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Johnny Dinar

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Everything posted by Johnny Dinar

  1. I don't know, did Graham give him 500,000 from his campaign fund or his own pocket? If it was from his pocket that's good. If it was was from his campaign fund then he screwed his donors. But it's 2020 so anything is possible. And Graham demanded proof on Saturday, that money was on Thursday I think.
  2. You left off the part about lying and misinformation and claiming to have won an election before hadn't even reached half way. Graham told him show us the evidence by today for your lawsuits... It ain't happening. I don't think Graham was talking about youtube and twitter conspiracies... We are hearing crickets on evidence. So far all I've seen is him firing people like he is still on his fake reality show... And that's not a slam on his show, all reality shows are fake. JMHO
  3. Dow Jones Today, Stock Futures Spike 1,700 Points On Biden Presidency, Pfizer Vaccine News The Dow industrials spiked to a record high near 30,000 Monday, as the market valued in the prospects of Joe Biden presidency, as well as a continued balance of power in Congress. Pfizer shook global markets in early trade, announcing positive trial results of its Covid-19 vaccine. The news set stocks sensitive to the coronavirus economy in motion, both up and down. https://www.investors.com/market-trend/stock-market-today/dow-jones-today-stock-futures-spike-1500-points-on-biden-presidency-pfizer-vaccine-news/?src=A00220
  4. Trump indictments Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election netted indictments against 34 people and three entities. FEATURED FACT-CHECK However, 25 of the people indicted are Russian nationals or Russian intelligence officers. Only six of the 34 indicated are in Trump’s orbit: Paul Manafort (48/25 counts): Former Trump campaign chairman, former lobbyist for Ukrainian officials; crimes alleged not connected to his work for Trump. Convicted of tax and bank fraud. Oct. 30, 2017 indictment (with Gates): Counts 1-6; 10-12: 9. Feb. 13, 2018 indictment: 18. Feb. 22, 2018 superseding indictment (with Gates): Counts 1-5; 10-14; 24-32: 19. Sept. 14, 2018, superseding criminal information: 2. Rick Gates (23 counts): Top deputy to Manafort, former lobbyist for Ukrainian officials; crimes alleged not connected to his work for Trump. Pleaded guilty to lying to investigators and financial fraud related to hiding money he earned lobbying for politicians in the Ukraine along with Manafort. Oct. 30, 2017 (with Manafort): Counts 1-2; 7-12: 8. Feb. 22, 2018 superseding indictment (with Manafort) Counts 6-10; 15-32. Roger Stone (7 counts): Longtime adviser; Trump campaign official dispatched Stone to get information from WikiLeaks about the thousands of hacked Democratic emails in an effort to damage Hillarious Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign. Convicted of obstructing a congressional inquiry, lying to investigators under oath and trying to block the testimony of a witness whose account would have exposed his lies. Michael Cohen (1 count): Longtime Trump lawyer and adviser. Pleaded guilty to a series of criminal charges, including a campaign finance law violation that implicated the president but was unrelated to the Russia interference investigation. George Papadopoulos (1 count): Campaign adviser on foreign policy to Trump. Pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about his efforts to put the Trump campaign in contact with Moscow. Michael Flynn (1 count): Campaign adviser to Trump and then briefly his national security adviser. Indicted Nov. 30, 2017. Pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about his discussions with the Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak during the presidential transition. Flynn and Kislyak had discussed U.S. sanctions against Russia for election meddling. Because of the various indictments filed against Manafort, one could count a total of 48 charges against him. But ultimately he faced 25 charges: He went on trial for 18 charges (and was found guilty of eight of them) and then faced seven more charges (he pleaded guilty to two). So, that’s a total of 58 or 81 charges against Trump associates — not 215. But the claim we’re checking refers not to individual charges but indictments, of which there are only a half dozen directly tied to Trump. The other presidents We contacted more than a half dozen presidential historians and none said they were aware of a source that lists the number of indictments during the presidential administrations in question. But we did find tallies organized a bit differently in a March 2019 article by FiveThirtyEight. The article counted the number of people indicted in cases made by special counsels, from Watergate through Mueller. Nixon: 28 key indictments. There were 72 indictments charging 68 people (58 were convicted), all in the Watergate scandal or related investigations. But arguably only 28 of the 68 were part of, or closely tied to, Nixon’s administration. They included two of Nixon’s attorneys general, two White House counsels, two secretaries of treasury and a number of White House aides. Click here to see a spreadsheet listing the Watergate indictments. Reagan: 33 people indicted. 18 people indicted (16 convicted) in an investigation of fraud, corruption and influence-peddling within the Department of Housing and Urban Development; 14 people, including Caspar Weinberger and Oliver North, charged (11 convicted) in the Iran-contra scandal, an illicit arms deal with Iran orchestrated by members of the administration; and White House aide Lyn Nofziger was charged (his conviction was overturned) over corruption allegations surrounding Wedtech, a military contractor. Clinton: 2 officials indicted. Agriculture Secretary Mike Espy was charged (and acquitted) over allegations that he accepted improper gifts from businesses and lobbyists. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Henry Cisneros was convicted (and pardoned) of making false statements to law enforcement about hush money payments to his former mistress. Obama: None. Carter: None. https://www.politifact.com/factchecks/2020/jan/09/facebook-posts/many-more-criminal-indictments-under-trump-reagan-/
