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What I heard was that these generals sat Trump down for a two-week-long briefing, in which he was shown at least a good part of what we are callingΒ The Fundamental.
This included some of the most disturbing Pizzagate-type material, complete with sickening video proof no one would ever want to see.
Trump was very, very reticent to be involved in this. The generals essentially had to beg him to run for office.
Even though many people absolutely despise Trump, the generals had studied him and knew he was not a Deep State / Cabal member.
His public recognition would help him βgo the distanceβ once he finally came out and started exposing the Deep State as a candidate, unlike anyone before.
Furthermore, Trump could self-finance his own campaign without needing to take money from Deep State entities β and there was no one else in this position.
originally posted by: CoramDeo
This is not insignificant. Not in the least.
If someone from the future would've shown you this picture 6 months ago, you would've laughed and said "no way!"
Image credit and article:
Kim Jong-un becomes the first North Korean dictator to cross into the South for 65 years, shakes hands with sworn enemy President Moon Jae-in and admits his 'heart is throbbing' with nerves
It could be different in a bad way in another six months, but it feels pretty good right now.
Worry not.
originally posted by: Fowlerstoad
a reply to: xuenchen
True.
There was evidence of a second line of gunfire coming in through the windshield.
Could not be all from one gunman.
They never found the other shooter.... never even tried!
*crickets*
originally posted by: Cutepants
a reply to: burntheships
I don't want to play devil's advocate, but that looks to be just a figure of speech. Not like he could actually hear the shredders being used from another building, even if Trump was destroying evidence. And there's no proof of that happening, just Strzok's wishful thinking.
originally posted by: MindBodySpiritComplex
a reply to: Skyfloating
Sky, you were mistaking part V for part sIx. The pic you posted shows part five and we are now in pat six! Apples and Oranges...
ETA: I noticed fiver also pointed this out. I don't agree with the snarky tone of her post but she is right when stating that it is not exactly inspiring confidence to see how many people π π ππππππππ your post without even noticing or addressing the mistake.
originally posted by: carewemust
a reply to: Skyfloating
I'm still trying to understand how the CIA and GOOGLE were in control of Kim Jong, but now that they're gone, he's free to do as he pleases. Isn't that what Q has implied in numerous posts?
originally posted by: MindBodySpiritComplex
a reply to: Skyfloating
Sky, you were mistaking part V for part sIx. The pic you posted shows part five and we are now in pat six! Apples and Oranges...
ETA: I noticed fiver also pointed this out. I don't agree with the snarky tone of her post but she is right when stating that it is not exactly inspiring confidence to see how many people π π ππππππππ your post without even noticing or addressing the mistake.
originally posted by: carewemust
They (mistakenly) thought that if they typed a draft message and didn't send it, the others could log in to the account to read the message, without any spy or agency knowing that the draft message existed. Bad assumption, because Google keeps copies of draft unsent messages. The NSA is connected to Google, and every other e-mail service.
The House Intelligence Committee on Friday released the final report on its yearlong Russia investigation.
The report stated the committee "found no evidence that the Trump campaign colluded, coordinated, or conspired with the Russian government." They did, however, "find poor judgment and ill-considered actions by the Trump and Clinton campaign."
While the committee posted a copy of the report online, investigation leader Rep. Mike Conaway, R-Texas, complained about the heavy redactions made by the intelligence community.