We Depolrables do not want unisex toilets, or female CEOs; we want Jobs
and
Houses
Newsletter published on 27 September 2016
(1) Hillary calls Trump supporters 'Deplorables' - xenophobes,
bigots,
racists, haters
(2) Hillary Clinton’s basket of deplorables,
explained
(3) We Depolrables do not want unisex toilets, or female CEOs; we
want
Jobs and Houses
(4) Deplorably, Trump is going to win
(5) Obama
depicts Hillary-Trump contest as Globalism vs Nationalism
(6) CFR & NYT
call Trump a 'know-nothing' and his supporters 'stupid'
(7) Council on
Foreign Relations Declares War on Donald Trump
(8) Time to fire Trump - The
{Rothschild} Economist
(9) Jill Stein vs Both
(1) Hillary calls Trump
supporters 'Deplorables' - xenophobes, bigots,
racists, haters
http://americanfreepress.net/is-this-the-last-chance-of-the-deplorables/
Is
This the Last Chance of the ‘Deplorables’?
September 13,
2016
During a recent fundraiser, presidential candidate Hillary Clinton
called middle-class Americans, who support Donald Trump, "deplorables."
Mrs. Clinton is seeking to impose her liberal views on the country,
changing the face of the United States forever. Is a Trump presidency
the last chance for all of us "deplorables" out there?
By Patrick J.
Buchanan
Speaking to 1,000 of the overprivileged at an LGBT fundraiser,
where the
chairs ponied up $250,000 each and Barbra Streisand sang, Hillary
Clinton gave New York’s social liberals what they came to hear.
"You
could put half of Trump’s supporters into what I call the basket of
deplorables. Right?" smirked Clinton to cheers and laughter. "The
racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamophobic, you name it." They
are "irredeemable," but they are "not America."
Emigrate While You
Still Can!
This was no verbal slip. Clinton had invited the press in to
cover the
LGBT gala at Cipriani Wall Street where the cheap seats went for
$1,200.
And she had tried out her new lines earlier on Israeli
TV:
"You can take Trump supporters and put them in two baskets." First
there
are "the deplorables, the racists, and the haters, and the people who
…
think somehow he’s going to restore an America that no longer exists.
So, just eliminate them from your thinking…"
And who might be in the
other basket backing Donald Trump?
They are people, said Clinton, "who
feel that the government has let
them down, the economy has let them down,
nobody cares about them. …
These are people we have to understand and
empathize with."
In short, Trump’s support consists of one-half
xenophobes, bigots and
racists, and one-half losers we should
pity.
And she is running on the slogan "Stronger Together."
(2)
Hillary Clinton’s basket of deplorables, explained
http://www.vox.com/2016/9/14/12896540/hillary-basket-of-deplorables
Updated
by Matthew Yglesias on September 14, 2016, 8:30 a.m. ET
It’s not really
in character for Hillary Clinton to speak in terms of
vivid imagery,
creative metaphors, or striking turns of phrase. But she
did it over the
weekend, setting off a growing firestorm of controversy
that’s defined the
week in politics.
"You know," Clinton said to a friendly crowd of wealthy
donors this
weekend, "to just be grossly generalistic, you could put half of
Trump's
supporters into what I call the basket of deplorables. Right? The
racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamophobic — you name
it."
With that odd turn of phrase — basket of deplorables — Clinton sent
the
media-politico ecosystem into a tizzy. Donald Trump’s campaign
immediately took offense on behalf of his constituents, and Clinton
rather rapidly apologized. But Trump has only escalated. At a Monday
night rally in North Carolina, he accused Clinton of running a
"hate-filled and negative campaign" and released a television ad built
around the remark.
And indeed, while Clinton apologized for painting
with such a broad
brush as to call fully half of Trump’s supporters
deplorables, her
campaign is very much sticking to the core accusation that
Trump is
trafficking in bigotry.
Meanwhile, some liberals think
Clinton was wrong to back away from her
numerical estimates. Writers like
the Atlantic’s Ta-Nehisi Coates,
Slate’s Jamelle Bouie, New York’s Jonathan
Chait, and Vox’s own German
Lopez have all argued that, as best as we can
tell, Clinton was, if
anything, undercounting the quantity of irredeemable
bigots in Trump’s
ranks.
The multifaceted controversy touches on two
of the more enduring taboos
in American politics — frank discussion of
racism and disparaging the
electorate. And it highlights the contrasting
campaign strategies of the
Trump and Clinton camps. It started because the
Trump camp correctly
sensed Clinton had made a mistake.
But it
continues so viciously because it covers terrain Clinton is
fundamentally
comfortable with — reenforcing a dynamic in which Trump,
like the television
entertainer he is, chases the ever-tighter loyalty
of a minority — while
Clinton seeks to paint Trump as broadly
unacceptable to the general
population that will be voting in November.
What, exactly, did Clinton
say?
Clinton’s remarks came in the context of what was essentially a
fundraising pitch. She expressed her understanding of the fact that
despite massive strides in achieving legal and social equality, LGBTQ
Americans still face many challenges. "You can get married on Saturday,
post your pictures on Sunday, and get fired on Monday," she said before
launching into a litany of specific policy commitments she’s made to the
LGBTQ community. [...]
Clinton’s use of the phrase "deplorables" at
the LGBTQ gala was not
unique. Earlier in the week, in an English-language
interview on Israeli
television, Clinton explained, "If I were to be grossly
generalistic,
I'd say you can take Trump supporters and put them in two big
baskets.
There are what I call the deplorables." And then there are the rest
—
lots of basically good, decent Americans who she believes don’t buy into
the ugly side of what Trump is saying but who are so desperate to see
change in American politics that they are willing to vote for
Trump.
Writing at Slate, Ben Zimmer suggests that the "basket of
deplorables"
construction entered Clinton’s mind by way of analogy with the
term
"parade of horribles," which, starting in the 1920s, "entered legal
usage as a dismissive term for imagined concerns about a ruling's
negative effects."
