192
   

monitoring Trump and relevant contemporary events

 
 
oralloy
 
  -2  
Wed 17 Apr, 2019 01:18 am
@Setanta,
Setanta wrote:
Right, so we just stand by while the Saudis throw gasoline on a raging fire--because George says one side is as bad as the other. Oh hell I'm convinced.

The Saudis are merely protecting themselves from aggression.

The reason why we should continue to help the Saudis is to protect ourselves from that same aggression.
0 Replies
 
Olivier5
 
  1  
Wed 17 Apr, 2019 03:37 am
@izzythepush,
There was some pretty severe allies bombing of Normandie and Bretagne in preparation for D-day. Le Havre, Brest and a few other places were entirely flatened. For a good cause.
Walter Hinteler
 
  2  
Wed 17 Apr, 2019 04:03 am
@Olivier5,
About one third of Strasbourg was destroyed as well.
0 Replies
 
Brand X
 
  2  
Wed 17 Apr, 2019 04:54 am
@Setanta,
No. USA - All war everywhere, all the time.

Can't stop, it's an addiction.

Venezuela and Iran next.
0 Replies
 
oralloy
 
  -3  
Wed 17 Apr, 2019 05:08 am
Quote:
WASHINGTON/HAVANA (Reuters) - The Trump administration will allow lawsuits in U.S. courts for the first time against foreign companies that use properties confiscated by Communist-ruled Cuba since Fidel Castro's revolution six decades ago, a senior U.S. official said on Tuesday.
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-cuba-idUSKCN1RS1VY

It's about time. Now how about we allow Iran's victims to sue corporations who do business with Iran?
0 Replies
 
Brand X
 
  2  
Wed 17 Apr, 2019 05:10 am
@glitterbag,
More than that they feed our military industrial complex. France has sold them some as well even though they deny it.

Report from leaked document:

'SECRET REPORT REVEALS SAUDI INCOMPETENCE AND WIDESPREAD USE OF U.S. WEAPONS IN YEMEN'

https://theintercept.com/2019/04/15/saudi-weapons-yemen-us-france/

0 Replies
 
Brand X
 
  -1  
Wed 17 Apr, 2019 05:52 am
Yep, just like they used these same ex spooks to keep the Russiagate faux conspiracy going.


'Just as they did in the lead-up to the Iraq invasion, MSNBC and CNN now serve up a steady parade of war-hawks, spies and liars, presenting them as credible and almost heroic as long as they criticize the despicable man in the White House'

https://www.commondreams.org/views/2018/03/26/same-old-media-parade-why-are-liberals-cheering?utm_campaign=shareaholic&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=twitter

0 Replies
 
Brand X
 
  -1  
Wed 17 Apr, 2019 06:27 am
@weinbergersa

'One thing not talked about is the Obama Administration encouraged Saudi Arabia "to be more aggressive" in Yemen as Hadi govt was failing. "At that time the Saudis were reluctant got more deeply involved," Gerald Feierstein, former amb to Yemen, told me. https://foreignpolicy.com/2017/09/13/u-s-fights-on-two-fronts-in-yemen-at-what-cost/

@swin24

'Looking forward to see how Obama treats, if at all, the awlaki killing and Yemen in his memoirs, or if he gets asked at a next big interview'
0 Replies
 
Olivier5
 
  1  
Wed 17 Apr, 2019 11:49 am
@InfraBlue,
Excellent piece. It's true that during Victor Hugo's early times, churches in France were in various states of disrepair and damage from the revolution. Hugo laments the sorry state of Notre Dame on the first page of his book, and the success of the book lead to the country (and beyond) rediscovering this old sanctuary, and eventually repairing it.

The romantic movement, with Hugo in the lead, rediscovered the beauty of gothic cathedrals and medieval art and themes in general. Before Hugo, Gothic architecture was seen as odious and passéist by French cultural wonks. Dark and bizarre, ugly even; hard to believe now when cathedrals are rightly seen as artistic and architectural prowesses...
InfraBlue
 
  3  
Wed 17 Apr, 2019 09:32 pm
@Olivier5,
Yeah, I remember learning about flying buttresses and their use in Notre Dame which enabled the creation of the enormous enclosed space of the cathedral in one of my art history classes when I majored in art early on at university.
izzythepush
 
  2  
Thu 18 Apr, 2019 03:01 am
Quote:
North Korea says it has test-fired a new "tactical guided weapon" with a "powerful warhead", the first such test since talks between Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un ended without agreement.

State media gave few details, but analysts say this is unlikely to be a return to the long-range missile tests seen as a threat to the US.

