192
   

monitoring Trump and relevant contemporary events

 
 
Builder
 
  -2  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 04:43 am
@snood,
Quote:
On CNN just now


Bastion of the Bold, and home of the CIA.

Nice work, if you can get it.


0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  3  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 04:54 am
HCR wrote:
The reality that Joe Biden is about to become president and Kamala Harris is about to become vice president is sinking in across Washington, and today gave us some indications of what that’s going to mean.

Stories about what exactly happened in the Trump administration are coming out, and they are not pretty. Politics trumped everything for members of the administration, even our lives.

Today Representative James Clyburn (D-SC), who chairs the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis, revealed documents from senior appointees in the Trump administration overriding the work of the career officials in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Those documents show that the political appointees at the Department of Health and Human Services called for dealing with the coronavirus crisis by pursuing a strategy of “herd immunity,” deliberately spreading the coronavirus to try to infect as many people as possible, with the theory that this approach would minimize the dangers of the pandemic. While doing so, they downplayed what they were doing, tried to hide the dangers of the virus, and blamed the career scientists who objected to this strategy for the rising death rates.

Although the White House has tried to distance itself from senior Health and Human Services Adviser Paul Alexander, last summer he was widely perceived to speak for his boss Michael Caputo, the Health and Human Services Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs whom Trump had appointed, and for the White House itself. Alexander, a part-time university professor from Canada, defended Trump against scientists, accusing CDC Principal Deputy Director Dr. Anne Schuchat of lying when she provided accurate public information about the worsening pandemic. When she suggested everyone should wear a mask, he claimed: “her aim is to embarrass the President.” Alexander attacked Anthony Fauci for his attempts to protect Americans. “He just won’t stop!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!” wrote Alexander on July 3, 2020 (yes, I counted the exclamation points); “does he think he is the President???”

Alexander advocated spreading the infection to younger Americans: “So the bottom line is if it is more infectiouness [sic] now, the issue is who cares? If it is causing more cases in young, my word is who cares…as long as we make sensible decisions, and protect the elderely [sic] and nursing homes, we must go on with life….who cares if we test more and get more positive tests.”

Alexander wrote to Caputo: “There is no other way, we need to establish herd, and it only comes about allowing the non-high risk groups expose themselves to the virus. PERIOD.” On the same day, he wrote: “Infants, kids, teens, young people, young adults, middle aged with no conditions etc. have zero to little risk….so we use them to develop herd…we want them infected…”

On July 24, he wrote to FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn and Caputo: “it may be that it will be best if we open up and flood the zone and let the kids and young folk get infected” as a strategy to get “natural immunity…natural exposure,” an argument that illuminates Trump’s insistence this summer that schools and colleges must open.

But the idea that young people are safe from the virus is wrong. Today, an article published in the Journal of the American Medical Association reported that while Americans older than 65 have borne the brunt of the coronavirus, young adults are suffering terribly. From March through July, there were almost 12,000 more deaths than expected among adults from 25 to 44. Young Black and Hispanic Americans make up not just a disproportionate number of that group of victims; they are a majority. Those extraordinary death rates have continued. Younger adults are indeed endangered by the coronavirus; the idea it is harmless to them “has simply not been borne out by emerging data,” doctors Jeremy Samuel Faust, Harlan M. Krumholz, and Rochelle P. Walensky—Biden’s pick to run the CDC-- wrote in the New York Times today.

Another report today showcases two former CDC political appointees who are now speaking out to call attention to the silencing of career scientists at the agency. Kyle McGowan, a former chief of staff at the CDC, and his deputy Amanda Campbell watched as political appointees in Washington ignored scientists, censored doctors’ messages to the public, and cut the agency’s budget. “It was… like a hand grasping something, and it slowly closes, closes, closes, closes until you realize that, middle of the summer, it has a complete grasp on everything at the CDC,” McGowan told New York Times reporter Noah Weiland. “Every time that the science clashed with the messaging, messaging won.”

Politifact, the Pulitzer Prize winning fact-checking website from the Poynter Institute, named the downplaying and denial of the seriousness of coronavirus its “Lie of the Year.”

