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Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Trump is a crook ()
Date: July 13, 2018 12:25PM

Something else for Donald Fucktard to skip over while bowlng to Putin’s demands.

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Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Closer and. closer..: ()
Date: July 13, 2018 12:35PM

The dominos keep falling...

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Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: So where is the Trump link? ()
Date: July 13, 2018 01:06PM

Been waiting to see the link to Trump. Seems it would have been revealed by now. Oh, I know, just wait, right?

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Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Guilty, guilty, guilty ()
Date: July 13, 2018 01:09PM

He's in it up to his neck. From long before the election.

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Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: where's the case? ()
Date: July 13, 2018 01:41PM

Guilty, guilty, guilty Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> He's in it up to his neck. From long before the
> election.


And he's been under investigation for nearly two years. If he's in it up to his neck, what is taking so long?

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Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Guilty, guilty, guilty ()
Date: July 13, 2018 01:46PM

Ask Ken Starr, douchebag. Then again, what would be the point. You assholes are
In the bag for Trump no matter what. That’s why you are assholes.

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Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: trump continues to win.... ()
Date: July 13, 2018 01:51PM

lol...this occurred while Obama was president. It has nothing to do with Trump.
The thing is, Obama knew about the Russian hacking.
Also, remember that Hillary campaign did not turn her servers over to the FBI. They hired an outside business to do that.
Why is that?
Bottom line. This helps Trump. It shows again that he had nothing to do with any Russian interference.
So, all this money Mueller is costing taxpayers has amounted to nothing to show collusion or obstruction by Trump.
Sad.

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Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: show me ()
Date: July 13, 2018 01:56PM

Guilty, guilty, guilty Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Ask Ken Starr, douchebag. Then again, what would
> be the point. You assholes are
> In the bag for Trump no matter what. That’s why
> you are assholes.


Actually, show me the proof and I say string him up for treason. You, on the other hand, have convicted him without a shred of evidence.

I'm not even a huge Trump fan, but I like due process and seeing the evidence before issuing a sentence.

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Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Such a sorry ass ()
Date: July 13, 2018 02:03PM

Horseshit. You see the proof plainly in front of you and deny it. Bought and paid for dimbulb.

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Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: show me ()
Date: July 13, 2018 02:09PM

Such a sorry ass Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Horseshit. You see the proof plainly in front of
> you and deny it. Bought and paid for dimbulb.


Yup, just another shill with no facts to back up your claims. Dog shit on the bottom of a shoe has more intelligence than you.

Put your cards out on the table.

The Obama administration investigated the matter for more than half a year and couldn't come up with shit. Are you saying the Obama administration was incompetent or covering up for Trump?

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Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Orange Ass Clown! ()
Date: July 13, 2018 02:25PM

show me Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Such a sorry ass Wrote:
> --------------------------------------------------
> -----
> > Horseshit. You see the proof plainly in front
> of
> > you and deny it. Bought and paid for dimbulb.
>
>
> Yup, just another shill with no facts to back up
> your claims. Dog shit on the bottom of a shoe has
> more intelligence than you.
>
> Put your cards out on the table.
>
> The Obama administration investigated the matter
> for more than half a year and couldn't come up
> with shit. Are you saying the Obama
> administration was incompetent or covering up for
> Trump?

Know Trump links to Russia...


Donald Trump: Not only does his past and current team have ties to Russia, but the President himself also does. He has traveled to Russia extensively, done business there often, and has ties to Russian interests. For example, in 2008 he made a real estate sale to Russian billionaire, Dmitry Rybolovlev. Trump bought a Palm Beach mansion in 2004 during a bankruptcy sale for $41 million, and less than four years later, without ever having moved in, Trump sold the mansion to Rybolovlev for $95 million. In a May 2017 meeting in the Oval Office, he revealed highly classified information to the Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak and foreign minister Sergei Lavrov. US media was banned from this meeting, but a Russian photographer was allowed in the session, later releasing these photos on the Russian state-owned news.

Michael Flynn: Flynn, President Trump’s former National Security Advisor, was asked to resign just weeks after he was sworn in. His resignation came after it leaked that he misled Vice President Mike Pence about his communications with Russian officials, specifically Russian Ambassador to the U.S. Sergey Kislyak, before President Trump’s inauguration. In these communications, Flynn discussed sanctions imposed by the Obama administration on Russia – while President Obama was still in office. Earlier last year, he stated that the U.S. needs to respect that “Russia has its own national security strategy, and we have to try to figure out: How do we combine the United States’ national security strategy along with Russia’s national security strategy,” raising troubling questions. In 2015, Flynn delivered remarks at a Moscow gala honoring RT, Russia’s propaganda arm, where he was seated next to Putin. Flynn accepted $33,750 for this speech by RT, and did not correctly report the payment, thus concealing payment from a foreign government, and possibly violating the law in the meantime. Flynn continued to appear on RT as a foreign policy analyst. Altogether, Flynn was paid more than $67,000 by Russian companies before the 2016 presidential election.

Jeff Sessions: Sessions, President Trump’s Attorney General, had two conversations with Ambassador Kislyak during the 2016 presidential election. However, during later confirmation hearings, he claimed that he “did not have communications with the Russians” when prompted by Senator Al Franken. Once reports of his meetings with Kislyak surfaced, Sessions recused himself from any investigation into Russia’s interference in our 2016 presidential election. Many officials are continuing to call for his resignation.

Rex Tillerson: Tillerson, President Trump’s former Secretary of State, worked on energy projects in Russia for two decades during his career at Exxon. He has publicly described his “very close relationship” with President Putin and was awarded Russia’s Order of Friendship in 2013, the highest state honor possible for a foreigner.

Jared Kushner: Kushner is President Trump's son-in-law and current Senior Advisor. Along with Michael Flynn, Kushner met with Ambassador Kislyak during the Presidential transition. The White House later acknowledged that following that meeting, Ambassador Kislyak requested a second meeting, which Kushner had a deputy attend. However, at Kislyak's request, Kushner did later meet with Sergey Gorkov, the head of Russia's state-owned development bank, who has close ties to President Putin. The U.S. placed this bank on its sanctions list following Russia's annexation of Crimea. The Senate Intelligence Committee plans to question Kushner about his meetings with Russian officials. The New York Times recently reported that Kusher failed to disclose dozens of contacts with foreign leaders on his application for top-secret security clearance -- one of those contacts being Ambassador Kislyak.

Donald Trump, Jr.: Trump, Jr., President Trump’s son, met with Fabien Baussart, a leader of a Syrian opposition group backed by the Russian government, and others about how the U.S. could work with Russia on the Syrian conflict weeks before Donald Trump was elected President. He has also been quoted saying that his father’s businesses “see a lot of money pouring in from Russia”, and that he had visited Russia on business over a half-dozen times. In June 2016, he met with a Russian billionaire, Emin Agalarov, under the premise that Emin had “official documents and information that would incriminate Hillary and her dealings with Russia” from the Crown prosecutor of Russia, and that this was part of “Russia and its government’s support for Mr. Trump.”

Paul Manafort: Manafort, who has business connections to Russia and Ukraine, was hired as Trump’s campaign manager in March 2016. He then resigned in August of the same year, after reports surfaced that suggested he had received $12.7 million from Victor Yanukovych, Ukraine’s pro-Russia former president. It was recently revealed by AP that Manafort proposed in a strategy plan from as early as June 2005 that he would work to influence politics, business deals, and media inside the U.S. and Europe to benefit Putin. This plan was pitched to Oleg Deripaska, a "Russian aluminum magnate" with close ties to Putin. Manafort eventually signed a $10 million contract with Deripaska in early 2006. The Trump Administration and Manafort have both said that Manafort never worked for Russian interests. Since the FBI confirmed in a House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence hearing on March 20 that investigators are examining whether the Trump campaign and its associates coordinated with Russia to interfere in the 2016 election, the White House has made attempts to distance itself from Manafort, claiming that he played "a very limited role" in the campaign, despite his clear leadership role as campaign chairman leading up to the Republican National Convention. On October 27, 2017, Manafort was indicted by a federal grand jury for conspiracy against the United States, among other charges.

