Draining the Swamp

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Re: Draining the Swamp

Postby chump » Sat Feb 18, 2017 2:13 pm

https://www.rutherford.org/publications ... ke_over_am
Coming Soon to a City Near You: The U.S. Military’s Plan to Take Over America

By John W. Whitehead
February 13, 2017

“Our current and past strategies can no longer hold. We are facing environments that the masters of war never foresaw. We are facing a threat that requires us to redefine doctrine and the force in radically new and different ways. The future army will confront a highly sophisticated urban-centric threat that will require that urban operations become the core requirement for the future land-force. The threat is clear. Our direction remains to be defined. The future is urban.”— “Megacities: Urban Future, the Emerging Complexity,” a Pentagon training video created by the Army for U.S. Special Operations Command

The U.S. military plans to take over America by 2030.

No, this is not another conspiracy theory. Although it easily could be.

Nor is it a Hollywood political thriller in the vein of John Frankenheimer’s 1964 political thriller Seven Days in May about a military coup d’etat.

Although it certainly has all the makings of a good thriller.

No, this is the real deal, coming at us straight from the horse’s mouth.

According to “Megacities: Urban Future, the Emerging Complexity,” a Pentagon training video created by the Army for U.S. Special Operations Command, the U.S. military plans to use armed forces to solve future domestic political and social problems.

What they’re really talking about is martial law, packaged as a well-meaning and overriding concern for the nation’s security.

The chilling five-minute training video, obtained by The Intercept through a FOIA request and made available online, paints an ominous picture of the future—a future the military is preparing for—bedeviled by “criminal networks,” “substandard infrastructure,” “religious and ethnic tensions,” “impoverishment, slums,” “open landfills, over-burdened sewers,” a “growing mass of unemployed,” and an urban landscape in which the prosperous economic elite must be protected from the impoverishment of the have nots.

And then comes the kicker.

Three-and-a-half minutes into the Pentagon’s dystopian vision of “a world of Robert Kaplan-esque urban hellscapes — brutal and anarchic supercities filled with gangs of youth-gone-wild, a restive underclass, criminal syndicates, and bands of malicious hackers,” the ominous voice of the narrator speaks of a need to “drain the swamps.”

Drain the swamps.

Surely, we’ve heard that phrase before?

Ah yes...
(con'd at link above)


-----------------------------------


https://youtu.be/gEPdOZbyzbw
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Re: Draining the Swamp

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Feb 24, 2017 11:48 am

THURSDAY, FEB 23, 2017 01:00 PM CST
Fossil fuels’ BFF: Scott Pruitt’s emails show why Republicans rushed through his EPA confirmation
Thousands of the new EPA chief's emails were released by court order Wednesday
SOPHIA TESFAYE
On the eve of his confirmation, former Oklahoma attorney general Scott Pruitt was ordered by an Oklahoma judge to turn over thousands of communications between his office and the fossil fuel industry. But before those records were made public, Senate Republicans rushed to narrowly confirm Pruitt to lead the EPA. Now that the more than 7,500 pages have been released, it is clear why Pruitt had been withholding his extensive correspondences with oil executives from the public for the last two years.

Emails made public as the result of a lawsuit and open records request by the Center for Media and Democracy show Pruitt and his staff coordinated their legal strategy with oil and gas industry executives and conservative advocacy groups funded by those profiting from fossil fuels, including the billionaire brothers David and Charles Koch. Pruitt used his office as Oklahoma attorney general to work on a regular basis with oil and gas company Devon Energy, American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers, as well right-wing organizations like Americans for Prosperity, and the American Legislative Exchange Council’s (ALEC).

The AG’s office did not release emails it believes are exempted from public release. District Judge Aletia Haynes Timmons is reviewing those claims, and has ordered the agency to produce other emails requested by the watchdog group.

The emails also show employees’ attempts to make the work of the attorney general’s office confidential. “Don’t forget to take our name off our appearance,” reads one email from Oklahoma Assistant Attorney General Nicole King. Another email sent to three people in the attorney general’s office reads, “As you will see there is some confidential and highly sensitive confidential information. I am working on a confidentiality agreement based on what the Commission has been approving.”

The emails also reveal that Pruitt was a sought-after speaker for the fossil fuel industry. His close ties to the fossil fuel industry help explain Pruitt’s climate denial and consistent opposition to EPA regulation. On his LinkedIn, Pruitt described himself as a “leading advocate against the EPA’s activist agenda.”

Devon Energy

After several northeastern states threatened to file a lawsuit against the EPA for failing to regulate methane in 2013, Pruitt joined with 12 other attorneys general to urge the agency to avoid regulating methane emissions. Newly released emails reveal that Devon Energy, an oil and natural gas exploration and production company that was impacted by the EPA’s directives on methane emissions, had a heavy hand in helping Pruitt’s effort.

In a 2013 email from the deputy solicitor general, advice was sought from representatives at Devon Energy regarding the proposed regulations of methane emissions.

Devon Energy executive Bill Whitsitt marked up the letter for the Attorney General’s office. “Please note that you could use just the red changes,” he wrote in an email, “or both red and blue (the latter being some further improvements from one of our experts) or none.”

Devon’s director of public policy and government affairs, Brent Rockwood, said in another e-mail to Pruitt staffers that Devon’s legal team had taken “another review” of Pruitt’s letter and had suggested including footnotes to source the quotes and legal arguments. “Thanks for putting the AG letter into action, and I think that this letter will make a strong statement and a real difference,” Devon’s Rockwood said in the e-mail to Pruitt’s office.

“The emails show a very cozy relationship between Pruitt’s office and particularly Devon Energy, as well as other coal, oil and gas companies,” CMD research director Nick Surgey told The Guardian.

