Categories
FBI News Review

11:31 AM 12/20/2017 – Graffiti Artist – Google Search – Mike Nova’s Shared NewsLinks 

Listen to this article

Image result for Graffiti Artist
“Here is your “Collision” – “Collusion” for you, you “Lab-rats –  g(k)nats(nuts)”! That what your name is: THE LABRAT KNATS! And I am just one of them, a little Lab Rat, “The Graffiti Artist Writing On The Walls”. And be scared of the L.A. Brats – K-NATs, and be scared of the war with these nuts! Just by the way. And maybe the “Antifas” did it, too…” – in my interpretation as of 8:46 AM 12/20/2017 – M.N.

Mike Nova’s Shared NewsLinks
Graffiti Artist – Google Search
Graffiti Artist – Google Search
Graffiti Artist – Google Search
Graffiti Artist – Google Search
Graffiti Artist – Google Search
Graffiti Artist – Google Search
Graffiti Artist – Google Search
Graffiti Artist – Google Search
Amtrak Inquiry Will Focus on Driver Distraction and Excessive Speed
tacoma washington train nytimes – Google Search
The Early Edition: December 20, 2017
Urban Dictionary: lab rat
writing on the wall – Google Search
‘Antifa’ Falsely Linked to Amtrak Train Derailment by Right-Wing Conspiracy Peddlers
tacoma wa train accident claims of responsibility – Google Search
The Animatronic Trump In Disney’s Hall Of Presidents Is The Stuff Of Nightmares
There’s real promise in Trump’s National Security Strategy – Washington Post
A crisis in leadership at the FBI – Washington Times
As FSB marks 100 years of relentless spy-hunt, it nails a friendly Norwegian pensioner – The Independent Barents Observer
The FBI Routinely Abuses Its Powers but the Trump Investigation Has Been By the Book – The Intercept
HR McMaster rejects claim that Trump is Putin’s puppet – New York Daily News
Labrat « Endless Canvas Bay Area Graffiti and Street Art
“Labrat Knats! graffiti – Google Search
“Labrat Knats! graffiti – Google Search
“Labrat Knats! graffiti – Google Search
Feed Integration by RSS Dog.
Mike Nova’s Shared NewsLinks
Graffiti Artist – Google Search

mikenova shared this story .

Image result for Graffiti Artist

Graffiti Artist – Google Search

mikenova shared this story .

Image result for Graffiti Artist

Graffiti Artist – Google Search

mikenova shared this story .

Image result for Graffiti Artist

Graffiti Artist – Google Search

mikenova shared this story .

Image result for Graffiti Artist

Graffiti Artist – Google Search

mikenova shared this story .

Image result for Graffiti Artist

Graffiti Artist – Google Search

mikenova shared this story .

Image result for Graffiti Artist

Graffiti Artist – Google Search

mikenova shared this story .

Image result for Graffiti Artist

Graffiti Artist – Google Search

mikenova shared this story .

Image result for Graffiti Artist

Amtrak Inquiry Will Focus on Driver Distraction and Excessive Speed

mikenova shared this story .

