Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 23:25:36 GMT
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 31, 2017 14:13:10 GMT
From trump.....
“Why would smart voters want to put Democrats in Congress in 2018 Election when their policies will totally kill the great wealth created during the months since the Election. People are much better off now not to mention ISIS, VA, Judges, Strong Border, 2nd A, Tax Cuts & more?”
He keeps talking about the “great wealth” created. Problem is that “great wealth” is only for people who have a large portfolio of stocks. Which is not the majority of the middle class or the poor.
No tiny hands the majority of Americans are not better off after a year with you as president.
Edited to add this from PublicPolicyPolling....
“Only 32% of voters think their personal economic situation improved this year.
On a related note 61% think the tax bill will mostly just help the wealthy”
|
|
Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 23:25:36 GMT
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 31, 2017 14:16:22 GMT
This from trump
“Big protests in Iran. The people are finally getting wise as to how their money and wealth is being stolen and squandered on terrorism. Looks like they will not take it any longer. The USA is watching very closely for human rights violations!”
Prompted this response from Chris Lu...
“U.S. can't exercise moral leadership when its own leader: threatens freedom of press; attacks citizens (especially people of color) for protesting; questions legitimacy of judges; wants to jail his political opponent; enriches himself while in office; tries to obstruct justice”
yup.
|
|
Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 23:25:36 GMT
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 31, 2017 14:59:27 GMT
Greg Sargent in response to..
“When headlines echo Trump's false or dubious claims without signaling to readers that they are false or dubious, they are doing what Trump wants them to do.
This was the whole point of the lie in the first place -- and the lying is getting rewarded.”
This from Politico.....
“Trump: My approval rating is the same as Obama’s was in his first year politi.co/2DDeWfD”
|
|
|
Post by revirdsuba99 on Dec 31, 2017 16:43:26 GMT
This from trump “Big protests in Iran. The people are finally getting wise as to how their money and wealth is being stolen and squandered on terrorism. Looks like they will not take it any longer. The USA is watching very closely for human rights violations!” Prompted this response from Chris Lu... “U.S. can't exercise moral leadership when its own leader: threatens freedom of press; attacks citizens (especially people of color) for protesting; questions legitimacy of judges; wants to jail his political opponent; enriches himself while in office; tries to obstruct justice” yup. Exactly why I posted his tweets about protests are good for freedoms etc. What is the GOP afraid of? And does anyone really think Nunes isn’t doing trump’s dirty work? I mean really? Afraid of something, for sure!! Don't forget Nunes 'private' committee, without Democrats and even without some Republicans!
|
|
|
Post by peano on Dec 31, 2017 16:48:26 GMT
I continue to be puzzled about why Nunes is such an energetic and enthusiastic Trump lapdog. Is he somehow dirty too?
|
|
Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 23:25:36 GMT
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 31, 2017 17:57:56 GMT
In case anyone is wondering what trump is doing today....
Kyle Griffin...
“Per pool, Trump has arrived at Trump International Golf Club.
This is his 90th day at a golf club as president.”
Surprise!
|
|
|
Post by crazy4scraps on Dec 31, 2017 18:04:08 GMT
In case anyone is wondering what trump is doing today.... Kyle Griffin... “Per pool, Trump has arrived at Trump International Golf Club. This is his 90th day at a golf club as president.” Surprise! Awesome! Making America Golf Again!
|
|
|
Post by bc2ca on Dec 31, 2017 18:39:22 GMT
I continue to be puzzled about why Nunes is such an energetic and enthusiastic Trump lapdog. Is he somehow dirty too? I'm seriously depressed at what he is getting away with and have a tiny bead of hope that he will get caught up in the Mueller investigation. Nunes won his last reelection easily but the Democrats already have a good candidate to take him on and I'm hopeful that we won't see him on the national stage after 2018.
|
|
Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 23:25:36 GMT
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 31, 2017 23:32:57 GMT
Seriously who but a petty little man would say something like this....
Here’s the president of the United States with his new year’s greeting to the people of the United States.