Devon was one of the top contributors to the Republican Attorneys General Association, which Pruitt led for two years during the period of email correspondence with the energy company.

ALEC

When Pruitt was a state representative he was a task force chair of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), an organization that connects lawmakers with corporate lobbyists to produce model bills that are then introduced in legislatures across the country.

Newly released emails between Pruitt’s executive assistant and Amy Anderson, ALEC director and Oklahoma membership contact, indicate he appeared at an ALEC conference on May 3, 2013, in Oklahoma City. At the meeting, Pruitt addressed a workshop entitled “Embracing American Energy Opportunities: From Wellheads to Pipelines.” The emails described Pruitt’s speech as focusing on “state primacy in oil and gas regulation and the EPA’s sue & settle modus operandi.” Oil industry giant Exxon Mobil is a major donor to ALEC.

AFPM

Another email shows a conversation between Pruitt and a lawyer with American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers (AFPM)– one of the largest oil & gas lobbying firms in Washington. AFPM told Pruitt that despite their desire to challenge EPA regulations like the renewable fuel standard program and ozone regulations, Pruitt should instead challenge the rules on their behalf, arguing the complaint would be seen as “more credible coming from a state.”

A 2013 exchange between Pruitt’s staff and Richard Moskowitz, general counsel for AFPM, asked Pruitt to make a specific legal argument under air pollution regulations known as the National Ambient Air Quality Standards.

“We think it would be most effective for Oklahoma to file a separate waiver petition that emphasizes ‘severe environmental harm,’ as this argument is more credible coming from a state with primary responsibility for achieving and maintaining attainment with the NAAQS,” Moskowitz wrote.

Moskowitz’s email was then forwarded to Pruitt’s deputy solicitor general who replied that he knew little about the federal Renewable Fuel Standard and asked for further instructions from the industry group about what they should do.

“I think it is safe to say that AG Pruitt has an interest in the issue,” Pruitt’s deputy wrote. “Hopefully I haven’t missed the boat too much on these questions but I want to make sure I fully understand what Oklahoma’s role will be.”

AG Pruitt proceeded to file challenges to both regulations in an official state letter to Lisa Jackson, who was the administrator of the EPA under President Obama.

AFP

One email shows a Pruitt aide asking an Americans for Prosperity staff member “how the AG’s office and AFP can work together” and AFP celebrating Pruitt as a “true champion of freedom and liberty!” for his attacks on the EPA’s climate protection rules.

In another email dated August 2013, Matt Ball, an executive at Americans for Prosperity, sent Pruitt an email thanking him and his “respective bosses and all they are doing to push back against President Obama’s EPA and its axis with liberal environmental groups to increase energy costs for Oklahomans and American families across the states.” executive at Americans for Prosperity, a nonprofit group also funded in part by the Kochs. “You both work for true champions of freedom and liberty!” the note said.

AFP is closely linked to Koch Industries, which owns petroleum pipelines. Pruitt’s office also connected with Koch Industries senior counsel Dean Kuckelman, scheduling a conference call between Kuckelman, Assistant Attorney General Tom Bates and Solicitor General Patrick Wyrick on Dec. 13, 2013.

OCPA

Pruitt’s attacks on behalf of industry and right-wing groups were not limited to the EPA, but even included Obamacare, according to an email from the far-right organization, Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs.

After Pruitt appeared on Fox News in November 2013, OCPA’s Jonathan Small emailed Aaron Cooper, who was Pruitt’s director of public affairs, to tell him he was going to turn the segment into a blog and “freedom flash it out.”

On Tuesday, Scott Pruitt gave his first speech to the EPA’s employees as their new administrator. His first official address was mostly a defense of his ties to the industry he is tasked with regulating, saying, “I believe that we as a nation can be both pro-energy and -jobs, and pro-environment. We don’t have to choose between the two.”
http://www.salon.com/2017/02/23/fossil- ... irmation/e





Energy Firms in Secretive Alliance With Attorneys General
By ERIC LIPTONDEC. 6, 2014

SCOTT PRUITT The Oklahoma attorney general, second from right, in Dallas in July, and his Republican counterparts have formed alliances to oppose federal regulations. Credit Dylan Hollingsworth for The New York Times
The letter to the Environmental Protection Agency from Attorney General Scott Pruitt of Oklahoma carried a blunt accusation: Federal regulators were grossly overestimating the amount of air pollution caused by energy companies drilling new natural gas wells in his state.

But Mr. Pruitt left out one critical point. The three-page letter was written by lawyers for Devon Energy, one of Oklahoma’s biggest oil and gas companies, and was delivered to him by Devon’s chief of lobbying.

“Outstanding!” William F. Whitsitt, who at the time directed government relations at the company, said in a note to Mr. Pruitt’s office. The attorney general’s staff had taken Devon’s draft, copied it onto state government stationery with only a few word changes, and sent it to Washington with the attorney general’s signature. “The timing of the letter is great, given our meeting this Friday with both E.P.A. and the White House.”

Mr. Whitsitt then added, “Please pass along Devon’s thanks to Attorney General Pruitt.”

The email exchange from October 2011, obtained through an open-records request, offers a hint of the unprecedented, secretive alliance that Mr. Pruitt and other Republican attorneys general have formed with some of the nation’s top energy producers to push back against the Obama regulatory agenda, an investigation by The New York Times has found.

Continue reading the main story
Attorneys general in at least a dozen states are working with energy companies and other corporate interests, which in turn are providing them with record amounts of money for their political campaigns, including at least $16 million this year.

They share a common philosophy about the reach of the federal government, but the companies also have billions of dollars at stake. And the collaboration is likely to grow: For the first time in modern American history, Republicans in January will control a majority — 27 — of attorneys general’s offices.

