Author Topic: President Trump's accomplishments and promises kept  (Read 78803 times)






Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69401
    • View Profile
WSJ on Operation Warp Speed
« Reply #405 on: December 24, 2020, 08:08:49 PM »
second post



With the rollout of Covid-19 vaccines, a light has appeared in the darkness. A hard winter lies ahead, but this pandemic will soon be over.

How can this be happening only 10 months after the first Covid death in the U.S., rather than the 10 years it took to develop a vaccine for measles? Nine months ago, Anthony Fauci stated unambiguously: “It will take at least a year and a half to have a vaccine we can use.” The public-health community dismissed that as a fantasy. A co-inventor of the rotavirus vaccine, Paul Offit, noted: “When Dr. Fauci said 12 to 18 months, I thought that was ridiculously optimistic.” A New York Times vaccine timeline went further, declaring: “The grim truth behind this rosy forecast is that a vaccine probably won’t arrive any time soon.”
Opinion: Potomac Watch
Trump Demands More Covid Money
Subscribe

Those naysayers have been proved wrong and it’s worth considering why. Let me invite the reader to answer a short quiz. When in the months ahead you are vaccinated, to whom should you be most thankful for making this possible?

• The initiative forwarded by the United Nations, Group of 20, World Health Organization and COVAX—an affiliate of WHO and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations—that called for “a ‘people’s vaccine’ available and affordable for everyone, everywhere,” in the words of U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres ?
Newsletter Sign-up
Opinion: Morning Editorial Report

All the day's Opinion headlines.
SUBSCRIBED

• Foundations and donors, including the consortium led by the Gates Foundation that established the CEPI (the “alliance to finance and coordinate the development of new vaccines”) at Davos, Switzerland, in 2017?

• Leaders of federal agencies, including the directors of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Food and Drug Administration, and National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the health and human services secretary and the assistant secretary for health?

• The hundreds of medical and public health schools, their associated research labs and hospitals, and the tens of thousands of epidemiologists, virologists and other experts who have been talking endlessly about this plague?

• President Trump’s Operation Warp Speed, led by Moncef Slaoui —a controversial former head of vaccine development at the pharmaceutical company GlaxoSmithKline, which has delivered more vaccines than any other company in the world—which gave billions of taxpayer dollars to biotech and pharmaceutical companies to speed vaccine development and manufacture doses in advance in case a vaccine proved effective?

• Private, profit-seeking corporations including Pfizer, BioNTech, Moderna, AstraZeneca, Novavax and their counterparts?

Failure is an orphan; victory has a hundred fathers. In this case, success is certain to have thousands of paternity claimants. Many of those listed above will credibly claim to have contributed. But if this were a court of law allocating liability for damage done by a medicine, rather than a grateful public offering thanks, which of the actors would be held most responsible? Assuming all other claimants had done precisely what they did in this case—except for one—what is the likelihood that vaccines would be available today?

The answer is as clear as it will be uncomfortable to some readers. Had the WHO and Gates Foundation not existed, there would have been little difference in the availability of the vaccine. Had all of the departments and agencies in the U.S. government been on autopilot, this miraculous development would never have happened. This bureaucracy—including the CDC, FDA and HHS—was unable to provide a coronavirus test for several months after South Korea, Singapore and others were conducting extensive testing under their public-health responses.

Universities are rightly claiming to have built the foundations of knowledge without which other researchers couldn’t have sequenced the virus’s genome or developed mRNA delivery systems necessary to Pfizer and Moderna’s vaccines. But holding the pre-Covid base of knowledge constant, these scholarly researchers could have slept through the pandemic and it would have made little difference.

There are clearly only two primary causes behind the Covid-19 vaccine. The first was the capitalist system, which facilitated competition between private, profit-seeking biotech and pharmaceutical companies to produce a lifesaving product.

Like charities, universities, government agencies and pretty much everyone else, these organizations want to do good. But companies like Germany-based BioNTech, its Boston-based competitor Moderna, and the pharmaceutical giant Pfizer have also been racing for a pot of gold at the end of this rainbow. There would be no Covid-19 vaccine today had there been no venture capitalists prepared to invest before a product or profit was visible, no corporate leadership willing to double down with the companies’ own money in the spring to fund a crash effort to produce a vaccine by year-end, and no researchers pursuing a dream about mRNA as an unprecedented route for vaccines.

Second is Operation Warp Speed. Had Mr. Trump not created the initiative, appointed as its leader a man who knows the vaccine development world, and given him license to spend $10 billion outside normal contracting procedures, Covid-19 vaccines would still be only works in progress. Even after they were finally approved, the vaccines’ distribution could have been long delayed. Imagine a world in which Mr. Trump had not appointed as deputy head of the operation a general who knows logistics and had the authority to write contracts with FedEx and UPS to book space on their airplanes and in their network of distribution centers.