Clinton is an attorney by training, so Zimmer
thinks she would be
accustomed to that particular instance of nouning an
adjective.
Actual English-language use of "deplorables" as a term for a
group of
people, however, is quite rare, though Zimmer did find Thomas
Carlyle in
1831 writing that "of all the deplorables and despicables of this
city
and time the saddest are the ‘literary men.’"
In general, this
type of linguistic term suggests to me the vocabulary
of revolutionary
France (and, indeed, Carlyle wrote an early history of
the French
Revolution). This vocabulary is probably most familiar to the
mass audience
from the musical and book Les Misérables, with its
invocation of "the
miserables" as a term for the French urban poor. But
the revolutionary era
also gave us Les Enragés ("the enraged") as a term
for a loose group of
radical polemicists, the Sans-Culottes ("the
pantsless," i.e., people who
were the opposite of fancy pants) for the
Paris mob, and other instances of
nouning adjectives to give a name to
social classes. [...]
(3) We
Depolrables do not want unisex toilets, or female CEOs; we want
Jobs and
Houses
From Israel Shamir <adam@israelshamir.net> Date: Wed, 21
Sep 2016
12:55:53 +0200 Subject: [shamireaders] From Russian elections to
the
American ones, by Israel Shamir [1 Attachment]
Democracy’s Last
Chance
ISRAEL SHAMIR
SEPTEMBER 21, 2016
The Russian
parliamentary elections went smooth as a silk dress under
the hand. The
ruling party, United Russia, has got a big majority of the
seats in the
Parliament, while the other three parties, the Communists
(CPRF), the
Nationalists and the Socialists shared the rest. Pro-Western
parties did not
cross the threshold and remained outside, as before. [...]
Putin is the
most moderate Russian politician acceptable to the public;
every viable
democratic alternative would be more radical, and more
pro-Communist or
Nationalist. All Russian politicians above a certain
age were Communist
Party members; the Socialists (Fair Russia) is a
splinter of the Communist
Party established by the Kremlin in order to
undermine the CPRF.
[...]
While agreeing with and supporting Putin’s foreign policy, the
Communists, the Socialists and a sizeable minority of the ruling United
Russia party disagree with Putin’s liberal economic and financial
policies. They would like to suppress the oligarchs, to introduce
currency controls, to re-nationalise privatised industries and to
strengthen the social state. But they can’t do it: even if they were to
gain a clear majority in the elections, Putin would still be entitled to
ask, say, liberal Medvedev or arch-liberal Kudrin to form a government.
[...]
The parliaments and people mean very little now in Europe – as
little as
in Russia. The British people voted for Brexit. Fine! So did it
happen?
Not at all. The new unelected government of Theresa May just pushed
the
decision far away into the heap of not-very-urgent business
correspondence next to requesting assignment of a budget to a Zoo. Maybe
she will deliver it to Brussels in a year or two. [...]
Many people I
spoke to already repeat, word-perfect, the new
post-Brexit-vote mantra:
"Only retired old folk and unemployed racists
voted for Brexit." Mrs Clinton
provided the name for them: The
Deplorables. This American name for
perspective Trump voters fits the
Brexit voters like a glove. A Deplorable
is a person who does not
subscribe to the ruling neo-liberal paradigm and
its twin sister,
identity politics.
Clinton spoke of deplorables at
her meeting with the rich perverts of
Wall Street, at a hundred thousand
dollar a seat. Breaking the banks or
providing jobs will not help you, the
holy LGBT victims of white male
persecution, she said. Sure, but it will
help us, the working people. We
do not care for unisex lavatories, we do not
obsess about female CEOs.
We have other worries: how to get a secure job and
a decent house and
provide for our children. This makes us deplorable in the
eyes of rich
perverts.
A new generation of parties has sprung up in
Europe: the parties of the
Deplorables. In Sweden, until now, a Swedish
Democrats party, the only
party speaking against NATO, against the EU,
against the intake of
migrants had been excluded from public debate. Two
main parties, the
Right and the Left, forgot about their long animosity and
made a
government together, just to keep the SD out, because they are
deplorables. The result was paradoxical: more people have moved to
support the deplorable party.
French FN or Marine Le Pen is another
party of Deplorables. She wants to
take France out of EU and out of NATO,
and to keep the migrating waves
out. The Left and the Right would rather
submit to Saudi Arabia and
transfer the power to sheikhs than to allow the
Deplorables to win,
mused Houellebecq in his Submission.
The
Deplorable Jeremy Corbyn was almost removed from his chairmanship of
the
Labour party by the Labour MPs. The MPs preferred to keep their
party as a
clone of the Conservatives and to leave the electorate
without a real
choice. But Corbyn fights, and hopefully he will keep his
party and proceed
to victory. More power, more money, more control goes
to a smaller group of
people. We were disenfranchised, without noticing
it. The financiers and
their new nobility of discourse took over the
world as completely as the
aristocracy did in 11th century.
Russia with its very limited democracy
is still better off: their
nobility of discourse polled less than three per
cent of the votes in
the last elections, though they are still heavily
represented in the
government. The last decisive battle for preservation of
democracy now
takes place in the US. Its unlikely champion, Donald Trump, is
hated by
the political establishment, by the bought media, by instigated
minorities as much as Putin, Corbyn or Le Pen are hated.
The
Huffington Post published the following "Editor’s note: Donald Trump
regularly incites political violence and is a serial liar, rampant
xenophobe, racist, misogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to
ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from
entering the U.S."
A man so hated by enemies of democracy is one who
deserves our support.
When the revolution comes, whoever says "xenophobe,
racist, misogynist"
to his brother will be lined up against the wall and
shot. So it
probably won’t be Sanders’ revolution.
I am worried that
his enemies will not allow Trump’s inauguration: they
will say Putin hacked
the voting machines, and send the case to the
Supreme Court; or perhaps they
will try to assassinate him. But first,
let him win.
