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Everything posted by Tracker
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To heck with caution- let let Collaros go for Matty's record.
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At this rate, the Bombers will be tempted to play the bench by halftime.
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There seem to be a lot of Ticat jocks lying on the field.
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I was going to ***** about the Bomber vulnerability to runs up the middle but I will shut up for now.
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Its gonna be a rout!
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Looked like a Hail Mary pass to me.
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I keep wanting to call Redha Kramdi "Ralph".
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Collaros not showing any rust at all.
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wow- was Agudosi wide open. How do you miss someone that big?
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Damn. Shoen ought to have had that.
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Bombers should win the challenge.
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Sloppy start for the Blue.
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I think its going to be a close game- TiCats pushing the short passing game along with pounding the ball up the middle. Bombers will go with the 10-20 yard passing plus a few sweeps. All about ball control. Opening night games are usually pretty sloppy.
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Das ist nicht gut.
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Here are some of the Trump indictment’s most shocking revelations Federal prosecutors unsealed a 49-page indictment against Donald Trump and his personal valet Walt Nauta, named a co-conspirator in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case, on Friday. The twice-impeached, now twice-indicted former president was charged with 37 counts, including violations of the Espionage Act and obstruction of justice. Special counsel Jack Smith found evidence that Trump knowingly took classified materials after leaving the White House and haphazardly stored them or shared them with pals and political associates. Here are some of the stunning revelations: • Documents included details of the defense and weapons capabilities of US and foreign governments, US nuclear programs, and potential vulnerabilities to military attack for the US and its allies. • Trump stored his boxes containing classified documents in a ballroom, a bathroom and shower, an office space, his bedroom, and a storage room. • Some of those boxes were stored from January to March 2021 on a stage in the club's White and Gold Ballroom, which hosted events and gatherings during that period and were photographed, possibly by a guest. • Mar-a-Lago hosted more than 50 events, including weddings, film premiers and fundraisers, that drew tens of thousands of guests during the period the documents were stored in Trump's offices or other areas near public spaces. • In December, Nauta found several boxes containing highly classified materials had spilled from their boxes and took two photos, which he sent to another employee, who responded: "Oh no oh no." • Nauta falsely told investigators he didn't know the boxes had been brought to Mar-a-Lago for review after the National Archives asked for their return or where they had been stored: “I wish I could tell you. I don’t know. I don’t — I honestly just don’t know.” • The special counsel alleges that Trump endangered national security by sharing classified plans for a potential military strike on Iran, which was recorded and reveals that he knew he was not authorized to posses or discuss those materials: "Secret. This is secret information," he said. "Look, look at this." • In August or September 2021, Trump hosted a representative for his political action committee and mentioned that an ongoing military operation overseas was not going well, and he showed that person a classified map of the country but warned them not to get too close. • Trump met May 23, 2022, with his attorneys after the Department of Justice ordered him to return the materials to the National Archives, and the former president said: "I don't want anybody looking through my boxes, I really don't ... What happens if we just don't respond at all or don't play ball with them?" • The former president allegedly directed Nauta to move the documents to conceal them from his attorney, the FBI and the grand jury, and Trump allegedly suggested that his attorney hide or destroy some of the documents sought by the National Archives and caused a false certification to be sent claiming all those items had been returned. • He urged one of his attorneys to stash a classified folder in his hotel safe and hinted he should remove damaging information by making a plucking motion: "He made a funny motion as though -- well okay why don't you take them with you to your hotel room and if there's anything really bad in there, like, you know, pluck it out."
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And appoints Tamara Licht as governor general.
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And deservedly so.
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Trump seems to have slipped into a dissociative state where he simply cannot accept or understand the seriousness of the charges against him or that he cannot bluster his way out. He is detached from reality.
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Apparently Trump has not been telling even his attorneys the whole truth and they have been blindsided by the revelations that he ordered staff at Mar-A-Lago to move classified documents and even bragged about being in possession of classified documents while showing them to unauthorized people. His stupidity, arrogance and egotism knows no bounds. And the GOP rushes in once again to defend him. Better than Netflix.