DUPONT, Wash. — The investigation into the fatal Amtrak crash near Tacoma, Wash., is focusing on the possibility that the engineer was distracted by a cellphone, another person in his cab or something else when the train barreled into a curve 50 miles per hour over the posted speed limit.
The crew did not activate the emergency brake before the derailment on Monday morning, said Bella Dinh-Zarr, the National Transportation Safety Board official overseeing the investigation, which might indicate that the engineer failed to perceive the danger.
At a news conference on Tuesday afternoon, she said the badly damaged cameras in the engineer’s cab — one facing forward, and the other inward, toward the person driving the train — had been sent to the safety board’s laboratory in Washington D.C. There, investigators will try to extract images showing what went on in the moments before the train plunged into a stand of trees and onto a busy highway, killing three people.
Ms. Dinh-Zarr stressed that the crew members — all of them hospitalized — had not yet been interviewed, and most of the evidence not yet analyzed. A data recorder on the train, carrying 77 passengers and seven crew members, indicated that it was racing at 80 miles per hour into a curve that is limited to 30 miles per hour, the safety board said. Excessive speed appeared to be the immediate cause of the crash, but the reason for that speed remained unknown.
“Distraction is one of our most wanted list of priorities at the N.T.S.B.” she said. “It’s protocol for us to look at all of the cellphone records of all the crew members whenever there is an accident of this type.”
There was a second person in the cab at the time of the crash, “a conductor who was getting experience and familiarizing himself with the territory,” Ms. Dinh-Zarr said. While that is common practice, rail safety experts say it can also be a distraction to the engineer, a possibility that she said would be investigated.
Drug and alcohol testing of crews is routine after train accidents, and the inward-facing cameras could show not only whether the engineer was distracted, but also whether he was impaired or fatigued — factors that have been blamed in other rail accidents.
Amtrak 501, on the Cascades service between Seattle and Portland, was the first to carry passengers on a new, faster route between Tacoma and Olympia, on tracks recently upgraded for passenger service. The unfamiliar, 14.5-mile stretch includes a spot where southbound trains leave a straightaway on a downhill slope before reaching the crash site, where the tracks curve onto an overpass crossing Interstate 5.
On that new part of the trip, “crews have been operating for at least two weeks prior to the accident with nonrevenue trains,” she said, including the engineer who was at the controls on Monday morning. But she would not say whether they had enough training before hauling passengers.
The fact that the train was on its inaugural run — and that the tracks had only recently been improved — may have contributed to the derailment, said Allan Zarembski, a professor of railroad safety and engineering at the University of Delaware.
The accident mirrored a 2015 crash in Philadelphia that killed eight people, when an Amtrak train took a turn much too fast and jumped the tracks. In the 2015 Philadelphia Amtrak derailment, the N.T.S.B. found that the engineer had lost “situational awareness” of where the train was on the route.
In this week’s accident, “the operator may not have been 100 percent familiar with that route or misjudged where he was and didn’t start to slow down for that curve,” Dr. Zarembski said. “I’m sure there was some familiarization, but the question is, how familiar was he with it?”
Operators generally carefully study documents known as track charts, which describe the route’s speed limits and tricky areas, before stepping into the cab, he said.
A former safety board railroad investigator, Russell Quimby, said that while there was no national standard for how many dry runs a railroad had to perform before opening a line, it was common to run practice trains under a variety of weather conditions and other circumstances.
