Monday, August 6, 2018

USA news on Youtube Aug 7 2018

Rudy Giuliani Puts Peter Strzork In His Place Once And For All

President Trump's lawyer Rudy Giuliani is not in that position to keep quiet.

The former New York City mayor insisted early Friday that the congressional questioning

of FBI agent Peter Strzok revealed the investigation into the president is irreparably biased.

Rudy Giuliani called for special counsel Robert Mueller's whole probe of the Trump campaign,

along with the potential collusion with Russia, to be ended immediately.

This is primarily due to the fact that Strzok once wrote text messages critical of the president.

The mayor tweeted at 12:44am, "Peter Strzok's testimony was a disgrace."

"It taints the entire Mueller witchunt.

President Trump is being investigated by people who possess pathological hatred for him.

All the results of the investigation are `fruit of the poison tree' and should be dismissed."

Strzok's testimony came during a marathon session of the House Judiciary Committee on

Thursday.

Republicans accused Strzok of extreme bias.

The White House and Trump, who is away this week on a diplomatic tour in Europe, did not

immediately comment on the Judiciary Committee controversy.

What do you think about the job the Giuliani is doing for the president?

Do you think he is right about Peter Strzok's testimony?

Should Robert Mueller shut down the investigation immediately?

Let us know what you think in the comment section below, we look forward to seeing your

perspective.

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For more infomation >> Rudy Giuliani Puts Peter Strzork In His Place Once And For All - Duration: 11:45.

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Candace Owens Sends Hillary Clinton Scurrying Back Under Rock She Crawled From To Attack Trump - Duration: 12:32.

Candace Owens Sends Hillary Clinton Scurrying Back Under Rock She Crawled From To Attack

Trump

Hillary Clinton was the worst candidate in American political history.

No one doubts that anymore.

She had no message and had minimal energy.

She had as much charisma as a paper bag and routinely drew small and feeble crowds.

But people forget in their quest to impeach Trump with Russia that that election was about

one thing.

Establishment versus anti-establishment.

Was there a candidate in recent years more establishment than Hillary?

If you take that and couple it with what her husband did to the African American community

you have a recipe for disaster that did not include Putin.

From Conservative101:

Pesident Trump attacked Lebron James and Don Lemon in a recent tweet.

"Lebron James was just interviewed by the dumbest man on television, Don Lemon.

He made Lebron look smart, which isn't easy to do.

I like Mike!" tweeted Trump.

President Trump is known to insult anyone who insults him first, regardless or sex or

race.

However, whenever Trump insults a black person, the media jumps at the opportunity to call

him a racist.

Hillary Clinton tried this and it didn't go so well.

"@KingJames is a great family man, incredible ballplayer, gives back to his community, and

isn't afraid to speak his mind.

He's a world class athlete and a class act.

We need more like him in this world," tweeted Hillary Clinton.

African American conservative commentator Candace Owens slammed Hillary back in a perfect

way.

"This is rich.

Your husband locked up more black men than any President in the history of the United

States.

You view Margaret Sanger (who wanted to exterminate the black race) as your idol and Robert Byrd

(former Klansmen) as your mentor and dear friend.

Shut up, racist," tweeted Owens.

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For more infomation >> Candace Owens Sends Hillary Clinton Scurrying Back Under Rock She Crawled From To Attack Trump - Duration: 12:32.

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New Lawsuit Against Trump Is Horrible Timing For The Administration - Duration: 10:11.

New Lawsuit Against Trump Is Horrible Timing For The Administration

The latest setback for President Trump is another lawsuit.

This one is coming from his former chauffeur who is suing the Trump Organization.

He is saying he got stiffed on overtime pay, had his health care benefits slashed and was

denied a raise for more than a decade.

"In an utterly callous display of unwarranted privilege and entitlement and without even

a minimal sense of noblesse oblige President Donald Trump has … exploited and denied

significant wages to his own longstanding personal driver," Noel Cintron says in a

new Manhattan Supreme Court lawsuit.

