192
   

monitoring Trump and relevant contemporary events

 
 
vikorr
 
  3  
Sun 27 Dec, 2020 07:23 pm
I read an article just now about Trumps legacy, and it talked about, compared to his bullying and disdain for all other countries leaders, his 'inexplicably differential attitude towards Putin'...

I never found that inexplicable at all. To me it is quite obvious Trump admires Putin, and presumably his ability to seize and maintain power in Russia.
nimh
 
  1  
Sun 27 Dec, 2020 07:37 pm
@Rebelofnj,


I appreciate the intent behind this chart, and think it by and large does a decent enough job to roughly sketch the larger picture. It will never not be funny to me that it puts the proudly socialist magazin Jacobin on the same point of the left-right scale as MSNBC, though. :-)
0 Replies
 
Builder
 
  -4  
Sun 27 Dec, 2020 08:11 pm
@vikorr,
Quote:
To me......and presumably
being the keywords in your assumption.

What I admired about Vladimir Putin, is his ability to discuss, in -depth, any topic at any time, with some of the greatest minds on the planet, without a cue card or speech writer.

Couple that, to his outing of Obama's connection and support of known terror orgs, to the point of funding and equipping them to do his (and the Saudi's) bidding in Syria and Libya, and you've got the makings of a genuine world class leader.
vikorr
 
  1  
Sun 27 Dec, 2020 08:24 pm
@Builder,
Quote:
being the keywords in your assumption.
You say this like I didn't purposefully put those words in there, to make it clear it was an opinion...

I doubt Trump cares two whits about Putins intellectual ability. He certainly hasn't shown he places any value in such - particularly if the intellectual disagrees with him (meaning of course, if they agree with him, he's happy for them to say what they want...but the value appears to be that they agree with him, rather than the intellectual ability behind it)
Builder
 
  -3  
Sun 27 Dec, 2020 08:55 pm
@vikorr,
I never mentioned Trump.

Read my post more carefully, next time.
0 Replies
 
snood
 
  4  
Sun 27 Dec, 2020 09:01 pm
Just saw a report that Trump signed the Covid bill.
0 Replies
 
snood
 
  5  
Sun 27 Dec, 2020 09:24 pm
Even in the dank, dark corners of media that are Murdoch- owned publications, it’s getting harder t deny the obvious...

 https://iili.io/KwlmOJ.jpg
farmerman
 
  6  
Mon 28 Dec, 2020 12:57 am
@Builder,
what amazes me is how quickly you buy what Putin says on anything. He was denying anything all the while he was engineering the takeover of Crimea. He has NOTHING to do with Russian poisoning of intellectuals and dissidents. Russia has NOTHING to o with the 2016 and 2020 elctions and the recent hacking of our intell.

Maybe you have some personal stake in your own brand of fake news????
Below viewing threshold (view)
oristarA
 
  1  
Mon 28 Dec, 2020 01:10 am
@snood,
Yeah. The New York Post has always impressed me as a staunch defender of Trump. Now it says in its editorial: The Post says: Give it up, Mr. President — for your sake and the nation’s.

A peaceful transfer of authority is well expected on January 20, 2021.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  3  
Mon 28 Dec, 2020 03:31 am
somebody wrote:
Nothing from the inquiry came out. Remember?

Um...
Quote:
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump campaign’s interactions with Russian intelligence services during the 2016 presidential election posed a “grave” counterintelligence threat, a Senate panel concluded Tuesday as it detailed in a report how associates of the Republican candidate had regular contact with Russians and expected to benefit from the Kremlin’s help.

(...)

thegrio

Ever wonder if this character gets paid to "forget" this sort of thing? It was in all the news outlets. Trump's pardoned a bunch of the perpetrators and conspirators for keeping mum but that only goes to back up the fact that, indeed, something illegal actually occurred. It's hard to imagine such willful ignorance at work on a daily basis, yet we're treated to it again and again. Pizzagate, Uranium One, Benghazi, crisis actors, hydr0xychloroquine, 'covid is the flu' — nothing is too inane to escape this guy's dutiful attention to suspect and contested accounts and his shamelessness in promoting them.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  3  
Mon 28 Dec, 2020 03:56 am
HCR wrote:
(...)

So the CAA will become law, and the drama of lawmaking for this congressional session should be over. But it is not quite over yet. Trump vetoed the National Defense Authorization Act, which specifies how the defense budget will be spent, on Wednesday, December 23. The NDAA has passed with bipartisan majorities since the 1960s when it first began, and presidents have always signed it. But Trump has chosen to veto it, on the grounds that it calls for the renaming of U.S. military bases named for Confederate generals and that it does not strip social media companies of protection from liability when third parties post offensive material on them.

The National Defense Authorization Act this year does something else, though, that seems to me of far more importance to the president than the naming of military bases.