“As our Country rapidly grows stronger and smarter, I want to wish all of my friends, supporters, enemies, haters, and even the very dishonest Fake News Media, a Happy and Healthy New Year. 2018 will be a great year for America!”
|
|
|
Post by LavenderLayoutLady on Jan 1, 2018 0:32:05 GMT
Seriously who but a petty little man would say something like this.... Here’s the president of the United States with his new year’s greeting to the people of the United States. “As our Country rapidly grows stronger and smarter, I want to wish all of my friends, supporters, enemies, haters, and even the very dishonest Fake News Media, a Happy and Healthy New Year. 2018 will be a great year for America!” Wow, weird!
|
|
|
Post by revirdsuba99 on Jan 1, 2018 0:56:17 GMT
He has NO class!
|
|
imsirius
Prolific Pea
Call it as I see it.
Posts: 7,661
Location: Floating in the black veil.
Jul 12, 2014 19:59:28 GMT
|
Post by imsirius on Jan 1, 2018 1:03:46 GMT
Yep, he is proof money can't buy everything.
|
|
|
Post by revirdsuba99 on Jan 1, 2018 1:22:13 GMT
We knew it. Now it is in print! CNN host: Trump resigned US as world's leaderBY JULIA MANCHESTER - 12/31/17 05:51 PM EST CNN host Fareed Zakaria said on Sunday that President Trump has resigned the U.S. role as a global leader just one year into the Trump administration. "It's creator, upholder, and enforced, the United States, has withdrawn into self-centered isolation," he said on his show "Fareed Zakaria GPS" on CNN. Zakaria, who is a vocal critic of Trump, went on to rip the Trump administration for its "foolish and self-defeating decision to resign as the world's leader." "As the president might say in one of his tweets, 'sad,'" he concluded. Zakaria's comments come as Trump looks to wrap up his first year in office. The president has bucked the international community throughout his presidency, most recently in his recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. Trump also took a step back from the global community when he disavowed the multination Iran nuclear deal and pulled the U.S. from the Paris Climate Accords. Supporters of the president say his policies are a part of his "American First" agenda. thehill.com/homenews/media/366953-cnn-host-trump-resigned-us-as-worlds-leader
|
|
|
Post by crazy4scraps on Jan 1, 2018 2:33:50 GMT
Seriously who but a petty little man would say something like this.... Here’s the president of the United States with his new year’s greeting to the people of the United States. “As our Country rapidly grows stronger and smarter, I want to wish all of my friends, supporters, enemies, haters, and even the very dishonest Fake News Media, a Happy and Healthy New Year. 2018 will be a great year for America!” Wow, weird! How bizarre!
|
|
Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 23:25:36 GMT
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 1, 2018 2:34:52 GMT
George Bennett...
“Treasury Sec. Steven Mnuchin and wife Louise Linton arrive at @realdonaldtrump’s Mar-a-Lago for #NewYearsEve shindig.”
I wonder who paid their way to Florida? American tax payers?
|
|
|
Post by revirdsuba99 on Jan 1, 2018 3:24:22 GMT
I wonder who paid their way to Florida? American tax payers? Hummmm.............. I wonder! I think I know, US!
|
|
Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 23:25:36 GMT
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 1, 2018 5:54:11 GMT
How bizarre! He wanted to include everybody. I don't find it weird at all. Happy New Year to you!
|
|
Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 23:25:36 GMT
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 1, 2018 7:10:17 GMT
There is this from the Hill...
“President Donald J. Trump invited Florida Governor Rick Scott to join him for lunch on Sunday to discuss ongoing hurricane recovery efforts, the need to improve the nation’s aging infrastructure and other matters important to Floridians,” said spokeswoman Helen Ferré, according to reporters traveling with the president in Florida”
And then there is this from ABC News...
“Puerto Rico authorities say nearly half of power customers still lack electricity more than three months after Hurricane Maria. abcn.ws/2CjbCdG”
If I’m not mistaken Pureto Rico is just off the coast from Mar-a-Lago so why wasn’t the Governor of Pureto Rico and the Mayor of San Juan at this lunch to discuss hurricane recovery?
|
|
|
Post by cade387 on Jan 1, 2018 11:57:07 GMT
How bizarre! He wanted to include everybody. I don't find it weird at all. Happy New Year to you! Then maybe he could just say it to the American people instead of being more divisive. If you really feel that was inclusive then you are part of the problem.
|
|
casii
Drama Llama
Posts: 5,525
Jun 29, 2014 14:40:44 GMT
|
Post by casii on Jan 1, 2018 14:08:05 GMT
How bizarre! He wanted to include everybody. I don't find it weird at all. Happy New Year to you! To be inclusive, one might wish people a Happy New Year much as you just did. To be a jerk about it, one might model Trump's behavior. If folks don't find his message offputting, their personality is likely similarly abrasive.
