The red flag of skepticism should have gone up
years ago to the American public when lavish praise was heaped on Comey by
people who revile each other.
According to a senior White House official,
President Donald Trump is deciding between two U.S. strategies in
Afghanistan, one "more kinetic" and the other "less
kinetic."
The sun is shining, the air is sweet and breezy,
the birds are chirping and the jacandas are ablaze in purple blossoms. I'm
like a restless pupil in summertime, looking out the window and aching to
run out of the classroom and dive into glorious nature.
After Judicial Watch filed its suit, which invokes
the federal government's preeminent authority over immigration, San
Francisco filed its own lawsuit in which it asks that its sanctuary policy
be declared legal.
There is a far more important story that surfaced
this week that no one is talking about: a mysterious hand-picked group of
analysts chosen to write a damning intelligence assessment that found
Russia intervened in the election to help Trump win.
The French president Emmanuel Macron is a
protectionist when it comes to the EU.
Yesterday, President Trump took a long-overdue
step aimed at answering a nagging question: Has there been interference
with the democratic process in the recent U.S. elections? Its focus,
however, is alleged domestic, not foreign, interference.
by CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY
On May 10th, the Texas House unanimously
passed Rep. Tan Parker's HB787, which is a similar, but separate grid
security bill that creates a grid advisory committee to study the Texas
electric grid and its vulnerability to electromagnetic pulse and cybersecurity
threats.
by GIDON BEN-ZVI
Two state solution advocates recently
received a boost when President Trump hosted Palestinian Authority Chairman
Abbas at the White House. Abbas's urging of Trump to restart
Israeli-Palestinian negotiations from the offer made by former Israeli
Prime Minister Olmert is like a seductive siren song to the perpetually
hopeful.
C-SPAN: National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster spoke to reporters
and responded to questions about at the president's upcoming foreign trip
The president was scheduled to make stops in Saudi Arabia, Israel, the
Vatican, Belgium, and Italy. Then, Sean Spicer responded to questions on
news of the day, including the content of recent tweets from the president
and whether or not recordings exist of conversations between the president
and former FBI Director James Comey. (CSPAN)
REMINDER: Please
"like" our Facebook page:
and Don't forget to share some tweets!
As a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, The
Family Security Foundation relies upon the thoughtfulness and
(tax-deductible!) generosity of visitors like you.
We
certainly couldn't do it without you!
Checks may be sent here:
Family
Security Foundation, Inc.
2020 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., #298
Washington, D.C. 20006
|
No comments:
Post a Comment