The Times reported previously how individual attorneys general have shut down investigations, changed policies or agreed to more corporate-friendly settlement terms after intervention by lobbyists and lawyers, many of whom are also campaign benefactors.

But the attorneys general are also working collectively. Democrats for more than a decade have teamed up with environmental groups such as the Sierra Club to use the court system to impose stricter regulation. But never before have attorneys general joined on this scale with corporate interests to challenge Washington and file lawsuits in federal court.

Out of public view, corporate representatives and attorneys general are coordinating legal strategy and other efforts to fight federal regulations, according to a review of thousands of emails and court documents and dozens of interviews.

“When you use a public office, pretty shamelessly, to vouch for a private party with substantial financial interest without the disclosure of the true authorship, that is a dangerous practice,” said David B. Frohnmayer, a Republican who served a decade as attorney general in Oregon. “The puppeteer behind the stage is pulling strings, and you can’t see. I don’t like that. And when it is exposed, it makes you feel used.”

For Mr. Pruitt, the benefits have been clear. Lobbyists and company officials have been notably solicitous, helping him raise his profile as president for two years of the Republican Attorneys General Association, a post he used to help start what he and allies called the Rule of Law campaign, which was intended to push back against Washington.

That campaign, in which attorneys general band together to operate like a large national law firm, has been used to back lawsuits and other challenges against the Obama administration on environmental issues, the Affordable Care Act and securities regulation. The most recent target is the president’s executive action on immigration.

“We are living in the midst of a constitutional crisis,” Mr. Pruitt told energy industry lobbyists and conservative state legislators at a conference in Dallas in July, after being welcomed with a standing ovation. “The trajectory of our nation is at risk and at stake as we respond to what is going on.”

Mr. Pruitt has responded aggressively, and with a lot of helping hands. Energy industry lobbyists drafted letters for him to send to the E.P.A., the Interior Department, the Office of Management and Budget and even President Obama, The Times found.

Industries that he regulates have also joined him as plaintiffs in court challenges, a departure from the usual role of the state attorney general, who traditionally sues companies to force compliance with state law.

Energy industry lobbyists have also distributed draft legislation to attorneys general and asked them to help push it through state legislatures to give the attorneys general clearer authority to challenge the Obama regulatory agenda, the documents show.

“It is quite new,” said Paul Nolette, a political-science professor at Marquette University and the author of the forthcoming book “Federalism on Trial: State Attorneys General and National Policy Making in Contemporary America.” “The scope, size and tenor of these collaborations is, without question, unprecedented.”

DOCUMENT
A Window Into a Secret Alliance: Attorneys General and the Energy Industry
The New York Times submitted open-records requests for correspondence between certain energy industry executives and attorneys general who are helping lead an effort they call the Rule of Law campaign to combat Obama administration regulations. Thousands of pages of correspondence emerged. Here is a sampling of the documents, showing how the regulated industries and their lobbyists have secretly worked with the attorneys general to combat Washington.


OPEN DOCUMENT
And it is an emerging practice that several former attorneys general say threatens the integrity of the office.

“It is a magnificent and noble institution, the office of attorney general, as it is truly the lawyer for the people,” said Terry Goddard, a Democrat who served two terms as Arizona’s attorney general and who, like Mr. Frohnmayer, reviewed copies of the documents collected by The Times. “That independence is clearly at risk here. What is happening diminishes the reputation of individual attorneys general and the community as a group.”

Mr. Pruitt, who has emerged as a hero to conservative activists, dismissed this criticism as misinformed.

“Those kinds of questions arise from the environment we are in — a very dysfunctional, distrustful political environment,” Mr. Pruitt said in an interview. “I can say to you that is not who we are or have ever been, and despite those criticisms we sit around and make decisions about what is right, and what represents adherence to the rule of law, and we seek to advance that and try to do the best we can to educate people about our viewpoint.”

In a state dominated by the energy industry, Mr. Pruitt’s stands have been widely popular. “Attorney General Pruitt has been a champion for our state,” said State Senator Mike Schulz, a Republican who is the majority floor leader. “The State of Oklahoma is in a better position than the E.P.A. to regulate drilling.”

But Mr. Pruitt’s ties with industry are clear. One of his closest partners has been Harold G. Hamm, the billionaire chief executive of Continental Resources, which is among the biggest oil and gas drilling companies in both Oklahoma and North Dakota.

This year, Mr. Pruitt joined with a group aligned with Mr. Hamm to sue the Interior Department over its plan to consider adding animals such as the lesser prairie chicken to the endangered species list, a move that Mr. Hamm has said could knock out “some of the most promising land for oil and gas leases in the country.” The suit was filed after Mr. Hamm announced that he would serve as the chairman of Mr. Pruitt’s re-election campaign.

“Time and time again, General Pruitt has stood up and bravely fought for the rights of Oklahomans in those instances when the federal government has overextended its hand,” Mr. Hamm said as his role in Mr. Pruitt’s re-election effort was announced.

A Potent Ally

Energy industry executives and lobbyists from across the United States saw great potential in Mr. Pruitt, a gifted politician who had been a state legislator and a minor-league baseball team co-owner and executive before running for attorney general.

GRAPHIC
A Letter From Oklahoma’s Attorney General, Written Almost Entirely by Energy Company Officials
Devon Energy’s lawyers and lobbyists drafted letters and provided them to Attorney General Scott Pruitt to send to the Environmental Protection Agency, the Interior Department and even President Obama directly. Most of those letters were signed by Mr. Pruitt and sent with few changes. Here is one example, obtained through open-records requests.


