UNDER CONSTRUCTION - MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 3 https://middlebororeviewandsoon.blogspot.com/
Sunday, August 20, 2023
Sad news from Minnesota
RFK Jr. wants an abortion ban
“RFK Jr. says he’d sign a federal ban on abortions after three months of pregnancy” |
FIRST: Donald Trump packed the Supreme Court with far-right Justices to OVERTURN Roe v. Wade.
NOW: 21 states have banned or restricted abortion so far, with more states on the way.
BUT BUT BUT: President Biden is stepping up to codify Roe v. Wade and SAVE abortion rights everywhere!
Thank you for supporting Occupy Democrats.
For over a decade, our team has grown into the largest group of Democratic activists in the nation — over 10 million strong. This is the movement that will save our Democratic majorities from Trump's far-right Republicans!
Our mission is to elect the next blue wave of Democrats on November 2022 AND BEYOND by voting in a LANDSLIDE of progressive Democratic candidates dedicated to pass Biden's agenda for the people.
While Trump’s MAGA cronies have nearly their entire Republican caucus in Congress ruthlessly pursuing their extreme agenda, Occupy Democrats is an ever-growing MOVEMENT dedicated to changing that!
Let’s give the Trump's Republicans the boot — for good! — by electing a slate of newly-energized progressives to Congress.
PAID FOR BY OCCUPY DEMOCRATS ELECTION FUND [OCCUPYDEMOCRATS.COM] AND NOT AUTHORIZED BY ANY CANDIDATE OR CANDIDATE'S COMMITTEE.
Mitch McConnell Booed By Angry Kentucky Crowd Chanting ‘Retire!’
Senator Mitch McConnell spoke at the annual "Fancy Farm Picnic" in Kentucky and was loudly booed. Many in the crowd also began screaming “retire, retire, retire” at the Republican leader.
GOP 2024 Primary Debate Recap, Trump Georgia Indictment | The Breakdown August 24, 2023 at 7PM ET
Recap the first GOP Primary Debate in Milwaukee and Trump's Georgia Indictment. Join Tara Setmayer and Rick Wilson to discuss exclusively on The Breakdown. Thursday August 24, 2023 at 7PM ET.
JOHN FETTERMAN: Super short
It's the weekend, so I'm gonna go ahead + keep this *super* short!
My re-election may not be for a while, but I'm hard at work supporting vulnerable Dems like my PA partner-in-crime Bob Casey, all while fighting like h*ll for working families in DC.
That means our fundraising still matters. Like, a lot.
But it's slowed down. Like, A LOT.
Thank you, thank you, THANK YOU,
John 💛
Email is the most important way we keep in touch with people like you, so thank you for reading to the end. Small donors like you keep us going. To contribute via check, please address to Fetterman for PA, PO Box 6061, Pittsburgh PA 15211.
Paid for by Fetterman for PA.
MAGA Moron CLUELESS About What Drag Is
This MAGA moron is absolutely clueless when it comes to understanding what exactly is a drag queen. Adrian Costa discusses on Rebel HQ.
This MAGA Talking-Point Makes NO SENSE
MAGA Morons are doing everything they can to cope with former President Donald Trump's latest indictment.
MAGA Boycotting News Outlets That Cover Trump's Indictment
IT WOULD BE LAUGHABLE IF MAGA IGNORANCE WASN'T SO TRAGIC!
Trump supporters are avoiding news outlets that tell them facts they don't want to hear! Walter Masterson breaks it down on Rebel HQ.
TRUMP SUPPORTERS DEFINING IGNORANCE!
IT'S DIFFICULT NOT TO LAUGH AT THE IGNORANCE!
Trump Supporter Reacts To The Facts Of Trump Indictments
Visibly Confused Trump Posts BIZARRE Video about CRIMES
Anthony Davis dissects some truly strange videos posted by Donald Trump.
Trump’s plan to turn the Justice Department into his personal vendetta machine
Trump’s plan to turn the Justice Department into his personal vendetta machineIs it time to revive Senator Sam Ervin’s proposal for insulating the Department from politics?
