Sunday, June 3, 2018

USA news on Youtube Jun 4 2018

Today The Search Engine Google is Celebrating Tom Longboat's 131st Birthday.

When Longboat was a child, a Mohawk resident of the reserve, Bill Davis, who in 1901 finished

second in the Boston Marathon, interested him in running races.

He began racing in 1905, finishing second in the Victoria Day race at Caledonia, Ontario.

His first important victory was in the Around the Bay Road Race in Hamilton, Ontario in

1906, which he won by three minutes.

In 1907 he won the Boston Marathon in a record time of 2:24:24 over the old 24-1/2 mile course,

four minutes and 59 seconds faster than any of the previous ten winners of the event.

He collapsed, however, in the 1908 Olympic marathon, along with several other leading

runners, and a rematch was organized the same year at Madison Square Garden in New York

City.

Longboat won this race, turned professional, and in 1909 at the same venue won the title

of Professional Champion of the World by defeating Dorando Pietri and Alfred Shrubb in front

of sell-out crowds Thomas Charles Longboat was born on June 4th,

1887, whose Iroquois name was Cogwagee, which means "Everything", was an Onondaga distance

runner from the Six Nations Indian reserve near Brantford, Ontario, and for much of his

career the dominant long distance runner of the time.

For more infomation >> Tom Longboat Google Doodle in U.S.A and Canada - Duration: 1:34.

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Nunes is DONE Playing Nice with the DOJ and Just Issued This Brutal Ultimatum - Duration: 13:09.

Nunes is DONE Playing Nice with the DOJ and Just Issued This Brutal Ultimatum

Devin Nunes is fed up with the DOJ and their slow-walking of subpoenaed documents.

Nunes is now laying the smackdown and will refuse to go to any meetings with the DOJ

where they don't release documents.

From Washington Examiner

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes, R-Calif., on Sunday said he ignored

an invitation by the Justice Department to continue talks Friday with government officials

about documents he seeks related to the Russia investigation because he was sure someone

at the agency was leaking.

"We're not going to go to another meeting where we don't get documents, and then the

meeting leaks out," Nunes said during an interview on Fox News' "Sunday Morning

Futures" with Maria Bartiromo.

In recent weeks, Nunes subpoenaed the Justice Department for documents concerning an American

who was a confidential intelligence source for Robert Mueller's Russia investigation.

The subpoena came after the agency did not reply to a letter asking for details on Mueller's

probe.

But the DOJ, backed by the White House, did not provide the documents, informing Nunes

earlier this month that providing the information would threaten the life of the source and

jeopardize national security.

Instead he got a briefing with government officials, along with Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C.,

the chairman of the House Oversight Committee.

Though Nunes and Gowdy said they had a "productive" meeting and looked forward to future discussions,

Nunes did not respond to an invitation from the DOJ to answer questions he posed last

week in a follow-up meeting Friday.

Nunes explained Sunday that he and Gowdy did not accept the invite because they found out

they would not be receiving the documents they wanted.

A Justice Department spokesperson told the Washington Examiner, "The FBI was prepared

to answer his questions last week, but they can't do that if he won't talk to us."

During the Fox News interview, Nunes also said that had they gone, leaks about an supposed

FBI informant who had contacts with President Trump's campaign would be pinned on them.

Two reports published Friday evening, one by the New York Times and the other by the

Washington Post, describe the informant in question as an American academic who teaches

in the United Kingdom and met with up to three members of the Trump campaign to look into

their ties to Russia.

These include campaign advisers Carter Page, who was surveilled by the government via Foreign

Intelligence Surveillance Act warrants, and George Papadopoulos, who pleaded guilty last

year to lying to the FBI and agreed to cooperate with special counsel Mueller's investigation.

The FBI reportedly launched its investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election

after it got word that Papadopoulos learned that the Russians obtained thousands of former

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's emails months before WikiLeaks published them.

Both the Times and the Post said they identified the informant, but declined to identify the

person heeding concerns of national security officials that the individual's life and

the lives his his or her sources would be placed in danger.

However, subsequent reporting indicated the informant was a Cambridge University professor.

Trump and his allies have accused this informant of possibly having political motives to hurt

his campaign.