Carter Page: Page, hired as a foreign policy advisor to Trump’s 2016 campaign, was known to have deep ties to Gazprom, Russia’s state-owned gas company. In July 2016, a month after Russia's DNC meddling was reveled in the press, Page traveled to Moscow to make a speech. The Trump campaign approved this trip, saying he would not be traveling as an official representative of the campaign. In the speech he delivered in Moscow, he criticized American foreign policy as being hypocritical – remarks which ultimately led to his resignation from Trump’s campaign. Before joining the campaign, he was a businessman “of no particular renown” working in the Moscow branch of Merrill Lynch before creating his own consulting agency. Previously, Trump identified Page as one of a small group of advisors helping to craft his foreign policy platform during the campaign. However, President Trump’s staff now claims that “Carter Page is an individual who the [then] president-elect does not know.” Page met with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak at the Republican National Convention in 2016. Buzzfeed recently reported that Page had met with a Russian intelligence agent named Victor Podobnyy in 2013, who was reportedly trying to recruit Page. Podobnyy was later charged by the U.S. for acting as an unregistered agent of a foreign government.

Tevfik Arif: Arif, who founded Bayrock, a real estate group known to have many deals with Trump, had a 17-year career in the Soviet Ministry of Commerce and Trade.

Roger Stone: Stone, a former advisor to Trump, had back channel conversations with Julian Assange, the founder of Wikileaks, which is the organization that published the DNC leaks and Podesta emails during the 2016 elections. He also had exchanges with Guccifer 2.0 -- a hacker believed to be linked to Russia involved in the 2016 hacking of Democratic National Committee emails -- in August 2016. Also in August, he tweeted "it will soon [be] Podesta's time in the barrell." About two months later, Wikileaks began posting John Podesta's emails.

Felix Sater: Sater, formerly a senior advisor to the Trump Organization, is a Russian-born Bayrock associate with extensive involvement in organized crime. In 2015, he wrote an email to Trump’s lawyer, Cohen, referencing then-candidate Trump saying: “Our boy can become President of the USA and we can engineer it. I will get all of Putins team to buy in on this, I will manage this process.”

Alex Shnaider: Born in Russia, Shnaider co-financed a real estate project with Trump. Shnaider’s father-in-law, Boris J. Birshtein, was a close business associate of Sergei Mikhaylov, the head of one of the largest branches of the Russian mob.

JD Gordon: Gordon, a national security advisor for the Trump campaign met with Russian Ambassador to the US Sergey Kislyak during the Republican National Convention in Cleveland in July, who he told he would like to improve US - Russia relations. He advocated for a change to the GOP national platform to make their policies more pro-Russian and less pro-Ukraine, a change which Gordon said was directly supported by then-candidate Donald Trump.

Wilbur Ross: Ross, President Trump’s Secretary of Commerce, was the top shareholder in the Bank of Cyprus, an institution with deep Russian ties and investors who made fortunes under Russian President Vladimir Putin. According to McClatchy, the banking system in Cyprus, because of its dependence on Russian investors, is money-laundering concern for the US State Department. Ross served as the vice chairman of the board of directors for the Bank of Cyprus. The second largest investor in the Bank of Cyprus was Viktor Vekselberg, who once served on the Russian state-owned oil giant Rosneft, which is under partial sanction by the US Treasury Department. Vekselberg is known to have a close relationship with Vladimir Putin. In February, six senators sent a letter to Ross inquiring about his relationship to Vekselberg. The senators also inquired about Ross’s relationship with Vladimir Strzhalkovsky, who is also linked to the Bank of Cyprus, was a former KGB agent, and is believed to be a Putin associate.

Erik Prince: Prince, who had no formal role with the Trump campaign or transition team, had a secret meeting with a Russian close to President Putin, arranged by the United Arab Emirates, the Washington Post recently reported. The meeting reportedly took place around January 11, 2017 on the Seychelles islands, and was allegedly part of an effort to establish a back-channel line of communication between Russia and then President-elect Trump. The UAE agreed to facilitate the meeting in order to explore Russia's willingness to curtail its relationship with Iran. Prince was a supporter of Trump, and has ties to Steve Bannon and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, who is his sister. He was also seen in Trump transition offices in December.

Michael Cohen: Cohen is a longtime associate of President Trump’s and is his current personal lawyer. He has come under scrutiny for pursuing a Trump Tower deal in Moscow while Trump was campaigning to be President, and for alleged meetings with Russian officials in Prague. In January 2017, he met with a Ukrainian opposition politician and Felix Sater to discuss a plan to give Russia long term control over Ukraine and lift sanctions against Russia. They then put this plan in a sealed envelope and left it in the office of then National Security Advisor Michael Flynn.

George Papadopoulos: Papadopoulos was a foreign policy advisor for the Trump Campaign. On October 27, 2017 it was revealed that Papadopoulos had plead guilty to making a false statement to federal investigators "about the timing, extent and nature of his relationships and interactions with certain foreign nationals whom he understood to have close connections with senior Russian officials." While working for the Trump Campaign, Papadopoulos met with an overseas professor who told him about the Russians possessing "dirt" on Hillary Clinton in the form of "thousands of emails." He repeatedly sought to use his connections to arrange a meeting between the campaign and Russian government officials. On March 31, 2016, at a foreign policy meeting with Trump and other campaign advisers, Papadopoulos shared that he could help arrange a meeting between Trump and Putin. He sent multiple emails to other members of the campaign about his contact with "the Russians" and "outreach to Russia."

Russians all over this bitch!

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Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: You don't get it.. ()
Date: July 13, 2018 02:33PM

