Criminal Conspiracy to Make Vote by Mail as problematic as possible

The president says out loud that he won’t give “Democrats” the money the United States Postal Service needs to continue its constitutionally mandated public service. Trump and his loyal mega-donor appointee, new Postmaster General Louis DeJoy (annual salary $291,650) — who, among other efforts to hobble the Post Office is removing mail boxes and high speed mail sorting machines in heavily Democratic voting areas — appear to be criminally conspiring to flagrantly violate a federal law — as well as numerous state laws. The federal law, we learn, is:

18 U.S. Code § 1703. Delay or destruction of mail or newspapers

full text here

Glenn Kirschner, recently retired 30 year federal prosecutor, conducts a clinic on the use of this law, and related state laws, to rein in this illegal attempt to influence the outcome of an election the embattled Donald J. Trump and his dead-enders keep insisting will be rigged and massively fraudulent. You can watch Kirschner’s short, cogent presentation below.

18 U.S. Code § 1703 reads, in pertinent part:

Whoever, being a Postal Service officer or employee, unlawfully secretes, destroys, detains, delays, or opens any letter, postal card, package, bag, or mail entrusted to him … by authority of the Postmaster General or the Postal Service, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.

If the Roy Cohn-like Bill Barr was not the Attorney General, a criminal investigation of chief executive officer of the United States Postal Service Louis DeJoy for violation of 18 U.S. Code § 1703 would have already begun. The Postal Inspector General is currently investigating DeJoy, but that IG will join the list of recently fired IGs (who serve at the pleasure of the president, as we know) if the investigation begins to turn up anything unwelcome to Mr. Trump’s reelection campaign. Countless mailboxes taken off the streets and roads of our country and 671 high volume mail sorting machines taken off line by DeJoy? Uh?

Fortunately, the states are beginning to line up in their legal efforts to ensure free and fair elections by mail, in spite of the lack of federal enforcement of laws to protect the integrity of those elections. As Glenn Kirschner describes.

And tomorrow’s newspapers and other media should contain details of the late-Friday filing the Trump campaign and the RNC made in the case of Trump v. Boockvar.

You’ll recall the Trump-appointed judge in that case ordered plaintiffs to submit proof of mail-in voting fraud or state that they have none. Pittsburgh Public Radio station WESA confirmed:

We are tracking this case and I have been told there was a filing very late Friday, though we have yet to see it. It may take a day or two to sort it out, but we (and other local media too, I am sure) will be reviewing it.

Hold on to your hats, boys and girls, this fight for the preservation of democracy is getting good and nasty.

Best Case Scenario

Only four years accelerating the doomsday clock,
melting all the arctic ice,
giving the greediest ever more,
a few strong new laws needed to prevent a repeat

no violent second Civil War to save the Leader

fought by the same passionate men who waged —

— and never lost —

the first bloody uprising against

the tyranny of angry,
lawless
slaves.

first email to local news director

The National Public Radio station in Pittsburgh (site of the federal court where Trump v. Boockvar — the president’s lawsuit to restrict mail-in voting in Pennsylvania —  is being battled out)

Patrick,
 
I’m writing from NYC, concerned that an important news item about the upcoming election, federal Judge Ranjan’s Thursday’s order to Trump 2020 and the RNC to produce evidence of mail-in voting fraud or state they have none, is not being followed up by any news outlet that I can find. 
Google produces no results for updates on what happened when the judge’s Friday deadline came and went.   
 
I thought your station reported on the order yesterday, but, as I didn’t find anything recent about the case on your website, I seem to have been wrong.   Here is the troubling issue in a nutshell.
 
The NY Times reported on Friday afternoon:
 
Screenshot_20200815-003724_Messages
a few hours later, a search of the NYT online edition, even using parts of the quoted article, yielded zero results — nothing found — the article itself, not found.   
CNN, UPI, Bloomberg and others also reported on the story when the judge made his order, it’s a potentially huge federal lawsuit for the future of our democracy — no follow up?
 
I know things are crazy now in the USA, but have we actually entered the Twilight Zone, Patrick? 
only “update” I’ve been able to find online today, from the J. Nicholas Ranjan Wikipedia page:
In August 2020, Ranjan ordered the Trump campaign to produce evidence of voter fraud in Pennsylvania by Friday, August 14. The Trump campaign must answer questions from Democratic groups, or admit to having no proof of election fraud. A hearing about the evidence is set for late September.[9]
 
I’d be grateful for a little light on this important case,

What happened to this fairly important news story?

