Donald Trump: Trump, Pence Say Their Immigration Offer To Democrats Is Not Amnesty - 2:37 PM 1/20/2019
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Donald Trump: Rudy Giuliani: 'So What' If Trump Spoke With Cohen Ahead Of Congressional Testimony? | ||
Trump's personal attorney also acknowledged that discussions about a Trump Tower deal in Moscow may have occurred through November 2016. Donald Trump | ||
Donald Trump: Trump, Pence Say Their Immigration Offer To Democrats Is Not Amnesty | ||
”There’s no pathway to citizenship, there’s no permanent status here at all,” the vice president said Sunday after some conservatives criticized the plan. Donald Trump | ||
Trump Investigations: Michael Novakhov on the New Abwehr Hypothesis of Operation Trump - Google Search | ||
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"trump and russia" - Google News: Rudy Giuliani: Trump business talks in Russia extended far into 2016 - Vox.com | ||
Rudy Giuliani: Trump business talks in Russia extended far into 2016 Vox.com
In an interview Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press," Rudy Giuliani said the Trump Organization continued conversations with Russian officials about building a ...
"trump and russia" - Google News | ||
1. Trump Circles: Elections from Michael_Novakhov (16 sites): "Rudy Giuliani" - Google News: Giuliani: So what if Cohen spoke to Trump about testimony - Inside NoVA | ||
Giuliani: So what if Cohen spoke to Trump about testimony Inside NoVA
Donald Trump's lawyer Rudy Giuliani addresses whether the President talked to Michael Cohen about his congressional testimony. TownNews.com *Content* ...
"Rudy Giuliani" - Google News 1. Trump Circles: Elections from Michael_Novakhov (16 sites) | ||
"Trump Investigations" - Google News: Pence: BuzzFeed report shows 'obsession' by media, Dems to attack Trump | TheHill - The Hill | ||
Pence: BuzzFeed report shows 'obsession' by media, Dems to attack Trump | TheHill The Hill
Vice President Pence on Sunday seized on the special counsel's statement challenging the accuracy of a BuzzFeed News report that said President Trump ...
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The Operation Trump and The New Abwehr - Google Search | ||
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Kushner's family money came from Abwehr, for whom Tuvia Bielski and his Bielski Brothers were in fact the reinforcers and capos who terrorized, raped, and robbed the ghetto Jews. | ||
M.N.: My main thought with regard to Jared Kushner:
Kushner's family money came from essentially the Abwehr, for whom Tuvia Bielskiand his Bielski Brothers, who are called the "partisans" but were in fact the Abwehr' reinforcers and capos who terrorized, raped, and robbed the ghetto Jews. They bribed and bought their way to America with Abwehr's help, to continue the work for them: to invest the robbed Jewish ghetto jewelry and gold into Real Estate and other businesses and to establish ties with the old Jewish Italian Mafia in America,probably long under the Abwehr's protection also. It appears that the New Abwehr controls the Transnational Organized Crime, and in fact, it is this mysterious and hypothetical group which became The Capo De Tutti Capi. Abwehr used the Mafia as the parasite, for their covers and protection, the same old art of mimicry. The hypothesized earlier, Abwehr's Real Estate developments and investments with Fred Trump, Donald's father, might point to the same and single strategy on the part of the Abwehr's planners. This hypothesis has to be investigated carefully and thoroughly. Michael Novakhov 1.20.19 10:42 PM 7/29/2018 – Posts Review: The Meshuggah – Demiurge Or The ...
The Global Security News
The Meshuggah – Demiurge Or The German Hypothesis Of The Operations “Trump” And “9/11” – By Michael Novakhov · “
Michael Novakhov on the New Abwehr Hypothesis of Operation Trump - Google SearchTuvia Bielski
Over seventy years ago on a rainy night, Rae Kushner, her sister Lisa and Sonya and Aaron Oshman escaped through a narrow tunnel from the Novogrudok ghetto together with 250 other Jews. They hid in an area nearby to elude the pursuing Germans and their collaborators. Many in the group were shot and killed. Rae, Lisa, Sonya and Aaron, and others were rescued by the Bielski partisans, who heard of the group’s escape and sent in scouts to take the survivors from Novogrudok to safety.
