"The brothers have no criminal records and would not have been a priority for deportation by the Obama administration, said Matthew Bourke, a spokesman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
President Trump’s administration, in contrast, has made clear that any undocumented immigrant is subject to being expelled from this country. And so, on the same day that the White House endorsed a proposal to curtail legal immigration to the United States, the brothers were put on a plane to San Salvador."
"The brothers have no criminal records and would not have been a priority for deportation by the Obama administration, said Matthew Bourke, a spokesman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
President Trump’s administration, in contrast, has made clear that any undocumented immigrant is subject to being expelled from this country. And so, on the same day that the White House endorsed a proposal to curtail legal immigration to the United States, the brothers were put on a plane to San Salvador."
Caitlin Johnson again... Im becoming a big Caitlin fan
On Tuesday NPR released an exclusive report
titled “Behind Fox News’ Baseless Seth Rich Story: The Untold Tale”.
The centerpiece of the viral article is a legal complaint against Fox by
one of its commentators, which contains among other things a very
interesting quote by Hersh that the notoriously pro-establishment NPR
conveniently omitted from its report.
NPR mentioned these massive allegations only briefly and in the abstract, without quoting any of it for mainstream American consumption. What it did do, however, is provide a quote of Hersh denying the whole thing when asked for comment:
In an interview this week, Hersh sounded unconvinced.
“I hear gossip,” Hersh tells NPR on Monday. “[Butowsky] took two and two and made 45 out of it.”
So
there you go. Neither the plaintiff Rod Wheeler nor Ed Butowsky (the
Republican surrogate named in the lawsuit) have the most sterling
reputations at this point, and Sy Hersh himself denies the whole thing.
It’d make perfect sense to dismiss this wacky conspiracy theory
entirely, right?
You’d think so, but no. Big League Politics has released audio
of Hersh saying exactly what he’s alleged to have said in the lawsuit,
and completely contradicting the denial that he shared with NPR.
So that's the label you get now if you don't give enough love to radical basement bloggers? NPR is a big dawg, and they run with the big dawgs, if that bothers the little pups, they will just have to come up with some more wacky conspiracy theories.
So that's the label you get now if you don't give enough love to radical basement bloggers? NPR is a big dawg, and they run with the big dawgs, if that bothers the little pups, they will just have to come up with some more wacky conspiracy theories.
You know, NPR never reported on Comet Pizza. Right? You know that and that every Pizza came with a micro chip that broadcast NPR straight to your brain. Right? You know that, right?
"The brothers have no criminal records and would not have been a priority for deportation by the Obama administration, said Matthew Bourke, a spokesman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
President Trump’s administration, in contrast, has made clear that any undocumented immigrant is subject to being expelled from this country. And so, on the same day that the White House endorsed a proposal to curtail legal immigration to the United States, the brothers were put on a plane to San Salvador."
Comments
"The brothers have no criminal records and would not have been a priority for deportation by the Obama administration, said Matthew Bourke, a spokesman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
President Trump’s administration, in contrast, has made clear that any undocumented immigrant is subject to being expelled from this country. And so, on the same day that the White House endorsed a proposal to curtail legal immigration to the United States, the brothers were put on a plane to San Salvador."
Distort
Distract
Dysfunction
Libtardaplorable©. And proud of it.
Brilliantati©
On Tuesday NPR released an exclusive report titled “Behind Fox News’ Baseless Seth Rich Story: The Untold Tale”. The centerpiece of the viral article is a legal complaint against Fox by one of its commentators, which contains among other things a very interesting quote by Hersh that the notoriously pro-establishment NPR conveniently omitted from its report.
NPR mentioned these massive allegations only briefly and in the abstract, without quoting any of it for mainstream American consumption. What it did do, however, is provide a quote of Hersh denying the whole thing when asked for comment:
So there you go. Neither the plaintiff Rod Wheeler nor Ed Butowsky (the Republican surrogate named in the lawsuit) have the most sterling reputations at this point, and Sy Hersh himself denies the whole thing. It’d make perfect sense to dismiss this wacky conspiracy theory entirely, right?
You’d think so, but no. Big League Politics has released audio of Hersh saying exactly what he’s alleged to have said in the lawsuit, and completely contradicting the denial that he shared with NPR.
https://medium.com/@caityjohnstone/seymour-hersh-owes-the-world-an-explanation-for-his-seth-rich-comments-f9b2756123d3
So that's the label you get now if you don't give enough love to radical basement bloggers?
NPR is a big dawg, and they run with the big dawgs, if that bothers the little pups, they will just have to come up with some more wacky conspiracy theories.
Libtardaplorable©. And proud of it.
Brilliantati©