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Re: Iranian War PitDAWG 03/21/26 08:17 PM


rolleyes
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Robert Mueller, former FBI director who led Trump investigation, dies at 81 PitDAWG 03/21/26 06:52 PM
He had a long record of public service before becoming a special counsel for the Department of Justice in 2017.

Robert Mueller, the special counsel whose investigation of President Donald Trump kept America transfixed for two years, died Friday night, according to a family statement provided to the Associated Press. He was 81.

In August 2025, his family disclosed to The New York Times that Mueller had been “diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in the summer of 2021,” and that he retired both from teaching and his law practice because of his escalating health issues.

During Trump’s first term, the nation waited on Mueller and watched, eager to see whether its president or his campaign staff would be found to have conspired with a foreign power to get himself elected. Ultimately, Mueller offered a detailed report that accused Trump of misbehavior and possibly of obstructing justice, but which never came out and said the president had broken the law.

“Russia’s actions were a threat to America’s democracy. It was critical that they be investigated and understood,” he wrote in 2020 in defense of his investigation.

Mueller had a long record of public service before becoming a special counsel for the Department of Justice in 2017, including four years in the Marines during the Vietnam War and 12 years as director of the FBI.

“Agents of the Bureau prize three virtues above all: fidelity, bravery and integrity. This new Director is a man who exemplifies them all,” former President George W. Bush said in nominating him to lead the FBI in 2001. When appointing him in 2011 to two more years leading the FBI, former President Barack Obama said Mueller had “set the gold standard for leading the bureau.”

It was his reputation for rectitude and tenacity that colored much of the response to his appointment to examine Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign and whatever connections it might have had to President Vladimir Putin’s Russian government.

The special counsel’s final report, called the Mueller Report, summarized the lengthy investigation in a way that left many things open to interpretation. Trump claimed full vindication; tweeting at one point, “Mueller should have never been appointed, although he did prove that I must be the most honest man in America!” Others saw it as an investigation hamstrung by its own precise interpretation of the law, putting forth a case for Trump as someone who might well have broken the law but who couldn’t be charged because he was the president.

The publication of a much-redacted report didn’t add any great clarity.

“If we had confidence after a thorough investigation of the facts that the President clearly did not commit obstruction of justice, we would so state,” Mueller stated in his report. “Based on the facts and the applicable legal standards, we are unable to reach that judgment. Accordingly, while this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.”

Mueller had rarely sought the spotlight during his career and that was true even as the nation was watching intently for leaks and hints about where the investigation was heading — or expecting him to make a big show out of the whole Washington political circus that surrounded the investigation.

Biographer Garrett Graff wrote in 2017 that Mueller “might just be America’s straightest arrow,” neither the first nor the last person to describe him that way. Graff quoted a former Mueller aide at the FBI as saying: “The things that most of us would struggle with the most come relatively easy to him because his moral compass is so straight.”

Robert Swan Mueller III was born in New York City on Aug. 7, 1944. He spent part of his youth in Princeton, New Jersey, and went on to attend Princeton University, where, like his father, he played lacrosse.

He got a master’s at New York University and would later attend law school at the University of Virginia. He also married Ann Cabell Standish, whom he had met at a high school party.

Between NYU and law school, he served in the military. In a 2017 profile, Josh Meyer wrote: “He enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1968, led a rifle platoon in Vietnam and earned a Bronze Star, a Purple Heart and other medals for valor.” Mueller would later say he was driven to public service because he felt “exceptionally lucky” to have survived his tours of duty there.

Over the next three decades, Mueller practiced law, sometimes in private practice but more often as a government attorney.

In the early 1990s, he used testimony from an infamous mob underboss to successfully prosecute New York mob boss John Gotti, who had been called the “Teflon Don” because of his success in avoiding criminal convictions.

He also investigated the scandal-plagued Bank of Credit and Commerce International; prosecuted Manuel Noriega on drug trafficking charges after the U.S. invaded Panama and toppled his dictatorship; and led American efforts to get justice in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103, which exploded over the Scottish village of Lockerbie in December 1988, killing 270 people, most of them Americans. Those Lockerbie efforts would continue well into the next decade.

In 2001, Mueller was nominated by Bush to be the sixth director of the FBI.

“Our next FBI Director has given nearly all his career to public service, going back to his days in the Marine Corps. He served with distinction and was decorated during the Vietnam War. As a lawyer, prosecutor, and government official, he has shown high ideals, a clear sense of purpose and a tested devotion to his country,” Bush said.