Orange Ass Clown! Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> show me Wrote:
> --------------------------------------------------
> -----
> > Such a sorry ass Wrote:
> >
> --------------------------------------------------
>
> > -----
> > > Horseshit. You see the proof plainly in front
> > of
> > > you and deny it. Bought and paid for dimbulb.
> >
> >
> > Yup, just another shill with no facts to back
> up
> > your claims. Dog shit on the bottom of a shoe
> has
> > more intelligence than you.
> >
> > Put your cards out on the table.
> >
> > The Obama administration investigated the
> matter
> > for more than half a year and couldn't come up
> > with shit. Are you saying the Obama
> > administration was incompetent or covering up
> for
> > Trump?
>
> Know Trump links to Russia...
>
>
> Donald Trump: Not only does his past and current
> team have ties to Russia, but the President
> himself also does. He has traveled to Russia
> extensively, done business there often, and has
> ties to Russian interests. For example, in 2008 he
> made a real estate sale to Russian billionaire,
> Dmitry Rybolovlev. Trump bought a Palm Beach
> mansion in 2004 during a bankruptcy sale for $41
> million, and less than four years later, without
> ever having moved in, Trump sold the mansion to
> Rybolovlev for $95 million. In a May 2017 meeting
> in the Oval Office, he revealed highly classified
> information to the Russian ambassador Sergey
> Kislyak and foreign minister Sergei Lavrov. US
> media was banned from this meeting, but a Russian
> photographer was allowed in the session, later
> releasing these photos on the Russian state-owned
> news.
>
> Michael Flynn: Flynn, President Trump’s former
> National Security Advisor, was asked to resign
> just weeks after he was sworn in. His resignation
> came after it leaked that he misled Vice President
> Mike Pence about his communications with Russian
> officials, specifically Russian Ambassador to the
> U.S. Sergey Kislyak, before President Trump’s
> inauguration. In these communications, Flynn
> discussed sanctions imposed by the Obama
> administration on Russia – while President Obama
> was still in office. Earlier last year, he stated
> that the U.S. needs to respect that “Russia has
> its own national security strategy, and we have to
> try to figure out: How do we combine the United
> States’ national security strategy along with
> Russia’s national security strategy,” raising
> troubling questions. In 2015, Flynn delivered
> remarks at a Moscow gala honoring RT, Russia’s
> propaganda arm, where he was seated next to Putin.
> Flynn accepted $33,750 for this speech by RT, and
> did not correctly report the payment, thus
> concealing payment from a foreign government, and
> possibly violating the law in the meantime. Flynn
> continued to appear on RT as a foreign policy
> analyst. Altogether, Flynn was paid more than
> $67,000 by Russian companies before the 2016
> presidential election.
>
> Jeff Sessions: Sessions, President Trump’s
> Attorney General, had two conversations with
> Ambassador Kislyak during the 2016 presidential
> election. However, during later confirmation
> hearings, he claimed that he “did not have
> communications with the Russians” when prompted
> by Senator Al Franken. Once reports of his
> meetings with Kislyak surfaced, Sessions recused
> himself from any investigation into Russia’s
> interference in our 2016 presidential election.
> Many officials are continuing to call for his
> resignation.
>
> Rex Tillerson: Tillerson, President Trump’s
> former Secretary of State, worked on energy
> projects in Russia for two decades during his
> career at Exxon. He has publicly described his
> “very close relationship” with President Putin
> and was awarded Russia’s Order of Friendship in
> 2013, the highest state honor possible for a
> foreigner.
>
> Jared Kushner: Kushner is President Trump's
> son-in-law and current Senior Advisor. Along with
> Michael Flynn, Kushner met with Ambassador Kislyak
> during the Presidential transition. The White
> House later acknowledged that following that
> meeting, Ambassador Kislyak requested a second
> meeting, which Kushner had a deputy attend.
> However, at Kislyak's request, Kushner did later
> meet with Sergey Gorkov, the head of Russia's
> state-owned development bank, who has close ties
> to President Putin. The U.S. placed this bank on
> its sanctions list following Russia's annexation
> of Crimea. The Senate Intelligence Committee plans
> to question Kushner about his meetings with
> Russian officials. The New York Times recently
> reported that Kusher failed to disclose dozens of
> contacts with foreign leaders on his application
> for top-secret security clearance -- one of those
> contacts being Ambassador Kislyak.
>
> Donald Trump, Jr.: Trump, Jr., President Trump’s
> son, met with Fabien Baussart, a leader of a
> Syrian opposition group backed by the Russian
> government, and others about how the U.S. could
> work with Russia on the Syrian conflict weeks
> before Donald Trump was elected President. He has
> also been quoted saying that his father’s
> businesses “see a lot of money pouring in from
> Russia”, and that he had visited Russia on
> business over a half-dozen times. In June 2016, he
> met with a Russian billionaire, Emin Agalarov,
> under the premise that Emin had “official
> documents and information that would incriminate
> Hillary and her dealings with Russia” from the
> Crown prosecutor of Russia, and that this was part
> of “Russia and its government’s support for
> Mr. Trump.”
>
> Paul Manafort: Manafort, who has business
> connections to Russia and Ukraine, was hired as
> Trump’s campaign manager in March 2016. He then
> resigned in August of the same year, after reports
> surfaced that suggested he had received $12.7
> million from Victor Yanukovych, Ukraine’s
> pro-Russia former president. It was recently
> revealed by AP that Manafort proposed in a
> strategy plan from as early as June 2005 that he
> would work to influence politics, business deals,
> and media inside the U.S. and Europe to benefit
> Putin. This plan was pitched to Oleg Deripaska, a
> "Russian aluminum magnate" with close ties to
> Putin. Manafort eventually signed a $10 million
> contract with Deripaska in early 2006. The Trump
> Administration and Manafort have both said that
> Manafort never worked for Russian interests. Since
> the FBI confirmed in a House Permanent Select
> Committee on Intelligence hearing on March 20 that
> investigators are examining whether the Trump
> campaign and its associates coordinated with
> Russia to interfere in the 2016 election, the
> White House has made attempts to distance itself
> from Manafort, claiming that he played "a very
> limited role" in the campaign, despite his clear
> leadership role as campaign chairman leading up to
> the Republican National Convention. On October 27,
> 2017, Manafort was indicted by a federal grand
> jury for conspiracy against the United States,
> among other charges.
>
> Carter Page: Page, hired as a foreign policy
> advisor to Trump’s 2016 campaign, was known to
> have deep ties to Gazprom, Russia’s state-owned
> gas company. In July 2016, a month after Russia's
> DNC meddling was reveled in the press, Page
> traveled to Moscow to make a speech. The Trump
> campaign approved this trip, saying he would not
> be traveling as an official representative of the
> campaign. In the speech he delivered in Moscow, he
> criticized American foreign policy as being
> hypocritical – remarks which ultimately led to
> his resignation from Trump’s campaign. Before
> joining the campaign, he was a businessman “of
> no particular renown” working in the Moscow
> branch of Merrill Lynch before creating his own
> consulting agency. Previously, Trump identified
> Page as one of a small group of advisors helping
> to craft his foreign policy platform during the
> campaign. However, President Trump’s staff now
> claims that “Carter Page is an individual who
> the [then] president-elect does not know.” Page
> met with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak at the
> Republican National Convention in 2016. Buzzfeed
> recently reported that Page had met with a Russian
> intelligence agent named Victor Podobnyy in 2013,
> who was reportedly trying to recruit Page.
> Podobnyy was later charged by the U.S. for acting
> as an unregistered agent of a foreign government.
>
> Tevfik Arif: Arif, who founded Bayrock, a real
> estate group known to have many deals with Trump,
> had a 17-year career in the Soviet Ministry of
> Commerce and Trade.
>
> Roger Stone: Stone, a former advisor to Trump, had
> back channel conversations with Julian Assange,
> the founder of Wikileaks, which is the
> organization that published the DNC leaks and
> Podesta emails during the 2016 elections. He also
> had exchanges with Guccifer 2.0 -- a hacker
> believed to be linked to Russia involved in the
> 2016 hacking of Democratic National Committee
> emails -- in August 2016. Also in August, he
> tweeted "it will soon [be] Podesta's time in the
> barrell." About two months later, Wikileaks began
> posting John Podesta's emails.
>
> Felix Sater: Sater, formerly a senior advisor to
> the Trump Organization, is a Russian-born Bayrock
> associate with extensive involvement in organized
> crime. In 2015, he wrote an email to Trump’s
> lawyer, Cohen, referencing then-candidate Trump
> saying: “Our boy can become President of the USA
> and we can engineer it. I will get all of Putins
> team to buy in on this, I will manage this
> process.”
>
> Alex Shnaider: Born in Russia, Shnaider
> co-financed a real estate project with Trump.
> Shnaider’s father-in-law, Boris J. Birshtein,
> was a close business associate of Sergei
> Mikhaylov, the head of one of the largest branches
> of the Russian mob.
>
> JD Gordon: Gordon, a national security advisor for
> the Trump campaign met with Russian Ambassador to
> the US Sergey Kislyak during the Republican
> National Convention in Cleveland in July, who he
> told he would like to improve US - Russia
> relations. He advocated for a change to the GOP
> national platform to make their policies more
> pro-Russian and less pro-Ukraine, a change which
> Gordon said was directly supported by
> then-candidate Donald Trump.
>
> Wilbur Ross: Ross, President Trump’s Secretary
> of Commerce, was the top shareholder in the Bank
> of Cyprus, an institution with deep Russian ties
> and investors who made fortunes under Russian
> President Vladimir Putin. According to McClatchy,
> the banking system in Cyprus, because of its
> dependence on Russian investors, is
> money-laundering concern for the US State
> Department. Ross served as the vice chairman of
> the board of directors for the Bank of Cyprus. The
> second largest investor in the Bank of Cyprus was
> Viktor Vekselberg, who once served on the Russian
> state-owned oil giant Rosneft, which is under
> partial sanction by the US Treasury Department.
> Vekselberg is known to have a close relationship
> with Vladimir Putin. In February, six senators
> sent a letter to Ross inquiring about his
> relationship to Vekselberg. The senators also
> inquired about Ross’s relationship with Vladimir
> Strzhalkovsky, who is also linked to the Bank of
> Cyprus, was a former KGB agent, and is believed to
> be a Putin associate.
>
> Erik Prince: Prince, who had no formal role with
> the Trump campaign or transition team, had a
> secret meeting with a Russian close to President
> Putin, arranged by the United Arab Emirates, the
> Washington Post recently reported. The meeting
> reportedly took place around January 11, 2017 on
> the Seychelles islands, and was allegedly part of
> an effort to establish a back-channel line of
> communication between Russia and then
> President-elect Trump. The UAE agreed to
> facilitate the meeting in order to explore
> Russia's willingness to curtail its relationship
> with Iran. Prince was a supporter of Trump, and
> has ties to Steve Bannon and Education Secretary
> Betsy DeVos, who is his sister. He was also seen
> in Trump transition offices in December.
>
> Michael Cohen: Cohen is a longtime associate of
> President Trump’s and is his current personal
> lawyer. He has come under scrutiny for pursuing a
> Trump Tower deal in Moscow while Trump was
> campaigning to be President, and for alleged
> meetings with Russian officials in Prague. In
> January 2017, he met with a Ukrainian opposition
> politician and Felix Sater to discuss a plan to
> give Russia long term control over Ukraine and
> lift sanctions against Russia. They then put this
> plan in a sealed envelope and left it in the
> office of then National Security Advisor Michael
> Flynn.
>
> George Papadopoulos: Papadopoulos was a foreign
> policy advisor for the Trump Campaign. On October
> 27, 2017 it was revealed that Papadopoulos had
> plead guilty to making a false statement to
> federal investigators "about the timing, extent
> and nature of his relationships and interactions
> with certain foreign nationals whom he understood
> to have close connections with senior Russian
> officials." While working for the Trump Campaign,
> Papadopoulos met with an overseas professor who
> told him about the Russians possessing "dirt" on
> Hillary Clinton in the form of "thousands of
> emails." He repeatedly sought to use his
> connections to arrange a meeting between the
> campaign and Russian government officials. On
> March 31, 2016, at a foreign policy meeting with
> Trump and other campaign advisers, Papadopoulos
> shared that he could help arrange a meeting
> between Trump and Putin. He sent multiple emails
> to other members of the campaign about his contact
> with "the Russians" and "outreach to Russia."
>
> Russians all over this bitch!


