Archive for the ‘Hillary Clinton’ Category

Judge in Sussmann trial denies prosecution request to remove juror over daughter’s ties to defendant – Washington Times

A federal judge in the criminal trial of Hillary Clinton campaign attorney Michael Sussmann denied a prosecution request Thursday to remove a juror whose daughter plays on the same high school sports team as the defendants daughter.

A woman, identified as Juror #5, came forward Thursday morning to tell the court that she only recently discovered that her daughter and Mr. Sussmanns daughter play on the same high school crew team.

The juror told U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper that she was unaware of the connection when she filled out a jury questionnaire last week. The juror stressed that the daughters are not friends and there is at least a three-year age gap between the two.

She also said it was a large crew team with over 40 students, adding that she has never met Mr. Sussmann or his wife. She emphasized that she could still be fair and impartial and has no other ties to the defendant.

Prosecutors immediately moved to strike the juror, saying they would have asked her to be removed from the jury pool had they known of the connection.

Our position is that she should not stay on the jury, Brittain Shaw, a federal prosecutor in the case, said.

SEE ALSO: FBI official 100% confident Clinton lawyer denied repping client to peddle Trump-Russia dirt

Sean Berkowitz, defense attorney, said the woman should stay, noting that she never met Mr. Sussmann and did not know him.

There is no reason she cant sit as a fair and impartial juror, Mr. Berkowitz said.

Judge Cooper agreed that the juror should remain, saying notifying the court of the connection shows that she can be impartial.

The connection is not so close that it affects her impartiality, he said. She did not know the connection, unfortunately, when she filled out the questionnaire.

Judge Cooper said bringing the connection to the courts attention shows she is conscientious and takes her obligations as a juror seriously.

As a senior, her daughter is probably out of there anyway, he said.

SEE ALSO: Evidence in Sussmann trial points to Clinton campaigns link to a Trump-Russia collusion theory

Judge Cooper was criticized last week for allowing three Hillary Clinton campaign donors, including one who also donated to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, New York Democrat, to remain in the jury pool.

Others in the jury pool who were allowed to remain included people who worked the phone banks for the Clinton campaign or said they had strong views about the outcome of the 2016 election.

One potential juror told the court that she thought law enforcement was racist because the FBI dismantled the Black Panther movement.

None of the individuals who donated to the Clinton campaign nor the woman who objected to the FBI made the jury.

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Judge in Sussmann trial denies prosecution request to remove juror over daughter's ties to defendant - Washington Times

America is still paying the price for Hillary Clinton’s treachery – New York Post

However this era of angry polarization, crime and violence ends, it will be left to historians to decipher how America got so far off track. Instead of building on our unprecedented prosperity and role as the worlds ultimate superpower, we declared war cultural, political and social on each other. Even our nations Founders are not spared.

The reasons will be better understood in hindsight, but its hard to believe the 2016 presidential campaign wont be seen as an inflection point. Our move toward disunion didnt begin then, but it certainly gained steam and vitriol during and after the election of Donald Trump.

Two recent developments illustrate how that campaign remains a radioactive hot spot. With both developments centering on Hillary Clinton, they underscore her role and the depths of her venality.

Just when you think youve seen the worst of her, proof emerges that she was even more duplicitous than we knew.

The first evidence came in a little-noticed decision from the Federal Election Commission. It ruled on a complaint from the Coolidge Reagan Foundation that Clinton and the Democratic National Committee violated federal law by hiding how they funded the odious Christopher Steele dossier, perhaps the most destructive disinformation document in United States history.

The FEC agreed with the complaint and ruled that Clinton and the DNC, which she effectively controlled, hid their payments to Steele as merely legal fees, without mentioning him or his work. In fact, the money was funneled through a law firm, Perkins Coie, which then hired the smear merchants at FusionGPS, who hired Steele, a former British spook.

The layers and false claim about legal fees were intended to put distance between Clinton and Steele because knowledge of the truth would have destroyed her campaign. Although her lawyers and the DNC argued they did nothing wrong, they agreed not to contest the findings and quietly paid fines totaling $113,000.

If this effective admission on funding the dirtiest dirty trick in presidential politics is news to you, dont blame yourself. Much of the media ignored or downplayed the finding and Clintons fine, saying the issue was just one of misreporting or mislabeling the Steele payments.

Thats because the truth would make them look guilty, too. To report on the election commissions significance would force the Dems propaganda arm to acknowledge its own culpability.

