Monday, April 30, 2018

New York Times Gets Mueller's Questions For Trump

Here is the link to the entire article https://mobile.nytimes.com/2018/04/30/us/politics/questions-mueller-wants-to-ask-trump-russia.html which attribution I hope shields me from copyright infringement for I am copying and pasting all the questions as well as the Times' take on the meaning of the questions. I don't think I have ever re-posted essentially an entire article but it is too important not to.

These are well-crafted and fair questions. They are open-ended, not cross-examination questions. They give the impression of being open-minded as well, i.e. they give the impression that Trump can still convince the Special Counsel that he, Trump, did nothing wrong. But, as the Times analysis makes clear, the Special Counsel knows from others what Trump's answers should be and there does not appear that there are answers that Trump could give that are consistent with any reasonable hypothesis of innocence. It seems to this idiot blogger that Trump has no way out on many of the questions. So, without further moronic commentary from moi, here they are:

• What did you know about phone calls that Mr. Flynn made with the Russian ambassador, Sergey I. Kislyak, in late December 2016?

These questions revolve around whether Mr. Trump tried to obstruct justice to protect Mr. Flynn from prosecution. His phone calls with Mr. Kislyak are at the heart of that inquiry. During the calls, Mr. Flynn urged Russia not to overreact to sanctions just announced by the Obama administration. But Mr. Trump’s aides publicly denied that sanctions were discussed and, when questioned by the F.B.I., Mr. Flynn denied it, as well. Mr. Mueller wants to know whether Mr. Flynn was operating on Mr. Trump’s behalf. Prosecutors may already know the answer: Mr. Flynn has pleaded guilty to lying and is cooperating with investigators.

• What was your reaction to news reports on Jan. 12, 2017, and Feb. 8-9, 2017?

In January, the Washington Post columnist David Ignatius revealed Mr. Flynn’s phone calls with Mr. Kislyak. Mr. Ignatius questioned whether those conversations had violated a law prohibiting private citizens from attempting to undermine American policies. In February, The Washington Post revealed the true nature of Mr. Flynn’s conversations with Mr.
Mr. Kislyak.

Mr. Mueller wants to know, among other things, whether Mr. Trump feared that his national security adviser had broken the law and then tried to shield him from consequences.

• What did you know about Sally Yates’s meetings about Mr. Flynn?

Ms. Yates, the acting attorney general for the first weeks of the Trump administration, twice warned the White House that Mr. Flynn was lying, and those lies made him vulnerable to Russian blackmail. No one from the White House has ever said how much Mr. Trump knew about those warnings.

• How was the decision made to fire Mr. Flynn on Feb. 13, 2017?

Eighteen days after Ms. Yates’s warning, Mr. Flynn was asked to resign. The White House said that Mr. Trump lost confidence in Mr. Flynn because he had lied. But the White House has never fully explained why, after learning about the lie, officials waited so long to act.

• After the resignations, what efforts were made to reach out to Mr. Flynn about seeking immunity or possible pardon?

The Times recently revealed that, when Mr. Flynn began considering cooperating with the F.B.I., Mr. Trump’s lawyers floated the idea of a pardon. Mr. Mueller wants to know why.

Questions related to James B. Comey, the former F.B.I. director

• What was your opinion of Mr. Comey during the transition?

The questions about Mr. Comey relate to whether Mr. Trump fired Mr. Comey last year to shield Mr. Flynn, or anyone else, from prosecution. Mr. Trump has denied that, saying he fired Mr. Comey
because of his mishandling of the F.B.I.’s investigation into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server.

This question is important because, if Mr. Trump truly was upset about the Clinton investigation, he would have shown an early distaste for Mr. Comey.

• What did you think about Mr. Comey’s intelligence briefing on Jan. 6, 2017, about Russian election interference?

The briefing revealed that American intelligence agencies had concluded that Russian operatives meddled in the election to hurt Mrs. Clinton and to boost Mr. Trump. Mr. Trump has repeatedly cast doubt on these conclusions and said he believes the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin, who denies any interference.

• What was your reaction to Mr. Comey’s briefing that day about other intelligence matters?

This question addresses documents written by a retired British spy, Christopher Steele, who said that Russia had gathered compromising information on Mr. Trump. The documents, which became known as the Steele Dossier, also claim that the Trump campaign had ties to the Russian government. Mr. Comey privately briefed Mr. Trump about these documents.

• What was the purpose of your Jan. 27, 2017, dinner with Mr. Comey, and what was said?

A few weeks after his briefing, Mr. Comey was called to the White House for a private dinner. Mr. Comey’s notes say that Mr. Trump raised concerns about the Steele Dossier and said he needed loyalty from his F.B.I. director. This question touches on Mr. Trump’s true motivation for firing Mr. Comey: Was he dismissed because he was not loyal and would not shut down an F.B.I. investigation?

• What was the purpose of your Feb. 14, 2017, meeting with Mr. Comey, and what was said?

That was a key moment. Mr. Comey testified that the president told him, “I hope you can see your way clear to letting this go, to letting Flynn go.” Mr. Trump has denied this.

• What did you know about the F.B.I.’s investigation into Mr. Flynn and Russia in the days leading up to Mr. Comey’s testimony on March 20, 2017?

Mr. Comey’s testimony publicly confirmed that the F.B.I. was investigating members of the Trump campaign for possible coordination with Russia. Mr. Mueller wants to know what role that revelation played in Mr. Comey’s firing.

• What did you do in reaction to the March 20 testimony? Describe your contacts with intelligence officials.

In the aftermath, The Post reported, Mr. Trump asked the United States’ top intelligence official, Daniel Coats, to pressure Mr. Comey to back off his investigation. Mr. Mueller wants to ask Mr. Trump about his contacts with Mr. Coats as well as the C.I.A.’s director at the time, Mike Pompeo,
and the National Security Agency’s director, Michael S. Rogers. The conversations could reflect Mr.
Trump’s growing frustration with Mr. Comey — not about the Clinton case, but about his refusal to shut down the Russia inquiry.

• What did you think and do in reaction to the news that the special counsel was speaking to Mr. Rogers, Mr. Pompeo and Mr. Coats?

It is not clear whether Mr. Mueller knows something specific about Mr. Trump’s reaction to these interviews, but the question shows that Mr. Mueller is keenly interested in how Mr. Trump responded to each step of his investigation.

• What was the purpose of your calls to Mr. Comey on March 30 and April 11, 2017?

Mr. Comey said that Mr. Trump called twice to ask him to say publicly that he was not under F.B.I. investigation. In the second call, Mr. Comey said, the president added: “I have been very loyal to you, very loyal. We had that thing, you know.”

• What was the purpose of your April 11, 2017, statement to Maria Bartiromo?

While the White House ultimately said Mr. Comey was fired for breaking with Justice Department

policy and discussing the Clinton investigation, Mr. Trump expressed no such qualms in an interview with Ms. Bartiromo of Fox Business Network. “Director Comey was very, very good to Hillary Clinton, that I can tell you,” he said. “If he weren’t, she would be, right now, going to trial.”

• What did you think and do about Mr. Comey’s May 3, 2017, testimony?