OPEN GRAPHIC
Among them was Andrew P. Miller, a patrician 81-year-old former Virginia attorney general. Mr. Miller is a regular at gatherings of state attorneys general at resort destinations, and his client list includes TransCanada, the backer of the Keystone XL pipeline; the Southern Company, the Georgia-based electric utility, which has a large number of coal-burning power plants; and the investor group behind the proposed Pebble Mine in Alaska.

For the energy industry, Mr. Pruitt was an easy choice.

“There’s a mentality emanating from Washington today that says, ‘We know best,’ ” Mr. Pruitt said during his 2010 campaign. “It’s a one-size-fits-all strategy, a command-and-control kind of approach, and we’ve got to make sure we know how to respond to that.”

Among Mr. Pruitt’s first acts was to create a “federalism office,” which challenged the Obama administration’s plan to reduce haze in southwestern Oklahoma by requiring coal-burning electricity plants in the state to install new pollution control equipment.

His interaction with the industry, Mr. Pruitt said during an interview at his Oklahoma City office, has been motivated by a desire to gather information from experts, while defending his state’s longstanding tradition of self-determination.

That ethos, he said, is depicted in a large oil painting in his office that shows local authorities with rifles at the ready confronting outsiders during the land rush era. “The founders recognized that power concentrated in a few is a bad thing,” Mr. Pruitt said.

Mr. Miller made it his job to promote Mr. Pruitt nationally, both as a spokesman for the Rule of Law campaign and as the president of the Republican Attorneys General Association.

“I regard the general as the A.G. best suited to take this lead on this question of federalism,” Mr. Miller wrote to Mr. Pruitt’s chief of staff in April 2012. “The touchstone of this initiative would be to organize the states to resist federal ‘overreach’ whenever it occurs.”

To Mr. Miller, having Mr. Pruitt as an advocate fit a broader strategy. He wanted state attorneys general to band together the way they did when they challenged the health care law in 2010. In that effort, they hired a major national corporate law firm, Baker Hostetler, to argue the case, with much of the bill being paid through donations from executives at corporations that oppose the law.

In his initial appeal to Mr. Pruitt, Mr. Miller insisted that his approach was not “client driven.” But he soon began to name individual clients — TransCanada and Pebble Mine in Alaska — that he wanted to include in the effort. The E.P.A. has held up the Pebble Mine project, which could potentially yield 80 billion pounds of copper, after concluding it would “threaten one of the world’s most productive salmon fisheries.”

“This strike force ought to take the form of a national state litigation team to challenge the E.P.A.’s overreach,” Mr. Miller said in an email to Mr. Pruitt’s office. “Like the Dalmatian at the proverbial firehouse, it could move out smartly when the alarm sounded.”

A Call to Arms

Mr. Miller’s pitch to Mr. Pruitt became a reality early last year at the historic Skirvin Hilton Hotel in Oklahoma City, where he brought together an extraordinary assembly of energy industry power brokers and attorneys general from nine states for what he called the Summit on Federalism and the Future of Fossil Fuels.

The meeting took place in the shadow of office towers that dominate Oklahoma City’s skyline and are home to Continental Resources, a leader in the nation’s fastest-growing oil field, the Bakken formation of North Dakota, as well as Devon Energy, which drilled 1,275 new wells last year.

More liberal attorneys general, such as Douglas F. Gansler, Democrat of Maryland, did not participate.

“Indeed, General Gansler would in all likelihood try to hijack your summit,” Mr. Miller wrote to Mr. Pruitt in an email. “At best you would be left to preside over a debate, rather than a call to arms.”

Oklahoma energy companies were there, according to an agenda, joined by executives from Peabody Energy of Missouri, the world’s largest private-sector coal producer, as well as the Southern Company, which has aggressively challenged federal air pollution mandates.

The nation’s top corporate energy regulatory lawyers were there, too, including F. William Brownell, a senior partner at the law firm Hunton & Williams, which has spent more than 25 years fighting the enforcement of the Clean Air Act.

The event was organized by an energy-industry-funded law and economics center at George Mason University of Virginia. The center is part of the brain trust of conservative, pro-industry groups that have worked from the sidelines to help Mr. Pruitt and other attorneys general.

And there was nothing ambiguous about the agenda.

“Suggested Responses to Assaults on Federalism” was the topic of one breakfast meeting, moderated by Attorney General Wayne K. Stenehjem of North Dakota, that showcased Mr. Brownell and three other top corporate regulatory lawyers. Mr. Hamm was the featured dinner speaker.

Top Individual Recipients of Energy Industry Money Since 2004
Many attorneys general collect contributions directly from energy industry donors, in addition to money passed on from party associations. Attorney General Scott Pruitt of Oklahoma, for example, has received at least $215,574 from companies and industry employees since 2010, even though he ran unopposed in his most recent election.

Notes: 2014 data is incomplete. Scott Pruitt was unopposed in 2014.
Source: National Institute on Money in State Politics (energy industry contributions)
By Alicia Parlapiano
“We need to ensure the robust role of the states,” said Paul M. Seby, another coal industry lawyer who attended. “And as the chief law enforcement officers, it is not surprising this is becoming a cornerstone of attorney generals’ attention.”

Attorneys general said they had no choice but to team up with corporate America. “When the federal government oversteps its legal authority and takes actions that hurt our businesses and residents, it’s entirely appropriate for us to partner with the adversely affected private entities in fighting back,” said Attorney General Pam Bondi of Florida, whose top deputy attended the meeting.

A ‘Strike Force’

The impact of the gathering was immediate. A week later, a new Federalism in Environmental Policy task force was established by lawyers in the offices of 19 state attorneys general, according to email records obtained from the office of Attorney General Timothy C. Fox of Montana, who had participated in the Oklahoma meeting.

