Harvard Professor Preemptively Blames “Biased Media” Coverage For Hillary’s Upcoming Loss

Just yesterday we pointed out the “Premature Obit” published by the Huffington Post explaining, in advance, “Why Hillary Lost.”  The point of the HuffPo article was to preemptively identify scapegoats that could be blamed for a Hillary loss in November with the writer admitting that the mainstream media would not be able to bear the thought that it was in any way her fault.

Now today, seemingly right on cue, Harvard professor Thomas Patterson, penned an on op-ed in the Los Angeles Times noting that if Hillary loses in November it will be the result of the media’s biased coverage of her email scandal.  Ironically, Patterson’s excuses lined up perfectly with scapegoats #1 and #2 on the HuffPo list.

If Hillary Clinton loses the presidential election in November, we will know the reason. The email controversy did her candidacy in. But it needed a helping hand — and the news media readily supplied that.

Spot on, Patterson, almost makes us wonder whether you were copying off of your neighbor’s test?

Being the overachieving Harvard Professor type, Patterson also goes on to reference HuffPo’s #6 scapegoat by alleging that “sexism” is the only possible reason that could explain why the media chose to spend time covering Hillary’s email scandal rather than her “many accomplishments” that make her one of the most “fully prepared” candidates to ever seek the Presidency. 

Few presidential candidates have been more fully prepared to assume the duties of the presidency than is Clinton. Yet, her many accomplishments as first lady, U.S. senator, and secretary of State barely surfaced in the news coverage of her candidacy at any point in the campaign. She may as well as have spent those years baking cookies.

 

HuffPo List

 

But, Patterson offers up additional “analysis” intended to prove his alleged media bias saying that 11% of the media’s coverage of Hillary leading up to the DNC was focused on her email scandal with 91% of the email-related coverage having a “negative tone.”

My analysis of media coverage in the four weeks surrounding both parties’ national conventions found that her use of a private email server while secretary of State and other alleged scandal references accounted for 11% of Clinton’s news coverage in the top five television networks and six major newspapers, including the Los Angeles Times. Excluding neutral reports, 91% of the email-related news reports were negative in tone. Then, there were the references to her character and personal life, which accounted for 4% of the coverage; that was 92% negative.

But, we too are guilty of pointing out the bias in the media when it comes to covering Hillary.  Just a couple of weeks ago we pointed out how after 275 days of Hillary dodging the press, she finally offered to take questions from a vicious press pool which violently attacked her with questions like “How was your labor day weekend?” and “Do you have a Labor Day message?”….Vicious animals, every single one…have you no soul? 

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IRS Chief Requests Not To Be Impeached Despite Admitting He Misled Congress

IRS Commissioner John Koskinen expressed “regret” to Congress on Wednesday for his agency’s past mistreatment of tea party groups, but ahead of a hearing before the House Judiciary Committee, the top IRS official said he has cooperated with congressional investigators “and does not deserve to be impeached.”

In his prepared remarks, Koskinen said that impeaching him would be “improper” adding that “it would create disincentives for many good people to serve” not to mention that his impeachment would “slow the pace of reform and progress at the IRS.”

Ostensibly he was refering to reform whereby conservative groups are no longer targeted by the IRS under due political pressure.

His request to remain at the IRS took place even as Koskinen acknowledged that the IRS bungled tea party applications, and that he himself gave wrong information to Congress.  As the Washington Examiner reported earlier, at a hearing designed to lay the ground for his possible impeachment, Koskinen pulled the John Stumpf defense, suggesting he was let down by his subordinates, who allowed hundreds of backup tapes to be destroyed, losing tens of thousands of emails from former senior executive Lois Lerner.

It is the loss of those emails, even as they were under a subpoena issued by Congress, that has landed Mr. Koskinen in the hot seat, with conservative Republicans demanding he be ousted from office for his behavior. Koskinen in 2014 testified that all of the information was being preserved, but now says that was faulty information and he, too, was misinformed.