Guilty by association?

Not a crime to have business dealings with Russia, ask Hillary and Podesta.

Now where is the link to election meddling? Not some obstruction or process crime by a Trump associate. Where's the beef?

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: GOPurge! ()
Date: July 13, 2018 02:39PM

^^^ You are missing the point. The indictment references several Americans (not by name) who received the hacked information - including a U.S. Congressman.

Those will be the next indictments.

This is the end of the GOP.

Mueller investigation: 12 new indictments, hackers spoke to 'senior members' of Trump's campaign.

Will Trump defect to Russia?

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Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Google and obama ()
Date: July 13, 2018 02:46PM

Those who dont remember the past are condemned to repeat it....

Obammys in bed w google.

“Between January 2009 and October 2015, Google staffers gathered at the White House on 427 separate occasions. All told, 182 White House employees and 169 Google employees attended the meetings, with participation from almost every domestic policy and national security player in the West Wing.”

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Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Orange Ass Clown! ()
Date: July 13, 2018 02:54PM

^^^ Seems you are losing so gotta play the Obama card... nice deflection.

You are missing the point. The indictment references several Americans (not by name) who received the hacked information - including a U.S. Congressman.

Those will be the next indictments. This is the end of the GOP.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: pathetic prog bitches ()
Date: July 13, 2018 02:59PM

Orange Ass Clown! Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> ^^^ Seems you are losing so gotta play the Obama
> card... nice deflection.
>
> You are missing the point. The indictment
> references several Americans (not by name) who
> received the hacked information - including a U.S.
> Congressman.
>
> Those will be the next indictments. This is the
> end of the GOP.


Hey Trump get ready to pull the football out from under this jackass again and watch him go flying up and land on his head.....again.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Nigger lovers anonymous ()
Date: July 13, 2018 03:08PM

Orange Ass Clown! Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> ^^^ Seems you are losing so gotta play the Obama
> card... nice deflection.
>
Hillary lost because she’s a lying cunt NOT bc the election was “hacked.”
While the FBI has suffered from former employees: comey, Mc Cabe and that dick Strzok, America will realize that collusion against candidate Trump, will hit so much harder and closer to home.
Mueller’s “investigation” is tugging at yarn. What’s important is they illegally tapped Trumps campaign based on the Steele dossier. W/o the Steele dossier AND ANTI-Trump sentiment, that’s the BIGGER issue.
President Trump was correct all along about it being a witch hunt.

Why are you against President Trump? Because you are easily influenced by fake news.

Some poster was correct about the influence of Google in Obama’s term. How an anti trust lawsuit vs Google just went away. How data on millions of Americans was used for his second term win.
Obama is not the MESSIAH you thought he was.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Trump is a traitor ()
Date: July 13, 2018 03:20PM

^^^ It’s that simple.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Inquisitive One ()
Date: July 13, 2018 03:46PM

Such a sorry ass Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Horseshit. You see the proof plainly in front of
> you and deny it. Bought and paid for dimbulb.

Interesting philosophy!!! Why read a newspaper or watch news coverage when you can just plain make the shit up!

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: see if you can deflect this ()
Date: July 13, 2018 06:38PM

Orange Ass Clown! Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> ^^^ Seems you are losing so gotta play the Obama
> card... nice deflection.
>
> You are missing the point. The indictment
> references several Americans (not by name) who
> received the hacked information - including a U.S.
> Congressman.
>
> Those will be the next indictments. This is the
> end of the GOP.


The sad thing for you, is that the sky is about to fall on your house and you don’t even know it.

The court filing does not name the Congressional candidate involved in the information transaction or their party affiliation.

On Aug. 15, 2016, the date Mueller's indictment suggests the request was made "on or about," the Guccifer 2.0 blog posted a stolen Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) memo.

The memo points out possible vulnerabilities in the campaign of Annette Taddeo (D), who at the time was facing former Rep. Joe Garcia (D) in a heated Florida Democratic primary to challenge incumbent Rep. Carlos Curbelo (R) in the 2016 election cycle.

More Democratic collusion!

More like end of the Democrats.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Hi yo jo mo ()
Date: July 13, 2018 06:44PM

Penis
Attachments:
IMG_0073.JPG

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Orange Ass Clown! ()
Date: July 13, 2018 06:51PM

Actually Trumpit grabbed Rudy's penis.

Proof!

Ha!

.
Attachments:
4cd6cb835cf4f148e897ad4387767d8a382e4e9ae028ab6acfa27bfaad36301c.jpg

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Well, that stinks to high heaven ()
Date: July 13, 2018 06:58PM

see if you can deflect this Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Orange Ass Clown! Wrote:
> --------------------------------------------------
> -----
> > ^^^ Seems you are losing so gotta play the
> Obama
> > card... nice deflection.
> >
> > You are missing the point. The indictment
> > references several Americans (not by name) who
> > received the hacked information - including a
> U.S.
> > Congressman.
> >
> > Those will be the next indictments. This is the
> > end of the GOP.
>
>
> The sad thing for you, is that the sky is about to
> fall on your house and you don’t even know it.
>
> The court filing does not name the Congressional
> candidate involved in the information transaction
> or their party affiliation.
>
> On Aug. 15, 2016, the date Mueller's indictment
> suggests the request was made "on or about," the
> Guccifer 2.0 blog posted a stolen Democratic
> Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) memo.
>
> The memo points out possible vulnerabilities in
> the campaign of Annette Taddeo (D), who at the
> time was facing former Rep. Joe Garcia (D) in a
> heated Florida Democratic primary to challenge
> incumbent Rep. Carlos Curbelo (R) in the 2016
> election cycle.
>
> More Democratic collusion!
>
> More like end of the Democrats.


Oh snap. That's a pile of shit for the Democrats.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: confused ()
Date: July 15, 2018 08:04PM

OMG. They indicted 12 people who will never be in the USA or see ac courtroom. Oh well great Work for nothing.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Here it comes ()
Date: July 15, 2018 08:10PM

Collusion, obstruction, money laudering, perjury.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Gerrard ()
Date: July 15, 2018 08:17PM