So as Americans now look forward to getting vaccinated and resuming our normal lives, we should pause to give thanks to a remarkable group of scientists and entrepreneurs whose capitalism-fed competitive drive pushed them to venture into the unknown—for fortune and fame. And to a deeply flawed, often dysfunctional disrupter in chief who in this case certainly did a good thing.

Mr. Allison, a professor of government at Harvard, is author of “Destined for War: Can America and China Escape Thucydides’s Trap?” (2017)

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69401
    • View Profile


ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18510
    • View Profile
Trumps tops Barack
« Reply #408 on: December 29, 2020, 07:55:15 AM »

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18510
    • View Profile
SCOTUS
« Reply #409 on: December 29, 2020, 09:51:29 AM »
https://justthenews.com/government/courts-law/supreme-court-vacates-lower-court-rulings-related-trump-admin-apportionment

as always on the  cases with important political implications the libs ALWAYS find a way to argue for the Democwats

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18253
    • View Profile
Re: President Trump's accomplishments, legacy
« Reply #410 on: December 30, 2020, 07:04:42 AM »
Soon the question will be which accomplishments are lasting and what is his legacy.

The main legacy of the Trump administration will be the losing of the White House, House AND Senate if Republicans do not win at least one of these two seats in Georgia.  Why can't they stay focused on this crucial contest?  God help us.


Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69401
    • View Profile
WSJ: School Vouchers
« Reply #412 on: December 31, 2020, 06:24:26 AM »
Democrats hate vouchers so much that they restricted states from using education funds in the $900 billion Covid relief bill to help struggling families during the pandemic send their kids to private schools. All the more credit to President Trump for opening the door for at least some school-choice relief.

The Covid-19 relief bill sets aside $2.75 billion for private K-12 schools on top of some $54.3 billion for public schools. The catch is that none of the private-school funds can be used for vouchers that go directly to families. States can use the funds to support prep schools attended by the children of Members of Congress, but not to help low-income kids attend those schools.

Democrats, er, unions, were angry after several Republican governors used their small pot of discretionary education money from the Cares Act to help low- and middle-income families struggling to afford private-school tuition. So they fought to stop governors from doing so again. Republicans surrendered because they didn’t want to hold up the bill.


On Monday Mr. Trump signed an executive order that helps remedy the injustice by allowing states and local agencies to draw from $1.7 billion in federal funds from the separate Community Services Block Grant (CSBG) program to “provide emergency learning scholarships to disadvantaged families for use by any child without access to in-person learning.”

NEWSLETTER SIGN-UP
Opinion: Morning Editorial Report
All the day's Opinion headlines.

PREVIEW
SUBSCRIBED
States are supposed to allocate the grant money to groups that help low-income folks with employment, education and housing, among other things. Mr. Trump’s order says recipients can also use the grant funds for scholarships to assist families with private-school tuition and other education costs.

The executive order cites a June McKinsey study projecting that Hispanic, black and low-income students would lose 9.2, 10.3 and 12.4 months of learning, respectively, if in-person classes didn’t fully resume before January 2021. It also found that the average K-12 student in the U.S. could lose $61,000 to $82,000 in lifetime earnings in that scenario.

Joe Biden could reverse Mr. Trump’s order, but he’ll have to explain why he wants to keep low-income families from in-person education that public schools refuse to provide despite getting tens of billions more in relief.


ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18510
    • View Profile
we work for government unions
« Reply #413 on: December 31, 2020, 06:29:00 AM »
"Democrats, er, unions, were angry after several Republican governors used their small pot of discretionary education money from the Cares Act to help low- and middle-income families struggling to afford private-school tuition. So they fought to stop governors from doing so again. Republicans surrendered because they didn’t want to hold up the bill."

Even FDR said government unions are a bad idea
ridiculous how much power they wield over us and their marriage to ONE party

what a scam


DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18253
    • View Profile
Re: we work for government unions
« Reply #414 on: December 31, 2020, 07:31:41 AM »
"Democrats, er, unions, were angry after several Republican governors used their small pot of discretionary education money from the Cares Act to help low- and middle-income families struggling to afford private-school tuition. So they fought to stop governors from doing so again. Republicans surrendered because they didn’t want to hold up the bill."

Even FDR said government unions are a bad idea
ridiculous how much power they wield over us and their marriage to ONE party

what a scam

Government (public sector) unions are a bad idea.

