SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/16/2018 8:41:10 PM
From: GUNSNGOLD2 Recommendations

Recommended By
DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck
TideGlider

  Respond to of 224749
 
Well, Kenny that's two out of fifty, what about the other 48 states? Let's see that's 4 percent.

G-n-G



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/17/2018 1:32:27 AM
From: FJB4 Recommendations

Recommended By
DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck
GUNSNGOLD
rayrohn
TideGlider

  Respond to of 224749
 
Trump Administration Planning its “BIGGEST” Ever Round Up of Illegal Invaders - MORE WINNING!
January 16, 2018, 8:43 pm by Joshua Caplan



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/17/2018 5:27:36 AM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

Recommended By
GUNSNGOLD
TideGlider

  Respond to of 224749
 

President Trump Undoes Obama Legacy: Commonsense Nobama
WINNING!

nationalreview.com

by Victor Davis Hanson January 16, 2018 4:00 AM

Donald Trump continues to baffle. Never Trump Republicans still struggle to square the circle of quietly agreeing so far with most of his policies, as they loudly insist that his record is already nullified by its supposedly odious author. Or surely it soon will be discredited by the next Trumpian outrage. Or his successes belong to congressional and Cabinet members, while his failures are all his own. Rarely do they seriously reflect on what otherwise over the last year might have been the trajectory of a Clinton administration.

Contrary to popular supposition, the Left loathes Trump not just for what he has done. (It is often too consumed with fury to calibrate carefully the particulars of the Trump agenda.) Rather, it despises him mostly for what he superficially represents.

To many progressives and indeed elites of all persuasions, Trump is also the Prince of Anti-culture: mindlessly naïve American boosterism; conspicuous, 1950s-style unapologetic consumption; repetitive and limited vocabulary; fast-food culinary tastes; Queens accent; herky-jerky mannerisms; ostentatious dress; bulging appearance; poorly disguised facial expressions; embracing rather than sneering at middle-class appetites; a lack of subtlety, nuance, and ambiguity.

In short Trump’s very essence wars with everything that long ago was proven to be noble, just, and correct by Vanity Fair, NPR, The New Yorker, Google, the Upper West Side, and The Daily Show. There is not even a smidgeon of a concession that some of Trump’s policies might offer tens of thousands of forgotten inner-city youth good jobs or revitalize a dead and written-off town in the Midwest, or make the petroleum of the war-torn Persian Gulf strategically irrelevant to an oil-rich United States.

Yet one way of understanding Trump — particularly the momentum of his first year — is through recollection of the last eight years of the Obama administration. In reductionist terms, Trump is the un-Obama. Surprisingly, that is saying quite a lot more than simple reductive negativism. Republicans have not seriously attempted to roll back the administrative state since Reagan. On key issues of climate change, entitlements, illegal immigration, government spending, and globalization, it was sometimes hard to distinguish a Bush initiative from a Clinton policy or a McCain bill from a Biden proposal. There was often a reluctant acceptance of the seemingly inevitable march to the European-style socialist administrative state.

Of course, there were sometimes differences between the two parties, such as the George W. Bush’s tax cuts or the Republicans’ opposition to Obamacare. Yet for the most part, since 1989, we’ve had lots of rhetoric but otherwise no serious effort to prune back the autonomous bureaucracy that grew ever larger. Few Republicans in the executive branch sought to reduce government employment, deregulate, sanction radical expansion of fossil-fuel production, question the economic effects of globalization on Americans between the coasts, address deindustrialization, recalibrate the tax code, rein in the EPA, secure the border, reduce illegal immigration, or question transnational organizations. To do all that would require a president to be largely hated by the Left, demonized by the media, and caricatured in popular culture — and few were willing to endure the commensurate ostracism.

Trump has done all that in a manner perhaps more Reaganesque than Reagan himself. In part, he has been able to make such moves because of the Republican majority (though thin) in Congress and also because of, not despite, his politically incorrect bluntness, his in-your-face talk, innate cunning, reality-TV celebrity status, animalistic energy, and his cynical appraisal that tangible success wins more support than ideology. And, yes, in part the wheeler-dealer Manhattan billionaire developed real sympathy for the forgotten losers of globalization.

