I say YES. YOU say NO....Numero Tre! Enjoy!

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Comments

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342

    In a rather round-about way, but yes. I do hope though that our government is structured well enough to withstand a lot of their attempts at destructions.

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342

    So on board with this.

  • miriandra
    miriandra Member Posts: 2,232
  • ruthbru
    ruthbru Member Posts: 47,801

    On a more cheerful note, I want to share some pictures of the White House all decorated for The Holidays. One of my former students lives in DC & always goes to one of the receptions and posts pictures. I thought you might enjoy them, since next year they will probably be blood red again.

  • betrayal
    betrayal Member Posts: 3,648

    Lovely painting of Lady Bird Johnson.

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342

    The W. House most years is delightful, and your former student is so fortunate to be able to go and get those pictures. I'm with you though Ruth. The years from 2017 - 2020 were something less than charming to try and be somewhat neutral seeing how it is such a lovely holiday.

    I will not be looking forward much to anything 'those' people do and likely even less ANY holiday times since it has never seemed to me that they had any real reverence for them anyway. Not even Easter which I think many of the WH occupants seemed to go out of their way to make it delightful.

    I couldn't call Trump by his elected status designated name (pres.), and I was never able to think of Melania with the First Lady designation. In my thoughts they are still interlopers who did not have a great status in their everyday life (unless you want to call con, cheat, liar, abuser, etc, as some sort of status) and that goes very much into where they have once again landed. As far as I'm concerned — all those negative things and more still apply and Trump will take office definitely as the FELON he is. What a way people chose to bring degrading embarrassment and shame to our government.

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342

    We can choose to gather to our hearts the thorns of disappointment, failure, loneliness, and dismay in our present situation. Or we can gather the flowers of God's grace, boundless love, abiding presence, and unmatched joy. I choose to gather the flowers.     -Barbara Johnson

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342
    December 17, 2024

    Yesterday, Trump gave his first press conference since the election. It was exactly what Trump’s public performances always are: attention-grabbing threats alongside lies and very little apparent understanding of actual issues. His mix of outrageous and threatening is central to his politics, though: it keeps him central to the media, even though, as Josh Marshall pointed out in Talking Points Memo on December 13, he often claims a right to do something he knows very little about and has no power to accomplish. The uncertainty he creates is key to his power, Marshall notes. It keeps everyone off balance and focused on him in anticipation of trouble to come.

    At the same time, it seems increasingly clear that the wealthy leaders who backed Trump’s reelection are not terribly concerned about his threats: they seem to see him as a figurehead rather than a policy leader. They are counting on him to deliver more tax cuts and deregulation but apparently are dismissing his campaign vows to raise tariffs and deport immigrants as mere rhetoric.

    As the promised tax cuts are already under discussion, interested parties are turning to deregulation. Susanne Rust and Ian James of the Los Angeles Times reported on Sunday that on December 5, more than a hundred industrial trade groups signed a 21-page letter to Trump complaining that “regulations are strangling our economy.” They urged him to gut Biden-era regulations and instead to “partner” with manufacturers to create “workable regulations that achieve important policy goals without imposing overly burdensome and impractical requirements on our sector.”

    They single out reductions in air quality, water quality, chemical, vehicle, and power plant environmental regulations as important for their industries. They also call for ending the “regulatory overreach” of the Biden administration on labor rules, saying those rules “threaten the employer-employee relationship and harm manufacturers’ global competitiveness.” They want an end to “right-to-repair” laws, a loosening of the rules for how and when companies need to report cyber incidents, and the replacement of mandated consumer product safety rules with “voluntary standards.”

    They also call for cuts to the Biden administration’s antitrust efforts and for looser corporate finance regulations. On December 12, Gina Heeb reported in the Wall Street Journal that Trump’s advisors are exploring ways “to dramatically shrink, consolidate or even eliminate the top bank watchdogs in Washington,” including the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).

