Says you! I think he is exactly the person needed and required because he doesn't play by "their" rules Pay attention slow poke Rodriguez, I'm not saying he is breaking the law, because he isn't. He is doing things differently, 100% legal just different from what DC sees as the norm. You bleeding heart bastards are what is wrong with America, time to sack up and be proud again!
Trump's allocating another 500 million to fight childhood cancers and because of it they rant and rave that he's an idiot, delusional, and a self-serving lapdog of Satan. If he were fighting Emperor Palpatine to the death they'd prey he were evaporated by a light saber. Trump Derangement Syndrome is a real phenomenon. These people could have a better quality of life in every way under Trump and would still prefer to have him exiled, in jail, or dead - depending on how severe their disease were.
this is good With stroke of Trump’s pen, the FBI has 30 days to declassify Saudi fugitive intel https://www.oregonlive.com/news/201...-days-to-declassify-saudi-fugitive-intel.html President Donald Trump on Friday signed into law a bill that forces U.S. intelligence officials to disclose what they know about the Saudi government’s suspected role in whisking its citizens out of the United States to escape criminal prosecution. It requires the director of the FBI — in coordination with the nation’s intelligence director — to declassify all information in its possession related to how Saudi Arabia may have helped accused lawbreakers leave the U.S. The agency has 30 days to do so, according to the newly enacted measure. The action in Washington comes nearly a year after an investigation by The Oregonian found multiple cases where Saudi students studying throughout the U.S. vanished while facing sex crime and other felony charges. The news organization revealed criminal cases involving at least seven Saudi nationals who disappeared from Oregon before they faced trial or completed their jail sentence on charges ranging from rape to manslaughter, including those who had surrendered their passports to authorities. The legislation, introduced by U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, was part of a $1.4 trillion spending deal passed by Congress this week to avert a government shutdown. The investigation also found similar cases in at least seven other states — Montana, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Utah, Washington and Wisconsin — and Canada, bringing the total number of known Saudi suspects who have escaped to 25. Some date back 30 years, suggesting the Saudi government had spent decades helping its citizens flee, subverting the criminal justice system and leaving untold numbers of victims without any recourse. The United States and Saudi Arabia don’t share an extradition treaty. That makes the return of any Saudi suspect who has left the U.S. unlikely, if not impossible, without diplomatic or political pressure. In April, a story showed how the FBI, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and other agencies have been aware of Saudi officials helping their country’s citizens avoid prosecution since at least 2008 yet never intervened.