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sitting presidents should not be prosecuted or investigated
Posted by: riverhousebill ()
Date: July 31, 2018 01:12AM

Kavanaugh Trumps pick for high court has said that sitting presidents should not be prosecuted or investigated criminally or civilly.

Sound good to you??????

Prana is this why you support Trumps pick for high court?



NO WONDER WHY TRUMP PICKED BRET KAVANAUGH! WoW sounds cozy


Yale students and alumni blast law school for praising Brett Kavanaugh, Trump’s choice for Supreme Court

Brett Kavanaugh is a graduate of Yale Law School. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
By Valerie Strauss
July 11
Email the author
Scores of Yale University students, alumni and educators have signed a letter blasting the law school for “boasting” of the accomplishments of Brett M. Kavanaugh — who earned his law degree there in 1990 — shortly after President Trump publicly nominated him to join the U.S. Supreme Court.

The letter refers to a press release issued Monday by the Yale Law School noting the nomination and quoting several people who praise Kavanaugh, a conservative jurist who critics say will turn the Supreme Court sharply to the right and who has said that sitting presidents should not be prosecuted or investigated criminally or civilly. The Yale press release said in part:

“I have known Brett Kavanaugh for many years,” said Dean Heather K. Gerken. “I can personally attest that, in addition to his government and judicial service, Judge Kavanaugh has been a longtime friend to many of us in the Yale Law School community. Ever since I joined the faculty, I have admired him for serving as a teacher and mentor to our students and for hiring a diverse set of clerks, in all respects, during his time on the court.”

The open letter to Gerken and other leaders at the Yale Law School (see below) says in part:

Yet the press release’s focus on the nominee’s professionalism, pedigree, and service to Yale Law School obscures the true stakes of his nomination and raises a disturbing question:

Is there nothing more important to Yale Law School than its proximity to power and prestige?

Judge Kavanaugh’s nomination presents an emergency — for democratic life, for our safety and freedom, for the future of our country. His nomination is not an interesting intellectual exercise to be debated amongst classmates and scholars in seminar. Support for Judge Kavanaugh is not apolitical. It is a political choice about the meaning of the Constitution and our vision of democracy, a choice with real consequences for real people. Without a doubt, Judge Kavanaugh is a threat to the most vulnerable. He is a threat to many of us, despite the privilege bestowed by our education, simply because of who we are. . . .

Now is the time for moral courage — which for Yale Law School comes at so little cost. Perhaps you, as an institution and as individuals, will benefit less from Judge Kavanaugh’s ascendant power if you withhold your support. Perhaps Judge Kavanaugh will be less likely to hire your favorite students. But people will die if he is confirmed. We hope you agree your sacrifice would be worth it. Please use your authority and platform to expose the stakes of this moment and the threat that Judge Kavanaugh poses.

Asked to respond to the letter, the Yale Law School provided this statement:

Yale Law School is a nonpartisan institution. We routinely acknowledge high-profile nominations of our alumni. We did exactly the same thing not so long ago when Justice Sonia Sotomayor ’79 received her nomination to the High Court.

The Sotomayor press release followed a similar pattern to the school’s Kavanaugh press release, quoting several people in praise of her, including the acting dean at the time:

“Yale Law School is delighted to see one of its own distinguished alumni, Judge Sonia Sotomayor, nominated to the U.S. Supreme Court,” said Acting Dean Kate Stith, who has known Sotomayor for more than two decades and whose husband, Judge José A. Cabranes, serves with Judge Sotomayor on the Second Circuit. “We admire greatly and take special pride in her accomplishments. We have been fortunate that she has had continuing and deep involvement with the Law School — in conferences, moot courts, and guest appearances in classes — during her years on the bench. We congratulate Judge Sotomayor on this tremendous milestone in a remarkable career.”

