Adam Schiff's Open Letter (to Trump):

President Trump's tweets keep Schiff and his base up at night. This is the level of absurdity we are dealing with.

How about this level of absurdity

[h=1]Trump was sued for rape by minor girl in a "fixed" Epstein case[/h]


Trump was involved in Epstein's actions. Trump was sued by the minor girls. The case was "fixed" before the election.

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Snopes: https://www.snopes.com/news/2016/06/23/donald-trump-rape-lawsuit/
 
President Trump's tweets keep Schiff and his base up at night. This is the level of absurdity we are dealing with.

Many of you have acknowledged your deep misgivings about the president in quiet conversations over the past two years. You have bemoaned his lack of decency, character and integrity. You have deplored his fundamental inability to tell the truth. But ...

The president is popular among your base, which revels in his vindictive and personal attacks on members of his own party.


That is the plain truth. You think that pointing it out is "absurd"?
 
Many of you have acknowledged your deep misgivings about the president in quiet conversations over the past two years. You have bemoaned his lack of decency, character and integrity. You have deplored his fundamental inability to tell the truth. But ...

The president is popular among your base, which revels in his vindictive and personal attacks on members of his own party.


That is the plain truth. You think that pointing it out is "absurd"?

First, the tweets of Russian Bots constitutes "election meddling". Second, Trump's Tweets constitute "attacks". Maybe it's time you guys take a break from twitter before you guys try to alter the course of the country for the worst.
 
Ask...and you shall receive:

Title: An Open Letter to My Republican Collegues


This is a moment of great peril for our democracy. Our country is deeply divided. Our national discourse has become coarse, indeed, poisonous. Disunity and dysfunction have paralyzed Congress.

And while our attention is focused inward, the world spins on, new authoritarian regimes are born, old rivals spread their pernicious ideologies, and the space for freedom-loving peoples begins to contract violently. At last week’s Munich Security Conference, the prevailing sentiment among our closest allies is that the United States can no longer be counted on to champion liberal democracy or defend the world order we built.


For the past two years, we have examined Russia’s interference in the 2016 election and its attempts to influence the 2018 midterms. Moscow’s effort to undermine our democracy was spectacularly successful in inflaming racial, ethnic and other divides in our society and turning American against American.


But the attack on our democracy had its limits. Russian President Vladimir Putin could not lead us to distrust our own intelligence agencies or the FBI. He could not cause us to view our own free press as an enemy of the people. He could not undermine the independence of the Justice Department or denigrate judges. Only we could do that to ourselves. Although many forces have contributed to the decline in public confidence in our institutions, one force stands out as an accelerant, like gas on a fire. And try as some of us might to avoid invoking the arsonist’s name, we must say it.


I speak, of course, of our president, Donald Trump.


The president has just declared a national emergency to subvert the will of Congress and appropriate billions of dollars for a border wall that Congress has explicitly refused to fund. Whether you support the border wall or oppose it, you should be deeply troubled by the president’s intent to obtain it through a plainly unconstitutional abuse of power.


To my Republican colleagues: When the president attacked the independence of the Justice Department by intervening in a case in which he is implicated, you did not speak out. When he attacked the press as the enemy of the people, you again were silent. When he targeted the judiciary, labeling judges and decisions he didn’t like as illegitimate, we heard not a word. And now he comes for Congress, the first branch of government, seeking to strip it of its greatest power, that of the purse.


Many of you have acknowledged your deep misgivings about the president in quiet conversations over the past two years. You have bemoaned his lack of decency, character and integrity. You have deplored his fundamental inability to tell the truth. But for reasons that are all too easy to comprehend, you have chosen to keep your misgivings and your rising alarm private.


That must end. The time for silent disagreement is over. You must speak out.
This will require courage. The president is popular among your base, which revels in his vindictive and personal attacks on members of his own party, even giants such as the late senator John McCain. Speaking up risks a primary challenge or accusations of disloyalty. But such acts of independence are the most profound demonstrations of loyalty to country.


Special counsel Robert S. Mueller III may soon conclude his investigation and report. Depending on what is in that report and what we find in our own investigations, our nation may face an even greater challenge. While I am alarmed at what we have already seen and found of the president’s conduct and that of his campaign, I continue to reserve judgment about what consequences should flow from our eventual findings. I ask you to do the same.
If we cannot rise to the defense of our democracy now, in the face of a plainly unconstitutional aggrandizement of presidential power, what hope can we have that we will do so with the far greater decisions that could be yet to come?
Although these times pose unprecedented challenges, we have been through worse. The divisions during the Vietnam War and the civil rights movement were just as grave and far more deadly. The Depression and World War II were far more consequential. And nothing can compare to the searing experience of the Civil War.


