192
   

monitoring Trump and relevant contemporary events

 
 
gungasnake
 
  -4  
Wed 7 Jun, 2017 02:46 am
@layman,
Putin describes Ferkel's problem as a form of power envy, same is likely true of the new cheese/snail eating Frog HMFIC Maricon...
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  6  
Wed 7 Jun, 2017 02:53 am
Quote:
Washington (CNN) — US investigators believe Russian hackers breached Qatar's state news agency and planted a fake news report that contributed to a crisis among the US' closest Gulf allies, according to US officials briefed on the investigation.

The FBI recently sent a team of investigators to Doha to help the Qatari government investigate the alleged hacking incident, Qatari and US government officials say.

Intelligence gathered by the US security agencies indicates that Russian hackers were behind the intrusion first reported by the Qatari government two weeks ago, US officials say. Qatar hosts one of the largest US military bases in the region.

The alleged involvement of Russian hackers intensifies concerns by US intelligence and law enforcement agencies that Russia continues to try some of the same cyber-hacking measures on US allies that intelligence agencies believe it used to meddle in the 2016 elections.

US officials say the Russian goal appears to be to cause rifts among the US and its allies. In recent months, suspected Russian cyber activities, including the use of fake news stories, have turned up amid elections in France, Germany and other countries. (...)

source
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roger
 
  3  
Wed 7 Jun, 2017 03:03 am
@hightor,
You expect us to believe Trump would fall for something like that?
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gungasnake
 
  -4  
Wed 7 Jun, 2017 03:07 am
https://scontent-dft4-2.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/18813933_1171611839611812_8491133875299182279_n.jpg?oh=18458826aabd5557d020272435241cd2&oe=59DB7825
0 Replies
 
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hightor
 
  5  
Wed 7 Jun, 2017 04:22 am
@gungasnake,
Quote:

So you're trying to put Hitler's idea of telling a big lie often enough that people start believing it to the test....

Actually, you're the one who consistently posts disinformation in this thread so I'd say you win the Adolf Award. The reality of Russian hacking is well-established and it's stupid of you to categorically deny it — you can put a skeptical spin on the results of the hacking you want to but the story I quoted hardly qualifies as "bullshit".
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  2  
Wed 7 Jun, 2017 04:30 am
Donald Trump Is Never to Blame
Frank Bruni

Quote:
Poor Donald Trump, so late to the lesson that so many plutocrats before him learned: You can’t find good help.

Jeff Sessions? What a bust. True, he was never the nimblest newt in the swamp and had all that racial muck in his past. But he mirrored his master’s irreverence and atavism, with slighter dimensions and a Southern accent: Donald in a Dixie cup. Surely Sessions and his Justice Department could be expected to accomplish something as straightforward as keeping the Muslims at bay.

Hah. More than four months since the inauguration, there’s meager, flickering hope for the travel ban that wasn’t a travel ban until it became a travel ban again. The fault for that cannot possibly lie with its foundation of bigotry, its shoddy conception or the president’s own sloppy and shifting characterizations of it over time. No, there must be a fall guy with less shimmering tresses. The buck stops anywhere but hair.

So does the pound, the euro and every last bit of spare change and pocket lint. If Trump is feuding with the London mayor, it’s the mayor who should be abashed. If Trump is at odds with Angela Merkel, she must have something to apologize for. Never mind his baseless tweets and boundless pique. He’s the American president, they’re not, and global hegemony means never having to say you’re sorry.

But back to the Potomac and his principal aides, unprincipled underlings and princeling of a son-in-law, each more incompetent than the next.

The buck stops with Sean Spicer, who kept wandering from the script like a toddler into traffic. All he had to do was stick to his lines: The president’s proposals are the wisest. The president’s ethics are the purest. The president’s crowds are the biggest. The president’s detractors fall into three camps: illegals, commies and Samantha Bee.

He couldn’t manage that much, or rather that little, and so Sarah Huckabee Sanders is claiming ever more podium time. She won’t last. No one will. The relevant sinkhole isn’t the one that opened up just outside Mar-a-Loco last month. It’s the one beneath the feet of anyone dippy, delusional or daring enough to think that Trumplandia is terrain on which to make a positive difference, let alone a career.

The buck stops with Jared Kushner, never mind that his grandiosity and shortcuts were emulations of dear old dad-in-law. He has lumbered onto investigators’ radar and thus teetered ever so slightly from favor — that’s Steve Bannon chortling in the background — though he reportedly tasted Trump’s rancor before, when he hid in Aspen during the health care debacle, skiing while Washington churned.

Where will the buck stop next? With the tiniest Trump, Barron? He has some nerve doing homework while tax reform is still being hammered out and infrastructure is just coming together.

Trump’s quickness to deflect blame, readiness to designate scapegoats, unpredictable tirades and stinginess with the loyalty that he demands from others aren’t just character flaws. They’re serious and quite possibly insurmountable obstacles to governing.