In this Senate appearance, Mr. Comey described his handling of the Clinton investigation in detail. Mr. Comey was fired soon after. Mr. Mueller’s question suggests he wants to know why Mr. Trump soured.

• Regarding the decision to fire Mr. Comey: When was it made? Why? Who played a role?

Over the past several months, Mr. Mueller has asked White House officials for the back story, and whether the public justification was accurate. He will be able to compare Mr. Trump’s answers to what he has learned elsewhere.

• What did you mean when you told Russian diplomats on May 10, 2017, that firing Mr. Comey had taken the pressure off?

The day after Mr. Comey’s firing, Mr. Trump met with Russian officials in the Oval Office. There, The Times revealed, Mr. Trump suggested he had fired Mr. Comey because of the pressure from the Russia investigation. “I just fired the head of the F.B.I. He was crazy, a real nut job,” Mr. Trump said. “I faced great pressure because of Russia. That’s taken off.”

• What did you mean in your interview with Lester Holt about Mr. Comey and Russia?

Shortly after firing Mr. Comey, Mr. Trump undercut his own argument when he told NBC News that he had been thinking about the Russia investigation when he fired Mr. Comey.

“I was going to fire Comey knowing there was no good time to do it. And in fact, when I decided to just do it, I said to myself — I said, you know, this Russia thing with Trump and Russia is a made-up story. It's an excuse by the Democrats for having lost an election that they should've won.”

• What was the purpose of your May 12, 2017, tweet?

After The Times revealed the president’s private dinner with Mr. Comey, Mr. Trump responded on Twitter.

James Comey better hope that there are no "tapes" of our conversations before he starts leaking to the press!— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) May 12, 2017

Mr. Comey appeared unworried. “Lordy, I hope there are tapes,” Mr. Comey said. The White House ultimately said that, no, there were no tapes.

• What did you think about Mr. Comey’s June 8, 2017, testimony regarding Mr. Flynn, and what did you do about it?

After he was fired, Mr. Comey testified about his conversations with Mr. Trump and described him as preoccupied with the F.B.I.’s investigation into Russia. After the testimony, Mr. Trump called him a liar.

• What was the purpose of the September and October 2017 statements, including tweets, regarding an investigation of Mr. Comey?

Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House press secretary, said that Mr. Comey had testified falsely to Congress and suggested that the Justice Department might investigate. Mr. Trump followed up with tweets suggesting that he should be investigated for rigging an inquiry into Mrs. Clinton. Such comments reinforced criticism that Mr. Trump views the Justice Department as a sword to use against his political rivals.

...people not interviewed, including Clinton herself. Comey stated under oath that he didn't do this-obviously a fix? Where is Justice Dept?— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) October 18, 2017

• What is the reason for your continued criticism of Mr. Comey and his former deputy, Andrew G. McCabe?

Mr. Comey and Mr. McCabe are among Mr. Trump’s favorite targets. Mr. McCabe is a lifelong Republican, but Mr. Trump has criticized him as a Clinton loyalist because Mr. McCabe’s wife, a Democrat, ran unsuccessfully for office in Virginia and received donations from a Clinton ally. This question suggests that Mr. Mueller wants to know whether Mr. Trump’s criticism is an effort to damage the F.B.I. while it investigates the president’s associates.

Questions related to Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

• What did you think and do regarding the recusal of Mr. Sessions?

Mr. Trump has criticized Mr. Sessions’s recusal from the Russia investigation. The Times reported that Mr. Trump humiliated him in an Oval Office meeting and accused him of being disloyal. Mr. Sessions ultimately submitted his resignation, though Mr. Trump did not accept it. Along with the next two questions, this inquiry looks at whether Mr. Trump views law enforcement officials as protectors.

• What efforts did you make to try to get him to change his mind?

The Times has reported that Mr. Trump told his White House counsel, Donald F. McGahn II, to stop Mr. Sessions from recusing himself. Mr. McGahn was unsuccessful, and Mr. Trump erupted, saying he needed an attorney general who would protect him.

• Did you discuss whether Mr. Sessions would protect you, and reference past attorneys general?


Mr. Trump has spoken affectionately about past attorneys general who he said were loyal to their presidents. He cited Robert F. Kennedy and Eric H. Holder Jr. as examples. “Holder protected the president,” he said in a Times interview in December. “And I have great respect for that.”

• What did you think and what did you do in reaction to the news of the appointment of the special counsel?

In a twist, Mr. Mueller’s very appointment has become part of his investigation. Mr. Trump has repeatedly denounced the inquiry as a “witch hunt.” Mr. Trump blames the appointment on MrSessions’s recusal

• Why did you hold Mr. Sessions’s resignation until May 31, 2017, and with whom did you discuss it?

Mr. Trump rejected Mr. Sessions’s resignation after aides argued that it would only create more problems. The details of those discussions remain unclear, but Mr. Trump’s advisers have already given Mr. Mueller their accounts of the conversations.

• What discussions did you have with Reince Priebus in July 2017 about obtaining the Sessions resignation? With whom did you discuss it?

Mr. Priebus, who was Mr. Trump’s chief of staff, has said he raced out of the White House after Mr. Sessions and implored him not to resign. Mr. Mueller has interviewed Mr. Priebus and would be able to compare his answers with those of Mr. Trump.

• What discussions did you have regarding terminating the special counsel, and what did you do when that consideration was reported in January 2018?

Again, Mr. Mueller’s investigation intersects with its own existence. The Times reported that, in June 2017, Mr. Trump ordered Mr. McGahn to fire Mr. Mueller. Mr. McGahn refused. Though Mr. Trump’s own advisers informed Mr. Mueller about that effort, Mr. Trump denied it: “Fake news,” he said. “A typical New York Times fake story.”

• What was the purpose of your July 2017 criticism of Mr. Sessions? Mr. Trump unleashed a series of attacks on Mr. Sessions in July.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions has taken a VERY weak position on Hillary Clinton crimes (where are E-mails & DNC server) & Intel leakers!— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) July 25, 2017

Campaign Coordination With Russia

• When did you become aware of the Trump Tower meeting?

This and other questions relate to a June 9, 2016, meeting at Trump Tower with a Russian lawyer who offered political dirt about Mrs. Clinton. Mr. Trump’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., arranged the meeting. He said he did not tell his father about it when it happened.

• What involvement did you have in the communication strategy, including the release of Donald Trump Jr.’s emails?

When The Times found out about the meeting, Mr. Trump helped draft a misleading statement in his son’s name, omitting the true purpose of the meeting. After The Times obtained the younger Mr. Trump’s emails, he published them on Twitter.

• During a 2013 trip to Russia, what communication and relationships did you have with the Agalarovs and Russian government officials?

The Trump Tower meeting was arranged through the Russian singer Emin Agalarov, his billionaire father, Aras Agalarov, and a music promoter. Mr. Mueller is scrutinizing the nature of connections between the Agalarovs, Mr. Trump and Russian officials.

• What communication did you have with Michael D. Cohen, Felix Sater and others, including foreign nationals, about Russian real estate developments during the campaign?

