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Obama Admits He "Can't Pardon" Snowden Before A Trial - Sorry, Hillary

Obama Admits He "Can't Pardon" Snowden Before A Trial  - Sorry, Hillary

After everyone from Jesse Jackson, to the terrified mainstream media to prominent Congressional Democrats have called upon Obama to issue a blanket pardon for Hillary Clinton, he finally admitted that it's not possible to pardon someone who hasn't yet stood trial for a crime.  And while Obama was referencing a potential pardon of Edward Snowden with his comments, one could assume that the law should be applied the same way for all U.S. citizens.

Obama's 'Zero' Legacy

Obama's 'Zero' Legacy

Authored by Eric Zuesse via Strategic-Culture.org,

«Trump did more than any democrat to deflate the neocon/neoliberal agenda that liberals themselves screamed was fascist when Bush was president».

That was a brilliant and profoundly true reader-comment recently posted about Hillary Clinton supporters who are demonstrating against Trump’s winning the Presidency.

With TPP Dead, China Officially Launches Its Own Pacific Free-Trade Deal

As we noted on Thursday, "it was ludicrous for Obama to leave China out of things. China is the second biggest economy in the world, third if you treat the EU as a block. Had China been in the deal all along, we may not have seen the ludicrous provision that allowed companies to sue governments. That provision was one of the key reasons the deal failed. With the election of Trump, TPP is officially dead. China, not the US, will be at the center of a new Asian trade pact."

How The S&P 500 Will Spend $2.6 Trillion In Cash Next Year (Hint: Mostly On Stock Buybacks)

How The S&P 500 Will Spend $2.6 Trillion In Cash Next Year (Hint: Mostly On Stock Buybacks)

In light of expectations that the Trump fiscal stimulus plan will unleash a new Golden Age for the US economy, driven in part by the repatriation of hundreds of billions in funds held offshore, yesterday we showed a disturbing analysis from Citigroup according to which the bank's share-shrinker portfolio has soared relative to the S&P following the US election. The implication was clear: as fas as the market is concerned, much if not all of the capital repatriated from overseas will be promptly returned to shareholders, and maybe much of the corporate tax cut as well.

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