The Washington Post profiled him at the time: “He laughs at jokes but rarely tells them. Friends say he’s punctual even about his own parties, signaling their end by flicking the lights. His edges are hard when he wants something done, harder when it isn’t done the way he wants but smooth when someone is suffering. He believes bragging is taboo.”

He was confirmed by a 98-0 vote and assumed the position one week before the 9/11 terrorist attacks, an event that would raise the stakes for law enforcement in America.

“Since September 11,” Richard A. Clarke wrote in “Against All Enemies: Inside America’s War on Terror,” “Mueller has tried to reorient the organization from post-crime investigation to prevention, from drugs and bank robbery to terrorism.”

Mueller later told Graff, his biographer, that he liked leading the FBI because it was perceived as being above partisanship. “You’re free to do what you think is right,” Graff quoted him as saying.

By the time he left the FBI in September 2013, Mueller had led the agency longer than anyone except J. Edgar Hoover. “It is a family and it is a well-respected family,” Mueller said in a statement at the time.

After leaving the FBI, Mueller was hired by the NFL to investigate whether the league had mishandled its response to a case in which Ray Rice, a star running back for the Baltimore Ravens, had knocked his fiancée unconscious. He was also appointed to oversee the settlement of U.S. consumer claims against Volkswagen.

He was called back into public service months into the Trump presidency, one week after Trump had rattled Washington by firing FBI Director James Comey.

On May 17, 2017, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein announced that he appointed Mueller “to serve as special counsel to oversee the previously-confirmed FBI investigation of Russian government efforts to influence the 2016 presidential election and related matters.”

Inside and outside of Washington, Mueller’s appointment as special counsel was praised. Mueller’s history of getting along with both Republican and Democratic presidents worked in his favor. “With his intellect, integrity, and insight, he is right out of central casting on how a prosecutor and investigator should conduct themselves,” said Michael Leiter, who had led the National Counterterrorism Center.

In a statement, Trump said he welcomed the investigation: “As I have stated many times, a thorough investigation will confirm what we already know — there was no collusion between my campaign and any foreign entity.” But it was later reported that he told former Attorney General Jeff Sessions that Mueller’s appointment meant “the end of my presidency.”

Within a day, Trump was publicly casting doubts about the investigation: “It shows we’re a divided, mixed-up, not-unified country.” Those would not be his last criticisms, nor his most vitriolic, and it wasn’t long before the leading topic in Washington was whether Trump would fire Mueller, as he had done with Comey.

Mueller was nothing if not thorough, building a substantial team of investigators and then seemingly pursuing every angle as far as those angles could be pursued. The investigation plodded along, something that irked both those who hoped to see Trump vindicated and those who hoped to see Trump disgraced.

Seasons came and went, elections came and went, yet the investigation continued. Various Trump campaign officials faced charges, including Paul Manafort, Rick Gates, Roger Stone and Michael Flynn, though many of the cases seemed to be of a technical nature, as opposed to things that would implicate the Trump campaign, such as direct collaboration with Russian agents.

Thirteen Russians were indicted for election interference, but none of them have faced trial in the United States.

The word “Mueller” increasingly appeared in Trump’s Twitter feed. “Why does the Mueller team have 13 hardened Democrats,” he tweeted in March 2018, “some big Crooked Hillary supporters, and Zero Republicans? Another Dem recently added ... does anyone think this is fair? And yet, there is NO COLLUSION!”

The attacks came and went without a response from Mueller, who was rarely seen in public. In his book “Fear,” Bob Woodward dubbed him “a master of silence.”

On March 22, 2019, Mueller wrapped up his investigation and sent his findings to then-Attorney General William Barr, whom he had worked under decades earlier at the Justice Department. Two days later, Barr, who had raised constitutional issues about Mueller’s investigation when he was still a private citizen, sent a summary of Mueller’s findings to Congress.

The big takeaways, according to Barr’s summary, seemed to be that there was no evidence Trump had colluded with Russians, and that the president was not being accused of obstruction of justice. Trump was quite happy: “Bob Mueller was a great HERO to the Radical Left Democrats. Now that the Mueller Report is finished, with a finding of NO COLLUSION & NO OBSTRUCTION (based on a review of Report by our highly respected A.G.), the Dems are going around saying, ‘Bob who, sorry, don’t know the man.’”

But when the full report was published, it soon became evident that Mueller’s findings were of a more complicated nature than Barr and Trump had suggested.

