Posted on 06/07/2019 11:38:54 AM PDT by ransomnote
I don’t know the rules for clerks, but I think a lot of them are still trying to get through the Bar. Looking it up real quick it said that most states require a HS diploma and either a certification or 2 years of college in the area.
So .... yeah I’d think he could clerk.
Odd thing in the article is it said it was a Human Resource special category. I’d never heard of that before so maybe it’s something new.
Most of the personnel type officers, we called them Detailers, I knew came out of their own warfare specialty as a shore rotation. So Airedales were detailers for Airedales, SWOs for SWOs, etc
Detailer roles were pretty coveted as they had significant ability to push roles or deny/hold back roles and got to talk with all the different commanding officers who were looking to fill an upcoming slot in their command from that warfare specialty.
President Trump speaking live in Iowa now!
RSBN
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JWckon82rLA
Golden State Times
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xp4PhJIw-GE
FOX
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0OGXhqLOPB4
Not sure if this was posted yet, Sean Spicer hmmmm.
Spicer: Dems Need to Realize Mueller Probe Is Over John Dean Testimony Full-Blown Circus
Monday on Fox News Channels Your World, former White House press secretary Sean Spicer said Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee need to realize special counsel Robert Muellers investigation is over.
Spicer called Richard Nixons former White House counsel John Deans appearance before the committee evidence the Democrats are running a full-blown circus.
When asked about Dean testifying, Spicer said, I find it interesting that your lead witness is a convicted felon, part of the cover-up at Watergate, disbarred from ever serving as a lawyer again and serving four months in prison. Thats the person that you lead with? It really makes you wonder where were going from here. This has gone from silly to a full-blown circus. I do wonder how far theyre going to push this. Weve had House investigation, a Senate investigation, 488-page report from the special counsel. At some point, the House Judiciary Democrats need to understand that this matter is over. Focus on the issues the American people care about. Thats what the president is focused on, and thats the results that hes achieving.
New Cates thread wow
https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1138518258083094528.html
Good stuff on the 3 tons of ammonium nitrate found in London and the Iranian Hezbo terrorists behind it.
If only Cates took in to consideration of these Q drops he would understand more, who and what is behind Iran and connect even more dots. He’s on the right track but needs to dig even further.
CGato
Helicopter pilot who fatally crashed onto the top of a Manhattan skyscraper was NOT licensed to fly in bad weather says the FAA, as authorities reveal he claimed he was LOST five minutes after taking off in heavy fog
> Trump live from Iowa
Say hello to E15, no details other than “We lifted the restrictions”. I don’t know what that means but E15 will destroy all fuel system components of all non flex-fuel type engines of everything. Cars, lawnmowers, chainsaws, boat engines, everything.
-SB
I smell coverup....
If it was something like that hopefully a note will show up.
According to a slight dig, they say E15 will run in 2001 and up cars & trucks but several manufacturers have denied this, Chrysler among them. Again, flex fuel vehicles are fine with E15.
Your lawnmower won’t be though. I found a way to extract ethanol from gasoline. This is how it’s supposedly done. What you do is dump some water into a preferably a clear container. Then dump a gallon of gas in it. The water and ethanol will float to the bottom. Gas won’t mix with water but ethanol will. You then stick a syphon in the container and pump the water out. What your left with is ethanol free gas at WAY less cost.
Any chemistryfags in the audience?
-SB
-SB
Interesting theory. I’ll have to look again after work.
Mark
#nohomo I just thought that you would not want to leave that out.
>>I smell coverup....
I don’t. I smell idiot who flew in conditions he wasn’t supposed to fly in in a vehicle that didn’t have controls for flying in that condition. Idiot. Just lucky he didn’t have anyone else in the copter with him.
I defer to getting them out of prison so we don’t pay for their food, water, medical & college. And if they are “chemically” castrated, it hopefully should solve the problem
Okay, thanks for the info.
I am thinking that Priebus will be using his knowledge of legal proceedings to do prep work for the tribunals.
Mark
Thanks. I had been under the impression that the 737 max was fly by wire. So the AFCS is kinda like a helper, not a true autopilot?
I guess I’ve gotten so skeptical, do we really know that Kim is dead, or could his ambulance ride been witness protection?
MARTIN FELDSTEIN
Fox Biz reported his death at 79 on 6/11/19
FELDSTEIN, Martin S. Of Belmont, on Tuesday, June 11, 2019 at age 79, the George F. Baker Professor of Economics at Harvard University and President Emeritus of the National Bureau of Economic Research. For 54 years, the beloved and devoted husband of Kathleen (Foley) Feldstein. Loving father of Margaret Feldstein Borden & her husband Mark, Janet Feldstein McKillop & her husband Matt. Cherished grandfather of Clementine and Otto Borden and Katherine Ray and Mac McKillop. Dear brother of Helen Feldstein. Born in New York City in 1939, the son of Meyer C “Mac” and Esther (Gevarter) Feldstein, he was educated at Harvard College and received his D.Phil. from Oxford University.
Marty met Kate at Oxford in 1964 when he was a student at Nuffield College, where he later became an Honorary Fellow. He joined the Harvard faculty in 1967, and over the next five decades Marty introduced generations of students to the study of economics.
He served as President and CEO of the NBER for thirty years. From 1982 through 1984, he was Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers and President Reagan’s chief economic adviser. He served on the boards of several public corporations, including J.P. Morgan and Eli Lilly. He was a member of the President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board under George W. Bush and the President’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board under Barack Obama.
He was the recipient of numerous honorary degrees and awards, including the John Bates Clark medal in 1977. Funeral services at the Levine Chapels, 470 Harvard Street, BROOKLINE, on Thursday, June 13, 2019 at 2:00pm. The burial will be private. A memorial service will be held at Harvard University in the Fall.
In lieu of flowers, remembrances may be made to a charity of choice. Levine Chapels, Brookline 617-277-8300 www.levinechapel.com
Published in The Boston Globe from June 12 to June 13, 2019
The 229-191 vote broke down strictly along partisan lines with no defectors from either party, highlighting the entrenched divisions on Capitol Hill between Democrats accusing Trump of conducting a "cover-up" related to Mueller's findings, and Republicans fighting to protect their White House ally from what they consider a political "witch hunt" heading into 2020.
The resolution empowers the House Judiciary Committee to go before a federal court in seeking the Department of Justice's (DOJ) compliance with subpoenas for disputed materials and witness testimony. Two figures are named explicitly in the text: Attorney General William Barr, who has refused to release some parts of Mueller's report and the underlying documents; and Don McGhan, the former White House counsel who has defied a Democratic subpoena to appear before the committee.
SNIP
Indeed, Democratic leaders are labeling the resolution one of "civil contempt." But the measure makes no mention of contempt. And the language is much softer than another resolution, passed through the Judiciary panel last month, to hold Barr and McGahn in criminal contempt of Congress a step that carries steep penalties, including heavy fines and up to a year in prison.
"We're calling it contempt, for short, because the courts obviously would have to find the executive branch in contempt in order to, sort of, render the orders to comply," said Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), a member of the Judiciary Committee and former constitutional law professor.
"So it's, generally speaking, not contempt."
SNIP
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