By treating the Steele dossier as if it were holy writ, or at least credible, the media furthered Clintons campaign to paint Trump as a Russian stooge.

Of course, the FBI was also complicit, using the dossier as a crutch to justify its unjustifiable spying on a presidential campaign. A remaining question is, under Jim Comeys leadership, was the FBI the dumbest ever or the most venal?

Probably both but whatever the answer, J. Edgar Hoover finally can rest in peace.

The second recent development involves a new court filing by special counsel John Durham in the case of Michael Sussmann, a Clinton lawyer and campaign operative who is charged with lying to the FBI in 2016. His alleged role expands the deception annals by showing Clintons team wasnt relying only on Steeles farrago of lies, lies and more lies.

Perhaps doubtful that Steele, even with his FBI friends and media contacts, could make up for her unpopularity, Clinton financed a bookend to his dossier with another fabrication.

This second scam had Sussmann, a tech executive and the same smear merchants try to sell the FBI on a concocted story about a Trump computer secretly communicating with a Russian bank.

Durham calls the effort a joint venture of the conspirators, a phrase that gives a sense of the plot and the players. There wasnt a scintilla of truth to back up the computer nonsense, and even though the FBI saw through the tissue-thin claim, many in the media naturally fell for it.

They managed to find in this particular lie a confirming detail of the larger lie Steele was spinning that Trump was a toady of Vladimir Putin and was colluding with him to steal the election.

The case is a criminal one because Durham accuses Sussmann of lying by saying he was not representing any clients as he tried to spin a top agency official on the computer connection. In fact, Sussmann was representing the Clinton campaign, which he billed for the meeting, and the tech executive, identified as Rodney Joffe.

Although Sussmann pleaded not guilty, Durham released a text message in which Sussmann explicitly tells the FBI he is not representing any clients.

His trial, scheduled for next month, has the potential to be a breakthrough in Durhams long-running effort to reveal voluminous wrongdoing by Clinton and the federal government against the Trump campaign.

Based on his court filings, the prosecutor appears to be planning to link Sussmanns efforts to the dossier, in part because of the role his firm, Perkins Coie, played in both scams. Also, Durham said Sussmann met with Steele and FusionGPS in Perkins Coie offices and raised the possibility that Steele could testify.

Even before a verdict, the case moves the responsibility closer to where it ultimately belongsin Clintons lap. Whether Durham will ever be able to show her fingerprints on any criminal conduct is the great unknown, but in one sense, its also beside the point.

We already know with 100 percent certainty that she is guilty of igniting the false accusations of Russian collusion that continue to shape our culture and politics. Although Trump was hardly a model president, the widespread claim by her party and the media that he was an illegitimate president wasnt just dirty politics. It was a nuclear attack on the spirit that has always held our nation together, however tenuously.

Clinton lost the election and Robert Muellers special counsel probe came up empty, yet the collusion narrative lives on among major elements of the political left. To judge from the tumultuous years since, many of those who subscribe to her lie are using it as a license to try to destroy America.

Tragically, they are having a good deal of success.

Reader Steve Lounsberry, fearing that violence in New York is too entrenched to be reversed with halfway measures, offers what he admits is a draconian solution. He writes: If you possess an illegal gun

5 years in prison. Use an illegal gun in commission a crime 10 years. Shoot someone in commission of a crime 20 years. Kill someone in commission of a crime life without parole.

He says sentences should be mandatory with no plea bargaining and adds: I bet victims and family members would like the idea.

Amid a COVID outbreak, The Wall Street Journal reports from Hong Kong that At least 20 patients died in recent weeks at the Donghai Elderly Care Hospital, according to members of several families.

Anybody see Andrew Cuomo lately?

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America is still paying the price for Hillary Clinton's treachery - New York Post

Yes, Hillary Clinton Will Play an Off-Stage Role in a Theater Production – Snopes.com

Hillary Clinton has held many high-profile roles, including first lady, a U.S. senator representing New York, and U.S. secretary of state. Most recently, of course, Clinton was the Democratic candidate in the 2016 presidential election.

In April and May 2022, theater audiences in Arkansas can hear Clintons latest venture, where she will voice the role of The Giant in the musical Into the Woods, staged by the Arkansas Repertory Theater.

According to the theatrical news publication Playbill, its most likely that the theater company will use a recording of Clintons voice for the role instead of having her backstage for every performance during the plays run, from April 19 May 15.