Those who serve him are forever fearful of being undercut, perpetually having to defend behavior from him that’s indefensible, and demoralized as a result. Consider Defense Secretary James Mattis, whose torments were summarized by James Hohmann this week in The Washington Post. How can the country get the best from him when he’s getting the worst from Trump?

Many of the country’s diplomats are in a funk, as my Times colleague Mark Landler just recounted, and the ludicrously large number of unfilled positions throughout the administration partly reflects the limited appeal of such a gloomy club. There was never any overflow of top-tier applicants, given how many Republicans swore off Trump and how many others were spurned by him for not being obsequious enough.

But now that the terms of working for him — ridicule by tweet, potentially stratospheric legal bills — are clear, the pool of available talent is a puddle too shallow to keep a newt afloat. Mike Allen reported in Axios on Tuesday morning that the creation of Trump’s “war room” — a battalion of lawyers and such who would do damage control during the Russia probe — is on hold, because he can’t find the soldiers to staff it.

By many accounts, the atmosphere in the White House is one part high school cafeteria, two parts “Lord of the Flies.” Aides who are jockeying for position and trying to safeguard their reputations ask operatives on the outside to whisper to the media that they’re up while their rivals are down, and so we’re subjected to a daily Dow Jones on the stock of various players, with special note of who has Oval Office “walk-in privileges.”

I suspect that the Trump era will flip that phrase, and the people walking out of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue will be seen as — and be — the privileged ones.


(click on the title to see original article with links)
0 Replies
 
gungasnake
 
  -4  
Wed 7 Jun, 2017 04:45 am

Trump vs Saddick Khan IQ contest:

http://www.bbc.com/news/av/uk-36299929/donald-trump-challenges-sadiq-khan-to-iq-test?SThisFB

DT is obviously fairly safe on this one (people who habitually marry and have children with their own cousins don't tend to win very many IQ contests)...

hightor
 
  2  
Wed 7 Jun, 2017 04:52 am
@oralloy,
Thanks for the citation.

I don't see anything here which suggests that climate science is fraudulent, though. The fact that liberal policymakers see a positive spinoff doesn't invalidate the research. Conservatives might be have a similar response concerning certain aspects of the "War on Terror" — it's led to heightened vetting of immigrants and more military spending, even as it's run up a trillion in debt.

Quote:
Or just talk to one of the climate change zealots on a messageboard.

These are just low level spear carriers, the kinds of kids who attend "Save the Whales" rallies in college and become Republicans later in life.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  3  
Wed 7 Jun, 2017 04:56 am
@gungasnake,
Quote:
Trump vs Saddick Khan IQ contest:

This shows just how stupid Trump is. Khan accused Trump of ignorance; he made no mention of his (alleged) intelligence.
izzythepush
 
  5  
Wed 7 Jun, 2017 05:01 am
@hightor,
Trump, as usual is being played. Saudi Arabia remains the most oppressive state in the region where women aren't even allowed to drive. It's the home of Wahhabism the most extreme form of Sunni Islam whose ideology underpins IS.

All Gulf states have wealthy Arabs who contribute to jihadists, Qatar has something else, Al Jazeera a news channel that concerns itself with telling the truth, nasty little secrets that countries like Saudi Arabia would rather were kept quiet. Qatar has also reached out to Iran and extremists do not want reconciliation between the Shia and Sunni, there's too much to lose.

Trump, like the bloody idiot he is has gone along with this, ignoring the very real threat of Sunni terrorist groups like IS and instead attacking Iran for its support of Hezbollah. Hezbollah are regional, they're no threat to the West, unlike IS who are attacking London, Brussels, Berlin, Paris and now Tehran.
izzythepush
 
  4  
Wed 7 Jun, 2017 05:02 am
@roger,
Trump's a bloody moron, he'd fall for anything, especially if it confirmed his own backward beliefs.
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  3  
Wed 7 Jun, 2017 05:05 am
@hightor,
Trump is stupid, and if he did well in the IQ test then it's meaningless. We don't pay any attention to it over here preferring real qualifications from universities. Sadiq Khan is a qualified lawyer, Trump is an unqualified moron.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  2  
Wed 7 Jun, 2017 05:20 am
@MontereyJack,
Quote:
it's country/old timey

Five merit points for the Cohen brothers reference.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  2  
Wed 7 Jun, 2017 05:29 am
@izzythepush,
Quote:
It's the home of Wahhabism the most extreme form of Sunni Islam whose ideology underpins IS.

But, you know, we're permanent enemies with Iran...
blatham
 
  3  
Wed 7 Jun, 2017 05:32 am
Quote:
Led by Rachel Maddow, MSNBC Surges to Unfamiliar Spot: No. 1 in Prime Time
NYT
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  2  
Wed 7 Jun, 2017 05:57 am
Quote:
Glued even more than usual to the cable news shows that blare from the televisions in his private living quarters
WP

Nothing wrong with this man.
0 Replies
 
 

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