When you think of the times and places where unions once made sense, the logic was that the 'evil capitalist' had too much power over the people (because he employed them and hardly anyone else did).  Think of a town where one company employs 90% of the workforce.  Where does that happen anymore?  Maybe in Washington DC with the federal government. In the public sector union situation the 'evil capitalists' are the voters who allegedly run the public sector, meaning the will of the people.  The public sector union serves to remove the will of the people from the center of the equation.  Besides that that's wrong, it defines which side of the political spectrum you are on.  Democrats want the will of the people removed as far as possible from real decision making.



Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69401
    • View Profile
Stratfor: US adds CNOOC to Export Blacklist
« Reply #417 on: January 14, 2021, 02:24:42 PM »
The U.S. Adds Chinese Oil Giant CNOOC to Its Export Blacklist
4 MINS READ
Jan 14, 2021 | 21:50 GMT

HIGHLIGHTS

The U.S. Commerce Department added the Chinese National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) to its entity list on Jan. 14, effectively cutting off China’s third-largest oil company from U.S. exports. The move highlights the South China Sea’s importance to U.S. strategy, which will likely continue -- though not necessarily expand -- under U.S. President-elect Joe Biden. The Trump administration has significantly increased pressure on CNOOC in recent months, beginning in December when it added CNOOC to a separate U.S. Pentagon list of companies that are either owned by or controlled by the Chinese military, which will force certain U.S. investors to divest from CNOOC’s shares by mid-November. Just hours before the Commerce Department’s announcement, the S&P Dow Jones announced it was removing CNOOC from impacted indices to comply with a Jan. 13 presidential order banning U.S. investment into designated Chinese military-linked companies. As a result, major U.S. exchanges will likely delist...

The U.S. Commerce Department added the Chinese National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) to its entity list on Jan. 14, effectively cutting off China’s third-largest oil company from U.S. exports. The move highlights the South China Sea’s importance to U.S. strategy, which will likely continue — though not necessarily expand — under U.S. President-elect Joe Biden. The Trump administration has significantly increased pressure on CNOOC in recent months, beginning in December when it added CNOOC to a separate U.S. Pentagon list of companies that are either owned by or controlled by the Chinese military, which will force certain U.S. investors to divest from CNOOC’s shares by mid-November. Just hours before the Commerce Department’s announcement, the S&P Dow Jones announced it was removing CNOOC from impacted indices to comply with a Jan. 13 presidential order banning U.S. investment into designated Chinese military-linked companies. As a result, major U.S. exchanges will likely delist the company in the coming days and weeks.

Targeting CNOOC, historically the most technocratic of China’s major state-owned oil companies, indicates the rising U.S. attention on China’s assertive posture in the South China Sea. As China’s main offshore operator, CNOOC has been central to China’s drilling campaign in the region, which has encroached on disputed waters for years. The Commerce Department’s press release specifically cited CNOOC’s role in supporting Beijing’s efforts in the South China Sea, with U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross saying that the company bullied countries like Vietnam on the behalf of China’s People’s Liberation Army. 

In 2012, CNOOC kicked off an accelerated drilling campaign in disputed waters claimed by Vietnam and Japan. Since then, the company has been involved in a number of escalations in the South China Sea, with Beijing using the company’s exploration activities as a way to effectively implement control over maritime territory.

The inclusion of CNOOC on the entity list will significantly cut off the company’s access to U.S. technology, which is pervasive throughout the energy sector. It will also damage CNOOC’s reliability as a partner in its overseas operations. The immediate impact of the new designation will be limited to CNOOC itself since none of its subsidiaries were added to the entity list. The biggest implications will be related to the company’s domestic offshore operations, as CNOOC will now have to find alternatives to the U.S. suppliers and technology being used in those operations. Although CNOOC’s overseas subsidiaries will not be directly affected, companies exporting to the subsidiaries and consortiums will now also need to conduct enhanced due diligence in order to ensure that exports – including deemed exports of technology – do not trigger U.S. restrictions by eventually falling into the hands of the parent company. The scaling up of the U.S. pressure campaign against CNOOC will also damage both the company and all of its subsidiaries’ global reputation, meaning international oil companies may be less willing to partner with CNOOC in future projects.

CNOOC claims to be active in over 40 countries, and is particularly active in Africa, Asia and Latin America. CNOOC is also a major partner in burgeoning oil producers Guyana and Uganda. Through a subsidiary, CNOOC also has acreage in the United States as well.
The Biden administration is unlikely to expand the ban to CNOOC’s international subsidiaries for fear of blowback from the company’s global partners, such as U.S.-based ExxonMobil. But a full removal of CNOOC from the list is also unlikely due to the political consequences of appearing weak on China and CNOOC’s expansive actions in the South China Sea.