Orange Ass Clown! Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> show me Wrote:
> --------------------------------------------------
> -----
> > Such a sorry ass Wrote:
> >
> --------------------------------------------------
>
> > -----
> > > Horseshit. You see the proof plainly in front
> > of
> > > you and deny it. Bought and paid for dimbulb.
> >
> >
> > Yup, just another shill with no facts to back
> up
> > your claims. Dog shit on the bottom of a shoe
> has
> > more intelligence than you.
> >
> > Put your cards out on the table.
> >
> > The Obama administration investigated the
> matter
> > for more than half a year and couldn't come up
> > with shit. Are you saying the Obama
> > administration was incompetent or covering up
> for
> > Trump?
>
> Know Trump links to Russia...
>
>
> Donald Trump: Not only does his past and current
> team have ties to Russia, but the President
> himself also does. He has traveled to Russia
> extensively, done business there often, and has
> ties to Russian interests. For example, in 2008 he
> made a real estate sale to Russian billionaire,
> Dmitry Rybolovlev. Trump bought a Palm Beach
> mansion in 2004 during a bankruptcy sale for $41
> million, and less than four years later, without
> ever having moved in, Trump sold the mansion to
> Rybolovlev for $95 million. In a May 2017 meeting
> in the Oval Office, he revealed highly classified
> information to the Russian ambassador Sergey
> Kislyak and foreign minister Sergei Lavrov. US
> media was banned from this meeting, but a Russian
> photographer was allowed in the session, later
> releasing these photos on the Russian state-owned
> news.
>
> Michael Flynn: Flynn, President Trump’s former
> National Security Advisor, was asked to resign
> just weeks after he was sworn in. His resignation
> came after it leaked that he misled Vice President
> Mike Pence about his communications with Russian
> officials, specifically Russian Ambassador to the
> U.S. Sergey Kislyak, before President Trump’s
> inauguration. In these communications, Flynn
> discussed sanctions imposed by the Obama
> administration on Russia – while President Obama
> was still in office. Earlier last year, he stated
> that the U.S. needs to respect that “Russia has
> its own national security strategy, and we have to
> try to figure out: How do we combine the United
> States’ national security strategy along with
> Russia’s national security strategy,” raising
> troubling questions. In 2015, Flynn delivered
> remarks at a Moscow gala honoring RT, Russia’s
> propaganda arm, where he was seated next to Putin.
> Flynn accepted $33,750 for this speech by RT, and
> did not correctly report the payment, thus
> concealing payment from a foreign government, and
> possibly violating the law in the meantime. Flynn
> continued to appear on RT as a foreign policy
> analyst. Altogether, Flynn was paid more than
> $67,000 by Russian companies before the 2016
> presidential election.
>
> Jeff Sessions: Sessions, President Trump’s
> Attorney General, had two conversations with
> Ambassador Kislyak during the 2016 presidential
> election. However, during later confirmation
> hearings, he claimed that he “did not have
> communications with the Russians” when prompted
> by Senator Al Franken. Once reports of his
> meetings with Kislyak surfaced, Sessions recused
> himself from any investigation into Russia’s
> interference in our 2016 presidential election.
> Many officials are continuing to call for his
> resignation.
>
> Rex Tillerson: Tillerson, President Trump’s
> former Secretary of State, worked on energy
> projects in Russia for two decades during his
> career at Exxon. He has publicly described his
> “very close relationship” with President Putin
> and was awarded Russia’s Order of Friendship in
> 2013, the highest state honor possible for a
> foreigner.
>
> Jared Kushner: Kushner is President Trump's
> son-in-law and current Senior Advisor. Along with
> Michael Flynn, Kushner met with Ambassador Kislyak
> during the Presidential transition. The White
> House later acknowledged that following that
> meeting, Ambassador Kislyak requested a second
> meeting, which Kushner had a deputy attend.
> However, at Kislyak's request, Kushner did later
> meet with Sergey Gorkov, the head of Russia's
> state-owned development bank, who has close ties
> to President Putin. The U.S. placed this bank on
> its sanctions list following Russia's annexation
> of Crimea. The Senate Intelligence Committee plans
> to question Kushner about his meetings with
> Russian officials. The New York Times recently
> reported that Kusher failed to disclose dozens of
> contacts with foreign leaders on his application
> for top-secret security clearance -- one of those
> contacts being Ambassador Kislyak.
>
> Donald Trump, Jr.: Trump, Jr., President Trump’s
> son, met with Fabien Baussart, a leader of a
> Syrian opposition group backed by the Russian
> government, and others about how the U.S. could
> work with Russia on the Syrian conflict weeks
> before Donald Trump was elected President. He has
> also been quoted saying that his father’s
> businesses “see a lot of money pouring in from
> Russia”, and that he had visited Russia on
> business over a half-dozen times. In June 2016, he
> met with a Russian billionaire, Emin Agalarov,
> under the premise that Emin had “official
> documents and information that would incriminate
> Hillary and her dealings with Russia” from the
> Crown prosecutor of Russia, and that this was part
> of “Russia and its government’s support for
> Mr. Trump.”
>
> Paul Manafort: Manafort, who has business
> connections to Russia and Ukraine, was hired as
> Trump’s campaign manager in March 2016. He then
> resigned in August of the same year, after reports
> surfaced that suggested he had received $12.7
> million from Victor Yanukovych, Ukraine’s
> pro-Russia former president. It was recently
> revealed by AP that Manafort proposed in a
> strategy plan from as early as June 2005 that he
> would work to influence politics, business deals,
> and media inside the U.S. and Europe to benefit
> Putin. This plan was pitched to Oleg Deripaska, a
> "Russian aluminum magnate" with close ties to
> Putin. Manafort eventually signed a $10 million
> contract with Deripaska in early 2006. The Trump
> Administration and Manafort have both said that
> Manafort never worked for Russian interests. Since
> the FBI confirmed in a House Permanent Select
> Committee on Intelligence hearing on March 20 that
> investigators are examining whether the Trump
> campaign and its associates coordinated with
> Russia to interfere in the 2016 election, the
> White House has made attempts to distance itself
> from Manafort, claiming that he played "a very
> limited role" in the campaign, despite his clear
> leadership role as campaign chairman leading up to
> the Republican National Convention. On October 27,
> 2017, Manafort was indicted by a federal grand
> jury for conspiracy against the United States,
> among other charges.
>
> Carter Page: Page, hired as a foreign policy
> advisor to Trump’s 2016 campaign, was known to
> have deep ties to Gazprom, Russia’s state-owned
> gas company. In July 2016, a month after Russia's
> DNC meddling was reveled in the press, Page
> traveled to Moscow to make a speech. The Trump
> campaign approved this trip, saying he would not
> be traveling as an official representative of the
> campaign. In the speech he delivered in Moscow, he
> criticized American foreign policy as being
> hypocritical – remarks which ultimately led to
> his resignation from Trump’s campaign. Before
> joining the campaign, he was a businessman “of
> no particular renown” working in the Moscow
> branch of Merrill Lynch before creating his own
> consulting agency. Previously, Trump identified
> Page as one of a small group of advisors helping
> to craft his foreign policy platform during the
> campaign. However, President Trump’s staff now
> claims that “Carter Page is an individual who
> the [then] president-elect does not know.” Page
> met with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak at the
> Republican National Convention in 2016. Buzzfeed
> recently reported that Page had met with a Russian
> intelligence agent named Victor Podobnyy in 2013,
> who was reportedly trying to recruit Page.
> Podobnyy was later charged by the U.S. for acting
> as an unregistered agent of a foreign government.
>
> Tevfik Arif: Arif, who founded Bayrock, a real
> estate group known to have many deals with Trump,
> had a 17-year career in the Soviet Ministry of
> Commerce and Trade.
>
> Roger Stone: Stone, a former advisor to Trump, had
> back channel conversations with Julian Assange,
> the founder of Wikileaks, which is the
> organization that published the DNC leaks and
> Podesta emails during the 2016 elections. He also
> had exchanges with Guccifer 2.0 -- a hacker
> believed to be linked to Russia involved in the
> 2016 hacking of Democratic National Committee
> emails -- in August 2016. Also in August, he
> tweeted "it will soon [be] Podesta's time in the
> barrell." About two months later, Wikileaks began
> posting John Podesta's emails.
>
> Felix Sater: Sater, formerly a senior advisor to
> the Trump Organization, is a Russian-born Bayrock
> associate with extensive involvement in organized
> crime. In 2015, he wrote an email to Trump’s
> lawyer, Cohen, referencing then-candidate Trump
> saying: “Our boy can become President of the USA
> and we can engineer it. I will get all of Putins
> team to buy in on this, I will manage this
> process.”
>
> Alex Shnaider: Born in Russia, Shnaider
> co-financed a real estate project with Trump.
> Shnaider’s father-in-law, Boris J. Birshtein,
> was a close business associate of Sergei
> Mikhaylov, the head of one of the largest branches
> of the Russian mob.
>
> JD Gordon: Gordon, a national security advisor for
> the Trump campaign met with Russian Ambassador to
> the US Sergey Kislyak during the Republican
> National Convention in Cleveland in July, who he
> told he would like to improve US - Russia
> relations. He advocated for a change to the GOP
> national platform to make their policies more
> pro-Russian and less pro-Ukraine, a change which
> Gordon said was directly supported by
> then-candidate Donald Trump.
>
> Wilbur Ross: Ross, President Trump’s Secretary
> of Commerce, was the top shareholder in the Bank
> of Cyprus, an institution with deep Russian ties
> and investors who made fortunes under Russian
> President Vladimir Putin. According to McClatchy,
> the banking system in Cyprus, because of its
> dependence on Russian investors, is
> money-laundering concern for the US State
> Department. Ross served as the vice chairman of
> the board of directors for the Bank of Cyprus. The
> second largest investor in the Bank of Cyprus was
> Viktor Vekselberg, who once served on the Russian
> state-owned oil giant Rosneft, which is under
> partial sanction by the US Treasury Department.
> Vekselberg is known to have a close relationship
> with Vladimir Putin. In February, six senators
> sent a letter to Ross inquiring about his
> relationship to Vekselberg. The senators also
> inquired about Ross’s relationship with Vladimir
> Strzhalkovsky, who is also linked to the Bank of
> Cyprus, was a former KGB agent, and is believed to
> be a Putin associate.
>
> Erik Prince: Prince, who had no formal role with
> the Trump campaign or transition team, had a
> secret meeting with a Russian close to President
> Putin, arranged by the United Arab Emirates, the
> Washington Post recently reported. The meeting
> reportedly took place around January 11, 2017 on
> the Seychelles islands, and was allegedly part of
> an effort to establish a back-channel line of
> communication between Russia and then
> President-elect Trump. The UAE agreed to
> facilitate the meeting in order to explore
> Russia's willingness to curtail its relationship
> with Iran. Prince was a supporter of Trump, and
> has ties to Steve Bannon and Education Secretary
> Betsy DeVos, who is his sister. He was also seen
> in Trump transition offices in December.
>
> Michael Cohen: Cohen is a longtime associate of
> President Trump’s and is his current personal
> lawyer. He has come under scrutiny for pursuing a
> Trump Tower deal in Moscow while Trump was
> campaigning to be President, and for alleged
> meetings with Russian officials in Prague. In
> January 2017, he met with a Ukrainian opposition
> politician and Felix Sater to discuss a plan to
> give Russia long term control over Ukraine and
> lift sanctions against Russia. They then put this
> plan in a sealed envelope and left it in the
> office of then National Security Advisor Michael
> Flynn.
>
> George Papadopoulos: Papadopoulos was a foreign
> policy advisor for the Trump Campaign. On October
> 27, 2017 it was revealed that Papadopoulos had
> plead guilty to making a false statement to
> federal investigators "about the timing, extent
> and nature of his relationships and interactions
> with certain foreign nationals whom he understood
> to have close connections with senior Russian
> officials." While working for the Trump Campaign,
> Papadopoulos met with an overseas professor who
> told him about the Russians possessing "dirt" on
> Hillary Clinton in the form of "thousands of
> emails." He repeatedly sought to use his
> connections to arrange a meeting between the
> campaign and Russian government officials. On
> March 31, 2016, at a foreign policy meeting with
> Trump and other campaign advisers, Papadopoulos
> shared that he could help arrange a meeting
> between Trump and Putin. He sent multiple emails
> to other members of the campaign about his contact
> with "the Russians" and "outreach to Russia."
>
> Russians all over this bitch!