It is difficult
to predict the consequences of his victory. Newsweek
noted (while discussing
the US aid to Israel): "A Trump victory would
introduce a level of
uncertainty into the world that Israel fears.
Nobody has any idea what Trump
might do as president and that is
something new in international
relations."
This already sounds enticing enough. Israel fears democracy,
fears peace
in the Middle East, fears US disobedience, fears the Jews will
lose
their reserved places at the first class saloon on the upper deck, in
the editor’s rooms and the bank manager’s. Let them tremble.
The
consequences of Trump’s victory will be far-reaching. Our belief in
democracy will be restored. NATO will shrink, money will go to repair
the US infrastructure instead of bombing Syria and Libya. Americans will
be loved again.
The consequences of Clinton’s victory will be as
short-lived as we are,
for she will deliver us the living hell of a nuclear
war, and eternal
dictatorship of the Iron Heel.
This election is like
a red pill/blue pill choice given to you. "You
take the blue pill, the story
ends. You wake up in your bed and believe
whatever you want to believe. You
take the red pill, you stay in
Wonderland, and I show you how deep the
rabbit hole goes."
Providentially, we know what colour stands for Trump, and
what for
Clinton. First published at The Unz Review
Israel Shamir can
be reached at adam@israelshamir.net
(4)
Deplorably, Trump is going to win
http://atimes.com/2016/09/deplorably-trump-is-going-to-win/
Deplorably,
Trump is going to win
By David P. Goldman on September 11,
2016
The presidential election was over the moment the word "deplorable"
made
its run out of Hillary Clinton’s unguarded mouth. As the whole world
now
knows, Clinton told a Lesbian-Gay-Bisexual-Transgender fundraiser Sept.
10, "You know, to just be grossly generalistic, you could put half of
Trump’s supporters into what I call the ‘basket of deplorables.’ Right?
The racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamophobic — you name it.
And unfortunately, there are people like that, and he has lifted them
up." Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump arrives before the
start of the ceremony marking the 15th anniversary of the attacks on the
World Trade Center at The National September 11 Memorial and Museum in
New York
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump arrives before
the start of
the ceremony marking the 15th anniversary of the attacks on the
World
Trade Center at The National September 11 Memorial and Museum in Lower
Manhattan in New York City. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Hillary is road
kill.
She apologized, to be sure, but no-one will believe her: she was
chilling with her home audience and feeling the warmth, and she said
exactly what she thinks. The "Clinton Cash" corruption scandals, the
layers of lies about the email server, health problems, and all the
other negatives that pile up against the former First Lady are small
change compared to this apocalyptic moment of self-revelation.
You
can’t win an American presidential election without the deplorables’
vote.
Deplorables are America’s biggest minority. They might even be the
American
majority. They may or not be racist, homophobic and so forth,
but they know
they’re deplorable. Deplorable, and proud. They’re the
median family whose
real income has fallen deplorably by 5% in the past
ten years, the 35% of
adult males who deplorably have dropped out of
the labor force, the 40% of
student debtors who deplorably aren’t making
payments on their loans, the
aging state and local government workers
whose pension funds are $4 trillion
short. They lead deplorable lives
and expect that their kids’ lives will be
even more deplorable than
theirs. [...]
Corporations are making money
by gaming the regulatory system rather
than deploying new technologies.
Close to half of the increase in
corporate profits during the past decade
can be attributed to regulatory
rent-seeking by large corporations,
according to a June 2016 study by
Boston University economist Jim Bessen.
Bessen concluded that
"investments in conventional capital assets and
R&D account for a
substantial part of the rise in valuations and profits
especially during
the 1990s. However, since 2000, political activity and
regulation
account for a surprisingly large share of the
increase."
That’s why Trump won the nomination. Ted Cruz, an evangelical
Christian,
solicited the religious vote (what Hillary Clinton thinks of
"homophobes"), but the evangelicals by and large voted for Trump. They
want an outsider with a big broom to come in and sweep away the
Establishment, because the Establishment has given them deplorably few
crumbs from the table these past eight years. As "Publius" wrote Sept. 5
in Claremont Review, "A Hillary Clinton presidency is Russian Roulette
with a semi-auto. With Trump, at least you can spin the cylinder and
take your chances."
There are any number of things I would like
Donald Trump to do as
president. I have no idea what he will do when
elected. Deplorably,
we’re going to find out.
(5) Obama depicts
Hillary-Trump contest as Globalism vs Nationalism
Obama, in Farewell to
U.N., Paints Stark Choices for Unsettled World
By MARK
LANDLER
SEPT. 19, 2016
UNITED NATIONS — It was President Obama’s
last appearance on the marble
dais of the United Nations General Assembly
hall, and his farewell
speech on Tuesday revealed a man whose eye was fixed
as much on the next
seven weeks of the American political campaign as on his
place in history.
Mr. Obama delivered a stinging rebuke of those who
would build walls, a
message aimed at foreign leaders who he said had fueled
rising
nationalism, sectarian hatred and economic inequality — but,
unmistakably, at Donald J. Trump, as well.
"A nation ringed by walls
would only imprison itself," Mr. Obama said of
the protectionist impulse to
resist the forces of global integration. At
another point, he declared to
the packed chamber in New York, "the world
is too small for us to simply be
able to build a wall" to keep out
extremists. Lest anyone miss the point, he
said of the spreading Zika
virus, "mosquitoes don’t respect walls."
[...]
"At this moment, we all face a choice," Mr. Obama said. "We can
choose
to press forward with a better model of cooperation and integration,
or
we can retreat into a world sharply divided and ultimately in conflict
along age-old lines of nation and tribe and race and religion."
That
choice, Mr. Obama implied, was as sharply drawn in the race between
Mr.
Trump and the president’s preferred candidate, Hillary Clinton, as
it was in
the grinding sectarian war in Syria, the predations of
President Vladimir V.
Putin of Russia and the muscle-flexing of China.