Today it became clear the administration dropped the ball in other important ways. We have more information now about the extensive computer hack that appears to have been conducted by operatives from the Russian government. It’s bad. Hackers placed malware on commercial network management software upgrades to gain access to government computers, along with those of major U.S. companies, as far back as last March. They have been able to root around in our secrets for months. Hackers accessed the Treasury and Commerce Departments, the State Department, the Department of Homeland Security, and parts of the Pentagon, among other targets. The intrusion was discovered on December 8, when the cybersecurity company FireEye realized it had been hacked and alerted the FBI.

Today the FBI, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), issued a joint statement acknowledging “a significant and ongoing cybersecurity campaign” and indicated they are not sure yet what has been hit. “This is a developing situation, and while we continue to work to understand the full extent of this campaign, we know this compromise has affected networks within the federal government.” It is clear the U.S. has been hit hard: Trump’s National Security Adviser Robert O’Brien has cut short an overseas trip to come home and deal with the crisis.

In the New York Times, Thomas P. Bossert, Trump’s former Homeland Security Adviser said, “the magnitude of this national security breach is hard to overstate.” He insisted the U.S. must call out Russia for this attack (assuming it is confirmed that that country is, indeed, behind the attack). “Trump must make it clear to Vladimir Putin that these actions are unacceptable. The U.S. military and intelligence community must be placed on increased alert; all elements of national power must be placed on the table.”

“President Trump is on the verge of leaving behind a federal government, and perhaps a large number of major industries, compromised by the Russian government. He must use whatever leverage he can muster to protect the United States and severely punish the Russians.”

The New York Times called this breach “among the greatest intelligence failures of modern times.” Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) called it “stunning.” “Today’s classified briefing on Russia’s cyberattack left me deeply alarmed, in fact downright scared. Americans deserve to know what’s going on,” he tweeted. Blumenthal also recognized the severity of the coronavirus early: he tweeted on February 25: “This morning’s classified coronavirus briefing should have been made fully open to the American people—they would be as appalled & astonished as I am by the inadequacy of preparedness & prevention.”

And yet, there are signs that the country is reorienting itself away from Trump and modern-day Republicanism.

Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, previously a staunch Trump supporter, has released an advertisement urging people to wear masks and admitting he was wrong not to wear one at the White House. It seems likely he is eyeing a future presidential run, and clearly is calculating that it is wise these days to distance himself from Trump’s anti-mask politics.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), who has refused to advance a coronavirus relief bill since the House passed one last May, seven months ago, is now trying to make a deal that includes direct payments to Americans hurt by the pandemic. He explained to Republicans today that Republican senate candidates Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, who are running against Democrats Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff in Georgia, are “getting hammered” because the people want the bill and the Senate is holding it up.

Finally, Bloomberg last night ran a story by journalist Craig Stirling highlighting the work of economists David Hope of the London School of Economics and Julian Limberg of King’s College London, who examined the concept of “supply side economics,” or the “trickle down theory.” This is the economic theory popularized in the 1980s saying it’s best for the economy not to support wages at the bottom of the economy—the demand side—but rather to free up capital at the top—the supply side—because wealthy entrepreneurs will create new jobs and the resulting economic growth will help everyone. This idea has been behind the Republicans’ forty-year commitment to tax cuts for the wealthy.

In their study of 18 countries over 50 years, Hope and Limberg concluded that this theory was wrong. Tax cuts do not, they prove, trickle down. They do little to promote growth or create jobs. Instead, they mostly just help the people who get the tax cuts.

substack
Builder
 
  0  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 04:56 am
@hightor,
WTF was that all about?

Trickle down BS got kicked to the curb decades ago.

Try and keep up, son.
hightor
 
  1  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 04:57 am
I Was the Homeland Security Adviser to Trump. We’re Being Hacked.

The magnitude of this national security breach is hard to overstate.

Quote:
At the worst possible time, when the United States is at its most vulnerable — during a presidential transition and a devastating public health crisis — the networks of the federal government and much of corporate America are compromised by a foreign nation. We need to understand the scale and significance of what is happening.

Last week, the cybersecurity firm FireEye said it had been hacked and that its clients, which include the United States government, had been placed at risk. This week, we learned that SolarWinds, a publicly traded company that provides software to tens of thousands of government and corporate customers, was also hacked.

The attackers gained access to SolarWinds software before updates of that software were made available to its customers. Unsuspecting customers then downloaded a corrupted version of the software, which included a hidden back door that gave hackers access to the victim’s network.