Even his critics sometimes concede that his economic and foreign-policy agendas are bringing dividends. In some sense, it is not so much because of innovative policy, but rather that he is simply bullying his way back to basics we’ve forgotten over the past decades.

The wonder was never how to grow the economy at 3 percent (all presidents prior to 2009 had at one time or another done just that), but rather, contrary to “expert” economic opinion, how to discover ways to prevent that organic occurrence.

Obama was the first modern president who apparently figured out how. It took the efforts of a 24/7 redistributionist agenda of tax increases, federalizing health care, massive new debt, layers of more regulation, zero-interest rates, neo-socialist regulatory appointments, expansionary eligibility for entitlements, and constant anti-free-market jawboning that created a psychological atmosphere conducive to real retrenchment, mental holding patterns, and legitimate fears over discernable success. Obama weaponized federal agencies including the IRS, DOJ, and EPA in such a manner as to worry anyone successful, prominent, and conservative enough to come under the federal radar of a vindictive Lois Lerner, Eric Holder, or a FISA court.

Trump has sought to undo all that, point by point. The initial result so far is not rocket science, but rather a natural expression of what happens when millions of Americans believe they have greater freedom and safety to profit and innovate, and trust they will not be punished, materially or psychologically, for the ensuing successful results. The radical upsurge in business and consumer confidence is not revolutionary but almost natural. The Left and Never Trump Right claim that Trump is Stalin, Hitler, or Mussolini. In fact, for the first time in eight years, it is highly unlikely that the FBI, IRS, CIA, DOJ, and other alphabet-soup agencies see their tasks as going after the president’s perceived opponents.

The same about-face is true on the foreign-policy front, as the ancient practice of deterrence replaced the modern therapeutic mindset. Obama blurred, deliberately so, the lines between allies and hostiles. America experienced the worst of both worlds: We were rarely respected by our friends, even more rarely feared by our enemies; loud rhetorical muscularity was backed up only by “strategic patience” and “leading from behind.”

On the supposedly friendly side, Europe assumed that the United States would fawn after the virtue-signaling Paris Climate Accord. The Palestinians concluded that there was no shelf life on victimhood and that America simply would not, could not, dare not move its embassy to Jerusalem as the Congress had chronically showboated it would. NATO just knew that endless subsidies were its birthright and prior commitments were debatable. The West apparently lapped up Obama’s Cairo speech: But when even the European Renaissance and Enlightenment were seen as derivatives of Islam, there is not much left to boast about.

On the unfriendly side, China sensed there was little danger in turning the Spratley Islands into an armed valve of the South China Sea. Russia understood that America was obsequiously “flexible” and ready to push a red plastic reset button in times of crisis.

ISIS assumed that American lawyers were vetoing air-strike targets. Iran guessed rightly that the Obama administration would concede a lot to strike a legacy deal on nonproliferation. It was unsure only about whether the Obama administration’s eagerness to dissimulate about the disadvantageous details were due to a sincere desire to empower revolutionary, Shiite Iran as an antipode to Israel and the Sunni oil monarchies, or arising from a reckless need to leave some sort of foreign-policy signature. Kim Jung-un concluded that the eight years of the Obama administration provided a rare golden moment to vastly expand its nuclear and missile capability — and then announce it as an irrevocable fait accompli after Obama left office.

Again, the common denominator was that the Obama administration, in quite radical fashion, had sought a therapeutic inversion of foreign policy — in a way few other major nations had previously envisioned.

Trump’s appointees almost immediately began undoing all that.
There were no more effective avatars of old-style deterrence than James Mattis and H. R. McMaster. Neither was political. Both long ago embraced a realist appraisal of human nature, predicated on two ancient ideas: We all are more likely to behave when we accept that the alternative is far more dangerous to ourselves, and the world is better off when everyone knows the laws in the arena. Just as Obama’s pseudo–red lines in Syria signaled to the Iranians or North Koreans that there were few lines of any sort anywhere; so too the destruction of ISIS suggested to others that there might be far fewer restrictions on an American secretary of defense anywhere

On the cultural side, the Trump team figuratively paused, examined its inheritance from the prior administration, and apparently concluded something like “this is unhinged.” Then it proceeded, to the degree possible, to undo it.

