12
   

Monitoring Biden and other Contemporary Events

 
 
hightor
 
  2  
Reply Thu 2 Jan, 2025 05:21 am
@Lash,
Quote:
Enter chaotic false flag domestic attacks attributed to Arabs, Muslims, Islam in order to clamp down on the freedoms protected by our Constitution and wage war against Russia, China, and anyone who has something our govt wants.

So, you're saying that the NYE attack in New Orleans was a false flag operation?

Quote:
I’m so worried about what will happen to brown people in this country—-& across the world.

Yeah, and two weeks ago it was "government surveillance drones" fueling your paranoia.

Quote:
For interested passers-by, today marks the end of the world as we’ve known it.

Shhh....it's not until next Tuesday!
hightor
 
  3  
Reply Thu 2 Jan, 2025 05:30 am
Trump Voters Are in for a Rude Awakening

He sold them countless, often conflicting fantasies. In 2025, he’ll face political reality.

Robert McCoy wrote:
In his 1987 book, The Art of the Deal, Donald Trump let readers in on a promotional strategy of his. “I play to people’s fantasies,” the real estate developer wrote, by insisting that a project “is the biggest and the greatest and the most spectacular.” It’s a tactic Trump has also employed in his political career—most effectively this election cycle, when many voters were drawn to him based on perceptions of his second-term plans that had little to no basis in reality.

Consider these archetypal dispatches from the 2024 campaign trail. “A lot of people are happy to vote for [Trump] because they simply do not believe he will do many of the things he says he will,” an October New York Times “campaign notebook” entry observed. The following week, The Washington Post noted of prospective Trump voters: “Some read between Trump’s lines about how he would govern, while others disregard parts of his past or present platform.”

Then there was the phenomenon Paul Krugman, the retiring Times columnist, dubbed “Trump-stalgia,” which could just as well have been called “Trump-nesia.” Most Americans are undoubtedly better off than they were four years ago, he wrote in May. “But for reasons that still remain unclear, many seem disinclined to believe it.” This sentiment held true through the election. As TNR’s Greg Sargent reported on November 9, citing internal Democratic polling, “It proved disturbingly difficult to persuade undecided voters that Trump had been a bad president.”

In other words, for many, Trump was whoever they wanted him to be—a choose-your-own-candidate. Voters projected their wishes onto his candidacy, regardless of his stated policy program. They remembered positive aspects of his presidency and either memory-holed the negative parts (his deadly mishandling of the pandemic, say, or his nomination of Supreme Court justices who eliminated abortion rights) or simply didn’t blame him for them. But Trump’s rhetorical slipperiness made this possible. His relentless lying, flip-flopping, and vagueness about his plans made it difficult to pin him down, thereby attracting voters from both sides of certain issues.

But the chimerical allure that helped propel Trump to the White House has an expiration date. He sold myriad, and often conflicting, fantasies to voters. In three weeks’ time, he’ll face reality. And many Trump voters will undoubtedly start to realize that he is not at all the person they thought they were voting for.

Already, there are two major contradictions emerging in the nascent Trump administration, Vox’s Zack Beauchamp argued in November. “The first centers on economic policy—or, more fundamentally, the role of government itself,” he wrote, noting that some Trump picks are proponents of unfettered capitalism while others are economic nationalists who want to “transform American society, including by attacking the practices of large corporations.” The second contradiction, meanwhile, “centers on foreign policy—or, more fundamentally, the purpose of America in the world.” The advocates of hard power versus the isolationists, essentially.

These diverse allies found common cause on the campaign trail in opposition to the left, but “when governing, the administration will be forced to make choices in areas where its leaders disagree at a fundamental level, leading not only to internal conflict but potentially even policy chaos.” In other words, Trump will have to pick sides. In some ways, he’s already doing so based on the balance of his nominees: His Cabinet is shaping up to be rather interventionist and plutocratic.

Once he enters the realm of concrete policy, Trump will very likely face some degree of backlash. This happens with any new administration; according to the well-demonstrated theory of thermostatic politics, public opinion tends to move in the opposite direction of policy. But if Trump grossly overestimates his electoral mandate and tries to implement his most extreme ideas, the backlash could be historically fierce.

