Archive for June, 2017

Trump: Hillary Clinton colluded with Democrats to defeat Bernie Sanders – The Hill

President Trump on Sunday accused former Democratic presidential nominee Hillary ClintonHillary Rodham ClintonAmazons acquisition of Whole Foods underscores the threat posed by big data Pro-Trump group blasts 'rigged' Russia probe in ad starring Tomi Lahren Trump believes Russia 'probably' behind election hacking MORE of colluding with her party to defeat her primary opponent Sen. Bernie SandersBernie SandersSanders: GOP healthcare bill 'barbaric and immoral' Sanders dodges question on FBI investigation into his wife Major progressive group rolls out first incumbent House endorsement MORE (I-Vt.).

Hillary Clinton colluded with the Democratic Party in order to beat Crazy Bernie Sanders. Is she allowed to so collude? Unfair to Bernie! Trump said.

Hillary Clinton colluded with the Democratic Party in order to beat Crazy Bernie Sanders. Is she allowed to so collude? Unfair to Bernie!

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His latest tweet comes amid probes into Russian meddling in the presidential election and possible collusion between Trump's campaign and Moscow.

Trump in an interview aired Sunday blasted former President Barack ObamaBarack ObamaInspector general report: Park Service did not change records of crowd size at inauguration Feehery: Medicaid reform opening Pro-Trump group blasts 'rigged' Russia probe in ad starring Tomi Lahren MORE over Russia's interference, accusing Obama of doing nothing before the election.

Well I just heard today for the first time that Obama knew about Russia a long time before the election, and he did nothing about it. But nobody wants to talk about that, Trump told Fox and Friends Weekend.

The CIA gave him information on Russia a long time before they even before the election. And I hardly see it. It's an amazing thing," Trump continued.

The Washington Post reported late last week that Obama was slow and cautious in responding to Russian election interference.

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Trump: Hillary Clinton colluded with Democrats to defeat Bernie Sanders - The Hill

Where Would We Be Politically If Hillary Clinton Had Won? – NYMag – New York Magazine

With Hillary Clinton in the Oval Office, one things for sure: Nobody would be obsessing over the Sixth Congressional District of Georgia. Photo-Illustration: Daily Intelligencer; Photos: Getty Images

In a year like 2017, it is probably a good thing for Democrats to maintain some perspective on what continues to feel like the baleful consequences of a presidential election that went horribly wrong. Whether or not the election of Donald J. Trump was due to the mistakes of Democrats, the intervention of Russian hackers, media distortions of the news and the issues, or just bad luck, it has depressed and/or frightened many millions of people, and made others long for the Hillary Clinton presidency that might have been.

But it is worth remembering that a Hillary Clinton presidency would hardly have been a walk in the park. Indeed, you can make a pretty good case that aside from the ever-present possibility that we will awaken to some sudden presidential decision far more distressing than a poorly written tweet, the actual facts on the ground in Washington might not be completely different had the small group of Rust Belt voters who lifted Trump to the White house changed their minds or stayed at home.

Five months into the Trump presidency, his legislative accomplishments (other than ratifying the predictable reversal of very late regulations issued by Obama) are virtually nil. That would change, of course, if Congress passes the American Health Care Act but the bill might go off the rails yet. In any case, a President HRC facing a Republican Congress would have almost certainly had the same dismal five-month legislative record.

Trump has proposed a draconian budget that he cannot enact without Democratic votes. Clinton would have proposed a much more generous budget that she would not have been able to enact without Republican votes. The odds of fiscal gridlock, a government shutdown, or a debt default would have been roughly the same with a Democratic president. The same Federal Reserve Board would have been shepherding the economy, subject to the same global trends.

The 45th president and his closest associates are under constant scrutiny and investigation. If the 45th presidents name had been Clinton, she, too would be under constant scrutiny and investigation, though probably from Congress exclusively rather than Congress and the FBI and a special counsel.

The one very tangible counterfactual difference between a Trump and Clinton presidency is that in the latter there would be no Justice Gorsuch on the Supreme Court. But there might not be a new progressive Justice, either, given the vows of many Republicans to block her from placing anyone on the Court. Certainly the names of lower federal court nominees would be different, but then again, a President Clinton would not have been in a position to impose her own judges on a Republican Senate, or secure a nuclear option to make their ratification easier.

