Author Topic: Trump Administration 2.0  (Read 13727 times)


DougMacG

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Re: Trump Adminstration 2.0, Pete Hegseth
« Reply #101 on: December 08, 2024, 01:40:25 PM »
Powerline: I drank with Pete (and nobody got hammered)

https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2024/12/i-drank-with-pete.php
---------------
And VDH spells out what won't happen with Trump 2.0 nominees:

https://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2024/12/06/what_the_trump_nominees_have_not_done_--_and_will_not_do_152053.html

current Patel critic.

He will not forge an FBI court affidavit, as did convicted felon and agency lawyer Kevin Clinesmith.

He will not claim amnesia 245 times under congressional oath to evade embarrassing admissions as did former Director James Comey.

He will not partner with a foreign national to collect dirt and subvert a presidential campaign as the FBI did with Christopher Steele in 2016.

He will not use the FBI to draft social media to suppress news unfavorable to a presidential candidate on the eve of an election.

He would not have suppressed FBI knowledge that Hunter Biden’s laptop was genuine — to allow the lie to spread that it was “Russian disinformation” on the eve of the 2020 election.

He will not raid the home of an ex-president with SWAT teams, surveil Catholics, monitor parents at school board meetings, or go after pro-life peaceful protestors.

(Doug) Funny that all these people worried about Trump's nominees never worried about any of this.


Crafty_Dog

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Harmeet Dhillon
« Reply #103 on: December 10, 2024, 09:00:23 AM »
second

(2) TRUMP NOMINATES HARMEET DHILLON FOR CIVIL RIGHTS DIVISION: President-elect Donald Trump nominated former chair of the California Republican Party Harmeet Dhillon as assistant attorney general for civil rights in the Department of Justice (DOJ), signaling his intent to use the Civil Rights Division to challenge diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) policies.
Harmeet Dhillon founded Dhillon Law Group and the 501c(3) nonprofit Center For American Liberty, which are behind a number of high-profile lawsuits against DEI policies in business and academia, and Dhillon has repeatedly called for an end to DEI policies in press releases and on social media.
President-elect Trump has pledged to direct the Department of Justice to pursue civil rights investigations into universities, citing earlier efforts to sue Yale University for discriminating against Asian and white applicants and a 2020 executive order banning federal contractors from DEI training.
Why It Matters: While the Department of Justice does not have direct enforcement authority, the Civil Rights Division still plays a significant role in shaping how civil rights laws are interpreted. Historically, the Civil Rights Division has generally avoided weighing in on cases that allege discrimination against Asian and white applicants and employees, but Dhillon is likely to depart from her predecessors and make DEI the focal point of her tenure. Additionally, while certain DEI policies may withstand legal challenges, it is likely that universities and businesses will still scale these programs back, regardless, to avoid DOJ scrutiny. – M.N.

============

https://ace.mu.nu/archives/412735.php

« Last Edit: December 12, 2024, 08:18:45 AM by Crafty_Dog »


ccp

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DougMacG

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Re: Good thing she dumped Newsome
« Reply #106 on: December 11, 2024, 06:42:25 AM »
https://www.newsmax.com/politics/transition-guilfoyle-trump/2024/12/10/id/1191169/

 :-D :wink:

Besides that she may have earned the new job, it looks like a settlement in the breakup with Don jr.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Trump Adminstration 2.0
« Reply #107 on: December 12, 2024, 05:50:56 AM »
 :-D :-D :-D


Crafty_Dog

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Re: Trump Adminstration 2.0
« Reply #109 on: December 12, 2024, 07:24:59 AM »
Doesn't sound particularly credible to me.

Crafty_Dog

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PP: Trump choosing communicators, not bureaucrats
« Reply #110 on: December 12, 2024, 07:35:19 AM »

https://patriotpost.us/alexander/112745?mailing_id=8884&subscription_uuid=e046cf62-a6a8-4317-a631-0e7db6e8f626&utm_medium=email&utm_source=pp.email.8884&utm_campaign=alexander&utm_content=body

============

FO

Trump transition advisor Corey Lewandowski said the Trump team will use every resource to target Senators who oppose Trump’s cabinet nominations. According to a Trump advisor speaking anonymously, President-elect Donald Trump has a “much more professional political operation around him,” and is “a lot more willing” to use political power during his second term. [According to reports, Trump backed off on nominating former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) as Attorney General. However, after Secretary of Defense nominee Pete Hegseth’s nomination met resistance from Senate Republicans, the Trump camp began a pressure campaign against Senate Republicans who signaled they will vote against confirming Trump cabinet nominees. – R.C.]
« Last Edit: December 12, 2024, 08:03:57 AM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

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NLRB
« Reply #111 on: December 12, 2024, 09:04:16 AM »
third

(3) TRUMP COULD FLIP NLRB TO MAJORITY REPUBLICAN: The Senate voted 49-50 against reconfirming National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) Chair Lauren McFerran, who will leave the NLRB when her term ends on 16 December. (President-elect Trump will now have the opportunity to flip the NLRB to majority Republican by appointing McFerran’s replacement, and block Democrats on the NLRB from continuing Biden’s labor policies into the Trump administration. – R.C.)

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Hegseth
« Reply #112 on: December 12, 2024, 09:20:42 AM »

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Noonan
« Reply #113 on: December 13, 2024, 03:04:43 PM »


Biden Gets Lost in Trump’s Shadow
The president-elect acts as if he’s already in charge. There’s never been a transition like this before.
Peggy Noonan
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Volodymyr Zelensky, Emmanuel Macron and Donald Trump after their meeting in Paris, Dec. 7. Photo: Michel Euler/Associated Press
Like Donald Trump or dislike him, hate him or love him, doesn’t matter: You have to see that what we are witnessing right now is truly remarkable, with no precedent.

He is essentially functioning as the sitting president. In the past, a man was elected and sat in his house, met with potential cabinet members, and courteously, carefully kept out of the news except to make a statement announcing a new nominee. The incumbent was president until Inauguration Day. That’s the way it was even in 2016; Barack Obama was still seen as president after Mr. Trump was elected. All that has changed.

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Mr. Trump is the locus of all eyes. He goes to Europe for the opening of Notre-Dame. “The protocols they put in place for his arrival were those of a sitting president, not an incoming one,” a Trump loyalist and former staffer said by phone. He holds formal meetings with Volodymyr Zelensky and Emmanuel Macron. There he is chatting on a couch with Prince William. Why not the prime minister? Because the British know Mr. Trump is enchanted by royalty and doesn’t want to be with some grubby Labour pol. Mr. Trump talks of new tariffs on Canada, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau rushes down to Mar-a-Lago. After their meeting, Mr. Trump refers to him, on Truth Social, as “governor” of “the Great State of Canada.” (The Babylon Bee follows up with a headline: “Trump Tells Trudeau He Won’t Annex Canada if They Admit Their Bacon Is Just Ham.”)