Mr. Obama spoke of a "crude
populism" driving politics in the United
States and Europe that fed on
"uncertainty and unease and strife" around
the world.
Mr. Obama’s
words underscored the distance he has traveled from the
hopeful leader who
first addressed the General Assembly on Sept. 23,
2009. On that day, he
pledged to forswear the unilateralism of his
predecessor, George W. Bush,
heralded a new era for the United States’
relationship with the Muslim world
and promised to revive peace
negotiations between Israel and the
Palestinians.
On Tuesday, he dismissed the Israeli-Palestinian peace
process with a
single sentence — not a fervent call for a two-state solution
but the
perfunctory observation that both sides would "be better off if
Palestinians reject incitement and recognize the legitimacy of Israel,
but Israel recognizes that it cannot permanently occupy and settle
Palestinian land." [...]
A version of this article appears in print
on September 21, 2016, on
page A10 of the New York edition with the
headline: Obama, in Farewell
to U.N., Paints Stark Choices for
World.
(6) CFR & NYT call Trump a 'know-nothing' and his supporters
'stupid'
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/01/opinion/how-the-stupid-party-created-donald-trump.html
http://www.cfr.org/united-states/stupid-party-created-donald-trump/p38178
How
the ‘Stupid Party’ Created Donald Trump
By MAX BOOT
JULY 31,
2016
It’s hard to know exactly when the Republican Party assumed the
mantle
of the "stupid party."
Stupidity is not an accusation that
could be hurled against such
prominent early Republicans as Abraham Lincoln,
Theodore Roosevelt,
Elihu Root and Charles Evans Hughes. But by the 1950s,
it had become an
established shibboleth that the "eggheads" were for Adlai
Stevenson and
the "boobs" for Dwight D. Eisenhower — a view endorsed by
Richard
Hofstadter’s 1963 book "Anti-Intellectualism in American Life,"
which
contrasted Stevenson, "a politician of uncommon mind and style, whose
appeal to intellectuals overshadowed anything in recent history," with
Eisenhower — "conventional in mind, relatively inarticulate." The John
F. Kennedy presidency, with its glittering court of Camelot, cemented
the impression that it was the Democrats who represented the thinking
men and women of America.
Rather than run away from the
anti-intellectual label, Republicans
embraced it for their own political
purposes. In his "time for choosing"
speech, Ronald Reagan said that the
issue in the 1964 election was
"whether we believe in our capacity for
self-government or whether we
abandon the American Revolution and confess
that a little intellectual
elite in a far-distant Capitol can plan our lives
for us better than we
can plan them ourselves." Richard M. Nixon appealed to
the "silent
majority" and the "hard hats," while his vice president, Spiro
T. Agnew,
issued slashing attacks on an "effete core of impudent snobs who
characterize themselves as intellectuals."
William F. Buckley Jr.
famously said, "I should sooner live in a society
governed by the first
2,000 names in the Boston telephone directory than
in a society governed by
the 2,000 faculty members of Harvard
University." More recently, George W.
Bush joked at a Yale commencement:
"To those of you who received honors,
awards and distinctions, I say,
well done. And to the C students I say, you,
too, can be president of
the United States."
Many Democrats took all
this at face value and congratulated themselves
for being smarter than the
benighted Republicans. Here’s the thing,
though: The Republican embrace of
anti-intellectualism was, to a large
extent, a put-on. At least until
now.
Eisenhower may have played the part of an amiable duffer, but he may
have been the best prepared president we have ever had — a five-star
general with an unparalleled knowledge of national security affairs.
When he resorted to gobbledygook in public, it was in order to preserve
his political room to maneuver. Reagan may have come across as a dumb
thespian, but he spent decades honing his views on public policy and
writing his own speeches. Nixon may have burned with resentment of
"Harvard men," but he turned over foreign policy and domestic policy to
two Harvard professors, Henry A. Kissinger and Daniel Patrick Moynihan,
while his own knowledge of foreign affairs was second only to
Ike’s.
There is no evidence that Republican leaders have been
demonstrably
dumber than their Democratic counterparts. During the Reagan
years, the
G.O.P. briefly became known as the "party of ideas," because it
harvested so effectively the intellectual labor of conservative think
tanks like the American Enterprise Institute and the Heritage Foundation
and publications like The Wall Street Journal editorial page and
Commentary. Scholarly policy makers like George P. Shultz, Jeane J.
Kirkpatrick and Bill Bennett held prominent posts in the Reagan
administration, a tradition that continued into the George W. Bush
administration — amply stocked with the likes of Paul D. Wolfowitz, John
J. Dilulio Jr. and Condoleezza Rice.
In recent years, however, the
Republicans’ relationship to the realm of
ideas has become more and more
attenuated as talk-radio hosts and
television personalities have taken over
the role of defining the
conservative movement that once belonged to
thinkers like Irving
Kristol, Norman Podhoretz and George F. Will. The Tea
Party represented
a populist revolt against what its activists saw as
out-of-touch
Republican elites in Washington.
There are still some
thoughtful Republican leaders exemplified by House
Speaker Paul D. Ryan, who
devised an impressive new budget plan for his
party. But the primary vibe
from the G.O.P. has become one of
indiscriminate, unthinking, all-consuming
anger. See Sample Privacy
Policy
The trend has now culminated in
the nomination of Donald J. Trump, a
presidential candidate who truly is the
know-nothing his Republican
predecessors only pretended to be.
Mr.
Trump doesn’t know the difference between the Quds Force and the
Kurds. He
can’t identify the nuclear triad, the American strategic
nuclear arsenal’s
delivery system. He had never heard of Brexit until a
few weeks before the
vote. He thinks the Constitution has 12 Articles
rather than seven. He uses
the vocabulary of a fifth grader. Most
damning of all, he traffics in
off-the-wall conspiracy theories by
insinuating that President Obama was
born in Kenya and that Ted Cruz’s
father was involved in the Kennedy
assassination. It is hardly
surprising to read Tony Schwartz, the
ghostwriter for Mr. Trump’s best
seller "The Art of the Deal," say, "I
seriously doubt that Trump has
ever read a book straight through in his
adult life."