  5. Yup... Vaccine and Election is over... Both good news.
  6. (Photo: Twitter) https://www.yahoo.com/huffpost/tim-murtaugh-trump-washington-times-214418499.html
  7. The markets do their own thing regardless... S&P Futures 3,658.25 +157.50(+4.50%) Dow Futures 29,877.00 +1,673.00(+5.93%) Nasdaq Futures 12,198.00 +123.00(+1.02%) Russell 2000 Futures 1,758.10 +115.00(+7.00%)
  8. I say good for Trump... There's nothing like a good day of golf on a bad day at work...
  9. R 1 hour ago Rebecca Corey Trump returns to White House President Trump watches from his presidential state car as he returns to the White House after playing golf during the announcement that Joe Biden had won the 2020 presidential election. (Photo by ALEX EDELMAN/AFP via Getty Images)
  10. WASHINGTON — Americans nervous about a president who wanted troops to shoot border crossers, and who suggested using nuclear weapons against hurricanes, could be facing the scariest days of Donald Trump’s presidency: the final ones. As intemperate, foolhardy and reckless as many of Trump’s actions have been to date, critics warn that they all took place as Trump faced a referendum from voters. Now, that pending job review has passed. “He will create as much chaos as humanly possible,” said Michael Cohen, Trump’s former lawyer and fixer who was convicted and sentenced to three years in prison for, in part, arranging illegal hush money payments to keep women from revealing affairs they had had with Trump just prior to the 2016 election. “Donald Trump will take to the airwaves, to radio and print media whining about how the election was stolen from him due to fraud and foreign interference,” Cohen said. “He could never accept the fact that he lost because he is incompetent and arrogant.” President-elect Joe Biden is set to assume the office at noon on Jan. 20, but Trump retains all of the powers of the presidency for the 74 remaining days until that moment, including his role as commander in chief of the United States armed forces and the country’s nuclear arsenal. Trump has indicated that he is not inclined to cooperate in a transition because of the FBI’s investigation into the assistance Russia gave his campaign in 2016, something the president has characterized as “spying.” “What about the transition I had where you spied on my campaign and you tried to take down the president of the United States?” he complained at a Pennsylvania rally last week. The White House did not respond to requests for comment about this story. Trump offered some clues about his likely path in the three days of vote counting that followed the election. He relentlessly lied both on social media and in a 16-minute diatribe to reporters, where he accused Democrats of “stealing” the election from him and asserted ― bizarrely ― that he had already “claimed” certain states as his own. The president has had nothing on his public schedule since the election, beyond that briefing room appearance Thursday evening. One former White House official said on condition of anonymity that worries like Cohen’s are overwrought. “I don’t think he will do anything out of the ordinary,” he said of Trump. But a longtime adviser, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, said he can easily see Trump firing infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci, FBI Director Christopher Wray and CIA Director Gina Haspel for contradicting his various claims. “Either fire Wray, Fauci and Haspel and act out. Or he will behave to get good will,” the adviser said. “Will be interesting to watch. And it’s 50-50.” George Conway, who supported Trump in 2016 but soon thereafter became one of his most strident critics, said a purge is almost certain. “He’s going to fire anyone who’s ever looked at him crosswise,” said Conway, who is the husband of former top Trump aide Kellyanne Conway. Ruth Ben-Ghiat, a historian and authoritarianism expert at New York University, agreed that Trump is likely to use his powers to “take revenge on those who are not loyal enough.” Daniel Goldman, a former federal prosecutor who served as House Democrats’ lead lawyer during Trump’s impeachment hearings, said he predicts the president and his aides will have a busy 10 weeks or so. “Issue all sorts of executive orders rolling back additional Obama regulations, implement new regulations without proper notice and comment, kneecap and handcuff various agencies, use the levers of power to grease the wheels for his personal financial interests post-presidency,” Goldman said. “And, of course, pardons like you’ve never seen before.” One of Trump’s possible pardons, of course, could be for himself, to remove the threat of federal prosecution for potential crimes he may have committed, both before taking office (bank and tax fraud) and during these past four years (obstruction of justice, for example). It’s unclear whether he is actually permitted to self-pardon, but Trump has shown he is willing to break guidelines and laws when useful for