Anonymous ID: eb75fe June 5, 2025, 5:12 a.m. No.23125250   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5258 >>5295 >>5399

interdasting double post delta

 

ALL PB

>>23122019

> - djt t.s post and timestamp Qdrop 1240

>>23122019

>We Must Fight - President Reagan (Long Version)

 

>>23121920 @realDonaldTrump I just finished speaking, by telephone, with President Vladimir Putin, of Russia. The call lasted approximately one hour and 15 minutes. We discussed the attack on Russia’s docked airplanes…

 

>https://youtu.be/JDVT-8tUfiE

Anonymous ID: eb75fe June 5, 2025, 5:33 a.m. No.23125295   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5399

>>23125250

>interdasting double post delta

>>23125258

>>The call lasted approximately one hour and 15 minutes.

75 minutes

 

Delta to next: 0 D_1:16:22 (seconds total: 4582)

 

TT27660

[Profile picture from source site (X Post/Truth Social)] Donald J. Trump / @realDonaldTrump 06/04/2025 13:56:45

ID: Not Available

Truth Social: 114626383407680212

 

I just finished speaking, by telephone, with President Vladimir Putin, of Russia. The call lasted approximately one hour and 15 minutes.We discussed the attack on Russia’s docked airplanes, by Ukraine, and also various other attacks that have been taking place by both sides. It was a good conversation, but not a conversation that will lead to immediate Peace. President Putin did say, and very strongly, that he will have to respond to the recent attack on the airfields. We also discussed Iran, and the fact that time is running out on Iran’s decision pertaining to nuclear weapons, which must be made quickly! I stated to President Putin that Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon and, on this, I believe that we were in agreement. President Putin suggested that he will participate in the discussions with Iran and that he could, perhaps, be helpful in getting this brought to a rapid conclusion. It is my opinion that Iran has been slowwalking their decision on this very important matter, and we will need a definitive answer in a very short period of time!

Anonymous ID: eb75fe June 5, 2025, 5:45 a.m. No.23125335   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5350 >>5363 >>5392 >>5421 >>5436 >>5445 >>5473 >>5551

FO

 

https://x.com/devorydarkins/status/1930280989198028929

 

DeVory Darkins

@devorydarkins

This interview is truly remarkable. If you don’t remember who Miles Taylor is, let me remind you.

 

Miles Taylor was the chief of staff at the Department of Homeland Security during President Trump’s first administration. He wrote an anonymous Op-Ed for the NYT in 2018 detailing how he was leading a quiet subversion campaign, actively working against the commander in chief. He came out publicly in 2020, revealing his identity. In April of this year, President Trump revoked his security clearance and ordered the DOJ to investigate him for leaking classified information, among other things.

 

He has now filed a formal request to the Inspectors General to investigate how Donald Trump is “using the presidency to punish dissent.”

0:33 / 1:46

11:10 AM · Jun 4, 2025

·

163.6K

Views

Anonymous ID: eb75fe June 5, 2025, 6:04 a.m. No.23125410   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>23125392

>Why does Trump hire retards?

filtered

 

Career

 

Taylor's decision to have a career in government was largely motivated by the September 11 attacks in 2001. He later said that he "wanted to focus my entire professional life on making sure a day like that wouldn't happen again, and dedicating my career to, what I thought, was the mission of this country, and that's the advancement of human freedom."[20]

 

In 2007, while in college, Taylor interned in the office of the Secretary of Defense and the office of Vice President Dick Cheney.[17] In 2008, he worked as the briefing book coordinator at the Department of Homeland Security for Secretary Michael Chertoff and Deputy Secretary Paul A. Schneider.[17] In 2009, he served as a regional policy intern for the Department of Defense.[17]

 

Taylor was a political appointee in the administration of George W. Bush.[16] He was a staffer for the House Appropriations Committee and then the Committee on Homeland Security, where he served on Chairman Michael McCaul's staff.[16] Taylor was McCaul's chief speechwriter and national security advisor on counterterrorism and foreign policy. He also served as the majority staff lead for the congressional Task Force on Combating Terrorist and Foreign Fighter Travel.[16] In 2015, he was named a Penn Kemble Fellow by the National Endowment for Democracy.[21]

 

In 2016, Taylor co-wrote House Speaker Paul Ryan's national security strategy, released publicly as the "Better Way" agenda.[22][23][24]

Anonymous ID: eb75fe June 5, 2025, 6:14 a.m. No.23125436   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5443 >>5445 >>5473 >>5551

>>23125335

>>23125361

>I Am Part of the Resistance Inside the Trump Administration

 

 

I Am Part of the Resistance Inside the Trump Administration

I work for the president but like-minded colleagues and I have vowed to thwart parts of his agenda and his worst inclinations.