Cintron is a 59-year-old Queens resident and was Trump's personal driver for more than

20 years until the Secret Service took over the role.

"During this time he was forced to work thousands of hours of overtime without compensation,"

the suit says.

The ex-chauffeur did not get a raise in over 12 years and his health insurance, worth nearly

$18,000 a year, was taken away according to court documents.

In 2010, Cintron received a $7,000 increase and his salary was raised to $75,000.

But that was the same year Trump took away his health care, the suit says.

Cintron worked an average of 50 to 55 hours a week, starting at 7 a.m. "to whenever

Donald Trump, his family or business associates no longer required plaintiff's services,"

the suit says.

He technically still works for Trump as a member of his security staff.

The lawsuit seeks $178,200 in overtime pay plus $5,000 in penalties under the state's

Labor Law.

"It's a disgrace that Trump's longtime faithful employee is being exploited and denied

his fair wages, however this type of conduct is shameful for someone who claims to represent

the working people of our great nation," said Cintron's attorney, Larry Hutcher.

A spokeswoman for the Trump Organization said, "Mr. Cintron was at all times paid generously

and in accordance with the law.

Once the facts come out we expect to be fully vindicated in court."

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For more infomation >> New Lawsuit Against Trump Is Horrible Timing For The Administration - Duration: 10:11.

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How prepared is the U.S. to fend off cyber warfare? Better at offense than defense, author says - Duration: 7:28.

NICK SCHIFRIN: Last week, David Sanger of The New York Times reported that Russian intelligence

hackers are now more focused on disrupting the U.S. electrical grid than on sowing chaos

in the U.S. electoral system.

Sanger has been reporting on the threats and realities of cyber-warfare, who wages it and

how prepared the U.S. is to stop it in a new book.

Judy Woodruff recently sat down with Sanger to discuss it.

JUDY WOODRUFF: David Sanger, welcome.

The book is "The Perfect Weapon: War, Sabotage, and Fear in the Cyber Age."

You know, I don't normally say this in an interview.

Fear is in the title.

But this is a frightening book.

Did you mean for it to be?

DAVID SANGER, Author, "The Perfect Weapon: War, Sabotage, and Fear in the Cyber Age":

I meant it more to be an explanatory book, but it's an explanatory book about a frightening

time.

And the frightening part of this is that cyber-weapons have moved, almost without us recognizing

it, to be the primary way, Judy, that countries are beginning to undercut each other, do short-of-war

operations against each other, operations that they don't think will start a military

response.

You know, we spent years worrying about the giant cyber-Pearl Harbor that was going to

cut off all the lights from Boston to Washington or San Francisco to L.A. And, in fact, that

kind of blinded us to the much more subtle uses of cyber, in which all of us are the

collateral damage to this war among states that's going on far above our heads.

JUDY WOODRUFF: You have some -- just so many fascinating stories in here.

You had, I think, incredible access to some of the -- some of the key players.

One of the points you make, David Sanger, or is that the U.S. has not only stressed

secrecy above all, but it's been much more comfortable talking about what other countries

are doing to the U.S. than it's ever been willing to talk about what the U.S. is doing

to others.

DAVID SANGER: Yes, we have hit this moment, Judy, where I think, in the reporting, I became

convinced that the secrecy surrounding cyber, which arises from the fact that it was one

of the first weapons developed by the intelligence agencies -- and they're naturally secretive

-- is actually beginning to become a security problem for us, because it's getting in the

way of us establishing rules and deterrents.

So, let me give you an example.

We have felt free to go attack nuclear facilities in Iran, or, as this book reveals, North Korea's

missile program.

And yet, because we won't talk about our own capabilities and operations, we can't get

the government involved in a serious conversation about what's off-limits.

JUDY WOODRUFF: And why haven't U.S. officials been more willing to talk about that?