Open borders, illegal immigration, and sanctuary cities are the norms of very few sovereign states. They are aberrations that are unsustainable whether the practitioner is Canada, Mexico, or the United States. Calling a small pond or large puddle on a farm’s low spot an “inland waterway” subject to federal regulation is deranged; undoing that was not radical, but commonsensical.

Trump sought to revive the cultural atmosphere prior to Obama’s assertion that he would fundamentally transform what had already been a great country. In 2008, it would have been inconceivable that NFL multimillionaires would refuse to stand for the National Anthem — much less in suicidal fashion insult their paying fans by insinuating that they deserved such a snub because they were racists and xenophobes. It was Byzantine that a country would enter an iconoclastic frenzy in the dead of night, smashing and defacing statues without legislative or popular democratic sanction.

One would have thought that all Republican presidents and presidential candidate would be something like the antitheses to progressivism. In truth, few really were. The Un-Obama agenda was not simply reflexive or easy — given that Obama was the apotheosis of a decades-long progressive dream. After all, in year one, Trump has been demonized in a manner unprecedented in post-war America, given the astonishing statistic that 90 percent of all media coverage of his person and policies has been negative. Obama was a representation of a progressive view of the Constitution that about a quarter of the population holds, but in Obama, that view found a rare megaphone for an otherwise hard sell.

So given the lateness of the national hour, a President Nobama could prove to be quite a change.

READ MORE:
Donald Trump is the Polar Opposite of Barack Obama
How to Roll Back Obama’s Regulatory State
Obamacare is Unraveling



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/17/2018 8:24:10 AM
From: TideGlider  Respond to of 224749
 
Washington State football player dies from apparent self-inflicted gunshot



Daniel Rapaport
8 hrs ago

















Great news for Stanford: Love will return for senior year





NFL draft deadline winners, losers: It's Clemson, then everyone else


© Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images Washington State quarterback Tyler Hilinski has died of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Pullman, Wash. police released a statement on Tuesday night confirming Hilinski's death. The police's statement said that Hilinski was found dead on Tuesday in an apartment with a gunshot wound to the head. A suicide note was found.

Police detectives and the Whitman County Coroner's Office are still working to confirm the suspected cause of death.

Hilinski, who was a redshirt sophomore this season, appeared in eight games and started in Washington State's 42-17 loss to Michigan State in Holiday Bowl. He served primarily as the backup to senior Luke Falk and threw for 1,176 yards, seven touchdowns and seven interceptions on the season. He was slated to be the Cougars' starting quarterback going into the 2018 season.

Hilinski was a three-star recruit in 2015 and is from Claremont, Ca.

(Must be much more to this story)!!



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/17/2018 12:30:21 PM
From: FJB5 Recommendations

Recommended By
DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck
Investor Clouseau
locogringo
Sedohr Nod
TideGlider

  Respond to of 224749
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/17/2018 4:07:53 PM
From: FJB6 Recommendations

Recommended By
DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck
Investor Clouseau
locogringo
Sedohr Nod
TideGlider

and 1 more member

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224749
 
Humana added its name to the growing list of companies that have given their employees bonuses, pay hikes, and increases in benefits as a result of the GOP tax bill.

The Kentucky-based health insurance company announced on Wednesday that it would be “raising the minimum hourly rate for full- and part-time associates to $15 an hour.”

As a result of the GOP tax bill, more than 100 companies have given their employees bonuses, pay hikes, and increases in benefits resulting in more than a billion dollars for working-class Americans.