I read a short piece in the New York Times this afternoon that contained these eye-popping lines, which I texted to a friend:

Screenshot_20200815-003724_MessagesDistrict Judge J. Nicholas Ranjan was appointed by President Trump in 2019, presumably off of the list of Federalist Society vetted judges that all of McConnell’s judicial appointments are drawn from.  The judge basically ordered the plaintiffs, the Trump campaign and the Republican National Committee most prominent among them, to provide some proof of their allegations or admit that they had no proof of widespread fraud in mail-in voting.  A rather remarkable development, I thought, and one of great public interest and concern during a pandemic, at a time when an utterly fictitious fear of massive vote-by-mail fraud is being constantly stoked by the president, his AG and all of his other surrogates.

As Bloomberg reported:

The Trump campaign and Republican National Committee sued Pennsylvania Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar and local election boards on June 29 over their plan for mail-in balloting for the November 3 elections. Trump’s team claimed the plan “provides fraudsters an easy opportunity to engage in ballot harvesting, manipulate or destroy ballots, manufacture duplicitous votes, and sow chaos.”…

… “Plaintiffs shall produce such evidence in their possession, and if they have none, state as much,” said Ranjan, who took his seat on the bench in August 2019. He gave the campaign until Friday.

source

This evening I followed up on the story, since reporting the judge’s order the news media (UPI and CNN as well as CBS local in Pittsburgh all reported the story) has been unanimously silent about this case.   

A search for the story a few hours later, on the NY Times website where I’d read the piece hours earlier (using their own quote — which turned up nothing) as well as multiple searches on Google, YouTube and elsewhere, provided no update.   It was almost as if the federal judge had not ordered a party to comply in a case of great national importance, involving the right to safely vote in the presidential election, by the end of business today. 

As CNN reported yesterday:

The judge’s order, in a high profile case about vote-by-mail in the battleground state, essentially forces the Trump campaign to try to back up President Donald Trump’s false claims about massive voter fraud in postal voting. 

source

A high profile case?  Seems that way to me, though it’s keeping a pretty low profile so far, for such a high profile case.  

Plaintiffs DONALD J. TRUMP FOR PRESIDENT, INC.; REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE; et al sued the Attorney General of Pennsylvania and the elections board of every county in the state, making a passionate argument for limiting mail-in voting in Pennsylvania.  Here is a taste of the serious allegations made by lawyers for Mr. Trump, from their rip-snorting 75 page complaint:

The result is that a significant portion of votes for elections in Pennsylvania are being cast in a fashion that denies any procedural visibility to candidates, political parties, and the public in general, thereby jeopardizing the free and fair public elections guaranteed by the United States and Pennsylvania Constitutions. The most recent election conducted in this Commonwealth and the public reaction to it demonstrate the harm caused by Defendants’ unconstitutional infringements of Plaintiffs’ rights. The continued enforcement of arbitrary and disparate policies and procedures regarding poll watcher access and ballot return and counting poses a severe threat to the credibility and integrity of, and public confidence in, Pennsylvania’s elections.

full amended complaint here

“Denies procedural visibility?”   No idea.  The judge ruled Thursday that horrible, arbitrary, disparate and unconstitutional as all that may sound, he would need a few shreds of evidence of actual voter fraud to support the case, to allow it to go forward as if it were an ordinary federal lawsuit, brought in good faith, during normal times, by parties that were not rabidly litigious. What happened at the end of business today when the evidence was due?

Did the plaintiffs simply have a senior Federalist Society judge call Judge Ranjan and tell him to get the hell back in line?   

Did they provide the evidence of massive mail-in voter fraud that he ordered to be produced?   

Did they go over his head to the appellate court and seek a writ of mandamus to force him to do his job as a political appointee serving at the pleasure of the president, obey the “presumption of regularity” and not try to illegally usurp the legitimate powers of the Executive branch and the campaign arm appurtenant thereto?  

What happened at five pm today when the federal court closed for business in Western Pennsylvania?   What the hell?  I guess I’ll be calling some newsrooms tomorrow.

In other news, Georgia governor Brian Kemp quietly dropped his baseless political theatre case against the Atlanta mayor for mandating the wearing of face masks in public during the pandemic.   Check out this peach of a news item from the good state of  Georgia.

Things Are Looking Good for the Feral Five

Sad as we felt the last few days, knowing we’d have to part with these beautiful, trusting, affectionate little souls, that sorrow is fading as we know they’re in good hands.    We brought them to a great cat shelter in Freeport yesterday, spent a sad night missing them, but today was much better.

