Saturday, February 3, 2024

We Ignore the Ongoing Collapse of American Democracy at Our Peril

 

OVER 200 YEARS OF REPUBLIC CAN BE LOST WITH A FEW MORE YEARS OF TRUMP & MAGA GOP. MEDIA DOESN'T CALL IT OUT BECAUSE OF DEEP POCKETS! STOP BEING IN DENIAL- FACISM IS NEAR!
We Ignore the Ongoing Collapse of American Democracy at Our Peril
Fascism can happen here and we know this because it is happening here. And unless more people wake up and fight back, it will be too late.
Snippet: "Like an alcoholic family that won’t discuss alcoholism (proving Don Quixote’s warning never to mention rope in the home of a man who’s been hanged), far too many Americans are unwilling to acknowledge or even discuss the ongoing collapse of democracy in the United States.
We see it in everything from our last two Republican presidents having lost the national vote but taking office anyway, to the extreme gerrymandering happening in every Red state in the country, to the naked bribery of our legislators and Supreme Court justices.
And our media exclude it from almost every conversation. Networks run promotions mentioning Trump’s indictments, but completely fail to point out that he is calling for the end of democracy in America, the suspension of the Constitution, and playing the role of a “dictator” on day one.
The extent of the problems within our political and economic structures are laid bare with startling and sometimes frightening clarity.
President Jimmy Carter took it head-on when he told me on my radio program that the Citizen’s United decision, which brought us this crisis:
“[V]iolates the essence of what made America a great country in its political system. Now it’s just an oligarchy, with unlimited political bribery being the essence of getting the nominations for president or to elect the president. And the same thing applies to governors and U.S. senators and congress members. So now we’ve just seen a complete subversion of our political system as a payoff to major contributors, who want and expect and sometimes get favors for themselves after the election’s over.”
This “complete subversion of our political system” grew, in large part, out of Richard Nixon’s 1972 appointment of tobacco lawyer and rightwing extremist Lewis Powell to the Supreme Court."
PLEASE LISTEN, WATCH AND OR READ REMAINDER OF ARTICLE!





Trump Adviser FORCED to Make STUNNING Admission Live on Fox

 

LARRY KUDLOW IS AN INCOMPETENT CLOWN....NO SURPRISE!


Former Trump economic adviser and current Fox Business host Larry Kudlow was forced to admit he was completely wrong about the Biden economy. Francis Maxwell reports.



Comedian Shatters MAGA Man's Entire World With One Question TRUMP SUPPORTERS

 



The Good Liars were out and about at this year's March for Life event and once again proved that the protestors are just as dumb as they look and sound. Rick Strom breaks it down. Give us your thoughts in the comments below!

Florida man jumped by bystanders after beating his dog outside gas station 31 YEAR OLD JOSE RIVERA

 

 


A group of bystanders stepped in when they saw a Florida man brutally beating his dog outside a Deltona gas station. 31 YEAR OLD JOSE RIVERA


MAGA Mom Rambles About Alligators in the Swamp and The Devil TRUMP SUPPORTERS

 



MAGA Mom, "Do I think the Devil is here? I do." Michael Shure reports for TYT from the New Hampshire Primary election.

GOP Leader Told His Wife To "Hunt" For New Threesome Partner

 




Former, Florida Republican Party Chairman, Christian Ziegler told his wife that they needed to "hunt" for a new threesome partner, and he kept a list of women on his phone.



Kevin McCarthy Getting Even

 


 


In this highlight, Kevin McCarthy is out for revenge! After being ousted as Speaker of the House, McCarthy is planning to take down the "Crazy Eight" Republicans who voted against him. He's recruiting candidates to challenge them in primary elections, and he's not holding back his anger. Find out who's on McCarthy's hit list and why he's so determined to get even. Don't forget to subscribe for more political drama!


Dоnаld Тrumр Wоrе НІЅ РАΝТЅ ВАСΚWАRDЅ іn ЕМВАRRАЅЅІΝG Ѕреесh

 







Trump's CFO, Allen Weisselberg, to plead guilty to perjury for lying at Trump's NY fraud trial

 




Donald Trump's longtime Chief Financial Officer, Allen Weisselberg - already a convicted felon for engaging in fraud at the Trump Organization - reportedly is in negotiations with Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg to plead guilty to perjury for lying when he testified at Trump's NY fraud trial. This new legal development likely factors into two other legal developments: Judge Engoron delaying his verdict in Trump's NY fraud trial and Judge Tanya Chutkan postponing Trump's federal case in DC for trying to overturn the 2020 presidential elections. This video discusses the intersection of these three legal developments and what that intersection tells us about which of Trump's criminal cases is now most likely to go to trial first.


