The former FBI Director fired for looking into Russian interference in our election finally speaks — and passes the investigative baton to his old friend Robert Mueller.
In the most manifestly heartfelt moment of his testimony, James Comey spoke as a true and passionate patriot about the Russian effort to influence the outcome of the 2016 presidential election.
“Nobody tells us what to think, what to fight about… except for other Americans, but we had a foreign government…try to shape the way we think, we vote, we act…which is a big deal,” he told the Senate Intelligence Committee on Thursday.
He went on, “It’s not about Democrats and Republicans. They are coming after America, which I hope we all love equally.”
The question left for the country is why all those who profess to love America do not share Comey’s outrage.
That includes Trump supporters, even though the Russian effort benefitted their candidate.
That also includes President Trump himself, even though he was the intended beneficiary of that effort.
In pressing Comey to drop the investigation into a “good guy” like Mike Flynn, Trump may simply not have understood the rules are different from when he was wheeling and dealing in New York real estate.
But any true American should be roused to fury by the thought that a foreign power would seek to subvert the democracy that makes us who we are.
How can Trump talk about making America great again and try to dismiss such subversion as just Fake News concocted by a bunch of sore losers?
As Comey and virtually everybody else in the know asserts, the Russian effort was the realest of news.
“There should be no fuzz on this whatsoever,” Comey declared.
“The Russians interfered in our election during 2016 cycle. They did it with purpose. They did it with sophistication. They did it with overwhelming technical efforts. It was an active measures campaign driven from the top of that government. There is no fuzz on that. Community and members of this committee have seen the intelligence. It’s not a close call. That happened.”http://www.thedailybeast.com/the-return-of-james-comey-patriot
Each day we report and opine on crime and corruption on the Island Nation of Jamaica . Despite the blatant acts of murder and other violent crimes each day, the attitude of Jamaican authorities seem to be to blame the police.
They continue to sell Jamaica as a place of sun, fun, music , great food and people. “Don’t worry be happy everything alright”.
In fairness to them, brand Jamaica has tremendous pull , people across the globe like the name Jamaica, for the reasons outlined above, but not just, they also like our country for the fabled Ganja weed as well.
Nonetheless tourists come in droves ‚they disembark from cruise ships, and aeroplanes , they converge on the all inclusive properties, many do not get to see the true Jamaica outside the all inclusive properties.
None are oblivious of the dark underbelly which they are warned about before leaving their home countries. Unfortunately for many Jamaicans who do not have police details, ostentatious mansions with grilled fortifications and electronic gates, the reality is grim.
At a time when murders are running wild,over 4 homicides daily , rapes at astronomical highs, extortion continue unabated , sucking the lifeblood of businesses and industries , children being sold into servitude and general lawlessness runs unchecked, the attitude of the Government is to further shackle law enforcement.
In this medium we have noticed a pattern on the part of the Andrew Holness led Government .That pattern is to do the bare minimum while giving the impression that maximum efforts are in place to deal decidedly with criminals.
This is evidenced in the wishy washy legislation it has proposed which would supposedly give law enforcement powers the security forces should have had as a matter of course to search and cordon certain communities in search of weapons and wanted offenders. These powers on the face of it, would seem to be proactive, however once the thin veneer of deception is peeled back, it reveals the malicious intent of the bill.
The powers seemed more about the individual civil rights of dangerous gunmen than of removing those gunmen from the streets. Cordons and searches are good for recovering weapons and arresting wanted criminals , they are not intelligence-based techniques which has sustainable value to law enforcement. Targeted intelligence based policing is the only way to effectively remove these dangerous killers from the country.
Despite the ever increasing seriousness of the crimes and the potential for Terrorism, Jamaican authorities seem to be looking to make it easier for dangerous criminals to operate outside police control. This, when it should be fully engaged in finding ways to empower law enforcement to protect the population.
John Myers
The allegations that a Parish Councillor of the governing Jamaica Labor Party (JLP) has suggested that the administration use criminal extortionist to collect outstanding fees owed to the Kingston and St Andrew Municipal Corporation (KSAMC) is shocking.
According to published reports Councillor for the Lawrence Tavern Division in St Andrew West Rural John Myers, suggested using the “collection skills” of extortionists to make markets profitable after it was disclosed that an estimated $17 million in market fees is owed to the KSAMC and that the monthly market deficit is $5.5 million.
Myers contends that his statements were taken out of context. “I said that if you are losing so much money, billions of dollars, and you know the extortion people them or you know the person them you could deal with them or maybe talk to them. Hear what they have to say.” Said Myers ! “I don’t know if it is a crime to say something like that. I couldn’t come out and tell them to lock them up. I couldn’t do that; I don’t know them as extortionists. It’s the officers [of the corporation] who explain that it was extortion,” he continued. In fact, Myers said reporting extortionists could result in him being killed.
Any suggestion, or even the most vague nod in that direction must be seen as the thought process of a depraved mind, or maybe a product of depraved minds. That should alarm even the most hardened JLP partisans. This parish Councillor must have known that there is fertile soil withing the Government for that kind of thinking , regardless of what the administration does to distance itself from his comments.
Only in Jamaica would a conference on law enforcement’s use of force protocols be discussed and there is no input from Law Enforcement. In fact the Andrew Holness Government can only be characterized as disrespectful of the police, military and Corrections departments, which are the agencies which would use force against civilians as part of their job.
Terrence Williams (Photo credit Jamaica Observer)
That the Holness Government allowed INDECOM to convene a meeting with support from the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development, the United States Embassy and the United Nations office in Jamaica but did not invite the police, military or corrections is testament of it’s refusal to appreciate the serious implications crime poses to Jamaicans.
Andrew Holness
But most importantly it underscores the dim light in which the administration, as the one before it, and the Island’s elites view members of the law enforcement community. Surely the light in which the law enforcement agencies are viewed is consistent with short pants and night watchmen. The Force has evolved somewhat but members of the political class certainly hasn’t .
ONLYINJAMAICA
Montague
Holness addressed the conference, so too did the Minister of National security Robert Montague and others. But the police were treated like adopted children , removed from the room, while their surrogate parents discussed the best ways to proceed with them. No need to have the children in the room , they are fully incapable of participating in meaningfully discussion. Or worse, children have no business in grown folks conversation. The rules are made and children do what they are told.
I gotta say, am I glad I walked away from that in 1991. Here they have a conversation about police use of force, yet the very agencies which are being discussed, the very agencies which would be the ones using force in their encounters with the public are excluded from the table. How ridiculous is that?
Yet don’t be surprised that there will be no shortage of world the wise who will tell you that a conference like this does not have to have the groups excluded to be legitimate. This is not new , Bruce Golding and the simpleton Portia Simpson Miller came together and [trumped] up an anti-law enforcement law called the INDECOM Act. Absent from the debate as well was the Police Military, and Corrections Departments . The Jamaican Government views these agencies as serfs and peasants who do not deserve a seat at the table , they ought to simply do as they are told.
Simpson Miller
Remarkably, Andrew Holness could not get the simple-minded Simpson Miller to agree to a walk-through the garrisons as a symbolic gesture of peace. But Bruce Golding was able to get Portia and the Opposition PNP to agree to craft the INDECOM act a crime enhancement law. The only area in which the two political parties, or more aptly, the two ( criminal gangs) ever came together in a bi-partisan fashion was to craft the crime enhancement bit of garbage law called the INDECOM Act. Such is the palpability of the hatred and disrespect the two Jamaican political parties have for the rule of law.