Orange ass.,.who wrote this, CNN, MSNBC, wash post, ny times, or a bit from everyone? .....MORE FAKE NEWS! Nice try.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: sdfdsfs ()
Date: July 15, 2018 08:20PM

If this really is a cyber war with Russia, why is it being fought in court? Like Confused says, it's not like these people will ever appear. It's propaganda for the Mueller.

Shouldn't the military be doing the intel on these sort of things and recommend a response to the President?

Seems like Mueller is trying to cover his butt by showing he accomplished something when in fact he is severely undermining our national security apparatus.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Get a grip... ()
Date: July 15, 2018 08:44PM

Trump is the villain. And all the morons who somehow still support him.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: This has been known ()
Date: July 15, 2018 10:22PM

"If this really is a cyber war with Russia, why is it being fought in court? Like Confused says, it's not like these people will ever appear. It's propaganda for the Mueller.

Shouldn't the military be doing the intel on these sort of things and recommend a response to the President?

Seems like Mueller is trying to cover his butt by showing he accomplished something when in fact he is severely undermining our national security apparatus."


The military and the intelligence community HAS been doing the intel, but Trump says it's all fake! Haven't you been keeping up? Trumps does not listen to what they have been telling him because, you know, they are all lying.

Mueller is only showing what our intelligence already knows. We needed an INDEPENDENT counsel (Mueller) so that we could get this stuff out and get the indictments. It doesn't matter whether these people will ever be extradited to the US. The whole point of the Mueller investigation is to investigate the RUSSIAN interference in our election. Now WE KNOW THAT THEY WERE INTERFERING. It's immaterial whether they come to the US or not. The point is to stop this interference in our elections!

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: why it matters ()
Date: July 15, 2018 10:25PM

Those indictments are important to building the case that Russian interference happened (which Trump denies). It's not a 400 lb. guy behind a computer. Read the indictments.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: once you read the history ()
Date: July 15, 2018 10:36PM

Read the book "Red Notice" and learn about the Magnitsky Act. The Russian oligarchs wanted the sanctions that had been imposed under Obama to be lifted. Trump could not get loans from any legitimate sources after his 6 bankruptcies so he got in bed with the Russian oligarchs.

Trump deflected by saying Hillary was corrupt (and plenty of people didn't like her anyway). It was nasty, but it worked. If you believe a guy who lies as much as Trump does, I have a bridge to sell you.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Yussef Ahmad ()
Date: July 15, 2018 11:03PM

There's mothing more hilariously pathetic than libtards constantly grasping at the latest hope for bringing Trump down! Cry 'lil cuck snowflakes, cry!

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: one who read them ()
Date: July 16, 2018 12:42AM

why it matters Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Those indictments are important to building the
> case that Russian interference happened (which
> Trump denies). It's not a 400 lb. guy behind a
> computer. Read the indictments.


The court filing does not name the Congressional candidate involved in the information transaction or their party affiliation.

On Aug. 15, 2016, the date Mueller's indictment suggests the request was made "on or about," the Guccifer 2.0 blog posted a stolen Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) memo.

The memo points out possible vulnerabilities in the campaign of Annette Taddeo (D), who at the time was facing former Rep. Joe Garcia (D) in a heated Florida Democratic primary to challenge incumbent Rep. Carlos Curbelo (R) in the 2016 election cycle.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Orange hair, red nose... ()
Date: July 16, 2018 07:55AM

Yussef Ahmad Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> There's mothing more hilariously pathetic than
> libtards constantly grasping at the latest hope
> for bringing Trump down! Cry 'lil cuck
> snowflakes, cry!

It's Trump who will bring himself down, asshole. Your dreams of some 1,000-year reich are an example of self-delusion. In any abstract terms, Trump is already the biggest failure as President in US history, and he's only been at it for a year and a half. There has never been such a failure as this clown and patience with such Bozo-ness is starting to run out.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Hypocriosy of the Left ()
Date: July 16, 2018 07:56AM