A reminder that doing the right thing might sometimes hurt for a while, but it passes, the thing was worth doing and what remains is having done a good thing.  This case was the literal living out of the old saying  — if you love somebody set them free.  

The sudden withdrawal from that unlimited tender playfulness on demand that these little cats gave us whenever we spent time with them (when they weren’t napping) was painful, true, but our plan all along was to give them long lives of affection and safety we couldn’t provide them, much as we may have wanted to.

They are all being well cared for at an excellent shelter (where they’re all currently sleeping together and being treated for roundworm — they’ll be roaming the rooms with the others in a few days).   They will shortly become pets, sharing tenderness with humans who will fall for them quickly.

As they deserve.

IMG-20200804-WA0009.jpg

IMG-20200804-WA0006

20200806_16182920200807_143229 (2)20200809_162621 (1).jpg

The particular genius of Donald J. Trump

Last night Sean Hannity, during an exclusive interview with the president on FOX following Joe Biden’s pick of Kamala Harris as his running mate, apparently asked Mr. Trump about Harris’s previous critical comments about Biden and race. 

Mr. Trump answers this way, as only President Donald J. Trump can:

Trump answer to Hannity.png

source

Do not depend on fake news, who knows where this “transcript” comes from, hear Mr. Hannity and the president for yourself — cued up HERE

To be honest, I spotted a couple of inaccurate transcriptions in this rush transcript that made the president’s comments a bit harder to understand reading this than they were listening to it on air, but… still.  Pure genius.  You have to give him that.

The heartbreak of trying to save a tiny life

Yesterday I chased a rogue male cat who’d been aggressive toward the little feral colony we feed.  This cat, who we call Grey Guy, is usually quick to leave the garden when threatened, but yesterday, though I sprayed him with the garden hose, he hardly moved.   He didn’t move away very far, got a bit wet, looked back at me, reproachfully.   When Sekhnet encountered him a few minutes later, he was determined to make contact with her, though she at first sprayed him too.   

“He’s dying,” she told me afterwards, with tears, “he figured he had nothing to lose.”   She brought him a meal, and as she led him to it I saw for the first time how sick he looked, skinny, mangey, sad, with a distended stomach hanging to one side.  His eyes were barely open, he moved with difficulty.  He seemed clearly close to death.  He ate a bit of his last meal, before an opportunistic intruder named Giovanni made off with the last of it.   He was too weak to fight off the much younger challenger and Sekhnet was not guarding him at the moment.  We’ve taken to pegging the aggressive Giovanni with small stones when he hops the fence looking for food.

The cats we feed are Mama Kitten (so named because she gave birth to at least 20 kittens over the course of about three years, from a very young age) her three surviving daughters, Paint Job, White Back and Little Girl, and their probable father, Spot.   We watched almost every one of Mama Kitten’s offspring die or disappear.   We learned not to get too attached to the kittens, who tended to have very short lives in the wild.  Recently we trapped Mama, Spot and the three surviving daughters (who were old enough to get pregnant) and took them to a vet to be “fixed.”   Here is Mama with her first litter, back in September 2015.

20150902_103459.jpg

That big kitten toward her back legs we named Grey Guy.  He also disappeared after a few months, we assumed a hawk got him.  Hawks circle overhead here during kitten season.  They are circling today.

This stable little group protects their turf from intruders and we help them enforce their claim whenever we see another cat trying to get in on their action.  Giovanni (likely another of Spot’s offspring) has been a particularly insistent interloping pain in the ass, he bullies White Back and Paint Job and I’ve changed my attitude toward him.  It’s true he’s only trying to survive, but still, chasing our cats across the speeding traffic in the service road is a one way ticket to somewhere else.

About a year ago a haggard looking grey cat stood watching me on a street a couple of blocks from the house.   He didn’t run, or even back away, when I approached him.  He seemed to know me, and he was clearly hungry.   He appeared to be the grey kitten from Mama’s first litter, Grey Guy, a cat we assumed had died along with the others who all disappeared within a few months.   I called Sekhnet, and Grey Guy stood by, waiting with me until she brought a can of food and he ate it from a spoon, like he did as a wee pup.

IMG-20200811-WA0002

It was, in fact, Grey Guy.   He’d been living a rough life on his own and the years had not been kind.   After feeding him a couple of times we saw he was often savage with the other cats and we eventually drove him away.   He apparently came back the other day for one last visit before he died.

His presence reminded us how hard life is for a feral cat living on the street.  “He came as a harbinger,” Sekhnet said.  His poignant farewell came as we are completing the process of domesticating five feral kittens another mother cat dropped off in the garden, introducing them to big-hearted Sekhnet and the greatest cat buffet in the area.  Grey Guy’s appearance was a reminder of the short, brutal lives these affectionate little animals face in the wild. At five years-old he was ancient.  A house cat typically lives two or three times that long.