Recall how the barbarity of Trump’s first-term immigration agenda elicited widespread outcry. Now imagine if his 2025 plans for mass deportations are enacted. The Washington Post’s Aaron Blake writes that, while recent polls show Americans divided evenly on—or sometimes leaning in favor of—deporting most or all undocumented immigrants, respondents who approve of deportations often also support the (much more popular) solution of providing them a path to citizenship. Additionally, Blake writes, support for mass deportations tends to thin as people are given the details of what they’d entail.

If Trump brings his ghastly immigration policies to bear (and follows through on his more unpopular stances, such as prosecuting his political foes and pardoning January 6ers), it’s not unreasonable to expect that his crowing about his “powerful mandate” will be exposed as arrant hyperbole.

And Trump’s hyperbolic promises as a candidate could also undermine his presidency. Take his improbable vow to end the war in Ukraine within 24 hours, which he recently walked back in a Time interview, acknowledging that “this is trickier than he let on.” In the same interview, he also managed expectations about lowering the cost of groceries, saying doing so will be “hard” and, if he fails, he would not consider his presidency a failure. It’s a stark pivot from his September pledge: “Vote Trump, and your … grocery prices will come tumbling down.”

On those issues and more, Trump has, as a recent Times headline put it, promised the moon with “no word on the rocket.” On many issues, though, not only is there no rocket, but there are instead blueprints for a deep-sea submersible: Trump’s core policy proposals are poised to do the opposite of what he says, exacerbating the economic discontent he tapped into. Between his proposed tariffs, deportations, and tax cuts, Time reports that if Trump “enacts many of the policies he proposed on the campaign trail, voters may see prices continue to rise.”

Throughout 2024, the irreconcilable contradictions of Trump’s proposals and promises were wrinkles that could be smoothed over with rhetoric; as president, he’ll have to face them head-on. As William A. Galston wrote in The Wall Street Journal last month, while Trump is an untraditional president, “voters will judge him on a traditional measure—his ability to deliver on the promises that propelled him to a second term. Tensions among these promises will complicate his task.”

Or, to return to Trump’s words in The Art of the Deal: “You can’t con people, at least not for long. You can create excitement, you can do wonderful promotion and get all kinds of press, and you can throw in a little hyperbole. But if you don’t deliver the goods, people will eventually catch on.” Trump has proven, in business and politics, that in fact he can con people for a very long time. But, come 2025, when he’s confronted with the reality of governing—and, one can hope, a reinvigorated opposition—Trump may finally be exposed to his newfound supporters as the huckster we’ve long known him to be.

tnr
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  4  
Reply Thu 2 Jan, 2025 11:19 am
@Lash,
Quote:
John J Sullivan, like so many other Pentagon, alphabet blob / permanent state officials, is helping lay the groundwork with books, interviews, sound bites, etc for what is coming.

Enter chaotic false flag domestic attacks attributed to Arabs, Muslims, Islam in order to clamp down on the freedoms protected by our Constitution and wage war against Russia, China, and anyone who has something our govt wants. Protest, already equated to terrorism through accusation, will be illegal. Cops will show up at American residences with print outs of tweets and posts, featuring criticisms of Israel, or our own govt that may result in ‘detention’.

I’m so worried about what will happen to brown people in this country—-& across the world.

The Democrat cheering squad will all conveniently forget that Trump didn’t start this & continue to tweeze partisan weevils from hcr articles while the world burns down.
________________________________

For interested passers-by, today marks the end of the world as we’ve known it.


So if I read the reasoning here correctly - and I believe I do - the future ahead will be apocalyptic for brown people first and all the rest of us as well. There will be wars against relative innocents such as Russia and China. There will be worldwide predation by the US of any and all nations' resources the US deems valuable. There will be suppression by the government of any/all protests or criticism of what the government does. Police forces nationwide will monitor the speech and social media writing of citizens for critical commentary of Israel and America will detain or threaten to detain offenders.