“Far from the ‘complete and total exoneration’ the president has declared in recent weeks, the report depicts a president who made repeated moves to thwart the investigation into his campaign and presidency, possibly because Trump was trying to hide other, potentially criminal behavior — although Mueller found no evidence of a criminal conspiracy to help Russia influence the 2016 election,” Josh Gerstein and Darren Samuelsohn wrote in April 2019.

Mueller complained to Barr about his summary report.

“The summary letter the Department sent to Congress and released to the public late in the afternoon of March 24 did not fully capture the context, nature, and substance of this office’s work and conclusions,” he wrote in a letter to Barr.

Mueller made it clear that he was guided from the get-go by a belief in the Department of Justice that a sitting president could not be charged with a crime.

“Under long-standing department policy, a president cannot be charged with a federal crime while he is in office. That is unconstitutional,” Mueller said.

Mueller also indicated that he believed Russia had indeed interfered in the 2016 election, and that the nation needed to do something about it. “Russian intelligence officers who are part of the Russian military launched a concerted attack on our political system,” he said.

Barr testified about the report before the Senate Judiciary Committee on May 1, 2019, and complained about the way his old friend had handled the whole situation. Two months later, Mueller appeared before the House Judiciary Committee. Members of the panel hoped to draw out of him some of what his team had found but didn’t put in the report, but Mueller didn’t take the bait.

Laurence Tribe, a Harvard law professor, tweeted: “Far from breathing life into his damning report, the tired Robert Mueller sucked the life out of it.” Though Trump would continue to be the subject of investigations through the very end of his presidency and beyond, Mueller no longer figured prominently in them.

Mueller, however, would remain associated with Trump’s presidency. By the time Trump was banned from Twitter in January 2021, Mueller’s name had appeared in 298 Trump tweets or retweets. And Trump sometimes picked up where he left off after that.

“Good, I’m glad he’s dead,” the president wrote on Truth Social upon learning of Mueller’s death on Saturday. “He can no longer hurt innocent people!”

In July 2020, Mueller defended the outcome of his investigation in a Washington Post op-ed. “The work of the special counsel’s office — its reports, indictments, guilty pleas and convictions — should speak for itself,” Mueller said before tallying up the record of the investigation.

“Uncovering and tracing Russian outreach and interference activities was a complex task,” he wrote.

“The investigation to understand these activities took two years and substantial effort. Based on our work, eight individuals pleaded guilty or were convicted at trial, and more than two dozen Russian individuals and entities, including senior Russian intelligence officers, were charged with federal crimes.”

https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/21/robert-mueller-trump-special-counsel-fbi-obituary-00039059

POS said what? saywhat rolleyes

About what most normal people would have expected him to say I suppose.
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Re: Republican Right Wing Nuts - Part ???? mgh888 03/21/26 05:44 PM
TDS is very real - it's a tool used by Fanboys to deflect any conversation about Trump and all the stupid, maniacal, self serving, lying, corrupt or generally hard to defend things he says and does. As if somehow commenting on every stupid, maniacal, self serving, lie or corrupt action he does is somehow unwarranted or unamerican.
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Re: Random NFL News PitDAWG 03/21/26 05:41 PM
Since we're stuck with AB what choice do we have but to hope he does well? We're not going to be competing for the division this year. We don't even have a QB.

And if you want to have a shot at answering the QB position in next years draft you better hope they don't do that well.

Hope is what you have when you have when all else has failed.
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Re: Iranian War mgh888 03/21/26 05:40 PM
The question no-one has tried to attempt to address - what does success look like? What is the objective?

Trump declared they had won a few days ago ... won what? Obviously for fanboys its much better to try to derail the conversation than support the war and tell us what the objectives are. Regime change was the goal at one time, with Trump having control over the succession ... nope. Nuclear capability - they didn't have it before and don't have it now. During the negotiations they said they would hand over all their enriched uranium ... that's not happening now.

What I can see is that we've further alienated Western allies. Given Putin a massive windfall. Killed a bunch of school kids. Tanked or stalled the world economy. All in the name of replacing one leader with his son - sank a lot of Iranian Ships that were zero threat to the USA. Hit their missile sites - again, that were no threat to the USA. So ... what are the objectives? What does winning look like....
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Re: Random NFL News Homewood Dog 03/21/26 05:28 PM
Well in our case the GM that was here, involved, with the DW fiasco is still here and been given the very difficult task of righting the ship. That is a rarity and I'm 100 % supporting AB and hope he accomplishes the job. So far, he's done a decent job IMO and if he hits on these FA signings and this draft we could be contending for the division this season.
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Re: Iranian War mac 03/21/26 05:24 PM


While our War leaders talk like the war is winding down, reading the following might indicate the possibility of an increase in ground combat.