Here’s the open letter:

Open Letter from Yale Law Students, Alumni, and Educators Regarding Brett Kavanaugh

*Please sign below. Additional signatories will be added regularly*

July 10, 2018

To Dean Gerken and the Yale Law School leadership,

We write today as Yale Law students, alumni, and educators ashamed of our alma mater. Within an hour of Donald Trump’s announcement that he would nominate Brett Kavanaugh, YLS ’90, to the Supreme Court, the law school published a press release boasting of its alumnus’s accomplishment. The school’s post included quotes from Yale Law School professors about Judge Kavanaugh’s intellect, influence and mentorship of their students.

Since his campaign launched, Trump has repeatedly promised to appoint justices who would overturn Roe v. Wade. Overturning that decision would endanger the lives of countless people who need or may need abortions — including many who sign this letter. Trump’s nomination of Judge Kavanaugh is a reliable way to fulfill his oath. Just a few months ago, Judge Kavanaugh ruled to deny a detained immigrant minor her constitutional right to abortion. Decades-old Supreme Court precedent makes clear that the government may not place an undue burden on a pregnant person’s access to abortion. But Judge Kavanaugh clearly did not feel constrained by precedent: what could be a greater obstacle than a cage? The minor had never wavered in her decision to seek an abortion and had received a judicial bypass from a state judge who found that she was competent to make the decision. Yet Kavanaugh condescendingly and disingenuously held that she must wait weeks until she was in a “better place” to make a choice about her own bodily autonomy — at which point she might not be able to have a legal abortion. Further, Kavanaugh argued that to require immigration authorities to stop blocking her from accessing this right would force the government into complicity.

The judge employed similar spurious reasoning in a 2015 dissent arguing that the ACA’s contraceptive mandate violated the rights of religious organizations, even though those organizations were granted an accommodation that allowed them to opt out of providing contraceptive coverage. Kavanaugh’s opinions give us grave concern that he will consistently prioritize the beliefs of third-parties over the rights of the oppressed — not only when it comes to abortion and contraception, but also regarding other forms of medical care (including care for transgender patients), family privacy, and sexual liberty. Litigants harness this same logic when arguing that institutions have a religious right to discriminate against LGBT people — an issue the Court is certain to take up in the years to come.

Judge Kavanaugh would also act as a rubber stamp for President Trump’s fraud and abuse. Despite working with independent counsel Ken Starr to prosecute Bill Clinton, Judge Kavanaugh has since called upon Congress to exempt sitting presidents from civil suits, criminal investigations, and criminal prosecutions. He has also noted that “a serious constitutional question exists regarding whether a president can be criminally indicted and tried while in office.” This reversal does not reflect high-minded consideration but rather naked partisanship. At a time when the President and his associates are under investigation for various serious crimes, including colluding with the Russian government and obstructing justice, Judge Kavanaugh’s extreme deference to the Executive poses a direct threat to our democracy.

As part of his assault on the administrative state — based not in law, as he claims, but on policy preference — Judge Kavanaugh has undermined attempts to protect the environment and regulate predatory lenders and for-profit colleges. He has called now-defunct Net Neutrality regulations violations of the First Amendment. If elevated, the judge would pose an existential threat to the government’s ability to regulate for the common good and further twist the First Amendment beyond recognition, using it as a sword to advance his personal political preferences. His appointment would usher in a new era of Lochner, with “black-robed rulers overriding citizens’ choices.”

Judge Kavanaugh has consistently protected the interests of powerful institutions and disregarded the rights of vulnerable individuals. On the D.C. Circuit he denied a student with disabilities access to the remedial education he was promised after he emerged from juvenile detention. In a 2008 dissent, Judge Kavanaugh argued undocumented workers are not protected by labor laws. In 2016, Judge Kavanaugh ruled that employers can require employees to waive their right to picket. In a concurrence, he argued that the National Security Agency’s sweeping call surveillance program was consistent with the Fourth Amendment. As an attorney, he advocated for prayer at open public school events in brazen contravention of our country’s separation of church and state.