And all of these horrors will, apparently, now go into overdrive with Trump in the White House and his administration (from cabinet appointees down through every corner of government he and his team will place their preferred people). And they'll do this in tandem with a Republican controlled House and Senate.

But we must make the important point that Trump did not start this.

All quite reasonable.
hightor
 
  4  
Reply Thu 2 Jan, 2025 01:47 pm
There's a good article in the NYRB, Trevor Jackson's review of Martin Wolf's new book, The Crisis of Democratic Capitalism. Wolf, chief editorial writer for the Financial Times, wrote a book in 2004, Why Globalization Works where he opined that, “liberal democracy is the only political and economic system capable of generating sustained prosperity and political stability.” He concluded that a market economy was the only means for “giving individual human beings the opportunity to seek what they desire in life.”

Now, twenty years later, he writes, "Our economy has destabilized our politics and vice versa. We are no longer able to combine the operations of the market economy with stable liberal democracy. A big part of the reason for this is that the economy is not delivering the security and widely shared prosperity expected by large parts of our societies. One symptom of this disappointment is a widespread loss of confidence in elites."

He attempts to answer the question, "what happened" but the reviewer picks Wolf's arguments apart quite effectively. I really liked this passage:

Trevor Jackson wrote:
The deeper possibility, unthinkable to Wolf*, is that free-market capitalism and liberal democracy may have nothing to do with each other—or may even contradict each other. Wolf calls economics and politics “symbiotic twins,” which shows a poor grasp of both symbiosis and zygosity; he goes on to describe capitalism and democracy—specific versions of economics and politics—as inhabiting a “difficult marriage.” But they proceed from entirely different premises. Democracy is predicated on formal, substantive equality: one person, one vote. Capitalism is not, and is incompatible with substantive equality, because it is composed of workers and owners, success and failure, rich and poor. Capitalism is about self-interest and private gain; democracy is about public interest and civic responsibility. Capitalism’s moral justifications revolve around deservedness, efficiency, and individual risk-taking, none of which are important justifications for democracy. Capitalism is predicated on atomized individuals, democracy on shared publics.


This is a really astute observation – I've toyed around with some of those ideas in a piecemeal fashion but this is the first time I've seen them laid out so economically and so persuasively. I encourage everyone to give it a look, NYRB, January 16, 2025 issue.

*unthinkable to people like georgeob1, too.
Walter Hinteler
 
  4  
Reply Thu 2 Jan, 2025 02:28 pm
@hightor,
Master Sgt. Matthew Alan Livelsberger was killed when an explosive-packed Tesla Cybertruck burst into flames outside President-elect Donald Trump’s Las Vegas hotel.

As if army, Tesla, Trump, Las Vegas was enough: he was on leave from his unit, the 1st Bataillon 10th Special Forces in Germany. Germany, wink, wink!
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Thu 2 Jan, 2025 03:29 pm
@hightor,
Quote:
*unthinkable to people like georgeob1, too.

I'm afraid so.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  2  
Reply Thu 2 Jan, 2025 03:41 pm
@Walter Hinteler,
Quote:
More on the Cybertruck Incident
by Josh Marshall
A small update on the Cybertruck incident in Vegas, since I discussed it in today’s Backchannel. The 37-year-old active-duty soldier in the vehicle apparently shot himself in the head moments before the car ignited. He was also, according to his uncle, a big Trump supporter. Needless to say (or I hope it’s needless to say), this makes the motive for this incident pretty hard to make sense of. Given the apparent suicide and other outlandish parts of what happened it seems obvious that mental health issues likely played some role. But this goes a bit beyond making bad decisions or having a general suicidal ideation. Even in the context of some distorted reasoning, what was the message? What was the point? I’ve seen a number of people propose that the dead soldier may have been angry about Trump’s new fealty to Musk. On its face this struck me as the kind of over-ornate theory you’d come up with if you’re spending too much time on social media and had too much time on your hands. But the truth is I haven’t been able to come up with any more plausible theory.