    As Catherine Rampell explained in the Washington Post today, Congress created the FDIC in 1933 to protect bank deposits so that a bank’s customers can trust that mismanaged banks won’t lose their money. The FDIC also oversees those banks so that they are less likely to get into trouble in the first place. Congress created the system after people rushing to get their money out before a collapse actually created the very collapse that they feared, with one bank failure creating another in a domino effect that dug the economy even further into the crisis it was in after the Great Crash.

    But the insurance money for those banks comes from fees assessed on the banks themselves, so abolishing the FDIC would save the banks money.

    When he learned that Trump’s advisors are eyeing cuts to the FDIC, Princeton history professor Kevin Kruse commented: “When I lecture about New Deal banking reforms, I note that some of the key measures—like Glass Steagall—were repealed by the right with disastrous results like the 2008 financial meltdown, but ha ha, no one will ever be stupid enough to kill FDIC and bring back the old bank runs.”

    Ben Guggenheim of Politico was the first to report that twenty-nine Republican members of Congress are also quick off the blocks in getting into the act of promoting private industry, calling for the incoming president to end the program of the Internal Revenue Service that lets people file their taxes directly without using a private tax preparer. Other developed countries use a similar public system, but in the U.S., private tax preparers staunchly opposed the public system. When more than 140,000 people used the IRS pilot program this year, they saved an estimated $6.5 million. Republicans called for its end, warning it is “a threat to taxpayers’ freedom from government overreach.”

    But for all their faith that Trump will deregulate the economy, economic leaders seem to think his other promises were just rhetoric.

    Brian Schwartz of the Wall Street Journal reported Sunday that business executives have been lobbying Trump to change his declared plans on tariffs. The president-elect has vowed to place tariffs of 25% on products from Canada and Mexico, and of an additional 10% on products from China. He claims to believe that other countries will pay these tariffs, but in fact U.S. consumers will pay them. That, plus the fact that other countries will almost certainly respond with their own tariffs against U.S. products, makes economists warn that Trump’s plans will hurt the economy with both inflation and trade wars.

    Schwartz reported that some companies and some Republicans are hoping that Trump’s tariff threats are simply a bargaining tactic.

    Trump supporters say something similar about his vow to deport 11 to 20 million undocumented immigrants, hoping he won’t actually go after long-term, hardworking undocumented people. On December 10, Jack Dolan reported in the Los Angeles Times that the resort town of Mammoth Lakes, California, depends on migrant labor, and on December 15, Eli Saslow and Erin Schaff of the New York Times reported the story of an undocumented worker brought to the U.S. as an infant, who is now trying to figure out his future after his beloved father-in-law voted for Trump. Two days ago, CNN reported on Trump-supporting dairy farmers in South Dakota who depend on undocumented workers, insisting that Trump will not round up undocumented immigrants, no matter what he says.

    One person who is not discounting Trump’s threats is Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY). McConnell will give up his leadership position in January and has told his colleagues he feels “liberated.”

    McConnell appears to be taking a stand against Trump’s expected appointee for secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Kennedy speaks often against vaccines, and after the New York Times reported that the lawyer working with Kennedy to vet potential HHS staff petitioned federal regulators to take the polio vaccine off the market, McConnell—a polio survivor—warned: “Efforts to undermine public confidence in proven cures are not just uninformed—they’re dangerous. Anyone seeking the Senate’s consent to serve in the incoming administration would do well to steer clear of even the appearance of association with such efforts.”

    McConnell has also been vocal about his opposition to Trump’s isolationism. He is a champion of sending military support to Ukraine and, after he steps down from the leadership, will chair the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense, the subcommittee that controls military spending. “America’s national security interests face the gravest array of threats since the Second World War,” McConnell says. “At this critical moment, a new Senate Republican majority has a responsibility to secure the future of U.S. leadership and primacy.”

    McConnell will also chair the Rules Committee, which gives him a chance to stop MAGA senators from trying to abandon the power of the Senate and permit Trump to get his way. McConnell has said that “[d]efending the Senate as an institution and protecting the right to political speech in our elections remain among my longest-standing priorities.”