After a private briefing by investigators, Gov. Jay Inslee of Washington said, “there are a thousand unanswered questions about this right now.”
The safety board blamed the 2008 crash of a commuter train in Los Angeles, which killed 25 people, on the distraction of the engineer, who was composing a text message when he ran a red light and collidedwith a freight train.
That accident played an important role in evolving rail safety standards. It led the safety board to recommend inward-facing cameras in train cabs, and Amtrak committed in 2015 to installing them.
The crash also prompted Congress to require that railroads adopt a system called positive train control — which the safety board has sought for decades — that automatically slows or stops a train that is moving too fast, or is in danger of running a red light or hitting another train. The law originally set a 2015 deadline for positive train control, which uses sensors both on the trains and along the tracks, communicating by radio frequencies. But after lobbying by railroads, Congress postponed the requirement.
“Unfortunately, the deadline was the end of 2015, but Congress extended that deadline to the train companies, and allowed them to have until the end of 2018,” Ms. Dinh-Zarr said.
Richard H. Anderson, the president of Amtrak, said at a news conference in Tacoma on Tuesday evening that it was too early to know whether positive train control could have prevented the accident. While some Amtrak routes have the technology, the Cascades line is scheduled to have it by the end of 2018, he said.
“We have to keep this as a wake-up call,” Mr. Anderson said. “It is not acceptable that we are involved in these kinds of accidents.”
Sound Transit, the regional agency that owns the track where the train derailed on Monday, said the system had been installed along the line, and the Washington State Department of Transportation has said that the entire Cascades route will have the system by mid-2018.
“The locomotive was in the process of getting a P.T.C. system installed but it was not yet functional,” Ms. Dinh-Zarr said.
Last Friday, a Cascades train took local dignitaries on the new route, including Eric F. Corp, a DuPont city councilman. Long before then, he said, people who knew anything about the line knew that there was a big curve going over the highway, requiring a major slowdown.
“What speed we were going when we went around the corner I’m not sure, but it was slow and methodical,” he said. “It wasn’t like we were leaning or at no time did I think we were going too fast.”
Two of the people killed, Zack Willhoite and James Hamre, were close friends and rail enthusiasts, traveling together on the train’s first public voyage. Mr. Hamre, a retired engineer, was a volunteer for All Aboard Washington, a rail advocacy organization; Mr. Willhoite worked as a customer support specialist for Pierce Transit, a local transportation agency.
“It was just a given that they would be there,” said Lloyd Flem, a friend of the victims and the executive director of All Aboard Washington. “They had wanted to be on that very, very first run.”
In an interview on Tuesday, Mr. Flem said that he had seen both men just a few days ago and that they were eager to board the train early Monday morning.
On Tuesday, the scene of the crash, surrounded by police and emergency vehicles, began to look more like a construction site than a disaster. In a steady rain, huge cranes moved into place and began to lift the wrecked pieces of the train, while the crumpled remains of cars and trucks were loaded onto tractor-trailers to be taken away.
The crash left at least two coaches tumbled onto their sides, one of them on top of another coach, and two dangling precariously off the edge of the bridge; the locomotive that was pulling the train came to a stop on the highway. Of the 14 cars in the train, only the locomotive at the rear, which was not in use at the time, did not derail.
Continue reading the main story
tacoma washington train nytimes – Google Search