The group, founded by Tuvia Bielski and his brothers Asael and Zus – along with help from youngest brother Aron – provided a haven for
all
Jews fleeing the Nazis and their collaborators. For three years, the Bielski partisans survived in the forests of Belarus, engaging in armed combat and disrupting the Nazi war machine with acts of sabotage. Their primary mission, however, was always the preservation of Jewish lives. Tuvia proclaimed, “I would rather save the life of one old Jewish woman than kill ten Nazis.” By the end of the war, the Bielski partisans managed to save over 1,200 Jews.
Tuvia was one of 12 children, born to a miller fathher on May 8, 1906 in the rural town of Stankiewicze. They were the only Jews in a small community, and quickly learned how to look after themselves.
When the Germans invaded in June 1941, the brothers sought refuge in the woods where they had spent time as children. Asael and Zus, who were hiding together, set about finding safe homes for a dozen or so of their surviving relatives. Tuvia, who was staying further to the north, moved relatives in with friendly non-Jews. But by the spring of 1942, the three decided it was time to relocate all the relatives into a single location in the woods.
The brothers moved quickly to build a fighting force from the escapees. These escapees joined forces with the growing group of Soviet partisans who were engaging in guerrilla attacks against the occupiers. In October 1942, a squad of Bielski and Soviet fighters raided a German convoy loaded with supplies, killing at least one German soldier. “It was satisfying in a larger sense,” Tuvia wrote of the first attack on Nazis in his 1955 Yiddish language memoir, “A real spiritual high point, that the world should know that there were still Jews alive, and especially Jewish partisans.”
The group continued to grow until the end of the war. Committed to protecting all Jews – regardless of age, gender, socio-economic status, or level of religious observance – the Bielski Otriad provided shelter for Jews like Rae, Lisa, Aaron and Sonya. They worked endlessly to free hundreds of Jews from other ghettos. Among them were Leah Bedzowski Johnson, her sister Sonia, brothers Charles and Benjamin, and their mother Chasia, who escaped from the Lida Ghetto with Tuvia’s help. Sonia Bedzowksi was later captured enroute to the Lida ghetto to secure medicine for the partisans and killed in Majdanek. The rest of the Bedzowski family stayed with the Bielski Otriad until the end of the war. Now living in Florida, Leah expresses her lifelong gratitude, and praises Tuvia’s leadership and humanity, “Tuvia Bielski was our commander. He was always around us and he wanted only to save Jewish lives to make sure that our people continued and multiplied. I would not be alive today if it was not for Tuvia and neither would my children, grandchildren and great grandchildren.”
While imprisoned in the Lida Ghetto, Michael Stoll had heard tale of the Bielski partisans and vowed to escape and join the group. That chance came when he and 11 others jumped from a train bound for the Majdanek concentration camp. Finding themselves in the middle of “no man’s land,” they were eventually able to connect with the Bielski Otriad. Michael says, “If it had not been for Tuvia, we would not have survived. He was a good man. A legend.”
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Kushner's family money came from Abwehr... The Operation Trump and The New Abwehr - Google Search In... | ||
Kushner's family money came from Abwehr... The Operation Trump and The New Abwehr - Google Search In Pictures
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The Operation Trump and The New Abwehr - Google Search | ||
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The Operation Trump and The New Abwehr - Google Search | ||
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The Operation Trump and The New Abwehr - Google Search | ||
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The Operation Trump and The New Abwehr - Google Search | ||
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The Operation Trump and The New Abwehr - Google Search | ||
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The Operation Trump and The New Abwehr - Google Search | ||
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Michael Novakhov on the New Abwehr Hypothesis of Operation Trump - Google Search | ||
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Michael Novakhov on the New Abwehr Hypothesis of Operation Trump - Google Search | ||
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Michael Novakhov on the New Abwehr Hypothesis of Operation Trump - Google Search | ||
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Trump Investigations: Michael Novakhov on the New Abwehr Hypothesis of O... trumpinvestigations.blogspot.com/2019/01/michae… | ||
Trump Investigations: Michael Novakhov on the New Abwehr Hypothesis of O... trumpinvestigations.blogspot.com/2019/01/michae…
Posted by mikenov on Sunday, January 20th, 2019 3:48pm
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Michael Novakhov on the New Abwehr Hypothesis of Operation Trump - Google Search In Pictures - Sunday... | ||
Michael Novakhov on the New Abwehr Hypothesis of Operation Trump - Google Search In Pictures - Sunday January 20th, 2019 at 10:44 AM
January 20, 2019 | ||
"Russian Intelligence services" - Google News: Iran denies Germany's espionage charge against Afghan-German bi-national - i24NEWS | ||
Iran denies Germany's espionage charge against Afghan-German bi-national i24NEWS
Previous cases of infiltration by a foreign agency have sparked outrage and shock in Germany.
