President Trump confirmed early Friday that he called off a retaliatory attack on Iran in response to the downing of a U.S. drone “10 minutes before the strike,” saying the number of expected casualties was not “proportionate” to what Tehran did.

In a stunning tweet thread, the president said the U.S. was “cocked & loaded to retaliate” with plans to hit three sites, but he reversed course after asking military leaders about how many would be killed.

“… I asked, how many will die. 150 people, sir, was the answer from a General. 10 minutes before the strike I stopped it, not … proportionate to shooting down an unmanned drone. I am in no hurry, our Military is rebuilt, new, and ready to go, by far the best in the world,” Trump said. “Sanctions are biting & more added last night. Iran can NEVER have Nuclear Weapons, not against the USA, and not against the WORLD!”

He also took another swipe at his predecessor Barack Obama’s nuclear deal with Iran, while claiming sanctions imposed since have weakened the country. He also said more sanctions were added “last night.” Existing sanctions include those covering the country’s banking and energy sectors, restricting countries from importing Iranian oil and companies from doing business with certain Iranian entities.

A source had confirmed to Fox News earlier Friday morning that the administration made a last-minute decision to call off the retaliatory strikes against Iran. But until Trump’s tweets, few details about the aborted mission and the circumstances that led to the reversal were publicly available. And it remained unclear Friday whether strike plans have been definitively shelved.

Multiple news outlets, including The New York Times, Washington Post and Associated Press, had reported similar accounts of strikes being called off late Thursday — citing unnamed sources. These reports portray a mission that would have targeted Iranian missile batteries and radars.

No shots were fired and no missiles were launched, according to the AP.

Meanwhile, in Iran, the head of the Revolutionary Guard’s aerospace division claimed at a news conference Friday that a manned U.S. spy plane was near the downed drone but Iran chose not to target it.

Top White House officials met earlier Thursday for a classified briefing that lasted over an hour about the drone, and those in attendance suggested that a “measured” response was likely coming soon.

Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., an outspoken Trump critic who chairs the House Intelligence Committee, said the president is listening to congressional leaders who are urging caution.

Trump told reporters on Thursday that Iran made a “very big mistake” but also said he had the feeling that it might have been the result of someone being “loose and stupid,” rather than a deliberate provocation by Iran.

The Pentagon released video showing the smoke trail of the Navy drone that was shot out of the sky over the Strait of Hormuz by Iran, in what military officials described as an “unprovoked attack.”

The tensions between Washington and Tehran have increased since Trump backed out of the Obama-era nuclear deal in May 2018. Iran has been under strain from U.S. sanctions after seeing its currency drop by about 60 percent in 12 months, according to European Union figures. Food and drug prices are up 40 and 60 percent respectively.

Meanwhile, the  U.S. Federal Aviation Administration issued an emergency order Thursday prohibiting U.S. operators from flying in an overwater area of Tehran-controlled airspace over the Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman “due to heightened military activities and increased political tensions in the region.”

Fox News’ Gregg Re and Talia Kaplan and Fox Business Network’s Blake Burman and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/us-called-off-retaliatory-strike-against-iran-in-last-minute-wsj

A famous advice columnist has come forward to allege that President Donald Trump attacked her in the 1990s in a dressing room. The alleged actions ― as described by columnist E. Jean Carroll in graphic detail ― would clearly constitute rape.

Carroll is the 16th woman to accuse Trump of sexual misconduct. In an excerpt of her upcoming book, “What Do We Need Men For? A Modest Proposal,” published Friday by New York Magazine, she described her encounter with the real estate mogul.

Carroll says that in the mid-1990s, she was in Bergdorf Goodman when she ran into Trump. Trump, recognizing her as a famous advice columnist, asked for her help to buy lingerie for an unnamed woman. Carroll, then 52, obliged and followed Trump to the lingerie department. Once there, the exchange turned violent, she writes:

The moment the dressing-room door is closed, he lunges at me, pushes me against the wall, hitting my head quite badly, and puts his mouth against my lips. I am so shocked I shove him back and start laughing again. He seizes both my arms and pushes me up against the wall a second time, and, as I become aware of how large he is, he holds me against the wall with his shoulder and jams his hand under my coat dress and pulls down my tights.

I am astonished by what I’m about to write: I keep laughing. The next moment, still wearing correct business attire, shirt, tie, suit jacket, overcoat, he opens the overcoat, unzips his pants, and, forcing his fingers around my private area, thrusts his penis halfway — or completely, I’m not certain — inside me.

The now 75-year-old goes on to say it was a “colossal struggle” before she finally was able to “push him out and off,” and escape the department store.

The White House’s statement to New York Magazine on the alleged assault is that Carroll’s story “is a completely false and unrealistic story surfacing 25 years after allegedly taking place and was created simply to make the President look bad.”

Carroll told two friends about the attack. She wrote that she didn’t come forward sooner because “receiving death threats, being driven from my home, being dismissed, being dragged through the mud, and joining the 15 women who’ve come forward with credible stories about how the man grabbed, badgered, belittled, mauled, molested, and assaulted them, only to see the man turn it around, deny, threaten, and attack them, never sounded like much fun.”