We became determined to find homes for these kittens, to give them full lives as beloved pets.   The boldest of them (and the runt of the litter) we named Alpha Mouse.  He was ready to be a pet right away.   His brother Beta was not far behind.  Both liked being petted from the start.  The other three were wary, as stray cats tend to be.   Here’s two shots of Alpha, then Beta:

IMG-20200809-WA0001

 

 

IMG-20200807-WA0000.jpg

 

IMG-20200812-WA0002

We found a shelter twenty miles from here that would take them, we caught them and brought them inside, into a large cage Sekhnet bought online.  We couldn’t bring them to the shelter for adoption until they are calm and happy being handled by humans.  A volunteer at the shelter gave us some good tips, the rest was just time spent with them, petting them in the cage, feeding them by hand, gaining their trust.

The patience and tenderness you need to show to get a feral kitten to trust you is repaid with a tender affection that can’t be explained.  The little creature who was afraid to be touched now solicits your caress, cranes her neck to be stroked just right, pushes her little face into the palm of your hand, purring in contentment.   They all sit on our laps now, after only a few days of adjustment.   

We are doing the right thing trying to find them homes, as hawks continue to circle outside looking for their little tidbits of delicious prey, as all of the hardships that oppose any animal’s existence rage out there at a moment when we humans are also hunted during this pandemic.   The right thing, the kind thing, turns out to not be easy sometimes.

I’m waiting for a call back from the small shelter that they have room at the inn for these five (they do).  A friend is on hold to do us a tremendous favor, renting a cargo van so we can drive them out to the shelter in their cage tomorrow, rather than stuffing them into the single cat carrier we have for a fairly long trip, their first in a car.

Meanwhile, Alpha sometimes cries and is only consoled by being petted a bit.  Sekhnet and I are crying all the time.   They are so affectionate with each other, it makes Sekhnet cry every time she thinks of them being separated.   

Every moment with them is a reminder of the relentless inevitability of separation, the pain of eternal leave-taking.    Having this constant reminder is hard work, particularly during this depressing pandemic, I can tell you for sure.  Operation Poignant, I told my friend’s voicemail yesterday, my voice cracking.

Here’s one of the last feral hold-outs, Devilhead, who now likes nothing more than the feeling of human fingers brushing lightly along the underside of her jaws.

IMG-20200810-WA0001.jpg

 

Bravo Fortune (on USPS story)

Fortune, unlike NPR and other news outlets analyzing the current, corrupt- smelling Postal Service situation (slow-down in deliveries ordered by leading Trump donor/Postmaster General to “increase efficiency”), reported (in its July 24 edition):

But the agency has been rapidly losing money since a 2006 law, passed with the support of the George W. Bush administration, required USPS to pre-fund employee retiree health benefits for 75 years in the future. That means the Postal Service must pay for the future health care of employees who have not even been born yet. The burden accounted for an estimated 80% to 90% of the agency’s losses before the pandemic. 

Critics call the law “draconian” and say that it was created with the intention of leading the Postal Service toward privatization. No other federal agency bears this burden.  

source

Bravo.  Thank you.   

What about the rest of you news sources?

 

Conflict of Interest– no such thing

Just as “abuse of power”, Republicans argued, was not grounds for impeachment of the president, “conflict of interest” should not, apparently, be considered anymore in government appointments or the awarding of contracts.  Trump has done this over and over, appointing lobbyists for coal and petroleum to key environmental posts, elevating unqualified loyalists and donors (Betsey DeVos, to name just one) to other posts and so forth.   

The things that made this practice formerly unacceptable were “norms,” long-observed standards of decency, the appearance of fairness and propriety, that impose no legal penalty for their violation.   Therefore, if you are opposed to decency on general principle: screw ’em.  Norms are no longer a thing.

That norms are no longer observed is easy enough to see and  understand in Trump’s America.  But why has the reporting about Trump’s new Postmaster General, Louis DeJoy, million-dollar Trump 2020 donor (and until recently, lead fundraiser for Trump’s now cancelled convention in Charlotte),  been so consistently fact poor?

