Empty threats to sue to stop it, and this has the New York Times raises questions about obstruction of justice. It says the president personally urged the white House Counsel to stop sessions from recusing himself in the russia investigation. We will get to why in just a moment. And questions abound in the book after the world learned about donald trump, jr. s meeting with the russians, and wolff rights, it was about adoption policy, and even though it was likely, if not certain, that the times had the incriminating email chain and its quite possible they knew the times had the email chain. For the first time we are hearing from the author of the book himself, Michael Wolff, answering questions about how fit the people closest to the president think he is for this job. One of the overarching themes according to your reporting, everybody around the president , family members, senior advisers, every one of them questions his intelligence and fitness for office. Let me put a marker in the
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By allowing ads to appear on this site, you support the local businesses who, in turn, support great journalism. Smalls Funeral Home center of community activity in Guyton Michael Garvin, holding a portrait of Louis Harden, is surrounded by drawings of (clockwise from left) Shelton Hall, Samuel Smalls Sr. and Beatrice Michael, Garvin’s mother. The mementos depict instrumental figures in Smalls Funeral Home history. - photo by Mark Lastinger/staff
EDITOR’S NOTE This is the fourth installment of a four-story February series dedicated to people and/or places key to Black history in Effingham County.
GUYTON Smalls Funeral Home is a monument to irony. Effingham County’s oldest Black-owned business has been one of Guyton’s liveliest places since Samuel Smalls opened it in 1947.