It’s always good to remember that people who rent a car, drive it from Colorado Springs to Las Vegas and then light the car on fire and shoot themselvs in the head probably aren’t thinking in very linear ways or ways that are going to make sense to the rest of us. But it’s still pretty hard to figure.
glitterbag
 
  1  
Reply Thu 2 Jan, 2025 04:01 pm
@hingehead,
hingehead wrote:

https://i.pinimg.com/736x/eb/61/db/eb61dbbe023d2bc9d2a5aae0a8bb1a8b.jpg



Moolah Lago.......I couldn't stop laughing, then I tear up for a while then I start laughing again.
0 Replies
 
glitterbag
 
  1  
Reply Thu 2 Jan, 2025 04:02 pm
@Lash,
Lash wrote:

Who did stop spying?
The US?


That's an interesting remark, just more proof that too many Americans got a poor education and were raised by baboons. My apologies to baboons.
hingehead
 
  2  
Reply Thu 2 Jan, 2025 07:18 pm
@blatham,
There's always a chance that this is just a previously undocumented feature of the Cybertruck.
Lash
 
  -3  
Reply Thu 2 Jan, 2025 08:26 pm
@glitterbag,
More brilliant information from gbag.
The US doesn’t spy.
Drunk
Lash
 
  -2  
Reply Thu 2 Jan, 2025 08:29 pm
@Walter Hinteler,
He was shot in the head before the explosion, but amazingly, his ID was intact despite the inferno inside the car.

Wonders never cease.
Lash
 
  -2  
Reply Thu 2 Jan, 2025 08:33 pm
@blatham,
For passers-by, today as violence rings out across the country, Joe Biden is currently still president.
blatham
 
  4  
Reply Thu 2 Jan, 2025 08:35 pm
@hingehead,
Quote:
There's always a chance that this is just a previously undocumented feature of the Cybertruck.

That's an interesting thought. There really is no other commercially available vehicle which, in it's design, would seem more attractive to the aesthetics of the homocidal maniac.
0 Replies
 
hingehead
 
  3  
Reply Thu 2 Jan, 2025 11:20 pm
@Lash,
Well it will all become peaceful in a few weeks, won't it?
glitterbag
 
  3  
Reply Fri 3 Jan, 2025 01:39 am
@Lash,
G'bag didn't say that, that's just your nonsense reply. Let me guess, do people in South Carolina believe that Russia, China, Iran and the rest of the world don't keep a close eye on everything the US invents or prospers by? Please ease my mind and tell me you are not truly a moron. One more guess, none of our adversaries EVER try and steal our technology or secrets. Some of those thieves are so good, they get previously patriotic Americans to help them steal secrets and pay them for the privilege. When the US finds out we lock them up, because they are spies, they imperial the safety of the US, and the people who hire them are spies from non-friendly countries. We do what we can to put a big NONO on foreign spies and we look them up when we find them.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  3  
Reply Fri 3 Jan, 2025 03:18 am
Quote:
This evening, President Joe Biden awarded twenty Americans the Presidential Citizens Medal, which is given to those “who have performed exemplary deeds of service for their country or their fellow citizens.” Biden chose these particular individuals because he “believes these Americans are bonded by their common decency and commitment to serving others” and that “[t]he country is better because of their dedication and sacrifice.”

Those twenty included civil rights leaders who fought to end racial segregation, promote Black voting, restore rights for Japanese Americans incarcerated during World War II, legalize same-sex marriage, and defend women’s rights to equality, and reformers who advanced tax reform and the reform of financial markets, moved forward childcare policies, advanced commonsense gun safety regulations, and promoted women’s health.

They included military personnel who perfected trauma care, ensured that female service members received the recognition they deserve, and worked to repair the relationship between the U.S. and Vietnam; a war correspondent who recorded the experience of battle; a photographer and philanthropist who has advanced teacher training and microenterprise in developing countries’ an educator who has guided students toward the arts.