Carroll and the White House did not respond to additional requests for comment.

You can read the entire excerpt here.

Need help? Visit RAINN’s National Sexual Assault Online Hotline or the National Sexual Violence Resource Center’s website.

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  • This article originally appeared on HuffPost.

Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/06/21/advice-columnist-e-jean-carroll-details-alleged-rape-by-trump-in-1990s/23754190/

Four days after President Donald Trump announced that “ICE will begin the process of removing the millions of illegal aliens who have illicitly found their way into the United States,” news broke Friday that raids in a number of large cities will happen as soon as this weekend.

The Washington Post reported that ICE will conduct “predawn raids” on Sunday as part of a “family op” targeting up to 2,000 families with members who have received deportation orders — a number much smaller than what Trump called for in his announcement, but one that is large in scope for ICE and not without risk to communities where immigrants live and places where they work.

In an interview with ABC, Immigration and Customs Enforcement Acting Director Mark Morgan said the raids are about maintaining the “rule of law.” And though a ramped-up enforcement effort had been in the works, Trump’s decision to publicly telegraph a major law enforcement operation was an unusual one for a president to make. Coming as it did the evening before his 2020 reelection kickoff, his announcement appeared to be motivated by politics more than necessity. And as I detailed on Tuesday, ICE was blindsided by his tweet.

The Post reports that law enforcement officials felt comfortable talking to the publication on background about the raids because of Trump’s tweet, and expressed concerns both about Trump’s motivations and the raids themselves:

Some within DHS and ICE say the president appears to be using the operation for political purposes as he begins his reelection bid. Law enforcement officials worry that by publicly discussing the plan, Trump has undermined the chances of capturing those on the target list, as it likely pushed migrants with deportation orders underground.

ICE hasn’t revealed much about the operational logistics of the forthcoming raids, but here’s some of what we do and don’t know about them.

Families targeted for deportation have received final orders of deportation, but haven’t necessarily been accused of crimes beyond that

CNN reports that raids will occur in 10 large cities that are “immigration court locations”: Atlanta, Baltimore, Chicago, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, New Orleans, New York, and San Francisco, and are intended to detain people from up to 2,000 families.

Morgan told reporters earlier this month that ICE would be targeting “individuals who have gone through due process and who have received final orders of deportation.”

Last year, the Trump administration developed an expedited legal process for migrant families, which, according to the Post, fast-tracked “the cases of thousands of families in major cities, obtaining ‘in absentia’ deportation orders for thousands of families that did not show up for their court hearings.”

But just because one or more members of a family have deportation orders doesn’t mean they are the hardened criminals that Trump often portrays them as being. (In a departure from Obama administration policy, Trump hasn’t made distinctions between undocumented immigrants who have criminal records and those that don’t.)

After news of the raids broke, and ACLU and RAICES — or the Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services — posted tweets aimed at educating immigrants about their rights if they or someone they know is swept up in one of the raids.

These raids have been controversial even within the Trump administration, in part because they’re risky

The Washington Post reported last month that former Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen and former ICE Acting Director Ronald Vitiello were ousted from the administration in April in part because they were concerned that raids like the ones ICE is now planning to go forward with would be “bad policy and that the proposal was less than half-baked.”

Indeed, there are indications that the raids will be somewhat indiscriminate, in part because of intelligence shortcomings. From the Post:

ICE agents have limited intelligence on the locations of the families with court-ordered deportations beyond their last known addresses. But White House and ICE officials believe agents will be able to make many “collateral arrests” by finding foreigners living in the country illegally at or near the target locations.

The publicity Trump has given to the operations will likely cause some undocumented immigrants who have received deportation orders and are living in affected cities to go underground. But ICE believes agents will be able to arrest others who weren’t necessarily targets, but are happened upon during the process of carrying them out.

Acting DHS Secretary Kevin McAleenan has also reportedly pushed back on the large-scale “family op,” advocating a much more limited plan that would target approximately 150 families, per the Post.


The news moves fast. To stay updated, follow Aaron Rupar on Twitter, and read more of Vox’s policy and politics coverage.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2019/6/21/18701408/ice-deportation-raids-10-cities

President Trump approved military strikes on Iran, but then abruptly pulled back — this coming after Iran shot down a US Navy drone with a missile. #CNN #News

Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d8lwa-h6HeE

The number of border crossings appears to have slowed in recent weeks, possibly as a result of a crackdown by the Mexican government under pressure from President Trump, but the numbers remain high compared to recent years. The overcrowding crisis has been unfolding invisibly, with journalists and lawyers offered little access to fenced-off border facilities.

The reports of unsafe and unsanitary conditions at Clint and elsewhere came days after government lawyers in court argued that they should not have to provide soap or toothbrushes to children under the legal settlement that gave Ms. Mukherjee and her colleagues access to the facility in Clint. The result of a lawsuit that was first settled in 1997, the settlement set the standards for the detention, treatment and release of migrant minors taken into federal immigration custody.

Ms. Mukherjee is part of a team of lawyers who has for years under the settlement been allowed to inspect government facilities where migrant children are detained. She and her colleagues traveled to Clint this week after learning that border officials had begun detaining minors who had recently crossed the border there.

