Current Posts are focusing on COVID-19 Articles. Proverb 21:15-16 It is a joy for the just to do justice, But destruction will come to the workers of iniquity. A man who wanders from the way of understanding will rest in the assembly of the dead. No one is more hated than he who speaks the truth. Plato To argue with a person who has renounced the use of reason is like administering medicine to the dead. Thomas Paine These Posts are for your review, please do your own research!
Thursday, December 26, 2019
Tuesday, December 24, 2019
Monday, December 23, 2019
Saturday, December 21, 2019
This what the Democrats are impeaching our President for.
Looks like the Liberal Left votes against the USA every time also!
Friday, December 20, 2019
Thursday, December 19, 2019
What’s Hidden in the Senate Spending Bill?
Tucked into the Senate budget bill
are a host of provisions that help a broad array of industries and
sectors, including energy, health care and education, through increased
spending and tax credits.
The Senate
deal would raise strict spending caps on domestic and military spending
in this fiscal year and the next by about $300 billion. It would also
lift the federal debt limit until March 2019 and provide nearly $90
billion in disaster relief to deal with last year’s fires and
hurricanes.
It also includes a series
of unexpected spending increases, including restoring some provisions
that were jettisoned from last year’s $1.5 trillion tax package. And the
bill includes an extension of 48 different tax credits that expired at
the end of 2016, including several incentives meant to help particular
sectors like mining and horse racing.
Here are some of the provisions included in the 600-plus-page bill, which heads for a vote later today:
A cost watchdog is repealed, among other Medicare adjustments.
The
bill would kill an unpopular provision of the Affordable Care Act, its
Independent Payment Advisory Board, which was devised to help keep
Medicare spending growth from rising above a set level. No one has ever
been appointed to the board, and its services have not yet been needed —
Medicare spending has experienced unusually slow growth rates
in recent years — but the board was long denounced by Republicans as a
rationing board, and disliked by some Democrats for taking payment
policy authority away from Congress.
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The
bill extends a number of special payment bonuses for different Medicare
providers, many of which were once intended to be temporary, but get
regularly continued. Those include extra payments for rural hospitals, a
higher payment rate for ambulances, and increased payment rates to
certain Medicare doctors. It preserves loan repayment programs for
health providers who choose to work in underserved areas, and preserves
funding for hospitals that train residents.
The
bill expands pilot programs meant to test the value of in-home care for
some Medicare patients. And it expands the ability of private Medicare
Advantage plans to offer so-called “telehealth,” where doctors treat
patients over the phone or internet. It would allow Medicare providers
who are part of an accountable care association to offer patients cash
bonuses as incentives for healthy behaviors.
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The
bill increases discounts that pharmaceutical companies must give
seniors enrolled in the Medicare Part D drug plans, by making the
so-called “doughnut hole” smaller. This was a policy that was part of
the Affordable Care Act, but the new legislation would speed up
implementation by one year.
Funding changes for public health programs.
The
spending plan would cut $1.35 billion in funding to an Affordable Care
Act program meant to improve public health and prevention funding for
states and municipalities.
It
would extend funding for the Children’s Health Insurance Program for an
additional four years. Last month’s spending bill had already extended the program
for six years, so now CHIP will be funded for an entire decade. Another
popular program that delivers health care to low income children and
adults, the government-funded clinics known as Community Health Centers,
will also get a two-year funding extension.
Continued funding for abstinence education.
The bill would extend funding to abstinence-only sex education programs.
A break for Berea College.
The spending bill restores a provision that was stripped out of last year’s $1.5 trillion tax bill after the Senate parliamentarian objected to its inclusion.
The
bill would exempt Berea College, a small private college in Kentucky
that provides free tuition, from being subject to a new tax on large
higher education endowments that was included in last year’s tax law.
The
bill adds language that makes the new excise tax on investment income
applicable only to schools with “tuition-paying” students, shielding
Berea College, which does not charge tuition. The school is in the home
state of Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader.
Tax breaks for racetracks and horse owners continue.
Owners
of race horses and motor sports entertainment complexes would get an
extension of special tax treatment. Horse owners are allowed to
depreciate their horses over the course of three years. For racetracks,
the depreciation is over the course of seven years. Those breaks would
remain in place for 2017.
Extension and expansion of energy tax credits.