Clinton is no stranger to Arkansas, having served as the states first lady when Bill Clinton was Arkansas governor from 1979 to 1981, and again from 1983 to 1992.

The Stephen Sondheim musical Into the Woods is a play on several Brothers Grimm fairytale characters and plots, including Cinderella and Little Red Ridinghood, which imagines the consequences of their wishes coming true.

Sources:

Hall, Margaret. Hillary Clinton Joins Into The Woods at Arkansas Repertory Theatre. Playbill, 26 March 2022, https://playbill.com/article/hillary-clinton-joins-into-the-woods-at-arkansas-repertory-theatre.

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Yes, Hillary Clinton Will Play an Off-Stage Role in a Theater Production - Snopes.com

The lunacy is getting more intense: how Birds Arent Real took on the conspiracy theorists – The Guardian

In early 2017, Peter McIndoe, now 23, was studying psychology at the University of Arkansas, and visiting friends in Memphis, Tennessee. He tells me this over Zoom from the US west coast, and has the most arresting face wide-eyed, curious and intense, like the lead singer of an indie band, or a young monk. This was right after the Donald Trump election, and things were really tense. I remember people walking around saying they felt as if they were in a movie. Things felt so unstable.

It was the weekend of simultaneous Womens Marches across the US (indeed, the world), and McIndoe looked out of the window and noticed counterprotesters, who were older, bigger white men. They were clear aggravators. They were encroaching on something that was not their event, they had no business being there. Added to that, it felt like chaos, because the world felt like chaos.

McIndoe made a placard, and went out to join the march. Its not like I sat down and thought Im going to make a satire. I just thought: I should write a sign that has nothing to do with what is going on. An absurdist statement to bring to the equation.

That statement was birds arent real. As he stood with the counterprotesters, and they asked what his sign meant, he improvised. He said he was part of a movement that had been around for 50 years, and was originally started to save American birds, but had failed. The deep state had destroyed them all, and replaced them with surveillance drones. Every bird you see is actually a tiny feathered robot watching you.

Someone was filming him and put it on Facebook; it went viral, and Memphis is still the centre of the Birds Arent Real movement. Or is it a movement? You could call it a situationist spectacle, a piece of rolling performance art or a collective satire. MSNBC called it a mass coping mechanism for generation Z, and as it has hundreds of thousands of followers on social media, mass, at least, is on the money.

Its the most perfect, playful distillation of where we are in relation to the media landscape weve built but cant control, and which only half of us can find our way around. Its a made-up conspiracy theory that is just realistic enough, as conspiracies go, to convince QAnon supporters that birds arent real, but has just enough satirical flags that generation Z recognises immediately what is going on. Its a conspiracy-within-a-conspiracy, a little aneurysm of reality and mockery in the bloodstream of the mad pizzagate-style theories that animate the alt-right.

Birds Arent Real didnt stay in Memphis in a sequence reminiscent of the Winklevoss scene in The Social Network, when they realise just how big Facebook has become, McIndoe recalls being back at college, five hours away from Memphis. I remember seeing videos of people chanting: Birds arent real, at high-school football games; and seeing graffiti of birds arent real. At first, I thought: This is crazy, but then I wondered: What is making this resonate with people?

Its no surprise that it first gained popularity among high schoolers. The younger you are, the quicker you get it. Teenagers understand it, they dont need footnotes, McIndoe says. I asked my own two teenagers if they were aware of Birds Arent Real. They went off on some crazy extemporising, where pigeon was pronounced piggin and doves had the greatest surveillance accuracy, and it seemed that they really did have a good working knowledge of how a fake conspiracy theory functioned, with its need for jargon and taxonomy. Then I asked again the next day, and it turned out that theyd never heard of it, they were just taking the piss. Teenagers do just seem to get it. I still need quite a lot of footnotes.

This is the fourth interview McIndoe has given as himself, not his conspiracist character. If you go looking for interviews with him on Spotify, you will find him explaining to sub-Rush Limbaugh local radio shock-jocks, in total seriousness, how the CIA was explicitly founded to spy on the American public these robot birds were their crowning achievement, listening to and watching everyone all the time.

He describes sombrely but matter-of-factly the genocide of the real birds, which Birds Arent Real was tragically unable to prevent. The shock-jock will typically say something noncommittal, such as: Huh. Thats bad. (In fairness, if it were true, it would be quite bad.)

