Attorney General Pam Bondi met the House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday, and she did a great job. She blustered. She filibustered. She shouted. She summoned the mock outrage usually seen in recalcitrant teenagers. And she did so to dodge a simple question about the Epstein files.
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What the hell happened in politics this week? Esquire's legendary blogger Charlie P. Pierce has answers
Attorney General Pam Bondi met the House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday, and she did a great job. She blustered. She filibustered. She shouted. She summoned the mock outrage usually seen in recalcitrant teenagers. And she did so to dodge a simple question about the Epstein files.
That's all Ulster needs—the importation of an extremist American martyrdom cult right at the moment at which the possible establishment of a 32-county republic in Ireland seems closer than it's been in centuries.
When it comes to epidemic disease, California, Illinois, and New York have decided to go into business for themselves with the World Health Organization, as a way to get out from under the greasy roadkill thumb of RFK Jr.
This week saw the release of the documents underpinning the inexcusable seizure of the election materials from Fulton County in Georgia. Within the documents, Hunter Walker of Talking Points Memo noticed the name of Clay Parikh, mysteriously described as a "special government employee" in the executive branch.
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