The
Senate bill features a multitude of tax breaks for renewable energy
sources that had been neglected in a 2015 deal to bolster wind and solar
power. These so-called “orphaned” technologies
include geothermal, small wind farms and fuel cells. Much like existing
credits for wind and solar power, these incentives would phase out
starting in 2020.
The bill also extends an existing production tax credit for nuclear power past 2020, which would benefit a pair of long-delayed reactors being built in Georgia that aren’t expected to come online before 2021.
Southern Company has said it may not be able to complete the reactors,
the only two still under construction in the United States, without the
credit.
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A
separate measure would greatly expand a tax credit for companies that
capture carbon dioxide from power plants or other polluting facilities
and pump it underground. Oil firms such as Occidental Petroleum have
been pumping captured CO2 into old wells in order to extract additional
oil. Some environmental groups also lobbied for the measure, arguing
that carbon capture technology, still in its infancy, could one day prove a crucial tool for tackling climate change.
The
bill retroactively extends tax credits for biodiesel, advanced biofuels
and fuel-cell vehicles through the end of 2017. Industry lobbyists had
unsuccessfully fought to get many of these measures included in the tax
overhaul bill passed by Congress in December. They could still face
resistance in the House.
A tax credit for mining safety.
The
bill extends a tax credit for 20 percent of an employers’ spending on
mine rescue team training costs, up to $10,000. A separate provision
allows the immediate deduction of a company’s investment in mine safety
equipment.
A special rate for timber sales.
The
bill continues a special tax rate of 23.8 percent for 2017 for gains
from timber sales, a break from the top rate of 35 percent that would
have otherwise applied.
Here’s what Congress is stuffing into its $1.3 trillion spending bill
Border wall:
The bill provides $1.6 billion for barriers along the U.S.-Mexico
border but with serious strings attached. Of the total, $251 million is
earmarked specifically for “secondary fencing” near San Diego, where
fencing is already in place; $445 million is for no more than 25 miles
of “levee fencing”; $196 million is for “primary pedestrian fencing” in
the Rio Grande Valley; $445 million is for the replacement of existing
fencing in that area; and the rest is for planning, design and
technology — not for wall construction. The biggest catch is this: The
barriers authorized to be built under the act must be “operationally
effective designs” already deployed as of last March, meaning none of
President Trump’s big, beautiful wall prototypes can be built.
Immigration enforcement:
The bill bumps up funding for both U.S. Customs and Border Protection
and for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement — delivering increases
sought by the Trump administration. But there are significant
restrictions on how that new money can be spent. Democrats pushed for,
and won, limitations on hiring new ICE interior enforcement agents and
on the number of undocumented immigrants the agency can detain. Under
provisions written into the bill, ICE can have no more than 40,354
immigrants in detention by the time the fiscal year ends in September.
But there is a catch: The Homeland Security secretary is granted
discretion to transfer funds from other accounts “as necessary to ensure
the detention of aliens prioritized for removal.”
Infrastructure:
Numerous transportation programs get funding increases in the bill, but
the debate leading up to its release focused on one megaproject: The
Gateway program, aimed at improving rail access to and from Manhattan on
Amtrak and New Jersey Transit. Trump made it a signature fight,
largely to punish Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.)
and other Democratic backers of the project who have held up other Trump
initiatives, and Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao told Congress
this month that the project simply wasn’t ready for prime time. The
project is not mentioned in the bill, and Republican aides say that they
turned back efforts to essentially earmark federal funding for the
project. But Democrats say that the project is still eligible for as
much as $541 million in funding this fiscal year through accounts that
Chao does not control. The project might also still qualify for other
pools of money, though it will have to compete with other projects on an
equal playing field.
Health care: Left
out of the bill was a health-care measure sought by GOP Sens. Susan
Collins (Maine) and Lamar Alexander (Tenn.) that would have allowed
states to establish high-risk pools to help cover costly insurance
claims while restoring certain payments to insurers under the Affordable
Care Act. Trump, who ended the “cost-sharing reduction” payments in the
fall, supported the Collins-Alexander language. But Democrats opposed
it, because they said it included language expanding the existing
prohibition on federal funding for abortions.