Mr. Mueller is referring to a failed effort to build a Trump Tower in Moscow. Mr. Sater, a business associate, proposed the idea to Mr. Cohen, the longtime personal lawyer to Mr. Trump. Emails show that Mr. Sater believed that the project would showcase Mr. Trump’s deal-making acumen and propel him into the presidency.

• What involvement did you have in the communication strategy, including the release of Donald Trump Jr.’s emails?

When The Times found out about the meeting, Mr. Trump helped draft a misleading statement in his son’s name, omitting the true purpose of the meeting. After The Times obtained the younger Mr. Trump’s emails, he published them on Twitter.

• During a 2013 trip to Russia, what communication and relationships did you have with the Agalarovs and Russian government officials?

The Trump Tower meeting was arranged through the Russian singer Emin Agalarov, his billionaire father, Aras Agalarov, and a music promoter. Mr. Mueller is scrutinizing the nature of connections between the Agalarovs, Mr. Trump and Russian officials.

• What communication did you have with Michael D. Cohen, Felix Sater and others, including foreign nationals, about Russian real estate developments during the campaign?

Mr. Mueller is referring to a failed effort to build a Trump Tower in Moscow. Mr. Sater, a business associate, proposed the idea to Mr. Cohen, the longtime personal lawyer to Mr. Trump. Emails show that Mr. Sater believed that the project would showcase Mr. Trump’s deal-making acumen and propel him into the presidency.

• What discussions did you have during the campaign regarding any meeting with Mr. Putin? Did you discuss it with others?

Journalists and lawmakers have uncovered several examples of Russian officials trying, through intermediaries, to arrange a meeting between Mr. Trump and Mr. Putin. Senior campaign officials rejected some overtures, but Mr. Trump’s involvement has been a mystery.

• What discussions did you have during the campaign regarding Russian sanctions?

Even as the Obama administration stepped up sanctions on Russia, Mr. Trump struck a laudatory tone toward Mr. Putin.

• What involvement did you have concerning platform changes regarding arming Ukraine?

A portion of the Republican platform was changed in a way more favorable to Russia.

• During the campaign, what did you know about Russian hacking, use of social media or other acts aimed at the campaign?

This is a key question. Mr. Trump praised the release of hacked Democratic emails and called on Russia to find others. Mr. Mueller’s investigation has unearthed evidence that at least one member of Mr. Trump’s campaign — George Papadopoulos — was told that Russia had obtained compromising emails about Mrs. Clinton. But Mr. Trump has repeatedly said there was “no collusion” with the Russian government.

• What knowledge did you have of any outreach by your campaign, including by Paul Manafort, to Russia about potential assistance to the campaign?

This is one of the most intriguing questions on the list. It is not clear whether Mr. Mueller knows something new, but there is no publicly available information linking Mr. Manafort, the former campaign chairman, to such outreach. So his inclusion here is significant. Mr. Manafort’s longtime colleague, Rick Gates, is cooperating with Mr. Mueller.

• What did you know about communication between Roger Stone, his associates, Julian Assange or WikiLeaks?

Mr. Stone, a longtime adviser, claimed to have inside information from WikiLeaks, which published hacked Democratic emails. He appeared to predict future releases, and was in touch with a Twitter account used by Russian intelligence. This question, along with the next two, show that Mr. Mueller is still investigating possible campaign cooperation with Russia.

• What did you know during the transition about an attempt to establish back-channel communication to Russia, and Jared Kushner’s efforts?

Mr. Kushner, Mr. Trump’s son-in-law, has testified that the Russian ambassador proposed getting Mr. Flynn in contact with Russian officials to discuss Syria. In response, Mr. Kushner said, he proposed using secure phones inside the Russian Embassy — a highly unusual suggestion that was not accepted.

• What do you know about a 2017 meeting in Seychelles involving Erik Prince?

The meeting was convened by Mohammed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan of the United Arab Emirates. It brought Mr. Prince, an informal adviser to Mr. Trump’s team, together with a Russian investor close to Mr. Putin.

• What do you know about a Ukrainian peace proposal provided to Mr. Cohen in 2017?

Mr. Cohen, the lawyer, hand-delivered to the White House a peace proposal for Ukraine and Russia. This unusual bit of backdoor diplomacy is of interest because it involved a Ukrainian lawmaker who said he was being encouraged by Mr. Putin’s aides. Mr. Cohen has said he did not discuss the proposal with Mr. Trump.
I am a known moron. An idiot. I know myself to be. "Hello, moron," I say in the morning. "Hello, idiot," the mirror says back.

So, this is a moron writing here: Peace in Korea is real. Kim Jong Un is sincere. No non-moron has written this. Every informed, wise person has written caveating "promising," "hopeful", "optimistic" with "cautious," "wary," "suspicious," "skeptical," and like that. 

The wise people are wrong. Every village needs an idiot. This is real.

Sunday, April 29, 2018

Hello My Dear.

Please do not feel disturbed for contacting you, based on the critical condition I find mine self, though, it's not financial problem, but my health, you might have know that cancer is not what to talk home about, I am married to Mr. Abaul karim Farah who worked with Tunisia embassy in Burkina Faso for nine years before he died in the year 2012.We were married for eleven years without a child. He died after a brief illness that lasted for five days.

Since his death I decided not to remarry, When my late husband was alive he deposited the sum of US$ 9.2m (Nine million two hundred thousand dollars) in a bank in Burkina Faso, Presently this money is still in bank. And My Doctor told me that I don't have much time to live because of the cancer problem, Having known my condition I decided to hand you over this fond to take care of the less-privileged people, you will utilize this money the way I am going to instruct herein. I want you to take 30 Percent of the total money for your personal use While 70% of the money will go to charity" people and helping the orphanage.

I don't want my husband's efforts to be used by the Government. I grew up as an Orphan and I don't have anybody as my family member,

I am expecting your respond.

Regards,
Mrs.Fareeda Farah

written from Hospital.

That's a Chinese person trying to write persuasively in English as a Burkina Faso-ite. That's a fail. Man, there is some inspired spam out there, or in there actually, in my Gmail Spam folder.
He was -2.

Will you do the fuck away with that goddamned stat?!
"That Man" had 45 points in 43 minutes. 105-101 the final. The Mistake moves on to Toronto.
clevelandbeatindiana

Mother.

Was It Not Real?

Today at Old Trafford...

Arsene Wenger's last appearance there as Arsenal manager...
with his once bitter rivals Sir Alex Ferguson and Jose Mourinho...
who presented Wenger with a gift of a trophy.

"It is as if there were a restlessness...


"and a capacity for violence at the center of the human spirit that can never be contained...


"Yet in every country, too, humans have shown a...gentleness...


"and a yearning for justice...

"that have cut across the darkness and filled their world with light."*



*The Search For Modern China, Jonathan D. Spence.

FT West Ham 1 Manchester City 4

Fernandinho in the 63' accounted for the final margin.

City now own the record for most wins in a Premier League season, 30, with three matches left, 102 goals, one shy of Chelsea's record 103, and 92 points, three off the record 95, also Chelsea's. City will own all of those by the end.
The Arch Angel Gabriel makes it 3-1 in the 52nd.
goal
That own goal ironically is City's 100th on the campaign...Oh West Ham have scored. 2-1 now in the 42'...Anyway City are the fastest team in EPL history to 100 and can break the record of 103.