She said the conditions in Clint were the worst she had seen in any facility in her 12-year career. “So many children are sick, they have the flu, and they’re not being properly treated,” she said. According to the Associated Press, which first reported the conditions at the facility, said on Wednesday that the station was housing three infants, all with teen mothers, along with a 1-year-old, two 2-year-olds and a 3-year-old. It said there were dozens more children under the age of 12.

Ms. Mukherjee said children were being overseen by guards for Customs and Border Protection, which declined to comment for this story. She and her colleagues observed the guards wearing full uniforms — including weapons — as well as face masks to protect themselves from the unsanitary conditions.

Together, the group of six lawyers met with 60 children in Clint this week who ranged from 5 months to 17 years old. The infants were either children of minor parents, who were also detained, or had been separated from adult family members with whom they had crossed the border. The separated children were now alone, being cared for by other young detainees.

“The children are locked in their cells and cages nearly all day long,” Ms. Mukherjee said. “A few of the kids said they had some opportunities to go outside and play, but they said they can’t bring themselves to play because they are trying to stay alive in there.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/21/us/migrant-children-border-soap.html

Fox News host Tucker Carlson slammed national security adviser John Bolton after it was revealed President Trump called off a strike on Iran minutes before it was set to happen.

Bolton has been a long-standing believer in the U.S. playing a part in toppling the Iranian regime.

“I had said for over 10 years since coming to these events that the declared policy of the United States of America should be the overthrow of the Mullah’s regime in Tehran. And that is why before 2019, we here will celebrate in Tehran. Thank you very much,” Bolton said in a clip played by Carlson on Friday.

“In other words, last night has been in the works for years. John Bolton is kind of bureaucratic tapeworm. Try as you might, you can’t expel him. He seems to live forever in the bowels of the federal agency reemerging to cause pain and suffering. But critically, somehow, never suffering himself,” Carlson said.

Carlson said Bolton’s career was “Washington in a nutshell” by blundering “into the obvious catastrophes again and again, refuse to admit blame, then demand more of the same.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/john-bolton-is-a-bureaucratic-tapeworm-tucker-carlson-says

Traders this week bet on a Fed rate cut in record-setting numbers

Trading volume soared to 1,293,459 million contracts Wednesday, the same day the Federal Open Market Committee voted to keep rates unchanged.

read more

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/06/21/chip-stocks-fall-after-commerce-dept-bars-5-more-chinese-firms-from-buying-us-parts.html

CLOSE

President Trump canceled a retaliatory attack on Iran after the nation shot down a U.S. surveillance drone, according to a U.S. official brief.
USA TODAY

WASHINGTON – Congressional Republicans were divided Friday following President Donald Trump’s decision to abort a planned missile strike against Iran for the downing of a U.S. drone.

“I’ll judge ultimately based on if there is a response, but if the response is no response then I think this is a mistake in pretty big proportions,” said Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., a former Air Force pilot who sits on the House Foreign Affairs Committee. He added: “This was a direct attack on U.S. assets.” 

Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, a former Navy SEAL who was wounded in Afghanistan, said the president’s strategy to be flexible is a smart one.

“We now have the best of both worlds,” said Crenshaw, a freshman member of the House Homeland Security Committee. “There’s a clear indication that we’re willing to strike and retaliate when they hit us, and now there’s also an indication that the president is saying, ‘listen, I control the narrative. I control the escalation and I will give you a second chance, and now it is up to you what to do with it’.”

CLOSE

Following Iran’s shootdown of an American drone, tensions are high. But this is nothing new for the U.S. and Iran. We have the FAQs.
Just the FAQs, USA TODAY

Iran escalation: Timeline: How tension escalated between US, Iran

Trump abruptly canceled the strike Thursday after the military told him about the potential casualties.

“We were cocked & loaded to retaliate last night on 3 different sights when I asked, how many will die,” Trump said, adding: “150 people, sir, was the answer from a General. 10 minutes before the strike I stopped it, not proportionate to shooting down an unmanned drone.”

Trump added that he is in “no hurry” to respond to Iran because “our Military is rebuilt, new, and ready to go, by far the best in the world. Sanctions are biting & more added last night.”

GOP lawmakers say they are waiting to see what the president’s next move is.

Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, who heads the House Republican Conference, said it could be “a very serious mistake” if Trump doesn’t respond to Iran with more than tweets.

“We simply can’t allow America’s adversaries to think that they can shoot down a U.S. military drone with impunity,” Cheney told conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt on Friday. “The failure to respond to this kind of direct provocation that we’ve seen now from the Iranians, in particular over the last several weeks, could in fact be a very serious mistake.”

But other House Republican leaders – Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California, Armed Services Committee ranking member Mac Thornberry of Pennsylvania, Foreign Affairs Committee ranking member Michael McCaul of Texas and Intelligence Committee ranking member Devin Nunes of California – issued a joint statement supporting Trump.

“There must be a measured response to these actions,” the lawmakers said, referring to Iran’s takedown of a U.S. drone and recent attacks on two commercial oil tankers. “President Trump and his national security team remain clear-eyed on the situation and what must be done in response to increased Iranian aggression.”