Mr. Trump even appears proud of his lack of learning. He
told The
Washington Post that he reached decisions "with very little
knowledge,"
but on the strength of his "common sense" and his "business
ability."
Reading long documents is a waste of time because of his rapid
ability
to get to the gist of an issue, he said: "I’m a very efficient guy."
What little Mr. Trump does know seems to come from television: Asked
where he got military advice, he replied, "I watch the shows."
Mr.
Trump promotes a nativist, isolationist, anti-trade agenda that is
supported
by few if any serious scholars. He called for tariff increases
that experts
warn will cost millions of jobs and plunge the country into
a recession. He
claimed that Mexican immigrants were "bringing crime"
even though research
consistently shows that immigrants have a lower
crime rate than the
native-born. He promised that Mexico would pay for a
border wall, even
though no regional expert thinks that will ever happen.
Mr. Trump also
proposed barring Muslims from entering the country
despite terrorism
researchers, myself included, warning that his plan
would likely backfire,
feeding the Islamic State’s narrative that the
war on terrorism is really a
war on Islam. He has since revised that
proposal and would now bar visitors
from countries that have a "proven
history of terrorism" — overlooking that
pretty much every country,
including every major American ally, has a
history of terrorism.
Recently, he declared that he would not necessarily
come to the aid of
the Baltic republics if they were attacked by Russia,
apparently not
knowing or caring that Article 5 of the 1949 North Atlantic
Treaty
obliges the United States to defend any NATO member under attack.
Last
week, Mr. Trump even invited Russia’s intelligence agencies to hack the
emails of a former secretary of state — something impossible to imagine
any previous presidential nominee doing. It is genuinely terrifying that
someone who advances such offensive and ridiculous proposals could win
the nomination of a party once led by Teddy Roosevelt, who wrote more
books than Mr. Trump has probably read. It’s one thing to appeal to
voters by pretending to be an average guy. It’s another to be an average
guy who doesn’t know the first thing about governing or public
policy.
The Trump acolytes claim it doesn’t matter; he can hire experts
to
advise him. But experts always disagree with one another and it is the
president alone who must make the most difficult decisions in the world.
That’s not something he can do since he lacks the most basic grounding
in the issues and is prey to fundamental misconceptions.
In a way,
the joke’s on the Republican Party: After decades of
masquerading as the
"stupid party," that’s what it has become. But if an
unapologetic ignoramus
wins the presidency, the consequences will be no
laughing
matter.
Even if we can avoid the calamity of a Trump presidency, however,
the
G.O.P. still has a lot of soul-searching to do. Mr. Trump is as much a
symptom as a cause of the party’s anti-intellectual drift. The party
needs to rethink its growing anti-intellectual bias and its reflexive
aversion to elites. Catering to populist anger with extremist proposals
that are certain to fail is not a viable strategy for political
success.
Max Boot, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations,
was a
foreign policy adviser to the presidential campaigns of John McCain,
Mitt Romney and Marco Rubio.
A version of this op-ed appears in print
on August 2, 2016, on page A23
of the New York edition with the headline:
How the ‘Stupid Party’
Created Trump.
(7) Council on Foreign
Relations Declares War on Donald Trump
http://www.thecommonsenseshow.com/2016/03/01/the-council-of-foreign-relations-declares-war-on-donald-trump-his-days-are-numbered/
The
Council of Foreign Relations Declares War On Donald Trump- His Days
Are
Numbered
There will be no parades and no media shows which start out as…
"we
interrupt this broadcast to bring you this breaking news item…", but the
almighty Council of Foreign Relations (CFR) has spoken and they are
endorsing a Hillary Clinton, but mostly they have issued a position
statement that Donald Trump must be stopped at all costs. This is the
caricature of Trump that ran in the mouthpiece of the Council of Foreign
Relations, The Economist.
This is the caricature of Trump that ran in
the mouthpiece of the
Council of Foreign Relations, The Economist. Since
when does the
self-proclaimed righteous defender of the elite, founded by
John
Rockefeller, lower themselves to such blatant and childish mudslinging?
They don’t, and this behavior is representative of a departure of
tactics employed by the elite. And the fact that elite are approaching
such a state of desperation, near-panic, if you will, all options are on
the table. Again, I say, the elite are proclaiming that all options are
on the table when it comes to the fate of Donald Trump.
Meanwhile,
Hillary Clinton is their choice and has always been their
choice to follow
Obama into the White House, with her criminal behavior
notwithstanding.
The Council of Foreign Relations is no longer a
secret and this is who
Hillary Clinton serves. Look at the background behind
Mrs. Clinton. This
is how the CFR gives tacit approval. No matter how
criminal, no matter
how long the trail of bodies becomes, the CFR is "all
in" for their
support of America's modern day version of Lizzy
Borden.
The Council of Foreign Relations is no longer a secret, as it
once was,
and this is who Hillary Clinton serves. Look at the background
behind
Mrs. Clinton. This is how the CFR gives tacit approval. No matter how
criminal, no matter how long the trail of bodies becomes, the CFR is
"all in" for their support of America’s modern day version of Lizzy
Borden.
As an average American, anytime the CFR, or its first cousin, the
Trilateral Commission endorses a candidate, no matter how subtle the
endorsement, I assume it is opposite day and move in the other
direction.
Do you know your CFR history? The CFR was the first
"modern-day"
globalist organization that arose in the early 1920’s when
President
Wilson was unable to convince the Senate and the American people
that it
would be a good idea to join The League of Nations, which arose out
of
the ashes of World War I.
The League of Nations, like its
descendant, the United Nations, was
designed to usurp national sovereignty
from its member nations. The CFR
was founded by John Rockefeller and they
worked very hard at obscuring
their existence in the media (whose top elite
were members). Any talk of
the CFR would have earned that person the
original label of "conspiracy
theorist".