This growing list of companies stands in contradiction to previous claims by Democrats and members of the media that the GOP tax reform bill would not benefit America’s working class. ...


ntknetwork.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/18/2018 2:50:34 AM
From: FJB4 Recommendations

Recommended By
DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck
longnshort
rayrohn
TideGlider

  Respond to of 224749
 
2017 Fake News Awards

2017 was a year of unrelenting bias, unfair news coverage, and even downright fake news. Studies have shown that over 90% of the media’s coverage of President Trump is negative.

Below are the winners of the 2017 Fake News Awards.

1. The New York Times’ Paul Krugman claimed on the day of President Trump’s historic, landslide victory that the economy would never recover.




2. ABC News' Brian Ross CHOKES and sends markets in a downward spiral with false report.







3. CNN FALSELY reported that candidate Donald Trump and his son Donald J. Trump, Jr. had access to hacked documents from WikiLeaks.


(via Fox News)


4. TIME FALSELY reported that President Trump removed a bust of Martin Luther King, Jr. from the Oval Office.




5. Washington Post FALSELY reported the President’s massive sold-out rally in Pensacola, Florida was empty. Dishonest reporter showed picture of empty arena HOURS before crowd started pouring in.

6. CNN FALSELY edited a video to make it appear President Trump defiantly overfed fish during a visit with the Japanese prime minister. Japanese prime minister actually led the way with the feeding.




7. CNN FALSELY reported about Anthony Scaramucci’s meeting with a Russian, but retracted it due to a “significant breakdown in process.”


(via washingtonpost.com)


8. Newsweek FALSELY reported that Polish First Lady Agata Kornhauser-Duda did not shake President Trump’s hand.




9. CNN FALSELY reported that former FBI Director James Comey would dispute President Trump’s claim that he was told he is not under investigation.






10. The New York Times FALSELY claimed on the front page that the Trump administration had hidden a climate report.


(via WashingtonPost.com)

11. And last, but not least: "RUSSIA COLLUSION!" Russian collusion is perhaps the greatest hoax perpetrated on the American people. THERE IS NO COLLUSION!



While the media spent 90% of the time focused on negative coverage or fake news, the President has been getting results:

1. The economy has created nearly 2 million jobs and gained over $8 trillion in wealth since the President’s inauguration.

2. African Americans and Hispanics are enjoying the lowest unemployment rate in recorded history.

3. The President signed historic tax cuts and relief for hardworking Americans not seen since President Reagan.

4. President Trump’s plan to cut regulations has exceeded “2 out for every 1 in” mandate, issuing 22 deregulatory actions for every one new regulatory action.

5. The President has unleashed an American energy boom by ending Obama-era regulations, approving the Keystone pipeline, auctioning off millions of new acres for energy exploration, and opening up ANWR.

6. ISIS is in retreat, having been crushed in Iraq and Syria.

7. President Trump followed through on his promise to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of the State of Israel and instructed the State Department to begin to relocate the Embassy.

8. With President Trump’s encouragement, more member nations are paying their fair share for the common defense in the NATO alliance.

9. Signed the Veterans Accountability and Whistleblower Protection Act to allow senior officials in the VA to fire failing employees and establishes safeguards to protect whistleblowers.

10. President Trump kept his promise and appointed Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch to the U.S. Supreme Court.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/18/2018 3:22:24 AM
From: FJB5 Recommendations

Recommended By
Bill
Investor Clouseau
locogringo
rayrohn
TideGlider

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224749
 
CNN’s Worst Nightmare – Youngstown Ohio Voters Thrilled With Trump’s First Year… GREATEST PRESIDENT EVER?

Posted on January 18, 2018 by sundance
CNN took a production crew to Youngstown Ohio to talk to formerly registered Democrats who switched parties in 2016 in order to support Donald Trump.

A year into President Trump’s administration, CNN asks them if they still support Donald Trump. The answers seemed to confound the questioner, CNN’s Martin Savage. And when the topic of illegal immigration surfaces, Savage had a ‘splodey head, WATCH:




To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/18/2018 7:01:42 AM
From: longnshort4 Recommendations

Recommended By
DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck
FJB
rayrohn
TideGlider

  Respond to of 224749
 
Jeff Flake Was a Foreign Lobbyist for a Firm with Ties to Iran 8 sentinel



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/18/2018 9:01:01 AM
From: FJB5 Recommendations

Recommended By
Investor Clouseau
locogringo
Sedohr Nod
TideGlider
tonto

  Respond to of 224749
 
GREAT: JOBLESS CLAIMS LOWEST SINCE 1973...