Sept. 5, 2018

Leer en español阅读简体中文版閱讀繁體中文版한국어로 읽기日本語で読む

[On Oct. 28, 2020, Miles Taylor, who left his position as chief of staff in the Department of Homeland Security, made public his authorship of this article. While The Times has a strict policy of protecting its sources, in this case he personally waived our agreement to keep his identity confidential. We can confirm that he is the author.]

The Times is taking the rare step of publishing an anonymous Op-Ed essay. We have done so at the request of the author, a senior official in the Trump administration whose identity is known to us and whose job would be jeopardized by its disclosure. We believe publishing this essay anonymously is the only way to deliver an important perspective to our readers. We invite you to submit a question about the essay or our vetting process here. [Update: Our answers to some of those questions are published here.]

President Trump is facing a test to his presidency unlike any faced by a modern American leader.

It’s not just that the special counsel looms large. Or that the country is bitterly divided over Mr. Trump’s leadership. Or even that his party might well lose the House to an opposition hellbent on his downfall.

[The author of this Op-Ed will publish a book in November 2019 titled “A Warning.”]

The dilemma — which he does not fully grasp — is that many of the senior officials in his own administration are working diligently from within to frustrate parts of his agenda and his worst inclinations.

I would know. I am one of them.

 

https://archive.ph/w40tg#selection-945.0-949.31

Anonymous ID: eb75fe June 5, 2025, 6:16 a.m. No.23125443   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5473

>>23125436

>The dilemma — which he does not fully grasp — is that many of the senior officials in his own administration are working diligently from within to frustrate parts of his agenda and his worst inclinations.

 

>I would know. I am one of them.

 

Miles Taylor, a Former Homeland Security Official, Reveals He Was ‘Anonymous’

Mr. Taylor, whose criticisms of President Trump in a New York Times Op-Ed article and subsequent book roiled Washington and infuriated Mr. Trump, resigned from the administration last year and endorsed Joe Biden this summer.

 

Miles Taylor, left, served as the chief of staff for the Department of Homeland Security under Kirstjen Nielsen.Credit…Erin Schaff/The New York Times

Michael D. Shear

By Michael D. Shear

Oct. 28, 2020

Leer en español

WASHINGTON — Miles Taylor, the former chief of staff at the Department of Homeland Security, was the anonymous author of The New York Times Op-Ed article in 2018 whose description of President Trump as “impetuous, adversarial, petty and ineffective” roiled Washington and set off a hunt for his identity, Mr. Taylor confirmed Wednesday.

Mr. Taylor was also the anonymous author of “A Warning,” a book he wrote the following year that described the president as an “undisciplined” and “amoral” leader whose abuse of power threatened the foundations of American democracy. He acknowledged that he was the author of both the book and the opinion article in an interview and in a three-page statement he posted online.

 

https://archive.ph/m3Rr9

Anonymous ID: eb75fe June 5, 2025, 6:25 a.m. No.23125473   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5476 >>5525 >>5532 >>5551

>>23125335

>>23125436

>>23125443

A Statement

Miles Taylor

Miles Taylor

6 min read

·

Oct 28, 2020

 

Why I’m no longer “Anonymous”

 

More than two years ago, I published an anonymous opinion piece in The New York Times about Donald Trump’s perilous presidency, while I was serving under him. He responded with a short but telling tweet:“TREASON?”

 

Trump sees personal criticism as subversive.

 

I take a different view. As Theodore Roosevelt wrote, “To announce that there must be no criticism of the President, or that we are to stand by the President, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public. Nothing but the truth should be spoken about him or anyone else. But it is even more important to tell the truth, pleasant or unpleasant, about him than about anyone else.”

 

We do not owe the President our silence. We owe him and the American people the truth.

