192
   

monitoring Trump and relevant contemporary events

 
 
MontereyJack
 
  2  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 12:44 am
@oralloy,
You're the one defending the racist traitorious confederate flag and statues, not me. You're the one making fallacious illogical statements about BLM, not me.
MontereyJack
 
  1  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 12:45 am
@oralloy,
blahblahblah
MontereyJack
 
  1  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 12:55 am
@coldjoint,
seems that conservastives spend all their time being easily offended by damned near the whole world. so they must be the least productive employees and people is what that study is saying.
oralloy
 
  -2  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 01:52 am
@MontereyJack,
Conservatives are not the ones always complaining because they don't like facts and reality.
0 Replies
 
oralloy
 
  -1  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 01:53 am
@MontereyJack,
That is less-bad than your usual response to facts and logic.
oralloy
 
  -2  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 01:54 am
@MontereyJack,
MontereyJack wrote:
You're the one defending the racist traitorious confederate flag and statues, not me.

There is nothing racist about Southern culture. You are the only racist here.


MontereyJack wrote:
You're the one making fallacious illogical statements about BLM, not me.

Progressives dislike facts and reality. But that doesn't make facts and reality fallacious, and it certainly doesn't make them illogical.
MontereyJack
 
  1  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 05:24 am
@oralloy,
You clearly have no idea what you're talking about.
MontereyJack
 
  1  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 05:27 am
@oralloy,
Your "facts and logic" tend to be neither.
hightor
 
  1  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 05:36 am
@oralloy,
Quote:
There is nothing racist about Southern culture.


New research finds that white Americans are more likely to hold unconscious racism against black Americans if their home region was once heavily dependent on slavery.

The Tragedy of Southern Cultural Obsession
farmerman
 
  2  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 05:39 am
@hightor,
and the Klan is a social club for southern gentlemen of all nationalities and races.
Region Philbis
 
  4  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 05:58 am

long read... but worthwhile, imo...

historian Heather Cox Richardson wrote:
There’s something interesting in today’s news:

A number of Republican Senators have said they are skipping the Republican National Convention this year. The convention was originally scheduled in Charlotte, North Carolina, but at Trump’s insistence was relocated to Jacksonville, Florida, last month. The stated reason was that Democratic North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper would not commit to permitting a full convention out of concerns about the spread of coronavirus, but the abrupt switch to Florida, less than 80 days before the convention, still seems odd to me. Regardless, the switch has created a new problem: Florida is in the midst of a dramatic spike in coronavirus cases, setting a record for new cases in a single day during the weekend —11,458—and running low of ICU beds.

Senators are using the dangers of the coronavirus to distance themselves from the president. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), at 86, the oldest Republican senator, said he would not go. Senator Lamar Alexander (R-TN) is staying home because, his spokesperson says, “he believes the delegate spots should be reserved” for people who have not attended before. Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) is not going; neither is Susan Collins (R-ME). Mitt Romney (R-UT) won’t be showing up either. The coronavirus gives them an excellent excuse to socially distance themselves from the president.

This distancing is a sign that Republican leaders are uncomfortable with Trump’s behavior and are hoping to save Republican control of the Senate as his polls slip. They are also trying to downplay the story that Russia’s military intelligence unit, the GRU, offered bounties to Taliban fighters to kill Americans and allied forces, even as the administration has responded to the story not by retaliation against Russia, but by searching to expose the person who leaked the story to the media.

For his part, Trump is more aggressively asserting his power to defend his own vision of America. Determined to find a scapegoat for his own botched response to the coronavirus, Trump today officially notified the United Nations that America will be withdrawing from the World Health Organization, effective on July 6, 2021.

Trump publicly blames the WHO for the spread of the virus because, according to Trump, it worked too closely with China. Lawmakers of both parties condemned the move. Lamar Alexander (R-TN) chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee said: "Withdrawing U.S. membership could, among other things, interfere with clinical trials that are essential to the development of vaccines, which citizens of the United States as well as others in the world need…. And withdrawing could make it harder to work with other countries to stop viruses before they get to the United States."