mikenova shared this story .

Image result for tacoma washington train nytimes

The Early Edition: December 20, 2017

mikenova shared this story from Just Security.

Signup to receive the Early Edition in your inbox here.
Before the start of business, Just Security provides a curated summary of up-to-the-minute developments at home and abroad. Heres todays news.
ISRAEL-PALESTINE
The U.N. General Assembly is scheduled to hold an emergency special session tomorrow on Trumps decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, the session will include a vote on a draft resolution calling on Trump to withdraw his declaration a vote that would not be binding, but would carry political weight. Michelle Nichols reports at Reuters.
The draft resolution calls on the General Assembly to declare the U.S. move null and void and comes after Mondays U.N. Security Council 14-1 vote on a similar draft resolution. Peter Beaumont reports at the Guardian.
The U.S. will be taking names of the countries that support the draft resolution, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N. warned in a letter sent to Member States yesterday, adding that the president and the U.S. would take this vote personally. Noa Landau reports at Haaretz.
The decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israels capital and move the U.S. Embassy there does not prejudge final status negotiations in any way, Haleys letter to Member States also said, noting that the specific boundaries of Israeli sovereignty in Jerusalem are yet to be decided and that Trump supports the status quo at Jerusalems holy sites. Colum Lynch reports at Foreign Policy.
The Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas is in the Saudi capital of Riyadh to meet with King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to discuss the Jerusalem decision and the latest developments in the city. Al Jazeera reports in rolling coverage.
The killing of a Palestinian wheelchair-bound amputee protestors by Israeli security forces was a truly shocking and wanton act, the U.N. human rights chief Zeid Raad al Hussein said yesterday, calling for Israel to open an independent and impartial investigation into the incident that occurred on Dec. 15, amid increased tensions due to Trumps decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israels capital. The U.N. News Centre reports.
The Israeli military denied that it targeted the protestor and said that its own investigation was unable to conclude what had killed him, adding that protestors threw explosive devices and rocks and rolled burning tires at Israeli security forces. Reuters reports.
Trump and the British Prime Minister Theresa May spoke about their different positions on Jerusalem in a phone call yesterday amid tensions between the two leaders, neither the White House nor Downing Street mentioned a presidential visit to London in their accounts of the conversation. Julian Borger and Peter Walker report at the Guardian.
NORTH KOREA
The WannaCry cyberattack carried out by North Korea was meant to cause havoc and destruction, Trumps homeland security adviser Thomas P. Bossert said in a press conference yesterday, publicly acknowledging that Pyongyang was behind the attack in May that affected more than 230,000 computers across the world. Ellen Nakashiman and Philip Rucker report at the Washington Post.
Canada and the U.S. are scheduled to co-host a meeting on the North Korean crisis in January, the Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland announced yesterday during a joint news conference with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. Max Greenwood reports at the Hill.
The U.S. gave China a draft resolution for new U.N. sanctions on North Korea last week, according to a Western diplomat. An anonymous U.S. official said that efforts were underway to negotiate a new U.N. resolution, but that an agreement had not been reached yet, Michelle Nichols and Steve Holland report at Reuters.
Im not aware of any plans to halt our long-standing and scheduled and regular military exercises with our partners in South Korea, Tillerson said yesterday following comments by the South Korean President Moon Jae-in to NBC News that proposed postponing joint military drills until after the 2018 Winter Olympics. Max Greenwood reports at the Hill.
The President had made very clear that on North Korea now is not the time to talk, Trumps national security adviser H.R. McMaster said yesterday, reiterating the White House position after recent comments by Tillerson appeared to contradict previous policy on engaging in negotiations. Daniella Diaz and Dan Merica report at CNN.
U.S. allies and other countries have been slow to implement sanctions against North Korea and the U.S. must take an aggressive approach to Chinese sanctions violators if it wants to force North Korea to the negotiating table. The Wall Street Journal editorial board writes.
The visit by Jeffrey Feltman, the U.N. undersecretary-general for political affairs to North Korea, was the first by a high-level U.N. official in six years, Feltman made three request of Pyongyang officials during his meetings, however the North Korean response to his requests demonstrate that it seeks to bargain from a position of power and the world should be concerned about the possibility of sleepwalking into a confrontation. David Ignatius provides an analysis of Feltmans trip at the Washington Post.
YEMEN
Saudi Arabia intercepted a ballistic missile launched toward its capital by the Iran-backed Yemeni Houthi rebels, a spokesperson for the Saudi-led coalition said in a statement yesterday, adding that the missile was heading toward populated residential areas and a Houthi spokesperson said that the missile was aimed at a royal palace in Riyadh. Kareem Fahim reports at the Washington Post.
The Houthi rebels said that they have opened a new chapter in their confrontation with Saudi Arabia following yesterdays missile attack, Reuters reports.
The Houthi missile bears all the hallmarks of previous attacks using Iranian-provided weapons, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley said yesterday, warning that Iran would bring the world deeper into a broadening regional conflict if its crimes were not exposed. The BBC reports.
