a, 6-8, 39, 100, 193-94, 211, 226, 228, 258, 267, 269-70, 297 Chopra, Deepak, 80 Christie, Chris, 16, 24-25, 30-31, 210, 242, 279 Christoff, Niki, 78 Churchill, Winston, 50 Circa news website, 159, 257 Clapper, James, 41, 214-15 Clinton, Bill, 23, 27, 54, 58, 90, 116, 123, 128, 158, 225, 228 impeachment of,
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020128 →we had another one yesterday which was interesting. In the Oval Office there’s a beautiful statue of Dr. Martin Luther King and I also happen to like Churchill—Winston Churchill—I think most of us like Churchill, doesn’t come from our country but had a lot to do with it, helped us, real ally, and as you know
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fter all, in the business of concealing their most sensitive operations. It is often considered essential that important secrets be protected by what Winston Churchill famously termed “a bodyguard of lies.” Top intelligence officials are not exempt from this practice. Consider, for example, the response to a questio
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020180 →ve her his word.” Snowden emails to Laura Poitras, see: http://www.wired.com/2014/10/snowdens-first-emails-to-poitras/ 35.”a bodyguard of lies...” — Churchill wrote “In wartime, truth is so precious that she should always be attended by a bodyguard of lies” in the fifth volume of his autobiography Closing t
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him as a scholar in a class with Ward Churchill. He’s the Colorado professor who called the 9/11 victims “little Eichmanns” comparing Finkelstein to Churchill is a characterization with which I would not quarrel. Mr. Finkelstein does not do “scholarship” in any meaningful sense. Although his writings cente
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017235 →for those with open minds and hearts, and, though ideologies may remain relatively fixed over time, they adapt to changing realities and perceptions. Winston Churchill famously quipped, “Show me a young conservative and I’ll show you someone with no heart. Show me an old liberal and I’ll show you someone with no bra
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017096 →xperience. The problem is that sucha comfortable posture is at odds with nearly any book of history you might pick up, from The Peloponnesian Wars to Churchill's The Hinge of Fate, all of which will remind you in the most violent terms that liberty and freedom demand struggle and defense; that epochal change
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018280 →ny’s efficient, iron-and-blood commercial engines. Size and scale and safety became linked. This sense of the undeniable power of industrial mass was Winston Churchill's only comfort for two nervous, lonely years after 1939 as he paced the hours until what he hoped was America’s entry into The Second World War. “] kne
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018303 →ersize Easter bunny in his bright-yellow sleeping suit. “On hearing Winston Churchill’s motto, “Never, never, never, never give up,’ [Richard] called Churchill halfhearted,” she said. Hillary thinks this also perfectly captures her own theory of persistence. Aloft, the secretary of state can often be found
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_024984 →y enjoyed when he would disappear into the airplane restroom and emerge like an oversize Easter bunny in his bright-yellow sleeping suit. “On hearing Winston Churchill’s motto, “Never, never, never, never give up,’ [Richard] called Churchill halfhearted,” she said. Hillary thinks this also perfectly captures her own t
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_024984 →tel In Northern Africa, was the haunt of Winston Churchill, and it was one of the few places where he felt
Page: EFTA00008362 →(212-4) 44-89-81, fax (212-4) 44-46.60; WWW .rnamouni a . com. This resort, often described as the best hotel In Northern Africa, was the haunt of Winston Churchill, and it was one of the few places where he felt serene and removed enough from world affairs to practice his favorite pas- time, watercolor painting
Page: EFTA00008362 →50434322170000240 SOUTHLAKE ENTERPRISES CORP L S CHURCHILL C/O 1,301,550.00 0 CONDOMINIUM
COLEMAN EDWARD H & MOSS SANDRA M CHURCHILL DEBRA MILLER RICHARD & LOIS P LIV
Both courses are fraught and logically open-ended. Thus the fear of potentially negative consequences from a war should not necessarily rule one out. Winston Churchill, reflecting on British policy before World War II, wrote: If the circumstances are such as to warrant it, force may be used. And if this be so, it s
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fter all, in the business of concealing their most sensitive operations. It is often considered essential that important secrets be protected by what Winston Churchill famously termed “a bodyguard of lies.” Top intelligence officials are not exempt from this practice. Consider, for example, the response to a questio
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ersity Professor of Engineering and the Stuart W. Churchill Collegiate. gd “T am impressed with your journa
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United Nations (4 December 2012) 802 Part IV. Regional Documents Sykes—Picot Agreement (16 May 1916) 809 Balfour Declaration (2 November 1917) 812 Churchill White Paper (3 June 1922) 813 Peel Commission (7 July 1937) 817 MacDonald White Paper (17 May 1939) 843 Biltmore Program (11 May 1942) 854 Arab Leagu
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_023143 →resolution of Israel’s problems? No, but it helps Netanyahu stir support at home and maintain his fragile coalition. And while Bibi might sound like Churchill, he acts like a local ward boss, far more interested in holding onto his post than using it to secure Israel’s future. The newsworthy, and real, shi
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at the 141st running of the Kentucky Derby | at Churchill Downs in Louisville, | ; Kentucky. (Jeff Moreland
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one has to wonder: what was wrong with what we had until this point? What's wrong with the "Declaration of Independence"? Who needs this? And why? • Churchill once observed the difference between an optimist and pessimist. The pessimist - sees the difficultly in HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028910 --- PAGE BREAK --- e
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028911 →on of the percentage agreement between stalin and churchill. Saudi and Iran doing the same, dividing spheres
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we had until this point? What's wrong with the "Declaration of Independence"? Who needs this? And why? HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029385 --- PAGE BREAK --- • Churchill once observed the difference between an optimist and pessimist. The pessimist - sees the difficultly in every opportunity The optimist - sees the opp
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029386 →h-century leader exerting most influence on the coming century is China's Deng Xiaoping. "If you look at the other figures of the century, Roosevelt, Churchill, Stalin and Mao, none will leave the legacy in terms of the 21st century that Deng leaves," he says. "He walked away from the ideology of the Communi
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029555 →h-century leader exerting most influence on the coming century is China's Deng Xiaoping. "If you look at the other figures of the century, Roosevelt, Churchill, Stalin and Mao, none will leave the legacy in terms of the 21st century that Deng leaves," he says. "He walked away from the ideology of the Communi
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029561 →h-century leader exerting most influence on the coming century is China's Deng Xiaoping. "If you look at the other figures of the century, Roosevelt, Churchill, Stalin and Mao, none will leave the legacy in terms of the 21st century that Deng leaves," he says. "He walked away from the ideology of the Communi
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029660 →
George W. Bush
PersonPresident of the United States from 2001 to 2009