 

Make no mistake: I am a Republican, and I wanted this President to succeed. That’s why I came into the Administration with John Kelly, and it’s why I stayed on as Chief of Staff at the Department of Homeland Security. But too often in times of crisis, I saw Donald Trump prove he is a man without character, and his personal defects have resulted in leadership failures so significant that they can be measured in lost American lives. I witnessed Trump’s inability to do his job over the course of two-and-a-half years. Everyone saw it, though most were hesitant to speak up for fear of reprisals.

 

So when I left the Administration I wrote A Warning, a character study of the current Commander in Chief and a caution to voters that it wasn’t as bad as it looked inside the Trump Administration — it was worse. While I claim sole authorship of the work, the sentiments expressed within it were widely held among officials at the highest levels of the federal government.In other words, Trump’s own lieutenants were alarmed by his instability.

 

Much has been made of the fact that these writings were published anonymously. The decision wasn’t easy, I wrestled with it, and I understand why some people consider it questionable to levy such serious charges against a sitting President under the cover of anonymity. But my reasoning was straightforward, and I stand by it. Issuing my critiques without attribution forced the President to answer them directly on their merits or not at all, rather than creating distractions through petty insults and name-calling. I wanted the attention to be on the arguments themselves. At the time I asked, “What will he do when there is no person to attack, only an idea?” We got the answer. He became unhinged. And the ideas stood on their own two feet.

 

To be clear, writing those works was not about eminence (they were published without attribution), not about money (I declined a hefty monetary advance and pledged to donate the bulk of the proceeds), and not about crafting a score-settling “tell all” (my focus was on the President himself and his character, not denigrating former colleagues).

 

Nevertheless, I made clear I wasn’t afraid to criticize the President under my name. In fact, I pledged to do so. That is why I’ve already been vocal throughout the general election. I’ve tried to convey as best I can — based on my own experience — how Donald Trump has made America less safe, less certain of its identity and destiny, and less united. He has responded predictably, with personal attacks meant to obscure the underlying message that he is unfit for the office he holds.

 

Yet Trump has failed to bury the truth.

 

Why? Becausesince the op-ed was published, I’ve been joined by an unprecedented number of former colleagues who’ve chosen to speak out against the man they once served. Donald Trump’s character and record have now been challenged in myriad waysby his own former Chief of Staff, National Security Advisor, Communications Director, Secretary of State, Secretary of Defense, Director of National Intelligence, Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and others he personally appointed.

 

History will also record the names of those souls who had everything to lose but stood up anyway, including Trump officials Fiona Hill, Michael McKinley, John Mitnick, Elizabeth Neumann, Bob Shanks, Olivia Troye, Josh Venable, Alexander Vindman, and many more. I applaud their courage. These are not “Deep Staters” who conspired to thwart their boss. Many of them were Trump supporters, and all of them are patriots who accepted great personal risks to speak candidly about a man they’ve seen retaliate and even incite violence against his opponents. (I’ve likewise experienced the cost of condemning the President, as doing so has taken a considerable toll on my job, daily life, marriage, finances, and personal safety.)

Anonymous ID: eb75fe June 5, 2025, 6:25 a.m. No.23125476   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5525 >>5532 >>5551

>>23125473

>short but telling tweet:“TREASON?”

 

These public servants were not intimidated. And you shouldn’t be either. As descendants of revolutionaries, honest dissent is part of our American character, and we must reject the culture of political intimidation that’s been cultivated by this President. That’s why I’m writing this note — to urge you to speak out if you haven’t. While I hope a few more Trump officials will quickly find their consciences, your words are now more important than theirs. It’s time to come forward and shine a light on the discord that’s infected our public discourse. You can speak loudest with your vote and persuade others with your voice. Don’t be afraid of open debate. As I’ve said before, there is no better screen test for truth than to see it audition next to delusion.

 

This election is a two-part referendum: first, on the character of a man, and second, on the character of our nation. That’s why I’m also urging fellow Republicans to put country over party, even if that means supporting Trump’s Democratic opponent. Although former Vice President Joe Biden is likely to pursue progressive reforms that conservatives oppose (and rest assured, we will challenge them in the loyal opposition), his policy agenda cannot equal the damage done by the current President to the fabric of our Republic. I believe Joe Biden’s decency will bring us back together where Donald Trump’s dishonesty has torn us apart.

