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Has U.S. Democracy Been Trumped? Bernie Sanders wants to know who owns America?

#11921 User is online   johnu 

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Posted 2019-January-21, 22:52

 Winstonm, on 2019-January-21, 18:34, said:

So tough on Russia - not!


For Dennison, tough on Russia means holding out for 10 more luxury Dennison Towers in Russia, even if it means kickbacks of a penthouse suite in each one to various Russian oligarchs. The Art of the Deal Bribe Kompromat and keep those Pee tapes off the market.
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#11922 User is online   johnu 

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Posted 2019-January-22, 00:50

MLK’s Son Criticizes Mike Pence: My Father ‘Was a Bridge Builder, Not A Wall Builder’

Pence dennisons (aka lies, fakes, etc) a MLK quote for political capital and gets slapped silly by MLK's son.
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#11923 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2019-January-22, 12:58

From BuzzFeed News in Limbo Land by Jim Rutenberg at NYT:

Quote

This is, in many respects, a golden age for journalism.

With a president facing multiple federal and state inquiries — including one into whether a foreign government helped get him elected — the press has come through with some investigative work that can stand with the finest Watergate-era reporting.

Among readers and viewers, there’s a new appreciation for shoe-leather reporting. Clicks and subscriptions are up, welcome news for an industry in shaky financial shape.

But the ultimate prize has proved elusive for the scoop-hungry journalists competing to join the reporters’ pantheon alongside Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, whose methodical news-gathering for The Washington Post helped bring down a president alleged to have broken the law.

The perils of the chase were plain to see on Friday night, when the office of the special counsel issued a public denial of what had been widely portrayed as a “bombshell report” from BuzzFeed News.

The site, based in New York, has been as aggressive as any other news outlet in trying to break the Big One. Its latest attempt, published Thursday night, reported that the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, had evidence that President Trump had instructed his former lawyer Michael D. Cohen to lie to Congress.

In their race to get ahead of Mr. Mueller with news that will please much of the electorate while also driving clicks and ratings, however, journalists throughout the media have produced their share of misfires and unforced errors. Each mistake has been a gift to the president, providing fodder for his case that any unflattering reporting about him amounts to “fake news,” and that the special counsel’s investigation is nothing but a “witch hunt.”

The insatiable appetite of social media and cable news for fresh material makes the hunt for big stories even more perilous.

“I say to you on the record, I am thankful I don’t have to cover this story on a daily basis,” said Mr. Woodward, whose latest book, “Fear,” a fly-on-the-wall view of the Trump administration’s first year, has sold some two million copies.

“The hydraulic pressure in the system is just so great,” he added. “The impatience of the internet — ‘give it to us immediately’ — drives so much, it’s hard to sort something like this out.”

BuzzFeed’s business model is built on that immediacy. Its newsroom is part of an organization whose mission is to find or create viral content. So you have serious journalism sitting almost side by side with lighthearted listicles like “28 Ryan Reynolds Tweets About Parenting That Will Make You Laugh Out Loud.”

BuzzFeed News has produced top-flight work. But in fashioning itself as a 21st-century upstart challenging the traditionalists, it has also pushed the limits.

It was the first to publish the collection of reports that were put together by the former British intelligence officer Christopher Steele during the 2016 presidential campaign. Known as the dossier, the 35-page file was filled with what were at least then-unsubstantiated (and salacious) reports about Mr. Trump said to have been collected by Russian agents for blackmail purposes. Other news organizations, including this one, had all or part of the dossier, but decided against publishing any of its contents they couldn’t independently verify.

The BuzzFeed News editor in chief, Ben Smith, argued that the dossier was worthy of release without full journalistic corroboration, partly because its contents had been shared with President Trump and others “at the highest levels of the U.S. government.” Providing that level of transparency, he argued, was “how we see the job of reporters in 2017.”

BuzzFeed’s report last week was more traditional, providing information from “two federal law enforcement officials,” as the article described its sources. According to the piece, Mr. Mueller was in possession of documents, text messages and testimony from Mr. Cohen showing that Mr. Trump had directed him to lie to Congress about Trump business dealings in Moscow in 2016.

BuzzFeed said the report was months in the making. But, given the weightiness of the accusations, the final push for input from Mr. Mueller’s office appears to have taken place on internet time.