Bill Clinton
PersonPresident of the United States from 1993 to 2001 (born 1946)

Barack Obama
PersonPresident of the United States from 2009 to 2017

United States
LocationCountry located primarily in North America

Cynthia Nixon
Person
Benjamin Netanyahu
PersonPrime Minister of Israel (1996–1999; 2009–2021; since 2022)

Ronald Reagan
PersonPresident of the United States from 1981 to 1989 and actor (1911–2004)
Marc Rich
PersonAmerican commodities trader (1934–2013)

John F. Kennedy
PersonPresident of the United States from 1961 to 1963 (1917–1963)

Hillary Clinton
PersonAmerican politician and diplomat (born 1947)

Michael Cohen
PersonAmerican former attorney and former Republican official

Soviet Union
Location
Jeffrey Epstein
PersonAmerican sex offender and financier (1953–2019)

Donald Trump
PersonPresident of the United States (2017–2021, 2025–present)

Eleanor Roosevelt
PersonFirst Lady of the United States from 1933 to 1945 (1884–1962)

Richard Nixon
PersonPresident of the United States from 1969 to 1974 (1913–1994)

Cairo
LocationCapital city of Egypt
Courtney Wild
Person1997 British biographical film directed by Brian Gilbert

Jesus Christ
PersonCentral figure of Christianity (6 or 4 BC – AD 30 or 33)

Hosni Mubarak
PersonPresident of Egypt from 1981 to 2011