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2 yrs

Take the L! Corey DeAngelis Embarrasses TX Rep (and Troll) Gene Wu AGAIN in School Choice Back and Forth
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Take the L! Corey DeAngelis Embarrasses TX Rep (and Troll) Gene Wu AGAIN in School Choice Back and Forth

Take the L! Corey DeAngelis Embarrasses TX Rep (and Troll) Gene Wu AGAIN in School Choice Back and Forth
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2 yrs

The Bell Tolls for 'Bidenomics' After Disasterous New Poll
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The Bell Tolls for 'Bidenomics' After Disasterous New Poll

The Bell Tolls for 'Bidenomics' After Disasterous New Poll
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2 yrs

White House: Hamas Has No Interest in Cease-Fire
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White House: Hamas Has No Interest in Cease-Fire

White House: Hamas Has No Interest in Cease-Fire
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2 yrs

David Axelrod Has More to Say About Biden's Chances - The Powers That Be Should Listen
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David Axelrod Has More to Say About Biden's Chances - The Powers That Be Should Listen

David Axelrod Has More to Say About Biden's Chances - The Powers That Be Should Listen
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2 yrs

Adam Kinzinger Has an Hours-Long Mental Breakdown Over Mike Lee and the January 6th Tapes
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Adam Kinzinger Has an Hours-Long Mental Breakdown Over Mike Lee and the January 6th Tapes

Adam Kinzinger Has an Hours-Long Mental Breakdown Over Mike Lee and the January 6th Tapes
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2 yrs

Michigan Township Declares Itself a 'Second Amendment Sanctuary‚' Promptly Forms Militia
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Michigan Township Declares Itself a 'Second Amendment Sanctuary‚' Promptly Forms Militia

Michigan Township Declares Itself a 'Second Amendment Sanctuary‚' Promptly Forms Militia
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2 yrs

Finland Shuts Border Crossings to Stem Wave of Illegal Immigration Originating in Russia
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Finland Shuts Border Crossings to Stem Wave of Illegal Immigration Originating in Russia

Finland Shuts Border Crossings to Stem Wave of Illegal Immigration Originating in Russia
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
2 yrs

iPhone 16 series rumored to get these 5 big upgrades in 2024
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iPhone 16 series rumored to get these 5 big upgrades in 2024

We are still at least ten months away from the arrival of the iPhone 16. But even though much could change between now and when the iPhone 16 series launches‚ there are five improvements that we are very likely to see on the iPhone 16 models. Larger displays Renders based on leaked iPhone 15 Pro Max and iPhone 16 Pro Max (Ultra) designs. Image source: 9to5Mac Display analyst Ross Young believes Apple will increase the size of the iPhone 16 Pro displays from 6.1 and 6.7 inches to 6.3 and 6.9 inches‚ respectively. A Weibo leaker also corroborated this possibility. Even the Apple blog MacRumors shared leaked details about the size and weight of the next Pro phones‚ and they line up with these other two reports. Young does not expect the base iPhone 17 models to copy this change‚ as the cheaper versions of the iPhone 16 will stick with 6.1 and 6.7-inch panels. A18 and A18 Pro will offer important improvements With the iPhone 15 Pro series‚ Apple unveiled its first processor based on a 3nm process. The A17 Pro slightly improves the CPU but features a revamped GPU. Getting a bit more technical‚ Apple is expected to change the process of how its upcoming A18 chip will be made‚ likely bringing improvements in power consumption‚ heat management‚ and CPU power. Jeff Pu‚ a tech analyst at Hong Kong investment firm Haitong International Securities‚ says Apple will develop at least two variations of the A18 chip -- one base model and a Pro version for the Pro phones. Although it’s unclear how the specifications will change‚ he claims that Apple will switch from the N3E manufacturing process to N3B. N3E has fewer EUV layers and lower transistor density than N3B‚ resulting in efficiency tradeoffs‚ but the process can provide better performance. Pu even calls the A17 Pro an A16 Bionic with overheating issues. 5x optical zoom for iPhone 16 Pro Image source: Christian de Looper for BGR With the iPhone 15 Pro Max‚ Apple added an exclusive lens with 5x optical zoom. Previously‚ The Elec reported that Apple plans to add a periscope lens on both Pro models. Thanks to the increase in the display size‚ the publication believes the company will be able to add a tetra prism lens to both Pro models in 2024. While this will be a massive improvement for Pro users‚ Pro Max owners won't have a "new" feature‚ as the last version already had a periscope lens. 48MP resolution coming to the Ultra Wide lens Analyst Jeff Pu believes Apple will upgrade the Ultra Wide lens on the iPhone 16 Pro models to feature 48MP resolution. In other words‚ that means users will be able to shoot pictures in RAW with even more detail. In addition‚ standard shots will likely be 24MP‚ which is the current resolution for the main iPhone 15 camera. iPhone 16 will have built-in Generative AI Siri on the Vision Pro headset. Image source: Apple Inc. Of all these features‚ this is the one we've heard the most about in recent weeks‚ but we are still unsure how much of it will be built into iOS 18 and how much will be exclusive to the iPhone 16 models. According to Jeff Pu‚ Apple is building a few hundred AI servers in 2023 and even more next year. By combining cloud-based AI and on-device data processing‚ Apple would finally roll out its generative AI to iPhone and iPad by late 2024. Bloomberg's Mark Gurman also believes this will be a key feature of the big update. However‚ it will likely roll out at the end of next year instead of September. Don't Miss: iPhone 16: Everything we know so far The post iPhone 16 series rumored to get these 5 big upgrades in 2024 appeared first on BGR. Today's Top Deals Best Black Friday sales to shop this weekend: Amazon‚ Best Buy‚ Walmart‚ more Amazon gift card deals‚ offers &; coupons 2023: Get $400+ free Trending Right Now: Earth’s oxygen levels could drop‚ suffocating us all‚ study claims The universe began with two big bangs‚ new study claims Roses are red‚ iMessages are blue‚ RCS stays green‚ and Apple won’t support Google’s proprietary encryption
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History Traveler
History Traveler
2 yrs

