#the last time this happened was early access release day and I had to retake my numerical math exam because I didnât study wellđđ
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Tagged by @likesomethingblooming and @night-triumphantt đ„°
Last song: mulberry street - twenty one pilots, Iâm getting heavy concert flashbacks from it I miss Clancy tour so much đđ
Favorite color: pink!
Currently watching: attack on titan :/ I swore Iâll never watch it but everything I watched lately was so boring I needed something tragic and hyped
Last movie: final destination 4 Iâm getting ready to see the new onee
Currently reading: Circe by Madeline Miller,, Iâm in a Greek myth mood lately idk loll
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Current obsession: hades game đ« I finally played the war song update AND beat chronos after 60 nights đ so safe to say Iâve been having a great time lately lol however every time I get back into this game itâs the Worst timing possible,, I have to deliver a presentation at work on Monday and guess what Iâve been doing all week :)
Last googled: maxi skirts, I wanted to make sure thatâs what they are lol
Currently working on: finishing the last few kofi sketches đđđ
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#tag game#they should take hades away from me#the last time this happened was early access release day and I had to retake my numerical math exam because I didnât study wellđđ
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Week 136 is the longest list so far, with 202 not normal items - no wonder we are all anxious and exhausted! This week Trump manufactured two major story lines: an almost war with Iran, and mass roundups and deportations of âmillionsâ of immigrants.
Week 1: 9 not normal items
Week 2: 18 items
Week 52: 120 items
Week 136: 202 items đđđ€đ±đ±đ±
(no, you are not imagining it)PLEASE READ đ AND SHARE this past week's exordinary list of things that happened (you may be totally unaware of many of them because there is so much chaos- by-design of this administration).
By Amy Siskind | Published June 22, 2019 | The List | Posted June 23, 2019 |
Experts in authoritarianism advise to keep a list of things subtly changing around you, so youâll remember.
This week Trump manufactured two story lines: an almost war with Iran, and mass roundups and deportations of âmillionsâ of immigrants. The two stories occupied much of the national attention, while Trump continued to stonewall Congressional attempts at oversight.
Authoritarian expert Masha Gessen wrote about âThe Unimaginable Reality of American Concentration Camps,â as a national discussion over conditions at border facilities played out. Journalists, who have been given no access to facilities, reported through interviews on the alarming treatment of migrant children, including overcrowding, illness, and lack of basic necessities.
Trump came close to starting a war with Iran on Thursday, and reportedly was prepared and close to launch a missile attack. Of concern, Trump continued to act unilaterally and not seek Congressional approvalââânotably Speaker Pelosi said Friday she was not informed of Trumpâs planned attack, despite being second in line for the White House. Meanwhile, pressure to start an impeachment inquiry grew as 76 House members called for impeachment as public opinion, largely among Democrats, is shifting in favor of it.
On Saturday, NYT reported the U.S. is stepping up cyberwarfare against Russia, using digital incursions into Russiaâs electric power gridand other targets as a warning to Russia to stay out of U.S. cyber infrastructure.
The previously unreported deployment of computer code into Russiaâs grid has taken place over the past three months in tandem with public actions announced after hacking and disinformation during the 2018 midterms.
These steps mark a shift to going on offense, and being positioned against aggressions. The Department of Homeland Security and FBI have said Russia has inserted malware in U.S. power plants, pipelines, and water supplies.
The actions were taken using new legal authorities quietly slipped into the military authorization bill passed by Congress last summer, allowing the defense secretary to take action without requiring presidential approval.
Two officials told the Timesthat Trump had not been briefed on the moves, which could spark a digital Cold War between the countries, out of concern he might countermand or discuss it with foreign officials.
On Saturday, Trump tweeted, âDo you believe that the Failing New York Timesâ did a story on increasing cyber attacks on Russia, calling it a âvirtual act of Treason by a once great paper so desperate for a story.â
Trump also tweeted the reporting was âbad for our Countryâ and âALSO, NOT TRUE!â saying, âAnything goes with our Corrupt News Media today,â calling them âcowardsâ and âTHE ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE!â
On Saturday, the NYTresponded to Trump, saying, âaccusing the press of treason is dangerous,â adding, âWe described the article to the government before publicationâ and âthere were no concerns.â
On Sunday, Trump tweeted a poll should be done on âwhich is the more dishonest and deceitful newspaper,â the NYT or WAPO, adding âthey are both a disgrace to our Countryâ and âthe Enemy of the People.â
Trump also again mused about serving beyond the two term limit, tweeting âat the end of 6 yearsâ after America is âGREATâ again, âdo you think the people would demand that I stay longer?â
On Sunday, in celebration of Fatherâs Day, Trump tweeted, âHappy Fatherâs Day to all, including my worst and most vicious critics, of which there are fewer and fewer,â adding, âKEEP AMERICA GREAT!â
On Sunday, in a newly released part of his ABC News interview Trump chastised acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney for coughing, saying, âIf youâre going to cough, please leave the room,â and asking for a retake.
