Hello 'Pussy' it's Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle and Pippi Longstocking:
At a critical juncture in your presidential campaign last year, your son Donald Trump Jr. met with Natalia Veselnitskaya, a Kremlin-connected Russian lawyer who promised to share political dirt on Hillary Clinton. Paul Manafort, your campaign chairman at the time, and Jared Kushner, your son-in-law and a key strategist, also attended.
Should I remain in bed, leave my country or fight against the dragon?
( see also the story by Wolfgang Hampel,
' Betty MacDonald: Nothing more to say ' )
Betty MacDonald fan club fans,
you can join Betty MacDonald fan club on Facebook.
Thank you so much in advance for your support and interest.We are still working on Betty MacDonald fan club newsletter July.
A Betty MacDonald fan club fan is going to share a letter by Mary Bard Jensen whose grandmother sent a letter in the sixties to Mary.
The fan's grandmother was really very interested and asked Mary Bard Jensen some questions especially serveral ones regarding Betty MacDonald's and Mary Bard Jensen's 'adopted sister Madge' described by Betty in her book ' The Plague and I '.
As you can see we got very interesting new info for updated Betty MacDonald biography.
Betty MacDonald fan club founder Wolfgang Hampel and Betty MacDonald fan club research team are going to include all these new details and info in updated Betty MacDonald biography.
More info in Betty MacDonald fan club newsletter July.
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Greta
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At a critical juncture in Donald Trump’s presidential campaign last year, his son Donald Trump Jr. met
with Natalia Veselnitskaya, a Kremlin-connected Russian lawyer who
promised to share political dirt on Hillary Clinton. Paul Manafort, Mr.
Trump’s campaign chairman at the time, and Jared Kushner, Mr. Trump’s
son-in-law and a key strategist, also attended.
The
June 9, 2016, meeting is of obvious interest to Robert Mueller III, the
Justice Department special counsel investigating the Trump team’s
potential involvement in Russia’s effort to influence the presidential
election. In two clumsy statements over the weekend, the younger Mr.
Trump on Saturday said the meeting
was related to Russia’s freezing of an adoption program popular with
Americans. When confronted a day later with a Times story citing
authoritative sources that Ms. Veselnitskaya had promised damaging
material on Mrs. Clinton, he said that the information she supplied was
essentially meaningless and merely a “pretext” for discussing the
adoption issue.
On
the face of it, this seemed a clear though perhaps unintended admission
by Donald Trump Jr. that he had gone into the meeting expecting
damaging information, and the episode is clearly grist for Mr. Mueller’s
mill. As is a report Monday night by The Times that the president’s son
had received an email saying Ms. Veselnitskaya’s information came from
Moscow. But his shifty statements are also further evidence of how
freely his father and the people around the president contort the truth.
Only six months in, President Trump has compiled a record of dishonesty
— ranging from casual misstatements to flat-out lies — without precedent in the modern presidency. Equally disheartening is his team’s willingness to share in his mendacity.
On
Sunday, before Donald Trump Jr. acknowledged that there was a
Clinton-related aspect to the meeting, Reince Priebus, the White House
chief of staff, was on Fox News suggesting that the Veselnitskaya
episode was “a big nothingburger” for the Trump campaign.
If
a culture of dishonesty takes root in an administration, how can
Americans believe anything its officials say? Take, for instance, the
matter of whether President Vladimir Putin of Russia personally directed
Moscow’s hacking of the 2016 presidential election. In statements
dating from his first days in office until the eve of his meeting with
Mr. Putin in Germany last week, when he said “nobody really knows,” Mr.
Trump has deflected and sought to discredit his own intelligence
agencies’ finding that Moscow, at Mr. Putin’s direction, tried to
disrupt the election to help him win. Rex Tillerson, the secretary of
state, said after the American and Russian presidents met in Hamburg
that they “had a very robust and lengthy exchange on the subject” and
that Mr. Trump had “pressed” Mr. Putin on the issue. Later, Mr. Trump
made much the same claim on Twitter. The Russian foreign minister,
Sergey Lavrov, had quite a different version of the facts, suggesting
that Mr. Trump had characterized the hacking controversy as a “campaign”
against Russia in which “not a single fact has been produced.” So whom
should Americans believe? In a more credible administration, who would
ever ask?
On Monday, Donald Trump Jr. hired a lawyer,
while maintaining on Twitter that he’d been forthright in answering
questions about the meeting last year. Meanwhile, Sarah Huckabee
Sanders, deputy press secretary, blew more smoke: The “only thing I see
inappropriate” about the meeting, she said, is that it was leaked to the
media.