“This message is in follow-up to the excellent environmental conference put on last week by George Mason University and hosted by the Oklahoma attorney general’s office,” said one email sent by Katie Spohn, the deputy attorney general in Nebraska. “In order to continue our coordination of efforts regarding Federalism in Environmental Policy, I am seeking input from each state who participated in the conference.”

Mr. Miller was pleased. “Just the kind of strike force I was talking about,” he said in an interview.

And the input poured forth. The states worked to detail major federal environmental action, like efforts to curb fish kills, reduce ozone pollution, slow climate change and tighten regulation of coal ash. Then they identified which attorney general’s office was best positioned to try to monitor it and, if necessary, attempt to block it.

Follow-up by Mr. Pruitt’s federalism office often came after coordination with industry representatives, especially from Devon Energy. The company, one of the most important financial supporters for the Republican Attorneys General Association, is guarded about its public profile. But it readily turned to Mr. Pruitt and his staff for help, setting up meetings for the attorney general with its chief executive, its chief lobbyist and other important players.

“We have a clear obligation to our shareholders and others to be involved in these discussions,” John Porretto, a Devon spokesman, said in a statement.

While some of the exchanges were general in character, others were quite explicit, especially the communication about the E.P.A.’s methane regulations that had prompted Mr. Whitsitt, the Devon official, to propose that Mr. Pruitt send a letter to the agency.

Photo

PATRICK MORRISEY The West Virginia attorney general got a draft bill from a coal industry lawyer. Credit Mark Webb/The Herald-Dispatch, via Associated Press
“Just a note to pass along the electronic version of the draft letter to Lisa Jackson at E.P.A.,” said one September 2011 letter to Mr. Pruitt’s chief of staff from Mr. Whitsitt. “We have no pride of authorship, so whatever you do on this is fine.”

Mr. Pruitt took the letter and, after changing just 37 words in the 1,016-word draft, copied it onto his state government letterhead and sent it to Ms. Jackson, the E.P.A. administrator.

That was just one of his challenges to Washington. Devon officials also turned to Mr. Pruitt to enlist other Republican attorneys general and Republican governors to oppose a rule proposed by the Bureau of Land Management that would regulate hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, on federal land.

“As promised, we are sending you the attached draft of the R.G.A./RAGA follow-up letter to President Obama opposing B.L.M.’s proposed rule,” Brent Rockwood, Devon’s director of government affairs, wrote to Mr. Pruitt’s staff in late 2012, in an email marked “confidential.”

Weeks later, that letter was sent to Mr. Obama without only a few word changes, signed by Mr. Pruitt and Gov. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana, who was the head of the Republican Governors Association at the time.

Company officials again expressed their pleasure to Mr. Pruitt.

“I’ve learned that we’re having an effect — and may be able to have more, perhaps even to having the rule withdrawn or shifted to almost a reporting-only one,” Mr. Whitsitt wrote, in another email marked “confidential.”

The rule — which the industry claims would cost $346 million a year to comply with — has still not been issued.

Coordination between the corporations and teams of attorneys general involved in the Rule of Law effort also involves actual litigation to try to clear roadblocks to energy projects, documents show.

Energy producers, for instance, wanted to sue the Interior Department as it considered adding animals such as the sage grouse — which nests near sites of oil and gas drilling — to a list of endangered species, a move that could put tens of thousands of acres off limits to new drilling.

Photo

ANDREW P. MILLER A version of the lobbyist’s bill was approved by the West Virginia Legislature. Credit Stephen Crowley/The New York Times
The energy companies could have sued on their own, but their executives believed that the case would be more potent by bringing in Mr. Pruitt and the weight of the State of Oklahoma.

“We just came to the conclusion he would be the best person to be the lead attorney on this,” said Mike McDonald, an owner of Triad Energy, a small oil and gas exploration company, and the president of a group that calls itself the Domestic Energy Producers Alliance. “He has exceeded our expectations.”

For the industry, the state is an extremely valued partner because states are granted “special solicitude” from the federal courts, a critical advantage to private companies that helps confer legal standing and means that a matter is less likely to be dismissed.

Mr. Pruitt’s office, in a statement to The Times, rejected any suggestion that the attorney general has been wrong to send to Washington comment letters written by industry lobbyists, or to take up their side in litigation.

“The A.G.’s office seeks input from the energy industry to determine real-life harm stemming from proposed federal regulations or actions,” the statement said. “It is the content of the request not the source of the request that is relevant.”

Persuading lawmakers to offer legislation has been another effective lobbying tool. In West Virginia, Mr. Miller handed Attorney General Patrick Morrisey a draft of legislation that he argued would put West Virginia in a better position to sue the Obama administration over proposed regulations to tighten pollution controls on power plants, emails show.

“I trust you will find the legislation acceptable in its present form,” Mr. Miller wrote to Mr. Morrisey in February, referring to a private meeting the two had had in the law library of Mr. Morrisey’s office in Charleston. “If so, I would appreciate your having it introduced by your friends in both the Senate and the House.”

A version of the bill was introduced and passed by the West Virginia Legislature in March. Delegate Rupert Phillips Jr., the chief sponsor of a second bill that also contained language identical to what Mr. Miller had requested, said in an interview that he had acted with Mr. Morrisey’s support, an account supported by William B. Raney, the president of the West Virginia Coal Association.

“It is nice to have everybody singing from the same sheet of music,” Mr. Raney said.

A spokesman for Mr. Morrisey disputed this account, saying that while he supported the effort to challenge the rule, he did not play a role in promoting the legislation.

Photo

HAROLD G. HAMM The oil drilling executive was the chairman of Mr. Pruitt’s re-election campaign. Credit Kevin Cederstrom/Associated Press
Blurred Lines

The work in Mr. Pruitt’s office has sometimes seemed to blur the distinction between his official duties and the advancement of his political career.

