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NBA Clarifies Position On Charlotte All-Star Game, Commissioner Clarifies League Won’t Intervene

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‘The One Place Where I Know I Agree With the Governor Is That There’s Enormous Misunderstanding About This Law’ Says NBA Commissioner

The NBA Friday afternoon released a statement after Commissioner Adam Silver’s comments drew ire from those hoping the League would take action and move the 2017 All-Star game out of Charlotte, North Carolina.

“During a media availability earlier today following the NBA’s Board of Governors meeting, Commissioner Adam Silver clarified that the NBA remains deeply concerned about its ability to successfully host the 2017 All-Star Game in Charlotte, North Carolina, in light of recent legislation that discriminates against the LGBT community,” the statement reads, as Joe.My.God. reports.

“At no time did Adam affirm that the league would not move the All-Star Game; rather he stressed repeatedly that the legislation is problematic, that we feel it is best to engage with the community to work towards a solution, that change is needed and we are hopeful that it will occur.”

Except, not exactly.

During that media availability, Silver told reporters that at the board of governors meeting Friday, “There was no discussion of moving the All-Star game.” Which, of course, led most news outlets to report league owners wouldn’t even discuss moving the game, which is true.

But Silver’s other comments at the press conference are also of great concern.

“As an outsider to North Carolina right now, the one place where I know I agree with the governor is that there’s enormous misunderstanding about this law,” Silver told reporters, according to Sporting News and other outlets. The “misunderstanding” that exists exists because Gov. Pat McCrory and other Republicans are flat-out lying about what the Charlotte bill would have done, and about what HB2 does.

“I think when things settle down and legislators are together with the governor and are able to think through the implications of this law, the impact that it potentially can have on minority groups in their state, I think they will see clear to a change in the law. I’m hopeful they will.”

Perhaps, but right now there’s little hope of HB2 being repealed, which must happen. Republicans have dug themselves into a hole and refuse to climb up and out.

Silver didn’t stop there however. He’s advocating for a laissez-faire approach.

“By no means are we saying we’re stepping back,” he told reporters Friday.

EARLIER– NBA Commissioner: No Plans To Move All-Star Game Out Of North Carolina Despite Anti-LGBT Law

“The message is not that somehow the current state of affairs is OK for the league. Let me be clear: The current state of the law is problematic for the NBA in North Carolina. For the league office and our owners, I think the discussion was, how can we be most constructive in being part of a process that results in the kind of change that we think is necessary?”

“This notion that we set a deadline and then somehow we’re in the position to dictate to the community of North Carolina, ‘Change this or else,’ and then we were to say, ‘Fine, we’ll move on …’” Silver continued.

“We have a team that plays in Charlotte, North Carolina, and I’m not even sure what statement that would be making about that team. I think what’s next would be to say, ‘Should your team be playing in Charlotte, North Carolina?’ We have a playoff game there next week.”

Sporting News concludes that Commissioner Silver “repeatedly made clear his and the league’s position on the measure and expressed hope that change will come without an NBA ultimatum.”

In other words, they’ve stated their position, and that includes not putting any pressure on Tar Heel State lawmakers to make any change.

How is that leadership?

Meanwhile, ESPN’s Rachel Nichols (video above) takes NBA owners and Silver to task. 

“It’s beyond me that NBA owners didn’t even deem this worthy of discussion,” she says, noting Toronto officials were expecting $100 million in spending surrounding their All-Star game. “Or, maybe they do know, and they just don’t care to do more than issue a statement,” she observes.

 

Image of Adam Silver via Facebook 
Image of All-Star game logo via Wikimedia 

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‘I Don’t Think She Survives This’: Gabbard Faces Blowback After ‘Devastating’ Testimony

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Rumors continue to swirl about Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard‘s future as critics on Wednesday slammed her testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee, especially when she declared that it is not the Intelligence Community’s “responsibility” to determine what constitutes an imminent national security threat — a claim that received tremendous blowback.

“Was it the assessment of the Intelligence Community that there was an imminent nuclear threat posed by the Iranian regime?” asked U.S. Senator Jon Ossoff (D-GA).

“The Intelligence Community assessed that Iran maintained the intention to rebuild and to continue to grow their nuclear enrichment capability,” Gabbard replied.

“Was it the assessment of the Intelligence Community that there was a, quote, imminent nuclear threat posed by the Iranian regime, yes or no?” Ossoff pressed.

“Senator, the only person who can determine what is and is not an imminent threat is the president,” Gabbard responded.

READ MORE: ‘Reeks of a Coverup’: DOJ Official Accused of Blocking ‘Mysterious’ Epstein Probe Document

“False,” Ossoff replied. “This is the worldwide threats hearing where you present to Congress national intelligence, timely, objective, and independent of political considerations.”

Podcaster Paul Rieckhoff, an Iraq War veteran and founder of a veterans nonprofit, slammed Gabbard’s remarks.

