192
   

monitoring Trump and relevant contemporary events

 
 
blatham
 
  2  
Sat 7 Sep, 2019 11:03 am
@Walter Hinteler,
I can't imagine he'd actually use the office to fill his own pockets. He's never done anything like that previously.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  3  
Sat 7 Sep, 2019 11:09 am
@revelette1,
I am 100% in favor of the Dems, if they have the Senate, to appoint two more justices to the court. That's not something I would have approved of previously but McConnell's action re Garland (followed by his own smirking admission that of course he'd fill an empty seat now) makes such a move just.
oralloy
 
  -3  
Sat 7 Sep, 2019 11:39 am
@blatham,
Progressives always try to cheat, and always think that there is nothing wrong with that.

That is why people should always vote for conservatives.
hightor
 
  3  
Sat 7 Sep, 2019 02:36 pm
‘Trump is in severe mental decline’: Concerns raised over president’s health

‘He’s in full-blown meltdown; it’s like the episodes of Chernobyl,’ says sacked communications director

Quote:
Donald Trump is “in severe mental decline” and “won’t make it” to the next election, a former top aide has claimed.

Anthony Scaramucci, who was White House communications director for just 11 days before he was sacked in 2017, said the US president’s behaviour has “got worse” since he last saw him a year ago.

In an interview with CTV News on Friday, he said: “He’s in full-blown meltdown; it’s like the episodes of Chernobyl where the reactor’s melting down and people are trying to figure out whether they’re going to cover it up or clean it up.”

Mr Scaramucci said he believed the president’s chances of re-election were “diminishing every day” – but admitted there was “still a chance there”.

He added: “I predict he won’t make it to that election; there’s such severe mental decline going on that the most likely outcome here, and I think the proudest outcome, would be to say ‘OK I did a great job, and I’m going to retire at the end of the term’.”

Speaking at Toronto Global Forum on Friday, he repeated his claim that Mr Trump is in “severe mental decline”, adding: “I’m not saying that now because I’m a political adversary or I disavowed him, I’m saying that objectively just looking at what’s going on.”

The former aide’s comments came after the president was taken to task for a tweet he posted last weekend claiming that Alabama would be hit by Hurricane Dorian.

He later faced criticism after posing in the Oval Office with a National Hurricane Centre map of Storm Dorian which appeared to have been altered to include Alabama in the storm’s path.

Mr Trump hit back, tweeting: “This nonsense has never happened to another president.

“Four days of corrupt reporting, still without an apology.”

However the National Weather Service in Birmingham, Alabama, tweeted: “Alabama will not see any impacts from Dorian. We repeat, no impacts from Hurricane Dorian will be felt across Alabama.”

Sources told Business Insider that the president’s advisers were particularly concerned about his refusal to acknowledge his claim was false.

“People are used to the president saying things that aren’t true, but this Alabama stuff is another story,” they said.

"No one knows what to expect from him anymore," one former White House official told Business Insider, speaking anonymously.

"His mood changes from one minute to the next based on some headline or tweet, and the next thing you know his entire schedule gets tossed out the window because he's losing his s***,” they added.

A Republican strategist told the website: “He’s deteriorating in plain sight.”

independent
0 Replies
 
revelette1
 
  2  
Sat 7 Sep, 2019 04:18 pm
Trump Administration Is Not Funding Legal Aid In 3 Migrant Children’s Shelters

Quote:
The Trump administration is failing to fund legal services for detained immigrant children ― some under 5 years old ― in three shelters, HuffPost has learned. That violates federal law and could have life-threatening consequences for the minors, immigration lawyers say.

In July, HuffPost reported that the administration was not providing legal services to children in a now-closed temporary facility in Carrizo Springs, Texas, which held a few hundred immigrants, even though federal law and a court settlement require the government to inform detained migrant kids of their legal rights and to ensure access to counsel “to the greatest extent practicable.”

At the time, the government acknowledged that it was not paying for legal aid in the shelter, which a spokesperson chalked up to budgetary issues that would soon be resolved.

The government now claims it is funding legal aid for immigrant minors in all shelters. But multiple legal aid attorneys told HuffPost that’s not true. These lawyers said they are working for free, without the government money they usually receive for their services.

Legal service organizations confirmed that the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement, which is responsible for sheltering kids detained at the border without their parents, is not paying for legal aid in two recently opened shelters. One in Phoenix houses children under 5 years old, and another in Modesto, California, holds teenage mothers and their children.

