Puppet Masters
In an appearance on 'CBS This Morning' on Wednesday, America's former top spy, sorry, investigator, took aim at Attorney General William Barr for his claim that FBI "spying did occur"on the Trump campaign in 2016.
"Yeah, I have no idea what he's talking about. The FBI doesn't spy, the FBI investigates," Comey told CBS. "We investigated a very serious allegation, that Americans might be hooked up with the Russian effort to attack our democracy."

An activist in opposition of the U.S. involvement in Venezuela occupying the Venezuelan Embassy, sits in a window sill in Washington
After weeks of tense standoff between the 'Embassy Civilian Protection Collective' and supporters of US-backed opposition leader Juan Guaido outside the Venezuelan diplomatic compound, the US authorities attempted to drive the temporary occupants out by depriving them of electricity.
In a statement on Twitter posted by one of the group's members, independent journalist Alex Rubinstein, an activist says that the loss of electric power won't coerce them into abandoning their mission - to protect the embassy from a takeover by Juan Guaido appointees.
Speaking in London after his meeting with UK Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt, Pompeo told reporters that Venezuelans had chosen Guaido to lead them.
"The Venezuelan people have spoken through through constitutional mechanism, they have put Juan Guaido as their interim president, and he is the duly elected leader there," Pompeo said, adding that "Maduro is on borrowed time."
Comment: Pompeo and his neocon partner-in-crime Bolton are salivating at the thought of a war, any war:
- Pompeo boasts 'Any US action in Venezuela would be lawful' as he and Bolton drum up invasion option after failed coup
- Pompeo: US military action possible in Venezuela 'if that's what's required'
- Top Pentagon officials setting military options for Venezuela attack in closed-door meeting
- Pompeo makes hash of Fox interview: America 'obligated' to fight 'Hezbollah' in Venezuela to save 'duly elected' Guaido
Hawley announced that he's going to introduce "The Protecting Children from Abusive Games Act," which would ban the sale of so-called "loot boxes" and other microtransactions marketed toward children.
For non-gamers, microtransactions are options to buy things within a video game itself, using real money. If you download a "free" iPhone game, for instance, the game publisher may encourage you to buy stuff inside the application in order to improve the game experience. These game upgrades are charged to a credit card or checking account associated with wherever the game was purchased (such as the Apple's App Store).
Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Kathleen Kavalec's written account of her Oct. 11, 2016, meeting with FBI informant Christopher Steele shows the Hillary Clinton campaign-funded British intelligence operative admitted that his research was political and facing an Election Day deadline. -The HillAccording a typed summary of the meeting - which sat buried for over 2 1/2 years until an open-records litigation by Citizens United - Steele said that his client "is keen to see this information come to light prior to November 8," the date of the 2016 US election. Also attending the meeting was an employee of Steele's Orbis Security firm, Tatyana Duran.
Comment: The Barr-Horowitz investigations will no doubt turn up more of the same shenanigans.
- Christopher Steele knew who funded dodgy dossier - but FBI told secret court something different
- FBI vetting of Christopher Steele's Russia 'expertise' was biased and incompetent
- How Steele's raw, unverified 'intelligence' was politicized by Obama officials
- Christopher Steele told court that Trump-Russia dossier was created so Clinton could challenge 2016 election results
- Will Christopher Steele turn on Killary if hauled before federal investigators?

National Intelligence Community Inspector General Charles McCullough testifies before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee in Washington on April 30, 2014.
The news raises concern that some information about an explosive lead passed by the ICIG to the FBI now might be lost.
The lost notes memorialized a meeting that took place on Aug. 3, 2015, less than a month after the ICIG made a referral to the FBI that classified information may have been disclosed in an unauthorized manner to a foreign power because Clinton conducted State Department business through an email hosted on an insufficiently secured server in her basement.
The ICIG-FBI meetings hold special significance because it was allegedly several of these meetings where the ICIG officials passed a lead to the FBI about anomalies in the metadata of the emails indicating that a copy of nearly every email was sent to an agent of a foreign power.
Several lawmakers, as well as the Justice Department's Inspector General, publicly confirmed that then-ICIG Charles McCullough told them about the metadata anomalies and that the lead was communicated to the FBI. The FBI acknowledged that Clinton's emails could have been breached by foreign actors who covered their tracks, but denied that any evidence of foreign infiltration was found. Several current and former senior FBI officials involved in the Clinton case denied in congressional testimonies any recollection of receiving the metadata lead.
Exactly 10 years after The Telegraph's original investigation into MPs' expenses, the body set up to ensure greater transparency in the wake of the scandal has been accused of trying to prevent openness, rather than ensuring it.
The Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority tried to stop disclosure of MPs' use of Parliamentary credit cards on the grounds it would have a "chilling effect" on its relationship with MPs and reduce public confidence in the regulatory system.
But a former High Court judge reversed the decision, saying that the risk of "embarrassing" MPs was no reason to keep the information secret.
Comment: Shameless behaviour like this has become commonplace throughout Western governments, and the dissatisfaction with the corrupt establishment can be seen in everything from how people vote to the surge in protest movements:
- Political Ponerology: A Science on The Nature of Evil adjusted for Political Purposes
- Shameless: UK MPs to get another pay rise taking the total to £11,000 in just 3 years
- Eurosceptic parties set to double seats in EU Parliament after May elections
- UK's poverty wages, extortionate rents and austerity: Homeless families who work soars 73% in 5 years
On Wednesday, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani is expected to announce small steps to resume his country's nuclear program. According to the New York Times, that will include conducting research on centrifuges that can make nuclear fuel, and curbing nuclear inspections from observers.
Comment: What Rouhani actually said was that if there was no progress in the next 60 days they would start increasing uranium enrichment levels, but, for the moment, they have no intention of leaving the JCPOA entirely.
Here are ten.
1. Mueller Spent $30 Million But Didn't Do His Job
The special counsel probe reportedly cost more than $30 million, yet Mueller failed to do his job. Federal regulations expressly provide that at the conclusion of the special counsel's work he must "provide the Attorney General with a confidential report explaining the prosecution or declination decisions reached by the Special Counsel."
Special Counsel Attorney Michael Dreeben informed the court the special counsel was charged with investigating an obstruction case against President Trump from the beginning. President Trump was the target of their investigation from the outset.
The previously sealed court transcript was released today - SEE HERE













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