The recipients included both Democrats and Republicans, with Biden honoring Senator Nancy Kassebaum (R-KS) for example, for supporting abortion rights. “[S]he stood up for what she believed in even if it meant standing alone,” he said, “and she reached across the aisle to do what she believed was right.”

And the recipients included the chair and vice chair of the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol, informally known as the January 6th Committee, Representative Bennie Thompson (D-MS) and former representative Liz Cheney (R-WY). Biden praised Thompson for “defending the rule of law with unwavering integrity and a steadfast commitment to truth.” He praised Cheney for raising her voice and reaching across the aisle “to defend our Nation and the ideals we stand for: Freedom. Dignity. And decency.” He added: “Her integrity and intrepidness remind us all what is possible if we work together.”

Biden also offered a public message today in response to the horrific New Year’s Eve attack in New Orleans in which Shamsud-Din Jabbar, an American citizen and Army veteran from Texas, drove a truck into a crowd in the French Quarter, killing 14 people and wounding 30 others.

Before today’s Sugar Bowl playoff between Georgia and Notre Dame in New Orleans, Biden addressed the nation: “Today all America stands with the people of New Orleans. We pray for those killed and injured in yesterday's attack. We are grateful… for the brave first responders who raced to save lives. We’re glad the game is back on for today, but I’m not surprised, because the spirit of New Orleans can never be kept down. That’s also true of the spirit of America. We just have to remember who we are. We’re the United States of America. There’s nothing, nothing, beyond our capacity if we do it together. God bless New Orleans, and God protect our troops.”

While Biden focuses on protecting civil rights and making progress together in a unified America, Trump and Elon Musk are doubling down on dividing Americans. Over the holiday, the fight between the original MAGA and the new tech billionaires taking over the Trump White House continued, and Trump and Musk appear to be trying to heal that rift by returning to culture war themes.

The fight began over immigration, which MAGA opposes and Musk champions for skilled workers, but spread as the Musk faction attacked the American culture MAGA celebrates. After rising to prominence by attacking immigrants, Trump sided with the Musk faction.

On New Year’s Eve, as President-elect Trump set out for a party at Mar-a-Lago, a reporter asked him why he had changed his mind on the H-1B visas that enable employers to bring skilled workers to the U.S. “I didn’t change my mind,” Trump answered. “I always felt we have to have the most competent people in our country. We need competent people. We need smart people coming into our country. We need a lot of people coming in.”

This is a dramatic change from Trump’s previous positions. On March 4, 2016, for example, Trump’s social media account posted: “The H-1B program is neither high-skilled nor immigration: these are temporary foreign workers, imported from abroad, for the explicit purpose of substituting for American workers at lower pay…. I will end forever the use of the H-1B as a cheap labor program, and institute an absolute requirement to hire American workers first…. No exceptions.” It is this stand on immigration that Trump’s MAGA base supports.

For his part, last Friday Musk told those opposed to H-1B visas to “[t]ake a big step back and F*CK YOURSELF in the face.” He said: “I will go to war on this issue the likes of which you cannot possibly comprehend.” But MAGA news sites Breitbart and Newsmax didn’t back down, reporting a story by Fred Lambert of Electrek, a site that follows the changeover from fossil-fuel to green vehicles, pointing out that Musk’s Tesla is a major user of H-1B visa workers and that it requested more than 2,400 such workers at the same time it was laying off U.S. workers early in 2024.

On New Year’s Eve, Musk changed his name on X to the name of a meme coin, a cryptocurrency based on an online meme, and changed his avatar to one using symbols favored by the far right. Some of his supporters saw the changes as a signal of his true beliefs, especially as he is strongly supporting the right-wing AfD party in Germany.

Trump also seemed to swing back to his MAGA base when he returned to his attacks on immigrants by echoing a mistaken report by the Fox News Channel. Trump falsely linked the New Orleans attack to “criminals coming in” from other countries and claimed that the U.S. has “open borders,” although in fact, encounters at the border have fallen to a four-year low, lower now than when Trump left office.