Guns: The bill includes the Fix NICS Act, bipartisan legislation
aimed at improving the National Instant Criminal Background Check
System that is used to screen U.S. gun buyers. It provides for
incentives and penalties to encourage federal agencies and states to
send records to the federal database in an effort to prevent the type of
oversight that preceded last year’s church massacre in Sutherland
Springs, Tex. Democrats pushed for more aggressive gun laws, including
universal background checks, but won only a minor concession: Language
in the report accompanying the bill clarifying that the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention can, in fact, conduct research into gun
violence. A long-standing rider known as the Dickey Amendment,
which states that no CDC funds “may be used to advocate or promote gun
control,” has been interpreted in the past to bar such research. The
amendment itself remains.
Taxes: The
“grain glitch,” a provision in the new GOP tax law that favored
farmer-owned cooperatives over traditional agriculture corporations by providing a significantly larger tax benefit
for sales to cooperatives, is undone in the bill. Farm-state lawmakers
and farming groups said that without a fix, the tax law could disrupt
the farm economy and even put some companies out of business. The
spending bill tweaks the tax law to level the playing field between
sales to coops and corporations. Democrats in exchange got a 12.5
percent increase in annual allocations for a low-income housing tax
credit for four years.
Internal Revenue Service:
Despite the administration’s attempts to slash its budget, lawmakers
grant $11.431 billion to the nation’s tax collectors, a $196 million
year-to-year increase and $456 million more than Trump requested. The
figure includes $320 million to implement changes enacted as part of the
GOP tax overhaul plan.
Opioids: The
bill increases funding to tackle the opioid epidemic, a boost that
lawmakers from both parties hailed as a win. The legislation allocates
more than $4.65 billion across agencies to help states and local
governments on efforts toward prevention, treatment and law enforcement
initiatives. That represents a $3 billion increase over 2017 spending
levels.
Foreign policy: Included in the spending bill is the Taylor Force Act.
Named after an American who was killed by a Palestinian in 2016, the
measure curtails certain economic assistance to the Palestinian
Authority until it stops financially supporting convicted terrorists and
their families. It unanimously passed the House last year.
Baseball:
Should the bill pass, some minor-league ballplayers could see a raise
this year — but only barely. The Save America’s Pastime Act exempts pro baseball players from federal labor laws
and has been a major lobbying priority for Major League Baseball ever
since minor-league players began suing the league in recent years for
paying them illegally low wages. The version in the bill exempts only
players working under a contract that pays minimum wage, but there are
major loopholes: The contract has to pay minimum wage for a only 40-hour
workweek during the season, not spring training or the offseason — and
it includes no guarantee of overtime even though baseball prospects
routinely work long hours. Thus, under the bill, a player is guaranteed a
minimum salary of $1,160 a month. The current minor-league minimum is
$1,100 a month.
Election security: The
bill provides $380 million to the federal Election Assistance
Commission to make payments to states to improve election security and
technology, and the FBI is set to receive $300 million in
counterintelligence funding to combat Russian hacking.
Congressional misconduct:
The House appears to have gone further than the Senate to address
concerns about how allegations of sexual harassment and misconduct are
handled on Capitol Hill. The House set aside $4 million to pay for
mandatory workplace rights training and plans to create a new Office of
Employee Advocacy to assist employees in proceedings before the Office
of Compliance or House Ethics Committees. House leaders also made a
point of highlighting plans to expand the House Day Care Center. But
senators failed to reach agreement on making changes to how allegations
of wrongdoing are handled, so they won’t be included in the bill.
Congressional Research Service: The bill mandates that reports published by Congress’s in-house researchers be published online for public consumption.
Historically, such reports have not been easy to access online, and a
House Appropriations subcommittee took the lead last year in finally
forcing transparency.
District of Columbia:
The nation’s capital will see a slight dip in its federal funding.
Lawmakers provide $721 million in direct federal funding to the
District, a $35 million drop from last year — mostly because of a $22
million cut in emergency planning money that was used to prepare for the
2017 presidential inauguration. Lawmakers also kept out GOP attempts to
block the District’s budget autonomy act and its assisted suicide law.
Religion and politics:
The federal ban on tax-exempt churches engaging in political activity,
known as the Johnson Amendment, will continue, despite attempts by Trump
and GOP lawmakers to rescind it.
Jury duty:
If you serve on a federal jury, your daily pay rate will increase to
$50 per day — a bipartisan win sought in part after two dozen federal
grand jurors in Washington petitioned House and Senate judiciary
committee members last fall, saying the current pay rate is “abysmal,”
below the minimum wage and a hardship.
