Ex-Trump Official: Mueller Hasn’t Indicted Anyone for Collusion After 18 Months

By Fox News Insider. Former Trump administration official Michael Anton said Thursday that Special Counsel Robert Mueller has yet to indict anyone on charges related to collusion with Russia during the 2016 campaign.

The former National Security Council spokesman said Michael Cohen’s new guilty plea is another example of Mueller pursuing a “process” crime rather than pursuing collusion-related offenses, which was the original goal of the investigation.

Cohen, President Donald Trump’s former lawyer, made a second plea agreement with federal prosecutors in New York, reportedly admitting to lying to Congress in 2017 about a Trump real estate deal in Russia. . .

Cohen previously pleaded guilty in New York to violating federal campaign finance laws by arranging hush-money payments to women in 2016 “at the direction” of then-candidate Trump.

Anton asked on “America’s Newsroom” how long Mueller is going to investigate if he cannot charge anyone after 18 months on a charge related to Trump-Russia collusion. (Read more from “Ex-Trump Official: Mueller Hasn’t Indicted Anyone for Collusion After 18 Months” HERE)

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Dershowitz Urges Trump Team to ‘Be Ready’: Mueller Won’t Release ‘Balanced, Fair Report’

By Fox News Insider. Alan Dershowitz said President Trump and his legal team have to be ready when Special Counsel Robert Mueller releases his findings in the Russia probe, because the American public should not be presented with a “one-sided report.”

Dershowitz, a Harvard Law professor emeritus, explained that Mueller — who’s investigating Russian election meddling and possible collusion between the Trump campaign and Moscow — is not going to produce a “neutral” report.

“He’s not going to be fair. He’s going to produce what he believes is going to be a devastating attack,” Dershowitz said. “They’re going to put together every bit of evidence and present a mosaic which points to the White House, the Oval Office, the president.”

He said that’s why he has suggested the president’s legal team demand that when Mueller’s report is released, they are able to simultaneously release their own report. . .

“Mueller is not going to produce a balanced, fair report,” he stated. (Read more from “Dershowitz Urges Trump Team to ‘Be Ready’: Mueller Won’t Release ‘Balanced, Fair Report'” HERE)

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Manafort/Assange Drama Proves Media Will Buy Any Russia Conspiracy Story, No Matter Its Flaws

Many media figures have swallowed whole, without evidence, a conspiracy theory that Donald Trump became president by treasonously colluding with Russia to steal the 2016 election from its rightful owner, Hillary Clinton. The information operation that pushed this story turned out to have been secretly developed and funded by Hillary Clinton and the Democratic National Committee, a fact uncovered only through the tenacious digging of Republicans on the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence in the face of major opposition from the media and Democrats on the committee. . .

The latest questionably sourced information in support of this dramatic tale that opponents of Trump cling to in order to delegitimize the results of the 2016 election is that former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort secretly met with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in 2013, 2015 and, ominously, in spring of 2016, just as the Trump campaign was heating up. Assange is holed up in London at the Ecuadorian embassy there and published the hacked emails from the Democratic National Committee and Clinton aide John Podesta.

Even on first read the story seemed difficult to believe. It was based on anonymous sources so non-descript that they could be any of literally millions of people. A document from Ecuador’s Senain intelligence agency allegedly claimed a “Manaford” had visited Assange along with “Russians.” The story mentioned the discredited dossier that journalists wrote about and intelligence agencies used to secure wiretaps on Trump associates despite the failure to verify its claims. . .

It’s been seven and a half months, for instance, since McClatchy’s Peter Stone and Greg Gordon claimed, without evidence, that the special counsel had the goods showing that Trump attorney Michael Cohen had gone to Prague to collude with Russia in the run-up to the 2016 election. This was a key fact in the dossier and Cohen claimed it was a bald-faced lie. Even after he agreed to cooperate with the feds, he claimed it was a lie. In the seven and a half months since McClatchy ran that “bombshell” story that nearly everyone fell for, literally no one has been able to corroborate the story. . .

Weekly Standard editor at large Bill Kristol tweeted, “What campaign chair hasn’t held secret talks with Julian Assange in the Ecuadoran embassy in London?” He later deleted the tweet without explanation. (Read more from “Manafort/Assange Drama Proves Media Will Buy Any Russia Conspiracy Story, No Matter Its Flaws” HERE)

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Boy, 9, in Hasidic Jewish Clothing Beaten by Strangers

A 9-year-old boy dressed in Hasidic Jewish clothing was beaten in an apparently unprovoked attack in Brooklyn on Sunday night, and police are now investigating the assault as a hate crime.