The government of Syria suddenly falls and the world turns to America for its stand. Naturally it comes, quickly, from Donald Trump. “THIS IS NOT OUR FIGHT. . . . DO NOT GET INVOLVED!” The next day, Joe Biden characterizes the moment as one of “risk and uncertainty” for the region. Was there ever a moment that wasn’t one of risk and uncertainty for the region?

Mr. Trump tells Vladimir Putin that now that he’s abandoned Syria, he should make a deal to end the war in Ukraine. “I know Vladimir well. This is his time to act. China can help. The world is waiting!”

Mr. Trump’s cabinet picks—especially the highly questionable ones!—dominate the discourse in a country that hardly ever notices a cabinet nomination below that of secretary of state. His representatives, most famously Elon Musk, are greeted on Capitol Hill with a rapture comparable to past visits by heroic leaders of allied nations.

Donald Trump hasn’t overshadowed Joe Biden; he has eclipsed him. A former senior official in Mr. Trump’s first term told NBC News a few days ago that Mr. Trump “is already basically running things, and he’s not even president yet.”

To some degree the status shift is expected. Mr. Trump is the future, Mr. Biden the past; Mr. Trump wide-awake, Mr. Biden sleepy. The 46th president is a worn tire, the tread soft and indistinct. With the pardon of his son he lost stature. Also, Mr. Trump makes other leaders nervous, as he enjoys pointing out. They can neither predict him nor imitate him, so they can’t take their eyes off him. And Mr. Biden’s been rocked by something he knew in the abstract that’s become all too particular: after 50 years at the center of public life he’s been dropped, cast aside, because it was about power all along, and not about him.

A president, however, still has the machinery—the National Security Council, the State Department, the nuclear football. I can hardly believe our biggest adversaries don’t capitalize on this split presidency, this confusion. For all our woes you sometimes forget what a lucky country we are.

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Here I mention a part of the amazing interregnum that I think is important, one that his friends and staffers speak of. Mr. Trump is calmer and more confident than he has been in the past. It is a commonplace to say that his surviving a shooting—that a bullet came within an inch or so of his brain—would change anyone, even a man in his eighth decade, even a man with fairly brittle ingrained views, even Donald Trump. But all of his friends go back to this as they speak of the Trump they’re seeing now. They think it took time for it to be absorbed and settle in. They see him as at least presenting himself in an altered way.

The former staffer said by phone, “Right now he is extremely relaxed.” It isn’t only the assassination attempt. “Everyone thought he was gonna change in a way that would be normal for most people to change—an outward reflection, more humble. I laugh when people say, ‘Normally, a president would—.’ Don’t use ‘normal’ with him.”

But, he said, after the second assassination attempt was thwarted, at Mr. Trump’s golf course, it had real impact. “Trump began to recognize, not in an unappreciative way but in a reality way, that he’d been spared. It gave him a stronger sense of confidence, some extra level of relaxation and of determination. He feels the American people are in trouble and if he can be a small part of fixing that, he must.”

The former staffer said Mr. Trump feels that “this wasn’t an election, it was a vindication.” The court cases, the indictments, the impeachments—“all these things against Donald Trump, and he doesn’t just come back, he roars back in a way that defies logic, reason and history. Few can fathom this.” He meant the history, but also its effect on Mr. Trump.

Something else, he said. When Mr. Trump was elected in 2016, his policy priorities and intentions weren’t fully clear. They are now, and have been popularized. “He knows the mission he laid out to the people—sane border policy, unleash energy, monetize ‘the liquid gold,’ make the tax cuts permanent—there’s an air of confidence about his mission now, and an understanding of the systems in place.” He is living something few get to live: “If I could do it all over again.”

A different observer, who’s seen Mr. Trump up close, said this week, “This is the best version of Donald Trump we will see.”

Back to the former staffer: “The gravity of this historic moment cannot be overstated. He has a level of swagger, a new level. People say, ‘Can I get the policy without the personality?’ No, you need a certain level of ‘I don’t give a damn.’ If you think he had it the first time, Katy bar the door.”

He had a prediction: “This has the potential to be historic in a way that only a handful of administrations have been. We remember some administrations with a level of history-altering moments. This one’s gonna have a lot.”

What about the potential for wrongdoing, such as using government to suppress or abuse foes? “He’s said a million times his revenge is going to be success. When Trump wins, he lets bygones be bygones.”

He paused. “Some of the people he’s hired aren’t that way, so there’s a chance some people may take it upon themselves to do some stuff. I don’t know.”

Crafty_Dog

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Elon Musk on how it is going
« Reply #114 on: December 14, 2024, 05:49:14 AM »

ccp

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GGGG
« Reply #115 on: December 18, 2024, 06:51:30 AM »
[Grifter] gargoyle goes to Greece:

https://www.mercurynews.com/2024/12/12/trump-jr-didnt-like-kimberly-guilfoyles-style-family-happy-to-see-her-go-reports/

she will be missed almost as much as I missed her on Fox   :evil:

DougMacG

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« Last Edit: December 24, 2024, 05:08:11 AM by DougMacG »

ya

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Re: Trump Adminstration 2.0
« Reply #117 on: December 24, 2024, 05:29:19 AM »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Trump Adminstration 2.0
« Reply #118 on: December 24, 2024, 05:41:14 AM »
The Panama thread is a good place for matters concerning Panama and perhaps the Arctic thread for matters concerning Greenland.
« Last Edit: December 24, 2024, 05:44:16 AM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

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FO: Colby Under Sec Def for Policy
« Reply #119 on: December 24, 2024, 06:55:11 PM »


(1) TRUMP DEFENSE PICK SIGNALS PIVOT TO CHINA: President-elect Donald Trump said he will nominate Elbridge Colby as Undersecretary of Defense for Policy.
President-elect Trump said Colby will work with Secretary of Defense nominee Pete Hegseth to restore U.S. military power and achieve Trump’s policy of “peace through strength.”
Why It Matters: Colby believes the Indo-Pacific, not Europe, is the decisive theater for the United States. Colby’s nomination combined with Trump’s calls for NATO countries to double their defense spending is a solid sign that U.S. foreign policy will pivot away from Russia-Ukraine to China and the Indo-Pacific. Colby advocates for containment with the goal of deterring China from seeking regional hegemony, which Colby argues would give China significant influence over the global and U.S. economies. – R.C.

ccp

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so far $107,000,000 coporate "donations" to inauguration
« Reply #120 on: December 25, 2024, 02:09:37 PM »
https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/corporate-donate-trump/2024/12/25/id/1192837/

I never thought about it before.
I would have thought Feds pay for ceremony.
We must still pay for all the securit and ground setup.
So what does this money actually go for?   parties?

perhaps this saves taxpayer money but as we all know it is not without strings.


Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Gaetz
« Reply #121 on: December 26, 2024, 01:46:26 PM »


Reading the Matt Gaetz Ethics Report
By blocking him as AG, Senators helped the country—and Trump.
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Whether Donald Trump realizes it or not, Republicans did him a favor by making clear that former Rep. Matt Gaetz was unconfirmable as U.S. Attorney General. On Monday the House Ethics Committee released a 37-page report from its misconduct inquiry into Mr. Gaetz, which found “substantial evidence” of drug use, prostitution, and statutory rape.

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“The Committee heard testimony from over half a dozen witnesses who attended parties, events, and trips with Representative Gaetz from 2017-2020,” it says. “Nearly every young woman that the Committee interviewed confirmed that she was paid for sex by, or on behalf of, Representative Gaetz.” Some were first contacted via “a ‘sugar dating’ website,” the report adds. Mr. Gaetz “did not appear to have negotiated specific payment amounts.”

Yet the committee alleges that the terms of the deal were clear. “The women had a general expectation that they would typically receive some amount of money after each sexual encounter,” it says. One woman who got $5,000 over two years testified: “99 percent of the time that [Representative Gaetz and I] were hanging out, there was sex involved.” Text messages included lines such as: “Btw Matt also mentioned he is going to be a bit generous.”

The report says the record “overwhelmingly suggests” Mr. Gaetz had sex with a 17-year-old at a house party in 2017, when he was 35, citing corroboration by “multiple individuals.” The woman testified she was given “$400 in cash from Representative Gaetz that evening, which she understood to be payment for sex.” She said “she did not inform Representative Gaetz that she was under 18 at the time, nor did he ask.” The committee says it has evidence Mr. Gaetz didn’t learn her age until later, while noting that “statutory rape is a strict liability crime.”

In text messages, the report says, Mr. Gaetz would “ask women to bring drugs to their rendezvous,” in some cases “requesting ‘a full compliment [sic] of party favors,’ ‘vitamins,’ or ‘rolls.’” One woman said that she “witnessed him taking cocaine or ecstasy on at least five occasions.”

Mr. Gaetz denies illegal behavior. “In my single days, I often sent funds to women I dated,” he wrote last week. “I NEVER had sexual contact with someone under 18. Any claim that I have would be destroyed in court—which is why no such claim was ever made in court.” He added: “It’s embarrassing, though not criminal, that I probably partied, womanized, drank and smoked more than I should have earlier in life.” The Justice Department investigated Mr. Gaetz but didn’t bring any charges, which he claims is an exoneration.

The ethics report, however, alleges that his conduct broke state laws while also perhaps avoiding the federal sex-trafficking statute: “Although Representative Gaetz did cause the transportation of women across state lines for purposes of commercial sex, the Committee did not find evidence that any of those women were under 18 at the time of travel, nor did the Committee find sufficient evidence to conclude that the commercial sex acts were induced by force, fraud, or coercion.”

Appended to the report is a short dissent by a Republican, but it’s focused on the decision to release these ugly details after Mr. Gaetz quit Congress. “We do not challenge the Committee’s findings,” it says. Mr. Gaetz presents himself as a victim of a political vendetta, but his behavior should be disqualifying for a cabinet post, especially chief law enforcement officer. Mr. Gaetz abruptly resigned from Congress in hopes of forestalling the report’s release.

All of this vindicates GOP Senators who were skeptical of Mr. Gaetz’s nomination. The Senate’s advise-and-consent role is to protect the country from unfit nominees. By doing that job well, Republican Senators can also protect Mr. Trump from his worst decisions.

Crafty_Dog

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ccp

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it has already begun
« Reply #124 on: December 28, 2024, 01:46:44 PM »
https://www.mediaite.com/politics/steve-bannon-slams-toddler-elon-musk-after-tesla-owner-tells-critics-to-fk-yourself-in-the-face-as-maga-civil-war-rages-on/

three points

why do we have to always during Trump have the problems aired all over the news scape?  unlike Dems who rarely do this in public if at all to this degree.

funny the two foreign born Titans want to puch their business agenda in front of American born.

In another vein:

I read, and have no idea how true is the tech oriented H1Bvisas 70 % are from India and then next largest crew is from China at something like 8%.

The Indian ones are clearly quite motivated and do contribute . The ones at least in the medical field I have worked with are good citizens but then again I don't know if they came as

H1B visas or some other way.





Crafty_Dog

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Re: Trump Adminstration 2.0
« Reply #125 on: December 28, 2024, 03:49:00 PM »
Note the article I posted on the Immigration thread #2304 which made some interesting third way arguments such as DEI suppressing white excellence and universities sucking on foreign money and govt grants while Americans go broke borrowing to finance their STEM ed.


Crafty_Dog

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Get out tissue
« Reply #127 on: January 12, 2025, 01:27:02 PM »

Crafty_Dog

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WSJ dubious on Hegseth
« Reply #128 on: January 13, 2025, 03:32:29 PM »
Pete Hegseth Faces a Skeptical Senate
The Defense nominee must overcome doubts about his qualifications.
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Jan. 13, 2025 5:34 pm ET




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Pete Hegseth on Tuesday faces the Senate Armed Services Committee for his confirmation hearing to be Defense Secretary, and it could be a rough go. Democrats may make a spectacle of his personal history, and more than a few GOP Senators want to hear what he says about his plan to bolster flagging U.S. defenses.

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It’s still puzzling that President-elect Trump chose Mr. Hegseth for such a senior post. Mr. Trump seems to want someone to take on the “woke” policies of the military under President Biden, and they are problems. But retired four-star Army Gen. Jack Keane says this can be quickly addressed. Give the order, and the brass will follow and so on down the chain of command.

There are larger and more urgent issues at the Pentagon, and the 44-year-old Mr. Hegseth lacks the experience typically required. He has never run an organization of any size, never mind a bureaucracy with as many snares as the Pentagon.

Mr. Trump has nominated Stephen Feinberg, the CEO of Cerberus Capital, to fill the management gap as deputy secretary. Mr. Feinberg is a highly successful manager, but he also lacks familiarity with the vast Defense Department. Such experience is crucial lest Mr. Hegseth be swallowed up by the bureaucracy.