The ultimate scope of the export ban is unclear as the United States could still approve any export licenses requested by CNOOC. But the impact of Huawei’s inclusion on the entity list has shown just how effective Washington’s export bans can be when U.S. technology is essential to the blacklisted company’s business operations. According to the semiconductor market researcher TrendForce, Huawei’s share of the global smartphone market is expected to shrink to just 4% in 2021. Before the most extensive U.S. restrictions went into place in mid-2020, Huawei was the world's top smartphone maker.

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69401
    • View Profile
Re: President Trump's accomplishments and promises kept
« Reply #418 on: January 20, 2021, 07:29:41 AM »
TTT

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18510
    • View Profile
Re: President Trump's accomplishments and promises kept
« Reply #419 on: January 20, 2021, 07:54:05 AM »
TTT - ???


DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18253
    • View Profile
Re: President Trump's accomplishments from farewell address
« Reply #420 on: January 20, 2021, 08:15:44 AM »
I was asked again yesterday why I [still] support Trump.  I never supported Trump.  I support most of these policies and results.  I oppose the race to undo them.

https://www.bostonherald.com/2021/01/19/text-read-the-complete-text-of-president-trumps-farewell-address/

Excerpt with accomplishments:

We passed the largest package of tax cuts and reforms in American history.  We slashed more job-killing regulations than any administration had ever done before.  We fixed our broken trade deals, withdrew from the horrible Trans-Pacific Partnership and the impossible Paris Climate Accord, renegotiated the one-sided South Korea deal, and we replaced NAFTA with the groundbreaking USMCA — that’s Mexico and Canada — a deal that’s worked out very, very well.

Also, and very importantly, we imposed historic and monumental tariffs on China; made a great new deal with China.  But before the ink was even dry, we and the whole world got hit with the China virus.  Our trade relationship was rapidly changing, billions and billions of dollars were pouring into the U.S., but the virus forced us to go in a different direction.

The whole world suffered, but America outperformed other countries economically because of our incredible economy and the economy that we built.  Without the foundations and footings, it wouldn’t have worked out this way.  We wouldn’t have some of the best numbers we’ve ever had.

We also unlocked our energy resources and became the world’s number-one producer of oil and natural gas by far.  Powered by these policies, we built the greatest economy in the history of the world.  We reignited America’s job creation and achieved record-low unemployment for African Americans, Hispanic Americans, Asian Americans, women — almost everyone.

Incomes soared, wages boomed, the American Dream was restored, and millions were lifted from poverty in just a few short years.  It was a miracle.  The stock market set one record after another, with 148 stock market highs during this short period of time, and boosted the retirements and pensions of hardworking citizens all across our nation.  401(k)s are at a level they’ve never been at before.  We’ve never seen numbers like we’ve seen, and that’s before the pandemic and after the pandemic.

We rebuilt the American manufacturing base, opened up thousands of new factories, and brought back the beautiful phrase: “Made in the USA.”

To make life better for working families, we doubled the child tax credit and signed the largest-ever expansion of funding for childcare and development.  We joined with the private sector to secure commitments to train more than 16 million American workers for the jobs of tomorrow.

When our nation was hit with the terrible pandemic, we produced not one, but two vaccines with record-breaking speed, and more will quickly follow.  They said it couldn’t be done but we did it.  They call it a “medical miracle,” and that’s what they’re calling it right now: a “medical miracle.”
We did in nine months.

We grieve for every life lost, and we pledge in their memory to wipe out this horrible pandemic once and for all.

When the virus took its brutal toll on the world’s economy, we launched the fastest economic recovery our country has ever seen.  We passed nearly $4 trillion in economic relief, saved or supported over 50 million jobs, and slashed the unemployment rate in half.  These are numbers that our country has never seen before.

We created choice and transparency in healthcare, stood up to big pharma in so many ways, but especially in our effort to get favored-nations clauses added, which will give us the lowest prescription drug prices anywhere in the world.

We passed VA Choice, VA Accountability, Right to Try, and landmark criminal justice reform.

We confirmed three new justices of the United States Supreme Court.  We appointed nearly 300 federal judges to interpret our Constitution as written.

For years, the American people pleaded with Washington to finally secure the nation’s borders.  I am pleased to say we answered that plea and achieved the most secure border in U.S. history.  We have given our brave border agents and heroic ICE officers the tools they need to do their jobs better than they have ever done before, and to enforce our laws and keep America safe.

We proudly leave the next administration with the strongest and most robust border security measures ever put into place.  This includes historic agreements with Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador, along with more than 450 miles of powerful new wall.

We restored American strength at home and American leadership abroad.  The world respects us again.  Please don’t lose that respect.

We reclaimed our sovereignty by standing up for America at the United Nations and withdrawing from the one-sided global deals that never served our interests.  And NATO countries are now paying hundreds of billions of dollars more than when I arrived just a few years ago.  It was very unfair.  We were paying the cost for the world.  Now the world is helping us.