"Russian Intelligence services" - Google News | ||
Fred Trump: How the US president’s father built the property empire that spawned his son's billions | ||
Donald Trump has long enjoyed presenting himself as a self-made man, claiming the real estate portfolio that brought him wealth and fame is the product of hard graft and vision, nothing more.
“I started off in Brooklyn, my father gave me a small loan of $1m...” he told NBC's Today, without irony, on the campaign trail in 2015.
But The New York Times’s report that the president allegedly participated in “dubious tax schemes”to conceal up to $413m gifted to him and his siblings by their late father Fred Trump has again cast the harsh light of day on the Trump fortune and its backstory.
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Frederick Christ Trump (yes, you read that right) built up a huge property empire in the mid-20th century, incorporating 27,000 apartments and row houses in the New York City boroughs of Queens and Brooklyn, while the young Donald was raised in a 23-room, nine bathroom mansion in the leafy middle-class suburb of Jamaica Estates, making a nonsense of his claim to have sprung from hardship.
Fred was born in 1905, the son of German immigrant Frederick Drumpf (a family name the satirist John Oliver has delighted in), who had arrived in New York on 19 October 1885 from Kallstadt via Bremen, a 16-year-old seeking to evade military conscription.
Drumpf initially settled in the Big Apple before relocating to Seattle and then moving on to the Yukon Territory to take part in the Klondike Gold Rush, where he operated restaurants serving horse meat and a string of brothels catering to itinerant miners venturing in from the cold.
A wealthy man, Frederick married Elizabeth Christ in 1902 and returned to New York where he worked as a hotel keeper and where their son Fred was raised in the Bronx.
Fred Trump started his first business venture at 15 in 1920, building garage extensions to existing houses as the automobile’s future at the heart of American life was becoming increasingly clear. Too young to sign the cheques, he became partners with his mother in Elizabeth Trump & Son. He built his first house two years after leaving high school.
Taking advantage of the Great Depression, when Franklin D Roosevelt’s government was doing all it could to bolster the construction and home financing industries, Fred Trump gradually grew his business throughout the 1930s to the 1950s by borrowing from the Federal Housing Authority and making influential friends among the Brooklyn Democratic Party.
His properties were “plain but sturdy brick rental towers, clustered together in immaculately groomed parks”, as his New York Times obituary put it, selling for $3,990 and spread across the low-income neighbourhoods of Coney Island, Bensonhurst, Sheepshead Bay, Flatbush and Brighton Beach in Brooklyn and Flushing and Jamaica Estates in Queens.
He also built apartments for servicemen in the Second World War in Pennsylvania and Virginia and foresaw the advent of supermarkets, building one of America’s first, the Trump Market at Woodhaven, New York, whose slogan was: “Serve yourself and save!”
Known for his thrift, one of Fred’s few luxuries was a Cadillac with a personalised “FTC” vanity plate (his son's is “DJT”). Donald would recall in his ghost-written business manual The Art of the Deal(1987) that his father would roll up at construction sites after the working day was done and collect stray nails from the ground for his carpenters to use again the next morning.
He would also water down paint and manufacture his own disinfectant and cockroach spray to save cash, sending brand samples to labs to determine their ingredients.
“What had cost $2 a bottle, he got mixed for 50 cents,” remembered his son.