U.S. filings for unemployment benefits plummeted to the lowest level in almost 45 years in a sign the job market will tighten further in 2018, Labor Department figures showed Thursday.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/19/2018 5:49:19 AM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

Recommended By
DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck
TideGlider

  Respond to of 224749
 
“Sickening Reality Has Set In – Worse than Watergate”: Rep. Steve King Demands Congress #ReleaseTheMemo
by Joshua Caplan

thegatewaypundit.com

On Thursday night, Rep. Steve King (R-IA) joined the chorus of lawmakers demanding the classified FISA abuse memo be released.

“I have read the memo. The sickening reality has set in. I no longer hold out hope there is an innocent explanation for the information the public has seen. I have long said it is worse than Watergate. It was #neverTrump & #alwaysHillary. #releasethememo,” tweeted King.

On Thursday, the House Intelligence Committee quietly voted to make available to fellow House members “a memo documenting abuse of the FISA program,” reports Fox News’ Chad Pergram. Rep Lee Zeldin (R-NY) is demanding the secret memo be released immediately.

“Just read the classified doc @HPSCI re FISA abuse. I’m calling for its immediate public release w/relevant sourced material. The public must have access ASAP! #Transparency.”

“Releasing this classified info doesn’t compromise good sources & methods. It reveals the feds’ reliance on bad sources & methods,” added Zeldin.

Rep. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) called the classified report compiled by the House Intelligence Committee is “deeply troubling” and raises serious questions as it relates to the ‘Russian collusion’ investigation.

“The classified report compiled by House Intelligence is deeply troubling and raises serious questions about the upper echelon of the Obama DOJ and Comey FBI as it relates to the so-called collusion investigation,” tweeted DeSantis.

“While the report is classified as Top Secret, I believe the select committee should, pursuant to House rules, vote to make the report publicly available as soon as possible. This is a matter of national significance and the American people deserve the truth.”



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/19/2018 6:21:35 AM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

Recommended By
DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck
TideGlider

  Respond to of 224749
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/19/2018 6:30:30 AM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

Recommended By
DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck
TideGlider

  Respond to of 224749
 
‘Worse Than Watergate’

‘Shocking’ House Intel Memo Allegedly Reveals FISA Abuse by Senior DOJ and FBI Officials Related to Trump Campaign Investigation



Members of the House on Thursday said they viewed a “shocking” classified memo allegedly detailing abuse of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) by senior Justice Department and Federal Bureau of Investigations officials in relation to the investigation of the Trump campaign and called for it to be declassified and available to the public immediately.


…GAETZ: ‘I BELIEVE THERE ARE PEOPLE WHO WILL GO TO JAIL’ OVER INTEL MEMO…

…’ENTIRE MUELLER INVESTIGATION IS A LIE BUILT ON A FOUNDATION OF CORRUPTION’…


…CALLS ON HOUSE TO RELEASE MEMO TO PUBLIC…

…#RELEASETHEMEMO TRENDS ON TWITTER AS PUBLIC, POLITICIANS DEMAND TRANSPARENCY



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/19/2018 9:14:00 AM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

Recommended By
DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck
TideGlider

  Respond to of 224749
 
Approaching ramming speed: Senate Judiciary Committee advances 17 judicial nominees - WINNING!

Numerous non-judicial nominees also advanced through other committees, leading to howls from liberal interest groups.

Posted by William A. Jacobson
Thursday, January 18, 2018 at 4:30pm
legalinsurrection.com


We long have complained about the slow pace of judicial nominees due to Democrat stalling tactics.


Despite the fact that a record number (12) of appeals court nominees were confirmed last year, there remained a serious backlog to fill over 100 vacancies.