Mr. Pruitt’s chief of staff, Crystal Drwenski, served as gatekeeper to his office, arranging meetings and helping companies get Mr. Pruitt and his staff to intervene with the federal authorities. But Ms. Drwenski also played an important supplemental role for the attorney general: fund-raising aide.

“A.G. Pruitt is working with the Republican Attorneys General Association on their national meeting in Washington,” Ms. Drwenski wrote to Mr. Whitsitt. “The benefit of membership and participation is having 25 Republican A.G.s in a room to discuss policy issues.”

Ms. Drwenski wanted Devon Energy’s help in enlisting the American Petroleum Institute, and Mr. Whitsitt agreed.

“I’ve put in a plug to A.P.I.,” Mr. Whitsitt wrote back to Ms. Drwenski, a few hours after her request, having reached out to the organization’s senior lobbyist, Marty Durbin. “He is expecting a call.”

In addition to the American Petroleum Institute, major energy companies — ConocoPhillips, the oil and gas company; Alpha Natural Resources, a coal mining giant; and American Electric Power, the nation’s biggest coal consumer — have recently joined the Republican Attorneys General Association, bringing in hundreds of thousands of additional dollars to the group, internal documents show.

By last year, the association was starting to pull in so much money under Mr. Pruitt’s leadership that it decided to break free from its partnership with the Republican State Leadership Committee, a group that represents state elected officials. Within months, the association also set up the Rule of Law Defense Fund, yet another legal entity that allows companies benefiting from the actions of Mr. Pruitt and other Republican attorneys general to make anonymous donations, in unlimited amounts. Fund-raising skyrocketed.

The $16 million that the association has collected this year is nearly four times the amount it collected in 2010, money it used mostly to buy millions of dollars’ worth of television advertisements in states like Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado and Nevada, all places where Republican candidates for attorney general won election.

The fund-raising has taken place on the state level as well. Oklahoma Gas & Electric — a for-profit utility that Mr. Pruitt joined with in federal court to fight the E.P.A. — invited its employees to the Petroleum Club in downtown Oklahoma City late last year for a fund-raising event for Mr. Pruitt, drawing donations from about 45 company employees, including the chief executive. Four days later, Mr. Pruitt filed a new appeal in the case — timing that the utility said was a coincidence.

Photo

An Oklahoma drilling site. Credit Nick Oxford for The New York Times
While Mr. Pruitt’s efforts to raise money for the Republican Attorneys General Association have been an unqualified success, the lawsuits and regulatory appeals he has filed have yielded mixed results.

In May, the Supreme Court declined to take up the appeal on the Oklahoma Gas & Electric matter, meaning the company is now moving ahead on retrofitting its coal-burning plants. But other lawsuits are pending, including Mr. Pruitt’s challenge of the Dodd-Frank law, which rewrote the nation’s financial regulations, and, perhaps most important, his challenge of the tax subsidies that are a critical part of the Obama administration’s health care law.

Mr. Pruitt’s staff has juggled various duties — helping major corporations push their challenges against Washington, and then turning to these same executives, at times, to ask them for financial support.

For example, Ms. Drwenski, who is no longer Mr. Pruitt’s chief of staff, asked Devon Energy in 2012, on a workday afternoon, for help in signing up the American Petroleum Institute as a member of the Republican Attorneys General Association.

She used her personal email account to send out the initial request. But the subsequent exchange took place on her work email account, even though Oklahoma state law prohibits state officials from using state property or time to solicit political contributions. A spokesman for Mr. Pruitt said, “It is entirely possible she could have been taking a late lunch.”

Mr. Pruitt, who ran unopposed to win a second term, has not needed much of the money himself, but his fund-raising efforts have greatly benefited other Republicans running for the job.

That explains the partylike atmosphere late last month in South Florida, where members of the Republican Attorneys General Association held their fall meeting at the chic Fontainebleau Miami Beach, along with hundreds of lobbyists, lawyers and corporate executives, whose companies had paid as much as $125,000 for the privilege to celebrate with them.

During the opening reception, on a giant terrace overlooking the Atlantic Ocean, with red, white and blue lights beaming onto the walls and rock music blasting, the Republican attorneys general strode to the stage to trumpet their new majority in the states.

Mr. Pruitt was there for the weekend’s festivities, an event at which Devon Energy served as a corporate host, with banners hung in the hotel hallways featuring the corporate logo.

The Oklahoma attorney general’s stay was brief. The Rule of Law campaign had a new and urgent target.

“Our president sees himself as above the law,” Mr. Pruitt said from Oklahoma City as he announced several days later yet another front in the campaign, a lawsuit he planned to file to challenge the Obama administration’s new immigration policies. “We will take action to hold him accountable.
https://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/07/us/p ... .html?_r=0


Scott Pruit and another scandal ...docs on his ties to botched execution court docs Scott Pruit directly involved with drugs used in OK history he denied he had anything to do with it ......he has been lying about this and in 2 or 3 weeks......he wouldn't be Sec for very long :)



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Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Draining the Swamp

Postby divideandconquer » Sat Feb 25, 2017 4:03 pm

Could it be that Trump was being honest when he said he was going to "drain the swamp", insofar as the swamp is us? "We the swamp" - the filthy plebes, the bottom feeders, unwashed and toothless masses, etc.? He's "fixing" the federal government so that the only people circling the drain are we the people even more so than before.

I have not read through this thread, so ignore if already addressed, not that there is that much to say...
'I see clearly that man in this world deceives himself by admiring and esteeming things which are not, and neither sees nor esteems the things which are.' — St. Catherine of Genoa
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Re: Draining the Swamp

Postby Iamwhomiam » Sat Feb 25, 2017 4:17 pm

I think you're getting the picture, dnc.