Meanwhile, the European Union has reopened its borders to travelers from a list of countries where the coronavirus is now under control. The United States is not on the list, meaning Americans cannot travel to the EU, but China, which has brought the coronavirus into control, is. Still, Trump insists that those opposing the reopening of schools as new cases of infection are spiking are doing so only to hurt him politically. While he cannot order schools to open, he said today “We're very much going to put pressure on governors and everybody else to open the schools, to get them open.” Trump is eager to reopen schools both to enable parents to go back to work and to suggest everything is back to normal, even as coronavirus infections continue to rise. As of today, the United States has had more than 3 million cases of Covid-19.

The administration continues to court its base with a racist vision of the country. Yesterday, Republican National Committee spokeswoman Liz Harrington criticized presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden of advancing “radical left socialism” for saying that “Independence Day is a celebration of our persistent march toward greater justice — the natural expansion of our founding notion from ‘all men are created equal’ to ‘all people are created equal and should be treated equally throughout their lives.’”

On the same day, Trump tweeted an attack on Black racecar driver Bubba Wallace, accusing him of advancing a “HOAX” because someone (not Wallace) had found and reported a noose hanging in his garage. In the same tweet, Trump expressed outrage that NASCAR has banned the use of the Confederate flag at its events. (Republican strategist Karl Rove told the Fox News Channel the president's defense of the Confederate flag did not help his campaign.)

Then, out of the blue, the official White House Twitter account published a photo of Trump and Pence apparently gazing in to the sky, alongside a quotation that said: “Americans are the people who pursued our Manifest Destiny across the ocean, into the uncharted wilderness, over the tallest mountains, and then into the skies and even into the stars.” Manifest Destiny was a term coined in the 1840s by the editor of the Democratic Review magazine to explain why it was the divinely ordained duty of Americans to push west and take over the lands of indigenous peoples and Mexicans, spreading slavery into new lands. The term is widely associated with white supremacy and deadly dominance over people of color.

Meanwhile, the administration continues to move public money toward its supporters. Government data released this week shows that tax-payer funded bailouts went to churches whose leaders are Trump’s allies, as well as organizations traditionally opposed to government programs. Anti-tax advocate Grover Norquist’s Americans for Tax Reform Foundation received between $150,000 and $300,000 in loans, while Norquist took a stand against the unemployment insurance in the CARES coronavirus relief act. The Ayn Rand Institute, named for the theorist who opposed government welfare programs despite using them herself, took a loan of between $350,000 and $1 million, calling it “partial restitution for government-inflicted losses.” Multiple businesses close to Trump got money, too; the government loaned as much as $273 million to more than 100 companies with ties to the president.

Also today, excerpts from the book written by Trump’s niece, Mary L. Trump, appeared in the media. Trump tried, unsuccessfully, to stop the publication of the book. The excerpts don’t say much we didn’t already know, but the inside story of the Trump family is likely to get under the president's skin. Dr. Trump, who holds a doctorate in psychology, portrays the president as a habitual liar who paid someone to take the SAT to get him into college. She shows a narcissist who can think only in terms of himself, and who is calculating and cruel to the point that he was willing to take away health care from a baby in order to gain leverage over his nephew.

After her dissection of Trump’s dangerous personality, Dr. Trump concludes that Trump himself “isn’t really the problem after all.” The problem is his enablers, including the Republican Senators who voted five months ago to acquit him of the charges for which the House of Representatives impeached him.

That those same Senators are now begging off from the upcoming Republican convention is too little a protest, too late.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  2  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 06:52 am
Churches Were Eager to Reopen. Now They Are a Major Source of Coronavirus Cases.

The virus has infiltrated Sunday services, church meetings and youth camps. More than 650 cases have been linked to reopened religious facilities.