Secret Service:
The agency responsible for protecting the president and his family gets
$2.007 billion, including $9.9 million for overtime worked without pay
in 2017 and $14 million to construct a taller and stronger fence around
the White House. In a win for congressional Democrats concerned about
Secret Service agents protecting Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump on
overseas business trips, the bill includes language requiring an annual
report on travel costs for people protected by the service — including
the adult children of presidents.
Restaurant tips: In
December, the Labor Department proposed a rule that would allow
employers such as restaurant owners to “pool” their employees’ tips and
redistribute them as they saw fit — including, potentially, to
themselves. That generated a bipartisan outcry, and the bill spells out
explicitly in law that tip pooling is not permitted: “An employer may
not keep tips received by its employees for any purposes, including
allowing managers or supervisors to keep any portion of employees’ tips,
regardless of whether or not the employer takes a tip credit.”
Yucca Mountain:
The legislation blocks attempts by the Energy Department to restart a
moribund nuclear storage program at the mountain in the Silver State.
Former Senate majority leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) was
a fierce opponent of the measure. Sens. Dean Heller (R-Nev.) — the most
embattled GOP incumbent up for reelection this year — and Catherine
Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) proved that they, too, can stop a federal program
that is widely unpopular in their state from starting again.
FBI:
The spending bill grants the agency $9.03 billion for salaries and
expenses, a $263 million jump over the last fiscal year and $307 million
more than the Trump administration requested. The bill does not include
any funding for the construction of a new FBI headquarters, a win for
Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), a member of the Senate Appropriations
Committee. According to aides familiar with the move, the senator sought
to block new construction funding in response to the administration’s
plans to keep the FBI headquarters in downtown Washington instead of
moving it to suburban Virginia or Maryland.
Asian carp:
The invasive species has wreaked havoc on the Great Lakes, and
lawmakers from states bordering the lakes touted language that forces
the Army Corps of Engineers to keep working on ensuring that vessels in
the Illinois River don’t carry the carp across an electric field erected
to keep them out of the lakes.
Apprenticeships:
Federal money for apprenticeship programs will increase by $50 million,
and there’s a $75 million increase for career and technical education
programs. The office of House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) noted that
other job training and “workforce development” programs also stand to
benefit, including “more money for child care and early head start
programs to help make it easier for job seekers to enter or return to
the workforce.” This has been an area of concern for former “Apprentice”
star Ivanka Trump.
rts:
Federal funding for the arts goes up, despite GOP attempts to slash it.
The National Endowments for the Arts and Humanities will see funding
climb to $152.8 million each, a $3 million increase over the last fiscal
year. Trump proposed eliminating the endowments. The National Gallery
of Art gets $165.9 million, a $1.04 million jump in funding. The John F.
Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts will receive $40.5 million,
which is $4 million more than the last fiscal year.
Public broadcasting:
Big Bird, “Antiques Roadshow” and “Masterpiece Theatre” can play on as
lawmakers agreed not to cut funding for the nation’s public television
and radio networks. Government funding for the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting will remain at $465 million — the same level as past years.
PBS and NPR draw most of their funding directly from member stations
and viewers like you.
Extenders:
The bill reauthorizes key Federal Aviation Administration programs
through the end of September and extends the National Flood Insurance
Program through the end of July.
Wednesday, December 18, 2019
President's Trump Letter to pelosi regarding her impeachment hoax.
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
December 17, 2019
The Honorable Nancy Pelosi
Speaker of the House of Representatives Washington,
D.C. 20515
Dear Madam Speaker:
I write to express my strongest and most
powerful protest against the partisan impeachment crusade being pursued by the
Democrats in the House of Representatives. This impeachment represents an
unprecedented and unconstitutional abuse of power by Democrat Lawmakers,
unequaled in nearly two and a half centuries of American legislative history.
The Articles of Impeachment introduced by the House
Judiciary Committee are not recognizable under any standard of Constitutional
theory, interpretation, or jurisprudence. They include no crimes, no
misdemeanors, and no offenses whatsoever. You have cheapened the importance of
the very ugly word, impeachment!