However you weigh the differences between the real and the alternative 2017 at this point, one thing is very sure: The short-term electoral prospects for both parties would be very different. Since midterm elections almost always cut against the party controlling the White House (a tendency that grows stronger when that party has been in control for an extended time), it is very unlikely wed be talking about a Democratic wave election in 2018, or of a Democratic House as a realistic goal. Instead, wed probably be talking about the odds of Republicans getting to a supermajority of 60 seats in the Senate. They have the landscape for it, and absent the kind of antiWhite House factor that has Republicans worried today, theyd probably have no reason to fear significant House losses.

More immediately, its a lead-pipe cinch the whole political world would not be obsessing over a special election in the Sixth District of Georgia right now. Instead of four special elections (and another one in Alabama later this year) in Republican districts caused by Donald Trump hiring their incumbent members, wed probably have a different special election landscape. Since congressional Democrats are relatively well concentrated in urban areas, and any Clinton Cabinet would have been far more diverse than Trumps, the odds are high any vacancies would have been in heavily Democratic districts with sizable minority voting blocs. There might well be no competitive special elections at all. Even if they did exist, they would not feature Jon Ossoff and Karen Handel and Greg Gianforte and Rob Quist. Ben Jacobs would probably still have his glasses.

Its much harder to game out what the mood would be like in the two parties had Clinton won. There would be no Democratic resistance, and while restive populists would be watching HRC closely, at this point theres no reason to think Democrats would not have remained relatively united. Who knows what Donald Trump would have done in defeat? It is clearer that the many, many Republicans who opposed him or kept him at a distance until he won would have by now exerted enormous energy in trying to elbow him into retirement, preempt his message, and win over his following.

In any event, it is useful to reflect on the things that might have been, yet might not have been all that different from our real-life 2017, along with the things that might have turned the world upside down. You will never be able to convince the passionate people who cheered or wept on the night of November 8, 2016, that the turn of events we all witnessed were not fateful for the republic. But over time, it may all balance out especially if the glass ceiling HRC has tried so hard to break is finally shattered soon, as in 2020.

Following the CBO report, four Republicans said they wont even let Mitch McConnells bill be brought to the floor for debate.

The two men did exchange barbsperhaps jokinglyat a hedge fund dinner. They were not talking about Bidens deceased son.

Meanwhile, coal production is on the rise.

On one hand: 22 million people losing coverage. On the other: extra deficit savings to fund sweeteners.

He was called a snake and an evil man when jury selection began for his securities-fraud trial on Monday.

The Supreme Court did reinstate a narrower version of the order. But the White House could easily lose in the end.

It is hard to overestimate the impact of this much-rumored event, had it occurred.

In the meantime, the Court will allow the ban, in much narrower form, to go into effect.

The Senate still needs a replacement for Obamacares individual mandate. Their idea could amount to a death sentence for uninsured cancer patients.

Obama is Americas vacation-dad-in-chief.

It is bizarre to watch a party carry out a major welfare-state rollback while fervently insisting the welfare state will not be rolled back.

Republicans are laying out their demands, and its hard to see how both moderates and conservatives can be appeased.

Nobody knows, but everyones guessing.

Just wait. Watergate didnt become Watergate overnight, either.

Sixty British high-rises have already failed fire-safety tests following the devastating Grenfell Tower inferno. Hundreds more may still be at risk.

Soon there will be one less person Trump administration officials have to avoid taking selfies with.

A shooting down of an Assad-regime jet raises some questions, such as, are we about to go to war with Russia? How about Iran?

Hes complaining that Obama stole the term from him.

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Where Would We Be Politically If Hillary Clinton Had Won? - NYMag - New York Magazine

Colbert: The Only One Who Damaged Hillary’s Campaign More Than Putin ‘Was Hillary Clinton’ – Mediaite

On Monday night, Stephen Colbert took some shots at President Obama and Hillary Clinton over The Washington Post bombshell report that exposed how the Obama administration handled Russias meddling in the presidential election.

The Late Show host pointed out from the report that Russian President Vladimir Putin gave specific instructions to defeat or at least damage the Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, and help elect her opponent,Donald Trump.

And Putin was successful, he stated. The only person who did more damage to Hillary Clintons campaign was Hillary Clinton.

Colbert also mentioned that Obama considered using cyber weapons that were the digital equivalent of bombs.