Democrats were more vocal, advising the president to move carefully before threatening – or taking – military action.

“We are in an extremely dangerous and sensitive situation with Iran,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said in a statement. “We must calibrate a response that de-escalates and advances American interests, and we must be clear as to what those interests are.”

Pelosi also said any decision to engage in “hostilities” with Iran “must not be initiated without the approval of Congress.”

Rep. John Larson, D-Conn., said he is working with other Democrats “to draft a resolution to prevent this from escalating. We cannot let ourselves get into another Iraq and Afghanistan, too many American and civilian lives have already been lost to war.”

The episode drew comparisons to 2013 when congressional Republicans blasted President Barack Obama for not following through on a threat to punish the Assad regime for the use of chemical weapons on Syrian civilians.

Kinzinger tweeted that “America was facing a crisis in confidence” similar to six years ago if Trump didn’t act this time.

But Rep. Matt Gaetz, a Florida Republican and one of Trump’s staunchest allies in Congress praised the president’s tactics.

“I think he’s playing a little game of show and tell with the Iranians,” he told USA TODAY. “He’s showing them what he could do and then he’s telling them he didn’t do it last night.”

Contributing: Tom Vanden Brook and Bart Jansen

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/06/21/iran-strike-trump-criticized-republicans-calling-off-missiles/1523118001/

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/06/21/politics/ice-immigration-raids/index.html

“Fox News Sunday” anchor Chris Wallace said Friday that there are “costs to inaction” after President Trump confirmed he called off retaliatory strikes against Iran.

Trump made the last-minute decision Thursday night after the downing of a Navy drone that Washington said was flying within international airspace.

The mission would have reportedly targeted Iranian missile batteries and radars.

Trump took to Twitter Friday morning to confirm he called off the strikes and said he based his decision on the number of potential casualties.

MEDIC TESTIFIES THAT HE, NOT NAVY SEAL EDDIE GALLAGHER, WAS RESPONSIBLE FOR ISIS FIGHTER’S DEATH

A source had confirmed to Fox News earlier Friday morning that the administration made a last-minute decision to call off the retaliatory strikes against Iran.

But until Trump’s tweets, few details about the aborted mission and the circumstances that led to the reversal were publicly available. And it remained unclear Friday whether strike plans have been definitively shelved.

TRUMP SAYS IRAN’S US DRONE SHOOT-DOWN MAY HAVE BEEN ‘MISTAKE,’ BUT ‘COUNTRY WILL NOT STAND FOR IT’

Responding on “America’s Newsroom,” Wallace questioned Trump’s explanation that potential casualties were the reason for his decision. Wallace said such discussions about “collateral damage” would normally occur far in advance of the president ordering the strike to go forward earlier on Thursday.

“A war with Iran would be a very ugly and prolonged conflict so it does raise the question: Does the president really have the stomach to launch this kind of attack and get more deeply involved, perhaps, in a confrontation with Iran?” Wallace said.

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He stated Iran bears the responsibility for provoking the confrontation, but there are costs to both action and inaction.

“Remember when President Obama decided a few years ago, he declared that red line and said we would strike back if Syria launched another chemical weapons attack and then he backed off that. A lot of people, including Donald Trump as a candidate and even as president, said there was a real cost to that in terms of the U.S. threatening something and then not going ahead and doing it,” Wallace recalled.

He concluded Trump may still order a strike with less of a risk of causing casualties, but it appears the president “doesn’t have much of an appetite” for such an escalation.

Fox News’ Lucas Tomlinson contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/chris-wallace-trump-iran-strike-reversal-obama-syria-red-line

The Supreme Court has ruled to strike down a conviction of a death row inmate over racial bias in jury selection.

Eric Baradat/AFP/Getty Images


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The Supreme Court has ruled to strike down a conviction of a death row inmate over racial bias in jury selection.

Eric Baradat/AFP/Getty Images

The Supreme Court has struck down the conviction of an African American death row inmate who was prosecuted six times for the same crime and by the same prosecutor, a man with a history of racial bias in jury selection.

Writing for the court’s 7-2 majority, Justice Brett Kavanaugh said, “The numbers speak loudly. Over the course of the first four trials, there were 36 black prospective jurors against whom the State could have exercised a peremptory strike. The State tried to strike all 36.”

Curtis Flowers has spent 22 years on death row in Mississippi. In his cases, the same prosecutor struck 41 of 42 prospective black jurors.

Justice Clarence Thomas, the court’s only black justice, had the minority opinion, which was joined in part by Justice Neil Gorsuch.

“The majority’s opinion is so manifestly incorrect that I must proceed to the merits,” Thomas wrote. “Flowers presented no evidence whatsoever of purposeful race discrimination by the State in selecting the jury during the trial below.”

Curtis Flowers, whose murder case has gone to trial six times, is seen in an August 2017 photo.

Mississippi Department of Corrections via AP


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Mississippi Department of Corrections via AP

Curtis Flowers, whose murder case has gone to trial six times, is seen in an August 2017 photo.

