![]() |
I don't have a issue with investigating the investigators, but the investigations should continue.
With any luck, all of those who broke the law on both and any side will be going to PRISON, but the politicians have somewhat exempted themselves. But to get them all, we have to investigate them all. While you can't just do that, you must investigate wrong doings by a chain of evidence. I'm quite sure the congressional investigation is going to shed some light on what we think we know and should be able to tell us if we are just overly suspicious. But none of that can happen without investigation. One only has to look back at Nixon to understand it. Some are either ignorant to history or just ignoring it as far as processes go. But absolutely none of what has happened since trump has entered our lives has passed the smell test. I am more concerned that we take measures to prevent much of what has happened from happening again. Tax releases for POTUS should be mandatory for 4 years leading up to the run. Revisions need to be made to AG's handleing of any investigation within the executive branch and that includes the FBI. To my knowledge, the NSA only reports to the House and Senate 'Intel Committees' and POTUS. But how do you handle intel that may be damaging to POTUS himself ? We have seen Trump ignore a lot of intel from our best intel services that makes all of it suspicious all by itself. AND SOME OF YOU PRETEND THIS IS LESS OFFENSIVE THAN SEX WITH A INTERN IN THE WHITEHOUSE. |
They're calling it The retail apocalypse and Trump is still doing nothing about it two years in. 4,500 total planned store closures this year. Tens of thousands of jobs lost and out of work. Trump's tarrifs cut into these retailers small profit margin and now they're closing stores to compensate. Sad 465 store closures in 48 hours; Gap, JCPenney, Victoria's Secret & Foot Locker FOX NEWS - The 'retail apocalypse' is alive and well this week with major chains such as Gap, JCPenney, Victoria's Secret and Foot Locker all announcing massive closures, totalling the death of more than 465 stores over the last 48 hours. All four companies reported its fourth quarter results this week during the critical holiday period, with three of them (Gap, JCPenney and Victoria's Secret) reporting declining in same-store sales, while Foot Locker reported growth that more than doubled expectations. Still, despite the good news. Foot Locker announced Friday that it plans to close around 165 stores across the country, during its investor call. That comes less than 24 hours after Gap announced it would close 230 of its namesake stores over the course of the next two years after the brand's same-store sales fell 7 percent during the holiday quarter. It also announced that it will separate its sister company Old Navy into its own publicly-traded company and create a new firm to house its remaining brands. To top that off, earlier that day on Thursday, JCPenney announced it too will shutter 18 of its department stores this year, including the three it already announced in January. Additionally, it said it plans to close nine of its home and furnitiure stores to coincide with its previous announcement to discontinue selling major applicances and furniture at all of its stores by the end of February. However, Bob Phibbs, CEO of New York-based consultancy the Retail Doctor thinks JCPenney will be forced to announce more closures down the road. “It is mind boggling that JC Penney still thinks they have time when the clock has run out and there’s no real plan. Closing 18 stores is barely a drop in the bucket of JC Penney’s more than 850 stores. If this was a big, bold effort to reinvigorate the brand, they would have announced they were closing hundreds of stores and investing in an outstanding experience at their other locations," Phibbs told FOX Business. He added that JCPenney "still desperately" needs an inspiring vision for its brand as more and more customers head to Target, Walmart and Amazon. Lastly, late Wednesday, L Brands' Victoria's Secret also reported its same-store sales fell during the holidays, dropping 3 percent and it will have to close 53 stores this year. According to a Business Insider report, these announcements will bring the number of planned stores closures this year to well over 4,500. |
March 2019, Dept of Labor.
Facts. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D1JPPSAXgAAdyyQ.jpg https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D1JMY7QW0AAfGYg.jpg https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D1JKkEBX0AI6VzT.jpg |
All times are GMT -7. The time now is 01:19 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
©2000-, AI Media Network Inc123