Its a vivid dramatisation of how divisive conspiracy theories are; people who believe them live in another world, where any wild theory flies and even the most fleeting attempt to fact check it or test it against logic (if birds have been destroyed, whos eating all the worms?) marks you out as a brainwashed liberal. People who dont believe them cannot think themselves into the headspace of those who do. Then along comes a guy with a sign, and maybe hes not bridging this implacable divide, but hes certainly disrupting it.

That day of the Womens March, as McIndoe ad-libbed his conspiracy to whoever would listen, he had no plan. He was talking about robot birds one minute and Killary Clinton (a trope used by conspiracists about Hillary Clinton) the next: I was just saying things that were the funniest thing to me at the time.

It was a character based on the people I grew up around, he says. I grew up in rural, deeply conservative Arkansas, in a home-school environment. I had these intensely negative experiences of it. Im not a conservative person. At a very young age, I became more of an observer than a participant, which created a real loneliness, from an ideological standpoint.

Until he could drive, McIndoes entire life was home, home-school co-operatives run by the church, and church. He knew no one who didnt believe exactly the same thing, and Even though everything is [an] echo chamber, he says, the ideas in these home-schooled communities are bad echoes. Im sure that there are beautiful Christian communities that are doing good things somewhere. Im not trying to bash spirituality. But from my experience, the deep fundamentalist communities that I was in have caused way more harm. And Ive seen pure evil coming from them.

As his movement grows, though, hes started to think that maybe that kind of schooling made him more independent-minded, even though it emphatically didnt intend to. It creates a different relationship with the world. I wasnt involved in normal cultural settings, I was barred from a lot of traditional media. I didnt go to school. It definitely creates a different type of thinking, which can be in some ways more free and exploratory.

He also draws a tentative line between faith and conspiracy theory: The Christian worldview is really just about how youre determining truth. Where are you getting truth from? What is your relationship with truth? For the Christian, your foundational relationship with the truth is determined by faith, its definition is that you cant argue with it or interrogate it.

That mindset, plus the religious yearning for one single theory that explains everything, really softens up the brain these are my words, not his for conspiracy theories, which meet the same need. I think there is an actual concrete example of this journey, from fundamentalist Christianity to QAnon (again, this is definitely me not him, he is much less strident than I am). The paedophile element of QAnon, where Hillary Clinton and a huge global web of powerful liberals, are abusing children and keeping them in tunnels, sounds completely unhinged. But if youve been vehemently anti-abortion on faith grounds for years, then to your mind, feminists and other liberals are already in favour of murdering children.

So the leap isnt as great as it looks. McIndoe is more interested in tribal language and how conspiracy theory language echoes, in many ways, what I saw in a religious community. From QAnon, one of the main tag lines was the storm is coming. I hear many Christians talking about that right now, about coronavirus and the end times.

One more thing happened on the first day of Birds Arent Real. I met someone, her name is Madeleine. She has been my girlfriend for four years, shes the love of my life. So before long, he decided to drop out of college, and move to Memphis. I lived with people I didnt know, and worked at the richest country club in the south, as a waiter. It gave me a real window into how the 1% of Memphis talks about other races, since the entire staff are minorities. It was a very interesting time to start an idea about American polarisation.

Although birds arent real was very quickly picked up as a chant, getting the movement to snowball did take some work, McIndoe says. We set up the Bird Brigade, our boots-on-the-ground activism network, led by Claire Chronis. That was the first step to building a structured movement, getting it from Memphis to the rest of the US, getting people to put up flyers that I designed very poorly on Photoshop, which works for the conspiracy theory aesthetic.

They made up facts, faked secretly leaked CIA documents and made videos we created a world with laws and evidence and took out billboard adverts, which people posted on Instagram as selfie backdrops. If you put something absurd into the world, people are trying to present themselves as irreverent or funny, so that really spread.

Meanwhile, real conspiracy theorists, he says, will approach me like Im their brother, like Im part of their team. They will start spouting hateful rhetoric and racist ideas, because they feel as if Im safe.

In describing the movement, he gets towards perhaps the closest definition of what is happening: It is a collective role-playing experiment. There is true community found through this, it breaks down political barriers. We have taken pictures of a car park at a Birds Arent Real rally. There are people who will show up with a US flag on their car, Republican, patriotic, and a car right next to them with Bernie Sanders stickers. I was a Bernie guy myself. You see these people marching together, unified.

Theyre unified on the prank, right? There arent people there who think birds genuinely arent real? (I still need a lot of footnotes.) Yeah, theyre role-playing together. Theyre role-playing the collective understanding of the conspiracy theory.