Impeachment proponents say that Koskinen failed to comply with a subpoena for communications to and from former IRS official Lois Lerner, since back-up tapes containing Lerner’s emails were erased. They also allege that Koskinen made false and misleading statements to Congress about the tapes and emails.

Koskinen said that he testified based on his knowledge at the time and asked the IRS to comply fully with Congress. However, he acknowledged on Wednesday that some information was not preserved and that some of his testimony later turned out to be inaccurate, according to The Hill.

“I regret both of those failings,” he said. “I can also tell you that, with the benefit of hindsight, even closer communication with Congress would have been advisable…. I accept that it is up to you to judge my overall record, but I believe impeachment would be improper,” Mr. Koskinen told the House Judiciary Committee.

Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.), the chairman of the panel, however, offered few clues
about whether he might throw his support behind the impeachment effort.

The IRS chief flatly denied that he gave orders for the backup tapes to be deleted, saying he had actually issued orders that everything related to the tea party targeting be preserved. He said that message was received by everybody save for two workers on the graveyard shift at the West Virginia facility where the deletions happened. Explaining that he is essentially irreplacable, he said if he were to go, it would be tougher to hire good talent in the future, and he said it would derail the improvements he’s been able to make at the tax agency.

Wednesday’s hearing came only after GOP leaders, who’d been reluctant to pursue impeachment, had their hand forced by House conservatives. They were unswayed by Mr. Koskinen’s defense.

Rep. Jim Jordan, Ohio Republican, said the chain of events was suspicious, and said impeachment and removal is the right punishment. “All we’re asking is this guy no longer hold this office,” he said. “In light of this fact pattern, I think that’s the least we can do.”

Koskinen said he hopes the Judiciary Committee decides not to report to the House floor a resolution to authorize formal impeachment proceedings against him. “Should the Committee take that step, however, I am fully prepared to assist the Committee in developing a solid and vetted factual and legal record that Members can rely on to exercise their constitutional responsibility.”

* * *

At the hearing, Goodlatte focused his questions on the IRS’s handling of Lerner’s emails. He asked Koskinen about the steps he took to preserve emails after the agency received a subpoena. Koskinen said he met with senior executives and was told that an appropriate document retention order had previously been issued. His counsel sent a follow-up memo to information-technology employees to remind them to preserve the emails.

Conservatives present at the hearing showed no signs of backing down, even as Koskinen aggressively defended his record. GOP leaders and Koskinen would both like to avoid his impeachment; the hearing was intended to put a lid on pressure from conservative lawmakers who had been calling for a floor vote this month.

Yet it is not clear that vote will be avoided.  Freedom Caucus member Tim Huelskamp (R-Kan.), who lost his primary and will be out of office early next year, has threatened to force a vote before the House adjourns for the election. He told reporters Tuesday he would make a final decision after the hearing.

Later in the hearing, Goodlatte asked Koskinen if he could provide to the Judiciary Committee as well as to the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee written communications that he and any other IRS employees made to preserve records subject to subpoenas. Koskinen said he would do that.

Koskinen said that the erasure of the backup tapes has been determined to be an accident caused by two IRS employees working the midnight shift at a facility in Martinsburg, W.Va. But Republicans were unswayed by Koskinen’s defense.

“You issue 66,000 summons and subpoenas each year,” said Oversight Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah), who introduced a resolution to impeach Koskinen last year. “You know how to dish it out but you can’t take it. And so we issue a subpoena, we expect you to comply with it…. And when you destroy documents that are under subpoena, somebody’s got to be held accountable for that. And that starts with you,” Chaffetz said.

“You provided false testimony to this committee, you’ve provided false testimony to the Oversight and Government Reform committee, and you should be held accountable for that.”

Meanwhile, Democrats, enraged at the hearing, said impeachment was uncalled for, and tried to hijack the the proceedings into an attack on Donald Trump.

Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.) declared the hearing “an obvious sham” before asking Koskinen about the Republican presidential nominee’s tax returns, which he has said he will not release publicly because he is under a federal audit.