NYPD said the boy was walking home in Williamsburg when a man – described as a black teenager – approached him and repeatedly punched him in the face. . .

The suspect was described as a male, between the ages of 14 to 18. He was approximately 5 feet 6 inches tall and was last seen wearing a gray hoodie with a black patch on the sleeve. . .

In October, a teenager was arrested for viciously attacking a Jewish man in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Crown Heights less than an hour after he was released from police custody for an unrelated shoplifting incident.

Days earlier, a New York City cab driver was caught on video beating a Jewish man in the middle of an intersection. The victim, Lipa Schwartz, reportedly told local officials the alleged attacker yelled the words “Allah” and “Israel” while pummeling him. (Read more from “Boy, 9, in Hasidic Jewish Clothing Beaten by Strangers” HERE)

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Trump Issues a Huge Threat to Democrats Who Try to Investigate Him

By The Blaze. President Donald Trump issued a threat to Democrats in an interview Wednesday over the possibility that they will use the subpoena power of the House of Representatives after seizing power in the new year. . .

“If they go down the presidential harassment track, if they want go and harass the president and the administration, I think that would be the best thing that would happen to me,” he told the New York Post.

“I’m a counter-puncher and I will hit them so hard they’d never been hit like that,” he explained.

The president explained to the Post that the documents would expose a conspiracy between the Hillary Clinton campaign, the FBI, and the Department of Justice to frame him.

The possibility that Democrats will investigate the president is not purely theoretical. Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) made it clear that she would use her new powers as chairwoman of the House Committee on Financial Services to head several probes into Trump’s business relations and practices. (Read more from “Trump Issues a Huge Threat to Democrats Who Try to Investigate Him” HERE)

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Trump Threatens to Declassify ‘Devastating’ Docs About Democrats

By NY Post. In a wide-ranging, exclusive interview with The Post, President Trump said Wednesday that if House Democrats launched probes into his administration — which he called “presidential harassment” — they’d pay a heavy price.

“If they go down the presidential harassment track, if they want go and harass the president and the administration, I think that would be the best thing that would happen to me. I’m a counter-puncher and I will hit them so hard they’d never been hit like that,” he said during a 36-minute Oval Office sitdown.

The commander-in-chief said he could declassify FISA warrant applications and other documents from Robert Mueller’s probe — and predicted the disclosure would expose the FBI, the Justice Department and the Clinton campaign as being in cahoots to set him up. . .

Trump revealed his playbook just as Democrats are set to take over House committees in January where they are poised to investigate his potential business conflicts of interests, tax returns, Russia dealings and more. (Read more from “Trump Threatens to Declassify ‘Devastating’ Docs About Democrats” HERE)

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Pelosi Nominated for Speaker

By National Review. Representative Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.) was nominated Wednesday to serve as the next speaker of the House, despite strident opposition from a small subset of her Democratic caucus. Pelosi’s nomination was all but guaranteed as the House Democrats opposed to her nomination failed to present an alternative candidate.

With the nomination secured by a vote of 203-32, the California progressive must now win over a majority of the House in a floor vote in early January before she can claim the gavel. Since the entire Republican caucus will likely vote against her, Pelosi can only afford to lose the support of 17 Democrats if she hopes to win the speakership.

While Pelosi was running unopposed, the party modified the standard nomination ballot to include a “no” option, so that freshman Democrats who ran on opposing her could tell their constituents they followed through on their respective pledges. Pelosi reportedly supported those freshmen lawmakers, giving them the go ahead to vote “no” to preserve their political capital. (Read more from “Pelosi Nominated for Speaker” HERE)

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Another Dem to Oppose Pelosi

By The Hill. The road to the Speakership grew a bit steeper for Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) on Wednesday when another Democrat announced his opposition to the longtime party leader.

Rep. Ron Kind (D), an 11-term Wisconsin lawmaker, noted that he voted against Pelosi’s leadership bid on the floor two years ago, and he’s planning to do the same in January.

“I’ve been consistent in saying we’re in desperate need of new leadership on both sides, as we move forward in the new Congress,” Kind told The Hill.

A senior Democratic aide fired back, noting that Kind has supported Pelosi’s top lieutenants — Reps. Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) and James Clyburn (D-S.C.) — who have also been at the top of the party for more than a decade.