Warnings of Iran Invasion Grow as US to Send Up to 5,000 Marines, Sailors to Middle East
“Bringing this war to an end,” said one former US intelligence analyst, “requires recognizing it can still get much, much worse.”

Warningshttps://www.commondreams.org/news/5000-marines-warships-iran
 
 
In what has been described as a potential “major escalation” of the Trump administration’s war with Iran, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has reportedly approved a request from US Central Command to move more warships and thousands of Marines to the Middle East following Iran’s attacks on vessels in the Strait of Hormuz.

Citing three US officials, The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday that the US was sending “an element of an amphibious ready group and attached Marine expeditionary unit, typically consisting of several warships and 5,000 Marines and sailors.”

According to the Journal, the Japan-based USS Tripoli and its attached Marines are already headed to the Middle East.

While the Journal did not explicitly report that the operation was tied to the volatile situation in the Strait of Hormuz, it noted that “the move comes as Iran’s attacks on the strait have paralyzed traffic through the strategic waterway, disrupting the global economy, driving up gas prices and posing a major military and political challenge for President [Donald] Trump.”


X post: Shashank Joshi

@shashj
 
A key indicator of a potential ground operation. "Hegseth has approved a request from Centcom for an element of an amphibious ready group and attached Marine expeditionary unit, typically consisting of several warships and 5,000 Marines..."
 
 
 In his first address on Thursday, delivered by a news anchor on Iranian state TV, the country’s new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, said that “the lever of blocking the Strait of Hormuz must definitely be used” to heighten economic pressure on the US.

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has declared that “not a liter of oil” shall pass through the strait, and vowed to attack any ship linked to the US and Israel that may attempt to make the journey.

Iran has reportedly attacked at least six commercial ships in the area since Wednesday, including one marked with a Thai flag that still has three crew members missing. US intelligence sources have also accused Iran of laying mines in the Strait, which Iran has neither confirmed nor denied.

The blockage of the strait, through which about one-fifth of global oil shipments pass each year, has sent the global market into chaos. Prices of Brent crude have surged from under $70 less than a month ago to more than $100 per barrel on the global market, and US gas prices have leaped to $3.63 per gallon on average, up from $2.94 a month ago.

Prices have continued to climb even after the International Energy Agency (IEA) announced its largest-ever coordinated release of oil from nations’ strategic reserves on Wednesday to combat what it called “the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market.”

Shashank Joshi, the defense editor at The Economist and a visiting fellow at the Department of War Studies at King’s College London, said that a deployment of such a large Marine force seems to be “a key indicator of a potential ground operation” in Iran.

Trump said earlier this week that he was “nowhere near” sending troops into Iran even as it ramped up threats to block the strait. But privately, he has reportedly been mulling plans to put “boots on the ground” within Iranian territory to accomplish a number of objectives, though officials have characterized them as limited special-operations missions.

Administration officials have reportedly suggested a commando raid on Iran’s nuclear sites to confiscate or sabotage its supply of uranium, according to Axios. They’ve also considered a plan to occupy Kharg Island, which sits 15 miles off Iran’s coast and handles about 90% of its oil exports, serving as an economic “lifeline” for the battered nation.

But Trump has also said that if Iran blocks the strait, “the US Navy and its partners will escort tankers through the strait, if needed.” Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Gen. Dan Caine, has said the Pentagon is looking at “a range of options” to do this.

In an analysis published Tuesday by Zeteo, Harrison Mann, a former US Army major and executive officer of the Defense Intelligence Agency’s Middle East/Africa Regional Center, suggested that the US may pursue an ambitious plan to “clear Iran’s coastline around the strait” to get tankers moving again.

Mann, who worked under the Biden administration but resigned in protest of its support for the genocide in Gaza, said this plan would require “an indefinite occupation–otherwise missile trucks could just get in position after US forces leave.” Doing this, he added, would require “a full-fledged invasion, possibly beyond even the 10,000 or so rapid-response forces at Trump’s disposal.”

