Anonymous ID: 28f714 Aug. 14, 2022, 8:02 p.m. No.17396223   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6362 >>6458 >>6627 >>6771 >>6806 >>6870

Release the warrant!

reeeeeeeeeeeeeeee Trump released the warrant!

 

President Trump and Breitbart Accused of “Doxxing” FBI Agents Who Signed a Public Document

August 14, 2022

 

In the aftermath of the raid on President Trump’s Mar-A-Lago estate, one of the many skirmishes was over the search warrant. President Trump complained about the conduct of the search, but because the Department of Justice filed the warrant under seal, preventing its release. The left pointed out that the FBI was required to leave President Trump a copy of the warrant, and he should release his copy if he felt abused.

You have got to be sh***ing me.

 

A search warrant is a public document. The proof of that is that President Trump was given a copy and encouraged by the intellectual left to make it public. I don’t have any sympathy for anyone involved in this assault on our Republic. While I don’t wish them physical harm, I don’t have a problem with them being peacefully, if loudly, confronted at home or while shopping or dining out. That’s the standard.

So long as these agents aren’t treated with any more violence or disrespect than Kirstjen Nielsen, I think it’s completely fine.

 

Some of the usual suspects accuse Breitbart of “doxxing” the agents by posting a public document; see pages 5 and 7. This is utter nonsense. The only way “doxxing” could occur would have been if the Department of Justice had violated court rules when filing the search warrant.

 

Federal rules require that anyone filing a federal court document must redact certain personal information in the interest of privacy, including Social Security or taxpayer identification numbers, dates of birth, names of minor children, financial account information, and in criminal cases, home addresses.

 

If the agents were “doxxed” by publishing a public document, then the failure was on the part of the people who did not follow Federal court rules, not Breitbart News.

 

A genuine effort to “dox” the agents signing this search warrant would have required someone to have enough energy to find them in various public databases and publish that information. But that would be wrong. Right?

 

I don’t see why people voluntarily involved in this search have any expectation that their role, even if it was “only following orders” (Ich habe nur Befehle ausgeführt, in the original German), should be some sort of state secret. It shouldn’t. We have a right to know who we are dealing with. We have the right to balance out the scales of justice when our side is in charge. The people involved in planning and conducting this raid made a conscious decision to become participants in political warfare. If they are ashamed of what they did, maybe they shouldn’t have done it. If they are afraid their neighbors, or society in general, may disapprove, perhaps they should think twice about being part of a political vendetta. If they believe what they did was right and in the nation’s best interests, then they should hold their heads up and take full credit for the raid and for what comes next.

 

Sauce: https://republicandaily.com/2022/08/president-trump-and-breitbart-accused-of-doxxing-fbi-agents-who-signed-a-public-document/

Anonymous ID: 28f714 Aug. 14, 2022, 10:01 p.m. No.17396533   🗄️.is 🔗kun

The Nuge Truth Social

https://truthsocial.com/@tednugent/108824893206815913

https://truthsocial.com/@tednugent/108824867890792861

https://truthsocial.com/@tednugent/108824096448528546

Anonymous ID: 28f714 Aug. 14, 2022, 10:43 p.m. No.17396595   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6606

>>17396201

>Gina Lollobrigida will run for Senate

Good Lord, she must be 100…

 

Gina Lollobrigida[1][a] (born Luigia Lollobrigida; 4 July 1927) is an Italian actress and photojournalist.

 

Well CLOSE to 100… another member of the cult presumably…and of course she played Sheba..

3rd pic is of her at 35… in 1962!!!

Anonymous ID: 28f714 Aug. 15, 2022, 12:46 a.m. No.17396762   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6771 >>6806 >>6870

There’s no sainthood for Obama, National Archives in Trump FBI raid uproar

August 14, 2022

 

Accusations are flying fast and furious regarding last week’s FBI raid at former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home. In my Wednesday piece for The Post, I noted that 30 million pages of Obama administration records had been trucked to Chicago. The Obama Foundation, working with the National Archives, promised to digitize and put them online. Almost six years after the records arrived at a Chicago-area warehouse, that hasn’t happened.

 

Trump revved up the controversy Friday when he asserted that Barack Obama “kept 33 million pages of documents, much of them classified. How many of them pertained to nuclear? Word is, lots!”

 

Trump has not revealed any source for his allegations that many of the papers were classified and that they had “lots” of “nuclear” material. The Obama Foundation and the National Archives have denied there are any classified documents in those records.

 

The media have largely sainted the National Archives in this ruckus. The agency issued a statement Friday: “As required by the [Presidential Records Act], former President Obama has no control over where and how [the archives] stores the Presidential records of his Administration.”