“Is there anything that would prohibit someone from releasing their tax returns, if they want to, because they’re under audit?” Nadler said, without mentioning Trump by name. “No,” Koskinen responded.

“Can an individual use other people’s money run through a charitable foundation to enrich themselves or satisfy his personal debts or obligations?” Nadler asked.

Koskinen answered that tax-exempt organizations cannot use their funds to benefit their own members.

Nadler also made reference to Trump spending $12,000 of his foundation’s money to buy a football helmet signed by Tim Tebow, $20,000 for a 6-foot portrait of himself, $100,000 to cover a legal settlement and $158,000 to settle a dispute with a charity golf tournament participant.

After Goodlatte objected to the question, saying it was outside the scope of the hearing, Nadler asked Koskinen for an opinion on whether the IRS should bring a case on the matter. If it did not, Nadler asked if he thought it would be an “impeachable” offense for the commissioner. Koskinen said IRS commissioners don’t personally make such decisions but that there is a detailed process to examine such cases.

And so on.

In conclusion, just like yesterday’s kangaroo court involving the CEO of Wells Fargo which led to a lot of fingerpointing and angry statements by senators, today’s hearing will have a similar result: lot of words, and no actual change.

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The DEA’s Own Website Proves The War On Drugs Is An Epic Failure

Submitted by Carey Wedler via TheAntiMedia.org,

This summer, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) demonstrated its incompetence and exposed its archaic ideology on more than one occasion.

First, in defiance of public opinion, the agency announced it would continue to classify cannabis as a Schedule I drug, meaning the plant will continue to be categorized as one of the most “dangerous” drugs in America. Then, the DEA announced it would schedule kratom’s active ingredients in the same Schedule I category, even though the increasingly popular Asian herb, like cannabis, could potentially help curb the nation’s current opiate addiction epidemic.

To some Americans, these two actions demonstrate just how hopelessly out of touch the DEA is. But the agency’s ineptitude isn’t limited to misguided and stubborn decisions to ban plants. It’s actually out in the open for all to see on the DEA’s own website.

The DEA’s “Top Stories of 2016” page, which contains a selection of press releases the agency has issued throughout the year, is intended to highlight the valiant efforts of DEA agents in the fight against drugs.

But a simple analysis of the headlines reveals just how little the DEA has done to achieve its goals.

Here’s a sampling of their top stories:

Rogers Man Sentenced to Maximum of 20 Years in Federal Prison for Drug Trafficking

 

Overdose Investigation Leads to Heroin Distribution Charges

 

Over 65 pounds of heroin recovered from truck axle in Croton-on-Hudson, N.Y.: Two arrested

 

Methamphetamine Trafficker Sentenced to 12 Years Prison

 

Colombian Narcotics Kingpin Sentenced in Manhattan Federal Court to 35 Years in Prison for Massive Cocaine Conspiracy

 

Cumberland County, New Jersey Man Sentenced to More Than 10 Years in Prison for Methamphetamine Conspiracy

 

Two Brothers Charged with Distributing Heroin Involved in Overdoses

 

Owner of String of Marijuana Stores Sentenced to 10 Years in Prison

 

Major Takedown Leads to Indictment – Seizures of Over Half Million Dollars in Heroin and Cocaine

At first glance, it appears the DEA is doing a bang-up job. Look at all the bad guys they’ve caught! Can you believe they seized half a million dollars worth of scary drugs in one mission? Bless the men and women in uniform who fight to keep our children safe!

At second glance, however, one might begin to wonder why, nearly fifty years after the Drug War’s inception in 1971, the DEA is still struggling to contain the flow of illegal drugs in the United States.

Search for yourself. Perform a simple Google query on drugs seized by the DEA and law enforcement agencies around the country. You’ll find that seemingly every day, shipments of cannabis, cocaine, methamphetamines, heroin, and other drugs are seized by government agencies. Traffickers are charged with crimes and, to be fair, significant quantities of drugs are removed from the streets. But even the DEA admits (pdf) that, in general, increased seizures mean more drugs are in circulation; in the agency’s 2016 National Heroin Use Threat Assessment Summary, they note the recent uptick in drug seizures “indicates a sizeable increase in heroin availability in the United States.

