RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (Full Version)

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mnottertail -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 6:06:23 AM)

So what is the handle to hang on this?
Commiegate?
Nutsuckergate?
Douchegate?




PeonForHer -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 6:15:12 AM)

Orangegate. Bullshittergate.

We can't blame Trump's supporters though, can we? He gave *no* sign that he'd be this bad before he was given the presidency. Not one tiny-tiddly-widdly sign at all.




Musicmystery -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 7:34:09 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: CreativeDominant

Then...there is this perspective...

The United States is much better off without Michael Flynn serving as national security adviser. But no one should be cheering the way he was brought down.

The whole episode is evidence of the precipitous and ongoing collapse of America's democratic institutions — not a sign of their resiliency. Flynn's ouster was a soft coup (or political assassination) engineered by anonymous intelligence community bureaucrats. The results might be salutary, but this isn't the way a liberal democracy is supposed to function.

Unelected intelligence analysts work for the president, not the other way around. Far too many Trump critics appear not to care that these intelligence agents leaked highly sensitive information to the press — mostly because Trump critics are pleased with the result. "Finally," they say, "someone took a stand to expose collusion between the Russians and a senior aide to the president!" It is indeed important that someone took such a stand. But it matters greatly who that someone is and how they take their stand. Members of the unelected, unaccountable intelligence community are not the right someone, especially when they target a senior aide to the president by leaking anonymously to newspapers the content of classified phone intercepts, where the unverified, unsubstantiated information can inflict politically fatal damage almost instantaneously.

Donald J. Trump ✔ @realDonaldTrump
The real story here is why are there so many illegal leaks coming out of Washington? Will these leaks be happening as I deal on N.Korea etc?
7:28 AM - 14 Feb 2017
22,366 22,366 Retweets

President Trump was roundly mocked among liberals for that tweet. But he is, in many ways, correct. These leaks are an enormous problem. And in a less polarized context, they would be recognized immediately for what they clearly are: an effort to manipulate public opinion for the sake of achieving a desired political outcome. It's weaponized spin.

This doesn't mean the outcome was wrong. I have no interest in defending Flynn, who appears to be an atrocious manager prone to favoring absurd conspiracy theories over more traditional forms of intelligence. He is just about the last person who should be giving the president advice about foreign policy. And for all I know, Flynn did exactly what the anonymous intelligence community leakers allege — promised the Russian ambassador during the transition that the incoming Trump administration would back off on sanctions proposed by the outgoing Obama administration.

But no matter what Flynn did, it is simply not the role of the deep state to target a man working in one of the political branches of the government by dishing to reporters about information it has gathered clandestinely. It is the role of elected members of Congress to conduct public investigations of alleged wrongdoing by public officials.

What if Congress won't act? What if both the Senate and the House of Representatives are held by the same party as the president and members of both chambers are reluctant to cross a newly elected head of the executive branch who enjoys overwhelming approval of his party's voters? In such a situation — our situation — shouldn't we hope the deep state will rise up to act responsibly to take down a member of the administration who may have broken the law?

The answer is an unequivocal no.

In a liberal democracy, how things happen is often as important as what happens. Procedures matter. So do rules and public accountability. The chaotic, dysfunctional Trump White House is placing the entire system under enormous strain. That's bad. But the answer isn't to counter it with equally irregular acts of sabotage — or with a disinformation campaign waged by nameless civil servants toiling away in the surveillance state.

As Eli Lake of Bloomberg News put it in an important article following Flynn's resignation,

Normally, intercepts of U.S. officials and citizens are some of the most tightly held government secrets. This is for good reason. Selectively disclosing details of private conversations monitored by the FBI or NSA gives the permanent state the power to destroy reputations from the cloak of anonymity. This is what police states do.

Those cheering the deep state torpedoing of Flynn are saying, in effect, that a police state is perfectly fine so long as it helps to bring down Trump.

It is the role of Congress to investigate the president and those who work for him. If Congress resists doing its duty, out of a mixture of self-interest and cowardice, the American people have no choice but to try and hold the government's feet to the fire, demanding action with phone calls, protests, and, ultimately, votes. That is a democratic response to the failure of democracy.

Sitting back and letting shadowy, unaccountable agents of espionage do the job for us simply isn't an acceptable alternative.

Down that path lies the end of democracy in America.

No one is "cheering" anything. Fact is, he's lucky he's not on trial for treason.




CreativeDominant -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 9:33:03 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: heavyblinker

There's also this:

http://www.ibtimes.com/russia-worried-trump-will-be-killed-or-forced-office-2492072

The media is saying they're testing him, but it really makes me wonder if the cruise missile deployment/warship thing is supposed to be a warning to the US government not to impeach Trump. Considering everything that has happened, it really isn't outlandish to suggest that the president of the United States is being protected from his own government via threats from the Russian military.