Pointing out these facts never fail to draw out howls of accusations that I do not want to see accountability in the police department. Over the years, not only have I written extensively about police corruption, I have offered up workable solutions on how to help resolve said malady. I refuse to spend my time reflecting on idiotic statements from simple minded individuals who cannot face facts because those facts are antithetical to , or do not line up with their world view.
But if you thought that what the Labor Party is doing is bad as it relates to INDECOM and the disrespect for the Police and Military you are sadly mistaken.
For years I have been warning in this very medium that the Jamaican Government’s in-bed relationship with Carolyn Gomes of JFF and other groups whose interest does not line up with the best interests of Jamaica and Jamaicans is indeed bad for our country.
I have also warned what the consequences would be as it relates to the INDECOM law .Other Former Police officers have too. Former SSP Renato Adams warned that Jamaica would pay dearly . I doubt that there is anyone who would contend that the country isn’t paying dearly today . Not only is the Island paying dearly, it has no idea how to walk back the effects, because no matter how many Jamaicans die they cannot gather the courage to repeal the INDECOM Act out of fear of their foreign handlers.
I warned about Delroy Chuck’s agenda as it relates to crime. I write incessantly that Delroy Chuck wants the court dockets purged of all cases which are over 5 years old , including murder cases. Chuck argues that it would free up the courts to be more efficient ‚. The fact of the matter is that such actions would exacerbate and accelerate the strategies in motion which cause the delays in the first place. Violent murderers would have their lawyers frustrate the system further making sure they never face justice for their crimes.
Carolyn Gomes and her foreign funded JFJ has been on the forefront of the creation of INDECOM. These are the elites responsible for giving the nation INDECOM . They must take responsibility for the wave of murders and rapes sweeping the country. Yet they are untouched by the carnage…
Despite my warnings about Gomes no one paid attention until Gomes agenda was revealed when her organization, Jamaicans For Justice was found to have distributed homosexual literature to underage children. Carolyn Gomes was forced to step aside . Again Delroy Chuck’s name come into the picture. Chuck recently revealed in the parliament that he was lobbied by a foreign ambassador to change the Nation’s buggery law.
These are the hidden agendas being forced on our people. This crawling peg institutionalization of an alien culture being promulgated on our people is not readily obvious to Jamaicans. The ideas are duplicitous in the way they are couched in language which convinces ordinary Jamaicans it’s for their own good. INDECOM was supposed to root out corruption from the police, military and corrections departments. What the country ended up with are a lot of dead Jamaicans and dramatic erosion of respect for the rule of law. Additionally, less crooked police officers and other members of the security services are convicted that when the CCRB was responsible for that function.
Carolyn Gomes was exposed but not before she was bestowed with national honors . Delroy Chuck now wants to institutionalize homosexuality in Jamaica at the behest of foreign lobbyists. He is not afraid to tear down the church and the institutions we have held dear and which have served us well for generations. What we must ask then is, ” does this Administration serve the interest of the Jamaican people”, whether we support the party in power or not? Speaking out against intrinsic wrongs does not make the messenger a political shill for the other party. It means some of us are prepared to stand up for Jamaica, regardless of the occupant of Jamaica House.
Saving the planet is an uphill battle, and not just because we’re going to have to head for higher ground once the sea levels rise.
Hi, Earth —
It’s me, Jon. How are you? Dying a slow and painful death? Yeah, thought so.
(at this point pretend that I am doing an audible sigh)
I know we haven’t had the greatest relationship over the years. At points I’ve thrown things that should be recycled in the trash. Admittedly, I’ve left the water running while brushing my teeth. The other day I saw an Air BudVHS tape lying in the park grass and I picked it up — not because I care about you, but because I love both dogs and basketball. It was selfless. What I’m trying to say is, I’ve made my fair share of mistakes. And I’m sorry.
You’ve done so much for me. Trees are v cool. I fuck with oceans. You create a home for cows who then make cheese AND I LOVECHEESE. As humans, we don’t deserve you. So at the very least we could take care of you. Right? Lol nahhhh.
We put you second like two of our friends were having parties the same night and we just quickly stopped by yours to get it out of the way so that we could go to the cooler friends house. You know what I mean? We’re treating you like The Hangover IIwhen in reality we should be treating you like the original. You’re just an afterthought like checking for your keys after leaving the house or like thinking of a great comeback after an argument. Oh, which reminds me, Rachel, at least I didn’t lose the suitcase in Cabo!!! Boom.
It’s like some sort of sick plot twist in a movie.
Anyways, you get the point. And we need to do better. I need to to better.
How? Well, to start, probably not by dropping out of the Paris Accord. I don’t want to begin placing blame, but I’m following the CO2 footprints and they’re leading me to people like Donald Trump. Climate change deniers. Corporate sellouts. My friend Jake from high school. Seriously, fuck Jake he sucked.
Saving the planet is an uphill battle, and not just because we’re going to have to head for higher ground once the sea levels rise.
Today, the so called “leader of the free world” took a dangerous, polarizing stance and pulled out of a necessary global climate agreement. In doing so he turned a blind eye and small hands to accomplished scientists, a majority of citizens, the pope, and, yes, my very own mother. Shame on you, Donald Trump. I haven’t seen my mom this mad since the election, the Muslim ban, the healthcare bill, the Comey firing, etc.
I know I’m just one person/model/middle school basketball state champion, but I will continue to educate myself and improve my perspective when it comes to the environment. I hope that our leaders will do the same. If for no other reason than that I’m Jewish and sweat a lot outside and I can’t have this whole global warming thing.
Former President Obama blasted President Trump’s decision to withdraw the United States from the Paris climate deal, calling it an abdication of leadership, moments before his successor made it official.
Obama also argued the U.S. would be an economic loser because of Trump’s decision in a statement released as Trump told the world of his decision with remarks from the White House garden.
“The nations that remain in the Paris Agreement will be the nations that reap the benefits in jobs and industries created,” Obama said. “I believe the United States of America should be at the front of the pack.”
The Paris agreement negotiated and signed under the Obama administration was considered a hallmark of the former president’s efforts to combat climate change.
Trump’s decision to withdraw from it continues his efforts to erase much of the Obama legacy.
In this case, Obama said he hoped that states, cities and U.S. businesses would essentially block Trump’s actions by seeking to reduce greenhouse gas emissions on their own.
“But even in the absence of American leadership; even as this Administration joins a small handful of nations that reject the future; I’m confident that our states, cities, and businesses will step up and do even more to lead the way, and help protect for future generations the one planet we’ve got.”
Syria and Nicaragua are the only two other countries that are not a part of the 195-nation deal.
Throughout Trump’s presidential campaign, he criticized theParis Agreement on climate change. He even called climate change a “hoax” he said was aimed at weakening industry in the U.S.
Fareed Zakaria, host of CNN’s “Fareed Zakaria GPS,” appeared on CNN shortly before Trump’s announcement to talk with Jake Tapper about withdrawing from the accord.
Zakaria began the discussion by saying, should Trump go through with the exit, “This will be the day that the United States resigned as the leader of the free world.”
.@FareedZakaria: “This will be the day that the United States resigned as the leader of the free world.”
Zakaria went on to say that the “irresponsibility” of Trump withdrawing from the pact is “breathtaking because the Paris Climate Accords are extraordinarily flexible.”
“They do not dilute American sovereignty,” he said. “They allow every country to make its own plans. That’s why countries that jealously guarded their sovereignty like China, like India, like Russia have all signed on.”
These sentiments have been echoed by Susan Biniaz, the State Department’s long-time former lawyer on climate change issues. Biniaz told HuffPost Thursday that “it’s inexplicable why we would be leaving.”
In an effort to appease certain sectors of the society it appears Andrew Holness the Jamaican Prime Minister has made a tactical decision to do what countless other Politicians have done over the period of time that Jamaica has had self-rule.