|
|
|
Post by papercrafteradvocate on Jan 1, 2018 14:16:32 GMT
How bizarre! He wanted to include everybody. I don't find it weird at all. Happy New Year to you! Yep—way to go! Don’t find it weird? And instead normalize and approve of his assholian decisiveness.
|
|
|
Post by crazy4scraps on Jan 1, 2018 15:20:50 GMT
He wanted to include everybody. I don't find it weird at all. Happy New Year to you! Then maybe he could just say it to the American people instead of being more divisive. If you really feel that was inclusive then you are part of the problem. 100% this. I’d expect a greeting like that from a 12 year old middle schooler, not from a 70 year old POTUS. Wait, no I wouldn’t. I expect more from my 7 year old!
|
|
Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 23:25:36 GMT
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 1, 2018 15:29:01 GMT
trump....
“Will be leaving Florida for Washington (D.C.) today at 4:00 P.M. Much work to be done, but it will be a great New Year!”
He forgot to include in his tweet...”But first I have to play a round of golf.”
|
|
Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 23:25:36 GMT
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 1, 2018 16:06:21 GMT
In case anyone is wondering what trump is doing today.... Kyle Griffin... “Per pool, Trump has arrived at Trump International Golf Club. This is his 90th day at a golf club as president.” Surprise!
|
|
Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 23:25:36 GMT
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 1, 2018 16:13:50 GMT
Seriously who but a petty little man would say something like this.... Here’s the president of the United States with his new year’s greeting to the people of the United States. “As our Country rapidly grows stronger and smarter, I want to wish all of my friends, supporters, enemies, haters, and even the very dishonest Fake News Media, a Happy and Healthy New Year. 2018 will be a great year for America!” His supporters want this man-baby speaker in office because he makes white men and women feel powerful and in control, like they used to be: "“I am the ‘forgotten man’ that thrust Donald Trump into office, and the media elite and the hard left cannot stand it,” said Nelson Westrick, a 42-year-old autoworker. “I think there’s more Trump support now than before the election.”" www.rawstory.com/2018/01/trump-supporters-know-hes-a-flawed-human-being-but-we-just-dont-care/
|
|
Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 23:25:36 GMT
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 1, 2018 17:00:37 GMT
The Hill...
“Trump voter fraud commission head: We haven't met for months because so many groups are suing us hill.cm/RNKSK3w”
Gee I wonder why?
Waste of tax payer dollars from the get go.
|
|
Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 23:25:36 GMT
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 1, 2018 17:51:05 GMT
linkThe last two paragraphs remind us just how much the trump presidency has attacked the foundation of this country. And those in Congress that are suppose to “check” trump’s actions are complicit. Happy New Year. From Lawfare. “Other than that Mrs. Lincoln”. The apocryphal joke is rather crude: “Other than that Mrs. Lincoln, how was the play?” And yet I was reminded of it when reflecting on the first year of the Trump presidency because to separately evaluate conventional benchmarks apart from the extreme transgressions of decency is as impossible a task as asking Mrs. Lincoln to assess the play independent of the assassination. The transgressive nature of the Trump era—replete with narcissism, racism, anti-Semitism and what-about-ism—is amplified by Trump’s wholesale assault on fundamental American institutions. His disdain for the rule of law, equality of opportunity, a free press, an independent judiciary, and the professional intelligence and law enforcement communities are, in metaphorical ways, much like Lincoln’s death. How can one possibly assess the play when the denouement is so fundamentally disruptive of reality? Ignoring Trumpian dysfunction is difficult. So much of the policy that he has adopted might, coming from someone else and seen in that different light, be viewed as a useful course corrective to the drift of the Obama era. For example, though it is outside my expertise, I have long had a sense that American interests are not well-served by the current operation of the United Nations. In another’s hands I would perhaps welcome the new approach advanced by Ambassador Nikki Haley. Though it is difficult, if not impossible, to disassociate the act from the actor if we were to magically close our eyes to the nature of Trumpian dysfunction, how would did he fare? , Even with that generous effort of imagination, Trump’s efforts in cybersecurity have not been terribly impressive. He has made some modest policy improvements and begun putting together a good team—but not much more. Given the low bar inherently set for a president who thinks that hackers are fat kids in garages, the absence of a disaster is, itself, a positive. But in a world where cyberthreats morph at light speed, the administration’s rather turgid efforts have been all too timid and incomplete. The effort started slowly but with some promise, particularly after the much-delayed release of the May 11 executive order on cybersecurity. The order was long on “study the problem” and short on action items, but it could be explained or excused as a baselining exercise to set up further action. Sadly, however, the promise of that order has yet to be fulfilled. The reports have, in many cases, been late, and, more to the point, there has not yet