I've got to digest those other last few articles...
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Re: Draining the Swamp

Postby Elvis » Sat Feb 25, 2017 4:17 pm

divideandconquer » Sat Feb 25, 2017 1:03 pm wrote:Could it be that Trump was being honest when he said he was going to "drain the swamp", insofar as the swamp is us? "We the swamp" - the filthy plebes, the bottom feeders, unwashed and toothless masses, etc.? He's "fixing" the federal government so that the only people circling the drain are we the people even more so than before.


Nah, he didn't really mean anything. I read somewhere that he later said that the phrase "drain the swamp" was a spontaneous utterance, and people liked it, so he kept saying it. It doesn't mean shit.
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Re: Draining the Swamp

Postby Iamwhomiam » Sat Feb 25, 2017 4:45 pm

Phew! Glad to hear that, Elvis.
That mean I've got nothing to worry about then?
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Re: Draining the Swamp

Postby Elvis » Sat Feb 25, 2017 5:35 pm

Iamwhomiam » Sat Feb 25, 2017 1:45 pm wrote:Phew! Glad to hear that, Elvis.
That mean I've got nothing to worry about then?


Worry is always a personal choice, I suppose, but sure, there's plenty to worry about.

To me "Drain the Swamp" meant whatever the hearer wanted to hear.

The phrase struck a chord with me. I was kinda hoping it meant that Trump would get money out of election campaigns because he talked about how the system is corrupt that way; I hoped it meant he'd stop 'projecting American power' around the world, because he talked about ending that; I hoped it meant he'd put a check on the banksterism that drives the corruption and militarism because he talked about that, too.

It was all talk.

I do rather like the withdrawl from TPP, and I get a chuckle out of the handwringing about it on the NPR et al. political panels and "Marketplace™" etc. Like a broken clock, sometimes Trump can accidentally be right.

I also love the message to Netanyahu, "the settlements aren't helping" and watching the rows of Likudniks fainting away at such talk.

I'm mainly worried about the likely wars and fascist police state.


edited garbled sentence
Last edited by Elvis on Sat Feb 25, 2017 6:53 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Draining the Swamp

Postby Iamwhomiam » Sat Feb 25, 2017 6:01 pm

Yes, just articles of speech, Elvis, as I've often mentioned what a waste of energy worrying is.

Yes, I'm also pleased TPP was canned, but I do understand the view of the other side in desiring it, which is expansionist. Like the guy who stakes a claim next to yours before making you an offer you can't refuse and gobbling up yours, otherwise known as a claim-jumper.

Well, Trump's mention to Netanyahu about the settlements were not helping (the faux peace process) reflected his weakness and revealed his powerlessness to issue demands instead.
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Re: Draining the Swamp

Postby divideandconquer » Sat Feb 25, 2017 8:17 pm

Yeah, but the TPP was already dead in the water. Trump just took credit for it. To be sure, something else, even more horrific, will take its place.
'I see clearly that man in this world deceives himself by admiring and esteeming things which are not, and neither sees nor esteems the things which are.' — St. Catherine of Genoa
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Re: Draining the Swamp

Postby Elvis » Sat Feb 25, 2017 9:00 pm

divideandconquer » Sat Feb 25, 2017 5:17 pm wrote:Yeah, but the TPP was already dead in the water. Trump just took credit for it. To be sure, something else, even more horrific, will take its place.


I think all of the "free trade" agreements (NAFTA, WTO, TPP etc.) have the same basic aim: an end-run around national sovereignties to establish direct rule by big corporations with veto power over national local laws. They won't give up, they might try other tricks.
“The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.” ― Joan Robinson
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Re: Draining the Swamp

Postby Iamwhomiam » Sun Feb 26, 2017 12:10 am

I agree with both of you. They won't give up. And the US will be sure to do its best to punish those states that partner with opposing interests while debate continues at home and with partners trying to win approval for a similar Trump branded market-capture trade agreement.
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Re: Draining the Swamp

Postby chump » Sun Feb 26, 2017 11:20 am

? :signwhut:
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Re: Draining the Swamp

Postby seemslikeadream » Sun Feb 26, 2017 11:38 am

that chart comes from a site that list Henry Makow as a link you may like :roll:

should have at least mentioned that ...I don't think I need to post more really


you should take James Tracy off your tweeter feed...or at least stop posting his shit here

and he follows Kellyanne and James O'Keefe ...how sweet is that?

Defends the trumpty dumbty Swedish Terrorist attack!

now I have to go take a shower for even linking on that link!!!!

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OH AND ONE LAST THING HE LEFT OUT IS THAT TRUMP HAS CONNECTIONS TO RUSSIAN PEDOPHILE PUSHERS


seemslikeadream » Sun Feb 19, 2017 10:01 pm wrote:.......
Intelligence & Espionage • News
Donald Trump, Russian Mafia & US Intelligence Secrets
Image
However, more important to this story are Trump’s connections to the international prostitution ring allegedly financed from questionable sources from Russia; sources close to Putin himself.

Trump & The Russian Mafia

In 2010 the founding chairman of Bayrock, Tevfik Arif, who has reputed Russian organized crime ties was charged in Turkey for smuggling underage girls into the country for prostitution. Another principal in the deal is Russian émigré Tamir Sapir, who also lives in Trump Tower.

As reported by Turkish News,

A New York real estate mogul with ties to Donald Trump is at the center of an international sex scandal – suspected of running a high-priced prostitution ring.