This is what is called a supply-chain attack, meaning the pathway into the target networks relies on access to a supplier. Supply-chain attacks require significant resources and sometimes years to execute. They are almost always the product of a nation-state. Evidence in the SolarWinds attack points to the Russian intelligence agency known as the S.V.R., whose tradecraft is among the most advanced in the world.

According to SolarWinds S.E.C. filings, the malware was on the software from March to June. The number of organizations that downloaded the corrupted update could be as many as 18,000, which includes most federal government unclassified networks and more than 425 Fortune 500 companies.

The magnitude of this ongoing attack is hard to overstate.

The Russians have had access to a considerable number of important and sensitive networks for six to nine months. The Russian S.V.R. will surely have used its access to further exploit and gain administrative control over the networks it considered priority targets. For those targets, the hackers will have long ago moved past their entry point, covered their tracks and gained what experts call “persistent access,” meaning the ability to infiltrate and control networks in a way that is hard to detect or remove.

While the Russians did not have the time to gain complete control over every network they hacked, they most certainly did gain it over hundreds of them. It will take years to know for certain which networks the Russians control and which ones they just occupy.

The logical conclusion is that we must act as if the Russian government has control of all the networks it has penetrated. But it is unclear what the Russians intend to do next. The access the Russians now enjoy could be used for far more than simply spying.

The actual and perceived control of so many important networks could easily be used to undermine public and consumer trust in data, written communications and services. In the networks that the Russians control, they have the power to destroy or alter data, and impersonate legitimate people. Domestic and geopolitical tensions could escalate quite easily if they use their access for malign influence and misinformation — both hallmarks of Russian behavior.

What should be done?

On Dec. 13, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, a division of the Department of Homeland Security — itself a victim — issued an emergency directive ordering federal civilian agencies to remove SolarWinds software from their networks.

The removal is aimed at stopping the bleeding. Unfortunately, the move is sadly insufficient and woefully too late. The damage is already done and the computer networks are already compromised.

It also is impractical. In 2017, the federal government was ordered to remove from its networks software from a Russian company, Kaspersky Lab, that was deemed too risky. It took over a year to get it off the networks. Even if we double that pace with SolarWinds software, and even if it wasn’t already too late, the situation would remain dire for a long time.

The remediation effort alone will be staggering. It will require the segregated replacement of entire enclaves of computers, network hardware and servers across vast federal and corporate networks. Somehow, the nation’s sensitive networks have to remain operational despite unknown levels of Russian access and control. A “do over” is mandatory and entire new networks need to be built — and isolated from compromised networks.

Cyber threat hunters that are stealthier than the Russians must be unleashed on these networks to look for the hidden, persistent access controls. These information security professionals actively search for, isolate and remove advanced, malicious code that evades automated safeguards. This will be difficult work as the Russians will be watching every move on the inside.

The National Defense Authorization Act, which each year provides the Defense Department and other agencies the authority to perform its work, is caught up in partisan wrangling. Among other important provisions, the act would authorize the Department of Homeland Security to perform network hunting in federal networks. If it wasn’t already, it is now a must-sign piece of legislation, and it will not be the last congressional action needed before this is resolved.

Network operators also must take immediate steps to more carefully inspect their internet traffic to detect and neutralize unexplained anomalies and obvious remote commands from hackers before the traffic enters or leaves their network.

The response must be broader than patching networks. While all indicators point to the Russian government, the United States, and ideally its allies, must publicly and formally attribute responsibility for these hacks. If it is Russia, President Trump must make it clear to Vladimir Putin that these actions are unacceptable. The U.S. military and intelligence community must be placed on increased alert; all elements of national power must be placed on the table.

While we must reserve our right to unilateral self-defense, allies must be rallied to the cause. The importance of coalitions will be especially important to punishing Russia and navigating this crisis without uncontrolled escalation.

President Trump is on the verge of leaving behind a federal government, and perhaps a large number of major industries, compromised by the Russian government. He must use whatever leverage he can muster to protect the United States and severely punish the Russians.

President-elect Joe Biden must begin his planning to take charge of this crisis. He has to assume that communications about this matter are being read by Russia, and assume that any government data or email could be falsified.