What does Mr. Hegseth think are the spending priorities to rebuild America’s military deterrent? Should the Navy stop building carriers that are vulnerable to long-range Chinese missiles? And has Mr. Hegseth thought about how technology innovators like Anduril Industries can enhance U.S. bang for the buck?

Nothing in Mr. Hegseth’s record suggests he has thought about any of this. He has an admirable combat record, but in private life he has mainly been a political combatant.

Democrats are likely to pound away on the accusation of sexual assault in Monterey, Calif., that he settled with his accuser. But police investigated and declined to bring charges, and the details in the public record leave us with doubts about the accuser’s claims. All Senators on the committee deserve to have access to the FBI’s background check.

The real concern is judgment—why was Mr. Hegseth, by then a well-known TV personality, cavorting with a woman whose husband was at the same hotel? He was setting himself up to be exploited by precisely such an accusation. The episode seems to have caught the Trump transition by surprise, and someone should ask if Mr. Hegseth was forthcoming when under consideration for the job.

The Defense Secretary has to make difficult calls on the behavior of general officers who violate military rules. Will the accused cite Mr. Hegseth’s conduct as a defense? Moral authority matters to command authority.

Mr. Trump’s social-media enforcers have been threatening Senators with reprisals if they vote against Mr. Hegseth, which suggests they know he still has doubts to overcome. This is too fraught a moment in global affairs for Senators not to ask the hard questions.

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Ray Dalio: Trump Administration 2.0 Changing World Order
« Reply #129 on: January 14, 2025, 08:14:40 AM »
https://time.com/7177760/trump-administration-changing-world-order/

He is not a Trump supporter but has some 'neutral' insights.
« Last Edit: January 14, 2025, 08:16:21 AM by DougMacG »

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WSJ continues unenthused about Hegseth
« Reply #130 on: January 15, 2025, 06:21:40 AM »


Pete Hegseth Gets a Senate Pass
The Defense secretary nominee said he’ll ‘look under the hood’ if confirmed.
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President-elect Donald Trump's nominee for Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth speaks during a Senate Armed Services confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill on Tuesday Photo: Andrew Harnik/Getty Images
Americans didn’t learn much about Pentagon nominee Pete Hegseth at his Senate confirmation hearing on Tuesday, but they did learn more about the world’s greatest nondeliberative body. Democrats mostly played into Mr. Hegseth’s hands with questions he easily parried, while Republicans asked little of substance.

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The most effective Democratic questioning came from Virginia’s Tim Kaine, who wanted to know why Mr. Hegseth didn’t disclose to the Trump team a settlement he paid to a woman who accused him of sexual assault. Mr. Hegseth kept saying he was “falsely charged” but never answered the question.

Many Democrats wasted their time framing Mr. Hegseth’s previous comments on women in combat as if this were 1994. But Mr. Hegseth said he now believes women should be able to serve in the armed forces as long as they can meet the same physical standards as men.

Republicans didn’t do much scrutinizing. Markwayne Mullin (R., Okla.) noted that Senators sometimes show up drunk for votes at night and cheat on their wives, but they aren’t in the chain of command of U.S. military forces. Tim Sheehy (R., Mont.), after opening his remarks by asking how many genders there are, did ask about Navy shipbuilding, to which Mr. Hegseth basically said Donald Trump wants to build ships. No details.

Ted Budd (R., N.C.) asked what the U.S. should do about its shortage of fighter aircraft, and Mr. Hegseth said he looked forward to “looking under the hood” once confirmed. He gave the same vague answer to Sen. Deb Fischer (R., Neb.) when she inquired whether the nominee supports a “nuclear-armed sea-launched cruise missile system” to counter Russian and Chinese nuclear capabilities.

Mr. Hegseth made noises about restoring U.S. military deterrence, and that’s something. But it appears we’re on track to have a secretary of Defense whose real views are a mystery. Let’s hope he rises to the occasion.

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WSJ: Tulsi at DNI and the ouster of Mike Turner from the Intel Committee
« Reply #131 on: January 17, 2025, 06:19:03 AM »


MAGA Cashiers a Check on Tulsi Gabbard as DNI
Speaker Johnson bows to Mar-a-Lago in ousting Intel Chair Mike Turner.
By The Editorial Board
Jan. 16, 2025 5:55 pm ET

U.S. intelligence oversight took a turn for the worse Wednesday with the news that House Speaker Mike Johnson fired Ohio Rep. Mike Turner as chair of the House Intelligence Committee. Worse, the Speaker seems to have done it at the request of President Trump or his inner circle.

Mr. Johnson explained his decision by saying that “It’s a new Congress. We just need fresh horses in some of these places.” But Mr. Turner told CBS News that the Speaker cited “concerns from Mar-a-Lago” and that he will not serve from even a backbench committee seat.

Mr. Turner has been one of Mr. Johnson’s main supporters in the GOP conference, so the Speaker is sending the wrong message about the rewards of loyalty. It’s one thing for the Speaker to let Mr. Trump dictate to him on policy. But control over House leadership should be the Speaker’s prerogative. His ouster of Mr. Turner is a sign of weakness.

It’s also a bad message about the need for public honesty about threats to U.S. security. The House and Senate Intel Chairmen are checks on the CIA and the 17 other U.S. intelligence agencies. The committees can dig into intelligence findings by the director of national intelligence and ask pointed questions.

Mr. Turner went public last year with the news that Russia could put a nuclear antisatellite weapon in orbit. He was criticized as alarmist but he was right.

In a statement to the House Armed Services Committee, assistant secretary of Defense for Space Policy John Plumb said analysts believed detonation “at the right magnitude in the right location could render low-Earth orbit, for example, unusable for some period of time.” The Biden Administration would have preferred to keep that U.S. vulnerability under wraps.

Mr. Turner angered some in the GOP’s isolationist wing with his forthright support for Ukraine. In April 2024, he said Russian propaganda was being repeated on the House floor by Members who claimed the conflict in Ukraine was over NATO.

“To the extent this propaganda takes hold,” he said at the time, “it makes it more difficult for us to really see this as an authoritarian vs. democracy battle, which is what it is.”

MAGA critics also disliked his support for renewing, with some reforms, Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act to eavesdrop on non-U.S. citizens abroad. This is a crucial tool that Mr. Trump will be glad to have as President to prevent terror attacks.