It includes a measure known as the Corporate Transparency Act, which undercuts shell companies and money laundering in America. The act requires the owners of any company that is not otherwise overseen by the federal government (by filing taxes, for example, or through close regulation) to file a report that identifies each person associated with the company who either owns 25% or more of it or exercises substantial control over it. That report, including name, birthdate, address, and an identifying number, goes to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). The measure also increases penalties for money laundering and streamlines cooperation between banks and foreign law enforcement authorities.

America is currently the easiest place in the world for criminals to form an anonymous shell company which enables them to launder money, evade taxes, and engage in illegal payoff schemes. The measure will pull the rug out from both domestic and international criminals that take advantage of shell companies to hide from investigators. When the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists dug into leaked documents from FinCEN this fall, they discovered shell companies moving money for criminals operating out of Russia, China, Iran, and Syria.

Shell companies also mean that our political system is awash in secrecy. Social media giants like Facebook cannot determine who is buying political advertising. And, as Representative Tom Malinowski (D-NJ) noted, shell companies allow “foreign bad actors” to corrupt our system even more directly. “It’s illegal for foreigners to contribute to our campaigns,” he reminded Congress in a speech for the bill, “but if you launder your money through a front company with anonymous ownership there is very little we can do to stop you.”

We know the Trump family uses shell companies: Trump’s fixer Michael Cohen used a shell company to pay off Stormy Daniels, and just this month we learned that Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner approved a shell company that spent more than $600 million in campaign funds.

The new requirements in the NDAA apply not just to future entities, but also to existing ones.

Congress needs to repass the NDAA over Trump’s veto—indeed it is likely that the CTA was included in this measure precisely because the NDAA is must-pass legislation—and both the CTA and the NDAA bill into which is it tucked have bipartisan support. Trump has objected to a number of things in the original bill but has not publicly complained about the CTA in it. It will be interesting to see if Congress repasses this bill in its original form and, if not, what changes it makes.

substack

and...

Heather Cox Richardson Offers a Break From the Media Maelstrom. It’s Working.

Quote:
She is the breakout star of the newsletter platform Substack, doing the opposite of most media as she calmly situates the news of the day in the long sweep of American history.

0 Replies
 
snood
 
  3  
Mon 28 Dec, 2020 05:14 am
For those MAGATs saying Covid is nothing but the flu, or that it’s 99.99% survivable and is just being sensationalized by the media...

Can any of them tell me when was the last time we were standing up freezer cars for extra morgues to handle the overflow of corpses at major hospitals all over the country?

Or are all those hospitals just a part of the hoax?
snood
 
  2  
Mon 28 Dec, 2020 05:33 am
Rep. Kinzinger, (R) from Illinois:

Quote:
I don’t understand what’s being done, why? Unless it’s just to create chaos, show power and be upset because he lost the election.


Republicans blast Trump for delay signing the Covid relief bill

Create chaos, show power, and be upset because he lost the election. Sounds like a perfect description of how Trump is spending his last month as POTUS.



hightor
 
  1  
Mon 28 Dec, 2020 05:36 am
@snood,
The MAGATs don't seem to understand the amount of care it takes to keep covid patients alive, and that if the mortality isn't as high as was once feared, the number of deaths, the strain on hospitals and staff, and the sheer cost of the intensive care dwarfs any outbreak of influenza since 1918.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  5  
Mon 28 Dec, 2020 05:48 am
@snood,
Trump is such a f-ing amateur. Four years in office and he still shows himself to have no understanding of how government works. Now that he's realized he didn't have the political power to shape this huge bill at the last minute, he's on record as actually having signed this bill he previously labeled "disgraceful". He would have looked a lot more competent if he'd supported the compromise bill that his administration and Congress put together and congratulated them for their bipartisan work as he signed the bill. Now he just looks stupid.
vikorr
 
  4  
Mon 28 Dec, 2020 06:01 am
@vikorr,
Quote:
I never mentioned Trump.

Read my post more carefully, next time.

Uh Builder, I read your reply to my post (regarding Trump) carefully. Nothing about my reply changes.
0 Replies
 
snood
 
  6  
Mon 28 Dec, 2020 07:33 am
Stacey Abrams sounded optimistic this morning about Dem chances in the GA runoffs.
I’m encouraged.
0 Replies
 
oristarA
 
  5  
Mon 28 Dec, 2020 09:01 am
@hightor,
hightor wrote:

Trump is such a f-ing amateur. Four years in office and he still shows himself to have no understanding of how government works. Now that he's realized he didn't have the political power to shape this huge bill at the last minute, he's on record as actually having signed this bill he previously labeled "disgraceful". He would have looked a lot more competent if he'd supported the compromise bill that his administration and Congress put together and congratulated them for their bipartisan work as he signed the bill. Now he just looks stupid.


Well said.
0 Replies
 
snood
 
  4  
Mon 28 Dec, 2020 09:48 am
Trump fans claiming Nashville Bomb part of Chinese plot to steal election
 

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