I supported the Labor Party Holness now lead, but I did so while I lived in Jamaica under Edward Seaga’s stewardship. Though Seaga was vastly imperfect there are cases to be made that he was vastly superior to what we are now seeing from this political neophyte. It is becoming clearer by the day that he has made a tactical decision to do whatever, say whatever, against the police without the benefit of facts. Someone should take this idiot aside and caution him to engage his brain before he opens his mouth.
Andrew Holness (centre) in discussion with (from left) Luis Moreno, United States ambassador to Jamaica; Mark Connolly, UN resident coördinator in Jamaica; David Fitton, high commissioner of the United Kingdom to Jamaica; and Terrence Williams, Commissioner of INDECOM at INDECOM’s Caribbean Use of Force Conference, yesterday: Gleaner photo.
Addressing an INDECOM gathering of Elitists The Jamaican Prime Minister said the following. The use of force to maintain law and order has not achieved anything beneficial. “The society that we are trying to create cannot rely on the use of force to get the preservation of law and order. For too long, since our independence, since our colonial past, we have relied on force in order to get law and order.”
This statement is not only nonsensical , but it is also simply ignorant. Police officers’ use of force is not optional. It is not like waking up a deciding to cut your lawn. By opening his mouth and trying to impress, Holness demonstrated his lack of maturity and intellect. Clearly, this statement indicates that Andrew Holness’s views reflect the flawed, warped ideologically leftist world view of the socialist incubator called the University of the West Indies.
Police use of lethal force in Jamaica is particularly necessary when considered against the level of violence and crime which exists there. Each case of lethal use of force rests with criminal gunmen , not with the police as the moronic Prime Minister seem to think. Without adequate though or consultation on how law enforcement use of lethal force is activated he went ahead and showed the world that he is a total jackass.
Each and every thug who picks up a gun places himself in jeopardy . It is not up to Police to beg gun-toting hoodlums to obey laws and not fire at police or kill innocent civilians. If Holness can find his way out of his ivory tower it would be a good idea to do a ride-along with the policemen and women who patrol the gullies and garrisons , including the garrison of Olympic Gardens he calls his constituency.
Holness was addressing the opening of the Caribbean Use of Force in Law Enforcement Conference at the Jamaica Conference Centre in Kingston. A report from the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) showed that, in 2014, the police were shot at 470 times, 425 times in 2015, and 502 in 2016. During those incidents, two policemen were murdered and eight injured in 2014, eight were murdered and 19 injured in 2015, while six were killed and 22 injured in 2016. At the same time, in 2014 some 112 civilians were killed by the police, 92 in 2005, and 102 the following year
The report did not show that a single bullet was fired at Holness during the times detailed in the report, or ever was ‚which is a travesty given his holier-than-thou self-righteous and ignorant comments.
Before I get angrier at this idiot’s statement let me add the comment of an ex-police officer who worked at Hunt’s Bay and witnessed some of the worst examples of Jamaican urban warfare.
This man St. Andrew Holiness knows what he is talking about! If he knew the history of Jamaica, he wouldn’t be making such charge.
Those of us who were around during the late 1970s up until the 1980 election remembered that the communities in Jamaica erected imaginary borderlines. Gunmen killed close to one thousand Jamaicans. At the time it was the socialist thinking prime minister the late Michael Manley.
After the general election, Jamaica welcomes the best, smartest, pro-police Edward Seaga. The man brought a revolutionary change to Jamaica.
Mr. Seaga set-up Operations Base [Eradication Squad]. Criminals: Rapists, robbers, gunmen, dons were put on notice.
Most of us who are from the ghettos, remembered that a majority of the criminals migrated to other countries because of their fear of the police.
In the middle of the 1980’s I can testify that on several occasions my cousins and I would walked from Scarface Pathway, Arnette Gardens, Kingston 12, to downtown, Kingston via Hannah Town.
During our trips to and from Jungle, not even a fly bothered us.
So, when this head making dishonest statements about the police, someone who lived through the Seaga leadership can let the prime minister know that he’s wrong. »»>.….…
Andrew Holness is Prime Minister because of the hard work sweat and blood of Police Officers and members of the military. The country exist because, when the mother of all garrisons rose up in treasonous opposition to the rule of law and the existence of the Jamaican state our security forces said “not on our watch.”
Many people put in work to change the government from the tired corrupt , out of ideas People’s National Party and it’s bunch of criminals. They will work just as hard to remove Andrew Holness from Jamaica House when the time comes . Considering his actions he can count on my efforts toward that end.
Here goes (baby bruce ) again . This has got to defy all logic and certainly will evoke not a whisper from labourites in certain places. From Seaga to Bruce Golding and now Andrew Holness it appears that police nyam dem white fowl.
At a time when INDECOM’s own data is demonstrating that the agency is not value for money Holness found himself at their conference making grandstanding statements against police.
At a time when our police officers are having their brains blown out in the streets in the middle of the day , the Jamaican Prime Minister in classic vulture style, has pitched and is engaged in tearing at the carcass of these dead officers.
Andrew Holness
Speaking at a conference on Wednesday, Andrew Holness stressed the need to have a well-resourced institution to investigate police killings.
He noted the need for a shift in how force is used by the police. Holness noted that the police also need clear guidelines and resources to carry out their job so they can ensure public safety while also securing their own lives. Holness said he has given instructions to the Police High Command, through the National Security Council, that all officers in a particular region must undergo a polygraph test or what is commonly referred to as a lie-detector test.
The Gleaner/Power 106 News Centre had reported in late April that police in western Jamaica who failed lie detector tests would be subjected to administrative and investigative reviews. The National Security Council had reported that Police Area One which comprises St James, Hanover, Westmoreland and Trelawny, would be the focus of systematic polygraphing of police personnel. At a meeting in late April, the Council had said some 78 cops from Police Area One had so far been polygraphed. In recent times the JCF has also introduced polygraph tests for police recruits. (jamaicagleaner.com)
.….….….….….….….….….….….……
I apologize to the family of the late Leighton Hanson formerly of the Constant Spring Police , however in the interest of full disclosure and hopefully less dead cops , it is important that Andrew Holness be made aware of his fucking responsibilities to the Jamaican people.
.….….….…
I am at a loss as to what the hell this guy Andrew Holness is talking about . The Jamaican Police are the ones getting killed .His friend Bruce Golding made sure that on his watch a law was passed which neutered police and empowered gangsters and Dons. There are clearly defined use of force guidelines withing the JCF Act . Rules which makes the police hesitant and unsure ‚when juxtaposed with the INDECOM act, these critical components end up getting police officers killed in this cesspool of criminal support our country has been reduced to. Then these retards wonder why the PNP always win elections in Jamaica ? Here is this idiot in power with a one seat majority in the legislature making a total jackass of himself at the expense of dead cops and the loved ones they leave behind to grieve their loss..
Terrence Williams
There was no sense to his ramblings about lie detector test , and Police use of force. If there are dirty cops , go ahead and root them out , but this guy seem to be all about INDECOM as Bruce Golding was.
INDECOM’s media campaign is about Terrence Williams hold on a position which clearly is not bringing value for money, and a failing agency which cannot justify it’s existence by it’s performance. As the chief executive officer of the country and the person with the ultimate responsibility to protect the country Andrew Holness has been on a tear to demonstrate his animosity toward law enforcement. If the cops providing security for him and his family were sufficiently intelligent they would all walk away and let INDECOM secure him and his family. Or maybe he would be elated to pull security from his Olympic Gardens enclave?