The U.S. condemned the Houthis for the attack, the spokesperson for the State Department, Heather Nauert, called on Irans Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to stop arming and enabling the Houthis violent actions and reiterated the need to allow humanitarian aid to reach the Yemeni people. Max Greenwood reports at the Hill.
The main Yemeni port of Hodeida will remain open for a month, despite the Houthi attack, the Saudi-led coalition said today, saying that the decision was made to allow for humanitarian aid to reach the Yemeni people. Reuters reports.
Trumps nominee for the top legal adviser at the State Department acknowledged that Saudi Arabias blocking of humanitarian aid to Yemen may constitute a violation of U.S. and international law in a written answer to questions raised by a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Todd Young (R-Ind.), last month. Dan De Luce reports at Foreign Policy.
TRUMP NATIONAL SECURITY STRATEGY
China and Russia criticized Trumps new national security strategy (N.S.S.), which was unveiled on Monday and called both countries rivals, with China saying that it revealed Cold War thinking and Russia saying that it had an imperialist character. Andrew E. Kramer reports at the New York Times.
The N.S.S. offered a harsher but more realistic view of U.S.-China relations than that of the Obama administration, it acknowledged Chinas rise and its bullying behavior, however Trumps challenge will be to convince Asian friends and allies he is serious about upholding U.S. primacy in the region and the dispute in the South China Sea could lead to another Cold-War style brinkmanship. Andrew Browne writes at the Wall Street Journal.
The N.S.S. offered glimmers of hope, is a move in the right direction by acknowledging the threat posed by China and Russia, and may help to correct the foreign policy damage of the recent past. David Von Drehle writes at the Washington Post.
The N.S.S. omitted key points, such as the threat of climate change and the need to uphold human rights and promote democracy, it reversed the notion put forward by the Obama and Bush administration that free trade deals serve the U.S. national interest, and the strategy revealed a dissonance between Trumps words on Russia and China and his actions. The Washington Post editorial board writes.
At its core, the N.S.S. was hardly a radical departure from American tradition, and the critics have reacted with hyperbole. The most striking element of the speech was the linking of economic prosperity with the furthering of U.S. interests and national security a focus that is welcome. Zachary Karabell writes at POLITICO Magazine.
TRUMP-RUSSIA
The F.B.I. Deputy Director Andrew McCabe appeared before the House Intelligence Committee yesterday amid the committees investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. election, concerns among some Republicans about anti-Trump bias within the F.B.I. and speculation over McCabes possible departure. Katie Bo Williams reports at the Hill.
Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) and Oversight Committee Chairman Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.) have called on the Justice Department to make senior F.B.I. officials available for testimonybefore Congress, the two lawmakers are seeking information on the F.B.I.s handling of the investigation into the Russia investigation and their investigation into former presidential candidate Hillary Clintons use of classified information. Kyle Cheney reports at POLITICO.
The House Intelligence Committee interviewed the former State Department official David Kramer yesterday, Kramer met with the former British Intelligence officer Christopher Steele who compiled the controversial dossier that alleged ties between Trump and Russia. Katie Bo Williams reports at the Hill.
A group of Democratic lawmakers have called on speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) to arrange a briefing to Congress by the Department of Homeland Security and F.B.I. on Russian efforts to target state voter systems ahead of the 2016 election, Morgan Chalfant reports at the Hill.
SYRIA
The U.N. will propose a timeline for elections in Syria and guidance on constitutional reforms, the U.N. special envoy for Syria Staffan de Mistura told the Security Council yesterday, expressing hope that the propositions would spur fresh thinking in all quarters. Michelle Nichols and Tom Miles report at Reuters.
U.S.-led airstrikes continue. U.S. and coalition forces carried out 19 airstrikes against Islamic State targets in Syria and Iraq between December 15 and December 17. [Central Command]
OTHER DEVELOPMENTS
The U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley called for the Security Council to take action to address Irans dangerous violations of U.N. resolutions and its destabilizing behavior, saying yesterday that the council could strengthen the resolution that endorsed the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, adopt a new resolution prohibiting all Iranian ballistic missile activity, explore sanctions in response to violations of the Yemen arms embargo, and hold Irans Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps accountable for violating council resolutions. Russias deputy U.N. ambassador said that abandoning the language of threats and sanctions was needed to implement the resolution on the nuclear deal, Edith M. Lederer reports at the AP.
An analysis has revealed that between 9,000 and 11,000 civilians were killed in the battle to free the Iraqi city of Mosul from the Islamic State group, the AP reports.
The House is set to hold a vote on a bill renewing the National Security Agencys (N.S.A.) warrantless surveillance program, which was modified by the House Intelligence Committee and does not include many new privacy controls but tries to strike a compromise between the F.B.I.s desires and the protections sought by privacy advocates. Katie Bo Williams reports at the Hill.
Saudi Arabia has permanently closed its only land border with Qatar, according to a letter issued by Saudi Arabias customs directorate yesterday, the move coming in the eighth month of the diplomatic crisis that started when Saudi Arabia, U.A.E., Egypt and Bahrain isolated Qatar due to its alleged ties to terrorism and its close ties to Iran. Al Jazeera reports.