Jason Leopold, one of the article’s co-writers, sent a heads-up email to Mr. Mueller’s spokesman, Peter Carr, only several hours before publication. In the exchange, which was first reported by The Washington Post, Mr. Leopold said that he was planning to report “Michael Cohen was directed by President Trump himself to lie to Congress about his negotiations related to the Trump Moscow project.”

The email did not mention that the article would also assert that Mr. Mueller had substantial evidence of the supposed presidential marching orders — a vital component that gave the story so much apparent heft.

To be fair, Fortress Mueller has been a frustration for reporters. The special counsel’s office has kept leaks to a minimum while refusing, for the most part, to confirm or deny whatever report about its work is firing up the news algorithm. While its impenetrability may explain the BuzzFeed reporters’ casual-seeming approach, it’s not much of an excuse for skipping the steps taught in Journalism 101.

The Mueller team’s challenge to the BuzzFeed report is also exposing the flaws of the wider media ecosystem, which is all too ready to spring into action at any sign of the Big One. Within minutes of the article’s publication on Thursday, Twitter was ablaze, and cable panelists were effusive. “This is stunning,” Don Lemon said on CNN. Lawrence O’Donnell spoke of “a Nixonian moment” on MSNBC.

Fox News reported the article’s claims as potentially an “enormous, enormous problem for this presidency.” But the guest who described it that way, the Fox News contributor Guy Benson, also warned, “Proceed with caution on this story — it may be true, it may not.”

By the following morning, other news organizations had failed to match the BuzzFeed piece with their own reporting and increasingly included “if true” caveats — but that didn’t prevent hours of on-air speculation about the potential implications of “subornation of perjury,” with its echoes of Watergate.

Even after the special counsel’s statement on Friday night, Rachel Maddow of MSNBC speculated that it wasn’t a true denial. During an interview with Mr. Smith, she asked, “Do you have any concern that this statement from the special counsel’s office might be an effort to dissuade you and dissuade your reporters from pursuing this, even if it is accurate, either because it interferes with the special counsel’s investigation in some way or it is otherwise too uncomfortable for this Justice Department?”

The further the disputed report traveled, the more it seemed to help Mr. Trump, who is forever on the lookout for material for the most intensive anti-press branding campaign ever to come from the Oval Office.

As the former Associated Press top editor Kathleen Carroll described the current reporting environment to me: “It’s a very, very, very high wire, with a load of rusty razor blades underneath it.”

Mr. Woodward and Mr. Bernstein know better than most what BuzzFeed’s reporters and editors are now going through. During their history-making run, the duo misreported that a grand jury had received specific testimony about a secret slush fund controlled by Nixon’s chief of staff, H. R. Haldeman. The grand jury portion of the story was wrong, and the White House pounced on the error. But the substance was correct, and history ultimately vindicated them.

Mr. Smith, the BuzzFeed News editor, told me that the special counsel’s office was “gnomic” in its denial. “We are confident that our reporting will stand up,” he said.

For now, the story has fallen into a nether region occupied by two other recent, potentially groundbreaking stories on the Mueller investigation that have yet to be confirmed by others.

The first is a report from the McClatchy newspaper chain that cellphone signals placed Mr. Cohen near Prague in 2016, around the same time the Steele dossier placed him there for a meeting with Russian officials.

And there was the report in The Guardian that President Trump’s former campaign manager, Paul Manafort, had paid a visit to Julian Assange, the head of WikiLeaks, before that organization released a trove of emails that the United States has accused Russian agents of stealing from the Democrats.

With the BuzzFeed story joining those two reports in journalistic limbo land, there are two options for the hair-trigger, Russia-investigation commentariat, said Richard Tofel, the president of ProPublica, the investigative news organization.

“One is, try to figure out right this minute what the truth is, when you have no way of knowing,” Mr. Tofel said. “Or two, and both social media and cable news are a little bit at war with this: Wait a minute.”

If you lose all hope, you can always find it again -- Richard Ford in The Sportswriter
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#11924 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2019-January-22, 16:17

Message from Steve Robinson to the Washington DC Bridge League:

Quote

Furloughed (or excepted) federal workers, government contractors not being paid on account of the shutdown, and their dependents play free at the WBL unit game:
Beginning with this week's unit game and until the date on which a player's pay has resumed upon reopening of the relevant federal agency, players in these categories play for free at the WBL unit game.