Filling these vacancies, and feeding more nominees into the pipeline, is critical to reshaping the judiciary. But the pipeline, as squeezed by Democrats, can only handle so many nominees.

Chuck Grassley and Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee finally appear to have had enough, advancing 17 nominees today. The Washington Times reports:

Seventeen of President Trump’s federal court nominees cleared the Senate Judiciary Committee Thursday, setting them up for floor votes as Republicans look to install as many conservative judges as possible.

Eight of the judges were deemed very controversial and were approved on a 11-10 party-line votes, while just two were approved unanimously.

Three of the judges were for circuit courts.

Democrats raised concerns over several of the nominees over their LGBTQ positions, saying they would not be fair to that community.

But Democrats spent the most time protesting Thomas Alvin Farr, who was nominated to be a district judge for the Eastern District of North Carolina. Mr. Farr was one of the judges receiving a party-line vote.

Sen. Cory Booker, New Jersey Democrat, and Sen. Kamala Harris, California Democrat, who were both new to the Judiciary Committee this year, said Mr. Farr’s connection to former Sen. Jesse Helms’ campaign concerned them, and cited the Congressional Black Caucus’ opposition to the nominee.

The first I learned of the vote today was when I received an emailed press release from a group called the Civil and Human Rights Coalition protesting the vote, Civil and Human Rights Coalition Opposes Continued Effort to Rush Through Unacceptable Judicial, Executive Nominees:



Vanita Gupta, president and CEO of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, issued the following statement today following the Senate Judiciary Committee’s approval of 17 judicial nominees and six executive branch nominees, including Eric Dreiband’s nomination to lead the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice:

“Chairman Grassley and his Republican colleagues on the Senate Judiciary Committee today continued their troubling pattern of ignoring Senate traditions to rubber stamp President Trump’s extreme and unqualified nominees. Never before has this committee jammed through so many nominees hostile to civil and human rights on a single day. Stuart Kyle Duncan, David Stras, Thomas Farr, Matthew Kacsmaryk, and Mark Norris are too ideologically extreme to serve as neutral arbiters; Charles Goodwin and Holly Teeter were rated Not Qualified to serve as federal judges by the nonpartisan and independent American Bar Association based on work ethic and lack of legal experience, respectively; and Eric Dreiband lacks the commitment to equal justice necessary to lead the federal government’s largest civil rights enforcement office.

This is not a fair process to the new committee members, who have not had a chance to advise on these nominees. These senators deserve better from Chairman Grassley. These rash actions are damaging not just to their rights but to the role that the Senate plays under the Constitution and the important vetting role that the committee has long served on behalf of the entire Senate. Our courts, and our country, deserve better.”

The Leadership Conference has previously called for senators to oppose the confirmations of judicial nominees Stuart Kyle Duncan, David Stras, Thomas Farr, Matthew Kacsmaryk, Mark Norris, Charles Goodwin, and Holly Teeter, as well as Justice Department Civil Rights Division nominee Eric Dreiband.

Although not mentioned by name in the press release, that coalition also opposed the nomination of Kenneth Marcus, who was voted out of the HELP Committee today.

Now Mitch McConnell needs to get these people floor votes. The Democrat tactic of insisting on one-by-one consideration with a full 30 hours of debate needs to be cast aside. A year of Democrats preventing Trump from staffing his administration, and delaying judicial confirmations, is enough.

As pointed out before, the liberal nightmare is that Trump could appoint half federal judiciary.

But that only can happen so long as Republicans control the Senate. While it’s unlikely Democrats can regain control in 2018, it’s not impossible. If that happens, the chance to rescue an institution would evaporate. Every single current and known future judicial vacancy needs to be filled by November 2018.

Hopefully Chuck Grassley and Mitch McConnell are approaching ramming speed on nominees.





To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/19/2018 9:31:04 AM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

Recommended By
DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck
TideGlider

  Respond to of 224749
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/19/2018 10:56:00 AM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

Recommended By
DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck

  Respond to of 224749
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/20/2018 9:02:22 AM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

Recommended By
DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck
Joe Btfsplk
TideGlider

  Respond to of 224749
 
I wasn’t a Trump supporter. I am now.