 

Trump has been exactly what we conservatives always said government should NOT be: expansive, wasteful, arbitrary, unpredictable, and prone to abuses of power. Worse still, as I’ve noted previously, he’s waged an all-out assault on reason, preferring to enthrone emotion and impulse in the seat of government. The consequences have been calamitous, and if given four more years, he will push the limits of his power further than the “high crimes and misdemeanors” for which he was already impeached.

 

Trust me. We spent years trying to ameliorate Trump’s poor decisions (often unsuccessfully), many of which will be back with a vengeance in a second term. Recall, this is the man who told us, “When somebody’s president of the United States, the authority is total.” I believe more than ever that Trump unbound will mean a nation undone — a continued downward slide into social acrimony, with the United States fading into the background of a world stage it once commanded, to say nothing of the damage to our democratic institutions.

 

I was wrong, however, about one major assertion in my original op-ed. The country cannot rely on well-intentioned, unelected bureaucrats around the President to steer him toward what’s right. He has purged most of them anyway. Nor can they rely on Congress to deliver us from Trump’s wayward whims. The people themselves are the ultimate check on the nation’s chief executive. We alone must determine whether his behavior warrants continuance in office, and we face a momentous decision, as our choice about Trump’s future will affect our future for years to come. With that in mind, he doesn’t deserve a second term in office, and we don’t deserve to live through it.

 

Removing Trump will not be the end of our woes, unfortunately. While on the road visiting swing states for the past month, it’s become clear to me how far apart Americans have grown from one another. We’ve perpetuated the seemingly endless hostility stoked by this divisive President, so if we really want to restore vibrance to our civic life, the change must begin with each of us, not just with the occupant of the Oval Office. Fortunately, past generations have lit the way toward national reconciliation in even harder times.

 

On the brink of a civil war that literally split our nation in two, Abraham Lincoln called on the people not to lose sight of one other. He said in his Inaugural Address:

 

We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.

 

Heed Lincoln’s words. We must return to our founding principles. We must rediscover our better angels. And we must reconcile with each other, repairing the bonds of affection that make us fellow Americans.

 

Miles Taylor

October 2020

 

https://archive.ph/M0oTw

Anonymous ID: eb75fe June 5, 2025, 6:40 a.m. No.23125525   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>23125473

>>23125476

Handy list of treasonous fucks

 

 

WHO IS STANDING UP

 

Over 225 prominent former government officials and American leaders joined an open letter condemning Trump’s retaliatory investigations targeting Miles and Chris Krebs, another former Trump official similarly targeted by Executive Order because he dared to assert the 2020 election was fair and legal.

 

The forceful statement marked the largest, joint bipartisan repudiation of any targeted executive action in President Trump’s second term. The signatories blasted the Executive Orders as a “dangerous escalation in the abuse of presidential power” and a “profoundly unconstitutional break with tradition.”

 

Signatories included:nearly a dozen former officials from Trump’s first term, such as Ty Cobb, Rear Admiral Tim Gallaudet (ret.), John Mitnick, Elizabeth Neumann, Anthony Scaramucci, Olivia Troye, and Alexander Vindman; former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, House Majority Leader Dick Gephardt; dozens of Republican and Democratic members of Congress, such as Charlie Dent, Reid Ribble, Kathleen Rice, Christopher Shays; former Senators Barbara Boxer, Bob Kerrey, Mark Udall, and Tim Wirth; former CIA Directors Gen. Michael Hayden and William Webster; former FBI Acting Director Andrew McCabe; former Governors Arne Carlson, Christine Todd-Whitman, and Mark Sanford; former White House Chief of Staff John Podesta; former Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel, HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and Acting Attorney General Stuart Gerson; ex-presidential advisors Paul Begala and Bill Kristol; dozens of conservative and progressive policy luminaries such as John Bellinger, Rosa Brooks, George Conway, Joseph Nye, Richard Painter, Anne-Marie Slaughter, CAP CEO Neera Tanden, Laurence Tribe, and many more

 

https://endpresidentialrevenge.org/

 

 

OUR TEAM

 

Taylor and his family are being represented by a legal team that includes Lowell & Associates, Hecker Fink, andMark S. Zaid, PC. This legal defense campaign is coordinated by Whistleblower Aid and other leading civil society groups fighting for #End Presidential Revenge.