The list goes on. We see in these rulings an intellectually and morally bankrupt ideologue intent on rolling back our rights and the rights of our clients. Judge Kavanaugh’s resume is certainly marked by prestige, groomed for exactly this nomination. But degrees and clerkships should not be the only, or even the primary, credential for a Supreme Court appointment. A commitment to law and justice is.

Now is the time for moral courage — which for Yale Law School comes at so little cost. Perhaps you, as an institution and as individuals, will benefit less from Judge Kavanaugh’s ascendant power if you withhold your support. Perhaps Judge Kavanaugh will be less likely to hire your favorite students. But people will die if he is confirmed. We hope you agree your sacrifice would be worth it. Please use your authority and platform to expose the stakes of this moment and the threat that Judge Kavanaugh poses.

Signed,

Dana Bolger, YLS ’19
Alexandra Brodsky, YLS ’16
Alyssa Peterson, YLS ’19
Emma Roth, YLS ’17
Bertolain Elysee, YLS ’19
Kathryn Pogin, YLS ’20
Valeria Pelet del Toro, YLS ’19
Jonathan Cohen, YLS ’20
Olivia Graffeo-Cohen (Horton), YLS ’17
Isra Syed, YLS ’19
Veena Subramanian, YLS ’19
Jon Petkun, YLS ’19
Ricky Zacharias, YLS ’19
Laura McCready, YLS ’18
Molly Katherine Anderson, YLS ’19
Rebecca Chan, YLS ’18
Camila Vega, YLS ’18
Faren Tang, YLS ’18
Kath Xu, YLS ’20
Meghan Brooks, YLS ’19
Miriam Becker-Cohen, YLS ’18
Wally Hilke, YLS ’18
Jason Berkenfeld, YLS ’17
Brian Highsmith, YLS ’17
Emma Thurber Stone, YLS ’19
William Stone, YLS ’17
D’Laney Gielow, YLS ’18
Cassie Crockett, YLS ’17
Rachel Tuchman, YLS ’17
Nora Niedzielski-Eichner, YLS ’18
Seguin Strohmeier, YLS ’16
Dorothy Tegeler, YLS ’16
Gregg Gonsalves, Associate Professor (Adjunct) of Law and Co-Director of Global Health Justice Partnership
Swapna Reddy, YLS ’16
Maya Menlo, YLS ’18
Will Bloom, YLS ’17
Erika Nyborg-Burch, YLS ’16
Scott Stern, YLS ’20
Jenny Tumas, YLS ’20
Zachary Herz, YLS ’14
Jessica Purcell, YLS ’17
Monika Kothari, YLS ’16
Amber Qureshi, YLS ’19
Joe Muller, YLS ’19
Julia Coppelman, YLS ’20
Rachel Shur, YLS ’17
Laith Aqel, YLS ’20
Megan Wachspress, YLS ’15
John Gonzalez, YLS ’20
Poonam Daryani, Global Health Justice Partnership Clinical Fellow
Joseph Meyers, YLS ’18
Samuel Davis, YLS ’20
Charles Du, ’17
Elise Wander, YLS ’19
Aseem Mehta, YLS ’20
Zain Rizvi, YLS ’17
Erica Turret YLS ’20
Cal Soto, YLS ’14
Sameer Jaywant, YLS ’18
Carl Jiang, YLS ’20
James Bhandary-Alexander, Visiting Clinical Lecturer-in-Law
Sesenu Woldemariam, YLS ’19
Jacob Bennett, YLS ’19
Ted Lee, YLS ’18