I think that means they were playing Minesweeper, he joked.

Watch the clip above, via CBS.

[image via screengrab]

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Colbert: The Only One Who Damaged Hillary's Campaign More Than Putin 'Was Hillary Clinton' - Mediaite

Justices Say Fifth Circuit Must Decide Cross-Border Shooting Case – Courthouse News Service

(CN) A divided Supreme Court on Monday said the Fifth Circuit must ultimately decide whether the family of a Mexican teen shot dead by a U.S. border agent can sue the agent for damages.

The courts per curiam opinion vacates a previous ruling by an en banc Fifth Circuit and sends the case back to it for further proceedings.

The case stems from a shooting that occurred on June 7, 2010. Sergio Adrian Hernandez Guereca, a 15-year-old Mexican national, was with a group of friends in the cement culvert that separateEl Paso, Texas, from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.

As recounted in the majority opinion, Hernandez and his friends were playing a game in which they ran up the embankment on the United States side, touched the fence, and then ran back down.

Border Patrol Agent Jesus Mesa, Jr., arrived on the scene by bicycle and detained one of Hernandezs friends on the U.S. side of the embankment.Hernandez ran across the culvert and stood by a pillar on the Mexican side. Mesa fired two shots across the border, one of which struck Hernandez in the face, killing him.

The Justice Department investigated the incident and declined to bring federal civil rights charges against Mesa, finding there was insufficient evidence that Mesa acted willfully and with the deliberate and specific intent to do something the law forbids.

It also held that because Hernandez was not on U.S. soil when he was shot, the department had no jurisdiction to bring charges against the agent.

Hernandezs parents sued Mesa for damages, claiming that he violated their sons rights under the Fourth and Fifth Amendments. They also said at the time of his death, their son was unarmed and in no way posed a threat to the officer.

A federal judge in the Western District of Texas granted Mesas motion to dismiss. A three-judge panel of the Fifth Circuit later affirmed that ruling in part and reversed it in part.

It held Hernandez lacked any Fourth Amendment rights under the circumstances, but that the shooting violated his Fifth Amendment rights. On rehearing en banc, the Fifth Circuit unanimously affirmed the district courts dismissal of the familys claims against the officer.

The en banc court held that the family failed to state a claim for a violation of the Fourth Amendment because Hernanadez was a Mexican citizen who had no significant voluntary connection to the United States and was on Mexican soil at the time he was shot.

In regard to the familys Fifth Amendment claim, theen banc court said it wassomewhat divided on the question of whether Agent Mesas conduct violated the Fifth Amendment, but was unanimous in concluding that Mesa was entitled to qualified immunity.

In their petition for a writ of certiorari, the family asked the Supreme Court to determine whether they could assert claims for damages underBivens v. Six Unknown Fed. Narcotics Agents, in which the high court recognized for the first time an implied right of action for damages against federal officers alleged to have violated a citizens constitutional rights.

They also asked the justices to determine whether the shooting violated their sons Fourth Amendment rights, and whether Mesa was entitled to qualified immunity on the claim that the shooting violated Hernandezs Fifth Amendment rights.

In sending the case back to the Fifth Circuit, the majority noted that a Bivens remedy is not available when there are special factors counselling hesitation in the absence of affirmative action by Congress, and that it recently clarified what constitutes a special factor counselling hesitation in the case Ziglar v. Abbasi.

The Court of Appeals here, of course, has not had the opportunity to consider how the reasoning and analysis in Abbasi may bear on this case. And the parties have not had the opportunity to brief and argue its significance. In these circumstances, it is appropriate for the Court of Appeals, rather than this Court, to address the Bivensquestion in the first instance, the opinion says.

With respect to petitioners Fourth Amendment claim, the en banc Court of Appeals found it unnecessary to address the Bivens question because it concluded that Hernandez lacked any Fourth Amendment rights under the circumstances, the opinion continues. This approach disposing of a Bivensclaim by resolving the constitutional question, while assuming the existence of a Bivens remedy is appropriate in many cases. This Court has taken that approach on occasion. The Fourth Amendment question in this case, however, is sensitive and may have consequences that are far-reaching.

It would be imprudent for this Court to resolve that issue when, in light of the intervening guidance provided in Abbasi, doing so may be unnecessary to resolve this particular case, the majority of justices say.