JANUARY 19, 2018

By Mollie Ziegler Hemingway
January 19 at 7:56 PM

IN THE WASHINGTON POST: I wasn’t a Trump supporter. I am now.

This may seem like an odd moment for saying so, but a year into the presidency of Donald Trump, I’m elated.

Trump was not my first or even second choice for president, but a full two years ago I predicted he would win. I also predicted he’d be a progressive president, which explained why I was not among his supporters and why I am so pleased now.

Expecting Progressive Trump was a reasonable assumption. Trump supported the 2009 stimulus, the auto bailouts and the bank bailouts. He’d recently left the Democratic Party and had raised a ton of money for the Clintons, Nancy Pelosi and Charles E. Schumer. He’d supported single-payer health coverage, tax increases and even Planned Parenthood.

He was a New York liberal who had conquered the Republican Party in part by promising a good Supreme Court nomination. That was the most I allowed myself to hope for when he won.

The nomination of Neil M. Gorsuch to fill the vacancy of Antonin Scalia more than fulfilled that promise. Gorsuch isn’t a John Roberts, David Souter or Anthony Kennedy, to name three disappointing justices appointed by the three previous Republican presidents, but a brilliant legal mind with tremendous writing ability and persuasive powers.

Trump critics, particularly those on the right, like to mock Trump voters with the phrase “But Gorsuch!” It’s their way of saying that Gorsuch is the only good thing Trump has done and that a Trump presidency is not worth the rest. Except Gorsuch is not even close to the only good thing Trump has done.

He has appointed 12 outstanding federal appellate judges — a record number for a president in his first year. By comparison, President Barack Obama had only three in his first year.


In early June, Trump announced the U.S. departure from the Paris climate accord, an agreement that would have had virtually no impact on future temperatures but would have come at a large cost in the growth of government and control over the economy. Since Obama never ran the treaty through the Senate, it was nonbinding, but the federal bureaucracy was working to implement it with new regulations on U.S. businesses. Critics on the right say Trump just does what other Republican candidates would have done. Yet the previous Republican presidential nominee, Mitt Romney, lobbied Trump to stay in the global agreement.

The Clean Power Plan, which gave the Environmental Protection Agency unprecedented authority over states and businesses and was on track to be the most expensive regulation in history, is under review. For the 2017 fiscal year, Trump revoked 22 regulations for each new regulation that was issued. His chief regulatory officer, Neomi Rao, said the administration would continue the pace of deregulation through 2018, announcing 448 deregulatory actions and 131 regulatory actions.

It took a while for Capitol Hill to get used to working with Trump, but by the end of the year, lawmakers had passed the largest corporate tax reform in U.S. history and secured tax cuts for the vast majority of Americans.

Businesses are responding to the deregulation and historic corporate tax reform by loosening purse strings and investing in plants, equipment and factories. Pepco, a power utility that serves the Mid-Atlantic region, just announced it’s lowering everyone’s electric bills as a result of the savings from corporate tax reform.

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos is restoring due process to college campuses by rescinding Obama-era guidelines that made the mistake of encouraging college administrators to adjudicate serious crimes such as sexual assaults.

Trump’s foreign policy could be more restrained, but it’s far less interventionist than that of any of his recent predecessors, focused on national interest over nation-building or other less pressing and more expensive concerns. By trusting his military leaders to make quick decisions on the battlefield, in contrast to Obama’s desire to placate Iran and micromanage trivial moves such as helicopter deployments, Trump is crushing the Islamic State. Sanctions and other nonmilitary efforts are being used to keep North Korea at bay after the failure of denuclearization as practiced by presidents since Bill Clinton.

Trump is not normal, his critics keep saying. Sometimes that’s a plus. He recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel more than two decades after the Senate passed legislation requiring it, and after two decades of presidents signing waivers every six months to avoid it. More recently, he froze funding for Pakistan until it stops harboring terrorists.