If you lose all hope, you can always find it again -- Richard Ford in The Sportswriter
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#11925 User is online   PassedOut 

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Posted 2019-January-23, 10:57

President Trump Posts Altered Photos to Facebook and Instagram That Make Him Look Thinner

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In recent months, Trump’s official Facebook and Instagram accounts have published photos of the president that have been manipulated to make him look thinner. If it only happened once you might be able to chalk it up as an accident. But Gizmodo has discovered at least three different retouched photos on President Trump’s social media pages that have been published since October of 2018.

The image below, published on the official Donald J. Trump Facebook page on January 17 and on his Instagram account over the weekend, has been altered to make the president look more fit.

The photo looks pretty normal at first glance. But once you compare it to the original, which is available on the White House’s Flickr page, you can see what was changed.

The original photo was taken by a White House photographer on January 14, so you know that the original hasn’t been altered by anyone in the so-called “fake news media” to make Trump look heavier. It sounds silly to even have to say that, but many Trump supporters believe that the media is involved in a coordinated conspiracy against him. Allegations about this conspiracy often have anti-semitic overtones.

As you can see in the comparison above, Trump’s right shoulder has been slimmed down and his face is looking thinner. He’s also gotten a haircut—well, a digital one anyway—and in one of the strangest alterations, Trump’s fingers have been made slightly longer. Seriously.

:lol:
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#11926 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2019-January-23, 12:32

 PassedOut, on 2019-January-23, 10:57, said:

President Trump Posts Altered Photos to Facebook and Instagram That Make Him Look Thinner

Quote

Trump’s fingers have been made slightly longer. Seriously.


:lol:


Yes, especially the finger he's giving to all of the U.S.A. and her allies.
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#11927 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2019-January-23, 22:20

From the Editorial Board at NYT:

Quote

It is beyond time for this pernicious shutdown to end. With each passing day, more Americans are feeling the pinch of having the federal government thrown into chaos by a political standoff over President Trump’s demand for a wall on the southern border.

The continuing battle increasingly resembles an episode of “Real Housewives,” with the attendant name-calling and hair-pulling. On Jan. 16, the House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, sent Mr. Trump a letter suggesting that he postpone his State of the Union address until the government reopened. The following day, Mr. Trump hit back, withdrawing military support for a congressional delegation that Ms. Pelosi was preparing to lead to Afghanistan.

Come Saturday, Mr. Trump introduced a new immigration plan that he touted as a grand compromise but that, in reality, included enough poison pills to gag all but fervent hard-liners. On Wednesday, he followed up with a letter to Ms. Pelosi, declaring his intention to deliver his big speech as planned in the House chamber, shutdown or no. The speaker promptly announced that she would not allow the president to speak on the House floor for the duration of the shutdown.

“The State of the Union speech has been canceled by Nancy Pelosi because she doesn’t want to hear the truth,” Mr. Trump told reporters. He said he’d find another place to give the address.

So further down the rabbit hole we go.

As an alternative to the Don-and-Nancy drama, the Senate could take a small but solid step toward rescuing Americans from further pain and humiliation, when on Thursday it takes up a pair of competing plans to reopen the government.

After weeks of insisting that there is nothing Senate Republicans can do about the shutdown, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has agreed to hold a floor vote on two proposals to end it — a clear sign that lawmakers are feeling the heat and anxious to at least look like they’re taking action.

One measure is the immigration plan that Mr. Trump rolled out Saturday, an offering that seems custom-designed to turn off Democrats. The second is far more modest: a continuing resolution that would fund the government through Feb. 8 and that, aside from some extra money thrown in for disaster relief, is basically identical to a bill the Senate passed in December.

Back then, Mr. Trump initially agreed to accept the stopgap plan, before executing a last-minute back flip after being accused of apostasy by Rush Limbaugh and Ann Coulter. This time, the funding bill, like Mr. Trump’s proposal, is widely expected to fail.