So when the dark disturbing depths of this Russia thing are brought into the light and Trump is exposed and humiliated (anyone who doubts this is going to happen is kidding themselves), it's going to be a diplomatic nightmare for President Pence. Russia isn't just going to lie down and admit they did it, and who even knows what will even happen.

There seem to be A LOT of leaks on both sides... opposition to the DNC hacking/god knows what else from within Russia makes sense given the potential it has to cause serious conflict between two countries that were already on really bad terms. I keep wondering if there are people on both sides working together to try to get everyone out of this situation without starting a war.


Who's the paranoid conspiracy theorist now?




CreativeDominant -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 9:55:25 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Musicmystery


quote:

ORIGINAL: CreativeDominant

Then...there is this perspective...

The United States is much better off without Michael Flynn serving as national security adviser. But no one should be cheering the way he was brought down.

The whole episode is evidence of the precipitous and ongoing collapse of America's democratic institutions — not a sign of their resiliency. Flynn's ouster was a soft coup (or political assassination) engineered by anonymous intelligence community bureaucrats. The results might be salutary, but this isn't the way a liberal democracy is supposed to function.

Unelected intelligence analysts work for the president, not the other way around. Far too many Trump critics appear not to care that these intelligence agents leaked highly sensitive information to the press — mostly because Trump critics are pleased with the result. "Finally," they say, "someone took a stand to expose collusion between the Russians and a senior aide to the president!" It is indeed important that someone took such a stand. But it matters greatly who that someone is and how they take their stand. Members of the unelected, unaccountable intelligence community are not the right someone, especially when they target a senior aide to the president by leaking anonymously to newspapers the content of classified phone intercepts, where the unverified, unsubstantiated information can inflict politically fatal damage almost instantaneously.

Donald J. Trump ✔ @realDonaldTrump
The real story here is why are there so many illegal leaks coming out of Washington? Will these leaks be happening as I deal on N.Korea etc?
7:28 AM - 14 Feb 2017
22,366 22,366 Retweets

President Trump was roundly mocked among liberals for that tweet. But he is, in many ways, correct. These leaks are an enormous problem. And in a less polarized context, they would be recognized immediately for what they clearly are: an effort to manipulate public opinion for the sake of achieving a desired political outcome. It's weaponized spin.

This doesn't mean the outcome was wrong. I have no interest in defending Flynn, who appears to be an atrocious manager prone to favoring absurd conspiracy theories over more traditional forms of intelligence. He is just about the last person who should be giving the president advice about foreign policy. And for all I know, Flynn did exactly what the anonymous intelligence community leakers allege — promised the Russian ambassador during the transition that the incoming Trump administration would back off on sanctions proposed by the outgoing Obama administration.

But no matter what Flynn did, it is simply not the role of the deep state to target a man working in one of the political branches of the government by dishing to reporters about information it has gathered clandestinely. It is the role of elected members of Congress to conduct public investigations of alleged wrongdoing by public officials.

What if Congress won't act? What if both the Senate and the House of Representatives are held by the same party as the president and members of both chambers are reluctant to cross a newly elected head of the executive branch who enjoys overwhelming approval of his party's voters? In such a situation — our situation — shouldn't we hope the deep state will rise up to act responsibly to take down a member of the administration who may have broken the law?

The answer is an unequivocal no.

In a liberal democracy, how things happen is often as important as what happens. Procedures matter. So do rules and public accountability. The chaotic, dysfunctional Trump White House is placing the entire system under enormous strain. That's bad. But the answer isn't to counter it with equally irregular acts of sabotage — or with a disinformation campaign waged by nameless civil servants toiling away in the surveillance state.

As Eli Lake of Bloomberg News put it in an important article following Flynn's resignation,

Normally, intercepts of U.S. officials and citizens are some of the most tightly held government secrets. This is for good reason. Selectively disclosing details of private conversations monitored by the FBI or NSA gives the permanent state the power to destroy reputations from the cloak of anonymity. This is what police states do.

Those cheering the deep state torpedoing of Flynn are saying, in effect, that a police state is perfectly fine so long as it helps to bring down Trump.

It is the role of Congress to investigate the president and those who work for him. If Congress resists doing its duty, out of a mixture of self-interest and cowardice, the American people have no choice but to try and hold the government's feet to the fire, demanding action with phone calls, protests, and, ultimately, votes. That is a democratic response to the failure of democracy.