A similar test last November was viewed as an attempt to pressure the US.

There has been little progress in nuclear talks since the last summit.

In February, Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un met in the Vietnamese capital of Hanoi to discuss denuclearisation, but discussions broke down and both leaders left abruptly.

Last week, Mr Kim said Mr Trump needed to have the "right attitude" for talks to continue.

According to the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) the test was overseen by Mr Kim himself.

KCNA reported that the test was "conducted in various modes of firing at different targets", which analysts believe means the weapon could be launched from land, sea or air.

Mr Kim said the development was "of very weighty significance in increasing the combat power of the People's Army".

The report gave few other details, so it's not even clear if this was a type of missile - but most observers agree it was probably a short-range weapon.

Last year, the North Korean leader said he would stop nuclear testing and would no longer launch intercontinental ballistic missiles, as Pyongyang's nuclear capabilities had been "verified".

Nuclear activity appears to be continuing, however, and satellite images at North Korea's main nuclear site last week showed movement, suggesting the country could be reprocessing radioactive material into bomb fuel.

The country claims it has developed a nuclear bomb small enough to fit on a long-range missile, as well as ballistic missiles that could potentially reach the mainland US.

North Korea analyst Ankit Panda noted that the latest announcement followed fresh US-South Korean military exercises, describing the reported test as "tit-for-tat".

This launch was fairly low-key by North Korean standards. It doesn't appear to be a long-range missile, nor was it a nuclear test.

This means Kim Jong-un can say he's keeping his promise not to fire these weapons - while developing new ones.

Perhaps it's not a direct challenge to Donald Trump. But it could be designed to provoke some thought in the White House and warn them of what could follow if a deal isn't done soon.

The current thinking in Washington seems to be that as long as there's no testing, and the sanctions remain in place, there's no rush. The US also seems to be under the impression that it's holding all the cards in this negotiation. This launch is a reminder that North Korea is continuing to create weapons despite facing tough economic sanctions.

Pyongyang appears to be shrugging and saying, pressure? What pressure?!

Let's not forget that these launches send a message to the people of North Korea. There are reports that the state is facing food shortages. Kim Jong-un needs to rally his people and his resources. A show of military strength and a reminder that they face a common enemy will aid that cause.

The test may also ensure North Korea's military capabilities remain near the top of Mr Trump's intelligence briefings. As he heads into an election year, he won't want to see headlines on a series of missile tests - a problem the US president claimed to have solved.

Very little has moved since the US and North Korean leaders walked out of talks in Hanoi - apart from rhetoric.

The US said talks broke down because North Korea wanted all sanctions lifted in exchange for scaling back its nuclear capacity, but Pyongyang disputes that.

In his most recent comments, Mr Kim urged Mr Trump to pursue a deal that was "mutually acceptable" but also spoke of his excellent ties with the US leader. Mr Trump responded by tweeting generous praise of Mr Kim and also welcomed the idea of another summit.

Earlier this week the State Department announced that Stephen Biegun, its special envoy for North Korea, was heading to Moscow for meetings "with Russian officials to discuss efforts to advance the final, fully verified" denuclearisation of North Korea.

It came as speculation of a possible future meeting between Kim Jong-un and Vladimir Putin intensified.


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-47971164<br />
maporsche
 
  4  
Thu 18 Apr, 2019 03:26 am
@izzythepush,
Oh man, I really believed Trump when we tweeted that North Korea was no longer a threat.

Egg on my face or what?
0 Replies
 
Olivier5
 
  1  
Thu 18 Apr, 2019 04:37 am
@InfraBlue,
Yes, although that technique was used in every gothic cathedral, not just in Paris.

0 Replies
 
Lash
 
  1  
Thu 18 Apr, 2019 04:47 am
DNC Bosses Contemplating a Superdelegate Coup if Bernie Sanders Leads in Delegates
https://gritpost.com/dnc-bosses-superdelegate-coup/
Looks like Trump wins again.
0 Replies
 
Lash
 
  0  
Thu 18 Apr, 2019 06:02 am
David Brock, DNC hitman, vows to blot Bernie out of election, ensuring Trump victory.
https://www.commondreams.org/news/2019/04/16/sanders-2020-campaign-gains-steam-corporate-democrats-reportedly-growing

Excerpt:

Sen. Bernie Sanders' 2020 presidential campaign is rapidly gaining momentum early in the primary fight, and corporate Democrats are reportedly starting to get nervous.

The New York Times reported Tuesday that political operative David Brock has discussed launching "an anti-Sanders campaign" with other Democratic strategists and "believes it should commence 'sooner rather than later.'"

