Craig4
Penultimate Amazing
The crowd doesn't seem to understand. He is laughing at them, not with them.
Well, he's figured out the circuses part. He hasn't figured out the bread yet. If you want the mob's support you need both.
The crowd doesn't seem to understand. He is laughing at them, not with them.
Right! In a sense, Trump hasn't the wherewithal to lie about such things. Sure, he can lie, but when it comes to matters of his own popularity, he seems literally incapable of seeing anything but the largest crowds ever, the greatest mandate, etc.I think in this case it was in terms of Trump's stupidity and mental issues an "honest" mistake. He could only take note of the "hugest" number, i. e. the 52% that shows he is the most voted for by women POTUS of all time.
Right! In a sense, Trump hasn't the wherewithal to lie about such things. Sure, he can lie, but when it comes to matters of his own popularity, he seems literally incapable of seeing anything but the largest crowds ever, the greatest mandate, etc.
We don't blame a three year old for believing he's the center of the universe. We can blame Trump for this view, but I'm not sure it counts as a lie. Gross immaturity, sure.
This isn't clear to me. If the issue is narrowly tailored to protecting political figures at the polling places, I'm okay with it.Republicans keep saying that talks of authoritarianism is silly, yet they keep taking more steps towards it.
"I reject your reality, and substitute my own!" -- Adam SavageTechnically I am not sure Trump can lie, I am not sure he can conceive of an objective world that is different than what he decides it is.
"I reject your reality, and substitute my own!" -- Adam Savage
That's assuming he can stay awake long enough.Trump says
"Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross will be speaking with representatives of the European Union about eliminating the large Tariffs and Barriers they use against the U.S.A. Not fair to our farmers and manufacturers."
I am sure a speaking to by Wilbur Ross will make the EU scrap all their food and product standards.
Wait, didn't he just tick off the EU with the steel tariffs? And now he thinks they'll lower the ones for our stuff?
And not fair? But perfectly okay for us to do it to them?
On the other hand, it's not over until it's over. "Time and chance happeneth to us all."I might have added "working in the most stressful job in the world" but The PDJT probably doesn't feel that at all.
On the other hand, it's not over until it's over. "Time and chance happeneth to us all."
But like the poor Afghanis who went from the Russian moonscape ruin to the Taliban, if there were a god we'd get Pence!
Good for you. Principles matter.I doubt it will do any good, but today I sent out this letter to:
Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell
GA Senators David Perdue and Johnny Isakson
Our congressman Doug Collins
Dear _________ ,
About six months ago I contacted my Republican representatives in the House and Senate about the need to censure the President regarding his behavior in office. I said then that President Trump’s attacks on the press, his insults and name calling, and his misleading or false statements all rose to a level of “Conduct Unbecoming of the President of the United States”, and that some sort of formal censure was in order. I received polite responses, but to date, other than isolated Republicans voicing general displeasure with the President, for the most part the Republican Establishment has been silent in face of the President’s continued outrageous behavior. That is inexcusable.
Now, we have the President not only calling Senators and congressmen derogatory names, but specifically mocking at least one member’s “low IQ”. Where is the outrage? Where is the congress speaking out vociferously in a unified voice against such attacks on their fellow representatives?
I have been a Republican my entire adult life. But I can no longer in good conscience associate myself with what the Republican Party has allowed itself to become. It has shamelessly sold its soul to a bombastic, narcissistic, authoritarian showman. I can only hope that eventually the party regains its moral authority, or a viable third party steps in as the voice of reason.
Sincerely,
xxxxxxx
Mineral Bluff, GA
This isn't clear to me. If the issue is narrowly tailored to protecting political figures at the polling places, I'm okay with it.
I haven't seen the details and the officials in my own state of MA oppose the measure. They know more than I know.
Me too. I wish more of the real Republicans would stand up to this jerk POTUS.Good for you. Principles matter.
I'm not particularly conservative, but I value a principled conservative party. I hate to see the depths to which the Republicans have fallen.
Me too. I wish more of the real Republicans would stand up to this jerk POTUS.
Per the complaint, the three acting directors were appointed in violation of the Federal Vacancies Reform Act, meaning every action taken by these men, PEER executive director Jeff Ruch writes, “is incurably void and invalid.”
Acting directors are meant to be placeholders in the absence of a Senate-confirmed pick, and the Vacancies Act gives a new administration 300 days to select a new leader. PEER’s complaint alleges that the Interior Department violated the Vacancies Act in two ways. First, the president alone can nominate acting directors. Yet Smith, the BLM’s Brian Steed, and Greg Sheehan, who was appointed acting director of Fish and Wildlife last June, were all appointed by Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke. Second, an acting director must have held a senior position in the department for 90 days during the past year prior to being appointed—another criteria all three lack.
As of the beginning of the year, some 250 crucial jobs that required an appointee were unfilled across the government, many of which were being run by acting directors nearing their time limit under the Vacancies Act. This issue has been widely discussed, both in legal circles and among the media. As a reporter for NPR put it in an interview: “That law, the Federal Vacancies Reform Act, gives a new administration 300 days to fill posts, a deadline for Trump that has come and gone. So now if someone in an acting position makes an important decision, it’s subject to a court challenge as being improperly made.”
Or as the Vacancies Act puts it explicitly, “any attempt to perform the functions and duties of that office will have no force or effect.”