Wikipedia has this succinct description of a couple of  items consistently left out of articles about Louis DeJoy:

DeJoy is the first postmaster in two decades without prior experience in the United States Postal Service.[12] DeJoy’s appointment was controversial because DeJoy and his wife have assets between $30.1 million and $75.3 million in USPS competitors or contractors, such as UPS and trucking company J.B. Hunt.[13][14]

Upon assuming office as Postmaster General, DeJoy began taking measures to reduce costs. Critics claim these measures may result in slowing of the mail service.[15][16][17] On August 7, 2020, DeJoy announced he had reassigned or displaced 23 senior USPS officials, including the two top executives overseeing day-to-day operations.[18][19] DeJoy said he was trying to breathe new life into a “broken business model.”[20]

One gigantic reason for the “broken business model” is a 2006 law, signed into being by George W. Bush during the lame duck days of the Republican 109th Congress [1], requiring the Postal Service to fund its retiree health care plan SEVENTY-FIVE YEARS into the future– at an initial cost of $110,000,000,000.00.   

To, in fact, fund retirement health care for employees not yet even born. 

No other government agency (or any private corporation in the world) has a remotely similar financial burden imposed on its operations.   All of USPS losses in the last seven years have been as a result of this deliberately crippling requirement to fund retiree health care SEVENTY-FIVE YEARS into the future.

Add to this that the US Postal Service, an essential agency mandated by the US Constitution (and predating it), is entirely self-funded.  Unlike other federal agencies, it does not receive an operating budget directly from taxpayer funds.  So pass an outlandish law to unreasonably hobble it, make it compete with the “private sector”, send it into debt, criticize its “broken business model” while cutting overtime, ignoring the concerns of longtime USPS leaders, supervisors and the union, and “reorganize” it to ensure maximum … inefficiency — right before an election that, because of a raging pandemic, will be largely by mail.

NPR did a piece about DeJoy when he was appointed in May 2020 that identified him as a top GOP fundraiser but failed to raise the crippling 2006 law and other points salient to an informed discussion of the US Postal Service.   NPR did note:

DeJoy has contributed more than $1.2 million to the Trump Victory Fund, and millions more to Republican Party organizations and candidates, according to Federal Election Commission records. He was also in charge of fundraising for the Republican National Convention.

You can read an article about DeJoy’s recent testimony in front of Congress, over his order to cut overtime, (he testified right before his seemingly random reorganization of Postal Service leadership,) his disparagement of the USPS’s supposedly crappy business model, without learning anything about the law that sabotaged the Postal Service’s finances.  (In fairness to the second article, which seems to take pains to make DeJoy seem like a defender of the Postal Service, it did contain this paragraph:)

Without an intervention from Congress, the agency faces an impending cash flow crisis, [DeJoy] said. The Postal Service is seeking an infusion of at least $10 billion to cover operating losses as well as regulatory changes that would undo a congressional requirement that the agency pre-fund billions of dollars in retiree health benefits.

A “congressional requirement that the agency pre-fund billions of dollars in retiree health benefits,” hmmmm… mysterious…

Why are we unable to see this basic information, this crucial context — the 2006 law that imposes a crippling burden on the Post Office [2], the glaring conflicts of interest involved in a big donor with tens of millions of dollars of stock in the Post Office’s major competitors — in the reporting on Trump’s appointment of an inexperienced donor who immediately takes steps to to make sure the USPS is not a party to the projected “massive fraud of fake mail-in ballots” that Trump and Barr, without a shred of any kind of proof except “common sense,” are always railing about?

Simply sloppy reporting by overwhelmed news outlets exhausted by the gushing fire hose of administration lying, scandal and bad faith?  Democracy dying in darkness?   Innocent until proven guilty?   Presumption of Regularity?   Manifest Destiny?   The Peculiar Institution?   The Lost Cause?   All the News that’s Fit to Print?   What the fuck?

Get your ballot and mail it today, return receipt requested.  Support your local post office, however they may sometimes make you mad.

 

 

[1]  source

In 2006, Congress passed a law to require the USPS to prefund 75 years worth of retiree health benefits in the span of ten years—a cost of approximately $110 billion. Although the money is intended to be set aside for future Post Office retirees, the funds are instead being diverted to help pay down the national debt.

No other private enterprise or federal agency is required to prefund retiree health benefits on a comparable timetable. The mandate is responsible for all of USPS’s financial losses since 2013.