Like most people, I don’t particularly like Trump’s rhetorical style, juvenile insults and intemperate disposition — on full display in recent days. At the same time, having followed his career for decades, I am not surprised that he wakes up each morning as Donald Trump.

And that boorish attitude has come in handy after decades of media bullying of conservatives. Ironically, the very lack of conservative bona fides that worried me two years ago means he’s less beholden to a conservative establishment that had grown alienated from the people it is supposed to serve and from the principles it ostensibly exists to promote. His surprising conservatism might also be the result of the absolutism and extremism of his critics, whether among the media, traditional Democratic activists or the anti-Trump right. If Trump were ever inclined to indulge his liberal tendencies after winning the election, the stridency and spite of his opponents have provided him with no incentives to do so.

My expectations were low — so low that he could have met them by simply not being President Hillary Clinton. But a year into this presidency, he’s exceeded those expectations by quite a bit. I’m thrilled.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/20/2018 9:09:31 AM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

Recommended By
DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck
TideGlider

  Respond to of 224749
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/20/2018 9:18:34 AM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

Recommended By
Investor Clouseau
Sedohr Nod
TideGlider

  Respond to of 224749
 
Republicans are lining up to view the classified FISA abuse memo, while Democrats choose to stay in the dark

| Sara A. Carter

saraacarter.com

More than 130 congressional members have viewed the classified four-page memo detailing what senior government officials describe as “disturbing and explosive” surveillance abuse by employees of the FBI and Department of Justice under the Obama administration against President Trump and members of his campaign.

But almost all of them were Republicans.

Since the document was released Thursday to House members “only Democrats on the House Intelligence Committee have seen it,” a congressional source with knowledge of the memo said.

The classified memo was described by senior government officials as a detailed account of the House Intelligence Committee’s investigation into the FBI and apparent FISA abuse associated with the controversial dossier that alleged President Trump colluded with Russia during the 2016 presidential election. As recently reported, some congressional members who reviewed the memo said the revelations may end in the removal or criminal prosecution of senior officials in the FBI and Department of Justice.

Congressional officials expect the classified memo to be made available to the public before the end of the month. In order to make the classified memo public, the House Intelligence Committee, chaired by California Republican Devin Nunes, must first have another vote, a congressional source stated.

The vote is expected to happen and then the classified memo will be given to “POTUS for five days” so he can review it, the source stated. If POTUS objects to releasing the memo it will then go to the full House for a vote, they added.


President Trump is expected to approve the release of the memo.

Members who viewed the document say it is especially significant since the DOJ’s Inspector General Michale E. Horowitz will be issuing a report into how the FBI and DOJ handled the investigation into former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and her use of an unsecured private server to send classified information.

Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, and Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-FL, who viewed the memo Thursday said they are demanding it be made public but could not discuss the details of the memo due to its classified nature.

Rep. Adam Schiff, R- CA, said in a statement the memo is “profoundly misleading set of talking points drafted by Republican staff attacking the FBI and its handling of the investigation,” he said in a statement to CNN.

The classified memo, however, is expected to expose severe abuse of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which allows the intelligence community to gather communications on foreign subjects. Americans, however, are swept up in the collection of telephone, email and various other communications. The secret court chided the Obama administration in declassified documents when it discovered that one out of every 20 searches seeking upstream Internet data on Americans inside the NSA’s so-called Section 702 database violated the safeguards Obama and his intelligence chiefs vowed to follow in 2011. The Obama administration self disclosed these violations just days before the 2016 presidential election.

The failure of the Obama administration to disclose the extent of the violations earlier amounted to an “institutional lack of candor” and that the improper searches constituted a “very serious Fourth Amendment issue,” according to the court documents that were unsealed April 26, 2017.

The Senate voted 65-34 on Thursday to reauthorize a FISA provision for another six years, allowing the U.S. intelligence community to conduct surveillance on foreign targets.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (205800)1/20/2018 11:45:22 AM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

Recommended By
DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck
lorne
TideGlider

  Respond to of 224749
 


AND FILTHY LYING OBONZO...