If Andrew Holness wants to talk about polygraph tests a good place to start is on his agriculture Minister Carl Samuda who received a reported 15 acres of Mombasa grass planted on his property without paying for it until he was caught red handed. Lets get a polygraph test on these immoral thieves first .…
You’d think President Donald Trump’s opinion of climate change might inform the decision he promised to make on the Paris climate accord this week, following meetings with G7 leaders who pressured him to keep the US engaged. But it seems his team doesn’t know what his position actually is.
At a White House briefing on Tuesday, here is Press Secretary Sean Spicer’s response to a reporter’s question about whether Trump believes human activity is contributing to global warming: “Honestly, I haven’t asked him. I can get back to you.”
The reporter then asked if he feels as if Trump is still trying to make up his mind. “I don’t know,” Spicer responded.
Though Spicer didn’t hint at what his boss will ultimately decide, he mentioned that Trump and Environmental Protection Agency Chief Scott Pruitt met on Tuesday. That might be a bad sign, as Pruitt has been leading the Trump administration’s “leave” contingent.
It’s not just Spicer who’s sent mixed signals about whether Trump still thinks global warming is a “total, and very expensive, hoax,” as he’s tweeted.
During a press briefing in late March, when Trump was rolling out his anti-climate executive orders, a reporter asked a senior White House official whether the president accepted that humans contribute to climate change. “Sure. Yes, I think the president understands the disagreement over the policy response,” he replied. But pressed further, he couldn’t fully explain Trump’s position, his advisers, or his own, for that matter. “I guess the key question is to what extent, over what period of time,” he said. “Those are the big questions that I think still we need to answer.”
His advisers have recently suggested that Trump’s views on the Paris deal and climate change were, in the words of economic adviser Gary Cohn, “evolving,” though they’ve offered little evidence of what those views now are. “I think he is learning to understand the European position,” Cohn said during the G7 meetings last week. Secretary of Defense James Mattis, who acknowledges climate change as a threat, claimed Trump was “curious about why others were in the position they were” on the Paris deal, and that he was “wide open” on the issue.
America, as Paul Krugman writes in his Monday column, is supposedly “an open society, in which everyone is free to make his or her own choices about where to work and how to live.”
This idea of freedom is our favorite myth, and it’s one conservatives love to trot out when arguing for gutting the social safety net. Getting crucial help like health insurance or minor assistance paying for groceriess, they reason, makes a person less free.
In practice, the conservative definition of freedom means freedom for corporations to underpay their workers, enforce non-compete agreements preventing nearly 30 million from ever getting a new job if they quit, and deny the sickest among us life-saving health care. Not to mention, Krugman writes, “the millions of Americans burdened down by heavy student and other debt.”
The New York Times columnist argues “that we’re getting less free as time goes by,” especially when compared to European countries: “The Gallup World Survey asks residents of many countries whether they feel that they have ‘freedom to make life choices’; the U.S. doesn’t come out looking too good, especially compared with the high freedom grades of European nations with strong social safety nets.”
The non-compete agreements are particularly egregious. Krugman writes: “almost one in five American employees is subject to some kind of noncompete clause. There can’t be that many workers in possession of valuable trade secrets, especially when many of these workers are in relatively low-paying jobs. For example, one prominent case involved Jimmy John’s, a sandwich chain, basically trying to ban its former franchisees from working for other sandwich makers.”
Employers know that there are many trade secrets to be protected. But what companies will never admit is that these agreements are “less about protecting trade secrets than they are about tying workers to their current employers, unable to bargain for better wages or quit to take better jobs.”
Healthcare too, is another way in which Americans are yoked to their jobs, unable to advance simply because they’d lose their ability to see a doctor. Until the Affordable Care Act went into effect, “there was basically only one way Americans under 65 with pre-existing conditions could get health insurance: by finding an employer willing to offer coverage.”
Then Obamacare was created, and despite its flaws, for the first time there was flexibility and affordable care available even to those with pre-existing conditions. Instead of supporting its business and job-creating possibilities and making improvements to prevent the kind of premium increases and other challenges the law faces today, the Tea Party undermined it at every turn. It remains baffling how a party that extolls the virtues of entrepreneurship and innovation worked overtime to sabotage a law that encourages just that. With Trump in office, and the Republicans’ new plan on the table, the threats only get worse.
Instead of living up to our reputation as the land of the free, Americans are, Krugman concludes, “actually creeping along the road to serfdom, yoked to corporate employers the way Russian peasants were once tied to their masters’ land.” Even worse, “people pushing them down that road are the very people who cry ‘freedom’ the loudest.” Read the full column here.
The CBO had scored an earlier version of the Republican bill back in March. At the time, it projected that 24 million people would lose health insurance thanks to the bill. But the hard right of the Republican caucus rejected that iteration of the bill. House leadership had to include a new amendment that offered states the option to rip away Obamacare’s core consumer protections. The current bill would allow insurance companies to sidestep Obamacare’s ban on charging extra for people with preexisting conditions.
But once Speaker of the House Paul Ryan (R‑Wis.) got the votes he needed, he didn’t want to waste any time or let an economic analysis muck up his vote. Breaking with norms, Ryan and the Republican leadership rushed through the new version of their health care bill before the CBO had time to run the numbers. The bill narrowly passed the House in a 217 – 213 vote, with no support from Democrats. Three weeks later, the CBO’s numbers are finally out.
When truth and honesty are diminished and discarded, replaced with lies and half truths the basic pillars of decency and human dignity are destroyed as well. As human beings we all are lessened . When there are no longer clear lines of demarcation between right and wrong what do we tell our children?
Don’t like to obey your parent’s rules . Don’t. Don’t want to risk getting injured or killed in the war. Avoid the draft.
You don’t think you should study in School don’t . It shows! Not comfortable with some people’s existence. Denounce and condemn them.
Not willing to play by the rules . Bribe your way through life. Unhappy with tax rates . Don’t pay taxes.
Women are beneath you, to be used and abused. Treat them like objects. Can’t be bothered with the inconvenience of truth. Demonize truth, use alternative facts.
Have no concept of intellect. Use hyperbole and superlatives. Have no concept of Religion and never adopted one. Claim one without a basic understanding of it’s origins or significance. Razor thin on history , culture, geography . Make an ass of yourself.
Hate the sitting President. Run for President. Hate his agenda. Try to tear down everything he did.
When those who have a vote refuses to vote because they allow the lies of others to influence their actions, we get the worst of the worse as leaders. When people make false choices about carelessness with e‑mails and a person who clearly and demonstrably should never be anywhere near the presidency you end up with a standard which leaves rational people standing with mouth agape in shock.
Israel has been stealing nuclear secrets and covertly making bombs since the 1950s. And western governments, including Britain and the US, turn a blind eye. But how can we expect Iran to curb its nuclear ambitions if the Israelis won’t come clean?
Deep beneath desert sands, an embattled Middle Eastern state has built a covert nuclear bomb, using technology and materials provided by friendly powers or stolen by a clandestine network of agents. It is the stuff of pulp thrillers and the sort of narrative often used to characterise the worst fears about the Iranian nuclear programme. In reality, though, neither US nor British intelligence believe Tehran has decided to build a bomb, and Iran’s atomic projects are under constant international monitoring.
The exotic tale of the bomb hidden in the desert is a true story, though. It’s just one that applies to another country. In an extraordinary feat of subterfuge, Israel managed to assemble an entire underground nuclear arsenal – now estimated at 80 warheads, on a par with India and Pakistan – and even tested a bomb nearly half a century ago, with a minimum of international outcry or even much public awareness of what it was doing.
Despite the fact that the Israel’s nuclear programme has been an open secret since a disgruntled technician, Mordechai Vanunu, blew the whistle on it in 1986, the official Israeli position is still never to confirm or deny its existence.
