Wednesday, January 2, 2019
Tuesday, January 1, 2019
Next stop for beer-drinking Cherokee woman Elizabeth Warren: A visit to the hardware store "to get me a huntin' license"
Must be something in the water up there in Massachusetts that turns people into phony baloney plastic banana good time rock-n-rollas. Michael Dukakis in the tank, John Kerry goes a huntin', and now Elizabeth Warren cracks open a cold one in a New Year's Eve chat streamed live. Hm. Tongues are a-wagging. A drinking Indian, huh? Was it an India Pale Ale?
The article forgets to mention the incident involving John Kerry, who served in Vietnam.
Cashman: Elizabeth Warren racks up another Dukakis moment :
With the beer vid — trying to sell herself as your average
beer-swigging multimillionaire former Harvard Law prof who’s a champion
of the middle class — Warren has racked up two strikes in short order.
Three strikes and … it could be just Beto O’Rourke vs. Kamala Harris on
the left side of the Democrats’ debate stage.
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Suddenly Obamacare is not much of a muchness to Democrats, a mere stepping stone to the socialist future
The next development will be Republicans arguing, as Paul Ryan did in 2012 about Medicare, that conservatism means we must preserve Obamacare for future generations.
Lindsey Grahamnesty points out that the Gang of Eight bill was tougher on border security than Trump is now
Suddenly the Gang of Eight bill is conservatism. Trump is now to the left of the entire Republican primary field of 2016 on immigration, begging for just $5 billion and willing to take less.
What suckers he takes us for.
SEN. LINDSEY GRAHAM: What I can tell you is Democrats have voted for 700 miles of the Secure Fence Act that had double-layered fencing. Call that whatever you'd like. In the Gang of Eight bill we had $42 billion for border security, including $9 billion for physical barriers.
The wall has become a metaphor for border security. And what we're talking about is a physical barrier where it makes sense. In the past, every Democrat has voted for these physical barriers. It can't be just about because Trump wants it we no longer agree with it.
There is nothing immoral about a physical barrier along the border in places that make sense. There will never be a deal that doesn't have money for the physical barriers that we all in the past have agreed we need.
Laugh of the Day: Trump calls Elizabeth Talking Bull crazy without calling her crazy
The president has this part of politics down pat. Too bad the follow through on policy utterly escapes him.
From the transcript here:
HEGSETH: She says she’s in the fight all the way, Mr. President. Do you really think she believes she can win?
TRUMP: Well that I don’t know. You’d have to ask her psychiatrist. But honestly, I just, you know --
(LAUGHTER)
Monday, December 31, 2018
H. Ross Perot's $13/hr factory jobs going to Mexico in 1992 should pay $27/hr today adjusted for inflation but pay only $18
The giant sucking sound clip from 1992 is here.
Perot characterized factory wages in 1992 as typically paying between $12 and $14 per hour.
Adjusted for inflation the $13 job in 2017 would pay nearly $27 per hour. The reality is it pays a lot less than that. Factory work in Michigan today basically starts at $15, up only 25% not 107%. The average manufacturing job paying $21+ is composed of a lot of such lower paying positions.
The reality is in Michigan that the top eventual $18/hr advertised wage is the equivalent of less than $9/hr in 1992.
The jobs have gone out of the country, expanding middle classes abroad while impoverishing our own at home.
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Outgoing Trump Chief of Staff General John Kelly attacks Jeff Sessions, was just one in the retinue opposing Trump's policies whom Trump himself appointed
That's rich, attacking the only guy in the administration who tried to implement the policies the candidate ran on.
Good riddance!
“What happened was Jeff Sessions, he was the one that instituted the zero-tolerance process on the border that resulted in both people being detained and the family separation,” Kelly said. “He surprised us.” ... “The president still says ‘wall’ – oftentimes frankly he’ll say ‘barrier’ or ‘fencing,’ now he’s tended toward steel slats," Kelly said. "But we (moved away from) a solid concrete wall early on in the administration, when we asked people what they needed and where they needed it.” ... “Illegal immigrants, overwhelmingly, are not bad people,” Kelly said. “I have nothing but compassion for them, the young kids.” ... He said the job was arduous and he often clashed with Trump over policy. But he was determined to stay through the 2018 midterm elections.
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Trump already compromised on The Wall, and that's the problem
Trump gave away 80% of what he wanted without getting anything in return.
It's political malpractice.
Even worse, he's shut down the government now over the remaining 20% at the most politically inopportune time, having nothing left to bargain with.
The time to have done this was when Republicans were in control of Congress, in January 2017, or February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December, January 2018, February . . ..
Forgive us for thinking he was never serious about The Wall, at all.
The Wall is now and may always have been simply a political tool, like opposition to abortion. He stopped being serious about it in August 2016 after the immigration issue secured him the nomination, when this "advisor", Kellyanne Conway, came on board from the Ted Cruz campaign, which likewise was never serious about The Wall. Ted had one throwaway line about immigration in his entire speech announcing his candidacy, that's it. It was Trump who completely blindsided him and the rest of the Republican field with the issue. But ever since it's only red meat for the base. He never made it a priority, and fired the only person actively pursuing immigration reform in his administration, Attorney General Jeff Sessions. That's how unimportant The Wall has been to the president.
The Wall riles up the news, keeping Trump in it, that's all.
I believe the president has already compromised. He originally asked for $25 billion. The House is at $5.6 billion. They did their job. The Senate has to come back. It is a modest investment.
Saturday, December 29, 2018
State elections board still refuses to certify Republican Mark Harris the winner in NC-9
Harris filed an emergency petition earlier on Friday to be certified as victor of last month’s election for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. His request was rejected by a state elections board reviewing whether mail-in ballots were illegally handled in some rural counties.
But the future of that investigation was thrown into doubt by a state court ruling and newly passed law. The state elections board was disbanded on Friday, after a state court on Thursday declined to extend a stay on a previous order declaring the composition of the board unconstitutional.
North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper, a Democrat, said he would immediately appoint an interim board to continue the investigation until a restructured elections board was due to begin operating at the end of January under a new state law.
Friday, December 28, 2018
Thursday, December 27, 2018
Wednesday, December 26, 2018
Monday, December 24, 2018
So why did Trump appoint a Secretary of Agriculture who doesn't support The Wall?
The only other explanation than the one below is that Trump isn't really serious about The Wall and never has been, and is only interested in how he can play the politics of The Wall.
Opposition to the wall within Trump’s own administration has prevented progress on this issue, which is wildly popular with the GOP’s conservative base and is the consequence of the president surrounding himself with establishment advisers who have worked to thwart his populist agenda from within. For example, after being briefed on the concept of selling USDA commercial paper to pay for border security, Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue’s then-Chief of Staff Heidi Green shot down the idea by curtly stating, “The secretary does not want the wall.”
Labels:
border security,
border wall,
Donald Trump 2018,
populism,
Sonny Perdue,
USA TODAY,
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