Joe Biden

Trump lawyers’ apology letters contain a 'wink and a nod' to election deniers: expert

Two terse apologies from Donald Trump lawyers who pleaded guilty to Georgia election interference charges served as a sly wink to conspiracy theorists who refuse to believe Joe Biden won the 2020 election, experts say.

Democratic strategist Fred Hicks told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution Friday he was stunned by the cold, one-line apologies submitted to the Fulton County court by Sidney Powell and Kenneth Chesebro.

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Trump lawyer Jenna Ellis hit by new legal challenge: 'Should be disbarred'

Jenna Ellis, the Donald Trump attorney who tearfully pleaded guilty to 2020 election interference crimes, will face disbarment in her home state if two watchdog groups have their way.

The groups — States United Democracy Center and Lawyers Defending American Democracy — lodged a complaint against Ellis with Colorado's Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel via a joint letter sent Friday.

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Florida lawmaker declares 16-year-olds are ‘not children’ but ‘youth workers’

In late August, Hurricane Idalia, the strongest tropical storm to hit northern Florida since 1896, killed four people and caused up to $20 billion in damage.

Thanks to Governor Ron DeSantis’ anti-immigrant law that has been called “draconian,” clean-up and rebuilding has been hard. Migrant workers have been fleeing north, to Georgia and other states, terrified of being arrested.

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'Flubbed the basics': House GOPer ridiculed as lacking grasp of U.S. legal system

Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives unanimously voted Wednesday to move forward with an impeachment inquiry against President Joe Biden. House Democrats, meanwhile, voted unanimously against an inquiry, many of them slamming it as devoid of merit and emphasizing that Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-KY) and his colleagues haven't offered any proof that Biden did anything wrong.

One of the Republicans who argued in favor of the inquiry was Rep. Ralph Norman of South Carolina. In an opinion column MSNBC's Steve Benen stresses that Norman's comments were quite revealing about House Republicans — and not in a good way.

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Gobsmacked analyst rips Trump Saudi deal as Biden accused of taking cash from 'bad people'

Donald Trump on Friday celebrated a golf course business deal with ties to a Saudi prince who U.S. intelligence officials believe ordered the execution of a Washington Post columnist, according to his social media posts and a new report.

The former president announced Trump National Doral would partner with LIV Golf — funded by the Prince Mohammed bin Salman-led Public Investment Fund — to host a tournament the same year he hopes to reclaim the White House.

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'Trump isn't going to win': Analyst makes case that major 'MAGA defeat' is a certainty

Buried deep in an analysis of all of the reasons why Donald Trump will go down to defeat against President Joe Biden in the 2024 presidential election, a columnist suggested that history is not on his side and that the MAGA movement is winding down.

Writing for the Atlantic, Hussein Ibish of the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington explained that there are multiple roadblocks that will deny Trump a second presidency, including his extensive list of criminal trials that are casting a cloud over his campaign, his disparaging comments about the military that are resurfacing, and the fact that he is not the man he was in 2016 when he won his surprising victory over former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

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No 'concrete evidence': The Fox News hosts speaking out against impeachment

House Republicans voted this week to formalize an impeachment inquiry against President Joe Biden. The vote came down along party lines — Republicans unanimously voted "yea," while all of the Democrats who voted said "nay."

Fox News and Fox Business have been bastions of anti-Biden propaganda, often hyping House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer's (R-KY) Joe Biden/Hunter Biden probe.

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Watch: GOP senator warns House Biden charges may not be 'impeachable'

Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-OK) urged his allies in the House of Representatives to proceed cautiously with their impeachment inquiry and only send over articles if they have an air-tight case.

In an interview on Newsmax, Mullin expressed some skepticism that the current allegations being leveled against President Joe Biden by House Republicans would even qualify as impeachable offenses given that they did not occur during his presidency.

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Alarms raised over missing classified Russian intel file last seen with Trump: report

According to a report from CNN, U.S. intelligence officials are searching for a missing file containing highly sensitive information about Russia as well as information about Russian interference in the 2016 election.

As the report notes, the fact that the file, also containing intel compiled by NATO allies can't be found and was last seen in the possession of former president Donald Trump. That has both senior U.S. intel officials and European allies concerned.

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GOP 'plans are falling apart' on Biden investigation: PR experts

If Republican House members are expecting the dual investigations into President Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden to impact the 2024 election, they may have missed the boat according to public relations experts.

With some Republicans admitting they hope the investigation into Hunter Biden's finances and the impeachment inquiry poised to be conducted against President Biden are both meant to help Donald Trump win re-election in 2024, the court of public opinion may see it differently.

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Impeachment inquiry falling flat with target audience: right-wing media

House Republicans must have been counting on their impeachment inquiry against President Joe Biden becoming fodder for right-wing media, but so far conservative outlets have been skeptical of their allegations.

Fox News frequently resembles an extension of the Republican Party, but its hosts, anchors and reporters have poked holes in the evidence presented by GOP lawmakers, and their even further right-wing competitors have barely touched the impeachment proceedings, reported The Guardian.

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James Comer 'melted like a little snowflake' when cornered by Hunter Biden: Morning Joe

Reflecting on the press conference Hunter Biden gave outside of the U.S. Capitol this week, where he made it clear he has no problem being deposed by Republicans as long as it is done in public for all the country to see, "Morning Joe" host Joe Scarborough claimed the president's son is winning the public relations war with his GOP adversaries.

Speaking to reporters, Hunter Biden stated, "For six years, I have been the target of the unrelenting Trump attack machine shouting 'Where's Hunter?' Well, here is my answer: I am here. Here I am, Mr. Chairman, taking you up on your offer when you said, 'We can bring these people in for depositions or committee hearings, whichever they choose.'"

According to MSNBC's Scarborough, Republicans are afraid to confront Hunter Biden in public and House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer (R-KY) in particular is over his head.

Punchbowl News founder John Bresnahan then chimed in to say that Democrats "need to push back against this and say there is no real evidence that Joe Biden did anything wrong. I think the White House has done, you know — you could say what you want about Hunter Biden, I mean, that scene the other day was extraordinary, I haven't seen anything like it in my time, but, you know, they need to push back on this harder. So I do think it's interesting that these swing district Republicans found that there's no real downside for them voting for an inquiry."

"Well, you know, two things: I'm so glad you brought up Hunter's press conference the other day," Scarborough replied. "This is not a guy — I don't think this is a guy that they want to take on publicly, which is why, you know, even after he made the recommendation that they would do it privately or publicly — Comer made that recommendation you know — he melted like a little snowflake when Hunter actually took him up on it and said, 'Okay, I will come testify publicly."'

Watch the video below or at this link.

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Technologies like artificial intelligence are changing our understanding of war

Artificial intelligence (AI) is widely regarded as a disruptive technology because it has the potential to fundamentally alter social relationships. AI has affected how people understand the world, the jobs available in the workforce and judgments of who merits employment or threatens society.

Nowhere is this more apparent than in warfare, which is defined by social and technological processes. Technologies such as autonomous weapon systems (AWS) and cyberweapons have the potential to change conflicts and combat forever.

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