On Sunday, ABC aired the hour long interview with Trump. The interview was a rating bust, coming in third in its evening time slot.
On Sunday, NBC News reported the Trump re-election campaign cut ties with some of its own pollsters, after leaked polling data which surfaced in Week 135 showed him trailing Democratic rivals in many states.
On Monday, Trump dismissed polling by Fox News which showed him losing to multiple Democratic presidential candidates, tweeting, âSomething weird going on at Fox,â adding, âMore Fake News.â
On Monday, Trump vowed mass immigration arrests, tweeting in the late evening: âNext week ICE will begin the process of removing the millions of illegal aliens who have illicitly found their way into the United States.â
Trump also tweeted, âThey will be removed as fast as they come in.â Trump praised Mexico and Guatemala, but added, âThe only ones who wonât do anything are the Democrats in Congress.â
On Monday, the State Department announced the regime is ending foreign aid for Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador until they take âconcrete actions to reduce the number of illegal migrantsâ coming to the U.S.
Experts warned that cutting off aid will only exacerbate the conditions in the countries which are causing people to migrate. The regimeâs plan is likely to face opposition in the Congress.
On Tuesday, WAPO reported Trump and Stephen Miller have recently pushed to remove thousands of immigrants whose deportation orders were expedited. Publicizing a large-scale ICE operation is unheard of.
ICE officials told the Postthey were not aware that Trump planned to make the plan public. Trumpâs tweet of deporting millions was also at odds with available ICE budget and staffing.
On Tuesday, government attorney Sarah Fabian argued before the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals that migrant children sleeping on concrete floors is âsafe and sanitaryâ and they did not need soap and toothbrushes.
Attorneys for the detained children argued the Trump regime is not following the requirements of the 1997 Flores Agreement for humane treatment, even though sanitary items are not specifically mentioned.
The judges appeared stunned by the regimeâs arguments, with one saying, âI find it inconceivable that the government would say that that is safe and sanitary.â It is not clear when the panel will issue its decision.
On Wednesday, data obtained by the AP showed an El Paso border facility is neglecting 250 migrant infants, children, and teens, with kids taking care of kids and an inadequate supply of food, water, and sanitation.
Three girls told lawyers they alternated taking care of a 2 year-old boy who wet his pants and had no diapers. Lawyers could not discern where the boy was from or about his family from because he was not speaking.
Many of the children arrived alone, but some were separated from their families. A law advocate said in her 22 years of visiting children in detention, she had ânever heard of this level of inhumanity.â
The acting Customs and Border Protection Commissioner said CBP is holding 15,000 people while 4,000 is capacity. A psychoanalyst who evaluated 50 parents and children noted trauma causing lasting damage.
On Thursday, Dallas Morning News reported allegations made by acting Department of Homeland Security secretary Kevin McAleenan to Congress that 90% of those seeking asylum were skipping court dates is false.
McAleenan used the data to justify round-ups. Data showed that close to 100% of 47,000 asylum-seeking families with legal aid showed up to court. McAleenanâs data was from 7,000 cases decided in abstenia.
On Thursday, in an interview with Telemundo, Trump lied, saying he inherited an Obama-era policy of separating migrant families, saying, âObama had a separation policyâŠIâm the one that put âem together.â
On Friday, NYT reported on an overcrowded border station in Clinton, Texas, where hundreds of migrant children are being held. Children are wearing clothes caked with snot and tears, and toddlers have no diapers.
Most detainees have not been able to bathe or wash their clothes since they crossed the border. They have not been given toothbrushes, toothpaste, or soap. An advocate visiting described the scene, saying âthere is a stench.â
The facility is one impacted by Trump regime not providing basics like soap or toothbrushes to the children. An advocate visiting said the conditions are the worse she has ever seen, with no care for sick children.
In the facility, guards wore wearing full uniforms, including weapons and face masks, to protect themselves from the unsanitary conditions. Children are locked up in cells nearly all day long, and are not getting enough food.
Border crossings have slowed in recent weeks, but remain high compared to recent years. Journalists and lawyers have been offered little access, so the overcrowded conditions are occurring without visibility to the public.
On Friday, HuffPost reported four toddlers under the age of 3 years-old at the Border Patrol facility in McAllen, Texas were so severely ill, that immigration lawyers forced the government to have them hospitalized.
The four were in the care of teenage mothers or guardians, and were feverish, coughing, vomiting, and had diarrhea. One toddler was âcompletely unresponsiveâ and limp, with her eyes rolled back in her head.
On Friday, WAPO reported Trump has directed ICE to conduct mass roundups of family members who have received deportation orders. Raids are expected to begin in the early hours of Sunday.
