Trump's Business Worked With Felix Slater On Trump Tower During Campaign Writes WaPo

Building one of the tallest buildings in the world was on Donald Trump's mind when he decided to run for president in 2015. The vision of his Trump Tower Moscow loomed large as Trump's company pursued the massive Trump Tower project. With perfect timing and seeming deception, Donald Trump told the American public that he owned nothing in Russia, that he had no interests in Russia, that the Hillary supporters were obsessed with Russia. The confirmation to the Washington Post about Trump's plans for the Moscow Tower was voiced by several people familiar with the proposal and new records reviewed by Trump Organization lawyers.

Russian-born real estate developer Felix Slater urged Trump to come to Moscow to promote the real estate proposal, suggesting that he could get President Vladimir Putin to say “great things” about Trump, say insiders.

Slater wrote to Trump Organization Executive Vice President Michael Cohen “something to the effect of, ‘Can you believe two guys from Brooklyn are going to elect a president?’ ” said one person familiar the email exchange. Sater emigrated from what was then the Soviet Union when he was 6 and grew up in Brooklyn.

Slater is a key figure in the Dutch Zembla videos that attempt to layout the vast network of interconnecting ties between Trump and Russia, ones that also touch down in Israel, integrating some of Israel's wealthiest Russian Jewish billionaires. 

We covered the Felix Slater/Trump connection on Hillary Women News on Facebook before Trump became president. 

RelatedDonald Trump And The Felon: Inside His Business Dealings With A Mob-Connected Hustler Forbes October 2017

Google's Eric Schmidt Funds Critical Startup Providing Techno Prowess To Clinton Campaign

Timely Technology For Hillary

The stealthy, Eric Schmidt-backed startup that's working to put Hillary Clinton in the White House QZ.com

Google executive Eric Schmidt is devoted to electing Democrats. Schmidt was named to a Democratic think tank that analyzed what went wrong after the 2014 elections. But it's his forward-thinking investment in The Groundwork that is making news today.

A fundamental challenge of political campaigns in attracting elite engineering and technology talent is lack of stable job security, stock options and other professional perks used to attract the best minds in and out of Silicon Valley. Eric Schmidt is taking his vast wealth to fund The Groundwork, "one of a series of quiet investments by Schmidt that recognize how modern political campaigns are run, with data analytics and digital outreach as vital ingredients that allow candidates to find, court, and turn out critical voter blocs."

“We’re not trying to obfuscate anything, we’re just trying to keep our heads down and do stuff,” says Michael Slaby, who runs the Groundwork. He was the chief technology officer for president Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign, a top digital executive for Obama 2012, and the former chief technology strategist for TomorrowVentures, Schmidt’s angel investment fund.

Why Our Technological Ignorance Is Hurting Hillary Clinton Washington Post

Listening to Mica and Joe on 'Morning Joe', you would think that Hillary Clinton came within a fragile balance in hacking the truths of American diplomacy to the world. Technology experts don't find the reality of the Clinton servers nearly as insecure as the duo portrays them in their incessant Hillary bashing.

Peter Fidler, president of the tech firm WCA Technologies in New York cites the biggest problem for Hillary: People don't really understand how the Internet works, and so the stories might sound more ominous than they otherwise would.

Take the question of whether or not Clinton's server was "wiped." In August, a lawyer for Clinton told a Senate committee by letter that the server "no longer contains data" from Clinton's hdr22@clintonemail.com account. This entered the news cycle as the lawyer saying that the server had been "wiped clean." (When Clinton was asked if her e-mail server was "wiped," it elicited a now-infamous response of apparent bafflement -- which in retrospect seems believable coming from a grandmother.)

According to Fidler, a full "wipe" of the server would be a best practice when decommissioning a server. In fact, the professionals would go further. "Best practices would be to uninstall the software, clean wipe and destroy the hard drives," Fidler said.

Hillary Women

Salma Hayek Helps Launch 'Latinos for Hillary' AOC Hillary Women

'Chime for Change', founded by Gucci and Salma Hayek's husband Francois Henri Pinault, a chief stockholder of Gucci’s parent company Kering, recruited some of the most glamorous, activist leading ladies to work on the empowerment of women and girls around the world. 
Now the activist has turned her attention to electing Hillary Clinton with 'Latinos for Hillary'. 

Hillary Headlines Oct 9

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