Anonymous ID: 4f297d Aug. 23, 2018, 6:56 a.m. No.2711565   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>2711511

the Huber would know where the bodies are buried.

would explain Sessions picking a federal prosecutor from Utah of all places

 

would explain one of Trump's first actions at reducing size of national monument there

 

would explain podesta's trip there

 

might also explain that weird incident months ago when the nurse defended the truck driver in a coma from having his blood drawn by a corrupt Salt Lake City 'detective'.

Anonymous ID: 4f297d Aug. 23, 2018, 7:03 a.m. No.2711611   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>2711447

I heard a fake news anchor mention how POTUS is misspelling 'councel' all the time in his tweets.

 

Could this be a clue for us as to what Mueller is really doing?

 

special counsel Mueller is really going after 'cabal' 'clintons' ?

Anonymous ID: 4f297d Aug. 23, 2018, 7:58 a.m. No.2711957   🗄️.is 🔗kun

The revelation is contained in an in-depth analysis of the 44-year-old’s career by journalist Evan Osnos writing for The New Yorker magazine.

 

In it, Ms Power describes her close relationship with her Dubliner father, Jim Power, a dentist, piano player, raconteur and drinker.

 

“I was extremely close to my father, inseparable,” Power said. “Where we hung out most of the time was the pub.”

 

Her father expounded on the day’s papers, while she read mysteries by the light of a slot machine in the basement, Osnos writes.

 

Meanwhile her mother, Vera Delaney, described as “an Irish field-hockey standout and a squash champion” was fascinated by medicine. “On the sports field, when her knees were bloody, she would want to watch as they stitched up,” Power said.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Her mother followed through on her fascination to become a nephrologist at a time women were discouraged from studying medicine. Her parents’ marriage fell apart when her mother fell in love with her boss. Because divorce was illegal here, and they wanted more opportunities in medicine, they moved to the US when Samantha was nine and her brother was five. Jim Power remained in Ireland.

 

Osnos writes that Power told him that initially she and her father “stayed in touch”, and, then, the drink, she thinks, took over. He died when she was 14.

 

Power’s husband, Harvard legal scholar Cass Sunstein told Osnos that decades later, on a trip to Ireland, his wife took him to visit her father’s favourite pub, “where they met a woman who had worked behind the bar and remembered her dad”.

 

“Others seemed to drink just as much, and Power asked, ‘Why do you think my dad was the one who died?’ The barwoman answered simply, ‘It’s because you left’.” Osnos writes. Power told him she knew her father was drinking too much “But I had no idea he was sick — he was just 47, and his death was devastating”.

 

Osnos also writes about Power’s wedding celebrations. She wed Sunstein, 16 years her senior, on July 4, 2008, in Co Kerry, “in a boisterous three-day affair”.

 

Osnos says that at one point, boat captains urged Power to cancel a scheduled ride because of rough seas but she went ahead — only to regret subjecting her guests to it.

 

“Several puked over the side,” she said. One guest, in a toast, hailed the wedding as “a cross between ‘The Poseidon Adventure’ and the Bataan death march”.

 

Power’s wedding came less than four months after she resigned as an advisor to the Obama presidential campaign after describing his rival Hillary Clinton as “a monster”.

 

That summer, now deceased American diplomat Richard Holbrooke, who was close to Clinton, brokered a meeting at her Manhattan office, as Power’s “wedding present”.

 

Osnos writes that when Power told Obama about it, he reportedly said, “Gee, most people get toasters”.

 

Osnos’ article, for which he travelled with Power and undertook hours of interviews with her, chronicles her evolution from an activist often critical of the foreign-policy establishment to a diplomat and senior adviser to President Obama.

 

https://www.irishexaminer.com/ireland/us-ambassador-my-father-died-of-broken-heart-302900.html