ICE and DHS refer to the roundup as âfamily op,â and will target 2,000 families in 10 cities, including Houston, Chicago, Miami, Los Angeles, Atlanta, New York, Baltimore, Denver, San Francisco, and New Orleans.
McAleenan has urged Trump to narrow the roundup to 150 families, so as to avoid separating children from parents, and has voiced that ICE resources are better used for the crisis at the southern border.
The Los Angeles Police Department said it will not participate or assist in the roundup. New York AG Letitia James called it a âdespicable act of racism and xenophobia that is antithetical to our basic human values.â
On Friday, acting ICE Director Mark Morgan defended the roundups, telling NPR, âmy duty is not to look at the political optics, or the will the American people,â but to enforce the law and integrity of the system.
Morgan also repeated the false claim that the âmajority of them donât even show up. And then when they didnât show up, they received ordered removal in absentia,â adding, âWe have no choice.â
On Friday, authoritarianism expert Masha Gessen wrote at the New Yorker âThe Unimaginable Reality of American Concentration Camps,â citing âthe argument is really about how we history, ourselves, and ourselves in history.â
Gessen wrote: âAnything that happens here and now is normalized, not solely through the moral failure of contemporaries but simply by virtue of actually existing.â
On Saturday, a video posted on social media showed Phoenix police threatening to shoot a black family after their 4 year-old took a dollfrom a store. The incident led to an investigation and lawsuit against police.
On Tuesday, on the eve of House hearings on reparations for slavery, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told reporters he was not in favor of reparations, calling it âfor something that happened 150 years ago.â
McConnell also said slavery is something ânone of us currently living are responsibleâ for, and added we paid for the âsin of slaveryâ by passing civil rights legislation and by electing âan African American president.â
On Wednesday, Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee sponsored a bill before a House hearing of a 13 member commission which would allocate $12 million to study the effects of slavery and make recommendations to Congress.
Hundreds of spectators filled three overflowing rooms. Republican lawmakers and witnesses said black people should pull themselves up by their own bootstraps, saying reparations might damage their psyches.
Writer Ta-Nehisi Coates, whose 2014 article helped rekindle the conversation, responded to McConnell: âWhile emancipation dead-bolted the door against the bandits of America, Jim Crow wedged the windows wide open.â
Coates also said McConnell was âalive for the redlining of Chicago and the looting of black homeowners of some $4 billion,â adding, âVictims of their plunder are very much alive today.â
On Thursday, Fox News host Laura Ingraham backed Leader McConnell on her podcast, dismissing the idea of reparations, saying there are no âdo-overs,â adding, âwe won, you lost, thatâs that. Thatâs just the way it is.â
On Wednesday, a federal judge in Maryland ruled that new information from hard drives of a deceased Republican redistricting strategist on the 2020 census question in Week 133 merits more consideration.
The case is now with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit, but could be returned to the federal judge who said the new evidence âraises a substantial issue,â and could reach the Supreme Court again.
On Wednesday, the Senate confirmed Matthew Kacsmaryk to a lifelong federal judgeship, despite his record of hostility towards the LGBTQ community and having criticized Roe v. Wade.
On Thursday, in a major set-back for womenâs health, a panel of federal judges ruled that the Trump regimeâs abortion âgag ruleâ can go into effect, making clinics that provide abortion ineligible for Title IX funds.
Planned Parenthood could lose $60 million in fundingfrom the ruling. Attorneys general from 21 states argued the rule undermines the patient-provider relationship and endangers the health of millions of women.
On Friday, Missouriâs health department notified Planned Parenthood, the stateâs only abortion clinic, that it declined to renew their license. The judge said his preliminary injunction to remain open is in place for now.
On Friday, Wisconsinâs Democratic Gov. Tony Evers vetoed four bills that would have restricted access to abortion, implicated doctors who perform abortions, and cut funding to Planned Parenthood.
On Friday, writer E. Jean Carroll came forward in a New York Magazine article to say that Trump raped her 23 years ago in a dressing room of the Bergdorf Goodman department store in midtown Manhattan.
Carroll, now 75, told two friends about the incident at the time. WAPO interviewed one friend who encouraged Carroll to go to the police at the time. The episode in the article is an excerpt from her new book.
Trump responded Friday in a statement, calling the allegations âfake newsâ and repeating his common refrain, âIâve never met this person in my life.â The article is accompanied by a photo of the two together in 1987.
Trump accused Carroll of trying to sell books, âIt should be sold in the fiction section,â and questioned if she was working with the Democratic Party. Carroll is the 16th woman to accuse Trump of sexual misconduct.
On Tuesday, AP reported U.S. air quality is worsening, after decades of improving. There were 15% more days with unhealthy air in 2017 and 2018 than the average of 2013 through 2016, the cleanest four years.
On Wednesday, Trumpâs EPA issued the Affordable Clean Energy rule, the regimeâs most significant step towards unwinding federal regulations aimed at addressing climate change.