If Abraham Lincoln, the father of the Republican Party, could be hopeful that our bonds of affection would be strained but not broken by a war that pitted brother against brother, surely America can come together once more. But as long as we must endure the present trial, history compels us to speak, and act, our conscience, Republicans and Democrats alike.

Thank you very much, Frank.

That was amazing and eloquent. I hope it is read and understood.
 
Where was this person during Obama's reign of hate and division?

On the bandwagon with the rest of race and hate baiters. Now, he's squalling like a wet baby.

Suck it up, buttercup. There is always a hereafter.

We took America back. "He won. Get over it"
How ya been, sock?
 
Did Obama incite the American people to distrust their own intelligence services? Did his minions accuse the FBI and the Justice Department of attempting a coup? Did he damn the free press - just the part that spoke against him, of course - as an "enemy of the people"? Did he make the POTUS a bad joke or worse in the rest of the free world?

No, he did not - EVEN THOUGH HE WAS BLACK. Rankles, don't it?
Minty hates her some black people. Always has.
 
Obama wasnt investigated for anything, the media never printed or uttered a negative word about him. Hollywood snuggled up under his testicles and stayed there for 8 yrs in ignorant bliss.

Tell me you arent trying to compare the attacks on trump the secret coup investigations the go in all directions to find anything Mueller investigation to the pampering that obama had from his campaign right no through by everyone.
Stupid you are, Yoda.
 
You people who suppose you "took America back" by electing Donald Trump are TRAITORS...both to our Republic and to humanity.

Hopefully, you will grow up enough to recognize that.

That is such a repugnant asinine statement that I hope someday you will grow a brain and recognize that.
 
Ask...and you shall receive:

Title: An Open Letter to My Republican Collegues


This is a moment of great peril for our democracy. Our country is deeply divided. Our national discourse has become coarse, indeed, poisonous. Disunity and dysfunction have paralyzed Congress.

And while our attention is focused inward, the world spins on, new authoritarian regimes are born, old rivals spread their pernicious ideologies, and the space for freedom-loving peoples begins to contract violently. At last week’s Munich Security Conference, the prevailing sentiment among our closest allies is that the United States can no longer be counted on to champion liberal democracy or defend the world order we built.


For the past two years, we have examined Russia’s interference in the 2016 election and its attempts to influence the 2018 midterms. Moscow’s effort to undermine our democracy was spectacularly successful in inflaming racial, ethnic and other divides in our society and turning American against American.


But the attack on our democracy had its limits. Russian President Vladimir Putin could not lead us to distrust our own intelligence agencies or the FBI. He could not cause us to view our own free press as an enemy of the people. He could not undermine the independence of the Justice Department or denigrate judges. Only we could do that to ourselves. Although many forces have contributed to the decline in public confidence in our institutions, one force stands out as an accelerant, like gas on a fire. And try as some of us might to avoid invoking the arsonist’s name, we must say it.


I speak, of course, of our president, Donald Trump.


The president has just declared a national emergency to subvert the will of Congress and appropriate billions of dollars for a border wall that Congress has explicitly refused to fund. Whether you support the border wall or oppose it, you should be deeply troubled by the president’s intent to obtain it through a plainly unconstitutional abuse of power.


To my Republican colleagues: When the president attacked the independence of the Justice Department by intervening in a case in which he is implicated, you did not speak out. When he attacked the press as the enemy of the people, you again were silent. When he targeted the judiciary, labeling judges and decisions he didn’t like as illegitimate, we heard not a word. And now he comes for Congress, the first branch of government, seeking to strip it of its greatest power, that of the purse.


Many of you have acknowledged your deep misgivings about the president in quiet conversations over the past two years. You have bemoaned his lack of decency, character and integrity. You have deplored his fundamental inability to tell the truth. But for reasons that are all too easy to comprehend, you have chosen to keep your misgivings and your rising alarm private.


That must end. The time for silent disagreement is over. You must speak out.
This will require courage. The president is popular among your base, which revels in his vindictive and personal attacks on members of his own party, even giants such as the late senator John McCain. Speaking up risks a primary challenge or accusations of disloyalty. But such acts of independence are the most profound demonstrations of loyalty to country.


