As is custom in the United States, we wake up, yawn, remember that it's 2017, grab our phones, and then, bleary-eyed, go on Twitter to see what messages our president has hastily tapped that will rule our lives for the next 24 hours.。
And on Saturday, like clockwork, President Donald Trump was at it again, tweeting about "wire tapping." 。
SEE ALSO:An orange alligator exists and people are calling it 'Trumpigator'。The president appears to believe that former President Barack Obama—a favorite target of Trump's—had directed a "wire tapping" operation at Trump Tower in New York City, where Trump spent the majority of his time before he moved south to Washington, D.C.。
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And not that it should come as a surprise, but: The president's tweets appear to be based on incorrect and/or incomplete information.。 UPDATE, 1:04 p.m. EST:。
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"A cardinal rule of the Obama Administration was that no White House official ever interfered with any independent investigation led by the Department of Justice. As part of that practice, neither President Obama nor any White House official ever ordered surveillance on any U.S. citizen. Any suggestion otherwise is simply false."。
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Of course, the idea that Obama directed an operation to listen in on communications at Trump Tower is dubious at best.。 Tweet may have been deleted。And then there's the fact that—according to。 The Washington Post。—folks at the White House were passing around a。 Breitbart。story on Friday, in which。
Breitbart。
cribbed a timeline from conservative radio host Mark Levin, that supposedly outlines when and how the Obama administration constructed a spy operation against then-candidate Trump. The story describes Obama's supposed tactics as "police state" operations, and Trump described them as "McCarthyism." So, if the dots are truly connected already: the president's accusing a former president of "wire tapping" based on claims made by a conservative radio host, which were then cited in an article in a publication formerly run by Steve Bannon, who's now Trump's chief advisor. 。
Of course, underlining all of this is the temptation to wonder whether or not Trump just admitted that the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court had grounds to believe Trump associates were communicating with Russian officials from inside Trump Tower, and therefore, issued a warrant to gather communications. 。
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So, depending on where your thoughts go from there, you should either purchase an English-to-Russian dictionary, or go back to eating your cereal, let alone your coffee, if you've even had it yet.。
(责任编辑:綜合)
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