But the National Archives blocks access to official records at the behest of every former president and his designated officials.

 

Almost all the media coverage of this controversy has ignored or downplayed the dismal failure of the Presidential Records Act to reveal presidents’ records. A Washington Post analysis of the dispute on the 30 million pages conceded, “As with many issues of government transparency and document-sharing, it’s true that this is not great! You often have to wait years for requested documents, and this appears to be no exception.”

 

But journalists should be outraged by this perpetual stonewalling. Barack and Michelle Obama collected a $65 million advance for their memoirs, but Americans are still effectively prohibited from seeing his official records.

 

The Presidential Records Act requires people seeking information to file a Freedom of Information Act request. As Politico reported in March, “At many presidential libraries, the queues for processing FOIAs stretch for years,” and requests “involving classified information can take more than a decade.”

Obama boasted he had “the most transparent administration in history.” In reality, the Obama administration was as devious as the Nixon administration when it came to government secrecy.

 

In 2011, Obama’s Justice Department formally proposed to permit federal agencies to falsely claim that FOIA-requested documents did not exist.The American Civil Liberties Union complained that the plan perverted “a law designed to provide public access to government information to be twisted to permit federal law enforcement agencies to actively lie to the American people.”

 

Obama’s lawyers claimed a new veto power that turned FOIA into a travesty.White House CounselGregory Craigquietly notified all federal agencies in 2009 that “all documents and records that implicate the White House in any way are said to have ‘White House equities’ and must receive an extra layer of review, not by agency FOIA experts, but by the White House itself,” a congressional report noted. Politico observed in 2016 that in some cases, White House FOIA “referrals have led to years of delay.”

 

The Obama Foundation and the National Archives talk about digitizing those 30 million pages as if it were an almost unfathomable labor of Hercules. It took me less than five minutes searching online to find a Kodak scanner that can handle 150,000 pages a day. Buy 10 of those scanners, and the 30 million pages could easily be digitized within a month. The scanners cost $20,000 each, but the Obama Foundation has $560 million in assets and the top three employees receive more than $500,000 a year. It could easily find the money for the scanners if disclosure were the goal.

 

Sauce/more: https://nypost.com/2022/08/14/theres-no-sainthood-for-obama-national-archives-in-trump-fbi-raid-uproar/

Anonymous ID: 28f714 Aug. 15, 2022, 1:07 a.m. No.17396790   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6806 >>6870

Leonardo DiCaprio funneled grants through dark money group to fund climate nuisance lawsuits

August 15, 2022

Leonardo DiCaprio’s non-profit foundation awarded grants to a dark money group which, in turn, funneled money to a law firm spearheading climate nuisance lawsuits nationwide, according to emails reviewed by Fox News Digital.

 

Correspondence between Dan Emmett, a major philanthropist, and Ann Carlson — a University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) climate professor — in 2017 revealed that the two worked with law firm Sher Edling to raise money for its efforts to sue oil companies over alleged climate change deception on behalf of state and local governments, according to the emails obtained by watchdog group Government Accountability & Oversight (GAO) and shared with Fox News Digital.

 

In their emails, Emmett and Carlson discuss how Chuck Savitt, Sher Edling’s director of strategic client relationships, had sought Emmett’s support and had already received support from Terry Tamminen in his role as the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation’s CEO, a title he held between 2016 and 2019. When the emails were exchanged, Carlson, who is now a senior Biden administration official, served as co-director of the UCLA Emmett Institute on Climate Change & the Environment, the advisory board which Emmett still chairs.

 

“Chuck Savitt who is heading this new organization behind the lawsuits has been seeking our support,” Emmett wrote to Carlson on July 22, 2017. “Terry Tamminen in his new role with the DiCaprio Foundation has been a key supporter.”

Emmett also forwarded a message Savitt sent him three days earlier on July 19, 2022 asking for his support, according to the records. Savitt mentioned in that email that Sher Edling’s first lawsuits were filed with the support of the Collective Action Fund for Accountability, Resilience and Adaptation, a fund managed at the time by dark money group Resources Legacy Fund (RLF).

 

“Wanted to let you know that we filed the first three lawsuits supported by the Collective Action Fund on Monday,” Savitt had told Emmett. “These precedent setting cases call on 37 of the world’s leading fossil fuel companies to take responsibility for the devastating damage sea level rise – caused by their greenhouse gas emissions – is having on coastal communities.”

 

Savitt also offered to set up a meeting between Emmett and Vic Sher, a partner at Sher Edling.

 

The email correspondence took place two months before the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation publicly announced it would contribute $20 million in grants to various climate and conservation causes. The group’s announcement, which has since been deleted but remains archived, included a grant to the RLF “to support precedent-setting legal actions to hold major corporations in the fossil fuel industry liable,” closely mirroring Savitt’s language.

