Maher: Trump Violates ‘Pay Your Taxes’ Rule, I Worry ‘We Do Need the UN to Step In’


McCain is no war hero Jake, check him out if you dare.

Donna Brazile Admits to Sharing Debate Questions With Clinton Camp, Blames Russia


CNN embarrasses it self every day with or without Donna Brazile.

FLASHBACK: HOW DID NORTH KOREA GET NUCLEAR POWER?


T-Rex is right North Korea needs to be put down just like any rabid dog.

WHY YOUR CITY IS GOING TO S***


Agenda 21 is very very real people and the plan was to complete the conversion by 2050.

Republicans emerge as president’s biggest obstacle…


I DO NOT TRUST RYAN he is a snake in the grass!

Could it be Russians? Mysterious spike in cell phone hacks hits DC


Well stop complaining and do something … 😦

VA Hospital Removes Trump Photo Hung by Veterans


And they wonder why so many Vets hate the VA

DOJ Delivers Trump Wiretap Documents To Congress, Statement Due Shortly


Tyler Durden's picture

The DoJ just delivered documents to congressional committees responding to their request for information that could shed light on President Donald Trump’s claims that former President Barack Obama ordered U.S. agencies to spy on him. Reuters reports that a congressional official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the House Intelligence Committee was examining the documents and might issue a public statement about them later on Friday.

As The Hill reports, it’s unclear what’s in the documents, which CNN reported separately had also been delivered to the Senate Intelligence Committee, though that report could not be immediately confirmed.

Reuters reports a ‘government source’ an initial examination of the material turned over by the Justice Department indicates that it contains no evidence to confirm Trump’s claims.

Leaders of both the House and Senate intelligence committees, including from Trump’s Republican Party, have said they have found no evidence to substantiate Trump’s claims that Obama ordered U.S. agencies to spy on Trump or his entourage. The White House has publicly offered no proof of the allegation. On Monday, the House panel sent the Justice Department a letter asking for copies of any court orders related to Trump or his associates which might have been issued last year under an electronic surveillance law or a wide-ranging anti-crime statute.

White House press secretary Sean Spicer has sought to clarify the claims, saying that Trump put the wiretapping accusation “in quotes” and was more broadly referring to surveillance activities by the Obama administration.

But, The Hill continues, Spicer also said that Trump “stands by” his initial tweets on the subject, and Trump on Friday joked about the wiretapping claims during a press conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

The House Intelligence Committee will hold an open hearing on Russian interference in the election on Monday, where questions about Trump’s claims are sure to be raised. Lawmakers will have the opportunity to press FBI Director James Comey on the issue.

One way or another, we suspect speculation about what the documets contain will quickly become the news-cycle narrative for the weekend.

Updates to follow…

Limbaugh: ‘We Are on the Verge of a Genuine Constitutional Crisis’


Rush is right it is headed that way.

Visualizing The 100 Websites That Rule The Internet


Tyler Durden's picture

There are over 1.1 billion websites on the internet, but the vast majority of all traffic actually goes to a very select list of them. As Visual Capitalist’s Jeff Desjardins notes, Google.com, for example, has an astounding 28 billion visits per month. The next closest is also a Google-owned property, Youtube.com, which brings in 20.5 billion visits.

Today’s infographic comes to us from Vodien, and it lists the 100 highest ranking websites in the U.S. by traffic, according to website analytics company Alexa.

The information is grouped by company – for example, you can see that Google controls four sites in the Top 100 (Google, Youtube, Blogger, and Google User Content), while Verizon owns the Huffington Post and AOL.com (they will also control Yahoo and Tumblr when that deal closes in Q2). The data is also sorted by industry, so sites in a similar category are grouped in the same color.

Courtesy of: Visual Capitalist

A STEEP DROPOFF

The dropoff from #1 to #100 is significant. Google.com has 28 billion visits, but a website like Citi.com (ranked #98) only has 53 million visits a month. That’s a 500x difference!