Friends, Last week, Trump said that if reelected, he’d appoint a “real special prosecutor” to “go after the most corrupt president in the history of the United States of America, Joe Biden, and the entire Biden crime family.” In other words, if Trump is reelected, you can kiss nonpartisan criminal justice goodbye. His remark made me think back almost a half century ago, to when I was a rookie lawyer in the Justice Department. The department was in shambles, discredited by Nixon’s and Attorney General John Mitchell’s political abuse and corruption. To restore trust in the Justice Department, President Gerald Ford appointed Edward Levi to be attorney general. In naming Levi, who had been president of the University of Chicago and the former dean of its law school, Ford found someone whose reputation for integrity was impeccable. As Levi said at his swearing in, “Nothing can more weaken the quality of life or more imperil the realization of the goals we all hold dear than our failure to make clear by words and deed that our law is not an instrument of partisan purpose.” Levi set out to insulate the Justice Department from politics, instituting rules limiting White House involvement in law enforcement decisions. The Senate Watergate Committee chairman, Senator Sam Ervin, didn’t think Levi’s rules went far enough to protect the department from an unscrupulous future president. Ervin wanted to make the Justice Department an independent agency with an attorney general appointed by the president every six years and removable only for neglect. At the time, I thought Ervin’s proposal too extreme. I assumed America had learned its lesson from Watergate and would never again elect a president as repugnant as Nixon, willing to sacrifice the institutions of government to his own political ambition. Yet there was some precedent for Ervin’s view. The attorney general was originally viewed as having an independent, semi-judicial role — analogous to that of judges. Congress established the office of the attorney general in the Judiciary Act of 1789 — the same act that created the federal court system, as distinct from acts establishing executive departments. In the original draft, attorneys general would be appointed by the Supreme Court, not the president. Congress changed this so that attorneys general would be appointed exactly like federal judges. When George Washington appointed the nation’s first attorney general in 1789, Thomas Jefferson referred to him as “the Attorney General for the Supreme Court.” Early attorneys general shared offices with the court. Their budgets were line items under the federal judiciary, not the executive. Originally, the attorney general was not even in line to succeed to the presidency. Even after the attorney general became a key part of the executive branch and the Department of Justice was established in 1870, presidents continued to respect the need for prosecutorial independence. Until Richard Nixon and his scurrilous Attorney General John Mitchell. But surely, I said to myself at the time, Nixon and Mitchell were the extremes. Edward Levi’s reforms were adequate. Then came the worst offender of all. During his presidency, Donald Trump viewed the Justice Department as an extension of his own will — even claiming, “I have an absolute right to do what I want to with the Justice Department.” Trump interfered in the department’s prosecutions of Michael Flynn and Roger Stone, fired FBI Director James Comey for investigating possible collusion between Russia and Trump associates, and demanded that the department reopen a criminal investigation of Hillary Clinton. John Dean, former White House counsel to Nixon, described Trump’s efforts to use the Justice Department for personal gain as “Nixon on stilts and steroids.” Now, Trump threatens that if reelected he’ll turn the Justice Department into his own personal vendetta machine. If there weren’t already enough reason to fear a second Trump presidency, this would be it. Public trust in our governing institutions has already sunk to a new low — due in large part to Trump’s first term, his subsequent Big Lie that the 2020 election was “stolen,” and now his second Big Lie that Biden is orchestrating a “witch hunt” against him. Even if Biden is reelected, it will be necessary to deal with the damage Trump and his Republican enablers have wrought. Perhaps Sam Ervin’s proposal for an independent Justice Department should be given more serious consideration. What do you think? |
From August 9, 2023 POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Where the Mass. Jan. 6 cases stand
SWANSEA RESIDENT Michael St. Pierre, 46, was arraigned on a federal felony offense of civil disorder and a series of misdemeanors at the John Joseph Moakley United States Courthouse in Boston on July 27. St. Pierre was released on bail, and his case was transferred from Massachusetts to the District of Columbia district. He is being represented by federal defender Timothy G. Watkins.
https://www.heraldnews.com/story/news/crime/2023/08/08/swansea-man-caught-on-video-at-jan-6-capitol-riot-to-face-a-judge-in-dc/70547870007/
Prosecutors want prison time for Seekonk man for his role on day of Capitol riot
Chase Allen , a self-described documentarian from Seekonk
https://www.thesunchronicle.com/news/local_news/prosecutors-want-prison-time-for-seekonk-man-for-his-role-on-day-of-capitol-riot/article_84ab16a4-5af6-5fb0-aa0a-6d4f490f56a0.html
Seekonk man gets 14 days for stomping on media equipment outside US Capitol during Jan. 6 insurrection
(Mark Sahady, the vice president of “Super Happy Fun America” — the group behind the 2019 “straight pride parade” in Boston — is facing charges .)
https://www.justice.gov/usao-dc/pr/massachusetts-man-charged-felony-actions-related-us-capitol-breach
TROY SARGENT, 38, PITTSFIELD
Defendant Swung Open Hand at Police Officer
WASHINGTON – Troy Sargent, 38, of Pittsfield, Massachusetts, was sentenced today in the District of Columbia to 14 months in prison for felony charges of assaulting, resisting, or impeding officers during the breach of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, civil disorder, and four related misdemeanor offenses. Sargent pleaded guilty on June 27, 2022 to all six charges against him.
Vincent J. Gillespie, 61, of Athol, Massachusetts, was sentenced to 68 months in prison for assaulting, resisting, or impeding officers; civil disorder; engaging in physical violence in a restricted building or grounds; and disorderly conduct in a Capitol building. Gillespie was found guilty on December 23, 2022, following a jury trial in the District of Columbia. In addition to the prison term, U.S. District Court Judge Beryl A. Howell ordered Gillespie to pay a fine of $25,000, restitution of $2,000, and to serve 36 months of supervised release.
But Somerville resident Noah Bacon, the nephew of former U.S. Attorney for Massachusetts Frank McNamara Jr. who was seen wearing an “I heart Trump” T-shirt in the U.S. Senate chamber on Jan. 6, is appealing after he was sentenced last month to a year in federal prison .
Insurrectionist Somerville yoga instructor sentenced to a year in prison; he appeals
A federal judge in Washington, DC last week sentenced Noah Bacon, 30, to one year and one day in federal prison following his conviction for traipsing around the Capitol as part of Donald Trump's failed autogolpe.
https://www.bostonglobe.com/2023/07/28/metro/somerville-man-sentenced-in-jan-6-riot/
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BREAKING: Elon Musk’s gamble BLOWS UP in his face PAY ATTENTION! ELECT CLOWNS EXPECT A CIRCUS!
ELON MUSK TOLD MAGA DIM WITS TO CUT CHILD CANCER REEARCH FUNDING! WHAT HAS ELON MUSK EVER DONE FOR ANYONE? THIS IS ABOUT CUTTING SOCIAL S...
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05 June 23 Live on the homepage now! Reader Supported News ANOTHER FAILED MONTH OF FUNDRAISING ISN’T GOING TO WORK — We haven’t covered ou...
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04 August 22 Live on the homepage now! Reader Supported News Murtaza Hussain | Al Qaeda Honcho Zawahiri Got Droned and No One Gave a S...