For more infomation >> Nunes is DONE Playing Nice with the DOJ and Just Issued This Brutal Ultimatum - Duration: 13:09.

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Rudy Just Sent A Terrifying Warning To Maxine That Will Shut Her Mouth For Good - Duration: 11:52.

Rudy Just Sent A Terrifying Warning To Maxine That Will Shut Her Mouth For Good

Rudy Giuliani was in a blockbuster interview on The Hannity Show and was he on FIRE!

And woe!

In a heated castigation he calls out Maxine Waters in a effortless way!

The former Mayor of New York, calls out Maxine Waters and triple dog dares her to make her

tired old battle cry of "impeachment"!

Transcription below:

"Some people have criticized my strategy.

Such as, the President.

To some extent for playing to the American people.

If this were a regular case, I wouldn't be doing it.

But the people who decide this are the people of the United States in the 2018 election,"

Rudy begins.

"And boy, they are switching fast.

And the Democrats are running for cover.

You don't hear them say the words IMPEACHMENT anymore."

Then in a clear voice, Rudy says: "I challenge Maxine Waters… to say IMPEACHMENT.

Say it.

Say impeachment, sweetheart!

Just say it!"

Furthermore, Rudy says to her, "And you know what's going to happen?

You're going to go down.

Not maybe you, because they vote for you.

I don't know why.

But they vote for you.

But your colleagues are going to go down."

Giuliani says, "And this is the change that we've brought about by engaging and not

letting them get away with the unethical behavior."

Then Rudy tells who the Judges are in New York court system who are not happy with the

democrat narrative right now.

He states, "That has now outraged Judge Ellis.

Judge Wood.

You know what she did?

She threw out Avennati (Stormy Daniel's lawyer), the television star of the left-wing

CNN, and MSNBC.

She threw him out of Court.

He doesn't belong in a New York court!

He's not ethical enough," Giuliani tells it ALL!

Rudy continues, "You know why?

Because he's a BIG LIAR.

And he wanted to debate me.

The hell he's not going to debate me.

He needs to go debate some agenda," and Giuliani wraps it up.

In ending, Sean Hannity gives a summation, he says, "You said here tonight.

That if Mr. Mueller tries to subpoena the President that you will fight this all the

way to the Supreme Court."

Then Sean adds, "Mark Levin has said that the Constitution is on the President's side.

Judge Ellis' comments, this going back to a 2005 tax case with the Ukraine and Paul

Manafort, to put the screws to the President so that Manafort sings or composes some supporting

perjury.

And in hopes that they can prosecute or impeach

the President."

For more infomation >> Rudy Just Sent A Terrifying Warning To Maxine That Will Shut Her Mouth For Good - Duration: 11:52.

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Tom Longboat Google Doodle - Duration: 2:26.

Today the Search Engine Google is celebrating Tom Longboat's 131st Birthday with animated

doodle in USA and Canada.

Thomas Charles Longboat, whose native name was Cogwagee, which means "Everything", was

an Onondaga distance runner from the Six Nations Indian reserve near Brantford, Ontario, and

for much of his career the dominant long distance runner of the time.

He was known as the bulldog of Britannia and was a fighter for the air force at the time.

Today we celebrate the 131st birthday of Tom Longboat, a Canadian long-distance runner

celebrated as one of the greatest marathoners of all time.

Longboat was a member of the Onondaga Nation, born in 1887 on Six Nations Reserve, south

of Brantford, Ontario.

He first began racing in his early teenage years, inspired by Bill Davis, another First

Nations runner who finished second in the Boston Marathon in 1901.

When Longboat was a child, a Mohawk resident of the reserve, Bill Davis, who in 1901 finished

second in the Boston Marathon, interested him in running races.

He began racing in 1905, finishing second in the Victoria Day race at Caledonia, Ontario.

His first important victory was in Around the Bay Road Race in Hamilton, Ontario in

1906, which he won by three minutes.

In 1907 he won the Boston Marathon in a record time of 2:24:24 over the old 24-1/2 mile course,

four minutes and 59 seconds faster than any of the previous ten winners of the event.

He collapsed, however, in the 1908 Olympic marathon, along with several other leading

runners, and a rematch was organized the same year at Madison Square Garden in New York

City.