Republicans in the Presidency: Criminal Dealings?
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Republicans in the Presidency: Criminal Dealings?

Donald J. Trump is in court for a number of reasons currently‚ although he still remains favorite for the Republican nomination for the presidency. With that in mind‚ here Larry Deblinger looks at some of the criminal (or possibly criminal) dealings of some former Republican presidents. Harding’s Gang? President Warren G. Harding’s first cabinet in 1921. The Republican party of the United States is in flux as it seeks to forge its future with or without the leadership of former president Donald J. Trump. While Trump holds a commanding lead in the polls in the race for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination‚ he is also facing trial on four criminal indictments encompassing 91 separate charges. Republican politicians and rank-and file-voters must decide whether they will support Trump should he be both their party’s nominee and a convicted felon. Depending on the trial outcomes‚ it may be a stark choice of Trump or the law.But the stakes of the present moment for the future of the Republican party‚ and‚ potentially‚ of American democracy‚ can only be fully appreciated in light of the GOP’s past. The history of the presidencies of the Republican party‚ which often brands itself “the party of law and order‚” includes a long criminal record‚ spanning almost the entire existence of the party‚ of which the Trump administration‚ despite some unprecedented aspects of its law-breaking‚ is only the latest chapter. What Republicans decide today will help determine whether that heritage of lawlessness at the highest levels of national government‚ where a political party is expected to assemble its best and brightest and promote its core tenets‚ will continue to stain the character of the GOP.  Grant’s InvasionThe criminal record of Republican presidencies substantially begins a mere 15 years after the 1854 birth of the GOP‚ with the administration of Ulysses S. Grant (1869-1877). At this time‚ corruption in government was common since the so-called “spoils system‚” as in “to the victor go the spoils‚” held sway in American politics‚ determining government jobs‚ favors and funding through political patronage.1 But federal executive branch corruption erupted to unprecedented and shocking levels under Grant. The scandals‚ too numerous to detail in total‚ ran from bribery‚ fraud‚ and extortion to embezzlement and financial market manipulation and permeated the departments of the Treasury‚ Interior‚ Justice‚ War (now called Defense)‚ the Navy‚ and the Postal Service‚ reaching to top cabinet officers and the vice-president.2The malfeasance by the end of Grant’s first term was such that it helped trigger a breakaway faction of his party who called themselves the Liberal Republicans and opposed Grant’s 1872 re-election. Among other points of opposition to Grant‚ the Liberals charged that “The Civil Service of the Government has become a mere instrument of partisan tyranny and personal ambition‚ and an object of selfish greed. It is a scandal and reproach upon free institutions‚ and breeds a demoralization dangerous to the perpetuity of republican government.”3 The Whiskey RingThe most extensive of the Grant administration scandals was the Whiskey Ring. Grant had sent an old friend whom he had appointed to the Treasury‚ General John McDonald‚ to head up federal tax revenue collection in Missouri‚ a hotbed of support for the Liberal Republicans. Once there‚ McDonald observed that whiskey distillers had been bribing federal revenue agents for years to allow them to underpay what they owed in taxes. Rather than curtail the illegality‚ McDonald and other Republican operatives got in on the action‚ forming the Whiskey Ring in conjunction with distillers‚ ostensibly to divert the unpaid tax money to a slush fund for Grant’s re-election in 1872 and other Republican campaigns.4 Storekeepers‚ treasury clerks‚ revenue agents and others in the whiskey chain were forced to cooperate‚ sometimes through impressment and blackmail.4 After the 1872 elections‚ the Whiskey Ring outgrew its original‚ perhaps specious political purposes to become a nationwide crime syndicate operated entirely for the enrichment of the conspirators. After it was uncovered and investigated by Grant’s Justice Department starting in 1875‚ 110 conspirators‚ including MacDonald‚ were convicted of crimes (e.g.