Mr. Turner’s sacking is all the more troubling given Mr. Trump’s nomination of Tulsi Gabbard as director of national intelligence. Ms. Gabbard cast doubt on whether Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons and has supported a pardon for Edward Snowden, the traitor who leaked highly classified documents and fled to Moscow for asylum.

Ms. Gabbard also opposed Section 702 until she flipped her views last week in order to win Senate confirmation. The danger is that she will minimize threats to satisfy her isolationist policy preferences. She might be less willing to do so if she knows a serious House Intelligence Committee is watching.

Mr. Johnson is expected to replace Mr. Turner with Arkansas Rep. Rick Crawford, who voted against arming Ukraine last year. Perhaps he’ll rise to the role. But it’s alarming that Mr. Johnson is letting the GOP’s isolationist wing cashier one of his best committee chairs


Crafty_Dog

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Body-by-Guinness

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DJT Day
« Reply #134 on: January 18, 2025, 11:37:18 PM »
This piece ought to make all the right heads explode:

https://instapundit.substack.com/p/happy-djt-day?r=2k0c5&triedRedirect=true


Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Can Trump do better a second time?
« Reply #136 on: January 19, 2025, 09:06:10 AM »
Though not deranged about it, the WSJ has always been dubious on Trump.   Herewith it opines:

====================================
Can Trump Do Better the Second Time?
He’s stronger now, but his brand of political disruption has limits.
By The Editorial Board
Jan. 17, 2025 5:45 pm ET

Donald Trump takes the oath of office on Monday for a second term promising to disrupt the status quo—in Washington and around the world. Lord knows the status quo needs disrupting, but how he’ll do it and how far he’ll go remains a mystery, albeit for different reasons than eight long years ago.

In 2017 Mr. Trump had won narrowly, almost by accident, and he inherited a GOP majority in Congress that had a long-developed agenda on taxes, healthcare, judges and much else. The main policy victories of his first term—tax reform, energy development and judges—were traditional GOP priorities. He was less successful on his own signature issues of tariffs and immigration control.

***
This time Mr. Trump arrives in the Oval Office after a clear victory that was largely his own. The GOP majority in Congress is loyal to him, and a remarkable two-thirds of Republicans in the House were elected since 2016. Congress doesn’t have much of an agenda beyond what Mr. Trump campaigned on.

Eight years ago Mr. Trump also faced Democrats who were determined to oppose him on everything, if not impeach him from the start. There is no Russia collusion narrative this time. The press—which went all in for the “resistance” the last time—has hurt its credibility so much that Mr. Trump can afford to ignore most of its criticism.

The President-elect thus starts his second term with a personal favorable rating that is close to 50% and new political capital. Susie Wiles, his chief of staff, seems to have imposed order on the transition and the new White House staff. Mr. Trump’s first six months in 2017, by contrast, were a daily riot of media leaks and make-it-up-as-you-go orders.

All of this means Mr. Trump has political running room, though it’s not unlimited. His victory was solid but no landslide. Half the country still dislikes him. And the GOP majority in the House is so narrow that a couple of willful Members can kill anything. Mr. Trump could quickly find himself in trouble if he exceeds his mandate from voters.

Take immigration and border security. Mr. Trump has a mandate to stop the flood of illegal migrants, and that will be an immediate priority. He will have support for deporting criminals and gangs like Tren de Aragua.

But he also promised mass deportation. If this means midnight raids on busboys, or separating mothers from children, the politics could turn fast. His best option is controlling the border and using his political capital on the subject to cut a deal with Congress on legal and illegal immigration.

Or take the tax bill that must pass to avoid a $4 trillion tax increase in 2026. Merely extending the 2017 tax provisions will be a heavy lift. But Mr. Trump campaigned on trillions of dollars more in tax breaks—no tax on tips, Social Security benefits or overtime.

The danger is that the tax bill becomes a vehicle for income redistribution rather than economic growth. Inflation more than anything else elected Mr. Trump, and he will fail as President if his policies don’t lift real wages for his new working-class coalition. He needs to support the Federal Reserve’s efforts to keep reducing inflation and promote growth with supply-side tax and regulatory policies.

***
Which brings us to tariffs, which he calls the “most beautiful word” except perhaps “faith” and “love.” A tariff is a tax and a tax is anti-growth. Mr. Trump is going to impose tariffs as soon as his first week, and they may be large and universal.

The impact of his tariffs, and of the retaliation from other countries, is a growth wild card. Congress has ceded so much authority to the President on trade that financial markets may be the only real check on his tariff policies. His policy advisers this time have all endorsed tariffs of some kind.

Mr. Trump also views tariffs as an all-purpose political tool, which raises the question of how much he wants to disrupt the current U.S. network of alliances. He may not leave NATO, at least not right away, but he will want Europe to provide for most of its own defense. Same with allies in Asia.

What we don’t know is whether Mr. Trump believes in a world in which there are dominant spheres of influence: the U.S. in the Western Hemisphere, China in the Asia-Pacific, and Russia in Europe. This is the logic of the GOP’s isolationist wing, and it is a recipe for a chaotic reordering of world affairs.

The biggest risk in our view is Mr. Trump’s desire to court adversaries in search of diplomatic deals for their own sake. He won’t settle the Ukraine war in a day as he promised, but an ugly deal that favors Russia could be his version of President Biden’s flight from Afghanistan. Mr. Trump will try again to coax North Korea’s Kim Jong Un into a nuclear deal, despite his failure the last time. Mr. Trump will be tougher on Iran at first, but he wouldn’t mind a nuclear deal with the Ayatollahs if they’re willing.

Most important will be his courtship of Chinese dictator Xi Jinping. Former Trump security adviser John Bolton writes in his memoir that Mr. Trump said in his first term that a U.S. defense of Taiwan was implausible, and Mr. Xi can read. China could react to Mr. Trump’s tariffs with a blockade of Taiwan, or perhaps by taking nearby islands now controlled by Taiwan. How would Mr. Trump respond to avoid the risk of war? Would he cede Taiwan to Mr. Xi?

***
Mr. Trump’s victory was most important as a repudiation of the woke left, and it creates a rare opening for Republicans to build a new majority. But Americans don’t want disruption for its own sake. They will support it if it means broader prosperity that they can share. They also don’t want Mr. Trump to indulge in the politics of retribution by siccing the FBI and Justice Department on opponents.

If Mr. Trump focuses on settling scores rather than raising incomes, Democrats will sweep the 2026 midterms and progressives will return to power with a vengeance in 2028. A second presidential chance would be a terrible thing to waste.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Trump Administration 2.0
« Reply #137 on: January 19, 2025, 09:08:19 AM »
As for CCP's piece on the imagery of the inaugeration, I get the point, but IMHO unspoken is that they don't want to admit that they doubt security if it is held outside.   Deep and hidden forces are out there to kill him.