 

[2]   Wikipedia:

The Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act (PAEA) is a United States federal statute enacted by the 109th United States Congress and signed into law by President George W. Bush on December 20, 2006.[1]

The bill was introduced in the United States House of Representatives by Tom Davis, a Republican from Virginia, and cosponsored by Republican John M. McHugh of New York and Democrats Henry Waxman of California and Danny K. Davis of Illinois.[2] The bill was approved during the lame duck session of the 109th Congress, and approved by a voice vote.[3]

PAEA was the first major overhaul of the United States Postal Service (USPS) since 1970.[4] It reorganized the Postal Rate Commission, compelled the USPS to pay in advance for the health and retirement benefits of all of its employees for the next 50 years, and stipulated that the price of postage could not increase faster than the rate of inflation.[5][6] It also mandated the USPS to deliver six days of the week.[7] According to Tom Davis, the Bush administration threatened to veto the legislation unless they added the provision regarding funding the employee benefits in advance with the objective of using that money to reduce the federal deficit.[2] When he signed the bill on December 20, 2006, Bush issued a signing statement that says that the government can open mail under emergency conditions, though Waxman asserted that the government cannot do this without a search warrant.[8]

source

 

Benghazi Hearings Continue in effort to disprove the legality of the Mueller Investigation (which totally exonerated Mr. Trump!)

I started writing this cumbersome analysis of the ongoing probe into Trump-claimed “Deep State spying” in “Russiagate” a few days ago.  Today we had this update from Lindsey Graham, under the FOX headline: Newly Declassified Documents on Russia Probe Origins Could Point to Criminality. 

Note the squishiness of that “Could”.   “Could” could mean pretty much anything.  Injecting disinfectant into the lungs could cure Covid-19 in about a minute, as the president once theorized.    The seemingly impossible could become possible, like after the first runner broke the four minute mile and then many other top athletes did too.  A cow could jump over the moon.   

Could is the key here:  in spite of all the previous investigations that found an adequate legal predicate and reason to believe the Russians were interfering in 2016 (and are again in 2020) Mueller’s, Senate, House, DOJ’s Inspector General, — this new probe COULD find that the origins were criminal, done out of pure hatred of the greatest president in American history.

To rewrite the narrative on Russian interference on behalf of Mr. Trump once and for all, Trump’s party has initiated its fearless Senate inquiry into the real oringes of the 2016 investigation into Russian election meddling, as the Department of Justice dangles criminal charges against the investigators.   The Mueller investigation that resulted in several criminal convictions for members of Trump’s campaign has been recast as illegal Obama “spying,” an attempted “coup” orchestrated by traitors.   

As Republicans hang tough on denying economic relief to 30,000,000 unemployed Americans, during a raging pandemic that makes paid work for them impossible, Lindsey Graham began the Senate Judiciary Committee interrogation of former Obama officials delving into their roles in “Russiagate.” 

The president is still clearly very upset and frustrated about the “witch hunt” that he insists was arbitrarily and illegally started against his campaign team by Obama (who the president and Mr. Barr say — Barr hedges on the characterization– illegally, baselessly spied on him) and Biden (a Chinese Communist puppet, according to Mr. Trump, nobody’s puppet).  Mr. Trump was, as Mueller “acknowledged” (according to AG Bill Barr, you may search the report in vain for the quote) rightfully frustrated and angry to be under investigation, which is why the president tried to get first Comey, then Sessions, McGahn and several others to shut down all Flynn then Russia-related investigations, including making numerous attempts to have others fire Mueller, who began unfairly going against Trump himself (for Obstruction of Justice, of all things!) once the president’s attempts to interfere in his investigation became clear.

The Senate, controlled by Trump’s party, has already issued a detailed (158 heavily redacted pages) report that agreed with the findings of the Mueller “witch hunt” regarding sweeping and systematic Russian meddling on behalf of Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election and finding that the initial investigation into this meddling was legally justified [1].  Mueller’s entire investigation, of course, outside of that “immaterial” conclusion about Russian interference (the “immateriality” of Flynn’s lies are why, according to Barr, Flynn’s guilty pleas must now be tossed), Trump’s party now argues, was predicated on the flimsiest of cooked partisan evidence, the result of TDS (Trump Derangement Syndrome), purely and viciously partisan in its criminal oringes.

The Department of Justice’s Inspector General, Michael Horowitz, concluded his exhaustive report, which noted numerous misstatements and sloppy assertions in FISA warrants that led the government to open an investigation into Russian influence on behalf of the Trump campaign in 2016:

The decision to open the Crossfire Hurricane investigation was made by the FBI’s then Counterintelligence Division (CD) Assistant Director (AD), E.W. “Bill” Priestap, and reflected a consensus reached after multiple days of discussions and meetings among senior FBI officials. We concluded that AD Priestap’s exercise of discretion in opening the investigation was in compliance with Department and FBI policies, and we did not find documentary or testimonial evidence that political bias or improper motivation influenced his decision. While the information in the FBI’s possession at the time was limited, in light of the low threshold established by Department and FBI predication policy, we found that Crossfire Hurricane was opened for an authorized investigative purpose and with sufficient factual predication.

source

Bill Barr and Federal Prosecutor John Durham (assigned to find underlying criminality) immediately, publicly, disputed this finding.  Barr calling “Russiagate” “one of the greatest travesties in American history.”  (Recall that the Watergate travesty led to the resignation of Mr. Nixon, another martyred champion of unlimited presidential power on behalf of rich, white Americans).