And perhaps most importantly of all, with nearly $3 trillion, we fully rebuilt the American military — all made in the USA.  We launched the first new branch of the United States Armed Forces in 75 years: the Space Force.  And last spring, I stood at Kennedy Space Center in Florida and watched as American astronauts returned to space on American rockets for the first time in many, many years.

We revitalized our alliances and rallied the nations of the world to stand up to China like never before.

We obliterated the ISIS caliphate and ended the wretched life of its founder and leader, al Baghdadi.  We stood up to the oppressive Iranian regime and killed the world’s top terrorist, Iranian butcher Qasem Soleimani.

We recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and recognized Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights.

As a result of our bold diplomacy and principled realism, we achieved a series of historic peace deals in the Middle East.  Nobody believed it could happen.  The Abraham Accords opened the doors to a future of peace and harmony, not violence and bloodshed.  It is the dawn of a new Middle East, and we are bringing our soldiers home.

I am especially proud to be the first President in decades who has started no new wars.

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18510
    • View Profile
"I was asked again yesterday why I [still] support Trump."
« Reply #421 on: January 20, 2021, 08:34:56 AM »
answer could be : 
"Biden and Harris"

as simple as that
we will be begging for Trump back very soon





ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18510
    • View Profile
"I'd say he is not a fan , , , "
« Reply #425 on: January 20, 2021, 08:05:13 PM »
Sadly ,

he does have a point
we lost the Wh to a total  old dud who was a loser for decades and a black supremacist whose claim to fame is wearing sneakers  and blowing Wille Brown .

we lost seats in the Senate and thus control to the black supremacist who with the upmost humiliation to us will cast deciding votes when Joe Manchin caves as he almost alway does.

We did pick up a few in congress after losing big 2 yr ago so we are still minority there after the Trump backlash here in '18.

We on this board sound the  bugle : " Trumps accomplishments. !! " Even give his a thread.
Which except for judgeships will all be turned back within the next 2 yrs
so what the f..k good are they now?

OTOH

yet, he was the virtually the ONLY ONE  who heard us  (except for few others)

in the end he lost it all to establishment , elites , swamps and corporate media complex

So now we are back at  square one  and soon to be minus one
And now we have the above elites trying to crush us as fast as possible now - not the slow bleed from a thousand cuts
but now trying to cut our throats with one death blow


-------
We need someone new. - Not Trump !  I don't know who it will be ...


The only thing I know for sure is it won't be Kevin Williamson
OR  any other  never trumper

We continue to get our asses kicked

and China laughs

And Bloomberg Zuckerberg Bezos Page continue to laugh their way to the bank.


« Last Edit: January 20, 2021, 08:10:22 PM by ccp »

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18253
    • View Profile
Re: NRO: Witless Ape Rides Helicopter
« Reply #426 on: January 20, 2021, 08:31:47 PM »
I'd say he is not a fan , , ,     

https://www.nationalreview.com/2021/01/witless-ape-rides-helicopter/?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=NR%20Daily%20Monday%20through%20Friday%202021-01-20&utm_term=NRDaily-Smart

I thought Kevin Williamson was once good, real good. 

"Third Lady: Melania Trump departs the scene the most unpopular presidential wife in recorded statistical history."

What a jerk.  What did SHE do wrong? 

Unemployment is up?  Anyone heard of coronavirus or blue state lockdowns?  400,000 dead Americans?  What was the right number?  Universal, eternal life. Didn't stand up to China?  Seriously?  He had staredown with them, nearly bankrupted them before China-flu.
 Real facts mixed with bs and twisted to make his scorched earth point.  And what IS his point.  Evan McMullen should have been President?  Hillary??

Call Trump an ape?  That is sub-Trump.  People pay subscriptions for that?

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: "I'd say he is not a fan , , , "
« Reply #427 on: January 20, 2021, 09:17:00 PM »
You need to wrap your head around the fact that there is NO winning national elections anymore.

Sadly ,

he does have a point
we lost the Wh to a total  old dud who was a loser for decades and a black supremacist whose claim to fame is wearing sneakers  and blowing Wille Brown .

we lost seats in the Senate and thus control to the black supremacist who with the upmost humiliation to us will cast deciding votes when Joe Manchin caves as he almost alway does.

We did pick up a few in congress after losing big 2 yr ago so we are still minority there after the Trump backlash here in '18.

We on this board sound the  bugle : " Trumps accomplishments. !! " Even give his a thread.
Which except for judgeships will all be turned back within the next 2 yrs
so what the f..k good are they now?