Profiled by the trade magazine American Builder and Building Age in 1940, this side of his personality was revealed in depth: “Until last year he never had an office, and carried all his bookkeeping records around in his pocket. The ‘office’ he now has is a little structure of about 90 square feet of space in which the only occupant is a girl to write letters and answer the telephone. He still does most of his office work on the breakfast table at home.”
That office, employee Richard Levy told The Times, was a former dentist’s practice in Beach Haven, Coney Island: “I felt like Custer... There were all these huge wooden Indians all over the place.’’
Fred Trump’s practices were seldom free of controversy. A hard-bitten and ruthless man, he would lie about his family heritage, saying his ancestors hailed from Sweden so as not to deter potential Jewish tenants and developed a reputation for turning away black applicants, frequently bringing him into conflict with indignant civil rights groups.
Amazingly, this was observed and recorded by folk troubadour Woody Guthrie, a Trump tenant, in his poem “Old Man Trump”: “I suppose/Old Man Trump knows/Just how much/Racial hate/He stirred up/In the bloodpot of human hearts/When he drawed/That colour line.”
This especially unsavoury aspect of his character was revived in 2015 when an old New York Times press clipping from June 1927 was rediscovered, recording the 21-year-old Trump’s arrest – and eventual release without charge – for attending a Ku Klux Klan rally in which 1,000 Klansmen became embroiled in a battle with police.
As a father, Fred had hoped his eldest son, Fred Jr, would follow him into the family business and was disappointed, scorning the boy and turning instead to Donald, the class prankster at school.
In The Art of the Deal, President Trump describes the lessons he absorbed from his old man: “I never threw money around. I learned from my father that every penny counts, because before too long your pennies turn into dollars.”
Perhaps more tellingly, he revealed: “I was never intimidated by my father, the way most people were. I stood up to him, and he respected that.”
Donald Trump’s relationship with Fred has often been characterised as combative and oedipal, with the son closer to his Scottish mother Mary McLeod, the inspiration behind his golf resorts in Ayrshire and Aberdeen.
Donald Trump poses in a rocking chair once used by President John F. Kennedy at his New York City residence
Reuters
Developer Donald Trump with his new bride Marla Maples after their wedding at the Plaza hotel in New York
Reuters
Donald Trump and Celina Midelfart watch the match between Conchita Martinez and Amanda Coetzer during U.S. Open. She was the date whom Donald Trump was with when he met his current wife Melania at a party in 1996
Reuters
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas serving as the grand marshal for the Daytona 500, speaks to Donald Trump and Melania Knauss on the starting grid at the Daytona International Speedwa
Reuters
Developer Donald Trump talks with his former wife Ivana Trump during the men's final at the U.S. Open
Reuters
Donald Trump and his friend Melania Knauss pose for photographers as they arrive at the New York premiere of Star Wars Episode : 'The Phantom Menace,'
Reuters
Billionaire real estate developer Donald Trump talks with host Larry King. Trump told King that he was moving toward a possible bid for the United States presidency with the formation of a presidential exploratory committee
Reuters
Donald Trump answers questions as Minnesota Governor Jesse Ventura looks on in Brooklyn Park. Trump said on Friday he 'very well might' make a run for president under the Reform Party banner but had not made a final decision
Reuters
Billionaire Donald Trump makes a face at a friend as he sits next to Panamanian President Mireya Moscoso before the start of the 2003 Miss Universe pageant in Panama City
Reuters
Entrepreneur Donald Trump is greeted by a Marilyn Monroe character look-a-alike, as he arrives at Universal Studios Hollywood to attend the an open casting call for his NBC television network reality series 'The Apprentice.'