been significant follow-up with associated action plans. Much of the delay can, I think, be attributed to the turmoil in the executive agencies tasked with the cybersecurity mission. The Department of Homeland Security got off to a relatively strong start, but after its secretary, Gen. John Kelly, moved to the White House, the department suffered from not having a confirmed leader. That should change in the next year, now that Kirstjen Nielsen, a cyber expert, is at the helm. But a year into the administration, there still is no confirmed head for DHS’s cyber division. Likewise, the Justice Department has been distracted by other initiatives and by the president’s unrelenting assault on it. I can’t remember the last time I heard of any significant activity out of the computer-crime section. To be sure, there were some successes (or, if not full-blown successes, at least modest improvements). Both by virtue of luck and some good effort, the United States suffered far less from the WannaCry ransomware attack than other nations. And, notwithstanding major breaches such as what happened at Equifax, the country managed to get through another year without an existential catastrophe. That has to count for something. There are other pluses. The National Security Strategy did a pretty good job contemplating cyber issues. More indictments were returned against Chinese hackers. The Vulnerability Equities Process got a charter. And, even though my colleague Jack Goldsmith has doubts about it, I approve of the gentle policy moves toward greater transparency and public attribution that led to naming North Korea as the source of the WannaCry malware. All these steps are surely good things in the grand scheme. But all of those positives pale in comparison to the single, overarching massive failure of national policymaking in the cyber area: the utter unwillingness to come to grips with the vulnerability of our electoral infrastructure. In this the Trump administration is not alone. As the Washington Post reports, the Obama administration’s response was characterized by complacency, dithering and indecisiveness. But the Trumpian response is all those things and more. It is fairly characterized as a state of denial—a state that starts (and likely ends) at the top. As a result, the Trump administration has done virtually nothing to secure the next election: no strategy; no risk assessment; no resource allocation—nothing. I have no doubt that senior intelligence officials do not share the president’s view. I have no doubt that if it were free to do so, the National Security Council could devise a strategy for enhancing electoral security. Failure to act puts at grave risk the American public’s faith in the fidelity of the democratic process.
And yet, because of this president’s childish insecurity about the legitimacy of his election, the government has done nothing, and the prospect of action in the next year is nil. The failure is directly attributable to the aberrational nature of the president.
And that’s why this play stinks.
|
|
Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 23:25:36 GMT
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 1, 2018 17:59:03 GMT
linkAnother piece from Lawfare.. “On president trump and the Intelligence Community” “In October 2016, I wondered aloud on Lawfare why then-candidate Donald Trump did not believe the intelligence community’s assessment that the Russian government conducted an intelligence operation intended to influence the 2016 U.S. presidential election. I offered two hypotheses: [T]he more likely explanation for his rejection of the Intelligence Community’s assessment is one of two things: either he i) simply has an extreme inherent skepticism about any information that originates from the Intelligence Community; or, ii) he affirmatively chooses not to accept this particular assessment that Russia is behind the attacks, but he won’t explain to the public why he does not accept it. My view at the time was that a president who rejects everything presented to him by the intelligence community would be a president who would make foreign policy and national security decisions that were uninformed or even reckless. Now, almost one year in to Trump’s presidency, we are closer to knowing which of those theories is correct. The president has been consistent in his rejection of the intelligence community’s Russian influence assessment. He may be softening, ever slightly, however, on his rejection of the legitimacy of some work done by the intelligence community, even while he hardens his verbal attacks on the FBI and the special counsel. The takeaway is that the president’s rejection of specific intelligence community assessments appears to be based on how they personally affect him, his administration, and those close to him, and not on a fundamental belief that the intelligence community and its work is not credible. If my read of his current relationship with the intelligence community is correct, this development is both good and bad. The upside is that the president is willing to receive intelligence briefings. We can quibble over whether his briefings are too pictorial or dumbed down, but the practice that has emerged over the past year to receive intelligence briefings is better than the alternative, particularly given his verbal attacks on the intelligence services and less frequent briefings during the transition period after the 2016 election. Philip Rucker and Ashley Parker published last spring that Trump receives briefings most days, asks questions, and otherwise engages with the professional intelligence briefers and senior intelligence agency heads like