"[T]he Bernie question comes up in every fundraising meeting I do," Brock said.

In a fundraising letter sent shortly after the Times article was published, Sanders' campaign manager Faiz Shakir said the corporate forces working to stop the Vermont senator from becoming the Democratic nominee "don't just hate Bernie Sanders."

"They hate everything our political revolution embodies," wrote Shakir. "They hate Medicare for All, the Green New Deal, breaking up big banks, free public college for all."

Brock, a former Republican "media hitman," is just one of many prominent Democratic operatives and deep-pocketed donors who are "agonizing" over the possibility of the Vermont senator becoming the Democratic presidential nominee, according to the Times.

Steven Rattner, a Wall Street financer who served as head of Obama's Auto Task Force, told the Times that Sanders is discussed "endlessly" among his circle of wealthy Democratic benefactors.

"From canapé-filled fundraisers on the coasts to the cloakrooms of Washington, mainstream Democrats are increasingly worried that their effort to defeat President Trump in 2020 could be complicated by Mr. Sanders," the Times reported.
0 Replies
 
Lash
 
  1  
Thu 18 Apr, 2019 06:03 am
Amy Klobuchar is scheduled for a Fox Town Hall.
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  2  
Thu 18 Apr, 2019 06:10 am
Quote:
The US attorney general has been accused of "waging a media campaign" for President Donald Trump ahead of the Mueller report's long-awaited release.

Democrat Jerry Nadler accused William Barr of failing to let "the facts speak for themselves" over his plans to hold a news conference before the release.

The 400-page report is the result of an investigation into alleged Russian interference during the 2016 election.

A summary, released by Mr Barr, reveals it clears Mr Trump of any collusion.

However, it does not go as far as to completely exonerate the president of obstruction of justice.

Both Mr Trump's supporters and detractors are now eagerly awaiting the full - albeit redacted - report's release.

It will be sent to Congress between 11:00 and midday local time (15:00 GMT and 16:00 GMT). It will be published online sometime after this.

Mr Barr is due to hold a news conference at 09:30.

The report contains the findings of a 22-month investigation into possible collusion between Russia and the Trump presidential campaign back in 2016.

It was led by Special Counsel Robert Mueller, who was chosen to run the investigation in 2017 following concerns from US intelligence agencies that Russia had tried to tip the election in Mr Trump's favour.

He also looked into whether Mr Trump obstructed justice when he asked for the inquiry into former national security adviser Michael Flynn to end, and later fired FBI chief James Comey.

Mr Flynn has since pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about his contacts with Russia - one of six former Trump aides and 30 other people, including 12 Russians, charged in connection with the investigation.

So far all the public have seen of the report is the four-page summary released by US Attorney General Barr.


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-47974261
0 Replies
 
Lash
 
  -1  
Thu 18 Apr, 2019 06:17 am
The DNC prefers Trump to Sanders
https://www.mintpressnews.com/democratic-party-superdelegates-may-once-again-rob-bernie-sanders-of-nomination/257214/
Excerpt:

Politics abhors a vacuum
Enter the “superdelegates.” Following the changes made by the Democratic Party last August, if no candidate wins a majority (i.e., 50 percent+) in the first round of voting at the convention, the controversial “superdelegates” will be allowed to vote for their chosen candidate — a candidate, if history is any indication, that will be from the centrist, corporate wing of the party.

Superdelegates were a major source of contention and controversy in the 2016 Democratic nomination battle, where they were accused of having been “weaponized” against Sanders in favor of Hillary Clinton. Superdelegates are elite members of the party and, as journalist Caitlin Johnstone recently wrote, the superdelegate system “was put in place to ensure that Democratic Party insiders would have the ability to keep the riff-raff from nominating an unauthorized candidate.” Even former DNC chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz has admitted as much, telling CNN in 2016, “Unpledged delegates exist really to make sure that party leaders and elected officials don’t have to be in a position where they are running against grassroots activists.”

Notably, when the superdelegate system was altered last August, mainstream news headlines declared that the move had “stripped superdelegates of their power.” Yet, a trickle of reports in the past few months has noted that the crowded field of the 2020 Democratic primaries may end up ensuring that superdelegates not only retain their influence but make “a comeback.”

Last month, Dave Wasserman wrote for the New York Times:

[F]or 2020, Democrats’ jam-packed field is already on track to surpass the Republican 17-way rumble of 2016 and lacks an obvious front-runner. At the dizzying pace small- and large-dollar donors are bankrolling their favorite hopefuls, many Democrats could have the financial wherewithal — and even pressure from their backers — to campaign deep into the primary calendar, dramatically increasing the odds no candidate will capture a majority by the convention.”