Orange Ass Clown! Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> show me Wrote:
> --------------------------------------------------
> -----
> > Such a sorry ass Wrote:
> >
> --------------------------------------------------
>
> > -----
> > > Horseshit. You see the proof plainly in front
> > of
> > > you and deny it. Bought and paid for dimbulb.
> >
> >
> > Yup, just another shill with no facts to back
> up
> > your claims. Dog shit on the bottom of a shoe
> has
> > more intelligence than you.
> >
> > Put your cards out on the table.
> >
> > The Obama administration investigated the
> matter
> > for more than half a year and couldn't come up
> > with shit. Are you saying the Obama
> > administration was incompetent or covering up
> for
> > Trump?
>
> Know Trump links to Russia...
>
>
> Donald Trump: Not only does his past and current
> team have ties to Russia, but the President
> himself also does. He has traveled to Russia
> extensively, done business there often, and has
> ties to Russian interests. For example, in 2008 he
> made a real estate sale to Russian billionaire,
> Dmitry Rybolovlev. Trump bought a Palm Beach
> mansion in 2004 during a bankruptcy sale for $41
> million, and less than four years later, without
> ever having moved in, Trump sold the mansion to
> Rybolovlev for $95 million. In a May 2017 meeting
> in the Oval Office, he revealed highly classified
> information to the Russian ambassador Sergey
> Kislyak and foreign minister Sergei Lavrov. US
> media was banned from this meeting, but a Russian
> photographer was allowed in the session, later
> releasing these photos on the Russian state-owned
> news.
>
> Michael Flynn: Flynn, President Trump’s former
> National Security Advisor, was asked to resign
> just weeks after he was sworn in. His resignation
> came after it leaked that he misled Vice President
> Mike Pence about his communications with Russian
> officials, specifically Russian Ambassador to the
> U.S. Sergey Kislyak, before President Trump’s
> inauguration. In these communications, Flynn
> discussed sanctions imposed by the Obama
> administration on Russia – while President Obama
> was still in office. Earlier last year, he stated
> that the U.S. needs to respect that “Russia has
> its own national security strategy, and we have to
> try to figure out: How do we combine the United
> States’ national security strategy along with
> Russia’s national security strategy,” raising
> troubling questions. In 2015, Flynn delivered
> remarks at a Moscow gala honoring RT, Russia’s
> propaganda arm, where he was seated next to Putin.
> Flynn accepted $33,750 for this speech by RT, and
> did not correctly report the payment, thus
> concealing payment from a foreign government, and
> possibly violating the law in the meantime. Flynn
> continued to appear on RT as a foreign policy
> analyst. Altogether, Flynn was paid more than
> $67,000 by Russian companies before the 2016
> presidential election.
>
> Jeff Sessions: Sessions, President Trump’s
> Attorney General, had two conversations with
> Ambassador Kislyak during the 2016 presidential
> election. However, during later confirmation
> hearings, he claimed that he “did not have
> communications with the Russians” when prompted
> by Senator Al Franken. Once reports of his
> meetings with Kislyak surfaced, Sessions recused
> himself from any investigation into Russia’s
> interference in our 2016 presidential election.
> Many officials are continuing to call for his
> resignation.
>
> Rex Tillerson: Tillerson, President Trump’s
> former Secretary of State, worked on energy
> projects in Russia for two decades during his
> career at Exxon. He has publicly described his
> “very close relationship” with President Putin
> and was awarded Russia’s Order of Friendship in
> 2013, the highest state honor possible for a
> foreigner.
>
> Jared Kushner: Kushner is President Trump's
> son-in-law and current Senior Advisor. Along with
> Michael Flynn, Kushner met with Ambassador Kislyak
> during the Presidential transition. The White
> House later acknowledged that following that
> meeting, Ambassador Kislyak requested a second
> meeting, which Kushner had a deputy attend.
> However, at Kislyak's request, Kushner did later
> meet with Sergey Gorkov, the head of Russia's
> state-owned development bank, who has close ties
> to President Putin. The U.S. placed this bank on
> its sanctions list following Russia's annexation
> of Crimea. The Senate Intelligence Committee plans
> to question Kushner about his meetings with
> Russian officials. The New York Times recently
> reported that Kusher failed to disclose dozens of
> contacts with foreign leaders on his application
> for top-secret security clearance -- one of those
> contacts being Ambassador Kislyak.
>
> Donald Trump, Jr.: Trump, Jr., President Trump’s
> son, met with Fabien Baussart, a leader of a
> Syrian opposition group backed by the Russian
> government, and others about how the U.S. could
> work with Russia on the Syrian conflict weeks
> before Donald Trump was elected President. He has
> also been quoted saying that his father’s
> businesses “see a lot of money pouring in from
> Russia”, and that he had visited Russia on
> business over a half-dozen times. In June 2016, he
> met with a Russian billionaire, Emin Agalarov,
> under the premise that Emin had “official
> documents and information that would incriminate
> Hillary and her dealings with Russia” from the
> Crown prosecutor of Russia, and that this was part
> of “Russia and its government’s support for
> Mr. Trump.”
>
> Paul Manafort: Manafort, who has business
> connections to Russia and Ukraine, was hired as
> Trump’s campaign manager in March 2016. He then
> resigned in August of the same year, after reports
> surfaced that suggested he had received $12.7
> million from Victor Yanukovych, Ukraine’s
> pro-Russia former president. It was recently
> revealed by AP that Manafort proposed in a
> strategy plan from as early as June 2005 that he
> would work to influence politics, business deals,
> and media inside the U.S. and Europe to benefit
> Putin. This plan was pitched to Oleg Deripaska, a
> "Russian aluminum magnate" with close ties to
> Putin. Manafort eventually signed a $10 million
> contract with Deripaska in early 2006. The Trump
> Administration and Manafort have both said that
> Manafort never worked for Russian interests. Since
> the FBI confirmed in a House Permanent Select
> Committee on Intelligence hearing on March 20 that
> investigators are examining whether the Trump
> campaign and its associates coordinated with
> Russia to interfere in the 2016 election, the
> White House has made attempts to distance itself
> from Manafort, claiming that he played "a very
> limited role" in the campaign, despite his clear
> leadership role as campaign chairman leading up to
> the Republican National Convention. On October 27,
> 2017, Manafort was indicted by a federal grand
> jury for conspiracy against the United States,
> among other charges.
>
> Carter Page: Page, hired as a foreign policy
> advisor to Trump’s 2016 campaign, was known to
> have deep ties to Gazprom, Russia’s state-owned
> gas company. In July 2016, a month after Russia's
> DNC meddling was reveled in the press, Page
> traveled to Moscow to make a speech. The Trump
> campaign approved this trip, saying he would not
> be traveling as an official representative of the
> campaign. In the speech he delivered in Moscow, he
> criticized American foreign policy as being
> hypocritical – remarks which ultimately led to
> his resignation from Trump’s campaign. Before
> joining the campaign, he was a businessman “of
> no particular renown” working in the Moscow
> branch of Merrill Lynch before creating his own
> consulting agency. Previously, Trump identified
> Page as one of a small group of advisors helping
> to craft his foreign policy platform during the
> campaign. However, President Trump’s staff now
> claims that “Carter Page is an individual who
> the [then] president-elect does not know.” Page
> met with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak at the
> Republican National Convention in 2016. Buzzfeed
> recently reported that Page had met with a Russian
> intelligence agent named Victor Podobnyy in 2013,
> who was reportedly trying to recruit Page.
> Podobnyy was later charged by the U.S. for acting
> as an unregistered agent of a foreign government.
>
> Tevfik Arif: Arif, who founded Bayrock, a real
> estate group known to have many deals with Trump,
> had a 17-year career in the Soviet Ministry of
> Commerce and Trade.
>
> Roger Stone: Stone, a former advisor to Trump, had
> back channel conversations with Julian Assange,
> the founder of Wikileaks, which is the
> organization that published the DNC leaks and
> Podesta emails during the 2016 elections. He also
> had exchanges with Guccifer 2.0 -- a hacker
> believed to be linked to Russia involved in the
> 2016 hacking of Democratic National Committee
> emails -- in August 2016. Also in August, he
> tweeted "it will soon [be] Podesta's time in the
> barrell." About two months later, Wikileaks began
> posting John Podesta's emails.
>
> Felix Sater: Sater, formerly a senior advisor to
> the Trump Organization, is a Russian-born Bayrock
> associate with extensive involvement in organized
> crime. In 2015, he wrote an email to Trump’s
> lawyer, Cohen, referencing then-candidate Trump
> saying: “Our boy can become President of the USA
> and we can engineer it. I will get all of Putins
> team to buy in on this, I will manage this
> process.”
>
> Alex Shnaider: Born in Russia, Shnaider
> co-financed a real estate project with Trump.
> Shnaider’s father-in-law, Boris J. Birshtein,
> was a close business associate of Sergei
> Mikhaylov, the head of one of the largest branches
> of the Russian mob.
>
> JD Gordon: Gordon, a national security advisor for
> the Trump campaign met with Russian Ambassador to
> the US Sergey Kislyak during the Republican
> National Convention in Cleveland in July, who he
> told he would like to improve US - Russia
> relations. He advocated for a change to the GOP
> national platform to make their policies more
> pro-Russian and less pro-Ukraine, a change which
> Gordon said was directly supported by
> then-candidate Donald Trump.
>
> Wilbur Ross: Ross, President Trump’s Secretary
> of Commerce, was the top shareholder in the Bank
> of Cyprus, an institution with deep Russian ties
> and investors who made fortunes under Russian
> President Vladimir Putin. According to McClatchy,
> the banking system in Cyprus, because of its
> dependence on Russian investors, is
> money-laundering concern for the US State
> Department. Ross served as the vice chairman of
> the board of directors for the Bank of Cyprus. The
> second largest investor in the Bank of Cyprus was
> Viktor Vekselberg, who once served on the Russian
> state-owned oil giant Rosneft, which is under
> partial sanction by the US Treasury Department.
> Vekselberg is known to have a close relationship
> with Vladimir Putin. In February, six senators
> sent a letter to Ross inquiring about his
> relationship to Vekselberg. The senators also
> inquired about Ross’s relationship with Vladimir
> Strzhalkovsky, who is also linked to the Bank of
> Cyprus, was a former KGB agent, and is believed to
> be a Putin associate.
>
> Erik Prince: Prince, who had no formal role with
> the Trump campaign or transition team, had a
> secret meeting with a Russian close to President
> Putin, arranged by the United Arab Emirates, the
> Washington Post recently reported. The meeting
> reportedly took place around January 11, 2017 on
> the Seychelles islands, and was allegedly part of
> an effort to establish a back-channel line of
> communication between Russia and then
> President-elect Trump. The UAE agreed to
> facilitate the meeting in order to explore
> Russia's willingness to curtail its relationship
> with Iran. Prince was a supporter of Trump, and
> has ties to Steve Bannon and Education Secretary
> Betsy DeVos, who is his sister. He was also seen
> in Trump transition offices in December.
>
> Michael Cohen: Cohen is a longtime associate of
> President Trump’s and is his current personal
> lawyer. He has come under scrutiny for pursuing a
> Trump Tower deal in Moscow while Trump was
> campaigning to be President, and for alleged
> meetings with Russian officials in Prague. In
> January 2017, he met with a Ukrainian opposition
> politician and Felix Sater to discuss a plan to
> give Russia long term control over Ukraine and
> lift sanctions against Russia. They then put this
> plan in a sealed envelope and left it in the
> office of then National Security Advisor Michael
> Flynn.
>
> George Papadopoulos: Papadopoulos was a foreign
> policy advisor for the Trump Campaign. On October
> 27, 2017 it was revealed that Papadopoulos had
> plead guilty to making a false statement to
> federal investigators "about the timing, extent
> and nature of his relationships and interactions
> with certain foreign nationals whom he understood
> to have close connections with senior Russian
> officials." While working for the Trump Campaign,
> Papadopoulos met with an overseas professor who
> told him about the Russians possessing "dirt" on
> Hillary Clinton in the form of "thousands of
> emails." He repeatedly sought to use his
> connections to arrange a meeting between the
> campaign and Russian government officials. On
> March 31, 2016, at a foreign policy meeting with
> Trump and other campaign advisers, Papadopoulos
> shared that he could help arrange a meeting
> between Trump and Putin. He sent multiple emails
> to other members of the campaign about his contact
> with "the Russians" and "outreach to Russia."
>
> Russians all over this bitch!