This would be a waste. Embracing a short-term continuing resolution could provide an opening — no matter how narrow and fraught — for lawmakers to push this mess a few inches closer to a resolution. And at this point, every inch is a minor miracle. Republican senators with even a faint spark of independence remaining should stiffen their spines, stop providing cover for the president and signal their commitment to ending the shutdown madness by backing the measure. They did it once, just a few weeks ago. How hard can it be to do so again?

On the other hand, if members of the majority decline to step up, they should expect Democrats to ratchet up the pressure. Pass or fail, the very act of senators’ voting alters the story line that McConnell and company have been peddling: that Republican lawmakers are helpless observers in some tacky war between the president and congressional Democrats.

This was always a dishonest narrative. Mr. McConnell’s refusal to have his members vote on the funding proposals coming out of the House has been a cynical political move, an attempt to absolve his team of any responsibility — with either the public or the president — for the impasse.

With Thursday’s votes, Republicans will no longer have that cover. In December, the stopgap bill passed on a voice vote, meaning that individual members’ positions were not recorded. This time around, a formal roll call will be conducted, letting the public know exactly who favors moving forward and who would rather keep the government closed to satisfy the president.

Obviously, a short-term extension does not address the underlying issues that led to this shutdown. But by reopening the government, even briefly, the Senate could change the dynamic so that Democrats are not operating in a hostage situation — that is, negotiating with the president while he’s holding in his hands the livelihood of some 800,000 federal workers and those who rely on them. Democrats have vowed that they will not bargain under such circumstances — period — lest they encourage Mr. Trump to behave similarly going forward.

Considering the president’s track record, this is a reasonable concern. But if the government reopens briefly, it could ease the conflict enough to get everyone back to the bargaining table.

The assumption now is that Mr. McConnell is looking to send a message to Mr. Trump with this pair of votes. Both measures failing could show the president just how impossible this situation has become and how everyone needs to rethink his or her positions.

But counting on this president to behave rationally has burned Mr. McConnell before. The only thing Mr. Trump seems to respect is power. If the Senate wants to end this standoff, members will need to assert some of their own.

If you lose all hope, you can always find it again -- Richard Ford in The Sportswriter
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#11928 User is online   johnu 

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Posted 2019-January-25, 04:13

Dennison Says Grocers, Lenders Will Cut Federal Workers A Break: ‘That’s What Happens’

Quote

But Trump defended the man and said that banks were also “working along” with those facing financial hardship during the shutdown, “and that’s what happens in a time like this.”


I'm sure if you go into the local grocery store and ask if you can have a cart full of groceries without paying right now that everything will go very smoothly. Especially if you are a person of color and the manager and clerk are white. Yep, that will certainly go well :rolleyes:

As far as banks go, I'm sure they will cut you a sweetheart deal if

1) Your name is Trump
2) You are doing Kompromat with Russia
3) The bank is Deutsche Bank
4) Deutsche Bank is laundering money for Putin and the Russian Oligarchs

Dennison Lender Of Choice, Deutsche Bank, Faces Intense New Scrutiny | Rachel Maddow | MSNBC
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#11929 User is offline   hrothgar 

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Posted 2019-January-25, 05:13

I will gladly pay you on Tuesday for a hamburger today
Alderaan delenda est
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#11930 User is offline   hrothgar 

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Posted 2019-January-25, 07:42

Looks like an interesting day in the news...

Stone going down is a huge development.
Alderaan delenda est
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#11931 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2019-January-25, 08:23

 hrothgar, on 2019-January-25, 07:42, said:

Looks like an interesting day in the news...

Stone going down is a huge development.


From the indictment:

Quote

After the July 22, 2016 release of stolen DNC emails by Organization 1, a senior Trump Campaign official was directed to contact STONE about any additional releases and what other damaging information Organization 1 had regarding the Clinton Campaign. STONE thereafter told the Trump Campaign about potential future releases of damaging material by Organization 1.


(My emphasis)


And soon it may be Kushner's time in the barrel:
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#11932 User is online   johnu 

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Posted 2019-January-25, 10:59

 Winstonm, on 2019-January-25, 08:23, said:

And soon it may be Kushner's time in the barrel:

Kushner has been doing dennison shady stuff since before he joined the White House.

YT: Kushner's business got $500M in loans after White House meetings

If he was part of the government shutdown, he could also have got a loan for that week's groceries.