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There are at least three other criminal prosecutions or investigations aimed at Trump plus the civil suit won by E. Jean Carroll and will likely be re-filed due to Trump's repeating of the same slurs and allegations that cost him the first loss. Donny-boy has a couple of interesting years ahead of him.
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I suspect that will be the TiCat game plan for tomorrow.
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Even as a criminal, Trump is an abject failure- he makes the same stupid mistakes over and over and just cannot keep his mouth shut.
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If nothing else, it gives us something to chatter about while waiting for the season to start later today.
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Revealed: Mar-a-Lago wasn’t the first time Trump 'evidence' was flooded Donald Trump has been here before — 35 years ago — with an investigation. Then a flood in a room with evidence. It happened when auditors in New York City spent two years probing more than $3 million in unpaid rent the city was expecting from Trump’s Grand Hyatt hotel from operations in 1986. That flood was noted in passing as part of a 2016 report by CBS News in the context of then-candidate Trump refusing to release his tax returns, purportedly because he was being audited. It said the two-year audit of Trump’s hotel from the late 1980s involved “stonewalling, disorganization and obfuscation at every turn.” The story has a whole new context after CNN reported that in October of last year, a drained swimming pool at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home and resort flooded a room with computer servers containing surveillance video. Skepticism abounded immediately that it was done on purpose to damage evidence in the Justice Department’s investigation of potential obstruction. Trump is under investigation for his handling of classified documents after leaving office as president. The video could show how and when documents were moved. In the Grand Hyatt case, city auditors filed a 73-page report, posted by CBS News. It said that Trump’s lease obligations should have required substantial documentation — “documentation (that) the Hotel — for one reason or another — could not or did not provide.” Of particular interest today is the next sentence. “In September, 1988, the Hotel informed us that it could not locate seven of the twelve monthly general ledgers, because they ‘were discarded after they were severely damaged by water when the room in which they were stored was flooded,’” the report said.
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BIPARTISAN SENATE MOVES TO HIT PUTIN IN THE WALLET BY TRANSFERRING SEIZED RUSSIAN ASSETS TO UKRAINE U.S. Senators Joe Manchin (D-WV), Lindsey Graham (R-SC), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), and Mike Rounds R-SD) have introduced the Transferring Illicit Assets to Ukraine Act. The legislation aims to provide the Department of Justice (DOJ) with more authority to transfer forfeited Russian assets to Ukraine. The senators believe that defeating Putin and supporting the Ukrainian people in their fight against the Russian invasion must remain a top priority. The bipartisan legislation would authorize the DOJ to expand its ability to seize Russian assets and send them directly to Ukraine for defense and rebuilding. “Transferring assets seized from those aiding and abetting Putin’s barbaric invasion will help Ukraine defend and rebuild their homeland,” said Sen. Blumenthal in a statement provided to PolitcusUSA. “Our measure – targeting the ill-gotten profits of oligarchs, sanctioned companies, and others supporting Russia’s war machine – gives DOJ the tools it needs to embolden our allies. This is a critical time for Ukraine’s fight for freedom. I’m proud to join my colleagues in this bipartisan effort.” The senators have stated that it is a crucial time for Ukraine, and the asset forfeiture bill will allow them to transfer more forfeited assets from Putin’s cronies to Ukraine to apply to the war effort. The legislation targets the ill-gotten profits of oligarchs, sanctioned companies, and others supporting Russia’s war machine. It gives DOJ the tools it needs to embolden allies and help Ukraine defend and rebuild their homeland. “This is a crucial time for Ukraine. Our efforts to assist Ukraine in liberating their country from the Russian invasion and Senator Manchin’s asset forfeiture bill will allow us to transfer more forfeited assets from Putin’s cronies to Ukraine for them to apply to the war effort,” said Senator Graham. “A win-win for all.” Under current authority, DOJ can only transfer to Ukraine assets forfeited from violations of select Russia-related sanctions. The first and only use of this authority occurred in February 2023 when Attorney General Merrick Garland authorized a transfer of $5.4 million forfeited from a sanctioned Russian oligarch. With expanded authority from Congress, DOJ could transfer far more assets from bad actors to support the Ukrainian people in their fight for freedom.