Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Playing Ducks And Drakes And Turkey Dump!

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 Sep, 2016 01:44 PM
    Donald Trump claimed he did not "pay to play". Hillary Clinton insisted she played by the rules. And the FBI chief asserted they "don't play games".
     
    FBI's release of a report on the Democratic presidential nominee's use of a private email server before the long Labour Day weekend was not akin to a "Turkey dump", as the pundits insinuated to escape the media chatter, averred Director James Comey.
     
    "We don't play games," he said in a memo to FBI agents some of whom were reportedly sharply critical of the decision not to charge Clinton despite finding her "extremely careless" in handling the nation's secrets as America's top diplomat.
     
    "The case itself was not a cliff-hanger despite all the chest-beating by people no longer in government," he maintained and the documents were released when they were ready.
     
    And Clinton finding her national lead shrinking from 8 to 3 points in the face of her ever-unfolding email saga on the home stretch of the presidential race acknowledged it was a "mistake" to use a private email server and so was her vote for Iraq war as a US senator.
     
    But that did not disqualify her from serving as the nation's Commander-in-Chief, she insisted at a TV forum of military veterans.
     
    For while all government systems from the State Department to even the White House may have been hacked, "There is no evidence my system was hacked."
     
    Quickly negating her brazen claim, fact checkers pointed out that FBI did "assess that hostile actors gained access" to her system but found no evidence simply because it was unlikely hackers would leave a trail.
     
     
    And in choosing to discuss issues like the CIA drone programme in Pakistan on unclassified mail she relied on the judgement of "hundreds of experienced foreign policy experts, diplomats, defence officials", claimed Clinton, neatly shifting the blame.
     
    As for her support for Iraq war, her opponent too had done so, she offered lamely.
     
    Not true, averred rival Trump. "I was totally against the war in Iraq" he said, pointing to a 2004 interview with Esquire magazine glossing over his comment two years earlier to an interviewer when asked if he supported the invasion, "Yeah, I guess so."
     
    The brash billionaire who had not long ago claimed that he knows more than the generals and had a secret "fool proof" plan to tackle ISIS, asserted that the "generals had been reduced to a rubble" under President Barack Obama.
     
    Claiming to be "pretty good with body language", Trump suggested he had also learnt some shocking things from intelligence briefings given to presidential candidates, saying, "I could tell they were not happy" about "our leaders" not following their recommendations.
     
    He even praised Russian President Vladimir Putin saying while he did not like their system, Putin has "been a leader, far more than" Obama.
     
     
    Nor did he mind being called "brilliant" by an authoritarian Putin though that would not get the Russian leader anywhere with him, Trump preened.
     
    But a horrified Clinton suggested Trump's praise for Putin was "not just unpatriotic and insulting to the people of our country, as well as to our Commander-in-Chief -- it is scary".
     
    Meanwhile, the billionaire who had doubled down on his rival over what he called a "pay-to-play" game of giving fat cat Clinton foundation donors fast-track "access" to her, faced scrutiny over his own gifts to some politicians.
     
    Trump had last year boasted that "when you give" politicians "to do whatever the hell you want them to do". Now he changed tack suggesting that a $25,000 donation to Florida attorney general Pam Bondi in 2013 was a contribution without strings.
     
    While Bondi said Trump's gift did not influence her decision not to pursue fraud claims against his university, California's Indian-American attorney general Kamla Harris, who too got $5,000, was still said to be looking into the allegations.
     
     
    Back on the campaign trail, Clinton told reporters on her plane in the midst of a coughing bout: "Every time I think about Trump, I get allergic."
     
    And as #Hacking Hillary began trending on twitter, raising questions about her health, Trump shot back: "Mainstream media never covered Hillary's massive 'hacking' or coughing attack, yet it is #1trending. What's up?"
     
    While people do get to play the last card come November 8, those allergic to both Trump and Clinton face a Hobson's choice!

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Shopping vouchers may help pregnant women kick the butt

    Shopping vouchers may help pregnant women kick the butt
    Financial incentives could help one in five women quit smoking during pregnancy, shows a new research.

    Shopping vouchers may help pregnant women kick the butt

    What You Don't Know About Manure Use In The Landscape Could Hurt You

    What You Don't Know About Manure Use In The Landscape Could Hurt You
    Organic and synthetic fertilizers are the most common way to add nutrients to the soil, but animal manure is good too, if you can find and transport it.

    What You Don't Know About Manure Use In The Landscape Could Hurt You

    Disney Raises Theme Park Ticket Prices; Magic Kingdom One-Day Entry At $105 For Ages 10 And Up

    Disney Raises Theme Park Ticket Prices; Magic Kingdom One-Day Entry At $105 For Ages 10 And Up
    LOS ANGELES — Visiting Mickey and Minnie just got more expensive. The Walt Disney Co. raised ticket prices to attend Disneyland, Walt Disney World and the rest of its U.S. theme parks, effective Sunday.

    Disney Raises Theme Park Ticket Prices; Magic Kingdom One-Day Entry At $105 For Ages 10 And Up

    How Many Remotes Do You Have? New Single Touch-Screen Device Controls TV With Just A Tap

    How Many Remotes Do You Have? New Single Touch-Screen Device Controls TV With Just A Tap
    SAN FRANCISCO — How many remotes does it take to watch television, stream Netflix or record your favourite show on DVR?

    How Many Remotes Do You Have? New Single Touch-Screen Device Controls TV With Just A Tap

    Pawscars Honour Top Animal Actors, Including Prolific Primate For Lifetime Achievement

    Pawscars Honour Top Animal Actors, Including Prolific Primate For Lifetime Achievement
    A monkey who's starred in 25 movies over two decades was top dog at the sixth annual Pawscars, the animal version of the Oscars. Waving a statue over her head in triumph, a beaming Crystal accepts the "lifetime diva achievement award" looking every bit the part in a pink, floor-length gown and necklace during the show streaming online Wednesday.

    Pawscars Honour Top Animal Actors, Including Prolific Primate For Lifetime Achievement

    'Indian Cuisine Is Pretty Big In Britain'

    'Indian Cuisine Is Pretty Big In Britain'
      She comes from a family of chefs and co-owns Southall-based Brilliant Restaurant that specialises in Punjabi cooking with a Kenyan twist. Dipna Anand, a London-based Indian chef, says the city has welcomed Indian curries with open arms.

    'Indian Cuisine Is Pretty Big In Britain'