That page is all kinds of crazy Phrito, jfc dude
If you take one thing away from that page, it's the pre-1900s electoral maps. Take 1896 for example:
Anything stand out?
Hi king telemon (said in Jamaican voice)¡¡!!
Thought killary Soros finally got you welcome back buddy
The French government has said that 89,000 additional police officers and law enforcement personnel -- with 8,000 in Paris -- had been mobilized ahead of Saturday to head off planned protests, which show no sign of slowing down, despite the damage control by the government.
Although the government has scrapped the gas tax, the protests have morphed into a broader protest against Macron’s presidency -- which has been dogged by missteps as his approval rating has sunk as low as 18 percent, according to one poll.
On Friday, hundreds of students in Paris took to the streets a day early as a preview of Saturday’s protests after footage emerged of students on their knees in front of police with hands tied.
we boutta b heddn uppa berlin u b dere n gots b0ttlz on munMunn the place to be tonight is slippery slope vip for munn
we boutta b heddn uppa berlin u b dere n gots b0ttlz on mun
Look I have no doubt you let the world in you're going to win. Then your polls will show that Donald Trump has less than 10%; we understand open the borders, the country loses, and somehow you feel like you're winning ... idiot.
I guess here is who you will be voting for next election against President Trump. Welcome to California spreading to a neighborhood near you with this kind of bullshit:
What crime?Directing someone in a subordinate position to break the law makes the director guilty of the same crime. It's black letter law.
Cohen plead guilty to it. If Trump told him to commit those crimes (of course he did), he is guilty as well.
Though I agree with you that no prosecutor will try to prosecute him.
A little-noticed legal showdown in California poses a threat to a law seen as the backbone of special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe of 2016 Russian election interference.
Ravi Singh, an Illinois-based political consultant and self-proclaimed “campaign guru,” is challenging a decades-old federal law barring foreign involvement in U.S. elections. He calls the provision unconstitutional, insisting Congress can’t regulate the role played by non-citizens in state and local elections.
Legal scholars say the appeal represents a serious challenge to the statute. And while Mueller has yet to charge anyone with a direct violation of the law, his team alludes to the statute in several legal filings. And many legal experts have cited the foreign donations ban to rebut claims by some pro-Trump partisans and even Trump himself that “collusion” with Russia in the midst of a campaign would not be a crime.
Singh’s defense team notes that enforcing a ban on foreigners donating to virtually any U.S. electoral campaign has had some bizarre results. For instance, various localities including Takoma Park, Maryland, San Francisco and Chicago allow non-citizens to vote in local elections of some sort. However, under the broad federal ban, it is illegal for at least some of those foreigners to donate to candidates in those same races.
“It does not matter that some local jurisdictions may permit aliens to vote,” prosecutors wrote in a brief defending the conviction. “That is a matter of grace, not constitutional requirement.”
“I think there’s actually a pretty strong federalism issue here and it’s super interesting,” said Temple University Law Professor Peter Spiro, a leading expert on citizenship and dual nationality. “If non-citizen voting is constitutionally acceptable, I’m not sure I see what the government’s rationale here is. … It’s hard to see the national security explanation when you’re talking about state and local elections, and once you take that off the table it just looks like a federal diktat in terms of how states define their own political community.”
Former Trump campaign aide George Papadopoulos was released from a federal prison in Wisconsin on Friday morning after serving 12 days for lying to investigators about his contacts with Russia-linked officials during the 2016 campaign.