At this moment, the two teams must find a way to cooperate.

President Trump must get past his grievances about the election and govern for the remainder of his term. This moment requires unity, purpose and discipline. An intrusion so brazen and of this size and scope cannot be tolerated by any sovereign nation.

We are sick, distracted, and now under cyberattack. Leadership is essential.

nyt/bossert
0 Replies
 
oristarA
 
  1  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 05:03 am
@snood,
snood wrote:

On CNN just now, they reported that “White House aides” are saying that Trump told them he might refuse to leave the White House.



Then SCOTUS will take action, ordering Trump be removed from the White House, because a legal system is never a "vegetarian", because the law is bigger than the big boy.
hightor
 
  1  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 05:08 am
@Builder,
Quote:
WTF was that all about?

It's called an "article" or an "essay" or an "opinion piece". People with knowledge of history and public affairs often share their views on media platforms. It concerns actions of the Trump administration with regard to the pandemic and the recent widespread security breach which has hit the federal government and some large corporations.
Quote:

Trickle down BS got kicked to the curb decades ago.

Then why has it been the featured selling point of every Republican tax cut during these same decades?
Quote:
Try and keep up, son

Why do you continue to insist on assuming some familiarity between us that doesn't exist?
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  1  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 05:27 am
@oristarA,
Quote:
On CNN just now, they reported that “White House aides” are saying that Trump told them he might refuse to leave the White House.

That's probably because he can't reside at Mar-a-Lago — hell, we wouldn't want him to be homeless, would we?
oristarA
 
  1  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 05:56 am
@hightor,
He has already had too many homes to be homeless.
Just take a look at Trump Tower.
A cozy place to live in:
https://www.idesignarch.com/wp-content/uploads/Donald-Melania-Trump-Manhattan-Penthouse_3.jpg
https://www.idesignarch.com/wp-content/uploads/Donald-Melania-Trump-Manhattan-Penthouse_4.jpg
Inside Donald and Melania Trump’s Manhattan Apartment Mansion
BillW
 
  1  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 06:38 am
@snood,
snood wrote:

On CNN just now, they reported that “White House aides” are saying that Trump told them he might refuse to leave the White House.

Oh boy, Oh boy, Oh boy...

<fingers crossed, hoping for a pay-per-view “Removing the Donald” spectacular>


Biden Says He’ll Fumigate the White House Following Trump Departure
Posted on December 11, 2020

https://www.wbap.com/2020/12/11/wbap-morning-news-biden-says-hell-fumigate-the-white-house-following-trump-departure/

No big deal if Biden fumigates while theRump is still in the WH - what's one more louse?
farmerman
 
  2  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 06:51 am
@BillW,
and we can test Plumps belief that mainlining disinfectants can cure Covid.


Ya know we are gonna miss this clown and his moron followers. Hes provided more SNL bits than anyone since "Samurai Sammich Shop" And the "CHEESEBOOGER CHEESEBOOGER" years
BillW
 
  1  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 06:55 am
@farmerman,
farmerman wrote:

and we can test Plumps belief that mainlining disinfectants can cure Covid.

Ya know we are gonna miss this clown and his moron followers. Hes provided more SNL bits than anyone since "Samurai Sammich Shop" And the "CHEESEBOOGER CHEESEBOOGER" years

I am afraid they all won't be going away far enohgh, just becoming more irrelevant!
farmerman
 
  2  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 06:57 am
@oristarA,
that has got to be one of the ugliest most uninviting series of rooms Ive ever seen.

I wonder how many designrs and tradesmen he stiffed on these ??

To compare this with how real money spends it, you should visit LONGWOOD GARDENS and WINTERTHUR . These are two "country states" of Irenee Dupont Family (A family that could buy and sell Trump many times over)
They live in warm but "gilded age" surroundings. No purely ostentatious crap.
farmerman
 
  2  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 06:58 am
@BillW,
hopefully some news will tail his doings. I hope he tries a TV show on his life in the White House.
Hes such a dickhead
0 Replies
 
Brand X
 
  2  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 08:34 am
Carl Quintanilla
@carlquintanilla
·
5m
“Dominion insists that it has no connection to Venezuela, to Mr. Chavez or for that matter, as the letter notes, to ‘Big Foot or the Loch Ness monster.’”
Quote Tweet
Cliff Levy
@cliffordlevy
· 16m
NEW: Dominion Voting Systems sent a blistering letter to the former Trump lawyer Sidney Powell, demanding that she publicly retract her “wild, knowingly baseless and false accusations” about the company’s voting machines.
farmerman
 
  2  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 09:03 am
@Brand X,
The connection of Doninion to any others so alleged, has been the subject of rebuttal testimony several times in the course of the 50+ court hearings.