The agency’s efforts to reduce the circulation of drugs and the power of traffickers are further discredited amid evidence that legalizing cannabis has decreased the power of Mexican drug cartels. In contrast, 80% of drugs from Colombia, “one of the countries [the U.S. government has] focused on the most,” the Atlantic reports, make it into the U.S. One can suspect that if cocaine were legalized, the black market demand for it — and therefore, the power of cartels — would be reduced.

After 45 years and countless pounds of illicit substances seized, the war on drugs is yet to be “won,” even as the DEA increasingly requests (pdf) more money for its budget.

Take it from the government’s own National Institute on Drug Abuse:

In 2013, an estimated 24.6 million Americans aged 12 or older—9.4 percent of the population—had used an illicit drug in the past month. This number is up from 8.3 percent in 2002. The increase mostly reflects a recent rise in use of marijuana, the most commonly used illicit drug.

Do you mean to tell me that in spite of law enforcement’s grand efforts to intercept literal tons of cannabis, use of the drug is still on the rise?

That’s as preposterous as claiming alcohol prohibition in the 1920s failed to stop people from drinking! Oh, wait.

Even the DEA itself has acknowledged the rise in drug use. From its 2016 National Heroin Use Threat Assessment Summary (pdf):

The threat posed by heroin in the United States is serious and has increased since 2007. Heroin is available in larger quantities, used by a larger number of people, and is causing an increasing number of overdose deaths.

The report further highlights the severity of the problem, which has been exacerbated by the government’s own double standard when it comes to banning some dangerous drugs while classifying others as medicine:

“In 2014, 10,574 Americans died from heroin-related overdoses, more than triple the number in 2010. Increased demand for, and use of, heroin is being driven by both increasing availability of heroin in the U.S. market and by some controlled prescription drug (CPD) abusers using heroin. CPD abusers who begin using heroin do so chiefly because of price differences.” [emphasis added]

That’s right. Nearly five decades, $1 trillion dollars, and thousands of destroyed lives later, the war on drugs has failed to stop drug use.

In 1971, President Richard Nixon — who, according to a former adviser, launched the modern drug war in part to crack down on anti-war and black rights movementswarned that “America has the largest number of heroin addicts of any nation in the world.” As he urged Congress:

We must now candidly recognize that the deliberate procedures embodied in present efforts to control drug abuse are not sufficient in themselves. The problem has assumed the dimensions of a national emergency.

Richard Nixon’s words are still embarrassingly true. The United States still has more opiate addicts than any other nation – they gobble up 80% of the world’s supply. Though pharmaceutical opiates constitute much of this figure, this growing habit, as the DEA acknowledged, drives users to heroin.

Nixon’s words are also still timely considering  government’s attempts to stop drug use and addiction remain “not sufficient.” In fact, earlier this year, two U.S. senators called the heroin and prescription opioid epidemic “a national emergency” — the exact term Nixon used to push the war in the first place.

If, after almost fifty years, the conditions that officially inspired the drug war haven’t changed, perhaps it’s time for a change in strategy, not a continuation of it — especially when it was waged for reasons wholly unrelated to keeping people safe.

As Nixon’s former advisor, John Ehrlichman, said toward the end of his life when he admitted the Drug War was conceived to stifle dissent:

Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did.”

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“We Out Like The Taliban” – Charlotte Protesters Fought Off By Walmart Staff, Cops

During the riots in Charlotte last night, that followed the shooting of an armed black man by a black cop, protesters stormed the local Walmart (purportedly to make the point that they will not stand for cop-killings anymore), but were met with an unlikely opposition. Walmart staff blocked the entrance to the store with pallets and defended the warehouse until police arrived.