‚ defrauding the US Treasury) and over $3 million in stolen revenues were recovered.5  Despite the scandals of his administration and opposition of the Liberals‚ Grant‚ the former top general of the Union army and Civil war hero‚ won re-election handily. Grant appeared to be unaware of the various corrupt activities in his administration‚ and urged prosecution of the malefactors when informed of them.6 But he was drawn into the Whiskey Ring scandal when his private secretary‚ Orville Babcock‚ was indicted and tried in criminal court for involvement in the scheme. Grant testified on behalf of Babcock‚ denying his guilt and defending his character‚ in a deposition taken at the White House. Owing largely to Grant’s testimony‚ Babcock was eventually acquitted‚ but was later accused of complicity in another corrupt scheme.4‚5 For years afterwards‚ fairly or not‚ the term “Grantism” was synonymous with government corruption.7 Harding’s GangFollowing Grant‚ the Progressive era of the late nineteenth and early 20th century in the US promoted “good government” policies which helped to curb government corruption. Progressive Republicans such as Theodore Roosevelt played prominent roles in this movement.8 But Americans came to tire of Progressivism under the strident leadership and activism of the Democratic president Woodrow Wilson (1913-1921)‚ and in 1920‚ they voted a conservative Republican‚ Warren G. Harding‚ into the White House. Harding had run on the campaign theme of a “return to normalcy.”9 If by normalcy Harding meant a return to Republican officials criminally abusing the powers of the Federal government‚ he delivered in spades. A handsome‚ statuesque‚ and genial man with a turbo-charged sex-drive‚ Harding had risen through the shady world of Ohio politics and brought his cronies from that milieu to the executive branch. Known as the Ohio gang‚ Harding’s associates generated a font of corruption. The disclosures began in early 1923 at the Veteran’s Bureau  (now the Department of Veterans’ Affairs)‚ leading to the resignation of the Director‚ Charles R. Forbes and the suicide of the General Counsel‚ Charles T. Cramer. Forbes was convicted in 1924 of conspiracy to defraud the government‚ involving the theft of more than $200 million in bureau funds‚ and sentenced to two years in prison.10‚11The odor of corruption led next to the office of the Alien Property Custodian‚ which adjudicated claims for properties confiscated from Germans during World War I. Congressional investigators the bureau to be a sump of bribery and graft. The Custodian‚ Thomas W. Miller‚ was convicted of conspiracy to defraud the government and imprisoned.12  Harding’s Attorney General‚ Harry Daugherty‚ a key member of the Ohio gang‚ was brought to trial on charges of involvement in the Alien Bureau schemes and was acquitted‚ although it was brought out that he had burned bank ledger sheets of his and other accounts to destroy evidence.13 Daugherty was also accused of running a bribery/protection racket for alcohol dealers trying to evade the Prohibition law then in effect but was never prosecuted.14 However‚ Daugherty’s secretary and close friend‚ Jess Smith‚ committed suicide under mysterious circumstances.15  Oil Money BribesThe infamous Teapot Dome scandal‚ also occurring under the Harding administration‚ was named for a federal government reserve of oil-bearing land at Teapot Dome‚ Wyoming‚ intended for use by the US Navy and managed by the Interior Department. After a series of investigations and criminal trials revealing an intricate and scandalous web of corporate-government corruption‚ Interior Secretary Albert B. Fall was convicted and imprisoned for receiving bribes in return for leasing Teapot Dome and other federal oil reserves to private companies.16The full extent of Harding’s knowledge of the corruption in his administration remains unknown‚ largely because he died suddenly while in office in 1923. In his classic 1931 history of the 1920s‚ “Only Yesterday‚” Frederick Lewis Allen‚ author and Editor of Harper’s magazine‚ opined that “the Harding