Tevfik Arif, 57, has been detained in Turkey on suspicion of setting up trysts between wealthy businessmen and Eastern European models – some underage – aboard a $60 million yacht once used by the nation’s founder, Mustafa Ataturk

.......
http://greatgameindia.com/donald-trump- ... e-secrets/


Kazakh-born Soviet official turned real estate tycoon (), Tevfik Arif ran Bayrock/Sapir out of Trump Tower. Sater worked for him.

Alexander Litvinenko poisoned after blogging on Vladimir Putin being a pedophile


Image


I will be posting more later

2015 Trafficking in Persons Report - US Department of State
https://www.state.gov/documents/organization/245365.pdf

Human Trafficking, 2014
https://ucr.fbi.gov/crime-in-the-u.s/20 ... icking.pdf
Number of participating agencies
Alaska
20
Arizona
6
California
2*
Colorado
249
Delaware
60
Florida
698
Guam
1
Hawaii
2
Idaho
2*
Illinois
716
Indiana
78
Kansas
5
Massachusetts
7
Michigan
657
Minnesota
9
Missouri
636
Mississippi
68
Montana
117
Nevada
35
Ohio
78
Oklahoma
65
Oregon
111
South Dakota
137
Tennessee
467
Texas
1,074
Utah
142
U.S. Virgin Islands
1
Washington
247
Wyoming
61

2015
Police arrest more than 150 men in sex trafficking sting
http://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/a ... story.html

2015
Sex-trafficking suspects arrested in N. Florida, feds say
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/bre ... story.html

Four arrested in East Boston, Chelsea on charges of human trafficking ...
https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2012/ ... story.html

5 Arrested in Human Trafficking Case
http://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local ... 17561.html

2015 Trafficking in Persons Report - US Department of State
http://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local ... 74801.html

2016
42 in Iowa, Nebraska arrested in human trafficking sting
http://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/ ... /92479096/
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Draining the Swamp

Postby divideandconquer » Sun Feb 26, 2017 1:54 pm

Speaking of Makow, he published an article (below) that, at the very least, questions Trump, but still thinks this wolf in wolf's clothing is redeemable. That's the scary part, wolves don't even have to bother with the sheep costume anymore. Anyway, as someone commented, "[there is no doubt in my mind that] he is compromised himself or he would not be in the position he currently occupies." No one gets to be president with an agenda to stop the agenda.

Trump Admin Infested With Pedophiles?

Vice President Mike Pence has been implicated in the pedophile scandal that has the establishment in a panic. According to former CIA analyst Robert David Steele, General Michael Flynn was not dismissed for talking to the Russian ambassador and lying about it. He was fired because he had information on a close friend of Pence who is a pedophile. This is consistent with the fact that Flynn's son was also fired during the campaign for tweeting about pizzagate.

More concerning is that Tory Smith, left, has a series of youtubes accusing Mike Pence of being a multiple child rapist and murderer. Smith, who claimed to be a victim of satanic ritual abuse himself, makes a series of frankly crazy assertions. However, he predicted that Indiana State Police would kill him, and indeed, as of July 2016, he is dead.

I believe his core assertion that Child Protective Agencies, Immigration & Customs Enforcement, DARPA and the CIA are running a massive child trafficking network is credible. He says there are 39 Military Intelligence Laboratories (Milabs) operated by DARPA and the CIA, connected with child trafficking. This is consistent with what Carolyn Hamlett reported on this website in 2012. He also said former Indiana Attorney General (2010-2017) Greg Zoeller is a pedophile.

There is also another article detailing Pence's connection with the dodgy teen treatment industry. He has also expressed his admiration for Dick Cheney, who Kathy O'Brien said was another pedophile. During the campaign, Alex Jones asserted that Pence was a "terrible" choice for VP because he held globalist positions on immigration and trade. Jones has since gone quiet on Pence. He seems just the man the Illuminati would want to install, in case of Trump's assassination.

Steele calls Trump's Chief of Staff Reince Priebus, left, "a pedophile enabler if not a pedophile himself" who is a sycophant of the GOP elite, sabotaging the Trump's administration from within. Steele says pedophilia is the deep state's "achilles heel." The Democrats are amateurs compared to the GOP and "Wall Street bankers" who have perfected it into an art. There are "Saudi restaurants" in DC with basements where children literally are on the menu.

Steele says Trump is horribly isolated and needs to reach out to people like himself, Kucinich, Ralph Nader and Jesse Ventura. However, every time Steele has approached the Trump officials, he has been blown off.

Steele says Trump needs an electoral reform act that will draw the 70% of people Soros doesn't control to his side. He says Soros is preparing an "American Spring" uprising to overthrow Trump. He says the NSA has been spying on American politicians for decades and needs to be "shut down."

The fact that Flynn and his son were dropped from the Trump team for their focus on pedophiles does not augur well for those who think Trump is going to "drain the swamp", and destroy the deep state.

Steele confirms that Jeffrey Epstein's Palm Beach home and island sex retreat was a Mossad blackmail operation, and we know Trump visited both places. (Also)

So the chances are, he is also compromised.

Finally Trump's latest nomination for Labor Secretary makes his administration look like an awards program for the Lolita Express.

However, I think Americans would forgive Trump if he repented his own sins and cleaned house. This needs to be done or we are doomed.

Forget who Trump is--a narcissistic, greedy, arrogant, establishment, power-mongering attention whore-- how can anyone still believe he intends to clean house considering the swamp monsters he's appointed ? ...and he's got a long way to go.
'I see clearly that man in this world deceives himself by admiring and esteeming things which are not, and neither sees nor esteems the things which are.' — St. Catherine of Genoa
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Re: Draining the Swamp

Postby seemslikeadream » Sun Feb 26, 2017 2:08 pm

don't fucking link to that shit
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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