“I don’t think she survives this,” Rieckhoff wrote. “She’s already not trusted in Trump world as a former Democrat. And not trusted by most people period. Sooner or later, Trump is gonna dump her and blame her.”

“But like Noem, Hegseth, and so many others, she shouldn’t have been there in [the] first place,” he added. “And anyone who voted for her is responsible for this mess now. It’s all coming to the fore now. They are all being revealed. That’s what war does. Especially forever war that is now overflowing beyond US control. Our enemies are celebrating yet again. And we are all less safe. More and more by the minute.”

The Steady State, a group of 400 former national security officials, denounced Gabbard’s claim that “the only person who can determine what is and is not an imminent threat is the president.”

READ MORE: ‘He Was Aware’: Former Top Adviser Refutes Trump’s Denials on Iran Risks

The group called her remark “flatly incompatible with her statutory obligation to provide ‘timely, objective, and independent of political considerations’ national intelligence assessments of threats to Congress.”

Mark Seddon, a former speechwriter for UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, called Gabbard’s testimony “devastating.”

“The fact that DNI Tulsi Gabbard does not believe it is the intelligence community’s responsibility to determine if a threat is imminent is disqualifying for her to be the National Intelligence Director,” wrote retired U.S. Navy Intelligence Officer Travis Akers. “That is one, among many, of the primary responsibilities of the IC.”

READ MORE: ‘Grave Concern’: Democrats Demand DHS Preserve All Corey Lewandowski Records

 

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‘Reeks of a Coverup’: DOJ Official Accused of Blocking ‘Mysterious’ Epstein Probe Document

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The top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee is accusing a prominent Department of Justice official, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, of blocking access to the details of what he is calling a “mysterious Epstein investigation.”

U.S. Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) called the move “stunning interference,” and said that the document “literally says ‘unclassified’ at the top.”

“Given Blanche’s close personal ties to Donald Trump,” Wyden added, “this reeks of a continued coverup to protect key names in the Trump administration.”

Wyden also said that Blanche, whom he noted was Trump’s personal attorney, and “was also responsible for Ghislaine Maxwell’s transfer to a cushy club fed … has intervened to block the DEA [Drug Enforcement Administration] from providing details of a mysterious Epstein investigation to my Finance Committee team.”

READ MORE: ‘Is Tulsi Next?’ Questions Swirl About Future of National Intelligence Director

Wyden wrote: “Recent reporting revealed that Epstein was one of several targets of a big drug trafficking investigation a decade ago. DEA has key info. Based on what we know, Epstein was likely pumping his victims, young women and girls, with incapacitating drugs to facilitate abuse.”

The Democratic lawmaker pointed to a Bloomberg News article that said, “A Department of Justice document combined with interviews reveal that a long-running investigation into organized crime led law enforcement to suspect the serial sex abuser of money laundering, distributing ‘club drugs’ and operating a prostitution ring.”

He said that his team “immediately sought key documents from that investigation.”

“What was the result, and why did the investigation end?” he asked. “We were notified that the DEA intended to release those documents to the Finance Committee. Then Deputy AG Todd Blanche intervened.”

A separate Bloomberg Government report stated that “Blanche is blocking the Drug Enforcement Administration from releasing an unredacted document from the Jeffrey Epstein files about an investigation involving drug trafficking and money laundering, according to a letter Democratic Senator Ron Wyden sent to Blanche on Tuesday.”

READ MORE: ‘He Was Aware’: Former Top Adviser Refutes Trump’s Denials on Iran Risks

 

Image via Reuters 

 

 

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‘He Was Aware’: Former Top Adviser Refutes Trump’s Denials on Iran Risks

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A prominent former senior adviser to President Donald Trump is disputing his claim that “nobody” knew Iran would target neighboring nations or close the Strait of Hormuz if the U.S. attacked, saying that he personally warned him of those possibilities.

John Bolton, Trump’s national security adviser during his first term, “said that on multiple occasions he brought up scenarios in which Iran was attacked and responded with retaliatory strikes in the Strait of Hormuz and elsewhere,” The Hill reported.

“Well, I know for a fact that he was aware of those potentials. I raised the option of regime change in Iran several times during the time I was national security adviser,” Bolton told CNN.

“If you’re going to embark” on attacking Iran, Bolton added, “you better have answers” to how Iran would respond, “and certainly closing the Strait of Hormuz was always one of them and so were attacks on the Gulf Arab states, particularly their oil infrastructure, so he knew about it in his first term.”

“I find it hard to believe that he forgot about it in the intervening years,” the former Trump NSA said.

“Nobody, nobody, no, no, no,” President Trump said when asked if anyone had told him how Iran would retaliate. “No, the greatest experts, nobody thought they were going to hit – they were – I wouldn’t say friendly countries, they were like neutral. They lived with them for years.”

Trump also said this week that Iran wasn’t “supposed to go after all these other countries in the Middle East. Those missiles were set to go after them. So they hit Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait. Nobody expected that. We were shocked.”

READ MORE: ‘Is Tulsi Next?’ Questions Swirl About Future of National Intelligence Director

 

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