Mississippi Department of Corrections via AP

Thomas added, “If the Court’s opinion today has a redeeming quality, it is this: The State is perfectly free to convict Curtis Flowers again. Otherwise, the opinion distorts our legal standards, ignores the record, and reflects utter disrespect for the careful analysis of the Mississippi courts. Any competent prosecutor would have exercised the same strikes as the State did in this trial. And although the Court’s opinion might boost its self-esteem, it also needlessly prolongs the suffering of four victims’ families. I respectfully dissent.”

For decades the Supreme Court has wrestled with the question of racial discrimination in jury selection, setting down its most rigorous rules in 1986. But policing the way those rules are applied by the lower court has proved problematic, and the court has repeatedly struck down convictions by all-white, or close to all-white, juries.

Flowers’ case is anomalous only because of the number of times he was tried by the same prosecutor and the prosecutor’s repeated misconduct.

Doug Evans, a district attorney in Winona, Miss., prosecuted Flowers — who prior to this case had no criminal record — six times.

During that time the state Supreme Court three times threw out his murder conviction for prosecutorial misconduct.

The misconduct was not some technicality. It ranged from misleading the jury about evidence that did not exist to striking prospective jurors based on race.

In the fourth and fifth trials, the prosecutor ran out of strikes — meaning he had used up the limited number of prospective jurors he could eliminate from the jury for no reason. As a result, two black jurors were seated, and the juries deadlocked.

But in the sixth trial, with one black juror, the jury convicted, and the Mississippi Supreme Court upheld the conviction, ruling that this time there had not been any racial discrimination in jury selection.

Now it’s up to the state of Mississippi whether to try him for a seventh time.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/06/21/732159330/supreme-court-strikes-down-conviction-of-mississippi-man-on-death-row-for-22-yea

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/06/21/media/time-photographer-trump-threat/index.html

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y.,  has only been in Congress for a matter of months, but in that short period of time she’s been able to prompt widespread outrage and catch the attention of some of America’s most prominent politicians.

The self-described Democratic Socialist has attracted criticism and surprise over controversial policies like the “Green New Deal,” as well as her unorthodox political views that seemed to stun people on both sides of the aisle.

On Tuesday, AOC once again ignited a media firestorm when she continued bashing President Trump’s administration by alluding to a term used to describe the horrific conditions Jews endured during the Holocaust. Here’s a review of that comment and the many others that seemed to lead one pundit to dub her “the most powerful Democrat in office.”

TOMI LAHREN: ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ IS RIGHT ABOUT THIS (YES, I MEAN IT)…

Labeling Trump’s migrant centers ‘concentration camps’

In what were perhaps her most controversial comments to date, AOC alluded to Nazi Germany while describing the way Trump detained migrant families on the border. “The fact that concentration camps are now an institutionalized practice in the land of the free is extraordinarily disturbing,” she said during a livestream that went viral on social media.

Her comments quickly caught the attention of her colleague, House GOP Conference Chairwoman Liz Cheney, R-Wyo. Cheney, among others, suggested that the freshman congresswoman was grossly ignorant of history and disrespected Jews by bringing up a term often used to describe their imprisonment under the Nazis.

But Ocasio-Cortez and many others suggested her comments weren’t outrageous because “concentration camps” were markedly different than the “death camps” that Holocaust victims experienced. Some weren’t buying it, though, and Acting Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director Mark Morgan — whose agency is partially responsible for detaining migrants — even weighed in, calling her comments “reckless, irresponsible, misinformed and wrong.”

AOC ATTACK GROUP TARGETS TOP DEM — WHO VOTED WITH HER 96% OF THE TIME BUT CRITICIZED OMAR

The world will end in 12 years because of climate change

AOC started her congressional term with a bang — proposing a multitrillion-dollar plan that would radically alter the economy with the goal of reducing carbon emissions. Initially dismissed as absurd by critics, her “Green New Deal” eventually made its way into Democratic presidential candidate’s official policies.

While decrying the impacts of climate change in January, AOC seemed to conjure the most frequent conservative criticism of progressives on the issue — namely, that they blow the threat way out of proportion. AOC not only invoked World War II, but suggested that the world would “end in 12 years.” “Millennials and people, you know, Gen Z and all these folks that will come after us are looking up and we’re like: ‘The world is gonna end in 12 years if we don’t address climate change and your biggest issue is how are we gonna pay for it?'” she said.

Her comments received widespread ridicule, although two-thirds of Democrats shared that view. Months after her comments, she derided Republicans for failing to recognize the “dry humor + sarcasm” in her statement. “But the GOP is basically Dwight from The Office so who knows,” she tweeted.

REP. MCCARTHY: OCASIO-CORTEZ OWES THE COUNTRY AN APOLOGY FOR CONCENTRATION CAMP REMARKS

Amazon pays its workers ‘starvation wages’

As a “Democratic Socialist,” AOC has joined her colleagues — Sens. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., — in fiercely criticizing big corporations for their purported greed and oppression of working class Americans.

In June, the freshman congresswoman doubled down on her previous criticism of one of the biggest U.S. corporations — online retail giant Amazon — and claimed CEO Jeff Bezos was able to make billions in part because he paid his workers “starvation wages.”

That obviously didn’t go over well with Amazon which blasted her allegations as “absurd.” “Amazon associates receive industry-leading pay starting at $15 an hour,” an Amazon spokesperson said, citing the pay rate AOC and other progressives sought to install as the federal minimum wage.