By proceeding with your invalid impeachment, you are
violating your oaths of office, you are breaking your allegiance to the
Constitution, and you are declaring open war on American Democracy. You dare to
invoke the Founding Fathers in pursuit of this election-nullification
scheme—yet your spiteful actions display unfettered contempt for America's
founding and your egregious conduct threatens to destroy that which our
Founders pledged their very lives to build. Even worse than offending the
Founding Fathers, you are offending Americans of faith by continually saying
"I pray for the President," when you know this statement is not true,
unless it is meant in a negative sense. It is a terrible thing you are doing,
but you will have to live with it, not I!
Your first claim, "Abuse of Power," is a
completely disingenuous, meritless, and baseless invention of your imagination.
You know that I had a totally innocent conversation with the President of
Ukraine. I then had a second conversation that has been misquoted,
mischaracterized, and fraudulently misrepresented. Fortunately, there was a
transcript of the conversation taken, and you know from the transcript (which
was immediately made available) that the paragraph in question was perfect. I
said to President Zelensky: "I would like you to do us a favor, though,
because our country has been through a lot and Ukraine knows a lot about
it." I said do us a favor, not me, and our
country, not a campaign. I then mentioned the Attorney General of the
United States. Every time I talk with a foreign leader, I put America's
interests first, just as I did with President Zelensky.
You are turning a policy disagreement between two branches
of government into an impeachable offense—it is no more legitimate than the
Executive Branch charging members of Congress with crimes for the lawful
exercise of legislative power.
You know full well that Vice President Biden used his
office and $1 billion dollars of U.S. aid money to coerce Ukraine into firing
the prosecutor who was digging into the company paying his son millions of
dollars. You know this because Biden bragged about it on video. Biden openly
stated: "1 said, 'I'm telling you, you're not getting the billion dollars'
. . . I looked at them and said: 'I'm leaving in six hours. If the prosecutor
is not fired, you're not getting the money.' Well, son of a bitch. He got fired."
Even Joe Biden admitted just days ago in an interview with NPR that it
"looked bad." Now you are trying to impeach me by falsely accusing me
of doing what Joe Biden has admitted he actually did.
President Zelensky
has repeatedly declared that I did nothing wrong, and that there was No
Pressure. He further emphasized that it was a "good phone call," that
"I don't feel pressure," and explicitly stressed that "nobody
pushed me." The Ukrainian Foreign Minister stated very clearly: "I
have never seen a direct link between investigations and security
assistance." He also said there was "No Pressure." Senator Ron
Johnson of Wisconsin, a supporter of Ukraine who met privately with President
Zelensky, has said: "At no time during this meeting... was there any
mention by Zelensky or any Ukrainian that they were feeling pressure to do
anything in return for the military aid." Many meetings have been held
between representatives of Ukraine and our country. Never once did Ukraine
complain about pressure being applied—not once! Ambassador Sondland testified
that I told him: "No quid pro quo. I want nothing. I want nothing. I want
President Zelensky to do the right thing, do what he ran on."
The second claim, so-called "Obstruction of
Congress," is preposterous and dangerous. House
Democrats are trying to impeach the duly elected President
of the United States for asserting Constitutionally based privileges that have
been asserted on a bipartisan basis by administrations of both political
parties throughout our Nation's history. Under that standard, every American
president would have been impeached many times over. As liberal law professor
Jonathan Turley warned when addressing Congressional Democrats: "I can't
emphasize this enough... if you impeach a president, if you make a high crime
and misdemeanor out of going to the courts, it is an abuse of power. It's your
abuse of power. You're doing precisely what you're criticizing the President
for doing."
Everyone, you included, knows what is really happening.
Your chosen candidate lost the election in 2016, in an Electoral College
landslide (306-227), and you and your party have never recovered from this
defeat. You have developed a full-fledged case of what many in the media call
Trump Derangement Syndrome and sadly, you will never get over it! You are
unwilling and unable to accept the verdict issued at the ballot box during the
great Election of 2016. So you have spent three straight years attempting to
overturn the will of the American people and nullify their votes. You view
democracy as your enemy!