The new rule cuts carbon emissions from power plants by less than half of what experts said was need to avoid catastrophic climate change. Trump aides and GOP lawmakers celebrated it as a victory for coal companies.
Also, unlike Obamaâs 2015 Clean Power Plan, Trumpâs rule does not set specific greenhouse gas emissions cuts, relieving pressure to improve efficiency by switching from coal to lower-carbon energy sources.
On Friday, Oregonâs Democratic Gov. Kate Brown sent Oregon State Police to fetch 11 GOP state senators who had fled to Idaho to avoid giving the Democrats a needed quorum to vote on bills to combat climate change.
On Sunday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convened his cabinet to inaugurate a new community located on the occupied Golan Heights, which will be named âTrump Heightsâ to recognize his ally.
On Monday, after threats from Trump, Iran warned it would breach limits on stockpiled enriched uranium under the 2015 deal which Trump exited. The White House National Security Council called it ânuclear blackmail.â
The U.S. sent 1,000 more troops to the region on Monday. On Tuesday, Iran President Hassan Rouhani said on state-TV, âIran will not wage war against any nation,â and Russia called on the U.S. to stop stoking tension.
On Tuesday, Politico reported the Trump regime is laying the groundwork for a possible conflict with Iran, while preparing to do so without needing Congressional approval.
On Monday, Politico reported House Democrats investigating obstruction of justice are considering bypassing Trumpâs use of executive privilege by calling for testimony from people outside the government.
Names cited in the Mueller report who may be called include former campaign manager Corey Lewandowski and Chris Christie, as well as former top campaign officials Paul Manafort and Rick Gates.
On Monday, Politico reported Democrats on the House Foreign Affairs Committee are quietly racking up oversight winsagainst Trump in areas like retaliation at the State Department and Trumpâs relation with Putin.
Chair Eliot Engel has eschewed cable-TV and other flashy rhetoric, allowing bipartisan cooperation on his committee, with Republicans exasperated with Trump on foreign policy and national security issues.
On Monday, the Supreme Court voted 7-2 to uphold the âdouble jeopardyâ standard. The ruling could blunt the impact of potential Trump pardons for individuals like Manafort, who also faces charges in New York.
On Monday, NYT reported that as Manafort was scheduled to head to Rikers Island, last week Manhattan prosecutors received an unusual letter from Jeffrey Rosen, a top deputy of Attorney General William Barr.
Rosen indicated he was monitoring where Manafort would be held. Then on Monday, federal prison officials weighed in saying Manafort would not be go to Rikers, where most federal inmates facing state charges are held.
Former DOJ officials and state prosecutors said it was highly unusual for the second highest official at the DOJ to take an interest in such a case. The decision is typically made by the warden where the inmate is being held.
On Monday, Daily News reported five undocumented immigrants fired from Trumpâs golf courses in New York and New Jersey planned to hold a press conference in Florida on Tuesday, ahead of Trumpâs 2020 launch.
On Tuesday, ahead of Trumpâs official 2020 re-election campaign launch in Orlando, Florida, the Orlando Sentinel took the unusual step of endorsing âNot Donald Trump.â
The Sentinel cited, âafter 2œ years weâve seen enoughâ of âthe chaos, the division, the schoolyard insults, the self-aggrandizement, the corruption, and especially the lies,â adding he âdiminished our standing in the world.â
On Tuesday, while speaking to reporters before heading to Orlando, Trump refused to apologize for his prior call for the Central Park 5 to get the death penalty. Trump said, âYou have people on both sides of that.â
Trump said âthey admitted their guilt,â and âsome of the prosecutors, they think that the city should never have settled that case,â adding, âYou better believe that I hate the people who took this girl and raped her brutally.â
On Tuesday, Trump launched his re-election bid, picking up on many familiar themes from his 2016 campaign, promising greatness and invoking many of the same grievances from that campaign.
Trump relished in his victory over Hillary Clinton while the crowd shouted, âLock her up!â Trump said he was still looking for her missing emails, and teased about having the DOJ prosecute her.
Trump attacked the media, calling reporters in the arena âfake newsâ while the crowd cheered the familiar refrain, âCNN sucks.â
Trump attacked Democrats, calling them âradicalâ and saying they are âdriven by hatred, prejudice and rage,â and warning, âThey want to destroy you, and they want to destroy our country as we know it.â
Trump said immigrants should come on the basis of merit, saying the Democrat agenda of open borders is âmorally reprehensible,â and âthe greatest betrayal of the American middle class, and frankly American life.â
CNN calculated that Trump made 15 false statement during his 76-minutes speech, many of which he has repeated frequently in the past, including the topics of trade, the environment, Russia, his wall, and Hillaryâs emails.
WAPO reported after the rally, Trump flew on Air Force One in the opposite direction of the White House to visit his Doral golf course, his 126th visit to a Trump property since taking office.