Sitting back and letting shadowy, unaccountable agents of espionage do the job for us simply isn't an acceptable alternative.

Down that path lies the end of democracy in America.

No one is "cheering" anything. Fact is, he's lucky he's not on trial for treason.
Really? Have you checked some of the posts? Posts suggesting Trump be removed for "the good of the country" along with some form of I "I told ya do" aren't celebrating what the poster has felt all along? That's why you see Whore Mods agreeing with the perspective cited but stating that...in Trumps case....thank God someone did what should not be done.




Musicmystery -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 10:01:12 AM)

Making shit up again.

Regime change was not the war crime.

Although yes, I opposed "pre-eminent invasion" as stupid and likely to cause the kinds of messes we're in now, trillions of dollars and thousands of lives later.




mnottertail -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 10:06:53 AM)

LOL, the nutsucker Il Douchebagger just killed the nutsucker Conway. He unfriended her on twitter.

Throw them nutsuckers under the bus nutsuckers, American patriots are coming for you.




mnottertail -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 10:11:02 AM)

http://www.palmerreport.com/opinion/donald-trumps-staff-will-start-cutting-russia-gate-deals-feds/1546/

LOL.

The death toll will be great among the nutsuckers, circlefelched as they are.




mnottertail -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 10:12:28 AM)

http://thehill.com/homenews/senate/319425-blunt-calls-for-exhaustive-investigation-into-trump-russia-connections

We have to save the office of the Presidency, nutsuckers.




Musicmystery -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 10:14:06 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: CreativeDominant


quote:

ORIGINAL: Musicmystery


quote:

ORIGINAL: CreativeDominant

Then...there is this perspective...

The United States is much better off without Michael Flynn serving as national security adviser. But no one should be cheering the way he was brought down.

The whole episode is evidence of the precipitous and ongoing collapse of America's democratic institutions — not a sign of their resiliency. Flynn's ouster was a soft coup (or political assassination) engineered by anonymous intelligence community bureaucrats. The results might be salutary, but this isn't the way a liberal democracy is supposed to function.

Unelected intelligence analysts work for the president, not the other way around. Far too many Trump critics appear not to care that these intelligence agents leaked highly sensitive information to the press — mostly because Trump critics are pleased with the result. "Finally," they say, "someone took a stand to expose collusion between the Russians and a senior aide to the president!" It is indeed important that someone took such a stand. But it matters greatly who that someone is and how they take their stand. Members of the unelected, unaccountable intelligence community are not the right someone, especially when they target a senior aide to the president by leaking anonymously to newspapers the content of classified phone intercepts, where the unverified, unsubstantiated information can inflict politically fatal damage almost instantaneously.

Donald J. Trump ✔ @realDonaldTrump
The real story here is why are there so many illegal leaks coming out of Washington? Will these leaks be happening as I deal on N.Korea etc?
7:28 AM - 14 Feb 2017
22,366 22,366 Retweets

President Trump was roundly mocked among liberals for that tweet. But he is, in many ways, correct. These leaks are an enormous problem. And in a less polarized context, they would be recognized immediately for what they clearly are: an effort to manipulate public opinion for the sake of achieving a desired political outcome. It's weaponized spin.

This doesn't mean the outcome was wrong. I have no interest in defending Flynn, who appears to be an atrocious manager prone to favoring absurd conspiracy theories over more traditional forms of intelligence. He is just about the last person who should be giving the president advice about foreign policy. And for all I know, Flynn did exactly what the anonymous intelligence community leakers allege — promised the Russian ambassador during the transition that the incoming Trump administration would back off on sanctions proposed by the outgoing Obama administration.

But no matter what Flynn did, it is simply not the role of the deep state to target a man working in one of the political branches of the government by dishing to reporters about information it has gathered clandestinely. It is the role of elected members of Congress to conduct public investigations of alleged wrongdoing by public officials.

What if Congress won't act? What if both the Senate and the House of Representatives are held by the same party as the president and members of both chambers are reluctant to cross a newly elected head of the executive branch who enjoys overwhelming approval of his party's voters? In such a situation — our situation — shouldn't we hope the deep state will rise up to act responsibly to take down a member of the administration who may have broken the law?

The answer is an unequivocal no.

In a liberal democracy, how things happen is often as important as what happens. Procedures matter. So do rules and public accountability. The chaotic, dysfunctional Trump White House is placing the entire system under enormous strain. That's bad. But the answer isn't to counter it with equally irregular acts of sabotage — or with a disinformation campaign waged by nameless civil servants toiling away in the surveillance state.