CIA Director Mike Pompeo and Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats, who attend the morning meetings regularly. Moreover, recent reporting on international events tends to indicate that the briefings—and the president’s accompanying understanding of some world events—might be informing and influencing at least some foreign policy and national security positions or actions. For example, in April, the president launched limited military strikes in Syria following a chemical attack perpetrated by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. More recently, the president urged Saudi Arabia to allow humanitarian goods into Yemen, a position that was likely informed by intelligence information he received. On the other hand, it is hard to imagine that intelligence briefings provided to the president would support his continuing antagonistic public tweeting at North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. Other policy decisions such as the specific countries targeted in the travel ban, the decision to move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem in the current Middle East environment, and withdrawing from the Paris Climate Agreement, appear to an outside observer at least, to be disjointed from the type of information and analytic assessments probably communicated in presidential intelligence briefings. The bad is that the president continues to reject the intelligence community’s assessment that Russia conducted an information operation and other active measures intended to affect the 2016 election, even though the community updated its assessment in January 2017. The consequences of this refusal are several, and meaningful: First, the president continues to indicate publicly that he believes what Russian President Vladimir Putin tells him one-on-one over the advice of the U.S. intelligence community and friendly foreign intelligence services. Second, his refusal to acknowledge that a hostile nation-state took active steps to influence the 2016 election presents risks that federal and local officials will similarly not take the threat of foreign meddling in elections seriously or devote sufficient time and resources to protecting election systems from malicious attack and interference in the 2018 elections, and beyond. Third, his rejection of the intelligence assessment places additional and unnecessary strain on our partnerships with allies, particularly those with whom the U.S. maintains important intelligence-sharing arrangements. These partnerships are critical for a host of reasons, including but not limited to counterterrorism intelligence sharing. Trust among nations—at both the intelligence service level but also at the political leadership level—is critical to maintaining these important sharing relationships. Fourth, the president’s refusal to acknowledge the Russian influence campaign adds to—not detracts from—a perception that he, his campaign and his inner circle have something to hide regarding their communications with Russian government officials and surrogates during the election. Had it been true, it would have been so easy for Trump campaign officials to present a narrative that they were the unwitting targets of a foreign intelligence effort. Had they reacted very differently for the past eighteen months, including having affirmatively reported the outreach from Russian affiliates to American law enforcement and intelligence agencies, they could have been logically assessed to have been victims of a sophisticated foreign intelligence operation. Instead, by failing to be transparent about communications and meetings, and by disparaging the ensuing investigations (not to mention firing the chief investigator), they have increased the skepticism with which a reasonable observer contemplates their denials. Fifth, the denial only of intelligence pertaining to Russian influence efforts casts further doubt on the president’s assertions that he has no financial entanglements with the Russian government or Russian government-affiliated persons or organizations. Because the president now seems willing to accept some intelligence assessments, those that he refuses to accept stand out. After all this time, the president and his advisers still have not offered a reasonable explanation for his unwillingness to accept the community’s assessment. Financial entanglement has long been a counterintelligence red flag. Looking forward, we can be hopeful that the president will continue to allow himself to be informed by intelligence information that his national security and intelligence advisers present to him. We can further hope that these institutional processes will improve his policy deliberations in the year ahead. But the president’s continued unwillingness to accept the considered assessment regarding Russian influence casts a long shadow over his national security and foreign policy choices by allowing a perception to remain that his decision-making may be clouded by interests other than the American people’s. “
|
|
Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 24, 2024 23:25:36 GMT
|
Post by Deleted on Jan 1, 2018 18:38:14 GMT
San Francisco’s fog aka Karl the Fog....
“Today's high: everyone in California cause it's now legal”
|
|
|
Post by revirdsuba99 on Jan 1, 2018 19:01:14 GMT
“Trump voter fraud commission head: We haven't met for months because so many groups are suing us hill.cm/RNKSK3w” Gee I wonder why? Yes, members of your committee are suing to get information that you have refused to give them from your private meetings! ETA: Can't find it but there was a court order to turn over the papers to the committee members!
|
|