Trump also recently suggested his Doral golf course to host the Group of Seven meeting of world leaders. Trump has gotten pushback from the White House Counselâs Office on the topic but has ignored it.
Trump has reshaped the GOP fundraising schedule, with 23 of 63 fundraisers he attended taking place at one of his properties. Trump properties have also become a vendor for the federal government.
On Thursday, Media Matters reported Sinclair broadcasting is forcing its local stations to run a commentary segment which is akin to an unofficial Trump 2020 campaign ad within a short window after its release.
In one clip, former Trump aide Boris Epshteyn said, âThe energy behind President Trump and his âAmerica Firstâ movement is palpable,â praising âcrowds that fill up massive stadiumsâ and social media engagement.
On Monday, Jarrod Agen, Vice President Mike Penceâs communications director and one of his most trusted advisers who held multiple roles, announced he was leaving to take a job at Lockheed Martin.
On Tuesday, Trump announced on Twitter that Patrick Shanahan, his nominee for defense secretary, was withdrawing. WAPO and USA Today reported on incidents of domestic violence involving his family.
Trump told reporters he did not ask Shanahan to withdraw. Trump nominated Secretary of the Army Mark Esper to replace Shanahan, who prior was the head lobbyist for defense company Raytheon.
On Tuesday, CNN reported Katharine Gorka is expected to be named press secretary for CBP. Gorka, the wife of far-right extremist Sebastian Gorka, has been a political appointee at DHS since shortly after Trump took office.
Gorka has stirred controversy over her views on terrorism and has ties to far-right national groups. In Week 40, she helped pull DHS funding for Life After Hate, a group set up to counter neo-Nazis and white supremacists.
On Thursday, Trump appointee Eric Blankenstein, who left the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in May over racially charged online posts from years ago, was hired by the Department of Housing and Urban Development as a senior legal counsel.
On Tuesday, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer told reporters Senate Democrats will prioritize defense amendments to boost election security and keep Russia from meddling in 2020.
On Tuesday, Reuters reported Secretary of State Mike Pompeo blocked the inclusion of Saudi Arabia from a U.S. list of countries that recruit childsoldiers, despite expertsâ findings of their use in the Yemenâs civil war.
On Wednesday, a months-long United Nations investigation by Agnes Callamard, a human rights expert, into the killing of Jamal Khashoggi found âcredible evidenceâ Saudi Crown Prince MBS was likely involved.
She faulted the U.S. and other countries for not exerting enough pressure on Saudis, and called for sanctioning and freezing the princeâs assets until a final determination is made. Saudi Arabia would not allow her in.
Pompeo said Trump deplored the killing of Khashoggi, but that the U.S. relationship is too important to be sidetracked by one incident. Callamard called the U.S. response ambiguous and conflicted.
On Thursday, the Senate rebuked Trump, voting to block billions of weapons sales to Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Trump had tried to circumvent Congress by declaring an emergency over Iran.
Seven Republicans, including Trump ally Lindsey Graham voted with Democrats in the Senate, not enough to override an expected veto by Trump. Britain announced a similar measure on Thursday.
On Thursday, Reuters reported ex-U.S. Marine Paul Whelan, who is being held in Russia over accusations of spying, told reporters he was asking Trumpand the leaders of Britain, Canada, and Ireland for help.
Whelan said he has been threatened and harassed by a Russian investigator. He said, âwe cannot keep America great unless we aggressively protect and defend American citizenswherever they are.â
On Tuesday, Bloomberg reported that Trump believes he has the authority to oust Jerome Powell as Federal Reserve Chair and demote him to board governor, saying the Fed had gone crazyâ under Powell.
On Wednesday, the Fed left rates unchanged, with a rate cut possible soon. Asked by reporters about Trumpâs comments, Chair Powell said, âI think the law is clear that I have a four-year term and I fully intend to serve it.â
On Wednesday, Trump awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom to conservative economist Arthur Laffer. In his remarks, Trump said the Laffer Curve is âstill, a very, very highly respected economic curve.â
Laffer, along with his disciple Stephen Moore, wrote a fawning book about Trumpâs economic policies called âTrumponomics.â Trumpâs $1.5 trillion tax cuts did not generate more tax revenue as Lafferâs theory posits.
On Wednesday, NYT reported federal prosecutors are investigating if Deutsche Bank complied with laws meant to stop money laundering and other crimes, including handling of suspicious activity reports.
The FBI has contacted former employee Tammy McFadden, who spoke to the Times in Week 131. The investigation marks the largest government examination of potential misconduct at one of the worldâs largest banks.
FBI agents are also speaking to Val Broeksmit, the son of Deutsche Bank executive William Broeksmit, who committed suicide in 2014, about the bankâs role with Russian money laundering. Val has provided documents.
In addition to the FBI, the DOJâs Money Laundering and Asset Recovery Section and the U.S. attorneyâs offices in Manhattan and Brooklyn are also investigating the bank, as are two House committees.