Some folks are just to stupid to undrstand facts and evidence and would rather believe the Liar-in-Chief.
Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 09:13 am
From Putin's annual, hourslong news conference:
Quote:
Sergei Shnurov, a rock star turned journalist, asked Mr. Putin why Russian hackers did not help President Trump win the American election and whether Mr. Putin planned to offer Mr. Trump a job in Russia next year. Mr. Putin responded by denying, as he always has, that Russia had ever intervened in American politics, and added some farewell praise for Mr. Trump.

“I don’t think Trump needs any help finding employment,” Mr. Putin said. “He has quite a large base of support inside the United States and as far as I understand he does not plan to depart from the political life of his country.”

American officials acknowledged on Monday that the State Department and parts of the Pentagon were among the government entities compromised by a sophisticated Russian hacking attack, but Mr. Putin did not comment on the matter. Instead, he said Russian-American relations had become “hostage to domestic politics” in the United States, referring to Democrats’ criticism of Mr. Trump as being too soft on Russia.

“We expect that the new president-elect of the United States will understand what is going on,” Mr. Putin went on, referring to Joseph R. Biden Jr. “He is an experienced man, both in domestic politics and in foreign policy, and we expect that all the problems that have arisen — if not all, then at least some — will be solved by the new administration.”
NYT
Quote:
“It isn’t so much a question,” Putin replied, “as a provocation. Russian hackers didn’t help Trump get elected. They didn’t interfere in US elections – it’s all speculation to tarnish relations between our two countries. We hope that all these problems, or at least some of them, will be solved under the new administration.”

The president added that “almost 50 percent of the population voted for Trump, he has a large base of support within the United States. And he, so it seems, is not going to destroy his own country.”

Claims that Russian cyber experts helped to sway American voters away from Hillary Clinton and into the arms of Trump have plagued the US debate around the results of the 2016 vote. Trump, and the Kremlin, have consistently denied any collusion
RT
Brand X
 
  2  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 09:30 am
@farmerman,
Ya, I'm pretty sure the machines were vetted, they didn't just fall out of the sky in 2020. Although it is 2020...so something like that could happen.
0 Replies
 
oristarA
 
  2  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 10:24 am
@farmerman,
farmerman wrote:

that has got to be one of the ugliest most uninviting series of rooms Ive ever seen.
I wonder how many designrs and tradesmen he stiffed on these ??


What is Trump good at doing? He's good at reaping where he hasn't sown, he's good at claiming credit dut to others. As you wondered, he possibly stiffed those designers and trademen. So those are not ugly rooms, rather, that are well-designed grand rooms. If every American possessed such rooms, the provety will be completely wiped out of America.
farmerman
 
  1  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 10:32 am
@oristarA,
We disagree. I find them ponderous LOUIS XVI . It celebrates nothing except excess. Designers work for clients and try to translate the clients wishes. A client, left to their own, would only design some crap like that if it were a movie set.

The overuse of gold is a common feature of anything which Trump surrounds himself.

0 Replies
 
coldjoint
 
  -1  
Thu 17 Dec, 2020 11:12 am
Quote:
Peter Navarro Releases Massive Report On Election Fraud – Press Conference 1PM EST Today

Think the MSM will be covering the press conference? Do not count on it.
Quote:
Today, Dr. Peter K. Navarro released a new report which provides a comprehensive, objective assessment of the fairness and integrity of the 2020 election, obtained through evidence including more than 50 lawsuits around the nation, thousands of affidavits and testimonies, published analyses, media reports, and more.

Dr. Navarro will be hosting a press briefing call today at 1:00 PM EST in his capacity as a private citizen to discuss his findings.

https://creativedestructionmedia.com/news/politics/2020/12/17/peter-navarro-releases-massive-report-on-election-fraud-press-conference-1pm-est-today/
0 Replies
 
 

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