Helen Diagama, YLS ’17
Catherine Crooke, YLS ’19
Derek Mraz, YLS ’19
Alda Yuan, YLS ’18
Megha Ram, YLS ’18
Dianne Lake, YLS ’20
Ruth Lazenby, YLS ’19
Becca Steinberg, YLS ’20
Bina Peltzm YLS ’19
Nicole Brambila, YLS ’19
Stephanie Garlock, YLS ’20
Ali Gifford, YLS ’18
Susan Lin, YLS ’04
Corey Guilmette, YLS ’16
Kai Fees, YLS ’18
Elsa Mota, YLS ’20
Alyssa Yamamoto, YLS ’18
Josh Lee, YLS ’05
Adan Martinez, YLS ’17
Charlotte Schwartz, YLS ’19
Natalia Friedlander, YLS ’18
Juliana Moraes Liu, YLS ’20
Yasin Hegazy, YLS ’19
Zach Fields, YLS ’20
Sonya Schoenberger, YLS ’20
Patrick Baker, YLS ’18
Mark Birhanu, YLS ’19
Callie Wilson, YLS ’18
Samantha Peltz, YLS ’20
John Lewis, YLS ’14
Clare Kane Yale ’14 YLS ’19
Jorge Bonilla, YLS ’19
Hannah Hussey, YLS ’20
Jease Marks, YLS ’18
Ally Arias, YLS ’19
Gregory D. Phillips, YLS ’83
Amit Jain, YLS ’18
Bethany Hill, YLS ’18
Joanne Lee, YLS ’18
Zachary Manfredi ’17
Healy Ko, YLS ’19
Monica Cai, YLS ’20
Leanne Gale, YLS ’20
Rachel Kogan, YLS ’19
Ted Wojcik, YLS ’15
Sarah Ganty, YLS ’18
Ryan Cooper, YLS ’15
Jonathan Gray, YLS ’18
Shannon Manley, YLS ’20
Constance Zhang, YLS ’18
Rebecca Gendelman, YLS ’19
Mary Yanik, YLS ’14
Julie Krishnaswami, Associate Law Librarian, Lillian Goldman Law Library
Owen Monkemeier YLS ’19
Max Reinhardt, YLS ’20
Alda Yuan, YLS ’18
Molly Weston Williamson YLS ’13
David Singh Grewal, YLS ’02, Professor of Law
Sheela Ramesh, YLS ’14
Samantha Schnell, YLS ’19
Laika Abdulali, YLS ’18
Matt Lifson, YLS ’19
Alon Gur, YLS ’16
Rhoda Hassan YLS ’19
Jesse Williams, YLS ’20
Elizabeth Villarreal, YLS ’19
Noah Zatz, YLS ’99
Antonio Grayson ’21
Taylor Henley, YLS ’17
Andrew Walchuk, YLS ’17
Pauline Syrnik, YLS ’19
Kathy Lu, YLS ’18
Eric Baudry, YLS ’19
Matthew Noah Smith, Lecturer in Law 2007
Anil Kalhan YLS ’99
Kathryn Abrams, YLS ’84
Petey Menz, YLS ’20
Gabe Lewin, YLS ’20
Sanjukta Paul, YLS ’03
Joel Sati, YLS ’22
Andrew Chin, YLS ’98
Henry Weaver, YLS ’18
Michael Yarbrough, YLS ’09
Charles U. Farley, YLS ’04
Michael Wright, YLS ’15
Daniel Hornung, YLS ’20
Brian Sweeney, YLS ’15
Chandini Jha YLS ’21
Solomon Ariwoola, YLS ’20
Julie Wilensky, YLS ’07
Gowri Ramachandran, YLS ’03
Daniel Friedman, YLS ’14
Ashraf Ahmed, YLS ’19
Alice Clapman, YLS ’03
Alexander Stephens, YLS ’02
Rebecca Matsumura, YLS ’15
Aarti Khanolkar Wilson, YLS ’07
Rishi Gupta, YLS ’04
Jennifer Hunter, YLS ’03
Kaitlin Welborn, YLS ’15
Tal Eisenzweig, YLS ’17
Jonathan Zasloff YLS ’93
Michael Stone, YLS ’79
Thomas Geraghty YLS ’95
Valentina Garzon, YLS ’19
Carrie La Seur, YLS ’02
Megan Wulff, YLS ’13
Matthew W. Alsdorf, YLS ’04
Arash Ghiassi, YLS ’18