Special counsel Robert S. Mueller III may soon conclude his investigation and report. Depending on what is in that report and what we find in our own investigations, our nation may face an even greater challenge. While I am alarmed at what we have already seen and found of the president’s conduct and that of his campaign, I continue to reserve judgment about what consequences should flow from our eventual findings. I ask you to do the same.
If we cannot rise to the defense of our democracy now, in the face of a plainly unconstitutional aggrandizement of presidential power, what hope can we have that we will do so with the far greater decisions that could be yet to come?
Although these times pose unprecedented challenges, we have been through worse. The divisions during the Vietnam War and the civil rights movement were just as grave and far more deadly. The Depression and World War II were far more consequential. And nothing can compare to the searing experience of the Civil War.


If Abraham Lincoln, the father of the Republican Party, could be hopeful that our bonds of affection would be strained but not broken by a war that pitted brother against brother, surely America can come together once more. But as long as we must endure the present trial, history compels us to speak, and act, our conscience, Republicans and Democrats alike.

The irony here is that it's morons like Schiff on the Democratic Party of the Jackass side of the aisle who are the source of all the divisiveness, the dysfunction and the poison that divides this country.

It's morons like Schiff and Pelosi who refused to accept the results of an election and who now attempt to bring Government to a complete halt in an effort to be relevant.
 
This letter is a testament to the FACT that the entire Mueller investigation was a farce. Now, the morons in the Party of the Jackass are determined to continue the insanity knowing that Mueller did not give them what they wanted and expected.

The efforts to deflect the public attention away from the despicable way the DNC and the JD have conducted themselves will not end until the American people say ENOUGH and vote these dumbfucks out of office once and for all. I think that time is coming in 2020 and 2022.
 
What were you liberal dunces saying about our intelligence services when they claimed Saddam had WMDs snowflake? Do you remember? Or can you even remember what happened last week?

Saddam had WMDs and used them. By 2003 most intelligence services - not just "ours" - thought he still had some, but he didn't. Intelligence analysis isn't an exact science, buttercup. And of course the Bush-Cheney gang really, really wanted him to have them.

Speaking as a centrist dunce, I wasn't saying anything because I didn't know. What were you RW geniuses saying?
 
Saddam had WMDs and used them. By 2003 most intelligence services - not just "ours" - thought he still had some, but he didn't. Intelligence analysis isn't an exact science, buttercup. And of course the Bush-Cheney gang really, really wanted him to have them.

Speaking as a centrist dunce, I wasn't saying anything because I didn't know. What were you RW geniuses saying?

That wasn't the question; what were you liberal dunces saying about our intelligence services when they claimed Saddam had WMDs snowflake? Do you remember?
 
Speaking as a centrist dunce, I wasn't saying anything because I didn't know. What were you RW geniuses saying?

Here, this might help to jog your lacking memory:

Spy agencies 'produced flawed information on Saddam's WMDs'
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news...s-flawed-information-saddam-wmds-iraq-chilcot

Senate Report: Bush Used Iraq Intel He Knew Was False
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/06/05/divided-senate-committee_n_105374.html

Iraq war 'waged on false intelligence'
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2004/jul/09/usa.iraq2

The worst U.S. intelligence failure since the founding of the modern intelligence community.
https://www.newsweek.com/iraq-war-bushs-biggest-blunder-294411

THE 2004 CAMPAIGN: THE DEMOCRATS; Bad Iraq Intelligence Cost Lives, Democrats Say
https://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/11/...aq-intelligence-cost-lives-democrats-say.html
 
Where was this person during Obama's reign of hate and division?

On the bandwagon with the rest of race and hate baiters. Now, he's squalling like a wet baby.

Suck it up, buttercup. There is always a hereafter.

We took America back. "He won. Get over it"

Hey! Golden Shower boy! You better get over it! Because your asshole president is just about over already!

You had your fun! You're still drunk over his win!

But you'll be sobering up soon- with one giant up and coming 8 year old hangover! LOL!
 
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Hey! Golden Shower boy! You better get over it! Because your asshole president is just about over already!

You had your fun! You're still drunk over his win!

But you'll be sobering up soon- with one giant up and coming 8 year old hangover! LOL!
Trump will be re-elected.

And you will cry again.
 
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