ELIZABETH WARREN PROPOSES BREAKING UP BIG TECH GIANTS, INCLUDING AMAZON AND GOOGLE

Cauliflower isn’t just something you grow in a garden — it’s an outgrowth of colonialism

As part of AOC’s emphasis on race, she has derided as so-called “colonial” acts that the alleged perpetrators don’t even realize were oppressive. She warned, for example, that New Yorkers should be wary of blindly planting food like Cauliflower in the Bronx.

During a video, AOC addressed people who complained that planting Yucca — a plant often found in Mexico and Guatemala — was too difficult. Where they apparently saw cumbersome gardening, she saw a perpetuation of imperial conquest. “But when you really think about it — when someone says that it’s ‘too hard’ to do a green space that grows Yucca instead of, I don’t know, cauliflower or something — what you’re doing is you’re taking a colonial approach to environmentalism,” she said.

“That is why a lot of communities of color get resistant to certain environmentalist movements because they come with the colonial lens on them.” Those comments seemed to foreshadow AOC’s later claim that people were perpetuating “the legacy of colonization” when the pushed for Puerto Rican statehood.

MAN BREAKS INTO AOC’S OFFICES IN NYC, SPRAYS COPS WITH FIRE EXTINGUISHER

Border agents are caging children and injecting them with drugs

AOC’s concentration camp comments weren’t the first time she blasted the way children were treated at the border. During a long Instagram session in April, the New York congresswoman appeared to accuse Customs and Border Protection agents of forcibly injecting child migrants with drugs and putting them in cages.

“At least I’m not trying to cage children at the border and inject them with drugs,” she told viewers. “That’s not a mistake. That is a deliberate policy to attack people based on their national origin. That’s not a mistake, that’s just hatred. That’s just cruelty. That’s just wrong!” She seemed to be referring to an earlier lawsuit claiming migrant children were forced to take psychotropic medication.

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GOP acts like a demon-possessed girl vomiting pea soup

Republicans might have felt a sigh of relief when AOC compared them to “Office” star Dwight Schrute — at least she wasn’t likening them to a demon. During that same Instagram session in April, AOC said Republicans’ negativity reminded her of actress Linda Blair in “The Exorcist.”

“The reason Republicans hate me so much is because I confront them directly on their moral — their lack of moral grounding on so many issues and, not just that, but the reason they’re so upset and they act like that girl in ‘The Exorcist’ that’s like vomiting pea soup, that’s like them and negativity,” she said.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/aocs-concentration-camps-label-was-just-tip-of-the-iceberg-here-are-some-of-her-most-controversial-moments

House Democrats kept the Hyde Amendment intact in their $1 trillion spending bill, which passed yesterday by a vote of 226 to 203. However, they added a different pro-choice provision that the liberal media is keeping quiet about.

The new spending bill would repeal the Mexico City Policy, which was reinstated by executive order when President Trump took office. The policy prevents taxpayer dollars from funding abortion overseas. This Democratic bill would reinstate Obama-era policies and force Americans to fund Planned Parenthood International Federation, which already has plans for what to do with the cash.

Interestingly, the mainstream media hasn’t said a word about this. The few publications that have noted it are mainly pro-life and Catholic news outlets.

Trump and the GOP Senate will likely prevent this from happening. Like many GOP politicians, Trump promised to defund Planned Parenthood as a candidate. Then again, Trump and the GOP Congress both approved the 2018 omnibus bill that not only sustained Planned Parenthood’s domestic funding, but increased it to a total of $563.8 million per year. If the GOP let the abortion lobby walk right over them last year, what’s to say they won’t do it again?

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/media-keeps-hush-on-pro-abortion-provision-in-house-spending-bill

Mueller prosecutor Weissmann gets Trump Russia probe book deal:…

Andrew Weissmann, a leading prosecutor on special counsel Robert Mueller’s team, has a deal with Random House to write a book,The New York Times reported.

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Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/06/21/philadelphia-refinery-explosion-was-spotted-from-space-by-satellites.html

COLUMBIA, S.C. — South Carolina Democratic Rep. Jim Clyburn expressed “amazement” that Sens. Kamala Harris and Cory Booker have not had “more of a surge” in his state at this point in the race, referring to early polls that show the two black senators trailing far behind former Vice President Joe Biden.

During an interview in Washington this week with NBC News, Clyburn assessed the state of the Democratic primary race ahead of 22 of the 24 presidential hopefuls barreling into his home state Friday for South Carolina’s Democratic convention and Clyburn’s own “World Famous Fish Fry” event that night.

The state boasts a massive African American voting bloc — in 2016, black voters made up more than 60 percent of the Democratic electorate — meaning campaigns must work to woo voters of color to succeed here.

Booker and Harris have “been a little bit of amazement to me as well, because I thought for sure that there would be much more of a surge and I can’t quite figure that out yet,” Clyburn said.

Of Harris, he offered that she “hasn’t spelled out the policy stuff with her vision” — vision that he praised as “tremendous.”

“Of course, I just thought Kamala because this just seemed to be the year of the black woman. I thought she would be surging a little more than she is,” the third-ranking House Democrat said.