On Tuesday, White House Counsel Pat Cipollone said in a letter to House Judiciary Chair Jerrold Nadler that Hope Hick âis absolutely immuneâ from answering questions about her time on the transition team and White House staff.
Cipollone said a White House lawyer will be present for Hicksâ testimony âin order to preserveâ Trumpâs ability âto assert executive privilege.â The testimony will be private, but a transcript will be released within 48 hours.
On Wednesday, in a series of morning tweets, Trump attacked Democrats, saying they are âunhappy with the Mueller Report, so after almost 3 years, they want a Redo,â calling it âextreme Presidential Harassment.â
Trump tweeted Democrats gave âCrooked Hillaryâs people complete Immunity, yet now they bring back Hope Hicks,â asking why arenât they looking at â33,000 Emails that Hillary and her lawyer deleted.â
Trump also tweeted, âThat is real Obstruction that the Dems want no part of because their hearings are RIGGED and a disgrace to our Country!â adding, âDEMOCRAT CONGRESSIONAL HEARINGS ARE #RIGGED!â
Trump also tweeted if he did not have the âPhony Witch Huntâ and if the âFake News Media and their partner in Crime, the Democratsâ played it straight, he would be â way up in the Polls right now.â
On Wednesday, Mark Thompson, CEO of the NYT said Trump âisolating journalists, as a groupâŠis a really frankly hostile, stupid but also dangerous thing to doâ at a CNBC forum.
On Wednesday, in an op-ed at the Journal, NYT Publisher A.G. Sulzberger said Trump accusing the newspaper of âtreasonâ crossed âa dangerous lineâ of âaccusing the Times of a crime so grave it is punishable by death.â
Sulzberger wrote, âHeâs gone from misrepresenting our business, to assaulting our integrity, to demonizing our journalists with a phrase thatâs been used by generations of demagogues,â to treason accusations.
On Wednesday, the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker reported Trump had tweeted negatively about the press in every day of June so far, marking âthe longest stretch since he declared his candidacy.â
The group also found that in the first 18 days of June, Trump had tweeted 44 times, some days up to five times per day, and that since Trump launched his 2016 campaign, he has sent over 1,500 negative tweets.
Later Wednesday, Trump tweeted, âSo sad that the Democrats are putting wonderful Hope Hicks through hell,â saying Democrats want a âDo Over,â adding, âVery unfair & costly to her. Will it ever end?â
Trump also asked why Democrats are not âasking Hillary Clinton why she deleted and acid washed her Emails,â adding, âanybody else would be in jail for that,â and âRigged House Committee.â
On Wednesday, the House Judiciary Committee interviewed Hope Hicks. NYT reported she refused to answer nearly every question about her time working in the regime, citing Trump said she was âabsolutely immune.â
Democrats said Hicks even refused to answer about the location of her West Wing office at the closed door hearings. Hicks did discuss her time on the campaign, but with reportedly no meaningful revelations.
Democrats on the committee threatened to take Hicks to court to enforce the subpoena for her full testimony. Hicks was referred to more than 180 times in the Mueller report.
Legal experts said the legal process of compelling former White House officials like Hicks and Don McGahn could take several months or years to wind through the court system. Impeachment would hasten the process.
On Thursday, Politico reported according to a transcript of Hickâs interview released late Wednesday, she refused to answer 155 questions during her House testimony.
The transcript revealed dozens of objections from White House lawyers to prevent her from answering, including questions on Trumpâs attempts to restrain the Mueller probe through directives to McGahn to fire Mueller.
At one point, Chair Nadler challenged a White House lawyerâs claims of âabsolute immunity,â telling him, âthat is absolute nonsense as a matter of law.â Hicks at times became snarky, and remained loyal to Trump.
On Thursday, Chair Nadler told Politico that House Democrats would file a lawsuit within days to compel Hicks and McGahn to testify, adding Hicksâ blanket refusal is a huge gift in the legal battle with Trump.
Nadler said, âWe knew this was going to happen. The point of it was to dramatize for the court what the implications of this are.â The committee plans to show courts the Trump regimeâs extremist view on stonewalling.
On Thursday, WAPO reported Felix Sater, a Russian-born real estate developer and Trump business partner who worked on Trump Tower Moscow, will testify Friday before the House Intelligence Committee.
Sater said, âI will answer every question without exceptionâ in the closed door session. Sater also detailed what he described as a two-decade-long history of assisting the FBI, the CIA, and Defense Intelligence Agency.
On Friday, Sater was an unexplained no-show for the House hearings. Chair Adam Schiff said, âHe agreed to appear this morning. He did not show up. We will have to subpoena him.â
On Friday, Politico reported that Saterâs excuse for missing his scheduled appearance was that he was feeling ill and slept through his alarm on Friday morning.
On Wednesday, the Trump regime reversed its decision to end the Job Corps Civilian Conservation Centers announced in Week 133, after a backlash from a bipartisan lawmakers, including Leader McConnell.