There is also no legal service contract in place for a separate shelter in Phoenix that is being reopened and is expected to start detaining up to 420 children as early as next week, according to Golden McCarthy, the children’s program director at the Florence Immigrant and Refugee Rights Project, which provides aid to detained children in Arizona.


Sad
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  2  
Sat 7 Sep, 2019 06:49 pm
Quote:
Norman Ornstein
@NormOrnstein
I want you to consider just this past week:
1. A president who corrupted a rear admiral to justify his bizarre rants, lies and distortions about Alabama, and then, either directly or through his corrupt Commerce Secretary and/or corrupt Chief of Staff corrupted NOAA

An agency long noted for its expertise & honesty.
2. The discovery that the military had been corrupted, taken multiple out-of-the-way trips on missions to a foundering Trump property to funnel taxpayer money to him-- then stonewalled, with a SecDef enabling it by saying nothing

3. A president using the US imprimatur, power and resources to blackmail another country (Ukraine) to conspire with him to tilt the scales in favor of his reelection.

4. 4. A president who took money from disaster relief in the middle of a massive hurricane early in hurricane season, and money from vital defense projects and bases, to fund a vanity project of a border wall in defiance of clear congressional spending authority and intent.

5. A president who picks the gofer for his son-in-law, a 2016 college grad with no visible expertise, much less experience, to lead the Middle East peace initiative.

In ONE WEEK, more corruption, misuse of government resources and incompetent governance that nearly every other president experienced in their entire presidencies. And just as outrageous and shocking as the acts of Trump and his executive branch:

The fact that NONE of these corrupt acts-- NONE-- was openly criticized or challenged, or followed by a pledge to do oversight and hold hearings, by a single Republican in the Senate. No leader, no chair, no senator. The country has never, ever seen such a dereliction of duty.
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  3  
Sun 8 Sep, 2019 05:19 am
Quote:
The UK, US, France and Iran may be complicit in possible war crimes in Yemen over their support for parties to the conflict there, UN experts say.

A new report warns the countries they could be held responsible for aiding or assisting the commission of violations.

The Western powers provide weapons and logistical support to the Saudi-led coalition backing Yemen's government, while Iran backs the Houthi rebels.

The experts say both sides continue to commit violations with impunity.

Their report documents air strikes on civilian infrastructure, indiscriminate shelling, snipers, landmines, as well as arbitrary killings and detention, torture, sexual and gender-based violence, and the impeding of access to humanitarian aid in the midst of the worst humanitarian crisis in the world.

The UN says the four-year conflict has claimed the lives of at least 7,290 civilians and left 80% of the population - 24 million people - in need of humanitarian assistance or protection, including 10 million who rely on food aid to survive.

The Group of International and Regional Eminent Experts on Yemen conducted 600 interviews with victims and witnesses, and examined documentary and open-source material, for their second report for the UN Human Rights Council.

It says they found reasonable grounds to believe Yemen's government and the Saudi-led coalition, as well as the Houthis, had enjoyed a "pervasive lack of accountability" for violations of international humanitarian and human rights law.

The experts investigated a number of coalition air strikes on rebel-held areas in which civilians were killed. Such strikes raised concerns about the identification of military objectives and respect for the principles of proportionality and precautions in attack, they say. If there were breaches of the latter, which the experts consider highly likely, they would amount to serious violations of international law.

The experts also found reasonable grounds to believe that the Houthis were responsible for serious violations of international humanitarian law for having launched indiscriminate attacks resulting in the death or injury of civilians and, in some cases, by directing attacks against civilians.

All parties may also have used starvation as a method of warfare.

The experts call for the immediate cessation of all acts of violence committed against civilians and urge other states to refrain from providing weapons.

"States are obliged to take all reasonable measures to ensure respect for international humanitarian law by other states. Furthermore, the Arms Trade Treaty, to which France and the United Kingdom are parties, prohibits the authorization of arms transfers with the knowledge that these would be used to commit war crimes," they note.

"The legality of arms transfers by France, the United Kingdom, the United States and other states remains questionable, and is the subject of various domestic court proceedings," they add.

Melissa Parke, an Australian member of the Group of Experts, told reporters in Geneva: "It is clear that the continued supply of weapons to parties to the conflict is perpetuating the conflict and prolonging the suffering of the Yemeni people."

Where possible, the experts have identified "individuals who may be responsible for international crimes" and submitted a confidential list of their names to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights.

There was no response to the report from the coalition, the Yemeni government or the Houthis. But they have all previously denied carrying out war crimes.