Tom Longboat's legacy lives on as one of Canada's greatest athletes.

Not only is today his birthday, it is officially "Tom Longboat Day" in Ontario!

Below is another version of today's Doodle - watch as Tom transitions seamlessly between

marathon runner and military man, just as he did during World War I!

Happy, Tom Longboat 131st Birthday

Thanks for Watching

Please Like , Share , Subscribe and Comment below

For more infomation >> Tom Longboat Google Doodle - Duration: 2:26.

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Mueller Investigation Costing US Taxpayers $17 Million…And Counting - Duration: 10:47.

Mueller Investigation Costing US Taxpayers $17 Million…And Counting

Special Counsel Robert Mueller's ongoing investigation into alleged collusion between

the Trump campaign and Russia has cost American taxpayers $17 million to date and is increasing

fast.

According to a Department of Justice report released on Thursday, the probe, which has

returned no evidence of collusion, spent approximately $10 million between October 2017 and March

this year, according to a Department of Justice report released Thursday.

Between May 2017 and September 2017, the department had spent $6.7 million.

Donald Trump has repeatedly said there was "no collusion."

RT reports: Of the latest $10 million reported, Mueller's office spent $2.7 million on salaries

and benefits, just over $500,000 on travel expenses, and just under $30,000 on office

supplies.

President Donald Trump tweeted the news Friday morning, along with his often repeated assertion

that there was "No Collusion, except by the Democrats."

After an earlier FBI investigation, Mueller was appointed in May to lead an investigation

into "any links and/or coordination between Russian government and individuals associated

with the campaign of President Donald Trump, and any matters that arose or may arise directly

from the investigation."

While the investigation has thus far found no links or coordination, 19 individuals have

been indicted by Mueller.

These include thirteen alleged Russian internet 'trolls', as well as members of Trump's

campaign team.

Trump's former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, was indicted on unrelated charges of tax and

bank fraud dating back to 2005 and 2007, and charges of failing to properly register his

lobbying work for the Ukrainian government between 2006 and 2015.

A federal judge in Virginia questioned these charges last month, and claimed that they

were beyond Mueller's remit.

Instead, the judge argued, the charges were aimed at pressing Manafort to provide incriminating

information against Trump.

"You don't really care about Mr. Manafort's bank fraud," Judge T.S. Ellis said to one

of Mueller's prosecutors.

"What you really care about is what information Mr. Manafort could give you that would reflect

on Mr. Trump or lead to his prosecution or impeachment…The vernacular is to 'sing'."

Mueller's office has so far spent $879,000 of taxpayer money per individual indicted,

enough to prosecute 40 homicide cases.

Based on data from Rand Corporation, for the price of the entire investigation so far,

the US Department of Justice could have convicted as many as 770 murderers.

Last December, Mueller discovered that Trump's then-National Security Adviser, Michael Flynn,

lied about a conversation he had with Russia's ambassador to the US, Sergey Kislyak.

While newspapers ran titillating headlines like "Michael Flynn Pleads Guilty to Lying

to the FBI and Will Cooperate With Russia Inquiry," the circumstances surrounding

the guilty plea revealed that Mueller was actually grasping at straws: Flynn had indeed

met with Kislyak – to request that Moscow refrain from retaliating against sanctions

imposed by the outgoing Obama administration in December 2016.

With the collusion narrative falling apart, Mueller's focus shifted to building an obstruction

case against the President, based on his firing of FBI Director James Comey last year.

Comey claims that Trump asked him to end an investigation into Flynn, while Trump insists

that Comey was fired for botching an FBI investigation into Hillary Clinton's use of a private

email server.

Rudolph Giuliani, Trump's personal attorney, said recently that he expects Mueller's

probe to wrap up by the beginning of September.

Having a president under investigation, he said, would unfairly influence the upcoming

midterm elections.

"You don't want another repeat of the 2016 election where you get contrary reports

at the end and you don't know how it affected the election," Giuliani told the New York

Times, citing Comey's decision to reopen the Hillary Clinton email investigation days

before the polls opened in the US presidential election.

Trump has repeatedly slammed the investigation for its political bias, and accused Mueller

of dragging it out to hurt Republican

chances

in

the midterms.

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