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/saraharnold/2025/01/18/glenn-beck-offers-chilling-reason-why-he-thinks-trump-moved-inauguration-indoors-n2650759

and then there is this:

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/exclusive-maryland-police-unable-to-assist-with-inauguration-security-due-to-use-of-force-policy/ar-AA1xr5Iy?ocid=msedgntp&pc=HCTS&cvid=6cd4f69332bb497f8a2f1a8f969db61b&ei=12
« Last Edit: January 19, 2025, 09:27:44 AM by Crafty_Dog »

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Re: Trump Administration 2.0
« Reply #138 on: January 19, 2025, 12:39:59 PM »
Had not thought of security as being a/the  factor to move inside .  Makes sense.



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Let the Games Begin & Injustice Undone
« Reply #140 on: January 19, 2025, 02:10:15 PM »
Watching how an unfriendly jurisdiction where an unfriendly committee convened to erect an unfriendly framework within which vindictive prosecutors persecuted average Americans who would have been celebrated if their shoe of protest was worn on the other foot will tell us much about how the next 4 years will unfold:

From Insurrection to Resurrection
President Trump taking the oath of office inside the building that was supposed to constitute the graveyard of his political future and movement he created is a fitting end to the phony J6 narrative.
JULIE KELLY
JAN 19, 2025


Concerns over bitter cold in Washington on Monday—perhaps coupled with security concerns—prompted President Trump to move his inauguration ceremony from outside to inside the U.S. Capitol. No one loves a party more than Trump, so presumably his decision to take the oath of office in front of a few hundred legislators rather than perhaps one million cheering supporters was not made lightly.

But the optics of Trump being sworn-in inside the very building that was supposed to constitute the graveyard of his political future and the movement he created should erase any disappointment. The ceremony inside the Capitol Rotunda at noon tomorrow will represent the climax of the biggest political comeback ever, one historians (usually all leftists) will struggle to accurately explain to future generations.

Declassified with Julie Kelly is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.


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From insurrection to resurrection.

Democratic politicians and influencers undoubtedly will spend the day posting comparison photos of the activity inside the Rotunda on January 6, 2021 versus the inaugural proceedings. “OMG look there is Representative So-and-So who ALMOST DIED on January 6! How is this happening??!!”

Expect more lies about police fatalities—the Rotunda also acted as the setting to promote the lie that Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick, who lied in state there, was killed at the hands of Trump supporters on Jan 6—more lies about how Trump incited the violence that day, more lies about the people who participated in the protest. But their collective deception is like spitting in the wind: the insurrection narrative not only failed, it backfired.

Even a member of the editorial board of the Wall Street Journal, one of the most dependable J6 propaganda machines, recently admitted Democrats had “overinterpreted the Jan. 6 riot.” Calling Jan 6 a “disgraceful event,” Barton Swain nonetheless said “voters didn’t buy” how the Democrats tried to weaponize that day. (If you missed my light criticism of WSJ coverage of Jan 6, it’s here. Funny to read one of their own suddenly denounce the “overinterpretation” of the Capitol protest.)

Further, “overinterpretation” is hardly the apt description. After the Trump administration opens the books on how much taxpayer money was wasted pursuing Trump, his allies, and his voters, the American people should brace themselves for shock and disgust.

The Cost of the Failed J6 Operation Will Come to Light

Disgraced former special prosecutor Jack Smith, for example, spent at least $50 million on his dual prosecutions of President Trump; that does not include what the Department of Justice spent before Smith’s appointment in November 2022 investigating Trump for the events of Jan 6.

Add to the DOJ’s tab the so-called “Capitol Siege” investigation, which resulted in the arrest of almost 1,600 J6 protesters to date. The DOJ’s top brass reassigned prosecutors and investigators from federal offices around the country to instead work for D.C. U.S. Attorney Matthew Graves, the office responsible for charging and prosecuting J6ers, to handle the growing caseload.

The four-year political crusade to investigate, arrest, charge, convict, and imprison Trump supporters likely cost the DOJ, excuse me, us, hundreds of millions of dollars. The receipt, by the way, is still tabulating as the DOJ arrested and put on trial J6ers as recently as last week.

And that does not include how much J6ers had to spend defending themselves or the costs incurred by the federal public defender's office, which represented hundreds of penniless J6ers, most of whom despise Trump supporters.

Or the DOJ’s prosecution of Steve Bannon and Peter Navarro or criminal investigations into Trump associates such as John Eastman and Jeffrey Clark.

Then, of course, there is the January 6 Select Committee. Not only did the committee hire a well-known television network producer to jazz up nationally televised performances, more than 1,000 witnesses—mostly Trump White House aides and sometimes more than once—were hauled in front of committee inquisitors, which included former federal prosecutors who don’t work for cheap.

Resurrection then yes, Retribution

But now those same committee members and staffers fear, rightfully so, they soon will be on the other side of the interrogation table. Reports indicate Rep. Bennie Thompson, former chairman of the J6 committee, spoke with Biden’s White House counsel’s office last month about a preemptive pardon.

Graves, who left his post last Thursday, is on a media tour defending his abusive prosecution of J6ers and fielding questions about his own potential pardon. During an interview with a local D.C. station, Graves, sounding more like “Saturday Night Live” character Nathan Sturm rather than a serious law enforcement official, nervously laughed off concerns he might be prosecuted:


Jack Smith’s top prosecutor in the classified documents case, longtime DOJ henchman Jay Bratt, retired earlier this month; Smith resigned on January 10. But both reportedly have lawyered up to prepare for a Trump DOJ investigation into their conduct and/or Congressional inquiries, which already are underway.

Marco Polo, the opposition research group that prepared the book containing materials from Hunter Biden’s laptop, is using facial recognition to identify all the slavish DOJ employees who just gave Merrick Garland a sendoff worthy of any tyrant.

Meanwhile, once-simpatico J6 architects Nancy Pelosi and the Bidens are at each other’s throats. Glowering in a photo for a recent Washington Post profile, Dr. Jill said she was “disappointed” in her friend of 50 years, Nancy Pelosi. Dr. Jill skipped greeting the Pelosis at the White House holiday party and the Bidens did not send well wishes to Pelosi after her fall last month.

The bad blood further spilled when Alexandra Pelosi, who filmed her mother’s minute-by-minute movements on January 6, referred to Jill Biden as “Lady McBiden” and told her to grow up. “There aren’t that many people left in America who have something nice to say about Joe Biden and Nancy Pelosi is one of them.”