As Eli Lake of Bloomberg News put it in an important article following Flynn's resignation,

Normally, intercepts of U.S. officials and citizens are some of the most tightly held government secrets. This is for good reason. Selectively disclosing details of private conversations monitored by the FBI or NSA gives the permanent state the power to destroy reputations from the cloak of anonymity. This is what police states do.

Those cheering the deep state torpedoing of Flynn are saying, in effect, that a police state is perfectly fine so long as it helps to bring down Trump.

It is the role of Congress to investigate the president and those who work for him. If Congress resists doing its duty, out of a mixture of self-interest and cowardice, the American people have no choice but to try and hold the government's feet to the fire, demanding action with phone calls, protests, and, ultimately, votes. That is a democratic response to the failure of democracy.

Sitting back and letting shadowy, unaccountable agents of espionage do the job for us simply isn't an acceptable alternative.

Down that path lies the end of democracy in America.

No one is "cheering" anything. Fact is, he's lucky he's not on trial for treason.
Really? Have you checked some of the posts? Posts suggesting Trump be removed for "the good of the country" along with some form of I "I told ya do" aren't celebrating what the poster has felt all along? That's why you see Whore Mods agreeing with the perspective cited but stating that...in Trumps case....thank God someone did what should not be done.


I think Trump should be removed for the good of the country, and I'm no Pence supporter.

I'm not cheering it either. It's a disaster.




mnottertail -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 10:15:30 AM)

http://reverbpress.com/politics/wonkery/house-intelligence-committee-scoffs-at-flynn-investigation-pushes-to-investigate-fbi-instead/

Someone should go down there and coordinate policy or it would appear the nutsuckers are floundering in their own felch.




BoscoX -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 7:12:10 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Musicmystery
I think Trump should be removed for the good of the country, and I'm no Pence supporter.

I'm not cheering it either. It's a disaster.


No worries, we hold elections every four years just like clockwork. Wait, totalitarian alt left trash like you can't stand for free and fair elections, can you

Never mind




thompsonx -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 7:33:50 PM)


ORIGINAL: CreativeDominant

Then...there is this perspective...

The United States is much better off without Michael Flynn serving as national security adviser. But no one should be cheering the way he was brought down.

The whole episode is evidence of the precipitous and ongoing collapse of America's democratic institutions — not a sign of their resiliency. Flynn's ouster was a soft coup (or political assassination) engineered by anonymous intelligence community bureaucrats. The results might be salutary, but this isn't the way a liberal democracy is supposed to function.

Unelected intelligence analysts work for the president, not the other way around. Far too many Trump critics appear not to care that these intelligence agents leaked highly sensitive information to the press — mostly because Trump critics are pleased with the result. "Finally," they say, "someone took a stand to expose collusion between the Russians and a senior aide to the president!" It is indeed important that someone took such a stand. But it matters greatly who that someone is and how they take their stand. Members of the unelected, unaccountable intelligence community are not the right someone, especially when they target a senior aide to the president by leaking anonymously to newspapers the content of classified phone intercepts, where the unverified, unsubstantiated information can inflict politically fatal damage almost instantaneously.

Donald J. Trump ✔ @realDonaldTrump
The real story here is why are there so many illegal leaks coming out of Washington? Will these leaks be happening as I deal on N.Korea etc?
7:28 AM - 14 Feb 2017
22,366 22,366 Retweets

President Trump was roundly mocked among liberals for that tweet. But he is, in many ways, correct. These leaks are an enormous problem. And in a less polarized context, they would be recognized immediately for what they clearly are: an effort to manipulate public opinion for the sake of achieving a desired political outcome. It's weaponized spin.

This doesn't mean the outcome was wrong. I have no interest in defending Flynn, who appears to be an atrocious manager prone to favoring absurd conspiracy theories over more traditional forms of intelligence. He is just about the last person who should be giving the president advice about foreign policy. And for all I know, Flynn did exactly what the anonymous intelligence community leakers allege — promised the Russian ambassador during the transition that the incoming Trump administration would back off on sanctions proposed by the outgoing Obama administration.

But no matter what Flynn did, it is simply not the role of the deep state to target a man working in one of the political branches of the government by dishing to reporters about information it has gathered clandestinely. It is the role of elected members of Congress to conduct public investigations of alleged wrongdoing by public officials.

What if Congress won't act? What if both the Senate and the House of Representatives are held by the same party as the president and members of both chambers are reluctant to cross a newly elected head of the executive branch who enjoys overwhelming approval of his party's voters? In such a situation — our situation — shouldn't we hope the deep state will rise up to act responsibly to take down a member of the administration who may have broken the law?

The answer is an unequivocal no.