OTOH

yet, he was the virtually the ONLY ONE  who heard us  (except for few others)

in the end he lost it all to establishment , elites , swamps and corporate media complex

So now we are back at  square one  and soon to be minus one
And now we have the above elites trying to crush us as fast as possible now - not the slow bleed from a thousand cuts
but now trying to cut our throats with one death blow


-------
We need someone new. - Not Trump !  I don't know who it will be ...


The only thing I know for sure is it won't be Kevin Williamson
OR  any other  never trumper

We continue to get our asses kicked

and China laughs

And Bloomberg Zuckerberg Bezos Page continue to laugh their way to the bank.

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18253
    • View Profile
Re: "I'd say he is not a fan , , , "
« Reply #428 on: January 21, 2021, 07:35:53 AM »
You need to wrap your head around the fact that there is NO winning national elections anymore.

For another view...   Winning hearts and minds still matters.  Putting forward better policies, better candidates, better messaging and better results still matters.  Margin of victory or loss matters.  Winning the middle when the left goes too far Left still matters.  Setting the record straight for both parties accomplishments matters.  Answering and calling out the bullsh*t of writings like this ape article still matters. 

Our elections including Legislature, House, Senate, President are mostly state (and local) contests - with national consequences.  Like community organizers Barack and Stacey, act locally.

Winning the Supreme Court seats of Gorsuch, Kavanaugh and Barrett did not help the vote fraud case but it does matter going forward, especially in comparison of with who would hold those seats if the Left chose them.

A 50-50 split with many factors against us is not the point where we quit.  Documenting Trump accomplishments before the pandemic is part of the fight.
« Last Edit: January 21, 2021, 07:37:49 AM by DougMacG »

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18253
    • View Profile
Re: President Trump's accomplishments and promises kept, economic record
« Reply #429 on: January 21, 2021, 07:41:24 AM »

Donald Trump had an economic record that will be remembered
BY STEPHEN MOORE, OPINION CONTRIBUTOR — 01/20/21
 
Donald Trump had an economic record that will be remembered

From the article:  "...the successes in Trump’s first three years before the pandemic flattened the economy. The unemployment rate hit a low of 3.5 percent, which was near the lowest in half a century. The inflation rate fell to 1 percent, which was actually below the level the Fed targets. This has kept interest rates on mortgages, car loans and business loans down to their lowest levels in modern times.

The percentage of Americans who fell below the poverty line declined to its lowest level in recorded history in 2019. The wealth of American households, including their stocks, their savings and their homes, ranches and businesses, rose to their highest level in American history. According to the Census Bureau, median household income rose to above $65,000, up by more than $5,000 in three years. This was almost double the gain of the previous 12 years.

Perhaps most impressively, almost all of these gains were most pronounced for minorities, notably Blacks and Hispanics. Liberals are now countering this record by complaining that Trump is the first president in modern times to lose jobs in four years. This is, quite obviously, a result of the once-in-a-century pandemic, and unless the left blames Trump for the virus, the real issue is how well has the economy rebounded?

The unemployment rate was expected to be 8 percent to 10 percent, according to projections by CBO, the Federal Reserve and most Wall Street “experts.” Instead it has fallen to 6.7 percent from 13 percent in just six months. The growth rate hit an all-time quarterly high of 33.3 percent in the third quarter of 2020 and the latest estimate is for growth of 8 percent to 9 percent for the just-ended 4th quarter.

No wonder, at the end of the Trump presidency, almost six of ten Americans said they were better off than four years ago, even with the pandemic. Contrary to the “economic crisis” that President Biden says he has inherited, most experts expect the great American engine of economic growth to roar back to life in 2021 with 6 percent GDP growth. Why? Because of the vaccine that will save potentially hundreds of thousands of lives in the United States and millions around the globe. Oh, yeah, that was Operation Warp Speed. Another wildly successful Trump program.

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18253
    • View Profile
Re: President Trump's accomplishments and promises kept
« Reply #430 on: January 21, 2021, 06:29:34 PM »
[Former] Secretary of State Mike Pompeo wrote the book and it's free to read on his archived twitter feed.

Go back to Jan 1 and read 19 days or \trump administration accomplishments and history in Mike Pompeo's twitter feed:

https://twitter.com/SecPompeo

One LONG slide show of things no one else is going to tell you.
------------------------
Mike Pompeo should be the frontrunner in 2024.

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: President Trump's accomplishments and promises kept
« Reply #431 on: January 21, 2021, 06:45:30 PM »
[Former] Secretary of State Mike Pompeo wrote the book and it's free to read on his archived twitter feed.

Go back to Jan 1 and read 19 days or \trump administration accomplishments and history in Mike Pompeo's twitter feed:

https://twitter.com/SecPompeo

One LONG slide show of things no one else is going to tell you.
------------------------
Mike Pompeo should be the frontrunner in 2024.