It was quite a night iun Charlotte last night, as we detailed…

But it was the actions at Walmart that made us hope there is a chance for America…

Protesters headed to the Walmart on N. Tryon in the University area after shutting down Interstate-85 at WT Harris Blvd. early Wednesday morning following the shooting death of 43-year-old Keith Lamont Scott…

But Walmart staff had blocked the entrance by stacking wooden pallets…

Officers in riot gear blocked the entry to Walmart after it was broken into…

 

Employees could be seen sweeping up shattered glass at the front entrance.

 

So while protesters set fire to public property and attempt to steal to make the point that armed black men should not be shot by police, some people sought to protect their place of employment and responsibly protect it… is that hope? Perhaps.

However, not everyone was so responsible, as Paul Joseph Watson reports, at least 12 officers were injured, with one of them being hit in the face with a rock.

After the rioters began throwing bottles at police officers, SWAT teams were deployed and tear gas was used to clear the agitators.

 

 

 

Members of the media also had bottles thrown at them by the “protesters”. Vehicles were also smashed.

 

“We out like the Taliban!” one rioter was heard yelling on a live Facebook stream.

 

“This ain’t no one-day action!” another shouted. “This is the first time people standing up!”

 

“We ain’t playin’ no motherfuckin’ games, nigga!” asserted another individual.

We look forward to hearing president Obama's view on this rioting and looting… and it's not over…

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Why The Fed’s Window For A Rate Hike This Year Has Almost Closed

By Daniel Krueger, a reporter for Bloomberg News

Janet Yellen would like you to believe she wants to raise interest rates. The labor and inflation numbers explain why she won’t.

When looking at the data, the most important things to consider are measures of how close officials are to achieving mandates on full employment and price stability. According to Fed projections, unemployment may fall as low as 4.4% in 2018. By that time, inflation may reach the 2% target.

That means the economy has spare capacity. By remaining on hold Yellen endorsed that view. While the FOMC doesn’t want output to overheat, the greater risk is tightening too soon will choke off growth in a still-tender economy.

The committee uses personal consumption expenditures to track inflation. It was at 0.8% in August, or 1.6% excluding food and energy. Inflation-indexed Treasuries suggest consumer prices rising an average 1.2% in the next five years.

“They’re waiting for inflation to pick up,” said Thomas di Galoma of Seaport Global, who doubts the Fed moves this year. “It’s not going to happen. There’s no reason to raise rates.”

With three Fed voters dissenting, favoring a rate increase, Donald Trump accusing her of keeping rates artificially low, and JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon saying an increase is overdue, Yellen is aware that pressure to raise rates is building.

And the statement may have given a nod to those in favor of a hike: “The Committee judges that the case for an increase in the federal funds rate has strengthened but decided, for the time being, to wait for further evidence of continued progress toward its objectives.”

The mention of “time being” in the statement could be read as leaving December on the table. Two-year Treasury yields fluctuated after the decision and futures bet a hike by year-end is around 60%. The median forecast in the Fed’s dot plot is for an increase.

Whether that increase will happen by December depends on how much will change between now and then.

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New Report Proves What We Already Knew – The U.S. Economy Sucks

Submitted by Mike Krieger via Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

I’m surprised it took this long, but it’s finally become mainstream thinking to acknowledge that the official unemployment rate is little more than nonsensical propaganda. As the emergence of massive populist movements on both the “right” and the “left” have demonstrated, something ain’t right in the U.S. economy, and everyday people get it.

Bloomberg reports:

Democrats typically cite the current unemployment rate of 4.9 percent as evidence of significant economic improvement since the last recession, but a report this week from the left-leaning Center for Economic and Policy Research says otherwise.

 

Author and research associate Nick Buffie looked beyond the main jobless rate to more than a half-dozen measures including prime-age employment, labor compensation and the rate at which workers are quitting their jobs. When you factor these in, “the economy is weaker than the unemployment rate says and we haven’t fully recovered from the recession yet,” Buffie says.