Speaker Pelosi, you admitted just last week at
a public forum that your party's impeachment effort has been going on for
"two and a half years," long before you ever heard about a phone call
with Ukraine. Nineteen minutes after I took the oath of office, the Washington
Post published a story headlined, "The Campaign to Impeach President Trump
Has Begun." Less than three months after my inauguration, Representative
Maxine Waters stated, "I'm going to fight every day until he's
impeached." House Democrats introduced the first impeachment resolution
against me within months of my inauguration, for what will be regarded as one
of our country's best decisions, the firing of James Comey (see Inspector
General Reports)—who the world now knows is one of the dirtiest cops our Natiou
has ever seen. A ranting and raving Congresswoman, Rashida Tlaib, declared just
hours after she was sworn into office, "We're gonna go in there and we're
gonna impeach the Representative Al Green said in May, "I'm
concerned that if we don't impeach this president, he will get
re-elected." Again, you and your allies said, and did, all of these things
long before you ever heard of President Zelensky or anything related to
Ukraine. As you know very well, this impeachment drive has nothing to do with
Ukraine, or the totally appropriate conversation I had with its new president.
It only has to do with your attempt to undo the election of 2016 and steal the
election of 2020!
Congressman Adam Schiff cheated and lied all the way up to
the present day, even going so far as to fraudulently make up, out of thin air,
my conversation with President Zelensky of Ukraine and read this fantasy
language to Congress as though it were said by me. His shameless lies and
deceptions, dating all the way back to the Russia Hoax, is one of the main
reasons we are here today.
You and your party are desperate to distract from America's
extraordinary economy, incredible jobs boom, record stock market, soaring
confidence, and flourishing citizens. Your party simply cannot compete with our
record: 7 million new jobs; the lowest-ever unemployment for African Americans,
Hispanic Americans, and Asian Americans; a rebuilt military; a completely
reformed VA with Choice and Accountability for our great veterans; more than
170 new federal judges and two Supreme Court Justices; historic tax and
regulation cuts; the elimination of the individual mandate; the first decline
in prescription drug prices in half a century; the first new branch of the United
States Military since 1947, the Space Force; strong protection of the Second
Amendment; criminal justice reform; a defeated ISIS caliphate and the killing
of the world's number one terrorist leader, al-Baghdadi; the replacement of the
disastrous NAFTA trade deal with the wonderful USMCA (Mexico and Canada); a
breakthrough Phase One trade deal with China; massive new trade deals with
Japan and South Korea; withdrawal from the terrible Iran Nuclear Deal;
cancellation of the unfair and costly Paris Climate Accord; becoming the
world's top energy producer; recognition of Israel's capital, opening the
American Embassy in Jerusalem, and recognizing Israeli sovereignty over the
Golan Heights; a colossal reduction in illegal border crossings, the ending of
Catch-and-Release, and the building of the Southern Border Wall—and that is
just the beginning, there is so much more. You cannot defend your extreme
policies—open borders, mass migration, high crime, crippling taxes, socialized
healthcare, destruction of American energy, late-term taxpayer-funded abortion,
elimination of the Second Amendment, radical far-left theories of law and
justice, and constant partisan obstruction of both common sense and common
good.
There is nothing I would rather do than stop referring to
your party as the Do-Nothing Democrats. Unfortunately, I don't know that you
will ever give me a chance to do so.
After three years of unfair and unwarranted investigations,
45 million dollars spent, 18 angry Democrat prosecutors, the entire force of the
FBI, headed by leadership now proven to be totally incompetent and corrupt, you
have found NOTHING! Few people in high position could have endured or passed
this test. You do not know. nor do vou care, the great damage and hurt you have
inflicted upon wonderful and loving members of my family. You conducted a fake
investigation upon the democratically elected Plesident of the United States,
and you are doing it yet again.
There are not many people who could have taken the
punishment inflicted during this period of time, and yet done so much for the
success of America and its citizens. But instead of putting our country first,
you have decided to disgrace our country still further. You completely failed
with the Mueller report because there was nothing to find, so you decided to
take the next hoax that came along, the phone call with Ukraine—even though it
was a perfect call. And by the way, when I speak to foreign countries, there
are many people, with permission, listening to the call on both sides of the
conversation.
You are the ones interfering in America's elections. You
are the ones subverting America's Democracy. You are the ones Obstructing
Justice. You are the ones bringing pain and suffering to our Republic for your
own selfish personal, political, and partisan gain.
Before the Impeachment Hoax, it was the Russian Witch Hunt.