How will he poll with the masses of former illegal aliens turned registered dems? How will he fare with the dem cities vote fraud machines?

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18253
    • View Profile
Re: President Trump's accomplishments and promises kept
« Reply #432 on: January 21, 2021, 08:22:31 PM »
"How will he poll with the masses of former illegal aliens turned registered dems? How will he fare with the dem cities vote fraud machines?"

I get the pessimism but Republicans have won half the Pres elections in my adult life and need to pick the best one they can either way.  Not Dole, McCain or Romney in their 2024 versions.

Losing is one of the risks in picking a nominee, but what if he or she wins?  We want it to be someone who will lead effectively in the right direction, which won't likely happen with a lot of them.  Pompeo knows the score.

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: President Trump's accomplishments and promises kept
« Reply #433 on: January 21, 2021, 08:27:03 PM »
"How will he poll with the masses of former illegal aliens turned registered dems? How will he fare with the dem cities vote fraud machines?"

I get the pessimism but Republicans have won half the Pres elections in my adult life and need to pick the best one they can either way.  Not Dole, McCain or Romney in their 2024 versions.

Losing is one of the risks in picking a nominee, but what if he or she wins?  We want it to be someone who will lead effectively in the right direction, which won't likely happen with a lot of them.  Pompeo knows the score.

"I get the pessimism but Republicans have won half the Pres elections in my adult life "

That country doesn't exist anymore. 


Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69401
    • View Profile
Warp Speed
« Reply #435 on: February 02, 2021, 06:36:44 AM »
Why Operation Warp Speed Worked
The successful vaccine program followed the model of U.S. mobilization in World War II.
By Arthur Herman
Feb. 1, 2021 6:28 pm ET
SAVE
PRINT
TEXT
392

Gen. Gustave F. Perna during am Operation Warp Speed press briefing in Washington, Nov. 19, 2020.
PHOTO: CHRIS KLEPONIS/ZUMA PRESS



Every day new questions and criticisms arise about Operation Warp Speed, the public-private vaccine development initiative launched by presidential order in May 2020. Most of that criticism focuses on the distribution bottlenecks that have developed in different states, as Americans are impatient with the slow pace of the rollout. Jen Psaki, President Biden’s press secretary, has claimed to see an “urgent need to address failures of the Trump team approach to vaccine distribution.” Some in the new administration even want to rename the program.

Nearly all these claims rest on a misunderstanding both of Operation Warp Speed’s mission and its nature as a government program. While President Trump’s Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar and others dubbed the original project MP2, or Manhattan Project 2, after the crash effort to build an atomic bomb, Operation Warp Speed’s leadership borrowed a more practical model: the industrial mobilization during World War II that produced the so-called Arsenal of Democracy.

OPINION: POTOMAC WATCH
Covid, Kids and Teachers Unions


SUBSCRIBE
That model can still push the vaccine rollout over the finish line. Governors and other state officials in particular need to realize the federal government is operating in the wake of a health-care version of Pearl Harbor, and adjust their operations accordingly.

From the beginning the principal mission of Operation Warp Speed was the development, manufacturing, and distribution—i.e., shipping—of coronavirus vaccines. To date, the program has managed to produce and deliver about 50 million vaccine doses—all made in the U.S.—with hundreds of millions more on the way. It also had 97,000 certified receivers distributing the vaccine across the U.S.

NEWSLETTER SIGN-UP
Opinion: Morning Editorial Report
All the day's Opinion headlines.

PREVIEW
SUBSCRIBED
It is the most remarkable achievement in modern medicine, made possible by following the model of the World War II mobilization effort. That model rests on three principles.

First, set a clear target and a firm deadline. Operation Warp Speed’s goal was 20 million vaccine doses by December 2020. Aiming at that target enabled the program’s leaders, Gen. Gustave Perna and Dr. Moncef Slaoui (who resigned last month at the Biden administration’s request but will stay on as a consultant), to focus everyone in Operation Warp Speed on achieving a single result.

Second, mobilize the best pharmaceutical and drug manufacturing companies to hit the target, so that private industry invests its energy and productivity in the plan. During World War II, the big automotive and electrical companies became the driving engine of the mobilization effort, though many had never before produced arms or weapons.


In Operation Warp Speed’s case, the vaccine effort went from a single manufacturing facility in the U.S. to a network of facilities where the country’s drug companies could pool efforts to develop and manufacture vaccines. What traditional health-care experts thought of as a laboratory process became an industrial process—with prodigious results. Companies like FedEx and UPS were pressed into service to deliver the finished product.