Urban Dictionary: lab rat

mikenova shared this story .

2
A person who’s used for experimental reasons. Similar to the phrase “Guinea pig“.
writing on the wall – Google Search

mikenova shared this story .

Image result for writing on the wall

‘Antifa’ Falsely Linked to Amtrak Train Derailment by Right-Wing Conspiracy Peddlers

mikenova shared this story from Newsweek.

The anti-fascism movement, “antifa,” which is more of a protesting tactic than a formal group, has been the subject of blame in a growing number of bizarre—and false—conspiracy theories floated by right-wing pundits in recent months.
Take the mass shooting in Las Vegas that claimed scores of lives: Antifa was not involved, despite a theory otherwise. Then, antifa was blamed for a fake civil war plot. It never happened because such a thing was never planned. Antifa was also blamed for a mass shooting in a Texas church. Again, the shooting had nothing to do with anti-fascism, or with left-wing protesters in general.
On Monday, some of the usual conspiracy theory suspects—conservative media personality Mike Cernovich, President Donald Trump mega-fan Jack Posobiec, the far-right website Gateway Pundit andAlex Jones’s InfoWars—all brought up antifa in the context of a fatal train derailment in Washington state, and they did so before investigators had even announced any formal explanation for the crash.
Keep up with this story and more by subscribing now
What we know about the derailment is that more than a dozen cars of an Amtrak train jumped the tracks, injuring scores of people and killing an unknown number of others near Dupont, an area south of Tacoma, Washington. What we don’t know is what caused the accident, though right-wing pundits were pushing out insinuations before a death toll could be established.
Cernovich, who has pushed several other conspiracies tied to antifa, observed to his fans that “ANTIFA has a long and verifiable track record of obstructing train tracks, committing violence.” His friend Posobiec, who on Twitter doxed one of the women who accused Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore of sexual misconduct this November, leaking her work address and a recent photo to his followers, used the forum to tie antifa to the deadly derailment. “Antifa has targeted trains for weeks very near where the Amtrak derailment tragedy took place today,” Posobiec mused. Gateway Pundit pushed the theory as well, falsely accusing It’s Going Down, a well-trafficked antifascist website, of covering up its associations with the derailment. PJ Media, another right-wing site, picked up on the conspiracy, as did Jones.
The scene of a portion of the Interstate 5 highway after an Amtrak high-speed train derailed from an overpass early on December 18, near the city of Tacoma, Washington. KATHRYN ELSESSER/AFP/Getty Images
“FLASHBACK: ANTIFA ADMITS TRAIN TRACK SABOTAGE NEAR TACOMA TO ‘STOP FRACKING,’” a headline on InfoWars read. “Antifa behind Tacoma train wreck?”
The basis of the conspiracy appears to be a post published on a website called Puget Sound Anarchists that was rerun on a number of left-leaning sites and activist blogs earlier this year.
“Early in the morning of April 20th we poured concrete on the train tracks that lead out of the Port of Olympia to block any trains from using the tracks,” the April 21 post read, adding that the group notified the train company of its actions. “We did this not to avoid damaging a train, nothing would bring bigger grins to our faces, but to avoid the risk of injuring railway workers.”
Blocking trains that carry fracking equipment and other materials related to the production of fossil fuels has long been a tactic of environmental protesters. In May 2016, for example, 52 activists were cited for trespassing in Washington State after blocking a train that was headed to two refineries. That protest was part of the so-called Break Free protests, urging people to disengage with fossil fuels due to issues related to man-made climate change.
People on the right became familiar with the April post on Puget Sound Anarchists because it ran concurrently on the website It’s Going Down, which has gained a wide reach by reporting on alleged fascism and left-wing activism from an anti-fascist perspective following Trump’s election. After right-wing provocateurs seized on the post as something meant to incite violence (the post goes out of its way to discourage violence), It’s Going Down denounced the accusations to Newsweek and said it removed the post from its website—months before Monday’s train derailment.
Newsweek asked Cernovich why he felt it was important to talk about “antifa” in the context of this train incident. He wrote in response that “ANTIFA groups shouldn’t pour concrete on train tracks”; however there is no proof they did. He said that the derailment could be an accident, poor infrastructure, “antifa” or “ISIS.” (The Islamic State militant group has also been blamed for the accident on the imageboard site 8chan, and other sites that traffic in conspiracy theories.) Trump himself cited poor infrastructure as a national issue in the aftermath of the derailment, and declined to name any other potential causes.
Anti-fascist activists have expressed frustration to Newsweek over having to repeatedly push back against a wave of what they call baseless conspiracy theories attached to their protests this year. They argue that the conspiracies are being spun deliberately and in bad faith. One compared the trend to the demonization of environmentalists and Black Lives Matter activists.
tacoma wa train accident claims of responsibility – Google Search

mikenova shared this story from tacoma wa train accident claims of responsibility – Google News.

Story image for tacoma wa train accident claims of responsibility from Fox News

Amtrak train derails in Washington state onto Interstate 5; at least 3 …

Fox NewsDec 18, 2017
Jay Inslee declared a state of emergency after Amtrak train 501 derailed around 7:30 a.m. along Interstate 5 as it was leaving the new Tacoma station. … President Trump tweeted Monday afternoon: “The train accident that just occurred in DuPont, WA shows more than ever why our soon to be submitted …
Amtrak train hurtles off overpass; at least three people killed
<a href=”http://NBC4i.com” rel=”nofollow”>NBC4i.com</a>Dec 18, 2017
Multiple Deaths in Amtrak Train Derailment in Washington
In-DepthNew York TimesDec 19, 2017
The Animatronic Trump In Disney’s Hall Of Presidents Is The Stuff Of Nightmares

mikenova shared this story from Donald Trump.