And more loans from Qatar

THE KUSHNERS ARE FINALLY GETTING THAT SWEET, SWEET QATARI CASH

And there is the upcoming scandal about how Kushner was given top secret security clearance.

Officials rejected Jared Kushner for top secret security clearance, but were overruled

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Kushner's was one of at least 30 cases in which Kline overruled career security experts and approved a top-secret clearance for incoming Trump officials despite unfavorable information, the two sources said. They said the number of rejections that were overruled was unprecedented — it had happened only once in the three years preceding Kline's arrival.

Why bother with reviewing anybody for security clearances if a political appointee is going to approve them anyways.

Quote

As a very senior official, Kushner was seeking an even higher designation that would grant him access to what is known as "sensitive compartmented information," or SCI. That material makes up the government's most sensitive secrets,

Quote

After Kline overruled the White House security specialists and recommended Kushner for a top-secret clearance, Kushner's file then went to the CIA for a ruling on SCI.

After reviewing the file, CIA officers who make clearance decisions balked, two of the people familiar with the matter said. One called over to the White House security division, wondering how Kushner got even a top-secret clearance, the sources said.

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#11933 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2019-January-25, 11:21

 johnu, on 2019-January-25, 04:13, said:


Don't know about bankers, but I've heard a number of stories about restaurants giving free food to government workers. Just this morning WGBH aired this story about a Boston Chinese restaurauteur giving free dumplings to federal workers, and next week he's going to add rice bowls.

But the fact that a few private individuals and companies are stepping up to help these people should hardly be considered an excuse to let the shutdown drag on. People also donate money and goods to victims of natural disasters, but it's a drop in the bucket compared to government relief.

#11934 User is online   johnu 

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Posted 2019-January-25, 11:54

 barmar, on 2019-January-25, 11:21, said:

Don't know about bankers, but I've heard a number of stories about restaurants giving free food to government workers. Just this morning WGBH aired this story about a Boston Chinese restaurauteur giving free dumplings to federal workers, and next week he's going to add rice bowls.

But the fact that a few private individuals and companies are stepping up to help these people should hardly be considered an excuse to let the shutdown drag on. People also donate money and goods to victims of natural disasters, but it's a drop in the bucket compared to government relief.

And there's this

Chef Jose Andres’ pop-up kitchen serves free food to federal workers affected by shutdown

Jose Andres is also well known for serving free food in Puerto Rico after Hurrican Maria. Many thanks to Jose, but it's a sad comment on America that such efforts are needed when there is no natural disaster.

And maybe many tens of thousands will be helped by others. The problem is that there are 800,000 federal employees not getting paid anything.

How much does average US household have in a savings account?

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the median savings account balance across American households is $4,830

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40 percent of U.S. adults don't have enough savings to cover a mere $400 emergency

Quote

Last year, the average U.S. household spent 60,060, according to the U.S Bureau of Labor Statistics. That's roughly $5,000 a month.

The average expenditures is much higher than the median expenditure but are not quoted (available?).

And that doesn't count non government employees who are either laid off or have their hours substantially reduced because their companies depend on spending by the government (service and supply type stores ) or government employees (restaurants, shops, etc).
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#11935 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2019-January-25, 12:38

Pink Floyd has chimed in on the response of Individual-1 to the Roger Stone arrest: "All in all, you just shat another brick for your wall."
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#11936 User is online   johnu 

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Posted 2019-January-25, 14:00

Shutdown over?

Trump announces deal for government to reopen for three weeks, ending longest shutdown; no money for his border wall

A 3 week temporary win for the Democrats. The troubling issue is that the agreement is only for 3 weeks. Is there going to be another shutdown once the temporary agreement expires?
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#11937 User is offline   jjbrr 

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Posted 2019-January-25, 15:37

 johnu, on 2019-January-25, 14:00, said:

Shutdown over?

Trump announces deal for government to reopen for three weeks, ending longest shutdown; no money for his border wall

A 3 week temporary win for the Democrats. The troubling issue is that the agreement is only for 3 weeks. Is there going to be another shutdown once the temporary agreement expires?


“They save good people from attempting a very dangerous journey from other countries - thousands of miles - because they have a glimmer of hope of coming through. With a wall, they don’t have that hope.”