When the former speaker of the Knesset, Avraham Burg, broke the taboo last month, declaring Israeli possession of both nuclear and chemical weapons and describing the official non-disclosure policy as “outdated and childish” a rightwing group formally called for a police investigation for treason.
Meanwhile, western governments have played along with the policy of “opacity” by avoiding all mention of the issue. In 2009, when a veteran Washington reporter, Helen Thomas, asked Barack Obama in the first month of his presidency if he knew of any country in the Middle East with nuclear weapons, he dodged the trapdoor by saying only that he did not wish to “speculate”.
UK governments have generally followed suit. Asked in the House of Lords in November about Israeli nuclear weapons, Baroness Warsi answered tangentially. “Israel has not declared a nuclear weapons programme. We have regular discussions with the government of Israel on a range of nuclear-related issues,” the minister said. “The government of Israel is in no doubt as to our views. We encourage Israel to become a state party to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty [NPT].”
But through the cracks in this stone wall, more and more details continue to emerge of how Israel built its nuclear weapons from smuggled parts and pilfered technology.
The tale serves as a historical counterpoint to today’s drawn-out struggle over Iran’s nuclear ambitions. The parallels are not exact – Israel, unlike Iran, never signed up to the 1968 NPT so could not violate it. But it almost certainly broke a treaty banning nuclear tests, as well as countless national and international laws restricting the traffic in nuclear materials and technology.
The list of nations that secretly sold Israel the material and expertise to make nuclear warheads, or who turned a blind eye to its theft, include today’s staunchest campaigners against proliferation: the US, France, Germany, Britain and even Norway.
Meanwhile, Israeli agents charged with buying fissile material and state-of-the-art technology found their way into some of the most sensitive industrial establishments in the world. This daring and remarkably successful spy ring, known as Lakam, the Hebrew acronym for the innocuous-sounding Science Liaison Bureau, included such colourful figures as Arnon Milchan, a billionaire Hollywood producer behind such hits as Pretty Woman, LA Confidential and 12 Years a Slave, who finally admitted his role last month.
“Do you know what it’s like to be a twentysomething-year-old kid [and] his country lets him be James Bond? Wow! The action! That was exciting,” he said in an Israeli documentary.
Milchan’s life story is colourful, and unlikely enough to be the subject of one of the blockbusters he bankrolls. In the documentary, Robert de Niro recalls discussing Milchan’s role in the illicit purchase of nuclear-warhead triggers. “At some point I was asking something about that, being friends, but not in an accusatory way. I just wanted to know,” De Niro says. “And he said: yeah I did that. Israel’s my country.”
Milchan was not shy about using Hollywood connections to help his shadowy second career. At one point, he admits in the documentary, he used the lure of a visit to actor Richard Dreyfuss’s home to get a top US nuclear scientist, Arthur Biehl, to join the board of one of his companies.
According to Milchan’s biography, by Israeli journalists Meir Doron and Joseph Gelman, he was recruited in 1965 by Israel’s current president, Shimon Peres, who he met in a Tel Aviv nightclub (called Mandy’s, named after the hostess and owner’s wife Mandy Rice-Davies, freshly notorious for her role in the Profumo sex scandal). Milchan, who then ran the family fertiliser company, never looked back, playing a central role in Israel’s clandestine acquisition programme.
He was responsible for securing vital uranium-enrichment technology, photographing centrifuge blueprints that a German executive had been bribed into temporarily “mislaying” in his kitchen. The same blueprints, belonging to the European uranium enrichment consortium, Urenco, were stolen a second time by a Pakistani employee, Abdul Qadeer Khan, who used them to found his country’s enrichment programme and to set up a global nuclear smuggling business, selling the design to Libya, North Korea and Iran.
For that reason, Israel’s centrifuges are near-identical to Iran’s, a convergence that allowed Israeli to try out a computer worm, codenamed Stuxnet, on its own centrifuges before unleashing it on Iran in 2010.
Arguably, Lakam’s exploits were even more daring than Khan’s. In 1968, it organised the disappearance of an entire freighter full of uranium ore in the middle of the Mediterranean. In what became known as the Plumbat affair, the Israelis used a web of front companies to buy a consignment of uranium oxide, known as yellowcake, in Antwerp. The yellowcake was concealed in drums labelled “plumbat”, a lead derivative, and loaded onto a freighter leased by a phony Liberian company. The sale was camouflaged as a transaction between German and Italian companies with help from German officials, reportedly in return for an Israeli offer to help the Germans with centrifuge technology.
When the ship, the Scheersberg A, docked in Rotterdam, the entire crew was dismissed on the pretext that the vessel had been sold and an Israeli crew took their place. The ship sailed into the Mediterranean where, under Israeli naval guard, the cargo was transferred to another vessel.
US and British documents declassified last year also revealed a previously unknown Israeli purchase of about 100 tons of yellowcake from Argentina in 1963 or 1964, without the safeguards typically used in nuclear transactions to prevent the material being used in weapons.
Israel had few qualms about proliferating nuclear weapons knowhow and materials, giving South Africa’s apartheid régime help in developing its own bomb in the 1970s in return for 600 tons of yellowcake.
Pictures of the secret Dimona nuclear reactor in Israel, showing where the plant has allegedly been camouflaged. Photograph: space imaging
Israel’s nuclear reactor also required deuterium oxide, also known as heavy water, to moderate the fissile reaction. For that, Israel turned to Norway and Britain. In 1959, Israel managed to buy 20 tons of heavy water that Norway had sold to the UK but was surplus to requirements for the British nuclear programme. Both governments were suspicious that the material would be used to make weapons, but decided to look the other way. In documents seen by the BBC in 2005 British officials argued it would be “over-zealous” to impose safeguards. For its part, Norway carried out only one inspection visit, in 1961.
Israel’s nuclear-weapons project could never have got off the ground, though, without an enormous contribution from France. The country that took the toughest line on counter-proliferation when it came to Iran helped lay the foundations of Israel’s nuclear weapons programme, driven by by a sense of guilt over letting Israel down in the 1956 Suez conflict, sympathy from French-Jewish scientists, intelligence-sharing over Algeria and a drive to sell French expertise and abroad.
“There was a tendency to try to export and there was a general feeling of support for Israel,” Andre Finkelstein, a former deputy commissioner at France’s Atomic Energy Commissariat and deputy director general at the International Atomic Energy Agency, told Avner Cohen, an Israeli-American nuclear historian.
France’s first reactor went critical as early as 1948 but the decision to build nuclear weapons seems to have been taken in 1954, after Pierre Mendès France made his first trip to Washington as president of the council of ministers of the chaotic Fourth Republic. On the way back he told an aide: “It’s exactly like a meeting of gangsters. Everyone is putting his gun on the table, if you have no gun you are nobody. So we must have a nuclear programme.”
Mendès France gave the order to start building bombs in December 1954. And as it built its arsenal, Paris solds material assistance to other aspiring weapons states, not just Israel.
“[T]his went on for many, many years until we did some stupid exports, including Iraq and the reprocessing plant in Pakistan, which was crazy,” Finkelstein recalled in an interview that can now be read in a collection of Cohen’s papers at the Wilson Centre thinktank in Washington. “We have been the most irresponsible country on nonproliferation.”
In Dimona, French engineers poured in to help build Israel a nuclear reactor and a far more secret reprocessing plant capable of separating plutonium from spent reactor fuel. This was the real giveaway that Israel’s nuclear programme was aimed at producing weapons.
