Anonymous ID: cf83e1 Nov. 30, 2018, 6:31 a.m. No.4084820   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>4084658

nobody should play the game the way you play it. your spamming of each bread dilutes your message. in retrospect, youve been here close to 24/7 for lets just say 1 month. you didnt have to have your message every bread, you chose to do so. you chose not to relay your message say, 1 once per shift, 3 times per day (say am, mid afternoon, eve). you thought that being on top of everybread got you seen, it got you filtered. you suck at this. your life has become a plugged in stare at a computer screen while life goes by. kek owns you.

Anonymous ID: cf83e1 Nov. 30, 2018, 6:42 a.m. No.4084913   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4937

>>4084751

low iq post

i hate drive bys - headline readers

 

sorry anons - i hate the so mouch text - i had to read this as a result of drive by - the article says absolutely nothing new

 

President Donald Trump defended his decision to retweet a meme this week depicting his political opponents behind bars — including his sitting Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein — signaling more storm clouds for the embattled No. 2 at the Justice Department after what appeared to be a brief reprieve from Trump’s attacks.

In an interview with the New York Post, Trump was asked about the photoshopped image, which depicted targets of Trump attacks such as former Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton, 2016 presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, Robert Mueller, Huma Abedin and James Comey overlaid with the text: “Now that Russian collusion is a proven lie, when do the trials for treason begin?” Tucked just above Obama's head in the photo is Rosenstein's, smaller than almost all the other individuals in the image.

Rosenstein belongs in jail, Trump said, because “he should have never picked a special counsel.”

Rosenstein is responsible for picking Mueller to lead an investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election — a probe that now includes whether Trump sought to obstruct justice — following then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ decision to recuse himself from the investigation and Trump’s decision to fire Comey, then the FBI director.

After his firing, Comey passed to the media memos detailing interactions he’d had with the president, including one in which Trump reportedly asked the FBI chief for his loyalty. The publication of details from Comey's memos helped prompt Rosenstein to appoint a special counsel, a move that has earned the ire of Trump.

The president has ramped up his attacks on the Russia investigation in recent days after finally submitting written responses to Mueller’s inquiries last week.

Trump has tweeted about the “witch hunt” a dozen times over the past several days as the investigation seems to be closing in on a few key figures in the probe, and after a former campaign aide reported to prison earlier this week on charges stemming from the investigation.

In a Thursday morning post to Twitter, Trump called the Mueller probe an "illegal Joseph McCarthy style Witch Hunt" that has "shattered so many innocent lives."

In his interview with the Post, Trump declined to say whether he would fire Rosenstein, though the deputy attorney general offered the president his resignation in September, after it was reported that he may have sought to remove Trump from office.

Trump did, however, double down on his firing of Comey, a step the White House initially claimed the president took based on a recommendation from Rosenstein. Trump later conceded that he had made up his mind to fire Comey before receiving Rosenstein's recommendation and that it was the bureau's ongoing Russia investigation that was on his mind when he decided to dismiss the FBI director.

“Thank God I fired Comey,” Trump told the Post, invoking former FBI officials whom Trump felt were biased against him. “Because if I didn’t fire Comey, we wouldn’t know about [Andrew] McCabe, we wouldn’t know about [Peter] Strzok and his lover Lisa Page.”