Yawn...

1. Hillary Clinton approved the transfer of 20 percent of U.S. uranium to Russia and nine investors in the deal funneled $145 million to the Clinton Foundation.

While Hillary Clinton’s State Department was one of eight agencies to review and sign off on the transfer of 20 percent of U.S. uranium to Russia — then-Secretary of State Clinton herself was the only agency head whose family foundation received $145 million in donations from multiple people connected to the uranium deal, as reported by the New York Times.

2. Bill Clinton bagged $500,000 for a Moscow speech paid for by a Kremlin-backed bank while Hillary Clinton was Secretary of State.

Former President Bill Clinton delivered a speech in Moscow and received a $500,000 speaking fee from a Russian government-connected bank, while his wife’s State Department was getting ready to sign off on the transfer of 20 percent of U.S. uranium to Russia.

“And, in one case, a Russian investment bank connected to the deals paid money to Bill Clinton personally, through a half-million-dollar speaker’s fee,” reported the New Yorker.

3. Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman’s Joule energy company bagged $35 million from Putin’s Rusnano.

Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman John Podesta sat on the executive board of an energy company, Joule Unlimited, which received millions from a Putin-connected Russian government fund. Podesta also owned “75,000 common shares” in Joule Unlimited, which he had transferred to a holding company called Leonidio LLC.

Podesta also failed to fully disclose his position on Joule Unlimited’s board of directors and include it in his federal financial disclosures, as required by law, before he became President Obama’s senior adviser in January 2014.

4. Clinton Foundation chatter with State Dept. on Uranium Deal with Russia.

Senior staffers inside Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign were warned by Clinton Foundation senior vice president Maura Pally that the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Sen. Charles Grassley (R-IA), was asking the Department of Justice to investigate the State Department approval of the sale of American uranium assets to a Russian company.

The chain of emails proved the regular interaction between members of the Clinton campaign and senior staff at the Clinton Foundation.

5. Hillary Clinton hid $2.35 million in secret donations from Ian Telfer, the head of Russia’s uranium company.

Ian Telfer, the head of the Russian government’s uranium company, Uranium One, made four foreign donations totaling $2.35 million to the Clinton Foundation, as the New York Times reported.

“Uranium One’s chairman used his family foundation to make four donations totaling $2.35 million,” the Times reported. “Those contributions were not publicly disclosed by the Clintons, despite an agreement Mrs. Clinton had struck with the Obama White House to publicly identify all donors. Other people with ties to the company made donations as well.”

6. Over 50 Russian-Clinton connections detailed in Peter Schweizer's book 'Clinton Cash'. The Clintons and their associates enriched themselves personally, using shady, backroom deals with Putin's government and his oligarchs. Too many to list here.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: corruption is okay then? ()
Date: July 16, 2018 09:20AM

so we should look the other way on Trump?

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Vlad is Sad! ()
Date: July 19, 2018 02:51PM

Pute-pute is pissed that 12 of his people were indicted by Badass Bob Mueller.

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: Ulysses ()
Date: July 20, 2018 07:05AM

Orange hair, red nose... Wrote:

> Trump is already the biggest failure as President
> in US history, and he's only been at it for a year
> and a half. There has never been such a failure
> as this clown and patience with such Bozo-ness is
> starting to run out.

Only a commie dem would consider record high employment for Blacks and Hispanics to be a failure. Trump has already done more for minorities than obammy did in 8 years. So go kill yourself over the fact that Trump is draining the swamp AND your slave plantation!

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: The Economist... ()
Date: July 20, 2018 08:05AM

Ulysses Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Only a commie dem would consider record high
> employment for Blacks and Hispanics to be a
> failure. Trump has already done more for
> minorities than obammy did in 8 years. So go kill
> yourself over the fact that Trump is draining the
> swamp AND your slave plantation!

You've bought a lot of fake Prada there, moron. While quite a number of economic indicators have continued trending along favorable paths that began under Obama, Trump has had NOTHING TO DO with that. He has been riding on Obama's coat-tails. Don't expect that an ability to do that will continue indefinitely. Ignorant trade and tariff moves will eventually undercut all sorts of businesses, helping to usher in a downturn.

Remember as well, that when Reagan tried tax cuts for the rich, what followed was the worst economic collapse since the Great Depression, And when Bush-43 tried tax cuts for the rich, what followed was the worst economic collapse since the Great Depression, How confident can anyone actually be in the wake of Trump"s tax cuts for the rich?

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: Mueller indicts 12 Russian military officers
Posted by: damn, you're dumb ()
Date: July 20, 2018 12:43PM

The Economist... Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Ulysses Wrote:
> --------------------------------------------------
> -----
> > Only a commie dem would consider record high
> > employment for Blacks and Hispanics to be a
> > failure. Trump has already done more for
> > minorities than obammy did in 8 years. So go
> kill
> > yourself over the fact that Trump is draining
> the
> > swamp AND your slave plantation!
>
> You've bought a lot of fake Prada there, moron.
> While quite a number of economic indicators have
> continued trending along favorable paths that
> began under Obama, Trump has had NOTHING TO DO
> with that. He has been riding on Obama's
> coat-tails. Don't expect that an ability to do
> that will continue indefinitely. Ignorant trade
> and tariff moves will eventually undercut all
> sorts of businesses, helping to usher in a
> downturn.
>
> Remember as well, that when Reagan tried tax cuts
> for the rich, what followed was the worst economic
> collapse since the Great Depression, And when
> Bush-43 tried tax cuts for the rich, what followed
> was the worst economic collapse since the Great
> Depression, How confident can anyone actually be
> in the wake of Trump"s tax cuts for the rich?

Do you have to work hard to get that dumb or does it just come naturally to you?

Options: ReplyQuote


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