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Donald Trump and Simon Cowell present an Emmy during the 56th annual Primetime Emmy Awards at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles
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Donald Trump and Megan Mullally perform at the 57th annual Primetime Emmy Awards at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles
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Donald Trump, poses with his children, son Donald Trump, Jr., and daughters Tiffany and Ivanka
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Billionaire Donald Trump told Miss USA 2006 Tara Conner on Tuesday she would be given a second chance after reported misbehavior
Reuters
Donald Trump holds a replica of his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame as his wife Melania holds their son Barron in Los Angeles
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U.S. property mogul Donald Trump stands next to a bagpiper during a media event on the sand dunes of the Menie estate, the site for Trump's proposed golf resort, near Aberdeen, north east Scotland
Reuters
Whereas Trump Sr was largely frugal, although he was vain about his dyed hair in old age, Donald was flashy and flamboyant, vowing to take Manhattan and enter the luxury apartment market, dreaming of building the world’s tallest tower with his name emblazoned on it before turning his eye to the Eastern Seaboard and the gaming tables of Atlantic City, New Jersey.
While Fred may not have shared his boy’s taste for ostentation, he approved of his ambition and did not hestitate to bail him out when his Taj Mahal Casino folly hit the rocks in 1991.
As Sidney Blumenthal recounts in his London Review of Books essay, “A Short History of the Trumps”:
“When the Taj was sinking like Donald’s own private Titanic, Fred Trump rushed to the casino to buy $3.35m in chips to buoy his flailing child, who used the money to avoid default by making an interest payment he wouldn’t otherwise have had the liquid reserves to meet. A straight loan would have put Fred Trump in the lengthy queue of creditors. With his loan in the form of chips he could redeem it as soon as his son had the capital. The New Jersey Casino Control Commission ruled a year later that Fred Trump had engaged in an illegal loan and that Donald should return it, which would have forced him into instant bankruptcy. The Trumps blithely ignored the finding and instead paid a meagre $65,000 fine, though the manoeuvre failed to save the casino.”
When Fred passed away in 1999, The New York Times contacted Donald for comment. His jokey response was extraordinary: “It was good for me. You know, being the son of somebody, it could have been competition to me. This way, I got Manhattan all to myself!”
And he kept it up. As Gwenda Blair wrote in her biography The Trumps: Three Generations That Built an Empire (2000): “At his own father’s funeral, he did not stop patting himself on the back and promoting himself... There was to be no sorrow; there was only success... [It was] an astonishing display of self-absorption.’’
President Trump clearly took his father’s example to heart and sought to surpass his achievements in the New York real estate game.
Whether he received any further gifts from Fred Trump is now a matter for the state’s Department of Taxation and Finance.
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jared kushner - Google Search | ||
How Chris Christie describes Jared Kushner
The Week Magazine-Jan 18, 2019
Chris Christie quite literally has enough problems with Jared Kushner to fill a book. The former New Jersey governor is set to publish Let Me ...
How Jared Kushner Tried to Stop Me From Running the Trump ...
Highly Cited-POLITICO Magazine-Jan 18, 2019
How Jared Kushner got Donald Trump to push out Chris Christie as ...
International-Salon-Jan 18, 2019 Chris Christie Takes Aim at Jared Kushner in New Memoir
Fortune-Jan 16, 2019
In an excerpt obtained by Axios from Let Me Finish, Christie specifically cites the President's son-in-law and advisor Jared Kushner.
Chris Christie accuses Jared Kushner of political 'hit job' in explosive ...
Highly Cited-The Guardian-Jan 15, 2019
Chris Christie claims Jared Kushner executed political hit-job to get ...
In-Depth-Daily Mail-Jan 15, 2019
Chris Christie's Book Delves Into Beef With Jared Kushner, Trump's ...
International-New York Magazine-Jan 15, 2019 | ||
Mark Warner says it's "big news" that Trump discussed Moscow tower as late as November 2016 - Axios | ||
Mark Warner says it's "big news" that Trump discussed Moscow tower as late as November 2016 Axios
Sen. Mark Warner (D-Virginia) said on “Meet the Press" that the idea that Trump Tower Moscow negotiations could have continued into November of 2016 was ...
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Donald Trump | The Guardian: Trump may have spoken to Cohen before false testimony to Congress – Giuliani | ||
President’s attorney, Rudy Giuliani, said it would have been ‘perfectly normal’ for Trump to discuss testimony with Cohen
Donald Trump may have talked to Michael Cohen in advance about Cohen’s false testimony to Congress on their pursuit of a property deal in Russia, the president’s attorney said on Sunday.
Continue reading...Donald Trump | The Guardian |
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