SDC MEDIANET RADIO

Sunday, February 19, 2017

Rep. Jason Chaffetz

WEST SACRAMENTO CA (IFS) -- Rep. Jason Chaffetz enjoys going after a fly in the glass room with a ten pound hammer while stepping over the 500 pound grizzle bear.  At his town hall meeting in Utah, the crowd was screaming "Do Your Job."  He wants to go after the "whistle blowers" and leave the Russians alone to pillage the voting rights of the American people.  You go sir!
Rep. Jason Chaff

Jake Tapper - SNL

Tamron Hall

The always dramatic world of morning news got hit with another bombshell in February 2017 when Tamron Hall suddenly announced she was leaving NBC News and MSNBC. After the news broke, the Today show was thrust into the media spotlight as audiences tried to figure out why Hall quit and if NBC's newest hire, former Fox News star Megyn Kelly, had anything to do with it. Here's what we know.

Hall shocked her millions of fans when she announced she was leaving her top-rated post on the Today show, as well as her duties on MSNBC, after her contract expires at the end of February 2017. "The last ten years have been beyond anything I could have imagined, and I'm grateful," she said in a statement (via Page Six). "I'm also very excited about the next chapter. To all my great colleagues, I will miss you and I will be rooting for you."

"Tamron Hall will be leaving NBC News and MSNBC when her contract expires this month," a spokesperson for NBC said. "Yesterday was her last day as an anchor on both networks. Tamron is an exceptional journalist, we valued and enjoyed her work at 'Today' and MSNBC and hoped that she would decide to stay. We are disappointed that she has chosen to leave, but we wish her all the best."

Hall joined MSNBC and the Today show in 2007 and 2014, respectively.


Read More: http://www.nickiswift.com/40098/whats-really-going-tamron-hall/s/halls-exit-was-abrupt/?utm_campaign=clip

Monday, February 6, 2017

Randi Rhodes Show Live Stream

John Yoo says Trump has gone too far


BY MALLORY SHELBOURNE - 
John Yoo, a former Justice Department attorney known for writing legal memorandums on enhanced interrogation tactics known as the Torture Memos, says President Trump has gone too far in his use of executive power.
In a New York Times op-ed on Monday, Yoo argues that Trump's use of executive power is worrisome.
“He should understand the Constitution’s grant of executive power,” Yoo wrote, referencing Alexander Hamilton, who co-wrote the Federalist Papers, a series of essays on the Constitution.
“He should share Hamilton’s vision of an energetic president leading the executive branch in a unified direction, rather than viewing the government as the enemy. He should realize that the Constitution channels the president toward protecting the nation from foreign threats, while cooperating with Congress on matters at home.”


Yoo said Trump, as commander in chief, does not have the constitutional authority to order the construction of a border wall, nor does he have the power to terminate trade deals negotiated by Congress, like the North American Free Trade Agreement.
Yoo said that Trump’s executive order imposing a temporary ban on nationals from seven predominantly Muslim countries entering the United States “falls within the law,” but noted reports that Trump had originally sought a “Muslim ban.” Yoo said such an order would “violate the Constitution’s protection for freedom of religion or its prohibition on the state establishment of religion.”
“Had Mr. Trump taken advantage of the resources of the executive branch as a whole, not just a few White House advisers, he would not have rushed out an ill-conceived policy made vulnerable to judicial challenge,” he wrote.