Trump Hired Private Investigator To Spy On Alina Habba's Work

 



Recent campaign finance reports have revealed that Donald Trump's Save America PAC spent several hundred thousand dollars in the past 6 months paying a private firm to investigate the work that Alina Habba was doing for his trials. The firm was tasked with making sure that Habba was finding all the appropriate witnesses and properly reaching out to them, among other things. This is proof that even Trump knew that Habba has no clue what she's doing, as Farron Cousins explains.



Trump's PAC Is Nearly BANKRUPT After He Spent Everything On Legal Fees

 



It was reported this week that Donald Trump had spent more than $50 million in donor money from his PACs on legal fees last year alone, but that number doesn't even tell the whole story. According to new reports, Trump's Save America PAC has only $5 million left in the bank, down from well over $100 million just a short time ago. Like everything else in his life, Trump has managed to send a once-profitable entity almost into bankruptcy, and his personal finances aren't far behind. Farron Cousins explains what's happening.


US Capitol Arrest Update: Karol Chwiesiuk SENTENCED

 

IDENTIFY, INVESTIGATE, PROSECUTE, INCARCERATE

KEEP AMERICANS SAFE FROM DOMESTIC TERRORISTS!





Karol Chwiesiuk was sentenced for his participation in the January 6, 2021 attack and attempted insurrection at the United States Capitol.


POLITICO Nightly: Why Biden’s trade agenda is dividing Democrats

 



POLITICO Nightly logo

BY GAVIN BADE

Presented by

American Beverage

Katherine Tai is pictured in Washington, D.C.

U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai testifies during a hearing on the proposed budget for fiscal year 2022 for the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative on Capitol Hill on April 28, 2021. | Sarah Silbiger/Getty Images

WITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE — Washington progressives are circling the wagons to defend one of their own — U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai.

Tai, Biden’s top trade policy adviser, is among the most ideologically committed progressives in his entire cabinet and a staunch adherent to the administration’s “worker-centered” trade policy, which has aimed to reshape the rules of the global economy to benefit workers and small businesses, instead of large corporations.

But Biden’s trade agenda has run aground in recent months, and now many of Tai’s crew are abandoning ship.

Discontent with a stalled agenda and Tai’s leadership is contributing to a wave of departures at the trade representative’s office , including the agency’s former chief of staff and two of the three deputy U.S. trade representatives. Tai is “really tough on people,” said one official familiar with the moves, who pointed out that “other agencies aren’t having these kinds of departures.”

Few would dispute that there’s unrest at USTR. But Tai’s allies say it stems not from her management style, which they say is no harsher than her predecessors. Instead, they say the critics simply aren’t on board with Tai’s “worker-centered” trade agenda, which hews closer to Donald Trump’s protectionism on subjects like tariffs than the free trade policies of past Democratic presidents. The state of affairs has brought long-standing disputes on trade among Democrats to the fore.

“We think it’s bullshit,” one congressional staff member, who used to work with Tai when she was chief trade counsel for the House Ways and Means Committee, offered unprompted on Capitol Hill this week. The complaints, the staffer said, come from people who “can’t get with the program,” and are just a convenient excuse for people who don’t like the policy direction.

Tai’s lawmaker allies tend to agree. “It’s pretty hard for [departing staff] to go out and say that their problem is based on policy, and a lot easier to claim that they are leaving for other reasons,” said Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) when the complaints first surfaced. “So I’m not buying it.”

Tai’s defenders can’t deny that her agenda is stalled — particularly after the debacle in San Francisco that saw Biden’s team walk away from trade talks under the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework under pressure from Senate Democrats.

But there, too, they find others to blame. It was the White House, and not Tai, that ultimately pulled the plug on those talks, her allies have claimed . The problem isn’t Tai, they say, but that she’s had to fight against free traders in her own agency and the West Wing as well. With friends like these…

“At least my sense of it is she’s had to engage in arguments with others in the administration,” said Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.), a Tai ally who pushed the Biden White House to abandon the Indo-Pacific trade talks. “I don’t know if that has any impact on these issues … I just think I want to make sure that we do everything we can to support what she’s been trying to do.”