The abrupt elevation of culture wars echoes the formula Republicans have used for the past forty years to distract from the reality that between 1981 and 2021 their embrace of so-called supply-side economics moved $50 trillion from the bottom 90% to the top 1%. Distracting voters with outrage over “welfare queens,” “Libtards,” and so on, kept the country focused on cultural issues rather than economic ones.

As Musk and Trump appear to be making up for their defense of immigration by courting the far right again, Anthony Adragna of Politico reported today that incoming House Republicans are also relying on culture wars to hold their coalition together. Adragna reports they are planning to make trans rights their “marquee fight” of 2025.

That focus is likely intended to distract Republican voters from the reality that Trump has promised to swing the country away from Biden’s investment in rebuilding the middle class. Biden’s focus on employment meant that unemployment dropped dramatically during his term, more people got access to affordable health care, labor unions showed historic growth, and real wages went up so much that according to economist David Doney, workers now have the highest real hourly wages since the 1960s.

Good news for workers was good news for everyone: the country’s economic growth was more than double that of any other country in the Group of 7 (G7) economically advanced democracies.

But Trump has been very clear that he rejects this system and intends to take the country back to supply-side economics, in which the government encourages the concentration of wealth at the top of the economy. Those who embrace this theory argue that wealthy investors will use their money more efficiently than they could under government regulation.

Trump has promised to fill his cabinet with billionaires, and top donors have been donating as much as $2 million to his inauguration fund (those at that level can get up to six tickets to events of the inaugural weekend). According to Jeanna Smialek and Ana Swanson of the New York Times, Trump’s promise to back Wall Street investors and corporate boardrooms has given them high hopes for the Trump administration.

And, of course, Musk, the world’s richest man, has eclipsed Vice President–elect J.D. Vance and sometimes even Trump himself as the face of the incoming administration.

Trump’s very public embrace of billionaires comes just weeks after the December 4, 2024, shooting of United Healthcare chief executive officer Brian Thompson revealed a large American population that is desperately angry at wealthy and powerful executives. Across social media, posts have been defending and even praising Thompson’s alleged murderer since the shooting. Even those who avoided championing the shooter took exception to the fact that those defending Thompson’s industry and deploring his murder had little to say about those people who died after insurance companies denied their claims.

For decades now, Republicans have been able to keep class tensions at bay by hammering constantly on culture wars, and they appear to be trying that again to smooth over the fight between MAGA and the billionaires. But it is possible that the rumbling anger that flashed to the surface over the killing of an insurance CEO will reinforce the MAGA wing and keep class, rather than culture, uppermost.

If Trump does not bring down prices, as he promised and now has downplayed, if he imposes tariffs that will force poorer and middle-class Americans to pay for the tax cuts he has promised to the wealthy and corporations, if Republicans cut Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid to balance the budget; all while Musk continues to pull down billions of dollars in taxpayer money, the rhetorical formula that worked for so long might finally break.

hcr
0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  2  
Reply Fri 3 Jan, 2025 05:17 am
Donald Trump would like to bind Greenland to the USA. However, the island's head of government wants independence. He wants to break free from the ‘shackles of colonialism’ he said in his New Year's speech.

And yesterday, the Danish Royal House unveiled the new coat of arms chosen by King Frederik X.
Greenland and the Faroe Islands, two territories of the Kingdom of Denmark, now have more space.
hingehead
 
  2  
Reply Fri 3 Jan, 2025 05:57 am
@Walter Hinteler,
If it wasn't for the mercator projection they wouldn't need more space

Greenland overlaid on Africa:
https://bigthink.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/18406297.png?fit=1200,675

I wonder if Trump would change his mind if he knew this.
Walter Hinteler
 
  2  
Reply Fri 3 Jan, 2025 06:17 am
@hingehead,
A disadvantage of the Mercator projection when cylindrical landmasses are projected onto a flat 2D surface. The areas on the top and bottom will simply distort and become overly exaggerated in size. (Because Europe is towards the top of the map, it appears larger than it really is, which historically favoured the European-centred view of the world.)

The advantage is for navigation, because of its ability to represent lines of constant true direction.
0 Replies
 
 

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