I go through every other radio station in the stack and if I can't come up with something I'm willing to listen to, one of my local NPR stations is all 'news' and I'll see what's going on with that. I consider it opposition research but can only stomach small doses. 20 years ago they were much more even-handed and less partisan - which I guess is true of just about everything these days
You used to get decent economic news on NPR from Jim Siroli, now it's all shrill politics.
I do not know how you people listen to NPR.
You used to get decent economic news on NPR from Jim Siroli, now it's all shrill politics.
All things considered, I don't either.
Trump is talking about the failed coup... if they start impeachment, I think we can expect more of that line of talk.
[video=youtube;kpSHrDVuQvE]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kpSHrDVuQvE[/video]
Let's be real clear on what's happened the past two and a half years. Not only did members of the government attempt to sabotage Trump's campaign, they've actually tried to oust a sitting President. Is it even possible to put into words how evil and corrupt our government has become? Is using strong rope with a tall tree still a legal form of punishment? If so, it might be time to dust that little number off and put it to work.
The talking heads on the Communist News Network are having their heads explode since Narr got to set the nsrrative rather than them. Mueller has apparently objected that Barr's 4 page summary failed to adequately address the context and nuances of his report.
Really Bob? You think anyone could express in 4 pages all the nuance and context that you needed 448 pages to express? Get real!
And remember, Mueller’s report was released on a Thursday(?) and Barr’s team spent their weekend reading and summarizing a complex legal document by Sunday. Imagine the uproar if Barr had released nothing until his team was able to properly redact the report and release it three(?) weeks later.
“The summary letter the Department sent to Congress and released to the public late in the afternoon of March 24 did not fully capture the context, nature, and substance of this office’s work and conclusions,” Mueller wrote. “There is now public confusion about critical aspects of the results of our investigation. This threatens to undermine a central purpose for which the Department appointed the Special Counsel: to assure full public confidence in the outcome of the investigations.”