Jessica Sager, YLS ’99
Amos Friedland, YLS ’08
Katherine Carter, YLS ’14
Andrea Parente, YLS ’19
Deborah Marcuse, YLS ’08
Emily Rock, YLS ’14
Tal Klement, YLS ’01
Tom Jawetz, YLS ’03
Maria Pulzetti ’06
Sophia Wang, YLS ’17
Stephen Ruckman, YLS ’08
Deborah Gaines, YC ’82
Daniel K. Phillips, YLS ’20
Heather Khan, YLS ’04
Tara J. Melish, YLS ’00
Damon Hemmerdinger ’98
Benjamin Brady, YLS ’00
Kimberly West-Faulcon YLS ’95
Anna Levine YLS ’03
David Jaros, YLS ’01
Kate Gibson YLS ’14
Lynette Lim, YLS ’20
Asher Smith, YLS ’14
David M. Driesen, YLS ’89
Alexi Shaw, YLS ’17
Felisha Miles, YLS ’21
Kyle Barry, YLS ’07
Jonah Goldberg, YLS ’15
Marvin C. Brown IV, YLS ’16
Sam Brill, YLS ’18
Marissa Roy, YLS ’17
Kayla Morin, YLS ’20
Matt Kellner, YLS ’21
Katie Chamblee-Ryan, YLS ’12
Kate Mogulescu, YLS ’03
Touraj Parang, YLS ’99
Emily Jane O’Dell, YLS Resident Fellow in Islamic Law
David Menschel YLS ’02
Elizabeth Pierson, YLS ’18
Vanita Kalra, YLS ’06
Susanna D. Evarts, YLS ’18
Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg, YLS ’08
Ro Khanna, YLS ’01
Nathan J. Robinson, YLS ’14
Patrick Woolsey, YLS ’19
Rachel Dempsey YLS ’15
Felicia Medina, YLS ’06
Nicole Hallett, YLS ’08
Rebecca Bernhardt, YLS ’97
Bob Johnson, YLS ’07
Michael Tayag, YLS ’21
Nila Bala, YLS ’12
Inderpal Grewal, Professor, Yale University
My Khanh Ngo, YLS ’17
Darryl Li, YLS ’09
Christopher Lapinig, YLS ’13
Grant Damon-Feng, YLS ’14
Emily Teplin Fox, YLS ’07
Raquiba Huq, YLS ’07
Limor Mann, YLS ’05
Abigail Rich, YLS ’16
Lance Martinez, YLS ’96
Daniel Margolis, YLS ’04
J. Stephen Clark, YLS ’95
Jessica Gordon, YLS ’09
Stephen B. Cohen, YLS ’71
Zach Strassburger, YLS ’12
Aisha Saad, YLS ’18
Josh McLaurin, YLS ’14
Joel Ramirez, YLS ’17
Betty Hung, YLS ’97
Rebecca Weston, YLS ’91
Anjali Srinivasan, YLS ’11
Blake Emerson, YLS ’16
Alan H. Kleinman YLS ’77
Bryn Williams, YLS ’14
Elliot Forhan, YLS ’13
Abigail Pershing, YLS ’20
Steph Cha, YLS ’10
Ann Manov, YLS ’21
Nancy Yun Tang, YLS ’19
Shahana Basu YLS ’99
Noorain Khan, YLS ’11
Sriram MK, YLS ’06
Kristine Beckerle, YLS ’15
Saumya Manohar, YLS ’08
Robbie Silverman, YLS ’10
Joshua Tate, YLS ’02
Charanya Krishnaswami, YLS ’13
David Lebow, YLS ’16
Erin Conroy ’04
Rhonda Wasserman YLS ’83
Jillian Hewitt YLS ’15
Sofia Nelson, YLS ’13
Lauren Oleykowski, YLS ’11
Theresa Lee, YLS ’10
James J. Williamson YLS ’13
Mark W. Wickersham, YLS ’96
Michael O. Molina, YLS ’02
Cyd Oppenheimer, YLS ’04
Kate Magaram, YLS ’09
Jesse Tripathi, YLS ’21
Anna Arons YLS ’15
Joe Nania, YLS ’19
Molly Petchenik, YLS ’21
Ceara Donnelley, YLS ’09
Peter Chen, YLS ’13