By the end of the 50s, there were 2,500 French citizens living in Dimona, transforming it from a village to a cosmopolitan town, complete with French lycées and streets full of Renaults, and yet the whole endeavour was conducted under a thick veil of secrecy. The American investigative journalist Seymour Hersh wrote in his book The Samson Option: “French workers at Dimona were forbidden to write directly to relatives and friends in France and elsewhere, but sent mail to a phony post-office box in Latin America.”
The British were kept out of the loop, being told at different times that the huge construction site was a desert grasslands research institute and a manganese processing plant. The Americans, also kept in the dark by both Israel and France, flew U2 spy planes over Dimona in an attempt to find out what they were up to.
The Israelis admitted to having a reactor but insisted it was for entirely peaceful purposes. The spent fuel was sent to France for reprocessing, they claimed, even providing film footage of it being supposedly being loaded onto French freighters. Throughout the 60s it flatly denied the existence of the underground reprocessing plant in Dimona that was churning out plutonium for bombs.
Producer Arnon Milchan with Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie at the première of Mr and Mrs Smith. Photograph: L Cohen
Israel refused to countenance visits by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), so in the early 1960s President Kennedy demanded they accept American inspectors. US physicists were dispatched to Dimona but were given the run-around from the start. Visits were never twice-yearly as had been agreed with Kennedy and were subject to repeated postponements. The US physicists sent to Dimona were not allowed to bring their own equipment or collect samples. The lead American inspector, Floyd Culler, an expert on plutonium extraction, noted in his reports that there were newly plastered and painted walls in one of the buildings. It turned out that before each American visit, the Israelis had built false walls around the row of lifts that descended six levels to the subterranean reprocessing plant.
As more and more evidence of Israel’s weapons programme emerged, the US role progressed from unwitting dupe to reluctant accomplice. In 1968 the CIA director Richard Helms told President Johnson that Israel had indeed managed to build nuclear weapons and that its air force had conducted sorties to practise dropping them.
The following is the full text of the inaugural address by Prime Minister Andrew Holness at his swearing-in ceremony on (March 3, 2016). Your Excellencies, the Governor General, the Most Honourable Sir Patrick Allen and Lady Allen Leader of the Opposition the Most Honorable Portia Simpson Miller Former Prime Ministers: The Most Honorable Edward Seaga and Mrs Seaga The Most Honorable PJ Patterson The Honorable Bruce Golding and Mrs Golding My fellow Jamaicans Good afternoon. I recognize that I stand here today only by the Grace of God. It has not been an easy journey to this podium, but earnest labour and fervent prayers conquer all. To God be the glory. It is with a deep sense of gratitude, honour and humility that I took the Oath of Office moments ago, fully conscious of the magnitude of expectations and responsibility I have assumed, but equally energized and optimistic about a prosperous future for Jamaica. I pledge to serve the people of Jamaica faithfully, with all of my energies, all of my heart, mind and soul. I stand here today happy to be representing the voice, vision, vote and victory of Jamaica. We may have different voices and different votes on a similar vision, regardless of our differences, Jamaica was victorious at the General Elections. It is not perfect, but we can all be proud of the people, systems and institutions that make up our democracy. Meaning of the Mandate On the day of Election, I witnessed a young man carrying, cradled in his arm, an obviously bed-ridden elderly man from a polling station. I was touched by the sight. In the bustle of the busy school yard, as they passed, the elderly man pointed his ink stained finger at me and said, “Andrew, do the right thing!” I stand here humbled by the awesome power of you, the people, and I commit to doing right by you. The people are sovereign and their views and votes must never be taken for granted. The people of Jamaica did not vote in vain. They expect a government that works for them and by the same expectation, an Opposition that is constructive. This historic election delivered the smallest majority but also the clearest mandate: Fix Government! With this mandate: There is no majority for arrogance. There is no space for selfishness. There is no place for pettiness. There is no room for complacency and, There is no margin for error. I am under no illusion as to the meaning of this mandate. We have not won a prize. Instead, the people are giving us a test. There is no absolute agency of power. This means that the winner cannot take all, or believe we can do it alone. Leading Partnerships for Prosperity To achieve the vision of shared prosperity through inclusive economic growth and meaningful job creation, now more than ever, Government must lead, activate, empower and build real partnerships. I intend to lead a Government of partnership. The solutions to our problems do not rest with Government alone. The sum total of our potential exceeds our problems; our collective capabilities are greater than our challenges, but it is only through partnership that these capabilities and this potential can be seized, harnessed and realized for the good of Jamaica. Partnerships require trust, clear assignment of responsibility and an elevated sense of duty. There is only so much trust that pledges and statements of commitment can buy. I understand that the Jamaican people now want to see action in building trust. This is part of fixing government. Everyone who will form the next government must be seized of this expectation. From the politician making policy to the civil servant processing an application, we must act dutifully to fulfill our responsibilities. Trust requires the actualization of our commitments. We will fulfill our commitments. Our actions can achieve so much more if they are coördinated. We will bring greater coördination, rationality and focus to the role of government so that the objectives of partnership can be clear. There is no doubt that significant numbers of Jamaicans have lost hope in our system, but I am encouraged that a far larger number maintains faith, keeps hope and continues to pray that Jamaica will grow and prosper. I am energized by the expressions of willingness to work with our new Government in the interest of Jamaica. The sense of duty is alive and well. There is more hope than despair and this creates a great opportunity to form partnerships for prosperity. Partnership with Families You know, I am now joined in Parliament by my life partner Juliet. Family is the ultimate partnership. And that is why my Government will focus resources on supporting families. By increasing the income tax threshold we will restore the economic power of households to participate in not only growing our GDP but more importantly growing the general wellbeing of the society. Here’s how the partnership with families, and the working heads of households will work. Our government will ease your tax burden, but you must spend and invest wisely, use the additional money to acquire a house for your family or improve the house you already have, or buy Jamaican-made goods. This how we will increase local effective demand in housing, manufacturing, and agriculture. This is how you can play a part in creating in jobs while satisfying your well-being. We will continue our policy of tuition-free education and no user fee access to health care. However, will enable you to save in an education bond for your children’s education and in a national health insurance scheme your healthcare. We will enhance our social safety net for vulnerable families, and will provide support for parents in crisis, but you must be responsible and send your children to school. Our men must take care of their children, and couples must be responsible in having the children they can afford. Our government commits to creating the environment in which families can flourish and form communities of social mobility from which every ghetto youth can be star. However, every family member must do his or her part by being personally, socially and economically responsible. I am sure Juliet will understand if I seek to build another partnership in Parliament. Leader of the Opposition, Portia Simpson Miller has given long and dedicated service to the country and I believe the mandate is saying, we may not be on the same side of the road, but as much as possible we should hold hands in coöperation to overcome obstacles for the good of the country. We have evolved without formal structure a very good partnership in education and we intend to continue our informal collaborations in this area and pursue other such areas of coöperation between Government and Opposition members. I still believe it is a useful symbol of national unity for the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition to appear together in zones of political exclusions. I again extend the invitation. Partnership for Growth with Private Sector The priority of this Government is to grow the economy and create meaningful jobs. In so doing, we will more rapidly and sustainably reduce debt. I am sure we all agree that much of Jamaica’s development has been achieved without growth, which has left us with much debt. This is unsustainable. Going forward, Jamaica’s development must rest on its ability to create propositions of value and attract investments to convert the value into wealth. In this model, Government is not the main investor, it is the Private Sector whether they be large enterprises or small business. In the economic partnership with the Private Sector, Government’s role, among others, is: To ensure the rule of law. Create a safe, secure, and fair environment