 

In 2007, the year the recession began, the prime-age employment rate — defined as the percentage of Americans age 25 to 54 with a job — was 79.9 percent. The share fell to 74.8 percent in December 2009 and remained low until it began rising two years later, reaching 77.8 percent in June 2016.

 

Based on these numbers, the labor market has only recovered about three-fifths of the employment lost during the recession, according to Buffie.

 

Since the unemployment rate peaked in 2009 at 10 percent, about 12.7 million workers have found work, while an additional 11.8 million Americans have given up on their job search altogether. The report suggests that many currently unemployed Americans would resume work if given the opportunity.

 

The number of  so-called “job wanters” — which are prospective workers who wants jobs but haven’t searched for one within the past four weeks — is up 25 percent since 2007. Of those, the number of “marginally attached workers” — defined as a prospective worker who wants a job, is available to work now, and searched for employment within the past year but not the past four weeks — is up 31 percent. There were also 64 percent more “discouraged workers,” or marginally attached workers who had given up looking for work specifically because they didn’t think any jobs were available.

Meanwhile, the AEI came up with a neat little infographic on the subject. Here’s how they introduce it:

More people—but especially men in their prime—are out of work than ever before. Nicholas Eberstadt, America’s leading demographer and political economist, exposes this reality with fresh, detailed demographic data. He concludes that there is a new population of men—beyond the “employed” and “unemployed”—that are “unemployed but not looking for work.” Who are these men? Why are they not looking for work? And how has the welfare state influenced, contributed to, or even exacerbated the reality of this new class of men? “Men Without Work” pays particular attention to this group, presenting a clear, researched look at what all Americans can no longer ignore.

screen-shot-2016-09-21-at-2-35-44-pm

Finally, this post wouldn’t be complete without looking at how the “other half” lives in the national epicenter for financial crime, my hometown of New York City.

The Daily News reports:

The number of New Yorkers living in homeless shelters reached an all-time high over the weekend, a sad milestone that officials blame on a lack of affordable housing and support services for the poor.

 

A whopping 59,698 people — roughly the population of upstate White Plains — slept in a shelter in the five boroughs on Sunday night, according to stats released by the Department of Homeless Services.

 

That number has been slowly creeping up over the past few weeks, and easily surpasses the previously reported high of 59,068 in December 2014.

 

The grim stat is particularly high because it comes before the cold weather, which typically brings an influx of even more people to the city’s shelters.

 

In addition to the high rents, the city is also waiting on supportive housing for people, which the city and the state have pledged but haven’t been constructed yet.

 

“It’s not an immediate solution but it will help,” she said.

Or here’s another idea. Stop allowing criminal oligarchs to use empty apartments as bank accounts for their stolen funds.

You know, perhaps crack down on this idiocy…

Introducing Ghost Skyscrapers – NYC Real Estate Goes Full Retard

Stash Pad – Why New York Real Estate is the New Swiss Bank Account

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Cult Style Thinking Permeates The Economic Community (Video)

By EconMatters


We do a Fed recap in this video, and discuss our key takeaways from today`s Fed Economic Press Conference and Monetary discussion. The Fed is worried that raising rates is the match that sets the unintended consequences of ZIRP into motion.

© EconMatters All Rights Reserved | Facebook | Twitter | YouTube | Email Digest | Kindle   

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Saudis Puzzled By Sept 11 Legislation, Blame Israel: “Mossad Must Have Done This”

As Congress considers a bill that would allow the families of 9/11 victims to sue Saudia Arabia, Crown Prince Mohammad bin Nayef told the United Nations General Assembly that he’s “puzzled” by the move given that Saudi Arabia “suffered from terrorism” long before 9/11.  According to Al Arabiya:

“Saudi Arabia was one of the first countries that suffered from terrorism,” Crown Prince Mohammed told the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York.

 

He said “before Sep. 11, Saudi Arabia had signed agreements with other Arab states to fight terrorism,” and until now it is still “waging an unrelenting war terrorist groups.”