Goal! West Ham 0-2 Man City (Rice own goal 27)

Public Occurrences delivers you news on Man City's goals so quickly
the scorer has not been identified. Happened just now, 32'.
goal
Bad, bad Leroy Sane, baddest man in the whole damn gam-ay in the 12' and City of Champions lead the Hammerheads 1-0 at Hammerhead Park.
goal

Saturday, April 28, 2018

Klopp at It Again

The point isn't going to help Stoke and three points would have secured the Champions League for Liverpool. How dare Stoke try!

"We met Stoke in the moment when they thought a point could be enough [to stay up] still otherwise they had to play different, but if they think they can win the next two games and have a chance with that then we cannot change that opinion."

I have never detested a club, its fans, the city it represents, the people in that city, and increasingly the club's manager, as I do Liverpool and all associated with it. For me, it is as if all Trump voters were in one city and had their own sports team. I loathe them, both of them.

Bawston Ousts Milwawkee in 7, Gets Phila

112-96 was the final in the Gawden or whatever the name is. The "Bucks" are comin'. Good young team up there. Golden opportunity to catch the "Shamrocks" minus Kyrie Irving but couldn't quite do it. First series in the 'loffs to go 7, I think.

Leicester, Newcastle Go Splat; West Brom Still Alive

I'tis ovah. I'tis ovah in London, Child Porn have mugged the "Foxes" five nil; on Tyne; West Bromwich Albion have prevailed one nil; and in Southampton where the home side shook and stirred Bournemouth 2-1. 

Leicester, Newcastle Go Splat

In stoppage time now Crystal Palace lead the 2016 champions 5-0 in London. My goodness.

Those wild and crazy "Baggies" are stayin' alive, stayin' alive. West Brom went to St. James Park today and lead Nuevo Castillo 1-0 deep into stoppage time. They drew last Saturday against Liverpool and won the Sunday before at RayJay. 

In Denial In Miami

"As he addressed the media Friday, Miami Heat coach Erik Spoelstra noted, "It's been well documented since our 11-30 start two years ago that we've basically been playing .600 basketball."
...
"...is that what the Heat saw, and could that lead to a repeat of what now comes off as the irrational expectations of last summer?
...

"...if you instead pick up from the start of this past season and factor in the 1-4 just-completed playoff series against the Philadelphia 76ers, the percentage drops to .517.
...
"The end of this season, in light of a dreary playoff showing, came with a sense of submission; the talent deficit against the 76ers was undeniable.
...
"Spoelstra said he sees otherwise.

"We see progress," he said. "We see growth.
...
"We now have Spoelstra's policy statement.

"We believe, as much as anything, you grow through continuity," he said. "It's hard to start over."

"It also is hard, perhaps harder, to admit it's also not good enough."

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sports/miami-heat/fl-sp-ira-nba-column-20180428-story.html

Strange, Strange Liverpool

They did it again. A draw, 0-0 today, at home against a relegation-threatened club, this time Stoke.

     After a 5-2 Champions League semi-final win at Fenway over Roma.
          After leading 5-0, allowing two away goals to toss Roma a lifeline.
     Ahead of the second leg of the Roma tie Wednesday.
          After a 2-2 draw at dead last West Brom.
               After knocking Man City out of the UCL 11 days earlier at Etihad.

This--A.D.D.-afflicted? Schizophrenic?--team now sit a squirmy fourth in the Premier League, the last slot for automatic qualification into the group stages of the 2018/19 UCL.
     Four points ahead of Spurs.
          Who have two matches in hand.
          Who have earned exactly two points per match through 34.
          Which would put them exactly level on points with LFC with the added matches.
               Liverpool would claim the fourth spot on a projected five goal difference.

     Liverpool's last two league matches are at fifth Chelsea and home to 13th Brighton. Who's to predict those?
     Spurs last four matches are Monday home to 12th Watford (win), next Saturday at West Brom (win).
          Which would put them two points ahead of Liverpool after playing the same 36 matches.
     Home to 10th Newcastle (win).
     Home to 9th Leicester (draw, let's say they slip up and draw that one).

Those projected Spurs results would net them a final 78 points. Liverpool would match on points if they win their final two league matches. And claim the fourth UCL spot on goal difference. But if Liverpool slip...Slip?! Hit it! 

Que Gerrard, Gerrard,
He fell on his bloody arse,
He passed it to Demba Ba,
Que Gerrard, Gerrard.

If Liverpool slip up again (say, at Chelsea?) and don't win their final two matches they would finish fifth and have to play in the qualifying stages of next year's Champions League.

Squirmy. Strange. Strange, strange Liverpool.

Friday, April 27, 2018

What Donald Trump, the illegitimate president of America 2.0, has done in Korea is the most stunning foreign policy achievement in the combined history of the former United States and its successor. It is a miracle. Xi Jinping was great help. Moon Jei-in played an even greater role. But it would be spreading the Nobel Peace Prize too thin in my eyes to award a four-way or even a three-way prize. It is Kim and Trump who have worked this miracle, they should share it together.

Know what though? I don't see the Nobel committee omitting a Korean head of state for peace on the Korean peninsula. And Trump is not the Nobel Committee's cup of tea. It's going to stick in their craw to award a share of the Peace prize to a guy who a year ago vowed to "totally destroy North Korea" and who brought the world to within 2 1/2 minutes of nuclear midnight. Not the Nobel Peace Committee's way of doing things. That however is how this miracle was birthed, there is no denying it and to omit Trump would be an outrageous injustice. I would take a Trump-Kim-Moon three-way right now even though I think it should be Trump-Kim. I'm afraid what the committee might do if they decide to award only two. 
LBJ's block the last game? Officially a goal-tend. The Land has gotten scorched in two of their three losses, Indy has lost three squeakers and should have won the last game on the missed call. This should have wrapped up the series. One of their blow out wins was in Cleve in Game 1. You have to expect LBJ to go all Superman on Indy in Game 7 and he could probably win the game and series for them, he's that much better than everyone else...It's over 121-87, it's over with extreme prejudice... But it is clear--Lesson of the Series--LBJ has to go all Superman for Cleve to win. He did in Game 2, 46 17/24, 40", 12, 5, 2, 0, 3(TO), a three point Cleve win, and in Game 5, 44 14/24, 42", 10, 8, 1, 1, 5(TO) (remarkably similar stats), another three point win. Jeez! Identical margin of victory. That means we have a more precise lesson, Lesson 1-A: LBJ will have to play nearly the whole game and score in the mid-40's for The Land not to be used as the garbage dump of the nation that it is. And even then, they may need a crucial call down the stretch to go their way to win a squeaker. Sounds like a tall order but LeBron is a tall guy. Prediction: He will go all Superman on the "Pacers" but this time his team will come up just short. Indy to win Game 7 in the Pawn Shop Sunday.

"Lancers" BLOWing LeBron James Out

Oh my God, they're killing them. 107-79, under 6 left in game.

LBJ is saving himself for Game 7. He has only played 31" and there are under 3 to go. Now 114-83.