Elizabeth Compa YLS ’11
Harriet Robinson Gowanlock YLS ’86
MacKenzie Pantoja, YLS ’21
Paul Sonn, YLS ’92
Andrew DeGuglielmo, YLS ’21
Susan Hazeldean YLS ’01
Johanna Kalb YLS ’06
Issa Kohler-Hausmann, YLS ’08 Associate Professor of Law Yale
Angela Thompson, YLS ’07
Katherine Demby, YLS ’16
Allen Hernandez, YLS ’21
Nikko Price, YLS ’20
Mark Malaspina, YLS ’97
Pamela Davis, YLS ’93
Bassam Gergi, YLS ’17
Margaret Betts, YLS ’03
Allison Tait, YLS ’11
Julianne Prescop, YLS ’09
Claire Benoit, YLS ’21
Sara Cervantes, YLS ’20
Zareena Grewal, Assoc Prof, Yale University
Caitlin Miner-Le Grand, YLS ’13
Cara Reichard, YLS ’20
Allie Alperovich, YLS ’03
Amanda Gutierrez, YLS ’12
David Segal, visiting fellow YLS ISP ’14
Katie Mesner-Hage, YLS ’13
Gabriel J. Chin, YLS LL.M. ’95
Sri Kuehnlenz, YLS ’13
Helen Li, YLS ’17
Jesselyn Brown Radack, YLS ’95
Sean C. Foley, YLS ’21
Pirzada Ahmad, YLS ’21
Laura Saldivia, YLS JSD ’15
Wesley Kennedy, YLS ’84
Jennifer Sung, YLS ’04
Emma Sokoloff-Rubin, YLS ’18
Alexander Taubes, YLS ’15
Josh Rosenthal, YLS ’13
Andrew P. Propps, YLS ’09
Kim Clayton Hershman, YLS ’92
Adrian Gonzalez, YLS ’19
Laura Kokotailo, YLS ’20
Jonathan Smith, YLS ’12
Reed Schuler, YLS ’13
Seth Wayne, YLS ’11
L. D. Wood-Hull, YLS ’95
Georgie Boge Geraghty ’96
Olivia Luna, YLS ’15
Sam Frizell, YLS ’20
Kirill Penteshin, YLS ’09
Kate Levien, YLS ’21
Matt Nguyen, YLS ’19
Zachary Turgeon, YLS ’21
Devin Race, YLS ’19
Markus L. Penzel, YLS ’85
Mollie Berkowitz, YLS ’21
Anjali Dalal, YLS ’10
Rudy Pantoja, YLS ’20
Sarah Eppler-Epstein, YLS ’21
Jessica Weisel, YLS ’94
Matiangai Sirleaf, YLS ’08
Elizabeth Kaplan, YLS ’89
Neera Tanden, YLS ’96
Jill Morrison, YLS ’95
Chris Kemmitt, YLS ’05
Alyssa Briody, YLS ’13
David Ward, YLS ’98
Amy Stake, YLS ’12
Zach Summers, YLS ’07
Hope Babcock, YLS ’66
Valerie Marcus, YLS ’87
Spiros Vavougios, YLS LL.M ’18
Shannon Siragusa, YLS ’00
Ray Brescia, YLS ’92
Andrew Woolf, YLS ’05
Zygmunt Plater, YLS ’68
Allegra McLeod, YLS ’06
Valarie Kaur, YLS ’12
Meredith Hightower YLS ’94
Christopher Hines, YLS ’12
Hillary Vedvig, YLS ’17
Dan Mullkoff, YLS ’10
Sparky Abraham, YLS ’14
Eileen Goldsmith, YLS ’00
Thomas Buser-Clancy, YLS ’11
Joy Horowitz, YLS ’82
Laura Smolowe, YLS ’06
Samuel Kuhn, YLS ’21
Karun Tilak, YLS ’14
Nate Gadd, YLS ’15
Joy Horowitz, YLS ’82
Ellen Shadur, YLS ’85
Derrick Rice, YLS ’21
Becca Heller, YLS ’10
Jamie O’Connell YLS ’02
Lorraine Van Kirk, YLS ’12
Sabrina Smith, YLS ’94
Nicole Billington, YLS ’20
Thomas D. Allison, YLS ’69
Rumela Roy, YLS ’17
Jill Habig, YLS ’09
Zach Garcia, YLS ’16
Erica Chae, YLS ’20
Nic Marais, YLS ’11