DAVID SANGER: They have confused keeping secrecy around how we build these weapons and what

we do from -- from secrecy about how we want to go use them.

And, even in the nuclear age, we kept everything about how we built nuclear weapons, where

we stored them secret, and we had a big public debate about how we wanted to go use them.

And it ended up in a completely different place.

JUDY WOODRUFF: You write at one point that the U.S. is still ahead, but you said that

China and Russia are very close to catching up, and maybe even North Korea and Iran.

How well-equipped right now is the U.S. to fend off a major cyber-attack?

DAVID SANGER: We're much better at our offense than we are at our defense.

And that's partly because most of the targets in the United States are in private hands,

utilities, financial firms, but also because, even while our cyber-defenses have improved

-- and they have improved dramatically in the past five years -- the number of targets

has expanded so dramatically, that we can't keep up.

So you now have an Internet-connected refrigerator or the cameras outside your house, if you

have got them, are Internet-connected, your autonomous car.

There are so many new ways in that, no matter how much better we get a defense, it seems

like there are more targets.

JUDY WOODRUFF: The -- of course, one of the things that arises out of this, and because

the timing of the book, is what happened in 2016, the Russian -- reported Russian attempt

to interfere in the U.S. election.

What did you find out about that?

Did you come away convinced that that happened?

DAVID SANGER: I not only came away convinced that it happened, but I came away convinced

that we missed huge numbers of signals running up to it.

There are four chapters in the book on Russia.

But the first one starts in Ukraine.

And it's called "Putin's Petri Dish," because, basically, every single thing the Russians

did us, they tried out in Ukraine first.

And we didn't have the imagination to think that they would take that and try it here.

The second thing was, the FBI was way too slow on the investigation into what happened

at the DNC.

It took nine months before they really got everybody to wake up to it.

And, even then, the British had to step in and warn us that Russian military intelligence

was inside the DNC.

And then the White House got involved in a lengthy internal debate about whether to call

out President Putin.

Once again, they made the decision that they had made when the Russians went into the White

House, the State Department, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, not to publicly penalize

the Russians, at least before the election.

JUDY WOODRUFF: And, of course, the whole argument about whether President Obama moved quickly

enough or not.

DAVID SANGER: And aggressively enough.

JUDY WOODRUFF: And aggressively enough.

Last thing, David Sanger.

You ask an important question at the end about how the U.S. is really almost seen as a hypocrite,

because we argue against -- we argue against other countries interfering in what we do,

and yet it's something that the U.S. is guilty of doing.

Has the -- and then you go on to say, it's up to us, up to the United States, to come

up with ways to control this monster that we have created, that the U.S. has created.

Do you think that's going to happen?

DAVID SANGER: If so, it's going to happen very gradually, and it's going to require

a change of view in the United States and a change of view among our adversaries.

One of the ideas that's kicked around -- you hear the president of Microsoft, Brad Smith,

talk about it, you hear executives at Siemens and other places talk about it -- is having

some kind of a digital Geneva Convention, some rules about what you wouldn't do to civilians.

Now, would they get violated all the time?

Sure.

But, then again, the Syrians violate the Geneva Conventions every time they gas civilians.

But at least we would begin to have some norms of behavior.

And the few efforts so far to start that at the U.N. have really died off.

JUDY WOODRUFF: Which is a bleak prospect for the future.

DAVID SANGER: It is.

You don't want to wait until you have such a big, paralyzing set of events or a series

of smaller, but incredibly damaging cyber-attacks, for us to think about those in retrospect.

JUDY WOODRUFF: David Sanger, I started out saying the book is frightening.

It is.

But it's also fascinating and so important to read at this particular time.

It's "The Perfect Weapon: War, Sabotage, and Fear in the Cyber Age."

Thank you.

DAVID SANGER: Thank you, Judy.