Indiana 57 Cleveland 47 HT

Do I have faith in the "Lancers"? Hmmm comme ci comme ca. How many points does James have? 14 4/7. 3, 5, 1, 2(TO). 19 minutes. That's pretty quiet. 19 out of 24 minutes, that's "only" 38 over a whole game. That would be fewest of the series. I feel a second half eruption coming. But Cleve hasn't been Team Comeback in this series, they've been Team Collapse. Indy has been Team Comeback. A 10 point deficit is a significant half time deficit in this series. But James...James can do it. Still comme ci comme ca.

Trump deserves credit for Korean thaw

(Stephen Collinson, CNN)

He ABSOLUTELY does.

"...would rank as one of the top presidential achievements since World War II.
"...a feat that has eluded all of his most recent predecessors."
"[IllegiTrump] and other key players in the initiative would also be shoo-ins for the Nobel Peace Prize..."

You read that first at Public Occurrences...Actually, probably not since nobody reads Public Occurrences. But if you had read Public Occurrences you would have read it here first.

Seeking the Soul


You see there the most moving moment in the extraordinary meeting between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and South Korean president Moon Jae-in on the grounds of Peace House today. A man can literally step across the border there and what you are seeing is Kim taking Moon by the hand crossing the threshold into North Korea. The throng of gathered witnesses uttered a collective, audible "Ahh."

The soul is a mutable thing and the soul of Korea mutated from war to peace with that one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.

Thursday, April 26, 2018

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

What a series. The "Lances" blew out the "Cavs" in game one by 18 but after that the games have been decided by 3, 2, 4, and 3 points. Jeez.
Oh, I see. First he blocked Indy's game-winning LAYUP on one end and THEN won the game at the 🚨with his 3 at the other end. Oh, I see.

Blow Lance Blow

Somehow Lance Stephenson's Indiana "Pacers" lost "full control" of their series with LeBron James' Cleveland "Cavaliers." Wonder how that happened? Could it be LBJ hit a game-winning 3 at the buzzer? It could. Cleve wins 98-95 to put Lance one loss from elimination.

"Golden State Killer"/"East Area Rapist" Arrested

Got to be full 100 here, I had never heard of this case until now. But what an extraordinary case it is.

Between 1976 and 1986 one man committed 12 murders, 45 rapes and over 100 house burglaries in the "East Area" between Sacramento and San Francisco, California. He was good. Wore a mask, struck at night, preyed on women who lived alone with a child (to make them more compliant I hypothesize), placed a plate and cup on the backs of his bound victims as his alert when he was ransacking their homes, moved around. When the law seemed to be getting close he'd up and move. Never got caught until today.

72 year-old Joseph James DeAngelo, a former police officer, Argh, why didn't we think of that before!, was arrested today at his trim middle class house outside Sacramento. The arrest was based on a match of his DNA to that found on the crime scenes, a forensic technology unknown to him in 1986. DeAngelo's wave of terror began when he became a police officer in Auburn in 1976. He was fired in 1979 when he did not contest administrative action to terminate him following his arrest for shoplifting. "Just left. Didn't want them to look deeper."

Monday, April 23, 2018

10 DEAD IN TORONTO VAN ATTACK ON PEDESTRIANS

No motive. Driver in custody.

Tough one

PARIS — President Emmanuel Macron was put on the spot this year in front of a room full of journalists when one asked, provocatively: Which man is more dangerous, North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un; or Donald J. Trump?

“You know, I have always refrained from making sweeping judgments,” Mr. Macron answered slowly, weighing his words.https://mobile.nytimes.com/2018/04/22/world/europe/donald-trump-emmanuel-macron.html

Sunday, April 22, 2018

Oh my God. Indy timeout, 14 left, Cleve +6. Night!
What the hell time is it...What am I doing...

Cleve +4 15.2 left. Cleve on Timeout, Will Have Ball.

Blow harder, Lance.
The Land is going to escape. They lead 101-95 with 1:18 left. Since LeBron's T he has scored 6 and Kyle Korver has scored 6 (on two 3's). Lance hasn't scored. Lance blows, he does not score.
Cleveland led 60-50 at half time but now, with 8:05 left in the game, it's tied at 87.

Here, perhaps, is a coming refutation of axiom #1 from yesterday. LBJ leads the field with 26 points and has played 39 minutes. He is the only "Cavalier" who has more than 20 and only three others are in double figures with 12, 12, and 10.

For Indiana, who now lead by the way 91-89 with 6:12 left, seven players are in double figures, the highest with 19...LeBron just got a technical. Maybe Lance blew in his face again.
In the car on the way to a hockey game a couple of years ago I recounted to my issue the astonishment of a local writer covering the new hockey club in Miami in 1996. It was during the playoffs as I recall. A Florida "Panther" player had taken a puck to the mouth. Between periods the press box was given the customary player availability update for the next period. "Bill Lindsay [just picked a name], puck to face, lost three teeth, 12 stitches. Will return." "Hockey players are just tougher than basketball players," the kids said, and I agreed.

Just now I saw this headline:

Sean Couturier plays through torn MCL, posts hat trick in Flyers' loss

(ESPN)

There is right now a professional basketball player, a damned good one too, Kawhi Leonard,who is out of action with "right thigh tendinopathy" which is "inflammation of the tendon of the large muscle on the front of the thigh (quadriceps) just before it attaches to the kneecap (patella)." Kawhi Leonard is out for the season with inflammation of the tendon. He has missed 77 games.

"Philadelphia Flyers center Sean Couturier added another chapter to the book on hockey player toughness, scoring three goals and assisting on two others -- while playing on a torn MCL."

Couturier tore the MCL on Thursday. He missed that night's game, Game 4.

 "But with his team down 3-1 in the series, he returned and scored the game winner in Game 5 on Friday..." 

He played on it the day after he tore it. Then played today, scoring a hat trick.

There is right now another player in professional basketball, used to be an MVP too, Derrick Rose, who missed 99 games for a tear of his ACL in 2012. Derrick missed 257 games while with the Chicago "Bulls" from 2009-2016. Some of the injuries that kept Derrick out those 257 games are:

sprained left wrist 2010, 4 games.
stiff neck 2010, 1 game.
sprained big toe 2012, 1 game.
sprained big toe again 2012, 4 games.
"lower back issues" 2012, 5 games.
"groin injury" 2012, 12 games. [Bad year for Derrick, 2012.]
sprained right ankle 2012, 1 game.
right foot injury (unspecified) 2012, 3 games.
"rest," 2012, 1 game.
torn ACL 2012, 99 games.
sore right hamstring 2013, 1 game.
torn right meniscus 2013, 76 games.
sprained both ankles 2014, 2 games.
sprained both ankles again 2014, 2 games.
torn right meniscus 2015, 20 games.
"overall body soreness 2016, 1 game.

Alright, enough. Hockey players are just tougher than basketball players.

The Devil in LeBron James

LeBron James will never be considered the greatest basketball player of all time because he deliberately sabotage's teammates and his team both on the court and off. And because he quits on his teams and on his teammates. The last is the Jurgen Klopp corollary, don't compete. Deliberate sabotage though is a different animal altogether, a goat; it is close to throwing the game. Goat. Not. G.O.A.T. 