Trump loyalists are now determined to show the American public that their leader, like Roger Stone, Paul Manafort and the unfairly persecuted Michael Flynn, is as innocent as Hillary Clinton, former FBI director James Comey, former CIA director John  Brennan, Andrew McCabe, Joe Biden,  Hunter Biden,  Adam Schiff, Nancy Pelosi, Alexander Vindman, Marie Yovanovich, Michael Cohen, etc. are guilty.   

The shit show officially started in Lindsey Graham’s Senate Judiciary Committee last week.  Stay tuned for the exciting follow up — the election time announcement, by the unimpeachable Mr. Barr, of the criminal indictments of some of these viciously partisan “traitors” found by Barr-appointee John Durham’s globetrotting criminal probe.  Barr and Durham traveled to Europe together in search of evidence to incriminate those who COULD, very well, be guilty of terrible crimes.

ASIDE– not for nothing — after the Mueller investigation concluded and Barr declared that Mueller had found nothing incriminating or illegal, the president denounced the “Mueller witch hunt” as a “big fat waste of time and money” ($30,000,000, according to his tweets).  In contrast, the protracted Benghazi investigation into Crooked Hillary’s un-prosecuted alleged complicity in the murders of four innocent Americans in Libya only cost the taxpayers about $7,000,000 [2].

The legal predicate for opening the investigation into the Russian electoral interference extensively documented by Mueller, and in the Democratic House and the Republican Senate reports, was found to be sufficient by DOJ IG Michael Horowitz.  As noted above, this finding was quickly and publicly  challenged by Bill Barr, who followed up this way (live on Laura Ingraham’s show on Fox):

“My own view is that the evidence shows that we’re not dealing with just mistakes or sloppiness. There is something far more troubling here, and we’re going to get to the bottom of it. And if people broke the law, and we can establish that with the evidence, they will be prosecuted…

I think the president has every right to be frustrated, because I think what happened to him was one of the greatest travesties in American history. Without any basis they started this investigation of his campaign, and even more concerning, actually is what happened after the campaign, a whole pattern of events while he was president. So I — to sabotage the presidency, and I think that – or at least have the effect of sabotaging the presidency.”

source

American Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient Rush Limbaugh amplified Mr. Barr’s concerns with “one of the greatest travesties in American history.”  Limbaugh has all this Chinese Communist anti-Trump propaganda (that Trump’s campaign accepted Russian help, that Trump tried to shut down the Mueller probe several times, etc.) cogently covered HERE.   (Here’s a little taste of Rush [3] and a hint of what makes him a presidential medal of freedom recipient honored at Trump’s 2020 State of the Union.)

The Trumpist endgame is making Americans believe that Obama’s people illegally spied on Trump’s campaign, violated the law, committed serious crimes, and that somebody needs to go to jail.  Indict them right before the election: guilty until proven innocent!  The story you are to believe is that the people who said Trump and his campaign were guilty of various crimes are actually the guilty ones.

The logic of establishing that there was no legal predicate to the initial Russia election interference probe, and therefore also the Mueller investigation (forget about what the DOJ’s inspector general already determined — he’s likely a Deep State traitor!) is elementally simple.  Let’s walk through it:

If Michael Flynn was an innocent victim of lying Obama/Biden/Hillary spies then Trump was 100% right to tell Comey to drop the “Flynn thing”.  Since Barr has recently declared Flynn a completely innocent victim of partisan FBI trickery, whose prosecution for “immaterial” lies was based on deliberate FBI lies and whose guilty pleas were induced by entrapment and poor legal advice, Trump had every goddamned right in the world to be angry and frustrated and to fire FBI director James Comey.   

Since the president was right to tell Comey to shut down the “Flynn thing,” a “thing” which turned out not to be a thing at all, according to the top law enforcement official in the world’s greatest democracy, then Mueller never should have fucking been appointed!   The witch hunt was a terrible thing that should never have happened, if only disgraced AG Jeff Sessions wasn’t so spineless as to listen to the damned ethics lawyers at the DOJ and recuse himself so he couldn’t limit Mueller’s investigation and, if things got bad, fire Mueller.  DON’T YOU SEE?!!!  DON’T YOU SEE?!!!