In a liberal democracy, how things happen is often as important as what happens. Procedures matter. So do rules and public accountability. The chaotic, dysfunctional Trump White House is placing the entire system under enormous strain. That's bad. But the answer isn't to counter it with equally irregular acts of sabotage — or with a disinformation campaign waged by nameless civil servants toiling away in the surveillance state.

As Eli Lake of Bloomberg News put it in an important article following Flynn's resignation,

Normally, intercepts of U.S. officials and citizens are some of the most tightly held government secrets. This is for good reason. Selectively disclosing details of private conversations monitored by the FBI or NSA gives the permanent state the power to destroy reputations from the cloak of anonymity. This is what police states do.

Those cheering the deep state torpedoing of Flynn are saying, in effect, that a police state is perfectly fine so long as it helps to bring down Trump.

It is the role of Congress to investigate the president and those who work for him. If Congress resists doing its duty, out of a mixture of self-interest and cowardice, the American people have no choice but to try and hold the government's feet to the fire, demanding action with phone calls, protests, and, ultimately, votes. That is a democratic response to the failure of democracy.

Sitting back and letting shadowy, unaccountable agents of espionage do the job for us simply isn't an acceptable alternative.

Down that path lies the end of democracy in America.

According to you the truth does not matter. Now this is something we have known about you for quite some time. I applaud you for your candor in admitting that form is far more important than function.




heavyblinker -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 8:02:29 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: BoscoX


quote:

ORIGINAL: Musicmystery
I think Trump should be removed for the good of the country, and I'm no Pence supporter.

I'm not cheering it either. It's a disaster.


No worries, we hold elections every four years just like clockwork. Wait, totalitarian alt left trash like you can't stand for free and fair elections, can you

Never mind


You don't even seem to realize that you're openly declaring that impeachment should never be an option, that presidents shouldn't be held to any professional standards, are above the law and should have absolute power over everyone in the government so long as they can convince idiots like you to vote them into office.

This is why they say that Trump supporters are authoritarians.

Of course, you would never suggest that Obama should have held the same amount of power you want to give to Trump.

Now you can ignore what I said and bitch about Hillary and Obama to avoid confronting the truth.




heavyblinker -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 8:13:53 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: CreativeDominant
Who's the paranoid conspiracy theorist now?


So you think that the timing of this is completely random?

US intelligence complains of endless leaks to Russia coming from the White House, Russia interfered with the election, a dossier compiled by a professional Mi6 agent surfaces suggesting Trump is in Putin's pocket, Trump INEXPLICABLY refuses to say anything negative about Russia or Putin and in fact promises to reverse sanctions put in place by Obama (oh, and no Russian response to the sanctions either)... the media explodes because Flynn is forced to resign because of Russia ties, and then for no reason Putin suddenly decides to 'test' Trump the very next day?

Come on...




heavyblinker -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 8:26:54 PM)

Oh yeah, and Trump still hasn't responded to Russia's aggressive moves or said anything about the Russian warship.
The guy who does everything he can to make sure the entire world knows how much he hates SNL is refusing to make any comments about Russian aggression.

It's absurd that anyone could possibly look at this and think that it's all just business as usual.




heavyblinker -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 8:32:42 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx
According to you the truth does not matter. Now this is something we have known about you for quite some time. I applaud you for your candor in admitting that form is far more important than function.


When Hillary's email leaks were splattered all over the media, it was a good thing because the people deserve to know... unless it was information about Trump-- nobody needed to know that or it was lies.

Now that the piece of shit's corruption and lies and weaknesses as a leader are being exposed, it's the end of democracy, even though Trump doesn't give a shit about democracy anyways.

Just absolutely amazing levels of hypocrisy.




tamaka -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 9:45:50 PM)

I think as long as we know that they were communicating why don't they tell us what they were talking about.




heavyblinker -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 9:52:05 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: tamaka
I think as long as we know that they were communicating why don't they tell us what they were talking about.


I know you're used to right wing news outlets and Trump tweets where people just say whatever they want, but believe it or not when it comes to Intelligence it's pretty important to make sure you know what's real and what isn't.




tamaka -> RE: Trump administration chaos--Michael Flynn resigns! (2/15/2017 10:03:20 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: heavyblinker

quote:

ORIGINAL: tamaka
I think as long as we know that they were communicating why don't they tell us what they were talking about.


I know you're used to right wing news outlets and Trump tweets where people just say whatever they want, but believe it or not when it comes to Intelligence it's pretty important to make sure you know what's real and what isn't.


What's your point? I am being serious. If they can tell us there were communications between Trump campaign and Russis, why can't they tell us anything about them. What was discussed, and who specifically discussed it.




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