Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Q 4.25 Everything Is Happening In Order. Trumps Plan. WW. #GreatAwakening

 Anonymous ID: 90d8ed 1186910NEW
Screenshot_20180425-163141_Twitter
Soon
 !xowAT4Z3VQ ID: 025fdf 1187000NEW
>>1186910
Happened.
Not public.
Debate how to handle.
Buying time.
Toxic.
Dangerous.
Threats.
Q

 !xowAT4Z3VQ ID: 025fdf 1187000NEW
>>1186910
Happened.
Not public.
Debate how to handle.
Buying time.
Toxic.
Dangerous.
Threats.
Q
 !xowAT4Z3VQ ID: 025fdf 1187021NEW
>>1187000
Note 187.
Q

Dirty FBI Cover Up! Jail the 'Insurance Policy' Plotters! #ReleaseTheTexts
#strozk #page
#InsurancePolicy #Flynn #Trap #Lie #FakeCase


















 !UW.yye1fxo ID: b189f8 130638
What would happen if texts originating from a FBI agent to several [internals] discussed the assassination (possibility) of the POTUS or member of his family?
What if the texts suggest foreign allies were involved?
Forget the Russia set up [1 of 22].
This is only the beginning.
Be careful what you wish for.
AS THE WORLD TURNS.
Could messages such as those be publicly disclosed?
What happens to the FBI?
What happens to the DOJ?
What happens to special counsel?
What happens in general?
Every FBI/DOJ prev case could be challenged.
Lawless.
Think logically.
We haven’t started the drops re: human trafficking / sacrifices [yet][worst].
Those [good] who know cannot sleep.
Those [good] who know cannot find peace.
Those [good] who know will not rest until those responsible are held accountable.
Nobody can possibly imagine the pure evil and corruption out there.
Those you trust are the most guilty of sin.
Who are we taught to trust?
If you are religious, PRAY.
60% must remain private [at least] - for humanity.
These people should be hanging.
Q


https://monthlyreview.org/2005/03/01/the-ghosts-of-karl-marx-and-edward-abbey/
The ghosts of Karl Marx and Edward Abbey haunt the contemporary United States. Marx needs no introduction to readers of this magazine, but perhaps Abbey does. Edward Abbey was born in 1927 in Indiana, Pennsylvania, a small town about thirty miles from where I was born. He spent some of his youth on a hardscrabble farm in the nearby tiny village of Home, Pennsylvania, but he lived most of his adult life in the desert and canyon country of the Southwest. He was a novelist, essayist, poet, and a radical environmentalist. Among his best works are Desert Solitaire, an account of a year he spent as a park ranger at Arches National Monument (now a national park) in Moab, Utah, and The Monkey Wrench Gang, the novel which inspired a generation of militant environmentalists.




 !xowAT4Z3VQ ID: 8fd529 1187806NEW
>>1187631
What happens to the special counsel?
Rudy met w/ Mueller today.
Coincidence?
Connect.
Public announcement.
End of
POTUS investigation?
Continue w/ other investigations?
Stage set?
Support growing?
Strategic?
Planned?
We have it all.
Welcome to the
WH
.Q

https://www.cnn.com/2018/04/25/politics/rudy-giuliani-robert-mueller/index.html

"I can guarantee you, when Mueller is finished, no matter whatever he does, he is not going to have a stitch of evidence he colluded with the Russians," Giuliani said

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/apr/25/rudy-giuliani-meets-robert-mueller-negotiate-trump/