“All of these ground operations risk high casualties while failing to accomplish their missions,” Mann said. “That’s a feature, not a bug. Even if one of these operations met its objectives, troops in peril behind enemy lines demand resupply, evacuation, and revenge, which puts more troops in peril behind enemy lines, and so on.”

X post: Harrison Mann

@Harrison_J_Mann
·
Follow
Context: A MEU has only ~1200 *ground* troops. You're not invading Iran ("securing the Strait of Hormuz") with that. Adding the 5-10k available airborne troops might be enough to get a proper quagmire started, though.


Dave Brown
@dave_brown24

The Pentagon is moving a Marine expeditionary unit to the Middle East, as Iran steps up its attacks on the Strait of Hormuz. Hegseth has approved a request from Central Command for the expeditionary unit, typically consisting of up to 2,500 Marines https://wsj.com/livecoverage/us-isr...unit-to-middle-east-WeoODg0XIIe31W3np2aI
12:51 PM · Mar 13, 2026

 

The movement of more troops comes as the US public expresses strong disapproval of Trump’s war with Iran. In a Quinnipiac poll published this week, 53% of registered voters said they opposed US military action against Iran, while just 40% approved.

About 74% said they feared that the war would cause oil and gas prices to rise, and 71% feared that the war would last “months” or longer.

Trump’s former chief strategist, Steve Bannon, who remains one of his top allies in media, said on his War Room podcast that deploying such a large military force “sends a signal to Iran, but it also sends a signal to the American people: This is a major escalation.”

Mann said that putting troops on the ground in Iran will only “ensure that Trump can’t back out easily, which is exactly what [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu, [US Sen.] Lindsey Graham (R-SC), and their ilk need to fracture Iran.

“Bringing this war to an end,” Mann said, “requires recognizing it can still get much, much worse, refusing to fall for the promise of ‘small special ops raids,’ and calling these courses of action what they are: a prelude to forever war.”
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Re: Random NFL News 10YrOvernightSuccess 03/21/26 05:04 PM
Sorta reminds me of the 50yr mortgage that was getting proposed last year. Like, what could possibly be wrong with letting people dig as deep a hole as they want if there are takers.

I’m not saying 5yrs specifically is necessarily wrong but with how coaching & FO’s get swapped out every few years in (…ehem) stability-challenged franchises at some point this kind of can-kicking becomes “let’s just do it and if doesn’t work out we’ll be long gone before the bill comes due anyway”. Certain FO’s may just go for broke when they sense they’re reaching the end of their rope. Happens anyway but the damage potential is at least somewhat limited. I mean, can you imagine if we gave 4 or 5 firsts for DW? At some point someone always shoots themself in the face in the most elaborate way possible with the tools available and you can’t worry too much about that. Buuuuut…. You know it’s gonna be the Browns. 😂
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Re: Iranian War mac 03/21/26 04:38 PM
What's the Iran war death toll?

Dan Morrison updated 8:35 am CT
link

Iran: U.S.-based rights group HRANA said on Thursday that 3,186 people have been killed. It said 1,394 of those were civilians including at least 210 children.

Lebanon: Around 1,021 people have been killed in Israeli strikes since March 2, according to Lebanese authorities. The World Health Organization and Lebanese health authorities said more than 100 of those killed were children.

Iraq: At least 60 people have been killed, according to Iraqi authorities. Most of those were members of the Shiite Popular Mobilization Forces.

Israel: Fifteen civilians have been killed. The Israeli military said two of its soldiers were also killed in southern Lebanon. Four Palestinian women were killed in an Iranian missile attack in the occupied West Bank.

United States: Thirteen servicemembers have been killed in the Iran war.

United Arab Emirates: Eight people have been killed in Iranian attacks, including two army soldiers, according to the UAE defence ministry.

More: Syria, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Oman have each reported small numbers of deaths.
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Re: Iranian War mac 03/21/26 04:33 PM
jc...

Iran war 'winding down,' says Trump as Marines head to Middle East: Last Update: 9:32 am CT

Michael Loria
Aysha Bagchi
USA TODAY
link

 
 
 President Donald Trump said the U.S. is considering "winding down" war with Iran even as the Pentagon sends thousands of additional Marines and an amphibious assault ship to the Middle East.

The mixed messaging from the White House comes about three weeks into the conflict which launched on Feb. 28. Trump promised the war would be swift. On Friday evening, March 20, he said the country is "very close to meeting our objectives," including "never allowing Iran to get even close to Nuclear Capability."