She’ll need all the support she can get. The trade representative’s office is already down two of its three deputies, and President Biden’s pick to replace one of them — Clinton-era economic hand Nelson Cunningham — is already getting serious pushback from Tai’s progressive allies in the Senate, who worry he’s another fox in Tai’s henhouse.

At its core, Biden’s Democratic critics in Congress say all the finger-pointing comes back to a simple, but inconvenient policy truth: that despite championing a “worker-centered” trade agenda, Biden’s team has been unable to match the labor and environmental rules of Trump’s signature trade deal: the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement that replaced NAFTA.

While Democrats credit themselves with inserting those progressive provisions in the Trump-signed trade deal, the inability to replicate those policymaking deals under Biden has many of them terrified that Trump will get to their left on trade — just like in 2016. And with little policy progress likely to be made during an election year, there’s little left to do than pass the blame.

“We built a new policy” with USMCA, said Senate Finance Chairman Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), who fought to get the labor provisions during congressional negotiations. “It’s like this crowd — and this [Cunningham] fellow — don’t understand that.”

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at gbade@politico.com or on X (formerly known as Twitter) at @GavinBade .

 

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Not all plastic is the same. America’s beverage companies are carefully designing our plastic bottles to be 100% recyclable, including the caps. This means our bottles can be remade into new bottles, and that can reduce our use of new plastic. Learn more at EveryBottleBack.org.

 
WHAT'D I MISS?

— U.S. strikes militant positions in Iraq and Syria in response to deadly drone attack in Jordan: The U.S began conducting airstrikes on Iran-backed positions in Iraq and Syria today , according to four Defense Department officials, the first of what officials expect to be multiple rounds of retaliatory actions following the deaths of three U.S. soldiers in Jordan this week. President Joe Biden ordered the strikes in response to the deadly Iran-backed attack on U.S. forces at Tower 22, a small outpost in northeast Jordan, last Sunday, which the administration attributed to the umbrella group the Islamic Resistance in Iraq.

— Fani Willis confirms relationship with fellow Trump prosecutor but denies impropriety: Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis acknowledged entering a personal relationship with a prosecutor who is helping lead her case against Donald Trump but said it had no bearing on her handling of the probe. Rather, she said, efforts by Trump and his co-defendants to disqualify her from the case due to the relationship were a “public relations strategy” meant to hamstring the probe. In a 176-page filing today, Willis disputed claims that her relationship with special prosecutor Nathan Wade posed a conflict of interest, and she denied that she was improperly enriched by the Trump case. Last month, one of Trump’s co-defendants alleged in court documents that Wade has used income he earned from the case to pay for lavish trips with Willis.

— Air Force preps for mega overhaul with an eye toward China: The Air Force is putting the final touches on a major structural shakeup that would remake the force as part of the Pentagon’s push to keep up with China’s military buildup. Within the next few weeks, the service will announce it is consolidating some of its major three- and four-star commands, integrating fighter jets and bomber aircraft into single units, and beefing up its budget and planning shop, according to six people familiar with the plans. 

IDENTIFY, INVESTIGATE, PROSECUTE, INCARCERATE

KEEP AMERICANS SAFE FROM DOMESTIC TERRORISTS VIDEO ON LINK

— Ryan Samsel, Jan. 6 defendant who instigated breach, convicted of multiple felonies: The Jan. 6 defendant widely seen as the instigator of the violent breach of Capitol grounds was convicted today of multiple felonies for his role in the attack , including the assault of Capitol Police Officer Caroline Edwards, who was briefly knocked unconscious by the force of his charge. Ryan Samsel and four codefendants, who arrived at the thinly guarded barricades surrounding Capitol grounds even before Donald Trump concluded an address to supporters down the street, were each convicted of participating in the “civil disorder” wrought by the mob and of assaulting one of several police officers who guarded that first line.

 

CONGRESS OVERDRIVE: Since day one, POLITICO has been laser-focused on Capitol Hill, serving up the juiciest Congress coverage. Now, we’re upping our game to ensure you’re up to speed and in the know on every tasty morsel and newsy nugget from inside the Capitol Dome, around the clock. Wake up, read Playbook AM , get up to speed at midday with our Playbook PM halftime report, and fuel your nightly conversations with Inside Congress in the evening. Plus, never miss a beat with buzzy, real-time updates throughout the day via our Inside Congress Live feature. Learn more and subscribe here.