administration was responsible in its short two years and five months for more concentrated robbery and rascality than any other in the whole history of the Federal government.”17   Nixon’s Criminal CohortIt is sometimes forgotten that Richard M. Nixon set the tone for his administration (1969-74) well before the Watergate scandal with his choice for vice-president‚ Spiro T. Agnew‚ Governor of Maryland. Little-known outside of Maryland‚ Agnew was a tough‚ plain-spoken politician whom the Nixonites thought would be perfect for their campaign. It turned out that Agnew was a creature straight from the Grant-Harding school of politics as criminal enterprise. Agnew had not only run a bribery racket as County Executive and then Governor of Maryland‚ extorting public works contractors for kickbacks of government-appropriated funds‚ he continued receiving the payments—in envelopes stuffed with cash—as Vice-President of the US.18 Faced with criminal charges of extortion‚ bribery‚ graft‚ conflict of interest‚ and tax evasion‚ Agnew pleaded to the least embarrassing charge‚ tax evasion‚ in return for resigning his office and a $10‚000 fine.19 The Watergate ScandalThen there was Watergate. The infamous burglary of Democratic National Committee headquarters and cover-up‚ the latter personally engineered by Nixon and his White House staff‚ encompassed a vast scale of illegal activities and abuses of power. As in the Harding administration‚ the nation’s top legal official‚ Attorney General John Mitchell‚ was a key facilitator of illegality under Nixon. A century after Republican operatives under Grant used the Whiskey Ring to raise re-election campaign funds through intimidation and blackmail‚ Nixon re-election campaign officials also used an illegally derived slush fund‚ including campaign contributions from corporations‚ which were outlawed at the time‚ to finance the Watergate break in and other crimes and “dirty tricks‚” laundering the money through banks in Mexico.20‚21Overall‚ 69 Nixon administration officials were indicted for crimes related to Watergate or other illegal activities and 48 were convicted‚ including Attorney General Mitchell.22 A grand jury was set to charge Nixon with bribery‚ conspiracy‚ obstruction of justice‚ and obstruction of a criminal investigation but prosecution was deterred by questions over whether a sitting president could be indicted.23 In any event‚ like his vice-president before him‚ Nixon resigned in disgrace.  Reagan Restores a Republican TraditionAfter the brief period of atonement known as the Ford administration (1974-77)‚ which was most notable for President Gerald Ford’s pardoning of Nixon‚ the Republicans were back at it with the presidency of Ronald W. Reagan (1981-89). Reagan bore curious echoes of Harding as a genial‚ handsome‚ somewhat inattentive man promising to restore a nostalgic era of simpler times in America. And like Harding‚ Reagan presided over a viral outbreak of corruption in the federal government of a magnitude unseen since the days of the Ohio gang.24 Abuses of office occurred at no less than 20 different federal departments and agencies‚ according to Pulitzer prize-winning Washington Post journalist and author Haynes Johnson.25“By the end of his (Reagan’s) term 138 administration officials had been convicted‚ had been indicted‚ or had been the subject of official investigations for official misconduct and/or criminal violations. In terms of numbers of officials involved‚ the record of his administration was the worst ever‚” wrote Johnson‚ in his 1991 history of the Reagan administration‚ “Sleepwalking Through History.”26   Cascading Corruption The Iran-Contra affair is the most famous of the Reagan-era scandals‚ but that episode could at least be portrayed as a principled‚ if illegal‚ attempt to fight the spread of socialism in Central America. Less noted is that the Reagan administration was rife with raw‚ greed-driven corruption‚ which by one estimate amounted to a total theft of $130billion in public funds.27 A prime example was the Wedtech case‚ involving a Defense Department contractor‚ which Johnson described as “the kind of political corruption that extended back to the Washington (DC) of Grant and Harding: influence peddling‚ government contracts‚ cash‚ bribes‚ kickbacks‚ fraud and conspiracy.”28 The subsequent “Operation Ill Wind” probe by the FBI‚ investigating further corruption in Defense Department procurement‚ resulted in 50 convictions‚ including those of high-ranking military officers and administration officials.29 And on it went‚ across the federal government in a veritable feeding frenzy from the department of Housing and Urban Development‚ where an estimated $8 billion in public funds were stolen‚30 to the Environmental Protection Agency where the director resigned rather than cooperate with a Congressional investigation of political manipulation of department funds.31 As in the Harding and Nixon administrations‚ the nation’s top law enforcement officer came under scrutiny for alleged lawbreaking. Edwin Meese III‚ Reagan’s Attorney General starting in 1984‚ was the object of a 14-month special prosecutor and federal grand jury investigation of alleged criminal financial improprieties. Although Meese was acquitted‚ he became an object of ridicule at the Department of Justice where morale plummeted.32                 Government-Sponsored Organized CrimeThe Iran-Contra scandal involved a secret scheme concocted by high-ranking officials at the CIA and the National Security Agency to sell arms to Iran and use the proceeds to fund the Contras of Nicaragua‚ who were fighting the socialist regime of their country. The arms sales to Iran violated US policy of not negotiating with terrorists‚ and the Arms Export Control Act of 1976. The support for the Contras violated the 1984 Boland Amendment‚ which specifically prohibited all military aid to the Contras or other groups in Nicaragua.33 Moreover‚ the murky scheme involved an unholy host of money changers‚ drug dealers‚ arms dealers‚ and terrorists‚ amounting to what one writer has described as “American-sponsored organized crime.”34The Independent Prosecutor on the case‚ Lawrence E. Walsh‚ ultimately indicted 14 individuals with criminal charges of whom 11 were convicted‚ including National Security Adviser John M. Poindexter‚ Marine Corps Lieutenant Colonel Oliver L. North‚ National Security Adviser Robert C. McFarlane‚ and Assistant Secretary of State Elliott Abrams.35 Four counts of perjury and false statements were pending against Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger when he was pardoned in 1992 by President George H. W. Bush‚ who also pardoned Abrams and MacFarlane‚ among others. Walsh‚ a lifelong Republican‚ reportedly called Bush’s pardon of Weinberger‚ “one of the great cover-ups of American history at the highest levels of the executive branch.”36Reagan pleaded ignorance of the Iran Contra scheme‚ while accepting responsibility for it. Although Reagan made multiple false statements regarding the activities in a televised speech to the nation‚37 there was no evidence he knew they were false‚ and Walsh declined to indict him.38And then there was Trump‚ who is now charged under one of his four indictments (from the state of Georgia) of running a “criminal enterprise” along with 17 co-defendants. A Partisan Pattern? Of the 19 total Republican presidencies‚ four‚ not including that of Trump‚ have each compiled a criminal record unparalleled by any other administration of any other party in US history. The outbreaks have been sporadic but persistent to this day. Yet‚ the question could be raised as to whether this record truly reveals a penchant for lawlessness specific to the GOP or simply a tendency endemic to all political parties. As the famous saying goes‚ “power tends to corrupt‚ and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” Over their history‚ the Democrats have surely demonstrated no blanket immunity to corruption. During the 1860s and 1870s‚ the era of the spoilsmen‚ the Tweed Ring of New York City‚ run by the notorious “Boss” Tweed of the Democratic party‚ was a nexus of corrupt rackets that dominated city politics and set a standard for “boss”-run “party machines” nationwide. The Democratic-run states of New York‚ Illinois‚ and New Jersey have long been known for systemic corruption. Former New York State Democratic Assembly Leader Sheldon Silver died a convict in 2022 after being found guilty of corruption in 2015‚ and Democratic Senator Robert Menendez of New Jersey is currently facing bribery charges. Numerous other Democratic federal legislators have also been convicted of crimes in office.39 And the vast majority of Republican federal‚ executive branch office holders have been law abiding. The many Republicans who declared themselves ready to convict Nixon in his impeachment trial and forced his resignation demonstrated a courageous commitment to the law‚ as did those who testified for the January 6th Committee‚ and the two who served as committee members.             