OOF.

“MAGA Extremists” Descend on DC as their Tormentor-in-Chief Prepares to Exit

Traveling by planes, trains, and automobiles, hundreds of thousands, maybe up to a million, Americans branded “MAGA extremists” by Joe Biden are arriving in Washington to celebrate something even the most diehard Trump supporter never envisioned. Biden departs office a broken man, carrying with him the disdain of the American people and the burden of his crime racket family, now political pariahs rather than the dynasty he had always envisioned.

And Donald Trump—the man who prevailed over an unprecedented, coordinated crusade to put him behind bars, destroy his business and his family, and wreck the MAGA movement—will stand triumphant before those very same saboteurs in the very same place they thought would end it all.

Enough to make you want to dance.

https://www.declassified.live/p/from-insurrection-to-resurrection

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Trump Administration 2.0
« Reply #141 on: January 19, 2025, 04:05:51 PM »
Caught most of his event this evening, National Anthem, Christian cuties, to Kid Rock, culminating in a speech by him that had me quite caught up in it.  Perhaps I am carried away, but I thought it one of his best ever-- the man is in the zone!

PS:  Promised good things for the J6 folks!

Body-by-Guinness

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Pax Americana 2.0?
« Reply #142 on: January 19, 2025, 09:50:09 PM »
Dealing with the “reality distortion zone” embraced by sundry Western leaders and reasserting American strength by breathing de facto life into the Monroe Doctrine:

How Trump plans to make America greater
Speak to MAGA insiders, and the message is clear: the president is deadly serious about his imperial ambitions
Friday, January 17, 2025

“The mission of the United States is one of benevolent assimilation,” said William McKinley, America’s 25th commander-in-chief, who happens to be one of Donald Trump’s favorite presidents. Trump, who barely dodged a bullet in 2024, shares a number of traits with McKinley, who was assassinated in 1901: Scottish blood, ferocious work ethic, an affinity with the super-rich that somehow appeals to the working classes, a faith in tariffs as a means of safeguarding industry, and a willingness to expand America’s empire to boost future prosperity.

“I’m talking about protecting the free world,” said Trump last week, as he announced his intention to annex Canada and Greenland, to rename the Gulf of Mexico as the Gulf of America and to reassert American sovereignty over the Panama Canal. “You don’t even need binoculars. You look outside, you have China ships all over the place. You have Russian ships all over the place. We’re not letting that happen.”

The same day, the President-elect had dispatched his eldest son to Greenland aboard his Boeing 757, aka Trump Force One, to greet the locals. Don Junior, the princeling, came in peace. “We’re going to treat you well,” he told the Inuits, as 3,000 miles away, in the warmer climes of Mar-a-Lago, his father refused to rule out using military force to acquire their land.

Most of the world reacted to the Trump clan’s imperial ambitions with a mixture of amusement and disbelief. The political and diplomatic classes assume that his expansionist rhetoric is a madman ploy, a bluff to advance the Trump 2.0 tariff agenda and push his more sincere demands that Nato countries spend up to 5 percent of their budgets on defense. Speak to MAGA insiders, however, and the message is clear: he is deadly serious. “I keep speaking to Europeans and British embassy people and telling them he really means this stuff,” says one. “And they are like, ‘No, no, it’s just a negotiating tactic.’ I just think, are you guys never going to get it?”

Steve Bannon, Trump’s former chief strategist, says the President-elect’s “geo-strategic vision” is “the new ‘Great Game,’ bro.” It is global power politics for the manosphere and a natural extension of America First chauvinism: Make America Greater and Safer — by adding vast swaths of land where necessary. Trump’s first inaugural speech, in January 2017, was an inward-looking diatribe against “American carnage.” His second, eight years later, is expected to convey a greater sense of international urgency, including perhaps a direct warning about the threat of China.

“If you want Fortress America,” says Bannon, “Trump’s giving you Fortress America, all the way from Panama up through Greenland. Can he pull any of this off? Hey, it’s Donald Trump.”

If anyone doubts Trump’s ability to bend reality to his will, his allies point towards the fact that, at the same press conference, he promised “all hell will break loose” should Hamas not return its Israeli hostages before he returns to the White House on Monday. Sure enough, Hamas appears to have agreed to give back the hostages as part of a peace deal. Such diplomatic breakthroughs make it difficult for any fair-minded observer to gainsay the method in Trump’s madness.

Quite how Trump might take over Greenland, let alone Canada, is another question altogether. He has already disputed Denmark’s legal claim to the territory and suggested that Greenlanders would vote to join America in a referendum. Inside MAGA circles, there’s confidence that the threat of tariffs could force Denmark’s hand. One idea being discussed is to give Copenhagen a pass on increasing its Nato defense spending commitments in exchange for the handover of Greenland. Another is that Trump might prohibit sales of the Danish super-drug Ozempic — a product he’s rumored to use himself — in the world’s fattest market. “What a great negotiation tool Trump has,” says Charlie Kirk, the conservative activist who travelled with Don Junior to Greenland last week. “He could be like, ‘Oh, it would be a shame if Ozempic was banned in America. I mean, do you guys want Greenland that bad?’”

That’s not necessarily a stupid threat. Novo Nordisk, Ozempic’s manufacturer, is valued at $400 billion, which is about the same as Denmark’s entire annual GDP. What could be more Trumpy than turning America’s obesity epidemic into strategic leverage? “The Greenland stuff is like everything Trump does,” says another insider. “He starts talking about it and everyone says that’s random. And then they realize that it makes perfect sense. Denmark doesn’t really have the scale to do anything meaningful with Greenland, but we really could.”

Greenland is rich in minerals and the rare-earth elements which make semiconductors work and drive our technological age. The territory is also likely to be an increasingly important asset when it comes to intercontinental trade, as improved ice-breaking technology and, perhaps, climate change open up the frozen North Sea passages. US military chiefs have long been sensitive to China and Russia’s maneuvers in the Arctic Circle.

According to some Trumpworld voices, America’s annexation of Greenland is part of a broader strategy to counter Beijing’s Belt and Road initiative. “An alternative US Belt and Road type scenario is very possible,” says one soon-to-be member of the Trump administration. “The feeling here is that we’ve been asleep at the wheel for too long. China’s tentacles are everywhere.”

During the Covid crisis, it is said, Trump became depressed at the vulnerability of America’s economy when it came to global supply routes. He is also understood to have been alarmed at the more recent Houthi attacks on international shipping lanes in the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea. Trump’s secretary of state Marco Rubio, national security adviser Mike Waltz and the under-secretary of defense Elbridge Colby are all similarly exercised about China’s naval build-up and determined to re-establish that America rules the waves.