That’s why the Senate has to compel this testimony from all these anti-Trump zealots in the Deep State, to prove the Mueller witch hunt resulted from a Biden/Obama/Strozk/Page/et al  conspiracy of illegal spying to baselessly frame innocent American patriots!

Including the president himself. 

NOT for nothing:  Mary Trump’s book about her uncle sold more copies in its first week than her uncle’s masterpiece “The Art of the Deal” sold in its first twenty-nine years.   Just sayin’.

 

[1] 

the Republican-controlled Senate Intelligence Committee performed its own independent and exhaustive review of the ICA and, as expressed in Volume IV of its report titled “Review of the Intelligence Community Assessment and Additional Views,” expressed, inter alia, these “Findings”: (1) “The Committee found the ICA presents a coherent and well-constructed intelligence basis for the case of unprecedented Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election;” (2) “The ICA reflects proper analytic tradecraft despite being tasked and completed within a compressed timeframe;” (3) “The differing confidence levels on one analytic judgment are justified and properly represented;” and (4) “In all the interviews of those who drafted and prepared the ICA, the Committee heard consistently that analysts were under no politically motivated pressure to reach specific conclusions. All analysts expressed that they were free to debate, object to content, and assess confidence levels, as is normal and proper for the analytic process.

The ICA, along with the extensive investigative efforts taken by Mueller and Horowitz, seem unlikely to have left any material stone unturned regarding the details of Crossfire Hurricane and Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election. If there are any pebbles left for Durham to unearth, they seem highly unlikely to suffice as evidence of criminal wrongdoing or of improper political motivation. This will not deter Durham from completing his tasking, which increasingly seems intended principally for political use by the Trump administration. The president has never relented in decrying Crossfire Hurricane and the Mueller Investigation as “witch hunts,” employed to perpetrate the “hoax” that the Russians sought to sway the election in his direction. From the moment Barr assumed office, he has repeatedly amplified this theme with his personal view that improprieties have been directed at the Trump campaign and administration – commentaries that consistently violate the Justice Department’s own regulations prohibiting public comment acknowledging the existence of, or any details regarding, an ongoing investigation.

source

[2] from Politifact.com

The latest information released Dec. 14 shows that since the [Mueller] investigation started in May 2017 through Sept. 30, 2018, direct spending reached $12.3 million and indirect spending $12.9 million, totaling $25.2 million.

[The investigation of Hillary Clinton’s role (if any) in the killing of four Americans in Benghazi investigation, by contrast was a bargain:]

Led mostly by Republicans, critics saw the congressional investigations as a political move against Hillary Clinton, who served as secretary of state when the attack happened. The investigations concluded in 2016, costing about $7 million. The investigations did not suggest that Clinton was personally responsible for or could have prevented the attack.

The cost of the president’s frequent outings to golf courses he owns, of course, including security details, transportation, hotels, etc., dwarfs both of these numbers, (talk about a big, fat waste of money):

Trumpgolfcount.com addressed the fact-check on its website, saying: “At the time his article was published, our cost estimate was $72,251,706, but (Washington Post’s Glenn) Kessler correctly pointed out that since our estimates have a great deal of uncertainty, they shouldn’t be stated to the exact dollar. We’ve updated our site accordingly, and our total cost is now rounded to the nearest million.”

latest tally: about $138,000,000 for Trump golf trips.   Nothing to fucking see here!!! 

(you can check out this assertion at the link below, though, be forewarned, they are liars who suffer from extreme TDS!)

“source”

[3]   Rush:

So if Barr and Durham are doing this [criminal investigation into the oringes of the Mueller witch hunt], then what’s left to these people but to discredit Barr and to discredit Durham and to discredit Trump and to make it look like what they report is nothing more than sour grapes. So, yeah, there’s no question that that’s probably an element here. But you know what? Despite that, David, what you saw on MSNBC today would have happened anyway. You’re looking at borderline insanity when you turn on MSNBC.

You’re looking at borderline (let me qualify it further) political insanity.

You’re looking at borderline delusional political insanity when you turn on CNN.

And then you add the frustration of failure to these people who don’t know failure. When they decide to take somebody out, they generally succeed in doing it. But they have failed with Trump. So even if there weren’t a need to discredit Barr, if there weren’t a need to discredit Trump, investigate, whatever, they would still react this way. Trump is in their heads, has totally poisoned them, and no matter what he does, no matter what he says, this is the reaction they’re going to have to it.