The Parties ComparedThere is no comparison‚ however‚ between the criminal records of Democrats and Republicans in the presidency‚ the pinnacle of the US government‚ a fact supported by several media outlets using online data. Politifact‚ a nonpartisan website‚ found that there were 142 indictments against members of the past three Republican administrations (including Trump’s) versus just two under the past three Democratic presidents.40 The Huffington Post‚ a left-leaning news site‚ reported 91 criminal convictions connected to Republican presidencies versus only one under a Democrat since 1970.41 And the Daily Kos‚ another left-wing media site‚ tallied 120 indictments‚ 82 convictions‚ and 34 imprisonments for Republicans from the Nixon through the Obama administrations versus 4‚ 2‚ and 2‚ respectively‚ for the Democrats.42What is next for the Republicans? If Trump is convicted‚ Republicans may or may not choose to move beyond him. The greater question for their party‚ and for US democracy‚ is whether the Republicans will leave behind or continue their heritage of criminal abuse of power at the highest levels of the US government‚ of which the Trump administration is but the latest chapter.  What do you think of the author’s argument? Let us know below.  References1.     Calhoun CW (2017). The Presidency of Ulysses S. Grant. Lawrence‚ Kansas; University Press of Kansas. Page 12. 2.     Scandals of the Ulysses S. Grant Administration. Wikipedia. https://wiki2.org/en/Grant_administration_scandals.3.     The American Presidency Project. https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/liberal-republican-platform-1872.4.     Rives T. Grant‚ Babcock‚ and the Whiskey Ring. Prologue Magazine. Fall 2000; 32(3): https://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/2000/fall/whiskey-ring-1.5.     Longley R. The Whiskey Ring: bribery scandal of the 1870s. Thought Co. March 29‚ 2022. https://www.thoughtco.com/the-whiskey-ring-5220735.6.     Chernow R (2017). Grant. New York; Penguin Press. p.837. 7.     Sumner C. Republicanism vs. Grantism. Speech in the Senate of the United States. May 31‚ 1872. 8.     Swinth K. The Square Deal. Theodore Roosevelt and the themes of progressive reform. The Gilder-Lehrman Institute of American History. https://www.gilderlehrman.org/history-resources/essays/square-deal-theodore-roosevelt-and-themes-progressive-reform.9.     Wallenfeldt J. Return to normalcy. American campaign slogan. History and Society: Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/topic/return-to-normalcy. 10.  Allen‚ FL (1931). Only yesterday. An informal history of the 1920s. New York; Harper Perennial‚ Modern Classics. p.129-30.11.  Charles R. Forbes. Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_R._Forbes.12.  Allen‚ FL (1931). Only yesterday. An informal history of the 1920s. New York; Harper Perennial‚ Modern Classics. pp.130-1.13.  Allen‚ FL (1931). Only yesterday. An informal history of the 1920s. New York; Harper Perennial‚ Modern Classics. pp.131-2.14.  Allen‚ FL (1931). Only yesterday. An informal history of the 1920s. New York; Harper Perennial‚ Modern Classics. p.132.15.  Allen‚ FL (1931). Only yesterday. An informal history of the 1920s. New York; Harper Perennial‚ Modern Classics. pp.132-3.16.  Allen‚ FL (1931). Only yesterday. An informal history of the 1920s. New York; Harper Perennial‚ Modern Classics. pp.118-29.17.  Allen‚ FL (1931). Only yesterday. An informal history of the 1920s. New York; Harper Perennial‚ Modern Classics. p.133.18.  Yarvitz M‚ Maddow R (2020). Bag man. The wild crimes‚ audacious cover up and spectacular downfall of a brazen crook in the White House. New York; Crown. pp. 50-75.19.  Yarvitz M‚ Maddow R (2020). Bag Man. The Wild Crimes‚ Audacious Cover Up and Spectacular Downfall of a Brazen Crook in the White House. New York; Crown. pp. 138-9. 