-The President of the United States
OK
bed
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#11938 User is online   johnu 

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Posted 2019-January-25, 18:31

 jjbrr, on 2019-January-25, 15:37, said:

“They save good people from attempting a very dangerous journey from other countries - thousands of miles - because they have a glimmer of hope of coming through. With a wall, they don’t have that hope.”

-The President of the United States

I wonder what good people he's talking about.

Quote

When Mexico sends its people, they’re not sending their best. They’re not sending you. They’re not sending you. They’re sending people that have lots of problems, and they’re bringing those problems with us. They’re bringing drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re rapists. And some, I assume, are good people.”

–Real estate mogul Donald Trump, presidential announcement speech, June 16, 2015

Or maybe the good people are the Dreamers who are either US military veterans or currently serving in the US military that President Bone Spurs wants to deport.

Or maybe he was talking about the caravans coming north through Mexico. Those that made it to the border are mostly camped out at legal entry points along the border trying to apply for asylum.

He did say

Quote

So let me be very clear: We really have no choice but to build a powerful wall or steel barrier. If we don’t get a fair deal from Congress, the government will either shut down on February 15th, again, or I will use the powers afforded to me under the laws and the Constitution of the United States to address this emergency.

He could have signed bills a month ago and declared an emergency. He threatened to do so a number of times and didn't. If he does declare an emergency, the House will try to block any wall spending and the dispute will likely end up in the Supreme Court.

That being said, from what I've read, the Democrats are willing to provide some funding for a wall in exchange for a permanent DACA solution, and other immigration agreements.
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#11939 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2019-January-25, 19:17

 johnu, on 2019-January-25, 14:00, said:

Shutdown over?

Trump announces deal for government to reopen for three weeks, ending longest shutdown; no money for his border wall

A 3 week temporary win for the Democrats. The troubling issue is that the agreement is only for 3 weeks. Is there going to be another shutdown once the temporary agreement expires?


I cannot imagine the shutdown being repeated. But then I couldn't imagine a president shutting down government to get his way on building a wall, so maybe I am wrong.
Something interesting happened during the shutdown.Everyday people were hurt. A relative on my wife's side is a TSA agent. She is white, female, and although I have never asked her, probably gay. She was hurt. Straight white males were hurt. Old people were hurt. Young people were hurt. African Americans, male and female, were hurt. The damage shoved aside any notion of identity politics. It was sufficiently widespread so that everyone was affected, many very directly and substantially. And the issue was clear. There was a bill to open government, Trump would not support it unless he got his wall, McConnell would not allow a vote unless Trump got his wall. A person did not need to read a ten page article in some obscure political journal to get the gist of what was happening.

It was heartless and vicious, and ultimately brainless. And widely seen in that way. I have conservative friends and Republican friends, some, and I think this includes the TSA agent, may well have voted for Trump. There has been some serious re-thinking going on.

We will see where this all goes, but I do not think there will be another shutdown any time soon.

Ken
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Posted 2019-January-25, 22:55

 kenberg, on 2019-January-25, 19:17, said:

I cannot imagine the shutdown being repeated. But then I couldn't imagine a president shutting down government to get his way on building a wall, so maybe I am wrong.
Something interesting happened during the shutdown.Everyday people were hurt. A relative on my wife's side is a TSA agent. She is white, female, and although I have never asked her, probably gay. She was hurt. Straight white males were hurt. Old people were hurt. Young people were hurt. African Americans, male and female, were hurt. The damage shoved aside any notion of identity politics. It was sufficiently widespread so that everyone was affected, many very directly and substantially. And the issue was clear. There was a bill to open government, Trump would not support it unless he got his wall, McConnell would not allow a vote unless Trump got his wall. A person did not need to read a ten page article in some obscure political journal to get the gist of what was happening.

It was heartless and vicious, and ultimately brainless. And widely seen in that way. I have conservative friends and Republican friends, some, and I think this includes the TSA agent, may well have voted for Trump. There has been some serious re-thinking going on.

We will see where this all goes, but I do not think there will be another shutdown any time soon.


by opening his mouth and exposing how unfamiliar he is with the lives of normal Americans, Wilbur Ross may have done as much damage to the Republican party as anyone since Nixon - well, since Individual-1, anyway.
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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