On Wednesday, Trump called in to Fox News host Sean Hannity for what ended up being a 45-minute long interview. Trump accused two members of Congress of taking photos of Hicks and leaking them to the media.
Trumpâs claim was false, but Hannity validated it by saying, âOh good grief.â Trump continued on a variety of familiar topics, including Russia and his Wall. Trump continued as Ingrahamâs show started at 10 p.m.
Trump pushed back on Hannity saying many people would like for Trump to âturn off the switchâ and use Twitter less, telling Hannity âyouâre not really patriots as much as you want ratings.â
Trump also told Hannity he might live tweet the Democratic debates next week despite his aides not wanting him to, saying âmaybe I will now,â adding, âInstead of fake news, Iâll make them correct news. And thatâs OK.â
On Thursday, Time released a transcript of its interview with Trump. When asked about the Mueller report, Trump changed topics to threaten a photographer for attempting to photograph his letter from Kim Jong Un.
Trump said, âWell, you can go to prison, instead, because if you use, if you use the photograph you took of the letter that I gave you . . . â The Time reporter then tried to continue the interview.
Trump added, âconfidentially, I didnât give it to you to take photographs of itâââso donât play that game with me.â Asked if he was threatening jail time, Trump changed the subject to Timeâs unfavorable coverage of him.
On Sunday, a WSJ-NBC News poll found 48% of Democrats want to begin impeachment hearings, up from 30% last month. Overall 27% support for starting impeachment up from 17% last month.
The poll also found that overall, 51% of Americans believe impeachment should start now or Congress should continue to investigate, up slightly from 49% last month. Opposition to impeachment remained at 48%.
On Wednesday, 71 House members were for impeachment, including 70 Democrats and Republican Rep. Justin Amash. Notably, only one of the 12 key committee chairs, Chair Maxine Waters, is for impeachment.
On Thursday, Rep. Jan Schakowsky became the 72nd to call for impeachment, but hours later, she qualified her call to say Speaker Pelosi was âultimately rightâ in her push to get rid of Trump in the 2020 election.
On Wednesday, tensions grew between the Trump regime and lawmakers of both parties over whether Trump could use the 2001 authorization for the use of military force (AUMF) for a military strike against Iran.
Secretary of State Pompeo told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee the basis would be Iranâs connections to al Qaeda, which he called âvery real.â GOP Sen. Rand Paul said âthere are no credible linksâ between al Qaeda and Iran.
The State Departmentâs special envoy for Iran said adding troops was for protection, not a strike. A bipartisan group of Senators said in a letter âCongress has not authorized warâ and there was no statutory authority.
On Thursday, the U.S. military confirmed Iranâs Revolutionary Guard shot down a U.S. surveillance drone over the Strait of Hormuz, considered international waters, the first direct attack by Iran on U.S. military.
Trump tweeted shortly after, âIran made a very big mistake,â and when asked about a U.S. response said, âYouâll soon find out.â Iran denied the U.S. version of events, saying the drone strayed into Iranian airspace.
As he met with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Trump said, âWe have it all documented. Itâs documented scientifically, not just words.â When asked what came next, Trump said, âLetâs see what happens.â
Later, Trump seemed to soften, telling reporters, âI find it hard to believe it was intentional, if you want to know the truth,â adding, âI think that it could have been somebody who was loose and stupid that did it.â
At mid-day, Russian President Vladimir Putin said during a televised direct line with the Russian public that a war between the U.S. and Iran âwould be a catastropheâ and âcould have possibly sad consequences.â
On Thursday, NYT reported Trump had approved retaliatory strikes against Iran, and as of 7 p.m. military and diplomatic officials were expecting strikes on a handful of targets.
Trumpâs decision came after a discussion at the White House including his top national security officials and Congressional leaders. The strike was set to take place just before dawn on Friday in order to minimize risk.
Secretary of State Pompeo, national security adviser John Bolton, and CIA director Gina Haspel had favored a strike. Top Pentagon officials warned it could escalate. Congressional leaders were briefed in the Situation Room.
After the briefing, Democratic leaders called on Trump to de-escalate and to seek congressional authorization before taking any military action.
Later in the evening, Trump abruptly called off the strike, which would have been his third, including two strikes in Syria. It was unclear if Trump changed his mind or the regime altered course for some reason.
On Friday, Trump again attacked the Times, referring to a Washington Examiner story about a 2017 email from a NYTreporter to an FBI official. Trump tweeted about âthe Failing and Desperate New York Times.â
Trump falsely claimed the Timesâwas feeding false stories about me, & those associated with me, to the FBI,â calling them a âCrooked newspaperâ and asking, âIs what they have done legal?