A UK government spokesperson said: "The UK has been at the forefront of international efforts to bring a diplomatic solution to the appalling conflict in Yemen. We operate one of the most robust export control regimes in the world."

UK government ministers have said in the past they cannot determine whether any civilian deaths have been the result of British bombs or planes because the coalition does not track their use.

The US has argued against halting arms sales or assistance to the coalition, saying that continuing them is more likely to help limit civilian casualties.


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-49563073
izzythepush
 
  3  
Sun 8 Sep, 2019 05:25 am
Quote:
A US Congressional committee is investigating President Donald Trump in connection with a potential conflict of interest over military spending at a Scottish airport near his golf resort.

The House Oversight and Reform Committee says expenditure at Prestwick airport has "increased substantially" since Mr Trump came into office.

The debt-ridden airport has been fighting off closure.

It is said to be integral to the Trump business, which is also loss-making.

The committee's accusations are detailed in a letter to the Pentagon - which is dated to June but was only revealed on the Politico website on Friday.

The letter requests access to all communications between the US Department of Defense and Trump Turnberry, as well as any related financial records.

According to various reports in the US media, the department has not yet complied with the demands.

It has also not commented directly, and neither has the Trump Organisation.


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-49621836
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  6  
Sun 8 Sep, 2019 07:18 am
@izzythepush,
Side benefit from switch to renewables... detachment from the political/economic ties with places like Saudi Arabia.
blatham
 
  4  
Sun 8 Sep, 2019 07:50 am
FWIW
Quote:
We asked 100 New Hampshire insiders about the Democratic field. Here's who they favor.
The 1,280 most influential Democrats in the state hosted 19 presidential hopefuls on Saturday for the party's annual convention.

...Elizabeth Warren led the way among the surveyed delegates who had made up their minds, followed by Bernie Sanders in second and Biden in third.

“I’m not here to criticize any other Democrat or anyone else’s campaign,” Warren told reporters. “What I saw in that room were a whole lot of Democrats here in New Hampshire who are not only ready for change. They’re ready to get out there.”

Just over half of the 100 delegates said they haven't picked a candidate yet. Of those who have decided, a third named Warren as their favorite.
Politico
blatham
 
  4  
Sun 8 Sep, 2019 07:56 am
Quote:
In his speech, Parscale promised GOP loyalists that the Trump Victory Leadership Initiative here would marshall highly sophisticated technology, including use of artificial intelligence which he said would provide more information than ever before on “who the voters are, where they live, how they consume information — and how to contact them.”
Politico

0 Replies
 
MontereyJack
 
  3  
Sun 8 Sep, 2019 08:08 am
@oralloy,
Another evidence-free opinion-pretending -to -be -fact posts. McConnell cheated. That's why people should always vote for progressives rather than conservatives, as Repubs always do.
oralloy
 
  -2  
Sun 8 Sep, 2019 08:18 am
@MontereyJack,
MontereyJack wrote:
Another evidence-free opinion-pretending -to -be -fact posts.

Wrong again. You cannot provide any example of me ever making such a post.


MontereyJack wrote:
McConnell cheated.

McConnell gave progressives a much-deserved dose of their own medicine.


MontereyJack wrote:
That's why people should always vote for progressives rather than conservatives, as Repubs always do.

I prefer honorable conservatives over cheating progressives.
Lash
 
  -1  
Sun 8 Sep, 2019 08:41 am
@blatham,
Most of our warring would cease, but this has been known and pursued by honest liberals and progressives for decades. Who will lead the actual charge?

As long as the establishment and their servants in congress continue to be enriched by upholding the status quo and throwing the people’s money at the MIC, nothing will change.

This is a very good reason to force candidates to refuse money from Big Oil...and Big Ag...and Big Pharma.


I hope everyone will connect these dots while we have time.
blatham
 
  2  
Sun 8 Sep, 2019 08:52 am
@Lash,
What is MIC?
MontereyJack
 
  2  
Sun 8 Sep, 2019 08:57 am
@oralloy,
wrong again. the cheating is from conservatives. Honorable conservatives is an oxymoron.
Lash
 
  0  
Sun 8 Sep, 2019 09:03 am
@blatham,
blatham wrote:

Side benefit from switch to renewables... detachment from the political/economic ties with places like Saudi Arabia.