him. “No one has tried it before, so no court has considered the issue,” said Renato Mariotti, a former federal prosecutor. “It is an open question, but many people think he can’t, because the pardon clause implies that the person granting the pardon and the person receiving the pardon are different people.” As for last-minute regulations, those can be blocked in the courts if they are improperly drafted or implemented. And any of Trump’s executive orders can be immediately rescinded by Biden after he takes office. It’s not clear how much interest Trump will have in any of this, though, now that he has lost. Anthony Scaramucci, a longtime Trump friend and for a brief time a White House adviser, needed just two words to describe Trump’s likeliest lame-duck agenda: “Play golf.” https://www.yahoo.com/huffpost/trump-scary-lame-duck-170558195.html
  11. The majority of Americans have spoken over the last three elections. It was only a matter of time before the Electoral College caught up.. But there are still weeks before this is official.
  12. It's not official so everyone just chill... It is a historic moment with record voters. Now let democracy do it's thing... Joe did win the majority by millions, as did Clinton and Obama, so there is change blowing in the wind, but we all need to wait for certification..
  13. DEEP STATE ALERT... THERE IS A NEW MEMBER Fox News host Laura Ingraham advised President Trump to "accept defeat" with "grace and composure" during a live segment on Friday night. "If and when it's time to accept an unfavorable outcome in this election, and we hope it never comes, President Trump needs to do it with the same grace and composure that he demonstrated at that town hall with Savannah Guthrie," Ingraham said. Ingraham joins other Fox News commentators who have expressed concern at the president's continual false statements. Fox News host Laura Ingraham advised President Trump on Friday to "accept defeat" with "grace and composure" in an extraordinary shift in messaging. Following President-elect Joe Biden's speech on Friday night, Ingraham went on Fox News to seemingly prepare her viewers for the likelihood that Trump might soon have to accept his election loss. In a video of the segment, Ingraham said: "If and when it's time to accept an unfavorable outcome in this election, and we hope it never comes, President Trump needs to do it with the same grace and composure that he demonstrated at that town hall with Savannah Guthrie." The Fox News pundit was referring to the president's town hall event in October, which was hosted by NBC anchor Savannah Guthrie. "Losing, especially when you believe the process wasn't fair, it's a gut punch," Ingraham continued. "And I'm not conceding anything tonight, by the way, but losing, if that's what happens, it's awful. But President Trump's legacy will only become more significant if he focuses on moving the country forward." Watch the moment below: Ingraham's comments to the president come as Trump refuses to concede the race to the White House, making unfounded claims of voter fraud and election theft. Earlier Friday, Insider and Decision Desk HQ projected Biden to win the election after he picked up the state of Pennsylvania and its 20 electoral votes. In the last few days, some Fox News' election hosts and commentators have begun to challenge the president's continual false statements, though not all. The network's decision to call Arizona for Biden earlier this week — the first major outlet to do so — enraged the Trump campaign and his followers. Other Rupert Murdoch-owned media outlets, including the New York Post and Wall Street Journal, have also since shifted their messaging, which appears to be closely coordinated and includes an appeal to Trump to preserve his "legacy" by showing grace in defeat, the Guardian reported. Ingraham has stood by President Trump throughout his four years in office, becoming one of the first pundits to endorse him early in his 2016 campaign. She has since infiltrated Trump's inner circle, speaking regularly at events like the Republican convention and at one point was even considered for the role of White House's communications director. https://www.yahoo.com/news/fox-news-host-laura-ingraham-104518375.html
  14. I simply used Pizza Gate to display how people are fooled by the junk on youtube and twitter. I did not change the subject, I was asking people to wait for the final tallies before jumping off the cliff based on junk news by social media. Why are people acting like the vote count is taking too long? We had the largest turn out ever, more early voting than ever and we need to count every vote. If they had stopped counting when Trump cried stop, he would have lost. Even his own people explained that to him. He is still in the running so let's just wait. There will be time for the dust to settle and for the lawyers to cash in... You didn't fall the Pizza Gate conspiracy did you?
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