Third, maintain government oversight from start to finish. The Commerce, Defense, and Health and Human Services departments invoked the Defense Production Act 18 times to prioritize materials and supplies for Operation Warp Speed, and get government contracts for vaccine development and manufacturing to the head of the line. The use of federal authority to guide but not micromanage the private economy’s efforts was key to producing victory in World War II and to creating the Covid vaccine in record time.

In the U.S. federal system, however, state governments can’t be steamrolled by Washington. The Arsenal of Democracy was able to ship its goods to two all-powerful federal agencies, the War and Navy departments, which knew how to get those weapons to the soldiers, sailors and airmen who would use them. There’s no corresponding federal agency in this case.

About 50 million vaccination doses have been made and shipped, but only half have been administered, while fewer than six million people have received second doses. While some states have dealt with the crisis well, many have found the process of getting shots into arms overwhelming.

It isn’t too late to turn things around, if governors start using the World War II model. One step would be appointing their National Guard adjutants general as vaccine czars with clear authority to override state agency procedures and coordinate with federal leadership.

A second step would be to set a statewide target for inoculation aimed at twice the number of inoculations in half the time recommended by state health-care bureaucrats and experts. An urgent deadline can focus minds and trigger innovative thinking in ways that can transform the effort.


Another step would be to turn major businesses with large distribution networks into links in a logistical chain that can put as much vaccine as Operation Warp Speed can supply into as many arms as need it. With some 97,000 approved distribution centers already on the books there are plenty of opportunities for speeding up dispersal as part of an all-state government effort.

Some states are doing so. West Virginia has distributed nearly 90% of its first vaccine shot supply. But much more can be done in every state by combining planning with authority and imagination—and relying on guidance from the Arsenal of Democracy model.

There’s still plenty to be done on manufacturing. The Novavax and Johnson & Johnson vaccines look promising and could be available this spring. One could argue that Moderna and Pfizer should focus now on making booster shots for the South African strain. The original architects of the World War II mobilization model would see all these issues as opportunities not obstacles. Thanks to Operation Warp Speed, America has established clear leadership in vaccine manufacturing. It is now poised to do the same for getting that vaccine to every American, starting with those who need it most.

Mr. Herman is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute and author of “Freedom’s Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II.”

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69401
    • View Profile
Operation Warp Speed
« Reply #436 on: March 03, 2021, 04:39:55 AM »
American governments, federal and state, have made many mistakes in the Covid-19 pandemic. But the great success—the saving grace—was making a financial bet in collaboration with private American industry on the development of vaccines. That effort is now letting the country see the possibility of a return to relatively normal life as early as the spring.


President Biden announced Tuesday that the U.S. should have enough vaccine supply for every American adult by the end of May. Last week the Food and Drug Administration finally approved Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine, and this week J&J struck a deal with Merck to manufacture the single-shot J&J vaccine as well. With the Moderna and Pfizer shots already going into more than a million American arms each week, thousands of lives will be saved.

It’s important to appreciate what an achievement this is. Critics scoffed when President Trump set a target of having a vaccine approved by the end of 2020, and Kamala Harris suggested she might not take a shot recommended by the Trump Administration.


The Biden-Harris Administration has now changed to full-throated encouragement—though not before continuing to trash the Trump efforts. White House aides have suggested that they inherited little vaccine supply and no plan for distribution. Both claims are false.



The supply was ramping up fast, and while there were distribution glitches at first, the real problem has been the last mile of distribution controlled by states. Governors like New York’s Andrew Cuomo tried to satisfy political constituencies that wanted early access to vaccines, adding complexity and bureaucracy that confused the public.

Mr. Biden made the same mistake Tuesday, asking states to give priority to educators (read: teachers unions), school staffers and child-care workers. That is arbitrary and unfair. A 30-year-old teacher who may still work remotely until September is at far less risk than a 50-year-old FedEx driver who interacts with customers all day. The fairest, least political distribution standard is age.

The Trump Administration’s Operation Warp Speed also contracted most of the vaccine supply for production before approval by the FDA: 200 million doses each of Pfizer and Moderna, and 100 million of J&J. No one knew which technology would be approved first, if at all, so the government wisely bet on several. This was the best money the feds spent in the pandemic. Mr. Biden ought to give the vaccine credit where it is due—to U.S. drug companies and Operation Warp Speed.


DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18253
    • View Profile
Re: President Trump's accomplishments and promises kept
« Reply #438 on: October 11, 2023, 01:35:33 PM »

Body-by-Guinness

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 1878
    • View Profile
We Deserve a Do Over
« Reply #439 on: March 07, 2024, 05:11:25 AM »
Trump's accomplishments and promises kept germane to what's happening today. Imagine what he could have accomplished if the Deep State hadn't sought to subvert him at every turn:

https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1765567857922863446.html?utm_campaign=topunroll