With respect to petitioners Fifth Amendment claim, the en banc Court of Appeals found it unnecessary to address the Bivens question because it held that Mesa was entitled to qualified immunity. In reaching that conclusion, the en banc Court of Appeals relied on the fact that Hernandez was an alien who had no significant voluntary connection to the United States.

It is undisputed, however, that Hernndezs nationality and the extent of his ties to the United States were unknown to Mesa at the time of the shooting. The en banc Court of Appeals therefore erred in granting qualified immunity based on those facts, the opinion says.

In a dissent, Justice Clarence Thomas said the facts of the case differ considerably from those at issue in Bivens and its progeny, most notably this case involves cross-border conduct , and those case did not. Thomas says he would decline to extend Bivens under the circumstances and would affirm the en banc Fifth Circuit decision on that basis.

In a separate dissent, which Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg joined Justice Stephen Breyer says that when Mesa shot Hernandez from across the culvert, he did not know whether Hernandez was a U.S. citizen or a Mexican citizen. Further, he says, the agent has never asserted he knew on which side of the boundary his bullet would fall.

Breyer goes on to say that while the culvert is thought of as being the boundary line between the two countries, technically, because there are fences on either side of it, it may actually be thought of as no more than a border-related area and that the boundary is in essence an invisible line of which none of them is aware.

In light of these considerations and others, Breyer says there is more than enough reason for treating the entire culvert as having sufficient involvement with, and connection to, the United States to subject the culvert to Fourth Amendment protections.

I would consequently conclude that the Fourth Amendment applies, Breyer says.

Finally, I note that neither court below reached the question whether Bivens applies to this case, likely because Mesa did not move to dismiss on that basis. I would decide the Fourth Amendment question before us and remand the case for consideration of the Bivens and qualified immunity questions, he adds.

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Justices Say Fifth Circuit Must Decide Cross-Border Shooting Case - Courthouse News Service

Supreme Court, Wisconsin hit property rights – Washington Times

ANALYSIS/OPINION:

Liberty is slowly dying in this nation. The battles where liberty dies are mostly not the headline grabbing stories, but instead small cuts that help reduce this nation to despotism.

One of the cornerstones of liberty in America is property rights. In other nations, past and present, the sovereign could take a citizens property and the citizen was simply out of luck. Our founding fathers so feared the power of the government to take private property that they included what is known as the takings clause in the Fifth Amendment.

The Fifth Amendment is one of the most expansive amendments to the United States Constitution and it includes the takings clause; which states, nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.

Recently, the committee of nine unelected lawyers known as the Supreme Court gutted the Fifth Amendment. The case was called Murr v. Wisconsin.

In the Murr case, a family in Wisconsin owned two lots. On one, they built a nice cabin and the other they left undeveloped. The family at some point planned to sell the second lot at a profit. While the Murr family waited and their lot appreciated to $400,000 estimated value, the State of Wisconsin changed the rules.

The Murr family wanted to sell the one lot and keep their cabin. But under the new rules, the only allowable buyer for the lot was the State of Wisconsin. And the State of Wisconsin told them even more good news. If they wanted to sell, they would have to sell both of their lots, and the State of Wisconsin, the only permitted buyer, would only pay them $40,000.

The Murr family was outraged and sued under the takings clause. The Murrs (correctly) contended that by changing the rules after the family had bought the land and reducing the value, the government had taken their property.

In an utterly horrible decision, the United States Supreme Court ruled 5-3 that what Wisconsin did was not a taking under the U.S. Constitution.

In 2005, the Supreme Court decided the case of Kelso v. City of New London. In that case, the City of New London sought to use eminent domain to take private property for not a government purpose but for to be sold to another private company.

The idea that a private company could use the government to force an unwilling seller to give up their property is repugnant to liberty. Now, thanks to the Supreme Court, states are now free to change the rules and deprive someone of the value of property.

The Supreme Court is accelerating the movement of Americans from being property owners to being serfs. Under serfdom, serfs were bound to the land and were responsible for the land, even though they never received any benefit from the land.

Surveys show that fewer millennials are interested in property ownership. Why should they be? With the latest ruling from the Supreme Court, property owners in this nation are only one step above being serfs. Why would anyone want to spend their wealth on property the government can take at whim.

America is on the road to serfdom and that road is paved with bad Supreme Court decisions.

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Supreme Court, Wisconsin hit property rights - Washington Times