But it remains unclear what exactly the White House needs to complete its mission and whether that will involve deploying to Iran some of the thousands of U.S. soldiers the Pentagon has mustered. Thousands have been killed in the war. Among them are 13 American soldiers and scores of children killed in an apparent U.S. strike on an Iranian school. Israel has also launched a campaign in Lebanon, followed strikes from inside that country by Hezbollah, an Iranian proxy group. Millions of people between Lebanon and Iran have had to flee their homes, according to the United Nations. 

Iran’s move to close the Strait of Hormuz for many vessels has left the White House scrambling to come up with solutions to the burgeoning energy crisis. Average gas prices across the country topped $3.92 per gallon Friday evening, up almost a full dollar compared to before the war, according to AAA. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Friday the U.S. would lift sanctions on 140 million barrels of Iranian oil to ease the shortages driving rising prices. 

"The reality is, jet fuel prices have more than doubled in the last three weeks," Kirby said in a statement. "That may sound scary, but the first piece of good news is that, for now at least, demand remains the strongest we've ever seen. The 10 biggest booked revenue weeks in our history have been the last 10 weeks. But it may be a challenge to continue passing through much of the increased fuel price if oil stays higher for longer."

Kirby said he expects oil prices to rise to $175 per barrel and won’t return to $100 per barrel until the end of 2027. 

Most of the cuts would come to off-peak flights, Kirby said.
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Re: Republican Right Wing Nuts - Part ???? PitDAWG 03/21/26 04:22 PM
The next time trumpians bring up TDS just remind them...............

Republican who introduced Trump derangement syndrome bill arrested for soliciting a minor

Minnesota state senator Justin Eichorn allegedly traveled to meet a 17-year-old he thought he’d met online, but was instead a cop posing as minor

A Republican state lawmaker in Minnesota who recently introduced a bill to create a mental illness category for liberals obsessed over Donald Trump was arrested on Tuesday for allegedly soliciting a minor for prostitution.

Minnesota senator Justin Eichorn was arrested and booked on Tuesday. He believed he was talking to a 17-year-old female, but was communicating instead with detectives from the Bloomington, Minnesota, police department, police allege.

Eichorn, a 40-year-old whose biography on the Minnesota Senate website says he is married with four kids, faces felony charges for soliciting a minor to practice prostitution.

“As a 40-year-old man, if you come to the Orange Jumpsuit District looking to have sex with someone’s child, you can expect that we are going to lock you up,” Booker Hodges of the Bloomington police department said in a statement.

The Minnesota Senate GOP called for Eichorn to resign, saying the reports were shocking. “Justin has a difficult road ahead and he needs to focus on his family,” the caucus said in a statement. The Republican party of Minnesota also called for Eichorn to resign because of the “seriousness” of the charges.

Eichorn is one of five authors of a bill introduced this week that would classify “Trump derangement syndrome” as a mental illness. The derogatory term is often used by Trump supporters to claim liberals are obsessed with Trump to the point of being mentally ill.

The bill defines the syndrome as “the acute onset of paranoia in otherwise normal persons that is in reaction to the policies and presidencies of President Donald J Trump. Symptoms may include Trump-induced general hysteria, which produces an inability to distinguish between legitimate policy differences and signs of psychic pathology in President Donald J. Trump’s behavior.” Expressions of the syndrome could include “intense hostility” toward Trump or “overt acts of aggression and violence against anyone supporting President Donald J Trump or anything that symbolizes President Donald J Trump”.

The bill garnered national headlines and criticism from the left. State senate majority leader Erin Murphy called it “possibly the worst bill in Minnesota history” and said if it’s a joke, it wastes time and trivializes real mental health issues. If it’s serious, it’s “an affront to free speech and an expression of a dangerous level of loyalty to an authoritarian president”.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/mar/18/minnesota-justin-eichorn-arrested-soliciting-minor

..................... that they're following the example of a pedophile.
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Re: Republican Right Wing Nuts - Part ???? PitDAWG 03/21/26 03:10 PM
Army‑Navy game gets special protection under Trump executive order

President Donald Trump has signed a new executive order will prevent any other college football games from infringing on the exclusive television window for the annual Army-Navy clash.

Trump revealed his plan on Friday, March 20 at a White House ceremony as he presented the Commander-in-Chief’s trophy to the Navy football team.

The Army-Navy game has traditionally had the second Saturday in December all to itself, coming the week after conference championship games, but before the start of the bowl season. However, there has been some concern that a possible expansion of the College Football Playoff might necessitate moving first-round games a week earlier – potentially conflicting with Army-Navy.

