Anonymous ID: c08ae2 Dec. 19, 2018, 5:11 p.m. No.4383452   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Military OP.

[Green]

General K [JFK]

Full Disclosure.

General Statement:

Once the 'extremely guarded & highly classified' information is finally revealed to House investigators, DNI, public etc., RR must recuse or forcefully terminated.

[RR] problems.

What was RR's Senate Conf Vote?

WRAY reports to RR [important fact].

Who do you TRUST?

[RR] recuse/fired who has direct oversight of Mueller?

Sessions un-recuse or #3 [until refill]?

Who is Rachel Brand?

Why was Rachel Brand dismissed?

Think timing.

"The succession question is actually a bit complicated. By default, under an obscure statute known as the the Vacancies Reform Act of 1998, Brand’s temporary successor as the “acting” associate attorney general is her principal deputy, Jesse Panuccio. That same statute would also allow the president to choose someone else to serve as the “acting” AAG on a temporary basis for up to 210 days; the pool of individuals from which the president could draw in this case includes individuals already holding Senate-confirmed positions elsewhere in the executive branch (like EPA administrator Scott Pruitt) or senior civil service lawyers in the Justice Department, specifically."

"Acting"

https://www.justice.gov/asg📁

When does the clock run out?

Why is Schneiderman's removal 'extremely' relevant?

TRUST (name).

These people are stupid.

D5.

Q

Anonymous ID: c08ae2 Dec. 19, 2018, 5:21 p.m. No.4383585   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3676

Using brackets for clarification

The most common use of brackets is to enclose information that clarifies or explains an ambiguous element in a quoted sentence. For example:

 

“She [the governor] insisted that the restructured budget would not result in funding shortfalls for schools.”

 

We can also use brackets to replace a word so the quotation fits with the natural flow of the sentence, such as by changing a capital letter to a lowercase (or vice versa), using the correct pronoun to fit the sentence’s grammatical person, or creating the correct subject-verb agreement. For instance:

 

Original sentence: “I have always been sure to file my taxes on time.”

As a quotation: The senator said he “[has] always been sure to file [his] taxes on time.”

 

Original sentence: “The U.N. will ultimately have oversight over reunification.”

As a quotation: The acting president has confirmed that “[t]he U.N. will ultimately have oversight over reunification.”

 

Original sentence: “Yesterday, December 7, 1941—a date which will live in infamy—the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan.”

As a quotation: “[A] date which will live in infamy,” as then-President Franklin D. Roosevelt famously called it, the bombing of Pearl Harbor by Japan on December 7, 1941, acted as a catalyst that propelled America into the Second Word War.