for business Make markets where none exist Ensure transparency and access to information ‑and create an efficient and supportive public sector bureaucracy In exchange, we want the Private Sector to unleash investments in the local economy. We want to see the return of the pioneering drive to create new industries, the entrepreneurial willingness to take risk, and the innovative insight to do things better. I am heartened by the signals coming from the Private Sector. I believe they have got the message about the partnership for growth and job creation. Now is the time for growth. Partnership with international partners We are not naïve about the challenges we face regarding our debt and the need to maintain fiscal discipline. This is why we will continue with the principle of joint oversight of our Economic Programme and performance. We recognize the importance of, and value our relationship with our bilateral and multilateral friends. These relationships have been critical in securing stability. We believe in preserving stability, but we must now build up on this in a productive partnerships with them to achieve inclusive growth and job creation. There are many more areas of partnerships that we must formally pursue for national development and as our government is installed over the coming days these will become evident. The Role of the Prime Minister In all these partnerships for prosperity, there must be coördinated effort. That is my role. I will ensure that: Government is coördinated and strategically directed. Decisions are taken quickly. Targets are set. The nation is informed and that. Everyone under my appointment is held to account for their action or lack thereof. Institutional Reform There is a sense of expectation of change. It is not lost on me that I am the first of the Post-Independence generation to lead Jamaica. More than anything else we want to see Jamaica take its true place as a developed country in the next 50 years. The struggle is not so much political independence as it is economic independence. It is through our economic independence that we secure real political independence. However, after 53 years of independence, there is need for institutional review of the Jamaican State both in terms of modernization of the institutions of the State, and the structure of the State. Government has to improve its business processes and become more efficient as a regulator and a service provider. There is need for us to have a say in the fundamental institutions that define Jamaica, the rights we secure for our citizens and how we want Jamaica to be. We will give form to that voice in a referendum to decide on the constitutional matters and social matters. Independent Jamaica must remove the culture of dependency from our midst. We must teach our children that there is no wealth without work, and no success without sacrifice. We must remove the belief from the psyche of our children that the only way they can step up in life is not by how hard they work, but by who they know. As Prime Minister I have a duty to align our incentives and reward systems for those who work and follow rules. We must create a Jamaica where the man who plays by the rules is rewarded! It is important that the citizens of Independent Jamaica have a sense of entitlement to good service from their country. However, increasingly this is not being balanced with a duty of ‘giving back’. Jamaica has benefited significantly from the civic pride and sense of nationhood that drove so many to give generously of their talent and treasures to build our great nation. The spirit still exists, to a great extent, locally and in our Diaspora. However, we have to be more active in promoting civic responsibility, volunteerism and ‘giving back’, particularly among our youth. And we have to integrate the incredible talents and assets of the Jamaican Diaspora in local development. Too often I hear complaints from the Diaspora that they experience difficulty in giving to Jamaica. Giving should be easy, as part of our Partnership for Prosperity which includes the Diaspora, we will make it easier for you to contribute to the development of your homeland. Jamaica is too rich in people and talent to be a poor country. With good governance and a prospective outlook, Jamaica, within a decade or less, could emerge as a booming economy and a prosperous society. Jamaica is geographically central in the Caribbean. My vision is to turn Jamaica into the centre of the Caribbean. A centre of finance, trade and commerce, technology and innovation, and the centre of arts, culture, and lifestyle regionally. This is all possible within our lifetime. Despite any negatives, Jamaica still has a powerful and alluring brand amplifying our voice and influence in the world. We cannot be satisfied with things as they are. My dream is to fulfill your dream. We must create a Jamaica where there is hope and opportunity. Where we can encourage our children to dream big and be optimistic about their life chances. We must create a Jamaica where our young people can find meaningful work. A Jamaica where you feel safe to live, work and raise your children. A Jamaica that is booming and investors and entrepreneurs can have a confident outlook on the economy. A place where we can retire and truly enjoy as paradise. All of this is possible. We must start now. Time for a partnership. Time for action!
Prime Minister Andrew Holness being sworn in as PM on March 3rd 2016.
NOWTHIS /
Samuda pays for his Mombasa grass.
Carl Samuda Agricultire Minister
MINISTER of Industry, Commerce, Agriculture and Fisheries Karl Samuda informed the House of Representatives yesterday that he has now paid up $546,000 for the Mombasa grass planted on his property in Knollis, St Catherine, by the Jamaica Dairy Development Board (JDDB).Samuda also told the House that he has the names of other major farms, some politically linked, which have also benefited from the 500 acres of the grass already planted across the country to boost dairy production.
However, he said he currently has no intention of releasing those names.
“Similar treatment was offered and available to all diary, beef and small ruminants farmers,” Samuda told the House, in an impromptu response to the allegations made by Opposition spokesman on agriculture Dr Dayton Campbell in Parliament last week Wednesday.
Samuda said that, unlike claims made by the Opposition People’s National Party (PNP), the project was not restricted to small farmers and many of the major farms had received “a considerably larger contribution” of grass than he had, and were not required to pay for the service.
“I do not wish to name them now, and I will not. The fact of the matter is that persons who have participated in this programme were not only related to non-political figures. But I have no intention whatsoever to match like with like,” he said.
“I would not seek to strengthen my presentation by drawing reference to anyone that it might eventually hurt, because I am satisfied that anyone who took advantage of this programme did so in the earnest belief that it would improve their contribution to the development of the country through agriculture,” he added.
He said that he was aware that the programme does not cater to receiving payment for the current planting process, which is primarily to promote the benefit of the grass to the dairy industry. However, he said that he felt more comfortable now, having doing that.Samuda also took the blame for the controversy which developed around Campbell’s revelation in the House.
“Had I thought of it more carefully, and if the opportunity should ever arise again, I would not have gone the route that I did. It raises questions, it gives rise to speculation and, in that regard, it is unquestionably an error on my part not to have safeguarded myself appropriately,” he said.
He said that, initially, he was reluctant to accept the suggestion, which came from acting CEO of the JDDB Byron Lawrence.
“I did not initiate this suggestion and, in fact, was prevailed upon to accept”.
As I have said before, I regret not having taken appropriate measures to protect my integrity in the whole process,” Samuda stated.
He said that since the controversy he had insisted on getting a bill, and that whatever was done on his farm be costed, and a statement sent to him.
“I received that statement, and I have here the receipt for my payment for all the work done at my farm, for $546,000, that I paid today,” Samuda told the House of Representatives.
“Why? Because I knew I was coming to this House and I did not want to promise to pay. I paid it, knowing fully well that there is no provision under the programme for any participant to pay for the services that they have received,” he admitted.
Last week, the PNP called on Contractor General Dirk Harrison to investigate the circumstances in which Samuda benefited from the grass-planting programme.
According to the PNP, Samuda, a cattle and dairy farmer, was able to benefit from a 15-acre demonstration plot of Mombasa dairy-feeding grass at his farm by the dairy board.
There is a critical component which must be considered when we consider someone’s character,whenever there are questions, or whether a crime has been committed. That component is ‚did he know what he was doing was wrong/Did he intentionally and pre-meditatedly engage in an unlawful act? In law it is called guilty mind, or ( mens rea.) the intention or knowledge of wrongdoing which constitutes part of a crime.
Our Nation’s brief history as a self ruled state has been fraught with incredible corruption and graft . This has caused some of the most patriotic Jamaicans to wonder whether we can govern ourselves.
It is remarkable that with the level of corruption which has permeated the 22 years of PNP rule out of 26, that a member of the Governing Jamaica Labor Party would not do everything in his power to shun any impression of impropriety.
How can the Minister of Agriculture , himself a farmer, benefit from a 15-acre demonstration plot of Mombasa dairy-feeding grass at his farm by the dairy board to the tune of $546’000, and did not see it is wrong and problematic?