The main goal of the CFR is
world governance and a one world economy
that they control. The one world
economy is taking shape and it is
comprised of those people that Patrick
Wood calls technocrats. I hope
you are sitting down. These people are intent
on owning all energy on
the planet through unrealistic caps on our energy
usage. Their system of
carbon trading will reduce the lifestyles of the
average person to about
the 1870’s in terms of lifestyles, if we are
lucky.
Dehumanization and Depopulation are central themes of this
approach. Pat
Wood details this in his book Technocracy Rising.
The
ushering in of these strict environmental regulations is why Obama
is
sitting in the White House. At some future date I will, in great
detail,
Obama’s connection to this group. Suffice for now, let’s just
say that his
original membership in the Joyce Foundation where Obama
worked for Valerie
Jarrett, now the senior-White House advisor is
noteworthy. With the support
of notables such as Al Gore, Warren Buffet
and George Soros, the Joyce
Foundation morphed into the intended carbon
trading organization, The
Chicago Climate Exchange.
arrett and Obama were unable to get the Chicago
Climate Exchange to a
position of prominence because Obama was unable to
advance his complete
Climate Change initiatives, to any degree, through the
Congress. Later,
Justice Scalia, was the swing vote on the Supreme Court
that was
standing in the way of Obama making his Climate Change initiatives
law
through executive branch fiat. And I am compelled to point out, where is
Scalia today? This is a dire warning for Donald Trump.
When the smoke
clears, Obama may not get his entire package codified
into law. However,
that is why the CFR has Hillary Clinton. At stake, is
the world economy. The
elite power structure of the CFR is in charge of
the smart grid, and
ultimately the use of all energy on this planet
including the world’s new
economy, carbon trading, the new global
currency. Under this system, all
debts will be forgiven because the
people will be left with nothing when the
bank runs, the bail-ins and
the absolute collapse of the dollar takes
place.
This is the most important Presidential race in our history
because of
the specter of technocracy. If Hillary secures the White House,
the
elite in the CFR are going to get exactly what they want, absolute power
over the planet and with that, the complete power over who lives and who
dies.
Let’s take a look at the CFR’s condemnation of Trump and their
de facto
endorsement of Clinton so there can be no doubt as to the accuracy
of
what I am speaking about.
Relevant Excerpts From The CFR’s The
Economist
…the Republican nomination could be all but over. Donald
Trump has
already won three of the first four contests. On March 1st, Super
Tuesday, 12 more states will vote. Mr Trump has a polling lead in all
but three of them. Were these polls to translate into results, as they
have so far, Mr Trump would not quite be unbeatable. It would still be
possible for another candidate to win enough delegates to overtake him.
But that would require the front-runner to have a late, spectacular
electoral collapse of a kind that has not been seen before. Right now
the Republican nomination is his to lose...
With the statement the
CFR alarm was sounded. But there is more…
When pollsters ask voters
to choose in a face-off between Mr Trump
and Hillary Clinton, the Democratic
front-runner wins by less than three
percentage points. Mr Trump would have
plenty of time to try to close
that gap. An economy that falls back into
recession or an indictment for
Mrs Clinton might do it for him.
That is an appalling prospect. The things Mr Trump has said in this
campaign
make him unworthy of leading one of the world’s great political
parties, let
alone America. One way to judge politicians is by whether
they appeal to our
better natures: Mr Trump has prospered by inciting
hatred and violence. He
is so unpredictable that the thought of him
anywhere near high office is
terrifying. He must be stopped (Editor’s
Note: Stopped at all
costs?).
This last statement is a declaration of war by the
self-appointed elite
in this country and this is so reminiscent of what
happened to Bobby
Kennedy.
When one is losing an argument, they
resort to name-calling and that is
what we see here where the power-brokers
are so desperate that they
resort to infantile name calling, taking quotes
of out of context and
engaging in the worst type of yellow journalism.
There’s more…
,,,hinted that Antonin Scalia, a Supreme Court
justice, was
murdered (Editor’s Note: He was murdered); proposed banning all
Muslims
from visiting America (Editor’s Note: Trump stated that all
immigrants
should be screened, a sentiment embraced by most Americans with
common
sense).
Conclusion
What is the fate of all effective
reformers.
When the Council of Foreign Relations declares war on an
individual,
history shows (e.g. JFK, RFK, MLK, et al) have a short
shelf-life. One
can only imagine how John F. Kennedy felt when he knew that
the
interlocked and combined forces of the Federal Reserve, the oil industry
and the military industrial complete were closing in on him. Donald
Trump is in a very similar position.
The fate of those who would date
to buck the CFR power elite.
This is often the fate of those who would
date to buck the CFR power
elite. I liken Trump and his future to Larry
McDonald than I do John
Kennedy. I see it ending the same way.
I do
not want to end this article on a note of doom and gloom. Those of
who work
in the Independent Media know that if you are going to be on
the list, you
better be on the top of the list. Right now, placing
extreme attention on
the topic of Trump’s safety, is the best way to
keep him alive until
election day.
(8) Time to fire Trump - The {Rothschild}
Economist
http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21693579-front-runner-unfit-lead-great-political-party-let-alone-america-time-fire-trump
The
Economist
Time to fire Trump
The front-runner is unfit to lead a
great political party, let alone
America Feb 27th 2016 | From the print
edition
IN A week’s time, the race for the Republican nomination could be
all
but over. Donald Trump has already won three of the first four contests.
On March 1st, Super Tuesday, 12 more states will vote. Mr Trump has a
polling lead in all but three of them. Were these polls to translate
into results, as they have so far, Mr Trump would not quite be
unbeatable. It would still be possible for another candidate to win
enough delegates to overtake him. But that would require the
front-runner to have a late, spectacular electoral collapse of a kind
that has not been seen before. Right now the Republican nomination is
his to lose.