For more infomation >> How prepared is the U.S. to fend off cyber warfare? Better at offense than defense, author says - Duration: 7:28.

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WWE 'Monday Night RAW' Match Results August 6th | Heavy.com - Duration: 7:03.

WWE 'Monday Night RAW' Match Results August 6th | Heavy.com

The latest episode of Monday Night RAW is currently airing on the USA Network.

Here's what's happened so far:.

8:35 – Reigns wins.

He pins a weary Corbin for the victory.

8:30 – Reigns' anger is evident from the start, and he gets a few good hits on Corbin before the latter is able to recover.

Once he does, however, the match gets much closer.

He lays out Reigns with a clothespin and just misses a pin.

He then takes Reigns down with a Deep Six, but Reigns again manages to kick out.

but he manages to kick out.

Reigns finally regains the momentum with a brutal Superman punch and Corbin decides to leave the ring rather than face his opponent's wrath.

Finn Balor comes out and blocks his path, however, forcing Corbin back to the ring so he can get speared by Reigns.

Roman Reigns vs. Baron Corbin.

8:10 – Reigns calls out Corbin for not protecting Angle against Lesnar.

Angle says he hopes Reigns beats Lesnar at SummerSlam.

Reigns and Corbin prepare for their match.

8:07 – Angle and Baron Corbin come to the ring to open the show.

Kurt starts talking about Ronda Rousey, saying that she's a true professional over someone like Lesnar.

Corbin warns him to watch his mouth, but Angle says that Lesnar is ruining the universal title.

Before Angle can continue, Roman Reigns comes out to the ring.

8:03 – The episode opens with a recap of last week, including Lesnar's attack on Paul Heyman and RAW general manager Kurt Angle.

Preview.

The biggest story heading into tonight's episode is Ronda Rousey.

The self-proclaimed "baddest woman on the planet" is back from her suspension and fuming after seeing Alexa Bliss take a cheap shot at her alley Natalya and cost her a victory.

Instead of waiting until SummerSlam to attack Bliss or Alicia Fox, however, Rousey wants to take a crack at them tonight.

She will face Fox in a one-on-one match, making it the first time in her career that she's competing on RAW.

We'll also see Mojo Rawley taking on Bobby Roode tonight.

Rawley has been on a tear as of late, demolishing opponents like Tyler Breeze and No Way Jose, but Roode made it clear last week that he's not afraid of him.

After Rawley was caught bragging about his accomplishments in the locker room, an irate Roode attacked him.

RAW general manager Kurt Angle broke things up, but he also decided to schedule a match so that they can sort their differences out in the ring.

Will Rawley continue his reign or will Roode put a violent end to his winning streak?.

Then, of course, there's the aftermath of what happened with Brock Lesnar on last week's episode.

After dismissing Paul Heyman's attempts to bring him out to the ring, Lesnar showed up, assaulted Kurt Angle, and grabbed Heyman by the face until he was incapacitated.

Roman Reigns wasn't on WWE ground when the incident happened, as he was forced to leave by RAW commissioner Stephanie McMahon.

You can expect Reigns to have plenty to say about Lesnar's actions, along with the standard trash-talk that comes with prospective SummerSlam opponents.

The real mystery will be whether Lesnar shows up to answer for what he did, or whether he'll recede once more to let Reigns fume.

In other news, Seth Rollins is still dealing with the fallout of last week's episode. After Intercontinental Champion Dolph Ziggler kept Rollins from pinning Drew McIntyre (and causing a disqualification in the process), the duo attacked Rollins backstage and left him reeling for some payback.

Its likely we'll see some form of Rollins' payback tonight, or at least the foundation for whatever plan he has being laid.

Per usual, Kevin Owens will continue to have trouble with Braun Strowman, The B-Team will continue to rile themselves up and prepare for their match against The Revival, whom they face tonight, and newly affirmed best friends Sasha Banks and Bayley will team up again against the Riott Squad.

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