Though among declared candidates Sanders is the clear frontrunner, the media — with few exceptions — has largely avoided labeling him as such, given the “prospect” of a Joe Biden candidacy, which seemed inevitable until the recent deluge of “Me Too” testimonials accusing the former vice president of inappropriate behavior towards women and girls.

Wasserman further noted that the decisions of California and Texas to move their primaries to so-called “Super Tuesday” in early March 2020 also presents a problem:

This means 36 percent of Democrats’ 3,768 pledged delegates will be allocated in early March, before the herd has truly been culled, making it even harder for one candidate to build a delegate majority. And if Colorado, Georgia and New York decide to join the Super Tuesday stampede, that share could rise to a whopping 46 percent.”

With the primary now set-up to make it virtually impossible for any one candidate to secure a delegate majority, the outsized role of superdelegates at the next Democratic National Convention seems all but assured. Those “unpledged” delegates comprise around a fifth of all Democratic Party delegates.

2020 Democratic candidates
A very crowded field of 2020 Democratic candidates
This likely explains why centrist, corporate candidates in striking range of Sanders, namely Kamala Harris, made moves early on that alluded to the now clear role that superdelegates will have in the upcoming convention. Indeed, as MintPress noted in January, Harris was quick to hire David Huynh, Hillary Clinton’s director of delegate operations in 2016, to serve as a senior adviser to her campaign. Harris’ hiring of Huynh drew attention at the time owing to his success in essentially weaponizing superdelegates in Clinton’s favor, leading some to suggest that Harris will follow a similar strategy despite the reduced role of superdelegates in the Democratic Party. Yet, now, with the role of superdelegates unlikely to be as “reduced” as previously believed, Harris’ strategy has taken on a new significance.

“At least Trump’s not a ‘progressive’”
As some analysts have pointed out, there are elements in the mainstream media and the Democratic Party that prefer the prospect of a Trump reelection over the prospect of a Sanders presidency, with even “liberal” networks like MSNBC having made that case directly. As Johnstone recently noted:

The extent to which superdelegates will be willing to outrage the party’s progressive base will depend on two related factors: how badly they want to beat Trump, and how badly they want to avoid a President Bernie Sanders. Last time they were willing to risk getting Trump elected in order to keep Sanders out, and that may still be the case; the plutocrats who own the Democratic Party certainly aren’t doing any worse under Trump.”


Indeed, allowing an “unauthorized” candidate that makes powerful party donors on both sides of the aisle uncomfortable to win the nomination may be less attractive to party insiders than letting Trump waltz into another term, particularly if there is concern that a candidate like Sanders is much more likely to upend the status quo.

Yet, even if Trump’s reelection is considered favorable by party elites, there is no denying that the need to defeat Trump at all costs will be the rallying cry used to push Democratic voters to fall in line behind the eventual nominee, regardless of whether the nominee was chosen by voters or by superdelegates
0 Replies
 
Brand X
 
  0  
Thu 18 Apr, 2019 06:24 am
@mtracey

'Read this tweet several times. Barr is exercising substantially more transparency than is required by DOJ regulations. Doesn't mean Barr is virtuous or infallible, but it cuts against the people already losing their minds screaming "coverup"


@JenniferJJacobs

'Barr is going beyond what’s required under DOJ regulations by sharing any of the Mueller report, @cstrohm and @spettypi note.'
revelette1
 
  4  
Thu 18 Apr, 2019 06:45 am
White House and Justice Dept. Discussed Mueller Report Before Release

Quote:
WASHINGTON — Not all of Robert S. Mueller III’s findings will be news to President Trump when they are released Thursday.

Justice Department officials have had numerous conversations with White House lawyers about the conclusions made by Mr. Mueller, the special counsel, in recent days, according to people with knowledge of the discussions. The talks have aided the president’s legal team as it prepares a rebuttal to the report and strategizes for the coming public war over its findings.

A sense of paranoia is taking hold among some of Mr. Trump’s aides, some of whom fear his backlash more than the findings themselves, the people said. The report might make clear which of Mr. Trump’s current and former advisers spoke to the special counsel, how much they said and how much damage they did to the president — providing a kind of road map for retaliation.

The discussions between Justice Department officials and White House lawyers have also added to questions about the propriety of the decisions by Attorney General William P. Barr since he received Mr. Mueller’s findings late last month.

0 Replies
 
 

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