On Friday, the Washington Examiner issued a correction, removing the characterization that a NYT reporter âfed informationâ to the FBI, adding âwe regretâ the story did not meet our ânormal standards and procedures.â
On Friday, in a series of tweets on Iran, Trump said Obama âmade a desperate and terrible deal with Iranâ falsely claiming Obama bailed Iran out by giving them â150 Billion Dollars plus 1.8 Billion Dollars in CASH!â
Trump blamed Obama for giving Iran âa free path to Nuclear Weapons, and SOON,â adding, âI terminated deal, which was not even ratified by Congress, and imposed strong sanctionsâ claiming he has weakened Iran.
Trump added after Iran shot down the drone, âWe were cocked & loaded to retaliate last night on 3 different sights when I asked, how many will die. 150 people, sir, was the answer from a General.â
Trump added, â10 minutes before the strike I stopped it, not proportionate to shooting down an unmanned drone,â adding, âI am in no hurry,â and saying, âIran can NEVER have Nuclear Weapons.â
Trump also tweeted, âSanctions are biting & more added last night.â CNBC reported the Treasury Department has not issued new sanctions, and a spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.
On Friday, Speaker Pelosi told reporters that she was not informed by Trump about his planned Iran strike. Traditionally, House and Senate leadership, and chair and ranking members key committees are informed.
On Friday, Reuters reported Iranian sources said Trump had warned Tehran that a U.S. attack was imminent, saying he was against war and wanted talks. The U.S. State Department denied Reutersâ report.
Trump spoke to Crown Prince MBS on the situation Friday. German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she and fellow EU leaders âare concerned about the situation and support diplomatic negotiations.â
On Friday, WAPO reported key Trump allies had expected him to impose economic sanctions or other nonmilitary punishmenton Iran. The chaos of the response reinforced concerns about the Trump regimeâs credibility.
Officials disputed Trumpâs tweets, saying he was told the number of possible casualties early in the day, but gave the green light to prepare for a retaliatory strikes.
Later in the day, in an interview with NBCâs Chuck Todd, Trump changed his story, saying at no time did he he give final approval for any strikes and that no planes were in the air.
On Friday, NYT reported that one of the reasons Trump chose not to strike was warnings from his favorite Fox News host Tucker Carlson not to do so, highlighting the unusual decision-making process of Trump.
On Friday, Rep. William Lacy Clay and two co-sponsors filed articles of impeachment for obstruction of justice, and three co-sponsored a resolution for the House Judiciary to begin an impeachment inquiry.
On Friday, Politico reported Trumpâs continual reference to serving more than two terms and comments by Michael Cohen that Trump will not leave if 2020 is close have people in Congress and the beltway chattering.
Concern is Trump would not accept a 2020 defeat, and tie the matter up in court for a long time. Republicans claim at that point they would intervene, and most at the juncture view the possibility as far-fetched.
On Friday, Trump tweeted a video depicting him on the cover of Time as running for president indefinitely. The video was a play on this weekâs Time cover titled, âHow Trumpism Outlasts Trump.â
On Friday, the number of Democrats calling for impeachment grew to 75 out of 235, bringing the total including Rep. Amash to 76.
On Friday, a newly unsealed filing from the Alexandria court revealed Sean Hannity and Paul Manafort exchanged hundreds of text messages about the Mueller probe in the time preceding Manafortâs criminal trial.
The two regularly communicated, sharing opinions and information about the Mueller investigation. Manafort put Hannity in touch with his attorney Kevin Downing, and Hannity relayed information from Trumpâs orbit.
Manafort texted, âI wonât sell out. I cannot allow them to win..it would empower them to go afterâ Trump and others, adding he planned to work to re-elect Trump. Mueller brought the texts to the judgeâs attention.
A gag order prevented Manafort from appearing on Hannityâs show, but he texted him, âBuilding a plan B.â He also told Hannity he was using information on Fox News for his legal arguments.
Manafort requested to put Downing in contact with Gregg Jarrett, another Fox News host, and set up Hannity with Downing on a phone call in a January 2018 to which Hannity said, âI asked him to feed me every day.â
Manafort said that unlike Gates, he would never cooperate. He also praised the hire of Rudy Giuliani, but repeatedly expressed frustration with then AG Jeff Sessions, whom he called âtotally worthless.â
On Saturday, Trump defended the roundups, tweeting, âThese are people that are supposed to go back to their home country,â adding, âThey broke the law by coming into the country, & now by staying.â
On Saturday, Trump praised Bolton, despite reports of friction on Iran. Trump told reporters Bolton is a âhawkâ and he disagrees with him at times, adding, âthe only one that matters is me.â
On Saturday, Trump delayed planned deportation roundups scheduled for Sunday, facing a massive backlash from Democrats, activists, and elected officials and law enforcement in the 10 states he planned to target.
Pelosi called the roundups âheartlessâ and urged Trump to âstop this brutal action.â Trump tweeted, âat the request of Democrats, I have delayed the Illegal Immigration Removal Process (Deportation) for two weeks.â
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