“These grantees are active on the ground, protecting our oceans, forests and endangered species for future generations – and tackling the urgent, existential challenges of climate change,” DiCaprio said at the time.

 

Tamminen added that the organization believed it needed “to do as much as we can now, before it is too late.” The announcement didn’t mention Sher Edling.

 

In February 2018, months after the initial email exchange, Emmett told Carlson that she could mention to other prospective donors that he and the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation were now “serious supporters” of Sher Edling’s ongoing litigation. The suggestion came after Carlson asked whether she should ask New York philanthropist Andy Sabin to support the effort.

 

“You can tell him Terry’s organization and I are both serious supporters, that you are an advisor, that the science is there, that it could do more for the environment than just about anything going on if it succeeds,” Emmett said in the email Carlson.

 

In addition to the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation and the Emmett Foundation, the MacArthur Foundation, William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, Rockefeller Brothers Fund and JPB Foundation have contributed to the Collective Action Fund since 2017.

 

Sher Edling’s website states that the firm is specifically dedicated to representing “states, cities, public agencies, and businesses in high-impact, high-value environmental cases.” Since its initial cases in July 2017 — filed on behalf of a city and two counties in California — Sher Edling has sued major oil companies on behalf of Delaware, Minnesota, Rhode Island, New York City, Washington D.C., San Francisco, Baltimore, Honolulu and several local governments across the country, alleging the companies have deceived the public about climate change.

 

Most of the cases are ongoing with two, involving San Francisco and Oakland, Calfornia, on appeal before a federal panel.

 

Sauce/more: https://nypost.com/2022/08/15/leonardo-dicaprio-funneled-grants-through-dark-money-group-to-fund-climate-nuisance-lawsuits/

Anonymous ID: 28f714 Aug. 15, 2022, 1:42 a.m. No.17396845   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6870

'member that football game with the shooting earlier today?

 

Texas cops launch manhunt for brother of ex-NFL star Aqib Talib after he 'killed youth football coach during row over kids game': Shocking clip shows fight break out just before shots are fired

A football coach was shot dead following a row at the end of an under-9's game

Mike Hickmon, 43, a coach for Dragon Elite Academy team, was shot and killed

Hickman was shot three times in front of his nine-year-old son who was present

Police are looking for Yaqub Talib, the brother of former NFL player Aqib Talib

First responders were seen performing CPR as they took Hickmon from the field

No arrests have yet been made butpolice are hunting for Yaqub Talib, 39

 

August 15, 2022

 

An under-9's football gameturned to tragedy after the coach of one of the teams was shot dead following an argument between parents at the end of the match in Lancaster, Texas.

 

The brother of former NFL star Aqib Talib, Yaqub Talib, 39, is now wanted on charges of murder after he was allegedly involved in the fatal shooting at the children's football game on Saturday evening.

 

Friends and family identified the official who was killed as Mike Hickmon, who coached the Dragon Elite Academy team.

 

It's believed Hickmon was shot three times in front of his nine-year-old son who was on one of the teams.

Lancaster Police Department say Talib was involved in a physical altercation with the referees on the field before opening fire at Lancaster Community Park in southeast Dallas County.

 

Video of the shooting shows a man wearing a black hoodie and hat pulling out a gun and firing.

 

In chaotic footage shot from the side of the field, parents can be heard yelling and arguing amongst one another with some talking to match officials at the culmination of the game before a scuffle breaks out on the grass.

 

Within the seconds, the brawl grew larger as more people ran to either join in or break the group up.

 

Five gunshots then rang out before the coach was seen lying motionless on the field.

 

Sauce: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11111595/Brother-ex-NFL-star-Aqib-Talib-hunted-Texas-cops-shooting-dead-youth-football-coach.html

 

Aqib Talib, pictured, was not named by Lancaster police as a person of interest but he was present at the shooting and his brother now has a warrant out for his arrest

Anonymous ID: 28f714 Aug. 15, 2022, 2 a.m. No.17396863   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6876

>>17396854

Don't jinx it. Notice a lack of members? Not to mention the red text abuser? Come to think of it a whole cast of characters dipped out tonight. Ah… comfy AF.

Also, it taught me to look at the parrots harder, that was a damned Macaw I think..

Anonymous ID: 28f714 Aug. 15, 2022, 2:31 a.m. No.17396924   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6944

>>17396918

Better idea. Fren was stationed off the coast of La Maddalena Italy and they HATED Americans. That was a long while back, doubtful it's changed much. Pretty country though, wasted on Italians.