Yes, of course, those of us who support our duly elected president
are a bunch of "Russia bots". We are "traitors" for demanding our
FBI and CIA not be political operatives of our executive branch.
The cannibal left suck at logic.
Most "Russia bot" accusers are foreigners. Too many anonymous
foreigners complaining about foreign influence on our country.
Notice the chronic nym-shifting America-bashing slimeball foreigner
changed the follow-up groups...
--
Vincent <vincent
trumpite.ru> wrote:
> Path:
eternal-september.org!
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feeder.eternal-september.org!
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> From: Vincent <vincent
trumpite.ru>
> Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,
rec.arts.tv,rec.crafts.metalworking,alt.survival,alt.global-warming,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show
> Subject: Is Donald Trump A Traitor? Did He Steal The Election? Are His Online Supporters Russian Moles?
> Followup-To: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show
> Date: Thu, 24 May 2018 01:57:46 +0000 (UTC)
> Organization: vincent
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>
> He is a low-rent racist, a shameless misogynist, and an unbalanced
> narcissist. He is an unrelenting liar and a two-bit white identity
> demagogue. Lest anyone forget these things, he goes out of his way
> each day to remind us of them.
>
> At the end of the day, he is certain to be left in the dustbin of
> history, alongside Father Coughlin and Gen. Edwin Walker. (Exactly
> - you don't remember them, either.)
>
> What more can I add?
>
> Unfortunately, another word also describes him: president. The
> fact that such an unstable egomaniac occupies the White House is
> the greatest threat to the national security of the United States
> in modern history.
>
> Which brings me to the only question about Donald Trump that I
> find really interesting: Is he a traitor?
>
> Did he gain the presidency through collusion with Russian
> President Vladimir Putin?
>
> One year after Trump took office, it is still unclear whether the
> president of the United States is an agent of a foreign power.
> Just step back and think about that for a moment.
>
> The fact that such an unstable egomaniac occupies the White House
> is the greatest threat to U.S. national security in modern
> history.
> His 2016 campaign is the subject of an ongoing federal inquiry
> that could determine whether Trump or people around him worked
> with Moscow to take control of the U.S. government. Americans must
> now live with the uncertainty of not knowing whether the president
> has the best interests of the United States or those of the
> Russian Federation at heart.
>
> Most pundits in Washington now recoil at any suggestion that the
> Trump-Russia story is really about treason. They all want to say
> it's about something else - what, they aren't quite sure. They are
> afraid to use serious words. They are in the business of breaking
> down the Trump-Russia narrative into a long series of bite-sized,
> incremental stories in which the gravity of the overall case often
> gets lost. They seem to think that treason is too much of a
> conversation-stopper, that it interrupts the flow of cable
> television and Twitter. God forbid you might upset the right wing!
> (And the left wing, for that matter.)
>
> But if a presidential candidate or his lieutenants secretly work
> with a foreign government that is a longtime adversary of the
> United States to manipulate and then win a presidential election,
> that is almost a textbook definition of treason.
>
> In Article 3, Section 3, the U.S. Constitution states that
> "treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying
> War against them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid
> and Comfort."
>
> Based on that provision in the Constitution, U.S. law - 18 U.S.
> Code õ 2381 - states that "[w]hoever, owing allegiance to the
> extent that it is defined - as providing aid and comfort to an
> "enemy" of the United States - the question might come down to
> whether Russia is legally considered America's "enemy."
>
> Russia may not meet the legal definition of an "enemy," but it is
> certainly an adversary of the United States. It would make perfect
> sense for Russian President and de facto dictator Vladimir Putin
> to use his security services to conduct a covert operation to
> influence American politics to Moscow's advantage. Such a program
> would fall well within the acceptable norms of great power
> behavior. After all, it is the kind of covert intelligence program
> the United States has conducted regularly against other nations -
> including Russia.
>
> Throughout the Cold War, the CIA and the KGB were constantly
> engaged in such secret intelligence battles. The KGB had a
> nickname for the CIA: glavnyy vrag or "the main enemy." In 2003, I
> co-authored a book called "The Main Enemy" with Milt Bearden, a
> retired CIA officer who had been chief of the CIA's Soviet/Eastern
> European division when the Berlin Wall fell and the Soviet Union
> collapsed. The book was about the intelligence wars between the
> CIA and the KGB.
>
> Today's cyber-spy wars are just the latest version of "The Great
> Game," the wonderfully romantic name for the secret intelligence
> battles between the Russian and British empires for control of
> Central Asia in the 19th century. Russia, the United States, and
> other nations engage in such covert intelligence games all the
> time - whether they are "enemies" or simply rivals.
> His first name, Rem, was an acronym for Revolutsky Mir - the
> "World Revolution" Soviet leaders had longed to bring about. His
> father had been a general in the NKVD, the Stalinist predecessor
> to the KGB, and whenever I talked to him, Krassilnikov made it
> clear that he still considered the United States his adversary. He
> proudly took me on a tour of sites around Moscow where he had
> arrested American spies.
>
> No one even bothered to rename the GRU, Russia's military
> intelligence agency. During the Cold War, the KGB considered the
> GRU a lower-class cousin, much as the CIA has always looked down
> upon the Pentagon's Defense Intelligence Agency. Today, the GRU
> has added cyber and hacking capabilities like those of the
> National Security Agency. The GRU was involved in the Russian hack
> of the 2016 American election, according to a classified NSA
> document obtained by The Intercept, yet it still operates in the
> shadows of the more influential FSB and SVR.
>
> Russian intelligence was briefly weakened following the collapse
> of the Soviet Union, but under Putin - the first KGB man to run
> the country since Yuri Andropov died in 1984 - it has come roaring