 

He added: “[Saudi] is now part of 12 international agreements to fight terrorism,” and it heads in “partnership” with the United States and Italy a group combating ISIS funding.

 

“The security apparatus in Saudi Arabia has foiled 268 terrorist
operations, including operations against friendly states,” he said.

Crown Prince Mohammad bin Nayef also told the General Assembly that Saudi Arabia “was one of the first countries that denounced September 11.”  That said, apparently he forgets that his nation’s first reaction to 9/11 was to blame Israel and simultaneously deny the fact that 15 of the 19 hijackers were, in fact, from Saudia Arabia. 

As previously pointed out by the The Jerusalem Post, the former U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Robert Jordan, confirmed the original denials in a book he published last year called “Desert Diplomat: Inside Saudi Arabia Following 9/11.”  Within that book, Jordan points out that immediately after the 9/11 attacks both Saudi King Salman and then Minister of Interior Mohammad bin Nayef denied reports that the hijackers were Saudis and instead insisted that “the Mossad must have done this.”

“One of my first calls was with then-governor of Riyadh… Prince Salman, who is now the king. His response was very emphatic [that] this could not have been Saudis, we couldn’t possibly have done this,” former envoy Robert Jordan said on CNN’s Fareed Zakaria GPS.

 

“This had to have been an Israeli plot. The Mossad must have done this,” he cited Salman as saying at the time.

 

“I got the same thing from the minister of interior, Prince [Mohammed bin] Nayef,” Jordan continued.

 

“I finally had to bring a CIA briefer out and show some of these princes
some compelling evidence that it, indeed, was Saudis who were the
hijackers.”

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9 Weird Things About The NYC And NJ Bombs That Will Make You Say Hmmmm…

Originally posted at DaisyLuther.com,

You know me – I’m not prone to conspiracy theories (cough). But, I noticed some weird things about the pressure cooker bomb attacks that took place in New York City and New Jersey this weekend and the subsequent arrest of the alleged perpetrator.

Some things just don’t add up. Trust me, you won’t even need to don your tinfoil because none of this is outrageous.

