Remember, tips are good karma and karma never lies.
Hillary skipped Wisconsin and lost the election.
No surprise.
2/
@bluevirginia@TheDemocrats@HillaryClinton@HumaAbedin Respectfully, if you expect the other side of the aisle to acknowledge election results and look forward to the future, rather than wallowing in past grievances, you need to do the same yourself.
Seriously, the final comment in your tweet diminishes your credibility.
3/3
@DanLamothe, @CENTCOM can best help by making it easier to request Letters of Recommendation for SIV and to request P2 referrals.
Biden’s pick to lead military in Middle East says U.S. has a ‘moral obligation’ to help Afghans left behind washingtonpost.com/national-secur…
@USACEHQ has created a simple system that at least intends to try to be helpful, though tracking the next steps after confirmation of employment under a USACE-supported contract is still pending.
There are people of good will trying to help but require an active organization at @CENTCOM with whom to communicate about how to validate claimed employment or for current officials to prepare Letters of Recommendation, etc. for SIV, P2.
Re pages 234-236, I think Mr. Comey should have gone to Deputy Attorney General @SallyQYates so that Both would have insisted that @AGLynch recuse after tarmac-meeting @BillClinton PHX June 2016.
Maybe she went along, maybe not, but he asked. 2/
I appreciate your discussion re the so-called “deep state,” including denials pages 166 and 202.
On the other hand, what you describe on page 39 certainly looks like the equivalent of a deep state.
3/
Sarah Palin’s libel case against New York Times opens in Manhattan courtroom, a culture clash with lasting legal potential washingtonpost.com/media/2022/02/…
“Reckless disregard” NYT v. Sullivan (1964) was the second part of “actual malice” and is why @nytimes will lose and @SarahPalinUSA will win.
Issue is targets on congressional districts, Not representatives or people.
2/
@nytopinion not bothering to check the Times’ own supposedly factual reporting re the exact factual issue is clearly “reckless disregard as to whether it was false or not.” Sullivan (1964)
I am reasonably confident that many people have taken positions on such topics without reviewing the materials, which is why I think curriculum transparency can actually be helpful to address any misconceptions on the part of the public.
1/
@LuisMorenolg@WendellAlbright@pigjowls CRT has become a shorthand for considering new perspectives on racial and other issues in our country, both now and in the study of our history.
I have found that effective training does make me uncomfortable, but the introspection is valuable.
2/
@Dina_Albayati@itsapurdy Unfortunately , what is even more difficult and frustrating is the knowledge - now confirmed - that a significant proportion (40%, as I understand) of the random people we flew out of Kabul last August were not our Afghan Allies - SIV, P1, P2 - but corrupt Kabul elites.
1/
@Dina_Albayati@itsapurdy They shoved our Afghan Allies aside and bullied and bribed their way into the airport in front of more deserving people, who don’t need the Afghan Adjustment Act because Americans, through Congress, already decided long ago to welcome them.
2/
@Dina_Albayati@itsapurdy I find it very difficult to advocate for the Afghan Adjustment Act (AAA) for this very reason.
Furthermore, I recall concerns re criminal patronage networks (search Afghanistan Corruption in Conflict for @SIGARHQ reports) and wonder whether anyone cares any more.
3/