Quote:
PENDLETON, Ore. — Weeks after President Trump demanded that America’s shuttered houses of worship be allowed to reopen, new outbreaks of the coronavirus are surging through churches across the country where services have resumed.

The virus has infiltrated Sunday sermons, meetings of ministers and Christian youth camps in Colorado and Missouri. It has struck churches that reopened cautiously with face masks and social distancing in the pews, as well as some that defied lockdowns and refused to heed new limits on numbers of worshipers.

Pastors and their families have tested positive, as have church ushers, front-door greeters and hundreds of churchgoers. In Texas, about 50 people contracted the virus after a pastor told congregants they could once again hug one another. In Florida, a teenage girl died last month after attending a youth party at her church.

More than 650 coronavirus cases have been linked to nearly 40 churches and religious events across the United States since the beginning of the pandemic, with many of them erupting over the last month as Americans resumed their pre-pandemic activities, according to a New York Times database.

(...)

nyt
0 Replies
 
revelette1
 
  3  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 09:18 am
Trump admin urged CIA to share intelligence with the Kremlin — and took no action against Russia arming the Taliban: report
0 Replies
 
oralloy
 
  -3  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 09:37 am
@MontereyJack,
MontereyJack wrote:
You clearly have no idea what you're talking about.

I'm talking about what a horrible racist you are. Your anti-South bigotry is shameful.
oralloy
 
  -1  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 09:38 am
@MontereyJack,
MontereyJack wrote:
Your "facts and logic" tend to be neither.

Your claims are phony. You cannot point out anything untrue in my posts. Neither can you point out any flaws in my logic.
0 Replies
 
oralloy
 
  -2  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 09:40 am
@hightor,
Pacific Standard wrote:
New research finds that white Americans are more likely to hold unconscious racism against black Americans if their home region was once heavily dependent on slavery.

The research is likely bogus. I'd not be surprised if it was carried out by progressive bigots.

Look at the way progressives want to allow black people to freely rape and murder white people. You can't trust anything a progressive says.
0 Replies
 
oralloy
 
  -2  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 09:41 am
@farmerman,
farmerman wrote:
and the Klan is a social club for southern gentlemen of all nationalities and races.

Progressive anti-South bigotry sure is ugly.
0 Replies
 
revelette1
 
  2  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 10:01 am
@oralloy,
That only works in your weird mind.
oralloy
 
  -1  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 10:02 am
@revelette1,
I'm not the only one who thinks that progressive bigotry and racism is shameful.
Walter Hinteler
 
  2  
Wed 8 Jul, 2020 10:05 am
Army Officer Who Clashed With Trump Over Impeachment Set to Retire
Quote:
The White House had made clear to Pentagon officials that President Trump did not want to see Lt. Col. Alexander S. Vindman promoted.

WASHINGTON — An Army officer who was a prominent witness in the impeachment inquiry into President Trump last year said on Wednesday he has decided to retire after his promotion was imperiled by objections from the White House.
The incident is the latest in what Pentagon and congressional officials say could be another flash point between the president and the military.

Lt. Col. Alexander S. Vindman, a decorated Iraq war veteran who served on the staff of the White House National Security Council, is among scores of officers who have been picked to be promoted to full colonel this year. Typically, such promotions are backed by Army and Pentagon officials before moving to the White House for final approval, and then to the Senate for a confirmation vote.

But the White House had made clear to officials in the Pentagon’s office of personnel and readiness, which handles such matters, that Mr. Trump did not want to see Colonel Vindman promoted, officials said.

In fact, when they saw an earlier draft version of the list last month, National Security Council staff members told their Defense Department counterparts they had evidence of misconduct by Colonel Vindman. No evidence of wrongdoing was ever provided.

“Today I officially requested retirement from the U.S. Army, an organization I love,” Colonel Vindman said in a Twitter message on Wednesday morning. “My family and I look forward to the next chapter of our lives.”
 

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