About Booker, on the other hand, Clyburn said, “I think he is suffering from the shadows, coming out from under the shadows of Barack Obama.”

But another man carrying the mantle of the Obama administration is the former president’s number two: Joe Biden. Clyburn shrugged off complaints from one local Democrat, Bakari Sellers, who accused him this week of breaking his own pledge to not endorse anyone in the primary by “tacitly endorsing” Biden.

“I don’t pay attention to that stuff,” Clyburn said, noting that he’s “pretty close to 12 of these people” and co-sponsoring legislation with several. “So you don’t walk away from your friends because you don’t want somebody to criticize you for what you might say about them,” he said.

In explaining Biden’s strong lead in South Carolina, Clyburn — who spoke to NBC before the former VP talked about working with segregationist senators earlier this week — chalked it up to the former vice president’s “long history” in the state. Biden gave eulogies for senators from both parties in recent years, and has spent years building relationships in the state.

“So, it doesn’t surprise me — that’s what I said — if he got into the race, everybody would also be running for second place. That’s just a fact,” Clyburn stated.

Even if his endorsement isn’t officially on the table, Clyburn’s deep roots and power in Palmetto State politics will still be on display Friday night as he hosts his annual Fish Fry.

Asked what a few thousand pounds of fish and toast have to do with winning the South Carolina Democratic primary, Clyburn laughed: “I don’t know if it has anything to do with winning but it gives a candidate an opportunity to interact with those people that we have out there working the polls, knocking on doors, beating the streets for Democratic candidates. These people really, pretty often get overlooked. I started doing the Fish Fry to honor them.”

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2020-election/clyburn-explains-why-harris-booker-haven-t-caught-s-carolina-n1020061

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/06/21/politics/donald-trump-iran-presidency/index.html

President Trump approved military strikes against Iran overnight for shooting down an American drone then suddenly decided not to do it. Iranian state TV broadcast what it claimed are the first remnants of the surveillance drone. The U.S. says the aircraft was flying over international waters when it was shot down. Iran says it has “indisputable” evidence that the drone entered Iran’s airspace. David Martin reports.

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Former top White House adviser Hope Hicks refused to answer House Judiciary Committee questions about her time in the White House, dimming Democrats’ chances of obtaining new or substantive information for their obstruction of justice probe. (June 20)
AP, AP

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump’s former aide Hope Hicks sat down with the House Judiciary Committee for nearly eight hours on Wednesday to answer questions about her time in the White House.

The former White House communications director, the first senior administration official mentioned in former special counsel Robert Mueller’s report to appear before Congress, was subpoenaed because of her proximity to Trump. Most notably, the committee members wanted to know about several episodes described in the Mueller report as attempts to thwart the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election. 

But throughout her marathon testimony, Hicks did not answer many questions related to her time in the Trump administration. Two White House lawyers were present during the testimony and often interjected with a quick “objection” to lawmakers’ questions.

In total, 155 questions went unanswered.

The queries she refused ranged from where her desk was in the White House to the president’s actions raised in Mueller’s report, according to a transcript published by the Judiciary Committee.

Iran: Following drone attack, the US prepared a strike against Iran but then withdrew plans, reports say

Hicks testimony: Democrats plan next steps after ex-Trump aide Hope Hicks didn’t answer key questions in te

Although the White House did not invoke executive privilege to block Hicks’ testimony, the lawyers, Michael Purpura and Patrick Philbin, noted that she “may not be compelled to speak about events that occurred during her service as a senior adviser to the President.”

“With all due respect, that is absolute nonsense as a matter of law,” House Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., replied.

Hicks said she found it “odd” that Corey Lewandowski, Trump’s former campaign manager, was asked to deliver a message to then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions to “unrecuse” himself from overseeing the Russia investigation.

Hicks was asked several times to read portions of Mueller’s report, such as an incident where Trump told Lewandowski to tell Sessions that if he delivered the remarks the president wanted, he would be the “most popular guy in the country.” However, when asked to verify the account, Hicks did not.

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In another instance, Hicks was asked about a portion of the report that described her as trying to “throw herself between the reporters and the President” in order to stop parts of an interview Trump was having with the New York Times in which he bashed Sessions for recusing himself from the Russia investigation.

When asked whether the account was accurate, lawyers objected to the question.

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Democratic members of Congress accused President Trump’s former spokeswoman Hope Hicks of pushing back on their inquiries during closed testimony.
USA TODAY

Hicks also did not answer any questions regarding Trump’s effort to have White House Counsel Don McGahn remove the special counsel, the resignation of former National Security Advisory Michael Flynn and Trump’s firing of former FBI director James Comey. She also did not answer a question about the president creating a statement in response to press coverage of a June 9, 2016, meeting at Trump Tower. Top Trump officials, including the president’s son Donald Trump Jr., had a meeting with Russians offering dirt on Democrat Hillary Clinton.

She also refused to answer questions about conversations she had with the president.

Although she was able to answer how the weather was on her first day on the job (“cloudy,” she said) and where she had lunch (at her desk), Hicks did not answer whether Trump would come and speak to her during lunchtime.