20.  Genovese MA (1999). The Watergate Crisis. Westport‚ CT; Greenwood Press. pp.22-23.21.  Emery F (1994). Watergate. New York; Random House‚ Inc. pp. 110-11‚ 124-5.22.  Watergate Scandal. Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watergate_scandal.23.   Watkins E‚ Kaufman E. National archives release draft indictment of Richard Nixon amid Mueller probe. CNN.com. October 31‚ 2018. https://www.cnn.com/2018/10/31/politics/richard-nixon-watergate-national-archives-mueller/index.html.24.  Scandals of the Ronald Reagan Administration. Wikipedia.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scandals_of_the_Ronald_Reagan_administration.25.  Johnson H (1991). Sleepwalking Through History: America in the Reagan Years. New York‚ London; W.W Norton and Company. p. 169. 26.  Johnson H (1991). Sleepwalking Through History: America in the Reagan Years. New York‚ London; W.W Norton and Company. p. 184. 27.  Suri J. Reagan and the Iran-Contra affair. American Heritage. 2021. 66(2). https://www.americanheritage.com/reagan-and-iran-contra-affair.28.  Johnson H (1991). Sleepwalking Through History: America in the Reagan Years. New York‚ London; W.W Norton and Company. pp. 172-3. 29.  Operation Ill Wind. Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Ill_Wind.30.  Johnson H (1991). Sleepwalking Through History: America in the Reagan Years. New York‚ London; W.W Norton and Company. p. 183. 31.  Johnson H (1991). Sleepwalking Through History: America in the Reagan Years. New York‚ London; W.W Norton and Company. pp. 170-1. 32.  Johnson H (1991). Sleepwalking Through History: America in the Reagan Years. New York‚ London; W.W Norton and Company. pp. 184-5. 33.  Suri J. Reagan and the Iran-Contra affair. American Heritage. 2021. 66(2). https://www.americanheritage.com/reagan-and-iran-contra-affair.34.  Suri J. Reagan and the Iran-Contra affair. American Heritage. 2021. 66(2). https://www.americanheritage.com/reagan-and-iran-contra-affair.35.  Final Report of the Independent Counsel for Iran/Contra Matters. Volume 1: Lawrence E. Walsh‚ Independent Counsel. August 4‚ 1993‚ Washington‚ D.C. United States Court of Appeals‚ District of Columbia Circuit. https://irp.fas.org/offdocs/walsh/summpros.htm.36.  Rosenberg P. Republicans‚ a history: how did the party of “law and order” become the party of crooks and crime. Salon. November 24‚ 2019.37.  Johnson H (1991). Sleepwalking Through History: America in the Reagan Years. New York‚ London; W.W Norton and Company. pp. 296-7. 38.   Understanding the Iran-Contra Affairs. Good Government Project‚ Brown University. https://www.brown.edu/Research/Understanding_the_Iran_Contra_Affair/profile-reagan.php.39.  List of American federal politicians convicted of crimes. Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_American_federal_politicians_convicted_of_crimes.40.  Kertscher T. Many more criminal indictments under Trump‚ Reagan‚ and Nixon than under Obama Clinton and Carter. Politifact; The Poynter Institute. January 9‚ 2020. https://www.politifact.com/factchecks/2020/jan/09/facebook-posts/many-more-criminal-indictments-under-trump-reagan-/.41.  Grossinger P. Republican presidencies have 91x the conviction rate of Democratic presidencies. HuffPost. December 22‚ 2017. https://www.huffpost.com/entry/republican-presidencies-have-91x-the-convictions-rate_b_5a3d5406e4b0df0de8b064e5.42.  RoyalScribe. Updated: Comparing presidential administrations by felony arrests and convictions (as of 9/17/2018). Daily Kos. September 18‚ 2018. https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2018/9/18/1796668/-UPDATED-Comparing-Presidential-Administrations-by-felony-arrests-and-convictions-as-of-9-17-2018.
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History Traveler
History Traveler
2 yrs

Bronze Age Razor Discovery Raises Exciting Questions (Video)
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Bronze Age Razor Discovery Raises Exciting Questions (Video)

In the exploration of Must Farm's (a Bronze Age settlement at Must Farm quarry near Peterborough‚ England) archaeological treasures. Read moreSection: ArtifactsAncient TechnologyNewsVideosRead Later 
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