Against all evidence, and regardless of the truth, you and your deputies
claimed that my campaign colluded with the Russians—a grave, malicious, and
slanderous lie, a falsehood like no other. You forced our Nation through
turmoil and torment over a wholly fabricated story, illegally purchased from a
foreign spy by Hillary Clinton and the DNC in order to assault our democracy.
Yet, when the monstrous lie was debunked and this Democrat conspiracy dissolved
into dust, you did not apologize. You did not recant. You did not ask to be
forgiven. You showed no remorse, no capacity for self-reflection. Instead, you
pursued your next libelous and vicious crusade—you engineered an attempt to
frame and defame an innocent person. All of this was motivated by personal
political calculation. Your Speakership and your party are held hostage by your
most deranged and radical representatives of the far left. Each one of your
members lives in fear of a socialist primary challenger—this is what is driving
impeachment. Look at Congressman Nadler's challenger. Look at yourself and
others. Do not take our country down with your party.
If you truly cared about freedom and liberty for our
Nation, then you would be devoting your vast investigative resources to
exposing the full truth concerning the FBI's horrifying abuses of power before,
during, and after the 2016 election—including the use of spies against my
campaign, the submission of false evidence to a FISA court, and the concealment
of exculpatory evidence in order to frame the innocent. The FBI has great and
honorable people, but the leadership was inept and corrupt. I would think that
you would personally be appalled by these revelations, because in your press
conference the day you announced impeachment, you tied the impeachment effort
directly to the completely discredited Russia Hoax, declaring twice that
"all roads lead to Putin," when you know that is an abject lie. I
have been far tougher on Russia than President Obama ever even thought to be.
Any member of Congress who votes in support of
impeachment—against every shred of truth, fact, evidence, and legal
principle—is showing how deeply they revile the voters and how truly they
detest America's Constitutional order. Our Founders feared the tribalization of
partisan politics, and you are bringing their worst fears to life.
Worse still, I have been deprived of basic Constitutional
Due Process from the beginning of this impeachment scam right up until the
present. I have been denied the most fundamental rights afforded by the
Constitution, including the right to present evidence, to have my own counsel
present, to confront accusers, and to call and cross-examine witnesses, like
the so-called whistleblower who started this entire hoax with a false report of
the phone call that bears no relationship to the actual phone call that was
made. Once I presented the transcribed call, which surprised and shocked the
fraudsters (they never thought that such evidence would be presented), the
so-called whistleblower, and the second whistleblower, disappeared because they
got caught, their report was a fraud, and they were no longer going to be made
available to us. In other words, once the phone call was made public, your
whole plot blew up, but that didn't stop you from continuing.
More due process was afforded to those accused in the Salem
Witch Trials.
You and others on your committees have long said
impeachment must be bipartisan—it is not. You said it was very divisive—it
certainly is, even far more than you ever thought possible—and it will only get
worse!
This is nothing more than an illegal, partisan attempted
coup that will, based on recent sentiment, badly fail at the voting booth. You
are not just after me, as President, you are after the entire Republican Party.
But because of this colossal injustice, our party is more united than it has
ever been before. History will judge you harshly as you proceed with this
impeachment charade. Your legacy will be that of turning the House of
Representatives from a revered legislative body into a Star Chamber of partisan
persecution.
Perhaps most insulting of all is your false display of
solemnity. You apparently have so little respect for the American People that
you expect them to believe that you are approaching this impeachment somberly,
reservedly, and reluctantly. No intelligent person believes what you are
saying. Since the moment I won the election, the Democrat Party has been
possessed by Impeachment Fever. There is no reticence. This is not a somber
affair. You are making a mockery of impeachment and you are scarcely concealing
your hatred of me, of the Republican Party, and tens of millions of patriotic
Americans. The voters are wise, and they are seeing straight through this
empty, hollow, and dangerous game you are playing.
I have no doubt the American people will hold you and the
Democrats fully responsible in the upcoming 2020 election. They will not soon
forgive your perversion ofjustice and abuse of power.
There is far too much that needs to be done to improve the
lives of our citizens. It is time for you and the highly partisan Democrats in
Congress to immediately cease this impeachment fantasy and get back to work for
the American People. While I have no expectation that you will do so, I write
this letter to you for the purpose of history and to put my thoughts on a
permanent and indelible record.
One hundred years from now, when people look back at this
affair, I want them to understand it, and learn from it, so that it can never
happen to another President again.
cc: United States Senate
United States House of Representatives
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