Food for thought.

https://theintercept.com/2019/09/06/exxon-mobil-progressive-policy-institute-climate/

THE PROGRESSIVE POLICY Institute, a centrist Democratic think tank that grew out of the party’s pro-business wing in the 1980s and ’90s, received $50,000 from Exxon Mobil in 2018 via its parent organization, the Third Way Foundation, according to the oil giant’s 2018 Worldwide Giving Report.

Exxon Mobil did not return The Intercept’s multiple requests for comment. In an email, PPI Executive Director Lindsay Lewis said the money was used for general support and that “we only accept general support funding from corporate interests, we do not do paid for work/research or have any donor run programs.”

Lewis also confirmed that this is the first time Exxon Mobil has donated to the Third Way Foundation.

Though it’s a first, PPI’s new donor isn’t so dramatic a shift from its fundraising record. The Intercept’s Akela Lacy has also found that PhRMA — the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America — has annually donated between $25,000 and $75,000 to the Third Way Foundation since 2009, upping its donation to $265,000 in 2016 — the same year that Medicare for All, which the trade group and PPI both oppose, entered the national spotlight. Donations dipped back to normal levels in 2017, although documents were not yet available for 2018 when
the piece was published in late April.

WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 10: Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) speaks while introducing health care legislation titled the "Medicare for All Act of 2019" with Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) and Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-OR), during a news conference on Capitol Hill, on April 9, 2019 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

Related story: PhRMA Is Funding a Democratic Think Tank Trying to Derail Medicare for All

In the last couple years, Exxon has taken up softer messaging on climate than either the Koch brothers or the Mercer family. With business all over the world, Exxon — like every other multinational oil company — is well-accustomed to operating in environments where denying the reality of the climate emergency outright is politically unthinkable. As climate concerns spike around the U.S., the company is still plenty opposed to environmental regulations and the lawsuits being lobbed its way from climate-vulnerable communities and attorneys general, who are each calling into question Exxon’s rule in fueling both the climate crisis and misinformation campaigns about it. Rather than paying people to say that there’s no problem at all, it can rebrand as a good-faith actor in the climate fight with paeans to carbon capture technology, low-carbon fuels (algae!), and carbon taxes that also conveniently exempt it from some of the lawsuits and regulations it’s most worried about. The decades of climate denial Exxon helped fund — and now the Trump administration — have dragged the national debate on climate change so far into the gutter that there are influential liberals willing to give the company credit simply for not denying the science.

This all dovetails well with a centrist approach to climate politics that’s long sought common ground with industry and harbors both temperamental and ideological opposition to big, confrontational proposals like the Green New Deal. The upshot is that they’ve started to sound a lot alike. Carbon capture, R&D, and carbon pricing — while not mutually exclusive with the Green New Deal framework that the Sunrise Movement, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and others have begun to flesh out — have reliably been wielded as a cudgel by establishment types against calls for more sweeping action.

Kert Davies, founder and director of the Climate Investigations Center, noted that the report indicates the money PPI received was through a “corporate” grant, rather than through the ExxonMobil Foundation. “We have never sussed how these two black boxes of money are managed or dolled out. So if you grab the ExxonMobil Foundation 990s, there are sometimes different descriptions or breakdowns of the funding, but this grant won’t be there,” he wrote in an email. “There is no need for public accounting of such grants. No obligation. But they have seemed compelled to disclosed them through the years.”

Of course, $50,000 is not an enormous amount of money either for PPI or Exxon Mobil. But it may well signal a shift in the fossil fuel industry’s relationship to climate politics.

For years, Exxon Mobil prolifically funded climate denier groups like the Heartland Institute and Competitive Enterprise Institute. Under pressure, the company pledged to stop funding deniers in 2007, although it kept bankrolling politicians who deny the reality of the climate crisis. Exxon also still support right-wing think tanks like the Manhattan Institute, which received $970,200 from Exxon between 2008 and 2018. As recently as 2011, MI Senior Fellow Robert Bryce said “the science is not settled” on climate change. Another MI Senior Fellow, Oren Cass, last year — the year after three of the five most expensive hurricanes to have ever hit the Atlantic — authored a report arguing that the potential costs of climate change are overblown, suggesting that many people prefer warmer temperatures and could adapt easily to global warming. In addition to Exxon, MI is — like other flagrant denier groups — funded by the Mercer Family Foundation; Rebekah Mercer, a key financier of Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign, runs the foundation and sits on the MI board. Exxon also continues to give large donations the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and remains a member of the American Petroleum Institute, each of which has fought hard against environmental regulations and climate measures. The oil company only left the Koch-funded American Legislative Exchange Council in 2017, four years after it pushed model legislation in Oklahoma, Colorado, and Arizona that described global warming as a “theory.”