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: sitting presidents should not be prosecuted or investigated
Posted by: riverhousebill ()
Date: July 31, 2018 05:06AM

Kavanaugh Trumps pick for high court has said that sitting presidents should not be prosecuted or investigated criminally or civilly.

This sounds like a dream come true for dictatorships.

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Re: sitting presidents should not be prosecuted or investigated
Posted by: Prana ()
Date: July 31, 2018 08:39PM

I don't support Kavanaugh. He is a Bush crony and a member of the Senior Executive Services. I also don't support other members of the SES, like Jeff Sessions, Robert Mueller, Rod Rosenstein, Bruce Ohr, John Podesta, etc.





Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 07/31/2018 08:42PM by Prana.

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Re: sitting presidents should not be prosecuted or investigated
Posted by: riverhousebill ()
Date: July 31, 2018 11:56PM

Prana, Im glad to hear you dont support Kavanaugh, but it seems to me you sent a confusing message, You did say you support him in quote below.

quote -I don't support Kavanaugh. He is a Bush crony and a member of the Senior Executive Services. I also don't support other members of the SES, like Jeff Sessions, Robert Mueller, Rod Rosenstein, Bruce Ohr, John Podesta, etc.


quote Prana - -Rand Paul will support Kavanaugh: After meeting Judge Kavanaugh and reviewing his record, I have decided to support his nomination.

im guessing now you where quoting Rand???

Maybe I misunderstood, Im good at that sometimes.

If you support Rand you are supporting Kavanaughs nomination to a degree.

Who's nomination then are you supporting?

Robert Mueller is a most honorable person, people seem to know little about his past.

I believe ,Robet Mueller military service speaks volumes about the mans


Kavanaugh statement-sitting presidents should not be prosecuted or investigated criminally or civilly is like a dictators dream come true, No wonder why this Orange clown picked him!

Options: ReplyQuote
Re: sitting presidents should not be prosecuted or investigated
Posted by: Prana ()
Date: August 01, 2018 12:10AM

Robert Mueller covered up the whole FBI 9/11 investigation. He is a Bush crony too, big time.


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Re: sitting presidents should not be prosecuted or investigated
Posted by: Prana ()
Date: August 01, 2018 12:12AM

By the way, regarding the quote I put from Rand Paul, how could that have been a quote from me? Do you think I actually met with Kavanaugh like the quote says? And am I in a position to vote for kavanaugh's nomination?


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Re: sitting presidents should not be prosecuted or investigated
Posted by: riverhousebill ()
Date: August 01, 2018 02:34AM

You did not say quote Rand Paul. it could have very well been you speaking.

Rand Paul will support Kavanaugh: After meeting Judge Kavanaugh and reviewing his record, I have decided to support his nomination.

And yes you can support a cause other ways besides voting.

Robert Mueller is a true patriot before some one makes judgment about Muerller
Look at his history, Starting with his short but most remarkable Military service.
People like mueller where he has been have no time for deep state bullshit.
It is Mueller Time and he will bring this Orange cult down, cults never have a good ending.

Do You Support Rand Paul,? who supports kavanaugh?
Did you ay before you support Rand Paul?



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 08/01/2018 02:38AM by riverhousebill.

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