 
 
NIGHTLY ROAD TO 2024

JEROME POWELL'S previous employer was CARLYLE - hardly promoting Democrats!

The Orange Turd is too DUMB to comprehend the failures of the Federal Reserve and just BLABS!


FED FOE 
— Former President Donald Trump said today he would not reappoint Jerome Powell as Federal Reserve chair if he returns to the White House next year. In an interview with Fox Business, Trump called Powell “political” and suggested that he might lower interest rates to help Democrats electorally in the fall.

“I think he’s going to do something to probably help the Democrats, you know, I think if he lowers interest rates,” Trump told host Maria Bartiromo.

MAKE YOUR CASE — The blowout job growth in January adds fuel to President Joe Biden’s pitch to voters that the economy is solidly recovering under his watch, POLITICO reports.

But it also probably shuts the door on an interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve next month, which many Wall Street investors and Democrats have been pressing for as inflation eases.

The strong job market, coupled with the end of price spikes, counters the campaign message of former President Donald Trump and other Republicans that the economy is weakening, though many economists are still projecting slower growth this year.

 

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AROUND THE WORLD

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends the weekly cabinet meeting at the Kirya military base in Tel Aviv.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends the weekly cabinet meeting at the Kirya military base in Tel Aviv, Israel Sunday, Dec. 31, 2023. | Pool Photo by Abir Sultan

NOT OUT OF THE WOODS — There was a sigh of relief among Israel’s government last week, when the judges at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) stopped short of acceding to South Africa’s request to suspend Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.

However, the provisional measures the court did issue — instructing Israel to take steps to prevent its troops from committing genocide, punish acts of genocidal incitement and improve the humanitarian situation — still present problems for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu . And it means Israel isn’t out of the ICJ woods just yet, reports POLITICO EU.

Already geared to issue combative statements before the ruling, the argument from Israeli officials was that the judges in The Hague are in the pockets of their own countries. “The court can’t be relied on to follow purely the norms of justice,” Alan Baker, an expert in international law and a former Israeli ambassador to Canada, told the media. Meanwhile, Mitchell Barak, a former adviser to late Israeli President Shimon Peres, described the ICJ as a “kangaroo court.”

“Who cares? Literally who cares what the ICJ says?” he blasted.

And maybe so. Some scholarly studies have, indeed, found cause for concern with the court, arguing that ICJ judges display a pattern of bias.

Nonetheless, the public bravado masked an underlying unease. Israel cares about the ICJ very much and was alarmed to be grouped with Russia, which received a court demand to suspend its military campaign against Ukraine in March 2022. And ahead of last week’s interim ruling, senior officials privately conceded to POLITICO EU they feared the court would place Israel in a difficult diplomatic spot.

 

YOUR GUIDE TO EMPIRE STATE POLITICS : From the newsroom that doesn’t sleep, POLITICO's New York Playbook is the ultimate guide for power players navigating the intricate landscape of Empire State politics. Stay ahead of the curve with the latest and most important stories from Albany, New York City and around the state, with in-depth, original reporting to stay ahead of policy trends and political developments. Subscribe now to keep up with the daily hustle and bustle of NY politics. 

 
 
NIGHTLY NUMBER

353,000

The number of jobs the U.S. economy added in January , significantly beating expectations in another sign of economic strength. The unemployment rate stayed at 3.7%, just above a half-century low, despite the highest interest rates in two decades.

RADAR SWEEP

STRAW MAN — Companies across the globe are starting to promise better, more sustainable housing insulation , made from one of the oldest and most basic sources: straw. The material — used for centuries but largely abandoned across much of the world in recent years — is making a comeback as people look for better ways to heat their homes. This has recently been made easier due to investment in large-scale straw processing facilities. Chris Baraniuk reports on the trend, including costs and future plans, for the BBC.

PARTING IMAGE

On this date in 1943: The Battle of Stalingrad, a major battle in World War II, ends with Russian victory. In this early 1943 photo, captured German soldiers, their uniforms tattered from the battle, make their way in the bitter cold through the ruins of Stalingrad.

On this date in 1943: The Battle of Stalingrad, a major battle in World War II, ends with Russian victory. In this early 1943 photo, captured German soldiers, their uniforms tattered from the battle, make their way in the bitter cold through the ruins of Stalingrad. | AP

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