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To: MileHi

You will be stunned at “where” Jeff Sessions is.

The case against Robert Hannsen took YEARS. If all you want is a low-level scum, this would be wrapped up yesterday. Setting a major mafia-level takedown of a LOT of these people requires total secrecy and a LOT of time. The cases must be air tight, or they will be dismissed as “political.” Sessions’ lawyers have to all be (seemingly) lefties or the cases will be dismissed as “political.”


87 posted on 10/17/2017 8:05:20 AM PDT by LS ("Castles Made of Sand, Fall in the Sea . . . Eventually" (Hendrix))
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To: LS

You will be stunned at “where” Jeff Sessions is.

The case against Robert Hannsen took YEARS. If all you want is a low-level scum, this would be wrapped up yesterday. Setting a major mafia-level takedown of a LOT of these people requires total secrecy and a LOT of time. The cases must be air tight, or they will be dismissed as “political.” Sessions’ lawyers have to all be (seemingly) lefties or the cases will be dismissed as “political.”

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

so it looks like you’re base premise is that we still have an on going investigation to bring treasonous US government officials at the highest levels for the past 3 - 4 administrations to justice.

and now the lead dog is jeff sessions??

or, applying ocsam’s razor theory: sessions & hand picked rosenstein are continuing the treasonous espionage that holder, podesta, hildabeast, bubba, barack hussein bin soetoro, rosentein, mccabe, mueller, comey have all been “investigating” this “matter” for over a decade in hopes of landing a bigger fish????

come on man.


93 posted on 10/17/2017 8:22:19 AM PDT by thinden
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To: LS
You are dead on. Sessions is not the enemy. He is trying to drain the swamp.

Here are what some of the enemies of Jeff Sessions are saying (go to the articles for the specific accomplishments):

Jeff Sessions has done more damage in his first 100 days than his boss

US attorney general Jeff Sessions may not be part of the biggest investigation in the Department of Justice, but as he reaches 100 days in office, there’s little doubt that he’s had an important impact on the American criminal-justice system—potentially for years to come.

Despite the political turmoil of the Trump administration, Sessions has moved to reverse a tide of progressive reform and to fulfill his boss’s law-and-order agenda, a collection of concepts loosely articulated during the 2016 presidential campaign. Sessions’ biggest actions, from undermining federal oversight of police departments to cracking down on undocumented immigrants, have worried a wide array of lawmakers, law-enforcement leaders, advocates and scientists.

“Of all the cabinet members, maybe even the president, he has to this point had the most significant impact as to policy changes,” said Jesselyn McCurdy, the deputy director at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) Washington Legislative Office told Quartz.

Unlike his boss, Sessions is delivering on what he has promised—sometimes on causes he has championed for decades.

“There’s been a great bipartisan movement by organizations on the ground and members of Congress to reform the federal criminal-justice system, based on successes that have happened in the states, but the leader of opposition to that reform was Jeff Sessions, as a senator from Alabama,” McCurdy said. “These are all things that [Sessions], as a criminal justice reform opponent, had on his radar already.

McCurdy said Sessions was “definitely” living up to the ACLU’s concerns, and in some areas, fulfilling the worst-case scenarios.

Jeff Sessions ushers in 'Trump era' at the Justice Department

In just over two months, Sessions has proved to be a central figure in effectuating Trump's vision for America in tangible ways on immigration, crime, police reform and civil rights.

And while the White House searches for new messaging to frame what Trump has accomplished in the first 100 days in office, Sessions has single-handedly managed to make several significant domestic policy changes -- from pressing pause on implementing police reforms to withdrawing Obama-era protections for transgender students in public schools.

His radical transformation of the Justice Department's role is no accident.

Many of the changes Sessions has made thus far track a familiar principle of federalism: the notion that the federal government's powers are limited and it can't coerce states into action. In other words, the federal government should get out of the states' way.

Sessions' critics worry that he is well on his way to undoing many of the major progressive achievements of his predecessors, often by withdrawing from court cases or previous directives that fail to align with his views. Yet Trump supporters cheered Sessions on during the presidential campaign when he said, "the American people are not happy with their government."

Now that Sessions is the nation's top law enforcement officer, his defenders and critics universally agree: he's been busy fulfilling the President's campaign promises and he's just getting started.

94 posted on 10/17/2017 8:27:54 AM PDT by kabar
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To: LS
You will be stunned at “where” Jeff Sessions is.

I will be happy to be stunned. But I certainly don't like Rosenstein, McCabe or Mueller anywhere around PDT.

95 posted on 10/17/2017 8:32:39 AM PDT by MileHi (Liberalism is an ideology of parasites, hypocrites, grievance mongers, victims, and control freaks.)
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To: LS

bookmark


109 posted on 10/17/2017 10:36:13 AM PDT by boxlunch (Pray for Donald Trump and his administration! Disband the DMC! (Democrat Media Complex). ncee)
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