Paying for the work is not a solution to this incredible breach of trust. You don’t get to wave a receipt in the Parliament after you are caught and expect this matter to go away. If that was the standard , every person who breaks the nation’s laws and are caught could simply say I’ll pay and that would have been the end of it.Saying that others have done it is not an excuse either . The fact that Samuda paid for the work done on his property should not be exculpatory , it ought to be a critical piece of evidence against him in a detailed , comprehensive and exhaustive criminal proceeding. Whatever information he has regarding other people who received Mombasa grass on their farms without paying ‚should be extracted from him in a criminal Investigation and the appropriate punitive remedy applied.
The American President seemingly believing he is above the laws is about to see what it ‘s like to have a Special Prosecutor do an exhaustive investigation into his behavior. Jamaica a small developing nation of 2.7 million people has no mechanism to ensure that cases of corruption like these do not go unpunished. It cannot be that the very people who are trusted with the leadership of the country are the very ones who engage in this type of behavior.
“Had I thought of it more carefully, and if the opportunity should ever arise again, I would not have gone the route that I did. It raises questions, it gives rise to speculation and, in that regard, it is unquestionably an error on my part not to have safeguarded myself appropriately,”
The foregone should not be a grand statement of self righteousness. It should be a statement for leniency made before a criminal court judge after trial .
Our country simply cannot continue to function this way in which some people flout the law and when caught simply make restitution and continue as if nothing happened. Mister Prime Minister over to you, I urge you to re-read your address to the nation on March 3rd 2016.
Washington (CNN)The Justice Department on Wednesday appointed former FBI Director Robert Mueller as special counsel to oversee the federal investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election, including potential collusion between Trump campaign associates and Russian officials.
Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein appointed Mueller to the position in a letter obtained by CNN. Attorney General Jeff Sessions previously recused himself from any involvement in the Russia investigation due to his role as a prominent campaign adviser and surrogate.
Mueller’s appointment aims to quell the wave of criticism that President Donald Trump and his administration have faced since Trump fired FBI Director James Comey last week in the middle of the FBI’s intensifying investigation into contacts between Trump campaign associates and Russian officials. That criticism swelled on Tuesday evening as excerpts of a memo Comey wrote in February surfaced, in which Comey writes Trump asked him to drop the FBI investigation into former national security adviser Michael Flynn.
Scandal whirlwind: If Trump tried to shut down the FBI’s Michael Flynn investigation, did Jeff Sessions play along?
Yates/Comey Sally Yates; James Comey (Credit: CNN/AP/Charles Rex Arbogast/Photo montage by Salon)
Tuesday began with the White House in total chaos over reports that President Donald Trump had spilled sensitive intelligence to the Russians on the morning after he fired FBI Director James Comey over what he later admitted was the investigation into Russian ties to the Trump campaign. This was not what administration officials wanted to be talking about in the days before the president’s first big overseas trip. In the middle of the crisis, they had to hold a previously scheduled meeting and press conference with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Here’s the dispatch from the pool report:
Every Democratic official’s hair was on fire, and even the Republicans on the Hill were starting to smoke a little bit around the ears. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who goes along with every Trump outrage, even roused himself to declare that he wished there was less drama coming from the White House.
And then came the really shocking news. James Comey wrote memos — detailed memos. And he gave copies to friends. And one of them described a meeting with the president, vice president and Attorney General Jeff Sessions on the day after Flynn was fired. That meeting had been previously reported. What we hadn’t heard was that, according to Comey, after the meeting, Trump told Pence and Sessions to leave the room and then asked Comey to drop the case against Flynn.
“I hope you can see your way clear to letting this go, to letting Flynn go,” Mr. Trump told Mr. Comey, according to the memo. “He is a good guy. I hope you can let this go.”
Mr. Trump told Mr. Comey that Mr. Flynn had done nothing wrong, according to the memo.
The White House is saying there’s nothing untoward about this: Everyone knows Trump likes Flynn, he never said those exact words, and anyway Comey should have brought this up earlier. In other words, Comey must be lying, because otherwise he would have shouted it to the world. Most experts on TV observed that isn’t the way investigations are done.
CNN’s Jake Tapper spoke with a source who is familiar with the memos and is close to Comey. That source said the FBI director assumed that one meeting would be the end of it. Tapper quoted this person explaining why Comey didn’t say anything:
… because it wasn’t a very successful effort and he thought he had pushed back on it. Living with this president is about standing up and pushing back.He thought he had pushed back and was working to regularize communications between the bureau and the White House and he knew more work was needed, thought he was starting to succeed, and he was very sensitive to how difficult it was going to be to work with this president. He also thought he could do it.
Tapper then added:
It should be noted that [Comey] is somebody, and I don’t mean this in a pejorative sense, he is somebody who has rather high regard for his own sense of integrity and what he can accomplish.
Later on Tuesday, in CNN’s Anderson Cooper’s interview with former Acting Attorney General Sally Yates, she responded to the question of whether Comey was a “showboat” and a “grandstander,” as Trump had claimed, by smiling slightly and simply saying, “Jim is candid.”
Coincidentally, on the morning of Trump’s interview with John Dickerson of CBS in which he used those words to describe Comey, I had published a piece for Salon in which I also called him a “showboat.” It’s true. He is. And Comey’s high regard for his own integrity and rectitude has led him to make terrible political judgments, such as the one that led him to announce last Oct. 28 that there was new information in the Clinton email case, throwing a live grenade into the presidential campaign.
But for all that, James Comey isn’t known to be a liar. In fact, he’s known as a scrupulous if somewhat supercilious prig. Donald Trump, on the other hand, is a constant, unrepentant liar of colossal magnitude. In a battle between the two grandstanders there is no contest as to which one has more credibility.
The White House also attempted to use the words of Acting FBI Director Andy McCabe as cover, saying he testified before Congress that the administration had not interfered. That’s not what he said. Here is the exchange between McCabe and Sen. Marco Rubio:
Rubio: Mr. McCabe, can you — without going into the specific of any individual investigation, I think the American people want to know, has the dismissal of Mr. Comey in any way impeded, interrupted, stopped or negatively impacted any of the work, any investigation, or any ongoing projects at the Federal Bureau of Investigation?
McCabe: As you know, Senator, the work of the men and women of the FBI continues despite any changes in circumstance, any decisions. So there has been no effort to impede our investigation today. Quite simply put, sir, you cannot stop the men and women of the FBI from doing the right thing, protecting the American people and upholding the Constitution.
McCabe was replying to a question about whether the investigation had been impeded by Comey’s firing. He clarified further by saying “there has has been no effort … today.”
For the moment, all eyes will be upon the new Deputy Attorney General, Rod Rosenstein, who is overseeing the investigation, and his boss, Jeff Sessions, who is vetting Comey’s replacement. Sessions is obviously a Trump loyalist and it appears that Rosenstein has no complaints. According to the Baltimore Sun, when the news broke that Trump was using his memo as the excuse for firing Comey, a friend told Rosenstein he should quit and he replied, “There is no place I would rather be.”
The Washington Post reported late on Tuesday that their sources had told them that “details of Comey’s notes have been shared with a very small circle of people at the FBI and Justice Department.” If the people with whom those notes were shared include Sessions and Rosenstein, their involvement in Comey’s firing takes this scandal to a whole new level. It would mean they knew that Trump had tried to shut down an active investigation by asking Comey to lay off Flynn — and still recommended that Trump fire Comey. Stay tuned.
We use cookies on our website to give you the most relevant experience by remembering your preferences and repeat visits. By clicking “Accept All”, you consent to the use of ALL the cookies. However, you may visit "Cookie Settings" to provide a controlled consent.
This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.