Worse, it might not stop there. Polls show that 46% of
Americans of
voting age have a "very unfavourable" opinion of Mr Trump,
which
suggests his chances of winning a general election are slight. But Mr
Trump’s political persona is more flexible than that of any professional
politician, which means he can take it in any direction he wants to. And
whoever wins the nomination for either party will have a decent chance
of becoming America’s next president: the past few elections have been
decided by slim margins in a handful of states. When pollsters ask
voters to choose in a face-off between Mr Trump and Hillary Clinton, the
Democratic front-runner wins by less than three percentage points. Mr
Trump would have plenty of time to try to close that gap. An economy
that falls back into recession or an indictment for Mrs Clinton might do
it for him.
That is an appalling prospect. The things Mr Trump has
said in this
campaign make him unworthy of leading one of the world’s great
political
parties, let alone America. One way to judge politicians is by
whether
they appeal to our better natures: Mr Trump has prospered by
inciting
hatred and violence. He is so unpredictable that the thought of him
anywhere near high office is terrifying. He must be stopped.
The
world according to Trump
Because each additional Trumpism seems a bit
less shocking than the one
before, there is a danger of becoming
desensitised to his outbursts. To
recap, he has referred to Mexicans
crossing the border as rapists;
called enthusiastically for the use of
torture; hinted that Antonin
Scalia, a Supreme Court justice, was murdered;
proposed banning all
Muslims from visiting America; advocated killing the
families of
terrorists; and repeated, approvingly, a damaging fiction that a
century
ago American soldiers in the Philippines dipped their ammunition in
pigs’ blood before executing Muslim rebels. At a recent rally he said he
would like to punch a protester in the face. This is by no means an
exhaustive list.
Almost the only policy Mr Trump clearly subscribes
to is a fantasy: the
construction of a wall along the southern border, paid
for by Mexico.
What would he do if faced with a crisis in the South China
Sea, a
terrorist attack in America or another financial meltdown? Nobody has
any idea. Mr Trump may be well suited to campaigning in primaries, where
voters bear little resemblance to the country as a whole, but it is
difficult to imagine any candidate less suited to the consequence of
winning a general election, namely governing.
America’s primary
agenda: our interactive 2016 election calendar
With each victory, the
voices trying to make peace with Mr Trump’s
hostile takeover of the
Republican Party grow louder. He has already
been endorsed by some
Republican congressmen. Some on the left point out
that he is less
conservative on social and economic questions than some
of his rivals (while
privately hoping the Republicans nominate him so
that Mrs Clinton can give
him a shellacking). Some on the right argue
that Mr Trump is merely playing
a role, blowing chilli powder up the
nostrils of the politically correct,
and that in essence he is a
pragmatic New York property developer who likes
to cut deals. Were he to
win the nomination, their argument runs, he would
be privately
intimidated and would appoint sensible advisers to whom he
would defer.
This is wishful thinking by those who want their side to win
at any
cost. There is nothing in Mr Trump’s career—during which he has
maintained close control of the family business he runs, and often acted
on instinct—to suggest that he would suddenly metamorphose into a wise
chairman, eager to take counsel from seasoned experts. For those who
have yet to notice, Mr Trump is not burdened by a lack of confidence in
his own opinions.
Republican in name only
For too long, the
first instinct of Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio, the
leading alternatives to Mr
Trump, has been to avoid criticising the
front-runner in the hope of winning
over his voters later. The primaries
may at times resemble a circus, but
they also provide a place to test
candidates for leadership and courage. So
far both men have flunked that
test. Republicans need to take Mr Trump on,
not stand transfixed by what
is happening to their party. More than 60m
people voted for Mitt Romney
in 2012. A big majority are decent,
compassionate, tolerant people who
abhor political violence, bigotry and
lying. Thoughtful conservatives
will be heart-broken if asked to choose in
November between a snarling
nativist and a Democrat.
If The Economist
had cast a vote in the Republican primaries in Iowa,
New Hampshire, South
Carolina or Nevada we would have supported John
Kasich. The governor of Ohio
has a good mixture of experience, in
Congress and in his home state as well
as in the private sector. He has
also shown bravery, expanding Medicaid in
Ohio though he knew it would
count against him later with primary voters, as
indeed it has. But this
is not Mr Kasich’s party any more. Despite his
success in New Hampshire,
where he came second, Mr Kasich is the preferred
choice of less than 10%
of Republican voters.
If the field remains
split as it is now, it is possible for Mr Trump to
win with just a plurality
of votes. To prevent that, others must drop
out. Although we are yet to be
convinced by Mr Rubio (see article), he
stands a better chance of beating Mr
Trump than anyone else. All the
other candidates—including Mr Cruz, who
wrongly sees himself as the
likeliest challenger—should get out of his way.
If they decline to do
so, it could soon be too late to prevent the party of
Abraham Lincoln
from being led into a presidential election by Donald
Trump.
From the print edition: Leaders
Featured
comment
oesioij Feb 25th, 16:29
Trump's the problem? And what
about the huge coalition of voters that
have rallied under Trump's banner?
Trump isn't the problem, the problem
is whatever made people feel that Trump
is there only hope for political
representation in the first
place.
Trump is on a different level. Most Republicans go around saying,
"people are fed up with political correctness!". Trump says he wants to
punch protesters in the face, calls Mexicans rapists, and gets into
name-calling matches with the Pope. Most Republicans, when talking
immigration, fall into technical discussions about work visas and what
have you. Trump says he going to build a gigantic wall to keep the
illegals out.
If you look past what he's saying, you can see he has
become the banner
of everyone who is sick of political correctness, sick of
being called
"racist" for expressing non-liberal opinions, and, most
especially, sick
of politicians who say whatever they need to to get
elected, and then
proceed to do whatever the people who paid for their
campaign want.