Under Trump 2.0, then, America will be a far more assertive sea power, aping China’s tactics of buying up ports and strategic assets and aggressively taking back control of the key water lanes, especially around Panama, the Caribbean and southern America. It’s no coincidence that Rubio is of Cuban origin and his deputy is Christopher Landau, whose background is in Latin-American diplomacy.

The incoming administration is hardly the first US government to take a keen interest in the seas. The American naval strategist Alfred Thayer Mahan’s preoccupation with British sea power shaped the thinking of McKinley and after him president Teddy Roosevelt. Both men used American warships to assert dominance in the western hemisphere, long before the advent of the League of Nations and the liberal idealism of Woodrow Wilson.

Trump, who thrives on being considered a fool, believes that American greatness accelerated towards the end of 19th century, when tariffs generated vast wealth for the American industrial robber-baron complex and the US didn’t bother with what today is called the liberal rules-based order. China and Russia aren’t playing by the rules anyway, runs the logic, so why should we?

The Republican party increasingly sees the world the same way. “The whole ‘rules-based’ order thing is simply not appealing to the American right these days,” says one source. “It’s been internalized as just more ‘Globo Homo,’ if you know that term.” When asked to define “Globo Homo,” Trump’s circle point towards what Keir Starmer’s government is doing with Diego Garcia, an important US-UK naval base in the Pacific and the biggest of the Chagossian islands, which Britain is hurriedly giving over to Mauritius, possibly to placate the Chinese Communist party. “My gaaad, what a disaster!” says the same source. “The brain rot of the liberal elite.”

“There’s this reality distortion zone around Nato and the United Nations,” says another insider. “All this moralizing goes on and it’s totally disconnected from hard power politics. Then you combine this moral tut-tutting with an unwillingness to do serious things with hard power. Just look at Ukraine. You think that war is existential and Russia is going to go on some expansionist campaign across Europe, then you need to be massively upping your military budget. I’m not saying that European powers did nothing. But the rhetoric was not being matched by the budgetary emphasis.”

It will be difficult for Britain’s Foreign Office to accept that people who speak in such damning terms are now perilously close to the White House. Yet we’ve already all seen in recent days the low opinion that Elon Musk, the First Buddy, has of the Westminster elite. Perhaps one idea that binds Team Trump together, from Musk to Bannon, is a deeply held belief that Britain, America’s predecessor as global hegemon, has lost control of its borders and gone to the dogs.

There’s a widely shared determination that America, the empire of liberty, will not go the same way, now that she has been freed from the leadership of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. “Biden meant four years of the dramatic liquidation of American power,” says one insider. The answer, according to Team Trump, is to restore peace through strength, and that means creating an icy strategic path through the north and a naval belt stretching out below the renamed Gulf of America. (“I actually hate that renaming of geographical places,” says one Trump source. “That’s what North Korea does.”)

The last, best hope for many Brexiteers, meanwhile, is that America might somehow rescue Britain from our China–appeasing, Europe-facing Labour government and benevolently assimilate Britain into its sphere of renewed North Atlantic influence. Trump has expressed his dismay at Britain’s “very big mistake” in shutting down oil and gas exploration in the North Sea. Rather than somehow forcing Canada to become the 51st state — a fanciful notion even for the most fanatical American primacists — why doesn’t the re-elected President focus on creating an Anglosphere Union, a free trade and military alliance comprising the US, the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, as a great buffer against Chinese control?

But the Empire of Trump is not much interested in new international agreements: it’s all about America First, as the Donald has said all along. His advisers tend to talk with what-can-you-do sadness about the British experience of multiculturalism. “There’s obviously a special relationship and we would love to keep that, but if the UK turns into Pakistan then that’s less interesting,” says one source.

What is more likely is that the US State Department will use its bully pulpit to berate European powers and Britain for its suppression of free speech, a major concern for the Trump family, Musk and the broader MAGA movement. Expect that to be something Emperor Donald addresses sooner rather than later.

https://thespectator.com/topic/trump-plans-make-america-greater-empire/
« Last Edit: January 21, 2025, 04:59:21 PM by Body-by-Guinness »

Crafty_Dog

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Birthright Citizenship
« Reply #143 on: January 21, 2025, 06:30:58 AM »
We've discussed this before, but with President Trump's EO yesterday I am thinking it is time to give it its own thread.
ND
Here is my current thinking:

The President is right.   Period.

The key point IMHO is this:   Note the word "AND".   As a matter of statutory construction, this means TWO requirements must be met:   Birth here AND subject to the jurisdiction.   Those who would have birth here be the  sole criterion violate the rule of statutory construction that language not be read to be meaningless.

So, the question presented becomes, "How can someone be here yet not subject to our jurisdiction?

I will give one example (there are more but I am busy in San Fran getting ready for three days of training the police here) -- the Apaches and the Commanches most certainly were born here and neither they nor we regarded them as subject to our jurisdiction!   I submit that my point here is affirmed by the passage of a STATUTE (in the 1920s?) declaring them to be citizens by birthright.   

There are other examples, but my proposition is that the Amendment envisioned the meaning of "subject to the jurisdiction thereof" to be fleshed out by statute cf the C. granting Congress the power to determine the jurisdictions of federal courts (a point I will need to research further). 

Body-by-Guinness

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All the Executive Orders Are …
« Reply #144 on: January 21, 2025, 07:34:55 PM »

Body-by-Guinness

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The FAFO Chapeau
« Reply #145 on: January 22, 2025, 12:17:56 PM »
Do we need a dedicated Melania thread? NSFW language:

https://x.com/KarluskaP/status/1881767877801631890?mx=2

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Trump Administration 2.0
« Reply #146 on: January 22, 2025, 08:15:55 PM »
Love the clip, indeed I forwarded it to my wife!   That said, I'm thinking Melania can comfortably fit in the Trump 2.0 thread-- we already have so many -- but I am glad to put it up to vote.

Body-by-Guinness

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Re: Trump Administration 2.0
« Reply #147 on: January 22, 2025, 08:40:59 PM »
Love the clip, indeed I forwarded it to my wife!   That said, I'm thinking Melania can comfortably fit in the Trump 2.0 thread-- we already have so many -- but I am glad to put it up to vote.

I was only half serious and suspect there won’t be enough content to support a dedicated thread, at this point at least.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Trump Administration 2.0
« Reply #148 on: January 22, 2025, 10:14:23 PM »
I love the meme about the looks she gives when her husband is about to go medieval for the FBI going through her lingerie drawer.