“This reasoning falls quite flat given Rep. Kind’s vote for Hoyer and Clyburn today,” the aide said, referring to Wednesday’s leadership votes on Capitol Hill. (Read more from “Another Dem to Oppose Pelosi” HERE)

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The American Taxpayer Is Always the Forgotten Man — Especially in the Immigration Fight

The president will never have as much leverage or a better impetus for a budget fight than he does now. Will he finally demand action and use his veto for leverage?

On December 8, the government will face its final budget deadline with Republicans in control of the trifecta of government. A budget, at its core, is an expression of our values. There is no greater value more relevant to this budget deadline than protecting the taxpayers from the high cost of illegal aliens invading our border, draining our schools and communities, and flooding us with the most deadly drugs and gangs that help fund international terrorism. It’s high time for Trump to finally take his case to the American people in dramatic fashion and threaten to veto any bill that fails to address the border crisis, not just from the standpoint of funding the border wall, but also ending the invasion permanently.

In her epic book on the Great Depression, “The Forgotten Man,” Amity Shlaes explains the progressive philosophy of using someone else’s money to make yourself feel good about another person’s plight using the following analogy from William Graham Sumner, the great 19th century Yale philosopher:

As soon as A observes something which seems to him to be wrong, from which X is suffering, A talks it over with B, and A and B then propose to get a law passed to remedy the evil and help X. Their law always proposes to determine what C shall do for X or, in the better case, what A, B and C shall do for X. As for A and B, who get a law to make themselves do for X what they are willing to do for him, we have nothing to say except that they might better have done it without any law, but what I want to do is to look up C. I want to show you what manner of man he is. I call him the Forgotten Man.

Shlaes applied this to government-sanctioned redistribution of wealth from one American to another by elite politicians who don’t use their money but other people’s money. Now, extrapolate the concept of the forgotten man to immigration and border policy, where politicians and judges are redistributing wealth to impoverished and often socially troubled people coming in by the millions from Central America without any regard for the taxpayer. And in this case, the laws say the exact opposite – whether they are our border laws, criminal alien statutes, or public charge protections.

We are subjected to endless debate over the border, judges, the purpose and nature of these migrants, etc. But who is talking about the American communities holding the bag of the crushing costs on their schools, welfare system, public services, and safety?

The Department of Health and Human Services just sent Congress a report showing how the virtue-signaling mission to “reunite” invading families who self-separate and break our laws cost taxpayers $80 million. We now know a number of them weren’t even real families. According to the Washington Times, HHS paid over $1.4 billion last year to care for nearly 41,000 Unaccompanied Alien Children (UACs) in its facilities, who stayed 41 days on average, costing taxpayers about $670 per day for each child.

We also know that these people aren’t fleeing violence. The homicide rate has been dropping in Honduras, the origin of this caravan, for a decade, even as the migration has surged. Honduras’ annual murder rate dropped by 26 percent in just one year preceeding this surge, from 5,150 in 2016 to 3,791 in 2017. And fleeing generic violence is not grounds for asylum anyway.

These people are all coming for economic reasons, as admitted by the now infamous mother depicted with her kid when the border agents were deploying tear gas. As such, even if we weed out the 600 known criminals and the countless others who are undocumented drug traffickers, why should the American people be on the hook for economic migration that will cost us billions? Yet it is being reported that despite Trump’s tough talk, the Department of Homeland Security is still processing 60 claims from the caravan per day. Why is it moral for the American people to shoulder this burden at all, when there is no asylum-qualifying persecution? And what about the persecution of the American people (as well as immigrants) by the gangs and drugs being brought in by some of these migrants?

Let’s not forget that our entire immigration system has become one giant government-sanctioned charity system with other people’s money. Less than seven percent of our immigrants come in based on any skill. Between chain migration, the diversity lottery, sundry quasi-amnesty programs, parole, refugees, and asylum, we already have numerous programs that don’t take into account the economic interests of taxpayers. It is perfectly fine for politicians to take their own money and open up missions in Central America to deal with the subpar social conditions. It’s quite another thing to do so on the backs of the American taxpayer. As Sumner said of the Forgotten Man, “He is the man who never is thought of. He is the victim of the reformer, social speculator and philanthropist.”

Under current law, deeply rooted in our social compact since colonial times, immigration must never be a charge on the taxpayers. Yet not only are we disregarding the law for legal immigrants, we are now disregarding it for blatantly illegal ones.