It doesn't matter if Trump can't keep his promises. He is
punishment for
a party that has disenfranchised its political bases so much
that they
feel their only hope for having their interests represented is -
the
demagogue. He is punishment for politicians who have crossed a line in
ignoring the wants of their voters (a line they always seem to want to
get as close to as possible without going over). If it's any
consolation, one of the insights from Bentley's "The Process of
Government" is that demagogues, as politician coalitions, tend to fall
apart as soon as they win power and begin to work out the details of
what they're going to do.
But I chuckle every time I see some eight
page refutation of Trumps
economic policies. If that's how you're going to
try and take him down,
then I can safely say that Trump will end up doing
whatever the forces
of history have in store for him. Scholarly critiques
will do nothing.
Maybe he won't win, and instead will end up costing a party
the election
as punishment. Either way he's a part of the democratic
process, like it
or not. Without demagogues, all people have left is
militias.
(9) Jill Stein vs Both
https://www.rt.com/usa/360709-jill-stein-debate-social-media/
3rd
party candidate Jill Stein responds to Clinton-Trump duel in real
time
Published time: 27 Sep, 2016 01:12 Edited time: 27 Sep, 2016
03:35
Barred from participating in the Clinton-Trump showdown at New
York’s
Hofstra University, Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein
fights
back with her own livestream Q&A contribution to the debate on
social media.
In answer to a debate question how to achieve prosperity,
Stein said
Clinton approved of NAFTA, which was signed into law by her
husband,
then president, Bill Clinton.
She said everything that
Donald Trump markets is an off-shored
manufactured item.
"So Donald
Trump knows all about it. In fact, he advised that people
close their
factories and move somewhere and then impose low wages on
the workers,"
Stein told more than 7,000 viewers on her livestream.
"We are calling for
the antidote to NAFTA. The Green New Deal, investing
in people, 20 million
living wage jobs that will transition us to 100
percent clean energy," said
Stein."…[Restoring] our ecosystem, turning
the tide on climate change,
reviving our health, that alone is enough."
With over 9,000 viewers
online, Stein said the policies that led to the
Wall Street crisis, and the
consequence of predatory lending and
predatory student loans, were a result
of deregulation brought to us by
then president Bill Clinton, with the
support of Hillary Clinton.
Clinton is a friend of the big banks, too, said
Stein.
"Don’t just listen to talk," said Stein.
"It’s very
important we go back and renegotiate NAFTA …but we need to
develop our jobs
here," said Stein. "That’s why we call for investing in
new jobs through our
Green New Deal...in small businesses, worker
businesses, worker
collectives."
Stein said both Democrat and Republican parties have a
history of
cutting taxes on the wealthy, and shifting the tax base to the
middle
class and working people.
"America wasn’t meant to be an
aristocracy," said Stein. "22
billionaires have as much money as 50 percent
of the US population.
...We need a progressive income tax, with the rich
paying at least at
the 55 to 60 percent level."
"We need a politics
of integrity," said Stein when the candidates talked
about their tax returns
and financial disclosures.
"I think they are both right," said Stein. "I
think the America people
deserve disclosure about who is the bigger
crook."
With 10,300 viewers, Stein said the police tactic Stop and Frisk
"was a
disaster for human rights, and a horrific assault on
communities."
"The place where need law and order is on Wall Street,"
said Stein who
explained that the police were "missing in action. They need
to be
brought back."
"Immigrants are among the most law-abiding
groups out there," said
Stein. "It is false for Trump to be fear-mongering
that immigrants are a
community of violence."
Stein said the systemic
racism in prisons, the courts and in the economy
needed to be
addressed.
Stein said the police needed training in de-escalation
techniques, to be
evaluated over whom is hired, and to not be loaded up with
military gear.
"Police forces need to look like the communities they
serve," said Stein.
With 10,800 viewers, 15,000 likes and 15,000 shares,
Stein said: "We
need an international treaty to prevent cyberwar, which the
Chinese and
the Russians as well want but our government has been refusing
to go
along. We need to listen to the concerns raised here, and move ahead
with the treaty."
On the allegations that Russia hacked the DNC
emails, Stein said: "I
agree with Donald Trump, surprisingly."
"There
is no evidence that the Russians were the ones who hacked into
the DNC
emails, but they gave us plenty of evidence that the DNC was
involved in
backroom dealing."
On the issue of Edward Snowden, Stein said the NSA
whistleblower should
be given a pardon and "brought home as a
hero."
On Foreign policy, Stein said we need a Peace Offensive in the
Mideast
to cut off weapons and funding to terrorist militias.
"When
it comes to nuclear weapons, the Obama administration had just
approved
trillions of dollars on new modes of delivering nuclear
weapons," said
Stein. "Clinton has given no indication of changing
course. She is pushing
for an air war against Russia over Syria,
creating a no-fly zones namely
against Russia."
"That is the one solution here – it is nuclear abolition
as an
international emergency," said Stein.
Stein said the Iran deal
ensured there would be no nuclear weapon in the
country in the
future.
"Iran does not currently have a nuclear weapons program and was
not
engaged in a nuclear weapons program," said Stein.
"There are
nuclear weapons in the hands of the Israelis and Pakistanis."
"It now takes
44 percent of your tax dollars to fund the military," said
Stein. "I am only
candidate not taking money from the military industry
and the fossil fuel
industry."
After the debate, Stein engaged in an #AskJill Q&A on
Twitter and
Facebook. Questions ranged from LGBT rights, immigration and
campaign
reform to how to fight climate change and what to do about public
schools.
On climate change, Stein said she was against all new fossil
fuel
infrastructure and would phase out fossil fuels by 2030 "to avert the
climate catastrophe that is coming."
On helping public schools, Stein
said they should be fully funded and
have smaller classes. She also
advocated hiring more teachers, getting
rid of high stakes testing, teaching
students for life-long learning,
and focusing more on arts and
music.
Stein was asked if she would pardon whistleblower Chelsea Manning.
"We
should pardon her and bring her back a hero," said Stein.
Stein
said she hopes the next time she’ll be on the debate stage.
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