  1. First, nobody died. Don’t get me wrong. I’m totally thrilled about that, but you have to ask yourself why? With 29 people injured there were obviously a fair number of people around. Yet everyone was well enough to be discharged from the hospital within hours of the blast. Was the bomb just positioned badly? Or was it designed to cause injury, but not too much injury?
  2. They sure found the mystery bomber quickly and efficiently. The last time I had to deal with the federal government, I ended up in an endless loop of phone transfers, when no one could figure out the right person to send me to. But they brought their game to a whole new level of efficiency with this that makes you wonder how anyone ever gets away with anything. The bomb fragments and the unexploded pressure cooker were examined and analysed, a fingerprint was found, a match to the print was located on the system, and Ahmed Khan Rahami was identified. Then, the posters were produced, he was located due to a member of the public spotting him, and was then captured. All within 40 hours of the bomb blast and even though he was not on a terror watch list or flagged as a possible terrorist. Fast work.
  3. Although experts say this type of thing is usually a group activity, no other persons of interest are being sought. Experts say that the chances of Rahami NOT having assistance with logistics, etc., was “infinitesimally small.” Mike Rogers, former chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said, “Normally the way this works, you have a cell doing logistics, bomb-making and assembly, and an operational one.”  Despite all of this, the New York Police Department said they are not actively looking for anyone else in connection with the incidents. (source)
  4. The culprit was just hanging around, asleep in a doorway like a homeless person, waiting to get bustedRahami was spotted sleeping in a shop doorway and police were called. He shot at an officer and then ambled off down the street, shooting at a police car before being wounded and taken into custody. Now, I have two major issues with this. What kind of terrorist decides to curl up and take a nap in a shop doorway in an area he knows the police will be looking for him? Secondly, we all know the police have hair triggers…children get shot for holding a BB gun, the caregiver of an autistic man got shot while laying down,  and an unarmed drivers got shot in front of his kid…but this guy sets off bombs, shoots two officers, shoots up a police car, and then wanders down the road holding a gun and he only gets wounded in the shootout?
  5. The placement of these bombs wasn’t very strategic. Usually, someone who sets off random bombs in the name of terror wants to do as much damage and inflict as much fear as possible. If these attacks were designed to maim and kill, why not plant a bomb when there are crowds of people around? When you are less likely to be singled out by CCTV walking alone at night shortly before the device explodes? It makes no sense does it? Terrorist attacks invariably aim for maximum impact with minimum risk. This was a complete reversal of that M.O.
  6. ISIS wants nothing to do with this one. The Minnesota stabbings that took place on the same day have been claimed by the Islamic State as an act committed by  ‘a soldier of the Islamic State’. There have been no claims at all that Rahami has links to ISIS.
  7. It wasn’t a very good bomb. The backpack with five bombs inside was found in a wastebasket around 9:30 p.m. on Sunday outside a neighborhood pub in Elizabeth, about 16 miles from New York City. Two men found the backpack about 500 feet from a train trestle and alerted police, officials said. (source). One of those bombs exploded as a police robot tried to defuse it, yet the others didn’t. That must have been one very lame bomb if it couldn’t even blow the others packed into a bag with it apart or trigger the explosive component in the remaining four so they also blew up.
  8. Somehow, the bomber didn’t really raise any eyebrows until now. Rahami was known to have travelled to Afghanistan, his home country, and also to Pakistan. This was known because he applied in 2011 to bring his Pakistani wife into the United States and the application was approved in 2012. So an Afghan national with a police record for trying to stab his sister-in-law travelled to Afghanistan and Pakistan spending months at a time there and it never raised a glance from any agency anywhere?  The TSA was satisfied he was visiting family. Obviously too busy harassing cancer patients . Despite all of that, there was no real suspicion about this guy until he was suddenly a major terrorist.
  9. What do we need to be distracted from? This always has to be the question when these situations take over the news. And the list is long, my friends. This freakshow of an election, the fact that Russia is accusing the US of starting WW3 in Syria, the upgraded effort to take away guns and personal medical decisions, the newest Wikileaks…we could go on and on about the things no one wants us paying attention to.

See what I mean? Weird stuff. Lots of weird stuff. I’m not saying it never happened or that this dude wasn’t a terrorist or that someone else was responsible or that this was a false flag. I’m saying that there are holes in the official story that one could drive an 18-wheeler truck through.

But the official story sure does seem a bit questionable.

Or maybe Rahami is just so bad at being a terrorist that the Islamic State doesn’t want to claim him as one of theirs.

via http://ift.tt/2d0Idax Tyler Durden

Vegas Police Union Wants Black Lives Matter Pins Banned From Courtrooms

A Vegas judge ordered a defense attorney to remove her Black Lives Matter pin yesterday during a sentencing hearing for her client, arguing it constituted political speech. The attorney refused, saying she was defending her free speech rights, and the judge scheduled a hearing for tomorrow to discuss buttons in court. The jury was not in the courtroom at the time.

The judge, according to the Las Vegas Review Journal, said he was enforcing a neutral policy meant to avoid outside influences in the court. No word on whether the judge, has, or will, prevent police officers for showing up en masse at police trials in what could be perceived as an attempt to influence the jury.

Last week, the executive director of the Las Vegas Police Protection Association wrote a letter to the chief judge of Nevada’s eight judicial district, urging him to ban such Black Lives Matter pins from courtrooms in the district, as Huffington Post reports. Steve Grammas compared the message “black lives matter” in the courtroom to permitting messages urging the death penalty for killers or castration for sexual predators. “We are certain that the courts would not allow similar public displays,” Grammas wrote. “While we embrace the First Amendment, we do not believe that such statements should be made in the halls of justice.”

Grammas is the second police union boss to say he supports the First Amendment, “but.” Read the whole letter, or any letter from a police union, and ask yourself if it sounds like something a “public servant” would say?

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