My guess, Dan Coats. He maintained his integrity and would have had access to that information before Trump fired him
I am inclined to agree here.
My guess, Dan Coats. He maintained his integrity and would have had access to that information before Trump fired him
If someone breaks into your friends' house late at night and steals their TV and they say to you 'I've been robbed!' do you correct them and say 'no, you've been burglarized'?
Treason has a definition. If you want to intentionally misuse the word that's on you.
it was just announced that Trump will release the transcript of the call with the Ukrainian President tomorrow.
Awwww, how cute, glenn1 pretends he cares about political correctness here...Treason has a definition. If you want to intentionally misuse the word that's on you.
it was just announced that Trump will release the transcript of the call with the Ukrainian President tomorrow.
A strategic procedure carried out by Leadership and their Cloakrooms. There are a few situations in which Senate Leadership might hotline a bill-- the most common is that they want to move it quickly. In that case a member of Leadership asks their Cloakroom to leave an outgoing message for the Senate that the measure will be called up to pass without a vote (by Unanimous Consent). If a single Senator objects to the bill they can phone the Cloakroom clerk, register their objection, and the bill is stopped. Sometimes the Majority leader doesn't really expect a bill to pass by Unanimous Consent but will hotline it anyway-- like a trial balloon to measure a bill's support.
Just to remind you, it was a progressive who brought up the subject of "2A remedies" that I was responding to. You've somehow managed to turn that into a screed about right-wing folks instead when the post was about progressives taking up arms.
I am inclined to agree here.
For sure, it's option 1.Jake Sherman, Politico:
"McConnell has hotlined the resolution calling for the release of the whistleblower report. Schumer asking for unanimous consent for its passsage."
"Hotlining" is bypassing usual Senate rules.
http://www.howdemocracyworksnow.com/glossary/hotline
1. So... Mitch is moving soon as to make sure the Repubs don't break on this and he can get this voted down, or...
2. Mitch is beginning the dance of separation
You do understand that you're saying this in defense of a President who has publicly accused others of treason simply for disagreeing with him, yes?Treason has a definition. If you want to intentionally misuse the word that's on you.
people is the plural form.
how the hell did it become an "individual" right. Only "people" can keep guns, not "person." This obviously refers back to the subject: militia.
Oh, words mean different things to you? Or do you agree that this only very contemporary interpretation of the 2nd amendment is taking some obvious liberties with language?
Honestly, it couldn't be any clearer, but you've taken the side of a powerful lobbying group instead of the United States of America.
Really? That is what you have People, Person...
It sounds like... It sounds like... MoscowM is putting in some distance. This is it? The moment we all been waiting for?Jake Sherman, Politico:
"McConnell has hotlined the resolution calling for the release of the whistleblower report. Schumer asking for unanimous consent for its passsage."
"Hotlining" is bypassing usual Senate rules.
http://www.howdemocracyworksnow.com/glossary/hotline
1. So... Mitch is moving soon as to make sure the Repubs don't break on this and he can get this voted down, or...
2. Mitch is beginning the dance of separation
You do understand that you're saying this in defense of a President who has publicly accused others of treason simply for disagreeing with him, yes?
I’m saying this for the defense of accurate use of the English language. That Trump himself misuses the word isn’t reason for others to do the same. I give zero shits about what happens to Trump and if he was impeached tomorrow I’d be delighted. There are enough impeachable things Trump has done that you don’t need to muddy the waters by inaccurately accusing him of one of the few laws and norms he actually hasn’t broken.
Has Trump ‘betrayed a trust’? In this case, a trust specifically related to putting someone else’s (his) interests before the country he swore an oath to? If so then he has met the dictionary definition of treason and the English language is safe for another day.
It is also correct to say that he does not appear to have met the necessary elements of 18 U.S. Code § 2381 - treason.
Those are two entirely different things and we should stop pretending only one counts.
Why would Dan Coates file a whistleblower complaint after he was fired? I don't think he could even do it, but even if he could, there would be no point as the entire purpose of the whistleblower law is to prevent whistleblowers from being fired and he was already fired.
Maybe you should read past the first sentence of a post before you reply to it. Regardless, I'd love to know whose trust was betrayed when he had an affair?Are you going to sue Trump in the Webster-Merriam court of law? Or are you trying to reprise the scene from Judd Nelson in the movie "From the Hip" where as a lawyer he asks the judge to have a special motion on the admissibility of the word "asshole"?
I'll tell you what, since Bill Clinton "betrayed a trust" with his affair and lying under oath, if you try him for treason and subsequently execute him then I'll happily allow you to prosecute Trump under the same standard.
Maybe you should read past the first sentence of a post before you reply to it. Regardless, I'd love to know whose trust was betrayed when he had an affair?