Trump says the order will prevent any other games from being played during a four-hour window reserved for the Army-Navy game, though it’s not clear how the order would be enforced.



Navy won the 2025 Commander-in-Chief’s trophy by having the best record in games between the service academies, defeating Army 17-16 and beating Air Force 34-31. Navy has won the title each of the past two seasons and 13 times in the last 23 years.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/spor...AkeTM1dFzUzjF_aem_md7kaKrQT5MffaRjXsieOg

Murica? Freedumb?
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Re: Iranian War PitDAWG 03/21/26 02:52 PM
US lifts sanctions on Iranian oil at sea in bid to ease supply pressures

Treasury secretary Scott Bessent says move will bring 140m barrels to market but insists Tehran will not benefit

The Trump administration has waived sanctions on Iranian oil purchases at sea for 30 days to ease surging oil prices driven by the US-Israeli war on Iran.

The US treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, said the waiver would bring about 140m barrels of oil to global markets and help relieve pressure on energy supply.

The move reflects White House concern that soaring oil prices – up about 50% to more than $100 a barrel, the highest since 2022 – will hurt US businesses and consumers ahead of the November midterm elections, when Republicans hope to retain control of Congress.

However, Bessent’s earlier suggestion of a waiver raised concerns that it could benefit Iran’s war effort.

It is the third time the US has temporarily waived sanctions in about two weeks.

It had previously eased sanctions on Russian oil, and on Friday issued a general licence allowing the sale of Iranian crude oil and petroleum products loaded on vessels as of Friday to 19 April, according to the licence posted to the US treasury website.

“By temporarily unlocking this existing supply for the world, the United States will quickly bring approximately 140 million barrels of oil to global markets, expanding the amount of worldwide energy and helping to relieve the temporary pressures on supply caused by Iran,” Bessent said in a statement on X.

“In essence, we will be using the Iranian barrels against Tehran to keep the price down as we continue Operation Epic Fury.”

The licence, posted to the Treasury’s website after market hours, said Iranian oil could be imported into the US under the waiver when necessary to complete its sale or delivery. The US has not meaningfully imported Iranian oil since Washington imposed measures after the 1979 revolution.

It was unclear whether any Iranian oil would enter the country as a result of the waiver. Cuba, North Korea and Crimea are among the regions excluded from the license.

Bessent had floated lifting the sanctions in a Fox Business interview on Thursday, prompting analysts to point out the policy could actually benefit Iran’s war effort.

“To put it mildly, this is bananas,” the Blackstone Compliance Services director, David Tannenbaum, told the BBC. “Essentially, we’re allowing Iran to sell oil, which could then be used to fund the war effort.”

Bessent pushed back on that analysis in his Friday statement. “This temporary, short-term authorization is strictly limited to oil that is already in transit and does not allow new purchases or production,” he wrote.

“Iran will have difficulty accessing any revenue generated and the United States will continue to maintain maximum pressure on Iran and its ability to access the international financial system.”

Vital energy infrastructure in Iran and neighbouring Gulf states has been attacked, and Iran has effectively closed the strait of Hormuz, a conduit for about 20% of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas.

Energy analysts, including Brent Erickson, a managing principal at Obsidian Risk Advisors, have said the administration’s efforts to control prices would not have a meaningful impact until the strait is opened to vessels.

“The easing of sanctions raises concerns about the rapid depletion of Washington’s economic toolkit,” to dampen oil prices, Erickson said. “If we’ve reached the point of loosening sanctions on the country we are at war with, we’re really running out of options.”

The move is expected to benefit China, the top buyer of Iranian oil. The US energy secretary, Chris Wright, said supplies could reach Asia within three or four days and hit the market after being refined over the next month and a half.

Meanwhile, Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araqchi, told a Japanese news agency Tehran had started talks with Tokyo about possibly opening the strait to allow the passage of Japanese-related vessels.

Japan depends on the Middle East for about 95% of its oil supplies and gets about 90% of its oil shipments via the strait. Japan is among the countries forced to release oil from their reserves amid the surging prices.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news...NTEgfRSdFa2ZCq3Wg-peg#Echobox=1774068775
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Re: Iranian War northlima dawg 03/21/26 02:28 PM
Originally Posted by Damanshot
$200 Billion...... Is he out of his freaking mind?