The 29-year-old hero from Waffle House shooting: 'I saw the opportunity and I took it'

(The Tennessean)

Tennessee Waffle House shooting suspect may be armed, police say

(CNN)

"Manhunt underway for naked shooter who killed four at Waffle House in Tennessee"-New York Daily News

Oh yeah, we're normal.
I cannot write of Barnesboro and Cambria County.
When a jet takes off, if you were standing a football field and one-third away, the noise would be eight times "annoyingly loud," 100 decibels.

When the Winnipeg "Jets" took off Friday night (and 32 seconds into the game they did) the noise inside Bell MTS Place was 114.3 decibels, a new record for the arena considered the loudest in the NHL and over 16 times annoying, above the average human pain threshold, greater than an automobile horn at one yard, and half way to a chain saw, which the "Jets" took to Minnesota in a 5-0 massacre.

This iteration of the "Jets" won their first playoff series four games to one and there were 15,321 witnesses cum noise makers in the arena and another 36,000 outside at the corner of Portage and Main downtown.

Winnipeg now awaits Colorado or Nashville in the second round in the chase for the Stanley Cup.

Saturday, April 21, 2018

Lessons from Today

Here's a basketball axiom that I believe in: "the team with the best player wins in the playoffs." (Note: this axiom does not apply to soccer, in league games, in England, to Liverpool, at The Hawthorns. Then you need to bring your own groundskeeper and referees. Note.) That axiom was proved true again today in the playoff basketball game between Philadelphia and Miami in America 2.0. The "Heat's" best starter is probably Goran Dragic. Goran Dragic would be at most the third-best player on the "7'6"ers." Dwyane Wade was the "Heat's" best player today and indeed the highest scorer on either team with 25 points but at 36 years of age Wade does not qualify as best player. He cannot start, he cannot go all game, he only went 26 minutes today (Phila had six players who played more minutes than did Wade), and so he cannot be impactful enough to disprove the axiom. As impactful as, say, LeBron James still is.

Which permits us segue into another lesson from today and another axiom: "Do not tug on Superman's cape." This is a lesson that the individual homo sapiens denominated "Lance" "Stephenson" has never learned.

For Lance asserted today that his Indiana "Pacers" have "full control right now" over the man whose face he is blowing into in that iconically Lance photo, and over his team. I wish Lance hadn't said that. Lance the LeBron Blower fancies himself uniquely able to tug on LeBron James' cape, to "get under his skin," to needle him, to distract him into doing...stupid things on the court. On what precedential authority Lance relies for his minority-of-one opinion court scholars are mystified. "We get another win in our building, and that's when I think they're going to start panicking." (Another win would put Indiana up three games to one.) As they panicked when they won their first NBA championship by coming back from 3-1 down to Golden State in the Finals? Eh, Justice Stephenson? I wish somebody had stuffed something in Lance's pie hole. I wish he hadn't said that for I was wishing for an Indiana win. But they didn't and he did and me thinks both of today's axioms will be proved anew tomorrow, for me thinks LeBron James, the best player on these or any other teams, will take his "Cavaliers," put them across his broad shoulders and carry them to victory, the while sticking one of his signature sneakers in Lance Stevenson's big, fat mouth. Too late for Indy's sake.

Jurgen Klopp Is An Asshole

This warrants another post. Klopp is an asshole. Klopp did not field a weakened team so he could not put the blame on that. In fact, he said he played such a strong lineup precisely to keep them in fighting trim for Roma on Tuesday. So, he blamed the pitch ("too dry). He blamed the refs. Weather and officials are the usual scapegoats the world of sport over. They teach those in coach school. So what Klopp is saying is that mighty Liverpool could not beat 20th West Brom on a dry pitch with these referees. Could not hold a 2-0 lead at 20th West Brom on a dry pitch with these referees. But Klopp was on a different world, Planet Asshole, when he also blamed West Brom for trying. He bitterly and mean-spiritedly dismissed them as a Championship side who had "wasted" points, his points.

"If you made a ‘set-piece Premier League’ where only set-pieces are allowed then West Brom would, for sure, not go to the Championship...We scored the first one. Then the pitch got drier and drier, that’s not an advantage for the football-playing side...It makes life a little bit more difficult.

“What do you think? Was it a penalty? Yes, I think the same. We agree.

“Hegazi on Ings? It’s a red card. But you see it, I see it, that’s not important. It matters only what the three or four gentlemen with the whistle say. We can’t change that.

“But if you have these situations, it’s different. I think if you are the better team you should win, we are the better team but we don’t win.

“We let the home team decide if they water the pitch or not. It’s not only about football, it’s dangerous for injuries too if the pitch is really dry. It’s difficult.

“I would have said nothing about that if we had won, though! We didn’t play a brilliant game, but good enough to win here.

""Useless comeback. I don't think that point will help West Brom massively, it is a complete waste of points: they don't need it, we would have needed it. 
They are happy, we are not happy, we stay in the league, they do not. It makes for a strange situation!

"The whole game was a plot on the goalkeeper, everyone loves it in this country, but it makes life difficult for the goalie.

"It was a difficult game as the pitch got drier and drier. West Brom decided not to water the pitch at half-time and that makes it difficult.

"It makes a massive difference. A team like West Brom do not need a wet pitch, they can do it next year playing on a dry pitch in the Championship."


ASS. HOLE.

Final


3 :( 58.2


1!


3


4. 1:45


6. 4:09 left.

Phila 17 MIA 7 in 4Q.

10


7

Phila has outscored MIA 13-2 in 4Q.
Six point Phila lead 91-85 at halfway point 4Q. The "Heat's" 4Q collapse.

87-83 Philly 8:27 4Q

11 straight points by "7'6'ers" from 3Q. Eight straight in 4th.
"I was not happy with the pitch. It was a tough game, especially after the pitch was getting dryer and dryer and we had the ball constantly so that makes it not so easy.West Brom obviously decided not to water the pitch at half-time...

"They can do it next year playing football with a dry pitch in the Championship. That's how it is and we have to deal with it."

Jurgen Klopp is a bit of a bitch.

MIA 83 Phila 79 End 3Q


"Heat" lead up to 10, 7:18 3Q. "7'6'"ers have called two timeouts in the last two minutes. Dragic's having a great game, 18 points so far, leading all scorers. Fourth quarter collapse coming?
Oh, tremendous tweet by CBS:

  1. Heat vs. Sixers is the only 2018 playoff series taking place in 1997
     
Oh hell that wasn't a fight. Simmons pushed Goran Dragic to the floor on a layup attempt. Simmons ended up leaning against the basket stanchion and James Johnson, who could have karate kicked Simmons into a tenor, pushed Simmons in the chest and they started jawing. No punches thrown. Bull shit incident. No fight.

Miami 61 Philadelphia 56 HT

According to ESPN there was a fight in the first half between MIA's James Johnson and Phila's rookie star Ben Simmons. Don't like that. This isn't hockey. You can get really hurt in a basketball fight, see Rudy Tomjanovich. James is a karate black belt, too.
China, you haven't been here that I've noticed in about a month. Could you check and tell me how much money I have in my Adsense account please?