Itai Vardi reported at DeSmog this summer that Phil Goldberg, director of PPI’s Center for Civil Justice, has come out swinging against climate lawsuits being brought by cities and states against fossil fuel companies. The law firm at which Goldberg is a partner — Shook, Hardy & Bacon — defended the tobacco industry for decades and was the inspiration for the fictional firm Smoot, Hawking in the 2005 film “Thank You For Smoking.” As a slew of lawsuits has begun to call into question fossil fuel companies’ role in fueling and spreading misinformation about the climate crisis, the industry has stepped into high gear to fight off litigation.

Goldberg is a former lobbyist for the coal company Peabody Energy who was brought on as special counsel by the National Association of Manufacturers in January as part of its Manufacturers Accountability Project, founded in 2017 to take on “activist litigation” against big oil companies; Exxon Mobil is a NAM member, and the MAP project has been among the most active bodies fighting off climate-related legal action. Both Peabody and NAM have also donated generously to climate denial groups over the years. Both, for instance, were members of the now-defunct Global Climate Coalition, which through the 1990s sought to undermine U.N. climate negotiations and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Goldberg has also been an adviser for ALEC’s Civil Justice Task Force. In addition to the model legislation on global warming, ALEC has vigorously opposed climate and clean energy legislation around the country.

Lewis said that Goldberg works with PPI in a volunteer capacity and is not employed by the Third Way Foundation, despite his lofty title. Evidently, he’s vocally defending fossil fuel companies out of the goodness of his heart.

In March, Goldberg co-authored a report for the industry front group Grow America’s Infrastructure Now on how to bring legal action against anti-pipeline organizers. “Allowing vigilante regulation to go unchecked undermines our democracy. We honor civil protests in this country, but we should not have to accept improper efforts to overturn the rule of law,” Goldberg said in a press release. “People who violate the law by improperly interfering with legitimate business activities, even to advance a political or public policy preference, can be held accountable for their actions through civil litigation.” While not disclosed on the group’s website, GAIN spokesperson Craig Stevens is a partner at the DCI Group, which specializes in astroturf campaigns that have fought everything from anti-smoking laws to climate legislation. From 2005 through 2016, Exxon Mobil was a DCI client. In another detail not mentioned on the GAIN site, the group’s strategic adviser is James “Spider” Marks, who as of 2017 was the advisory board chair of the security firm TigerSwan, which — as The Intercept has documented extensively — engaged in “military-style counterterrorism measures” against anti-pipeline protesters.

Asked whether Goldberg’s positions on climate litigation were also PPI’s, Lewis replied, “PPI, which has long advocated for cap and trade, a carbon tax, and other polices to combat climate change, believes such policies should be made in representative legislatures, not the courts.” In short, yes.

Throughout the 2020 campaign cycle, PPI strategic adviser and Clinton White House insider Paul Bledsoe has commented frequently about the dangers of candidates being too hard on fossil fuels. “[Joe] Biden and other moderate candidates must emphasize that the market is already phasing out coal over time, but that their climate policies still allow a role for natural gas as a low-carbon transition fuel for some time,” he told the Washington Examiner in August. “This distinction is crucial to success in swing states like Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Michigan.” In a New York Times piece about Biden’s critics on the left, Bledsoe said, “Indulging in ideological purity is great until you actually want to solve the problem.”
[Lash: We actually plan to solve the problem—for survival, not what they do cavalierly call ‘purity’. That’s a DNC talking point-buzzword.]

“Happily,” he wrote in a February Forbes op-ed attacking the Green New Deal, “there is no need to eliminate fossil fuels in the next decade or require only renewable energy or guarantee public sector jobs to meet our climate goals.” We might never find out what Exxon Mobil’s money got up to at PPI last year. If its experts keep sounding like Bledsoe and Goldberg, though, it’ll probably keep coming.
Lash
 
  0  
Sun 8 Sep, 2019 09:04 am
@blatham,
Military industrial complex
oralloy
 
  -1  
Sun 8 Sep, 2019 09:05 am
@MontereyJack,
MontereyJack wrote:
wrong again.

You cannot provide any examples of me being wrong about anything.


MontereyJack wrote:
the cheating is from conservatives.

All they did was give progressives a much-deserved dose of their own medicine.
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  3  
Sun 8 Sep, 2019 09:09 am
@Lash,
I thought you meant man in charge.
0 Replies
 
 

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