We don't have money for healthcare, school lunches, infrastructure, Social Security, public education...but we have money for this.
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Re: Iranian War PitDAWG 03/21/26 01:59 PM
Originally Posted by mgh888
Now calling NATO allies cowards while Hegseth says Biden depleted munitions by helping Ukraine fight Putin. Couldn't make this chit up if you tried - and its the sort of stuff only the staunchest unthinking fanboy could support. No doubt why there's so little commentary in these forums. Pretty much indefensible.

They take their notes from trump. Just like trump still blames Biden for everything, they blame us because they no longer post here. And just think, they used to claim they were the party of personal responsibility.
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Re: Random NFL News IrishDawg42 03/21/26 01:26 PM
Originally Posted by waterdawg
You missed the point completly


Well, you were pretty vague. Other than you can’t stand Haslem. I was just discussing the rule and how it wouldn’t be an advantage to the guy you hate.
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Re: Random NFL News waterdawg 03/21/26 12:59 PM
You missed the point completly
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Re: Iranian War mgh888 03/21/26 08:17 AM
Originally Posted by Damanshot
Pit, What Trump is looking for from Allies (former allies I think) is confirmation. He wants them to join in so it doesn't look like it's simply Trumps war. We are all aware that it is just Trumps and Israels war..

If they help now, it sends a message that it's alright,, He Done Good... He's looking for an Atta Boy.

There is nothing about the action taken in Iran that has anything to do with NATO. Nothing. It is why NATO partners have not taken any action or engaged. An illegal war of choice no matter how "evil" the regime is/was. No clear objective. Led by Netanyahu who has committed genocide in Gaza and who has been telling the world for decades that Iran was weeks/months away from Nuclear weapons.

Now calling NATO allies cowards while Hegseth says Biden depleted munitions by helping Ukraine fight Putin. Couldn't make this chit up if you tried - and its the sort of stuff only the staunchest unthinking fanboy could support. No doubt why there's so little commentary in these forums. Pretty much indefensible.
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Re: R.I.P. Chuck Norris 3rd_and_20 03/21/26 07:36 AM
Originally Posted by FATE
Yep. And it's happening at an ever-increasing rate. Same with high school classmates for me.

Same here.
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Re: More Music BrownsBabe 03/21/26 01:46 AM
This song was played for the first dance after my late husband and I were married. I still tear up every time I listen to it.

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Re: Random NFL News Damanshot 03/20/26 09:58 PM
Originally Posted by Jester
Or is it the opposite?
Myles Garret going on the trading block?

That makes a helluva lot more sense... If you are gonna give up 3 or 4 or 5 First Rounders, it should probably be on a Shoe in for the HOF.
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Re: Iranian War Damanshot 03/20/26 09:53 PM
$200 Billion...... Is he out of his freaking mind?
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Re: Iranian War Damanshot 03/20/26 09:52 PM
Pit, What Trump is looking for from Allies (former allies I think) is confirmation. He wants them to join in so it doesn't look like it's simply Trumps war. We are all aware that it is just Trumps and Israels war..

If they help now, it sends a message that it's alright,, He Done Good... He's looking for an Atta Boy.
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Pure Football Forum
Re: Random NFL News Milk Man 03/20/26 09:31 PM
Originally Posted by FATE
Originally Posted by Milk Man
Cleveland will soon get the Ted Stepien Rule 2.0 to try and save them from themselves. tongue

But the real question: Will Haslam drop footballs from the 52nd floor of Terminal Tower to celebrate the drafting of Arch Manning?



Jimmy dropping J-Dubs bobbleheads from atop the new Sherwin Williams building.
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Re: Random NFL News FATE 03/20/26 08:18 PM
Originally Posted by IrishDawg42
Originally Posted by waterdawg
Haslam cant win playing by the rules ; So lets change them ! Makes me ill.

Everyone would still have the same rules. It wouldn't really help one team without helping the other 31. It just gives everyone more flexibility. We are only talking 2 years difference, it is currently out 3 years allowed.

Everyone hears 5 years and jumps to the conclusion that Berry and/or Haslem wants to trade 5 picks instead of 3. I think it's more about flexibility than adding more picks to the pot. I'll be honest, I didn't think much about it until YTown brought it up. Kudos to him.

For sure. Just gives a little more leverage in negotiations. And in the case of huge trades, it gives the team dealing the picks a "skip year" in year two, or more likely, year three.

I bet this is passed at a near unanimous vote. It's just fodder for punch lines because it was the Browns that proposed it.
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