West Bromwich Albion 2 Liverpool 2 FT

Not only did the league's anchor man draw with the third best but the third best squandered a 2-0 lead. Said Liver manager Jurgen Klopp post-match:

"Useless comeback. I don't think that point will help West Brom massively, it is a complete waste of points: they don't need it, we would have needed it.

"They are happy now, we are not happy. We stay in the league, they don't stay in the league -- it is a strange situation.''


Which is a strange thing for Jurgen Klopp to say! Sport is about competition. Jurgen Klopp did not want West Brom to compete; just wanted them to hand Liverpool the match, give them the three points Liverpool need--still need--to cinch the Champions League competition next season. "It is a complete waste of points." For West Brom to deny Liverpool the points. Strange in the extreme! Maybe this perplexing view by the manager is one of the reasons Liverpool dropped points today-- just as they have all season. NEVER heard a sportsman say anything like that. Never.
Oh my goodness West Brom drew with Liverpool at The Hawthorns. One week after inflicting humiliating defeat on Manchester United (and delivering a frisson of schadenfreude for Manchester City fans) the "Baggies" bagged a point against the Man (City) eating "Cannibals."

There has been a pattern present all season for Liverpool that is evidenced here. The "'Balls" will beat City or another top club and then drop points against lesser opposition. I don't know if it's distraction (Liverpool are still playing in the Champion's League), lack of concentration, complacency or what it is but whatever it is it's the reason Liverpool are in third place behind Manchester United--with United having a game in hand!--and light years behind City, the champions they have defeated three of four this season. It is puzzling.

For West Brom the four points the last two weekends against the league's runners-up are almost are almost surely not going to be enough to keep them up.

Friday, April 20, 2018


JUST butt ugly unis, Indy has. Butt ugly. Go Butt Uglies.

Our Mistake: Cleve Blows 17 Point Half Time Lead, Falls to Indy 92-90

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!

The "Pacers" have now won two of three in this first round series, in which round LBJ had not lost in 21 straight before now. This is different, as the undersigned and every other carpel tunnel afflicted wretch wrote after the Pounding at the Pawnshop in Game One. The Canary and Blue twill be the canary in the coal mine for the Blood and Pus, formerly the "Wine and Gold."

Peter Bogdanovich lead the Pace with 30.

Oh by the way that gold standard of basketball evaluation metrics the +/-? LBJ  had 28 10/22, 12, 8, 1,1, 6(turnovers) and was a -1 +/- wise. So, Cleve woulda been better off without him. Aha, hmm-mmm.
What is the purpose of this? Cohen_lap_dog To humiliate Michael Cohen and to scare Trump. It is mean-spirited and has no news value. Co-authored by Maggie Haberman who often has written to tip off Trump.

For years Mr. Trump treated Mr. Cohen poorly, with gratuitous insults, dismissive statements and, at least twice, threats of being fired, according to interviews with a half-dozen people familiar with their relationship.

“Donald goes out of his way to treat him like garbage,” said Roger J. Stone Jr....

Now, for the first time, the traffic may be going Mr. Cohen’s way. Mr. Trump’s lawyers and advisers have become resigned to the strong possibility that Mr. Cohen, who has a wife and two children and faces the prospect of devastating legal fees, if not criminal charges, could end up cooperating with federal officials who are investigating him for activity that could relate, at least in part, to work he did for Mr. Trump.

[Could not according to reports this week. Rosenstein told Trump recently that he was not a target of the Cohen investigation. If that is true, then there is no news value to this article except "human interest." ( En passant, is it ethical for the prosecutor overseeing the Mueller investigation to tell his boss--who wants to fire him--over said investigation that he is not a target of the Cohen probe?)]

Mr. Trump has long felt he had leverage over Mr. Cohen, but people who have worked for the president said the raid has changed all that.

“Ironically, Michael now holds the leverage over Trump,” said Sam Nunberg, a former aide to Mr. Trump who worked with Mr. Cohen and Mr. Stone. 
...
Mr. Stone recalled Mr. Trump saying of Mr. Cohen, “He owns some of the finest Trump real estate in the country — paid top dollar for it, too.” In Mr. Trump’s worldview, there are few insults more devastating than saying someone overpaid.
...
[Cohen] fought with the initial campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski. Paul Manafort, the campaign chairman, later blocked him from coming on board. Mr. Trump never ordered his aides to make a place for Mr. Cohen.
...
Particularly hurtful to Mr. Cohen was the way Mr. Trump lavished approval on Mr. Lewandowski in a way he never did for Mr. Cohen. 
King Mswati III of Swaziland proclaims his nation will be henceforth known as eSwatini(WaPo)

Wenger Out-For Real

Arsene Wenger, 21 years manager at Arsenal F.C., The Invincibles, and of late the selling pop gunners and subject of constant WENGER OUT protests, has announced he is stepping down after this season with one year left on his contract

Philadelphia 128 Miami 108. Lessons Learned.

Talent will out.
Hassan Whiteside will be out.

A Dark Blessed Night

Leagues deep sleep. Vivid dreams. Rested. Reharged. Day: prepare to be seized by the neck and throttled.

Thursday, April 19, 2018

I Lyke Heather


Heather Lyke, the new athletic director at Pitt strykes me as smart, tough, decisive, committed, enthusiastic, honest, articulate and telegenic. She ran a squeaky clean program at Eastern Michigan before leaving for Pitt. She did not flinch in firing men's basketball coach Kevin Stallings nor women's basketball coach Susie McConnell-Serio. She made a universally applauded "late save" hire of Jeff Capel after failing on Dan Hurley. Usually at Pitt and elsewhere panic sets in when Plan A falls through. There is no Plan B. Ms Lyke did not panic, had a Plan B, and Capel was a good catch. This chick is going to succeed.
How Many More Times Can Justise Winslow Do That?
-Deadspin

Umm, none?

Philly 128
Miami 108

No Justise, No Heat!

Frigging Justise Winslow 19 points at the half :o. Usually takes him a week to get 19. 4/5 from 3.


He leads all scorers both teams.



Who the hell is guarding him?


And he's a -1.

+/- nonsense

D-Wade: 12', 0 0/4, 2, 3, 1, 1, 3 (turnovers), +7
Burning barn in Miami. "Heat" lead "7'ft 6'ers" 64-63 at half.

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Cleveland 100 Indiana 97 Final

Oh boy. If ever a win felt like a loss. If ever a team can take inspiration in defeat.

The Land needed 40', 46 17/24, 12, 5, and 2 from fill in blank, a 13-0, 19-3 start, 33-18 end-1, 58-46 half to hold off the "Pacers" by tres at home. Ooh. The "Pawns" led 74-67 end-3 but Indy closed to within three on Darren Collison's 3 with :51.2 left in the game. LBJ made 4 free throws and JR Smith 1 in the remainder to complete their scoring. As if to punctuate their invitation to Cleve for the next two in Indy the stellar Victor Oladipo hit a buzzer-beating 3 to make the final 100-97.

That kind of early burst then fade is usually the signature of an overmatched team, hang on or lose. Indy smells blood.