The Migration Policy Institute recently bemoaned the fact that a leaked draft of a proposal from the Trump administration to enforce our public charge laws would affect 47.2 percent of immigrants, including 58.4 percent of Hispanic citizens. But that is a direct admission that our immigration system is not working as it should, since so many immigrants have become a public charge to begin with?

Meanwhile, they are now using kids as human shields to break our laws. A classic case of A and B not only abusing C to help X, but actually harming X in the long run. It is so obvious to the cartels that we will just accept with open arms anyone who comes with a kid that they are now charging half price for those coming with kids, according to the Washington Post, because it makes the job easier. This is all the result of virtue-signaling over releasing family units:

As Judge Andrew Hanen warned in 2013 when Obama began dismantling our sovereignty, the promise of amnesty and catch-and-release for teenagers and family units “successfully complet[ed] the mission of the criminal conspiracy” of drug smugglers to smuggle people over the border on behalf of parents “at significant expense” to taxpayers, resulting in the “absurd and illogical” outcome of helping “fund the illegal drug cartels which are a very real danger for both citizens of this country and Mexico.”

Perforce, this is no longer a border security problem, but a self-destructive lawfare problem that is encouraging evil behavior.

Which brings us back to the budget bill and Trump’s opportunity. The problem we have now, as I’ve mentioned before, is not so much a border resource problem as a judicial problem. That’s why it is of more immediate importance for Trump to demand asylum clarity and judicial reform, cutting off magnets, and ending sanctuary cities in the bill than to demand the border wall. We need to stop the self-destruction of our lawless judiciary, which invites the illegals to climb over the fence and surrender themselves.

President Trump should give a televised address laying out the problem and demonstrating his power to close all immigration at our border, opting to route any “asylum” claims to a safe and stable environment in our Mexican consulates. Then he should give a speech before Congress and lay out a series of demands that are owed to the forgotten American people, from ending the asylum loophole and sanctuary cities to cutting off magnets, identity theft, and remittances. Trump should then commence a massive Spanish-language media campaign in Central America and Mexico announcing that nobody can ever come to our border to request status and that anyone caught challenging our border will be barred indefinitely from coming again. It’s all about magnets, incentives, and deterrents.

Then he should stare down Congress and challenge them on behalf of American taxpayers as Reagan did in 1985: “I have my veto pen drawn and ready for any tax increase that Congress might even think of sending up. And I have only one thing to say to the tax increasers. Go ahead — make my day.” This border tax on the American people costs over $100 billion a year, not to mention the cost to our security and the toll from the drug crisis. Trump might not have all the votes up front, but he does have a veto pen and a bully pulpit larger than anyone in this country. (For more from the author of “The American Taxpayer Is Always the Forgotten Man — Especially in the Immigration Fight” please click HERE)

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Kentucky Man Who Shot Intruder Won’t Face Charges Due to State Castle Doctrine

A Kentucky man who shot and killed a home intruder this week will not face charges, police say.

The shooting happened early Tuesday morning. Police received a call about a burglary in process with shots fired around 1:30 a.m. When officers arrived at the scene, they found a man lying on the ground outside the home with a gunshot wound to the chest, River City News reports.

The wounded man was identified as 43-year-old Joshua Kersey. He was transported to the University of Cincinnati Medical Center, where he died of his wounds. Police said that Kersey was armed with guns.

Kersey and two accomplices entered the home of 54-year-old Floyd Gillie Sr. armed, dressed in dark clothing, and wearing ski masks. They demanded to know the whereabouts of a person who hasn’t lived at the residence for years and threatened Gillie and his wife with their firearms.

Hearing the invasion, Gillie’s son Floyd Gillie Jr., 24, retrieved a handgun from an upstairs bedroom and shot Kersey as the intruders advanced towards his bedroom. All three suspects fled the house, but Kersey collapsed outside. Police are searching for the two other suspects.

Kenton County Commonwealth’s Attorney Rob Sanders said Gillie Jr. will not face charges, citing Kentucky’s “Castle Law Doctrine.”

“Mr. Gillie was justifiably in fear for his safety and the safety of his parents,” Sanders said. “So he was entitled to use deadly force in defense of their home.”

“This wasn’t a close call, it was clearly justified,” he added.

Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., tweeted the story, saying home invaders “should think twice.”

(For more from the author of “Kentucky Man Who Shot Intruder Won’t Face Charges Due to State Castle Doctrine” please click HERE)

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Democrats Show All Their Hypocrisy Over the Political Courts

Compare and contrast: 1) Democrats praising Chief Justice Roberts’ pushback against Trump’s claim that judges are political. 2) Democratic senators (and Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz.,) trying to block a judicial nominee for political reasons.