Giuliani’s sit-down with Mueller, firstreported by The Washington Post and confirmed to POLITICO by a senior administration official, came after a series of other meetings the former New York mayor has held as he tries to quickly get up to speed on the nearly year-long investigation, which has overwhelmed the White House.
Since his hiring, Giuliani had dinner in Washington with Jay Sekulow, another member of Trump’s outside legal team, who had been filling in as the lead attorney in the wake of John Dowd’s resignation last month.
Giuliani also met in South Florida with Marty and Jane Raskin, Miami-based former federal prosecutors whose hiring was announced last Thursday in tandem with his own.
Sekulow declined to comment on Giuliani’s interactions with the special counsel but told POLITICO that Trump’s new lawyer was “fully engaged with the representation of the president.”
“He’s hitting the ground running,” Sekulow said.
Giuliani, who has a second home in South Florida near Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort, signaled his plan to drive the Russia investigation to a swift conclusion soon after his hiring, telling CNN he wanted to try to bring the Mueller inquiry to an end within “maybe a couple of weeks.”
But that timeline may clash with reality.
Mueller is preparing for a possible July trial against Paul Manafort, Trump’s former campaign chairman, who has pleaded not guilty to charges that include bank and tax fraud. And several potential witnesses in the investigation, including Vice President Mike Pence, longtime Trump adviser Roger Stone and the Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya have yet to be interviewed, according to multiple sources tracking the investigation.
Longtime Giuliani associates who have spoken to the former mayor in the days both before and after he accepted the job representing Trump have told POLITICO that in private he has tried to soften expectations.
“What he said to me was: ‘There’s no magic dust. I might have a fresh perspective. I don’t have a magic wand,’” said Tony Carbonetti, a longtime Giuliani adviser.
“Rudy Giuliani does not believe he’s a miracle worker,” added Jon Sale, a Giuliani law school classmate.
Sale, a former federal prosecutor who served on the Watergate team, said he expected that Giuliani would be careful in his interactions with Mueller’s team of investigators and not push them where they weren’t prepared to go.
“Rudy knows that he doesn’t determine the outcome of cases,” Sale said. “He knows that as well as he knows how to breathe. He knows you have credibility, which you can lose in an instant.”
Giuliani, according to the Washington Post report, told Mueller’s team during their Tuesday meeting that the president and some of his top aides were resisting an interview but that they also wouldn’t rule out Trump’s agreeing to answer their questions in person. He also asked the special counsel for any details about the expected duration of the investigation.
In its report, The Post said Mueller told the Trump lawyers that he wanted a chance to interview the president about several key moments during the 2016-17 transition, as well as some early decisions made at the start of the new administration. The special counsel is trying to understand the president’s intent as his team works on the obstruction of justice portion of its investigation, which stems in large part from the firing of James Comey as FBI director.
Trump’s decision to hire Giuliani and the Raskins, a husband-wife duo with expertise in fraud and money laundering cases, has been widely praised given their backgrounds handling white collar criminal defense.
“These aren’t political hacks. These are pros,” Bruce Udolf, a former federal prosecutor based in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, said of the Raskins.
Peter Carr, a spokesman for Mueller, declined to comment for this article. Marty Raskin also declined comment, and Giuliani did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
With Dowd’s departure, Trump was seen as sorely lacking in the legal department — and he had struggled to convince other elite Washington-based defense attorneys to work for him. Many cited conflicts inside their law firms, though another reason given was Trump’s temperamental nature and his history of ignoring the legal advice he had been getting to avoid discussing the Russia case publicly and with top aides.
Matched up against Mueller, legal experts say, the Trump team remains short-handed.
“Even if you bring in two, three or four lawyers, whoever it is, [Mueller has] a whole law firm with a stable of investigators,” said Annemarie McAvoy, a former federal prosecutor and defense attorney who previously represented Trump campaign deputy Rick Gates before his decision to plead guilty and cooperate with Mueller’s investigation.
Julian Epstein, a former chief counsel for House Democrats during the impeachment proceedings for President Bill Clinton, said Trump had improved his defense team by adding Giuliani and the Raskins. But he said there was still “lots of potential for incoherence and disorganization.”
“They’ve got a ton of catching up to do,” he said, “and I don’t see how they do it in a short period of time.”
















http://www.good4utah.com/news/politics/house-already-threatened-could-gop-also-lose-senate-grip/1141149227
Republican Debbie Lesko won the special House election by 6 percentage points, though Trump captured the district by 21 percentage points in 2016. GOP turnout dropped off, and unlike Republicans' shocking losses in a Pittsburgh-area House race and an Alabama Senate contest, there was no weak GOP nominee to blame in Arizona.






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