Hicks, who was one of the president’s most trusted confidants, did talk briefly about her time on Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, which she said felt “relief” after hacked information from top members of Hillary Clinton’s campaign was published by Wikileaks. She also defended the campaign’s use of the Wikileaks information, which Trump cited many times on the campaign trail.

‘That will not stand’: Democrats plan next steps after ex-Trump aide Hope Hicks didn’t answer key questions

White House departures: Who’s been fired and who resigned

Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle said little was learned from Hicks’ testimony. Nadler said he was satisfied in “some ways” with Hicks’ testimony, but said the blanket objection to answering questions would “not stand.”

The next step for Democrats, some committee members said Wednesday, is going to court and forcing Hicks and others to fully comply with subpoenas and answer questions, though Nadler did not say that was the next step for the committee. 

Contributing: Bart Jansen and Christal Hayes

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Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/06/21/trump-aide-hope-hicks-didnt-answer-155-questions-during-testimony/1518556001/

The U.S. Supreme Court is continuing to allow Congress to delegate the details on a law’s implementation, but there was a landmine in the decision.

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The U.S. Supreme Court is continuing to allow Congress to delegate the details on a law’s implementation, but there was a landmine in the decision.

Eric Baradat/AFP/Getty Images

Lost in the shuffle Thursday at the Supreme Court — with the major decision released in a separation of church and state case dominating — was another ruling that could, at some point, have wide ramifications for how American government functions.

The court ruled that Congress did not overstep its authority in handing off important power to the attorney general under the federal Sex Offender Registration Act, or SORNA.

The court’s decision came on a 5-3 vote, but only four justices agreed on the reasoning.

There was a landmine in the decision, however. With the fifth vote, Justice Samuel Alito said that if a majority of the court were willing to reexamine its long-held position, he might be willing to do the same.

For now, he was not willing to go that far, but that could change.

At issue in the case is the practice that allows federal agencies to write rules and make decisions about enforcing legislation enacted by Congress. This affects any law Congress passes, from the sex-offender statute in this case to, for example, the Affordable Care Act and on.

Those who warn about the power of the so-called administrative state, or the “deep state,” often contend that Congress frequently violates the Constitution by delegating legislative power to other government agencies.

That theory is called the “non-delegation doctrine,” but, in fact, the Supreme Court has only twice in its history struck down a federal law on such grounds, and those two cases were in 1935 when a conservative Supreme Court used the theory to invalidate two significant administration reforms aimed at pulling the country out of the Great Depression.

In the 84 years since then, the court has repeatedly refused to make a similar decision. Even conservative icons like the late Justice Antonin Scalia refused invitations to revisit it.

But in Thursday’s case, Justice Neil Gorsuch, joined by Justice Clarence Thomas and Chief Justice John Roberts said the time had come to draw a line in the sand. The court’s newest appointee, Brett Kavanaugh, did not vote in the case, as he arrived at the court a week after this case was argued.

That left Alito, with the whip hand — either to cast his lot with the three or with the court’s liberals. He sided with the liberals, but said if a majority of the court were willing to revisit the issue in a different context, he might be willing also.

“If a majority of this Court were willing to reconsider the approach we have taken for the past 84 years,” Alito said, “I would support that effort.”

This case was about more than one sex offender

At issue in this case was whether the Sex Offender Registration Act required those convicted before SORNA was passed to register as sex offenders.

When SORNA was enacted in 2006, Congress did not say explicitly whether its provisions applied to people convicted before passage of the law.

In 2008, then-Attorney General Michael Mukasey, in setting out rules for implementing the statute, elected to apply the law to some pre-act offenders.

Herman Gundy was sentenced to 10 years in prison on a child rape charge in Maryland in 2005, a year before SORNA was enacted. He served seven years of a 10-year sentence before being released to a halfway house in New York.

He was charged with failing to register as a sex offender there, but Gundy’s lawyers claimed that the registration requirement should not apply to their client, because it was enacted after his offense. They maintained that Congress could not delegate this much power to the attorney general.

The Supreme Court majority rejected that argument on Thursday. Writing for a four-justice plurality, Justice Elena Kagan said Congress, in enacting SORNA and other legislation, had made clear that the law was to apply to all sex offenders, whether they were convicted before SORNA’s passage or afterward.

“Indeed, if SORNA’s delegation [of power] is unconstitutional, then most of Government is unconstitutional — dependent as Congress is on the need to give discretion to executive officials to implement its programs,” Kagan wrote.

Quoting Justice Scalia, she added, “Congress simply cannot do its job absent an ability to delegate power under broad general directives.”

Justice Gorsuch’s dissenting opinion, 32-pages long, was almost twice as long as Kagan’s plurality.

“The Constitution does not permit judges to look the other way, ” he wrote. “We must call foul when the constitutional lines are crossed. Indeed, the framers afforded us independence from the political branches in large part to encourage exactly this kind of fortitude to do our duty as faithful guardians of the Constitution.”

Could that be a sign of things to come in a case in the not-too-distant future? It could depend on how Justice Kavanaugh would decide.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/06/21/732178487/is-the-supreme-court-going-to-soon-give-haters-of-the-deep-state-what-they-want