dubs chekt
BOOM
Maxwell
John Tower
Was Senator Heinz lumped into that mix too.
Promis software and who knows what else from our own govt.
Horatio may have been related to Chief Gunner's Mate Turpin…
Horatio Turpin (1755–1826) was the son of TJ’s aunt Mary Jefferson Turpin. During the Revolutionary War he served as an ensign in the 15th Virginia Regiment, 1777–78, and by 1781 he had become a captain in the militia. Turpin inherited over 1,500 acres in Buckingham and Powhatan counties, serving as sheriff of the latter beginning in 1807. In about 1821 he moved his large family to Kentucky, where he owned land as early as 1784
Hunter may have figured out his number was up and wanted out prior to the cleaners making a stop.
DJT asking where's Hunter? as a taunt, troll, a come and find him like autists did with Shia's flag.
The cabal getting the message? Anon'd have to say that the responses seen in media elsewhere are somewhat comical. where else and or what else will they turn to next now that pols are dropping out and retiring en mass?
https://twitter.com/AndrewKauders/status/514130544473669633
Andrew marking time for Ron Fournier?
likely his shoe polish too
Fournier began his journalism career in 1985 at The Sentinel-Record in Hot Springs, Arkansas. Two years later, he moved to the Arkansas Democrat in Little Rock, Arkansas. He stayed there for another two years before joining the Little Rock bureau of the AP in 1989. While there, he covered Bill Clinton during his final term as governor. When Clinton was elected president, Fournier moved to the AP's Washington bureau.[4]
Fournier first left the AP in 2004 to take a Harvard Institute of Politics fellowship. During that period, he also co-wrote the book Applebee's America[5] with Matthew Dowd, then-Republican strategist who went on to be Independent, and Doug Sosnik, a Democratic strategist. In 2006, he took a position as editor-in-chief of a new Internet website called Hotsoup.com, which aimed to foster discussion on a number of topics including politics. The site failed to catch on, however, and Fournier returned to the AP in March 2007 as its Online Political Editor, after considering “a senior advisory role” with Republican Senator John McCain's presidential campaign.[6]
In May 2008, Fournier was named the acting Washington bureau chief, replacing his "mentor" Sandy Johnson.[7] Michael Calderone wrote that since taking over the position, Fournier has led a dramatic shift in the AP's policy, moving it away from the neutral and objective tone it had become known for and toward a more opinionated style that would make judgments when conflicting opinions were presented in a story.[7]
Fournier joined Crain's Detroit Business in 2016,[8] becoming publisher and editor in 2017.[9] About this time, he wrote a second book – Love That Boy: What Two Presidents, Eight Road Trips, and My Son Taught Me About a Parent's Expectations.[10] Published in 2016, the book chronicles what he learned about being a parent on a series of road trips with his son, Tyler, who has Asperger syndrome.
Fournier currently serves on the board of directors of the Autism Alliance of Michigan.[11] He also is a trustee of the University of Detroit Mercy.[12]
He won the Society of Professional Journalists' 2000 Sigma Delta Chi Award for coverage of the 2000 United States presidential election.[13] He received a 2012 Sidney Award[14] honorable mention for the article "In Nothing We Trust",[15] coauthored with Sophie Quinton.[16] He is also a three-time winner of the White House Correspondents' Association Merriman Smith award.[17]
Controversies
In February 2013, Fournier wrote a column about breaking ties with a White House official after a pattern of "vulgarity, abusive language" and "veiled threat(s)", but did not identify the official due to his policy of granting blanket automatic anonymity to all his sources.[18] Fournier received some criticism from commentator Glenn Greenwald for behaving in a "petulant" manner and for his policy on anonymity for sources.[19]
It's old comms,
but Kauder and Fournier and what it could be…
Just wondering what it was around that time with a column about breaking ties with a WH official that may be possibly related to it all
kek
that college student that stumped Stelter into calling for a lunch break
their favorites all got elevated way to quickly and now the "proof" comes out after the fifth column runs out of constructive material
It had been said
You are the news now
Let it be written
Let it be done
Stelts response tho
that's not the network I watch…
guessing he doesn't watch his own production then