“We do not have Obama judges or Trump judges, Bush judges or Clinton judges,” read a statement from Roberts on the eve of the Thanksgiving holiday. “What we have is an extraordinary group of dedicated judges doing their level best to do equal right to those appearing before them.”

And of course, Roberts was showered with praise from the left side of the aisle.

Fast-forward one week later, and every single Senate Democrat has locked arms in a political play against a Trump judicial nominee.

The nominee’s name is Thomas Alvin Farr, and he’s been waiting to find out his fate since July 2017. His opposition claims that putting him on the federal bench would be a blow to minority voting rights. Farr’s political resume includes working for former North Carolina Sen. Jesse Helms and working on voter ID and redistricting procedures in the Tarheel State.

But I thought that federal judges were purely non-political? Surely once he’s nominated he would be just like the rest of the judges that Justice Roberts referred to — completely free of any baggage from the president who nominated him and simply doing his “level best to do equal right?”

The bottom line is that all judges are fallible human beings in robes who can and do make mistakes and therefore cannot be treated as inerrant priests of human government. We could also acknowledge that the process to appoint and confirm them is indeed political; at least it is somewhat accountable to the people through their elected officials.

So no, federal judges are not above criticism for their words, actions, and decisions. They are not only subject to public assessment and denunciation by elected officials, but they and the courts on which they sit are subject to congressional checks, including impeachment of judges and Article III control over the courts’ jurisdiction, size, and very existence.

We could have that conversation, but this is American politics in the Trump era. Fawning over vapid platitudes and dealing in shrieking intellectual dishonesty are much more in fashion. (For more from the author of “Democrats Show All Their Hypocrisy Over the Political Courts” please click HERE)

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This Is How Kavanaugh’s Accuser Used Her $647,610 Gofundme Account

When Dr. Christine Blasey Ford was exposed as the first woman to publicly accuse Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh of sexual misconduct in high school, supporters of her story donated $647,610 to a GoFundMe account.

Last week, Ford posted a message on the page about how she has used the money.

Words are not adequate to thank all of you who supported me since I came forward to tell the Senate that I had been sexually assaulted by Brett Kavanaugh. Your tremendous outpouring of support and kind letters have made it possible for us to cope with the immeasurable stress, particularly the disruption to our safety and privacy. Because of your support, I feel hopeful that our lives will return to normal.

The funds you have sent through GoFundMe have been a godsend. Your donations have allowed us to take reasonable steps to protect ourselves against frightening threats, including physical protection and security for me and my family, and to enhance the security for our home. We used your generous contributions to pay for a security service, which began on September 19 and has recently begun to taper off; a home security system; housing and security costs incurred in Washington DC, and local housing for part of the time we have been displaced. Part of the time we have been able to stay with our security team in a residence generously loaned to us.

With immense gratitude, I am closing this account to further contributions. All funds unused after completion of security expenditures will be donated to organizations that support trauma survivors. I am currently researching organizations where the funds can best be used. We will use this space to let you know when that process is complete.

(Read more from “This Is How Kavanaugh’s Accuser Used Her $647,610 Gofundme Account” HERE)

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Three U.S. Service Members Killed in Afghanistan

Resolute Support, the NATO-led mission to Afghanistan, announced three U.S. service members were killed by an improvised explosive device on Tuesday.

“Three U.S. service members were killed and three wounded when an improvised explosive device detonated November 27 near Ghazni city. One American contractor was also wounded,” Resolute Support said in a statement. “The wounded service members and contractor were evacuated and are receiving medical care.” . . .

On Sunday, the DOD had identified the soldier that was killed in the Garmsir District, Helmand Province, Afghanistan from “injuries sustained while engaging enemy forces” the day prior as Sgt. Leandro A.S. Jasso.

“The loss of Sgt. Jasso is felt by his family and loved ones, by all who served with him and by all on this mission to protect our country and our allies,” said Gen. Scott Miller, Commanding General of Resolute Support and United States Forces – Afghanistan.

“Sgt. Jasso was killed defending our nation, fighting al Qaeda alongside our Afghan partners,” Miller added. “All of us, and throughout our coalition of 41 nations, recognize the threats posed by groups such as al Qaeda and ISIS and are determined to fight them here.” (Read more from “Three U.S. Service Members Killed in Afghanistan by IED Blast” HERE)

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