John Solomon, Mark Meckler & Bernard “Bernie” Richardson on The Larry O’Connor Show 05.23.19


Happen to miss The Larry O’Connor Show today? Recap today’s program by checking out topics from the program below:



Christopher Steele’s nugget of fool’s gold was easily disproven — but FBI didn’t blink an eye (The Hill)

Of all the wild tales that Christopher Steele spun about Russia-Trump collusion during a visit to the State Department shortly before the 2016 election, only one was deemed worth forwarding to his FBI handlers.

Long hidden, the now-disclosed email speaks volumes about both the quality of Steele’s so-called intelligence gathering and the FBI’s willingness to vet an informant who was openly biased against Donald Trump, paid by Trump’s Democratic opponent, and motivated by an Election Day deadline.

Multiple sources confirm to me that the attachment that Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Kathleen Kavalec sent to then-FBI section chief Stephen Laycock on Oct. 13, 2016, was a summary from Steele’s company alleging Trump and Russia might be communicating through a computer server at Russia’s Alfa Bank. [Read More]

 

Alan Dershowitz: Congress is not above the law when it comes to impeachment – Don’t weaponize the Constitution (FOX News)

The mantra invoked by those Democrats who are seeking to impeach President Donald Trump is that “No one is above the law.” That, of course, is true, but it is as applicable to Congress as it is to the president. Those members of Congress who are seeking to impeach the president, even though he has not committed any of the specified impeachable offences set out in the Constitution, are themselves seeking to go above the law. All branches of government are bound by the law. Congressmen, presidents, justices, judges must all operate within the law. All take an oath to support the Constitution, not to rewrite it for partisan advantage. [Read More]

Survey: Parents Believe Children Should Start Thinking About Career Path At Age 5 (Study Finds)

Plenty of moms and dads hope their children go on to become doctors or scholars, but how early is too early to lay the foundation for their careers? A new survey finds that, on average, modern parents view age 5-and-a-half as the right time to begin plotting out and looking ahead to their future career paths.

Perhaps not surprisingly, more than half (56%) of the 2,000 parents surveyed already have their own ideas for what their kids will be when they grow up. Three in four participants hope their children gravitate towards STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, mathematics) professions, with engineer, doctor, and web developer/programmer leading the way for the jobs they predict them landing. [Read More]

 

Missed a Show? Listen Here

Newsletter

Local Weather