    That last sentence identifies the current struggle in the Republican Party. McConnell is showing his willingness to prevent Trump and MAGA Republicans from bulldozing their way through the Senate in order to undermine the departments of Justice, Defense, and Health and Human Services, among others. But when he talks about “protecting the right to political speech in our elections,” he is talking about protecting the Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision that permits corporations and wealthy individuals to flood our elections, and thus our political system, with money.

    It is those corporations and wealthy individuals who are now lining up for tax cuts and deregulation, but who don’t want the tariffs or mass deportations or isolationism Trump’s “America First” MAGA base wants.

    Trump and his team have been talking about their election win as a “mandate” and a “landslide,” but it was actually a razor thin victory with more voters choosing someone other than Trump than voting for him. He will need the support of establishment Republicans in the Senate to put his MAGA policies in place.

    At yesterday's press conference, he appeared to be nodding to McConnell when he promised: “You’re not going to lose the polio vaccine. That’s not going to happen.” McConnell’s fierce use of power in the past suggests that the Senate’s giving up its constitutional power to bend to Trump’s will isn’t likely to happen, either.

  • ruthbru
    ruthbru Member Posts: 47,801
  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342

    I love this picture. He looks exactly like what he has always been — a rather spoiled two yr. old that someone took a toy from.

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342

    Some of the world's dumbest people strike again.

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342

    Read earlier the Reps. have released the whole investigative report on him. Likely interesting.

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342

    Yes.

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342

    Maga is so proud of their convicted felon, and they won't let anyone talk them out of him.

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342
  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342
  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342
  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342
  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342

    They just can't see the 'beast' that is greed at all.

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342

    We have to hope they get it.

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342
  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342

    Brain damaged.

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342
  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342
  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342

    So painfully, painfully true.

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342

    A little bit of early privatization anyone.

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342
    edited December 18

    BREAKING: Donald Trump gives the world a taste of the chaos to come in his second term with a deeply bizarre rant against Canada early this morning. This is EXACTLY what Democrats voted against..."No one can answer why we subsidize Canada to the tune of over $100,000,000 a year? Makes no sense!" Trump lashed out on Truth Social."Many Canadians want Canada to become the 51st State. They would save massively on taxes and military protection. I think it is a great idea. 51st State!!!" he added.

    This is not the first time that Trump has "proposed" making Canada a state, a deeply disrespectful insult to a country with a proud history and national identity. Trump has also threatened stiff tariffs if Canada fails to stem the flow of migrants and drugs into the USA. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau traveled to Mar-a-Lago to urge Trump to refrain from such destructive plans.The stream of abuse has been frequent, with Trump referring to Trudeau as a "governor" of "the Great State of Canada."This is what Trump does. He alienates our allies, damages our standing in the world, and behaves like a schoolyard bully

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342

    Universal Heath Care unless you're going to do away with the Medicare premiums that always seem to go up.

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342
    edited December 18

    BREAKING: MAGA Congressman Matt Gaetz gets slammed with stunning bad news as the House Ethics Committee votes to release its bombshell investigation into his alleged misconduct.This is a dramatic reversal and Gaetz's worst nightmare...The full report could be published as soon as this week, according to a source who spoke to The Hill.

    The plan is to publish it after the House holds its last vote for 2024.Previously, it was believed that the report might never see the light of day. The committee voted just lsat month against releasing it.Gaetz himself is already melting down over it. He slammed the panel and defended his behavior as "embarrassing, though not criminal."The certain-to-be-bombshell report is the result of three and half years of investigation into allegations of illegal drug use and sexual misconduct, including sex with a minor.If it's as bad as many suspect, Gaetz will never recover.

  • illinoislady
    illinoislady Member Posts: 40,342
    edited December 18

    Will rob the treasure blind — the whole idea of Trump love right now. Because this poor soul needs more money.