Disney unveiled the latest addition to its animatronic Hall of Presidents: a moving, talking rendition of Donald Trump.

There’s real promise in Trump’s National Security Strategy – Washington Post

mikenova shared this story from former FBI agents power influence – Google News.


Conservative Daily News
There’s real promise in Trump’s National Security Strategy
Washington Post
These successes, in turn, created profitable markets for American businesses, allies to help achieve favorable regional balances of power, and coalition partners to share burdens and address a variety of problems around the world. The task of bracing 
Watch: Trump announces ‘America First‘ national security strategy
Conservative Daily News
all 1,346 news articles »
A crisis in leadership at the FBI – Washington Times

mikenova shared this story from FBI politicization – Google News.


Washington Times
A crisis in leadership at the FBI
Washington Times
Although the FBI reports to the Justice Department, we maintained an arm’s-length distance from that politically infested agency. Previous attorneys general attempted to shroud their partisanship, but recent appointees such as Loretta Tarmac Lynch 
As FSB marks 100 years of relentless spy-hunt, it nails a friendly Norwegian pensioner – The Independent Barents Observer

mikenova shared this story from Russian Intelligence services – Google News.


The Moscow Times
As FSB marks 100 years of relentless spy-hunt, it nails a friendly Norwegian pensioner
The Independent Barents Observer
Two weeks after the detention, law enforcement representatives told news site Rosbalt that the Lefortovo District Court in Moscow is keeping Berg in custody as FSB accuses him of espionage under the criminal code’s paragraph 276. Allegedly, Berg 
Russia’s FSB Arrests Norwegian Suspected of EspionageThe Moscow Times
Suspected Norwegian spy arrested in Moscow, reportedly caught with Russian Navy classified docsRT
all 27 news articles »
The FBI Routinely Abuses Its Powers but the Trump Investigation Has Been By the Book – The Intercept

mikenova shared this story from fbi – Google News.


The Intercept
The FBI Routinely Abuses Its Powers but the Trump Investigation Has Been By the Book
The Intercept
They were kicking off what would become the newest right-wing talking points about Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation of Donald Trump’s presidential campaign. Secret surveillance, wiretapping, intimidation, harassment, and threats
FBI warned Trump in 2016 Russians would try to infiltrate his campaignNBCNews.com
The FBI warned Trump about Russian campaign infiltrationMSNBC
48% See Anti-Trump Bias in Senior FBI, Justice OfficialsRasmussen Reports
Mirror.co.uk –Townhall –New York Post
all 1,798 news articles »
HR McMaster rejects claim that Trump is Putin’s puppet – New York Daily News

mikenova shared this story from trump as putin’s puppet – Google News.


New York Daily News
HR McMaster rejects claim that Trump is Putin’s puppet
New York Daily News
White House national security adviser H.R. McMaster on Tuesday refuted the notion that President Trump is being manipulated by Russian President Vladimir Putin. It’s just not true, he told CBS News. Former Director of National Intelligence James 
Questioning the Russia-gate ‘Motive’Consortium News
all 784 news articles »
Labrat « Endless Canvas Bay Area Graffiti and Street Art

mikenova shared this story from Endless Canvas Bay Area Graffiti and Street Art.

SKELA10, OTHER, LABRAT – Olympia, WA

Friday, March 20th, 2015

skela10-other
Photographer: Mata-Hush

Tags: Labratmata-hushOlympiaOtherSBSSkela10WashingtonWEASTWest Coast Graffiti
Posted in PhotosPieces | Comments Off on SKELA10, OTHER, LABRAT – Olympia, WA

“Labrat Knats! graffiti – Google Search

mikenova shared this story .

Image result for Labrat Knats! graffiti

“Labrat Knats! graffiti – Google Search

mikenova shared this story .

Related image

“Labrat Knats! graffiti – Google Search

mikenova shared this story .

Image result for Labrat Knats! graffiti

Feed Integration by RSS Dog.