The response of real-life conspiracists to Birds Arent Real has shifted now: They think Birds Arent Real is a CIA psy-op. They think that we are the CIA, were put out there as a weapon against conspiracy theorists.

McIndoe has a long game with Birds Arent Real: I think it has the potential to be a creative collective for a long time. I would love Birds Arent Real to continue to be a space to process the badness. I dont think the madness is going to necessarily end. I think the lunacy is going to become more intense.

He ends with an image that is poetic, freighted and incredibly neat. We talk about it like an igloo. Making a shelter out of the same thing thats posing the threat. Take the materials of what is around us, build something with them, be safe in there together, and laugh.

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The lunacy is getting more intense: how Birds Arent Real took on the conspiracy theorists - The Guardian

Guests on Sunday Talk Shows Hillary Clinton Meet the Press – Los Angeles Times

CBS News Sunday Morning Jon Batiste and Suleika Jaouad. (N) 6 a.m. KCBS; 10 a.m. KCAL

Good Morning America (N) 6 a.m. KABC

State of the Union Secretary of State Antony Blinken; NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg; Gov. Larry Hogan (R-Md.). Panel: David Urban; Jane Harman; Amanda Carpenter; Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Fremont). (N) 6 and 9 a.m. CNN

Fareed Zakaria GPS Sanctions against Russia: Mikhail Khodorkovsky. Russias invasion of Ukraine: Author Adm. James Stavridis (U.S. Navy, retired) (To Risk It All: Nine Conflicts and the Crucible of Decision). The Grammys: Musician Jon Batiste. (N) 7 a.m. and 10 a.m. CNN

Sunday Morning Futures With Maria Bartiromo Petro Poroshenko, former president of Ukraine; Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.); Sen. Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.); Atty. Gen. Patrick Morrisey (R-W.Va.). (N) 7 a.m. and noon Fox News

The Sunday Show With Jonathan Capehart Former deputy commander of the U.S. European Command Lt. Gen. Stephen Twitty (U.S. Army, retired); Rep. Charlie Crist (D-Fla.); Jonathan Capeharts aunt Gloria Avent-Kindred; Nina Totenberg, NPR; Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Burbank); Ned Price, Department of State. (N) 7 a.m. MSNBC

Face the Nation Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. New York City Mayor Eric Adams; Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.); Fiona Hill. (N) 7:30 a.m. and Monday, 3:05 a.m. KCBS

Meet the Press Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Panel: Cornell Belcher; Leigh Ann Caldwell; Brad Todd; Amy Walter. (N) 8 a.m. and 1:30 a.m. KNBC

This Week With George Stephanopoulos White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain; Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.). Panel: Chris Christie; Donna Brazile; Astead Herndon, New York Times; Ruth Marcus, Washington Post. (N) 8 a.m. and 2 a.m. KABC

Fox News Sunday Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas); Rep. Suzan DelBene (D-Wash.); Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby. Panel: Ben Domenech; Susan Page; Juan Williams. Martha MacCallum hosts. (N) 8 a.m. KTTV; 11 a.m. and 11 p.m. Fox News

Reliable Sources With Brian Stelter Journalists ambushed while covering war in Ukraine: Stuart Ramsay and Dominique van Heerden, Sky News. Coverage of the war in Ukraine: Julia Ioffe, Puck; Ivan Kolpakov, Meduza. Media stories: Natasha Alford; David Zurawik. (N) 8 a.m. CNN

MediaBuzz Jason Chaffetz; Harold Ford Jr.; Griff Jenkins; Kat Timpf; Susan Ferrechio, Washington Times; Laura Fink, Rebelle Communications. (N) 8 a.m. Fox News

60 Minutes The International Medical Corps delivers supplies, training and resources into Ukraine; Russian billionaires and Great Britain; artist Laurie Anderson. (N) 4 p.m. KCBS

Frank Buckley Interviews Author Peter S. Goodman (Davos Man: How the Billionaires Devoured the World). 4:30 p.m. and 12:35 a.m. KTLA

The Circus: Inside the Greatest Political Show on Earth The Home Front. The Jan. 6 Select Committee investigation: Rep. Elaine Luria (D-Va.); Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Burbank). President Trumps Jan. 6 phone logs: Bob Woodward, Washington Post; Robert Costa, CBS. The evolution of the Jan. 6 investigations: Conservative attorney George Conway. (N) 8 p.m. Showtime

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Guests on Sunday Talk Shows Hillary Clinton Meet the Press - Los Angeles Times