So this is a screenshot of the Pittsburgh P.D. email.





This is a clarification of Cmdr Joseph's email.

“The Pittsburgh Bureau of Police receives information daily that we evaluate and prepare for if the event should occur. Events can include anything from extreme weather to potential demonstrations,”

“Often the events we prepare for do not occur. However, through an abundance of caution, we attempt to adequately prepare for an appropriate response,” he continued. “We receive information regularly about potential events and/or threats, assess the credibility of the information and plan for a potential event. In this case, we have not assessed the credibility of the potential for disturbances, and we do not have any knowledge of the President’s decision-making process.”

-Pittsburgh Public Safety Director Wendell Hissrich.

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette termed Joseph's email "alarming"--ACCURATELY.  It was...inartfully drafted by Cmdr Joseph. "We have received information...There is a belief..." It sure sounds like the belief that Trump is about to fire Mueller imminently is based on "information" the police department "received," especially when the "There is a belief" part is given its own paragraph! Read differently however and in conjunction with Director Hissrich's clarification Joseph's "There is a belief" refers to the protesters, "There is a belief" among the protesters. I can't really fault Joseph. Stylistically, the email was inartful. 

"There is a belief that President Trump will soon move to fire Special Prosecutor Mueller. "

“We have received information of a potential large scale protest in the Central Business District. There is a belief that President Trump will soon move to fire Special Prosecutor Mueller. This would result in a large protest within 24 hours of the firing. The protest would be semi-spontaneous and more than likely happen on short notice. Beginning Thursday, all Major Crimes detectives will be required to have a full uniform and any issued protective equipment, like riot gear, until further notice."

Golden

The Vegas "Golden Knights," an expansion team, swept Los Angeles last night four games to none in the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs. They are the first expansion team to sweep a series. Viva Vegas.

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Barbara Bush, First Lady of the former United States with her husband, President George H.W. Bush, and mother of President George W. Bush has died at age 92. Rest in peace.
Bill Kristol retweeted this with a recommendation that we all read a book on how personality cults and mass movements get started:

Candace Owens
@RealCandaceO
I truly believe that @realDonaldTrump isn’t just the leader of the free world, but the savior of it as well.

May God bless America— the last stand for western civilization.
10:18 PM · Apr 16, 2018

I have written many times of the "Svengali-like hold" that Trump has on his detritus, in fact, that was my first answer to a question posed by my-brother-the-klansman (and Trump voter, duh) when Trump first started winning primaries. "Why do you think nothing sticks?"

I thought of this again over the weekend. I was re-reading some China books ("Everything always comes back to China," my last girlfriend Carmen once said to me.) and I remembered Sen. Ted Cruz' debate with two Trump supporters in Indiana. "What do you like about Donald Trump?" Cruz asked. "Everything," detritus #1 answered. "Whatever Trump says, I believe," he went on. "Whatever is in the Bible, I believe," one of my other brothers once said to me. They are the savior's words. In both cases, and in Candace Owens' case, whatever the savior says is to be believed; he is the savior.

And, yes, that brings to mind China. In the case of Hua Guofeng, Mao Zedong's immediate successor. Hua's prescription to the Chinese people was,  两个凡是, the "Two Whatevers," We will resolutely uphold whatever policy decisions Chairman Mao made, and unswervingly follow whatever instructions Chairman Mao gave" since,

The east is red, the sun is rising.
From China comes Mao Zedong.
He strives for the people's happiness,
Hurrah, he is the people's great savior!
He strives for the people's happiness,
Hurrah, he is the people's great savior!


Good suggestion by Kristol to re-read some of the literature on personality cults and mass movements. Already have.

We Learned...

We learned that Goran Dragic made a layup with six seconds left. (?) We learned that this pissed off the "76'ers" coach and players (?). And one fan particularly. And we learned that this one fan can really write, really well. As a "Heat" fan, I take no offense; as a hobby writer I stand in gape-mouthed awe of Tyler's writing. I reprint his tirade in entirety in awe.

A calm, measured response to Goran Dragic’s end-of-game layup against the 76ers
Yeah, we’re salty.
By Tyler Tynes on April 17, 2018 9:05 am

It was an electric Game 2 in the Wells Fargo Center. Mark Zumoff’s deep brown suit was unnecessarily gorgeous. Per usual, several “Trust the Process” chants pinged around the arena. The soul of Sam Hinkie could be seen moonwalking the hardwood as the Sixers attempted comeback after comeback against the Miami Heat, each plagued with poor shooting and a sin of the Eastern Conference playoffs: the necessary “Dwayne Wade ‘bout to beat that ass” game.

I’m not one of those fans who believed the Sixers were going to sweep anyone this early in the playoffs. For whatever dumb sports reason that could be uttered, I believe a team as talented and young and handsome as this one needed to lose early so they could prove to the imaginary and real haters that they could get knocked down then get back up. Please cue up any scenes from Creed.

Eventually the Sixers’ gas powered, three-point-surging flamethrowers were going to run out. Somebody was literally going to try to fight Ben Simmons for 48 minutes in a bump-and-run style where WWE was enforced for several runs by referees Tony Brothers and Scott Foster. Charles Barkley was bound to say something dumb, which he did during the halftime show by suggesting, essentially, that Simmons and crew weren’t prepared for this because he’s never faced adversity in basketball thanks to not playing in March Madness.

What I didn’t expect was this. I need you to look several times, as I did. It felt as if Mortal Kombat’s Raiden launched 8,000 lightning bolts into my being and engulfed my soul in flames.

Dime on UPROXX
@DimeUPROXX
·
14h
Brett Brown and the rest of Philadelphia didn't like that late Dragic layup...
0:24
Embedded video

Let this be said now and remembered at this point of history when Philadelphia has established that it will destroy anything within it’s nuclear cloud: the Sixers will beat the Heat in this series and Goran Dragic will have to get jumped.

You may believe Dragic’s actions are no big deal, that players do this often enough (see Chris Paul vs. Damian Lillard and a zillion other examples), that turning the other cheek is something one should do when met with blatant disrespect.

I am here to tell you that’s horseshit. Disrespect must be met with an aggression so hot it melts away any thought that piling on a meaningless layup once the game is over will ever be OK. There must be a response, and it will come in a way only Philly knows and enjoys: a hate-induced troll that will taunt the heavens and a fan base willing to remember this every time Dragic comes back to Broad Street.

The Sixers deserved to lose Game 2. They shot like shit. They were muscled out of the lane. The were missing a part of the tenacity and fluidness that made them the NBA’s hottest team this spring. Wade was tremendous. And, they really shot like shit.

But from this moment on, Dragic’s late-game layup should be a rallying cry. We know the Sixers have the tools to become the darlings of the East. From this moment on, they should play like they like the underdog motif the city has leaned into since September.

So, thank you, Dragic. We needed a mental steroid. Whatever comes next, I can’t tell you. I’ll only say: don’t take bum-ass layups at the end of games, or death might meet you at your door in the form of an army yelling Beanie Sigel lyrics.

https://www.sbnation.com/2018/4/17/17245832/heat-vs-sixers-goran-dragic-layup-video-game-2-angry