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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sdgla who wrote (1202519)2/19/2020 2:21:40 PM
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rdkflorida2

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Congrats on Blago's commutation. He's a fellow Trumpcrat who withheld state money from a childrens hospital in order to get a $50K payoff. I know you Trumpocrats love that crooked shit.



To: Sdgla who wrote (1202519)2/19/2020 2:23:27 PM
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rdkflorida2

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Comrade Trump
Feb 13, 2020 NINA L. KHRUSHCHEVA

In 1922, Vladimir Lenin wrote that “Stalin concentrated in his hands enormous power, which he won’t be able to use responsibly,” owing to his rudeness, intolerance, and capriciousness – qualities that Donald Trump has in spades. His acquittal by the Senate was a dark day for American democracy, but his reelection could be lights out.

NEW YORK – “In just three short years,” US President Donald Trump declared in his recent State of the Union (SOTU) address, “we have shattered the mentality of American decline and we have rejected the downsizing of America’s destiny.” This baseless pronouncement – more propaganda than reality – recalled Joseph Stalin’s 1935 proclamation that “Life has improved, comrades; life has become more joyous.”

When Stalin touted “the radical improvement in the material welfare of the workers” brought about by the Soviet regime, production statistics were lagging; famine had ravaged populations, especially in Ukraine; and the Great Purge – a brutal campaign of political repression – was already in sight. Likewise, as Trump praises his administration for supposedly restoring America’s greatness, US allies and friends are scrambling to reduce their dependence on the US, which has become both a threat to global stability and an international laughing stock.

Trump’s declarations about the economy are similarly misleading. Yes, GDP growth remains relatively strong, and stock prices have reached record highs. But, as Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer pointed out after the SOTU, “millions of people struggle to get by, or don’t have enough money at the end of the month after paying for transportation, student loans, or prescription drugs.” The “blue-collar boom” that Trump touted has left out a significant share of blue-collar workers.

I am not claiming that Trump is the new Stalin, let alone equating today’s US to the Soviet Union of the 1930s. But I know propaganda when I hear it, and Trump’s words are nothing less than the genuine article. I also know how effective good propaganda can be in terms of creating space for dictatorial behavior – and how vulnerable even the strongest democracy can be to totalitarianism.

Of course, propaganda involves more than just words. Authoritarian rulers use other tools to cultivate an aura of greatness. Architecture is one such tool. From the Egyptian pharaohs to the Roman emperors to contemporary dictators like North Korea’s Kim Jong-un, authoritarian leaders have often used (or abused) architecture to manipulate public perceptions, by creating grandiose public spaces that reflect their splendid image of themselves.

Leni Riefenstahl’s controversial 1938 cinematic masterpiece Olympia, based on the 1936 Berlin Summer Olympics, was shot in a manner intended to emphasize the masculine, domineering air of the stadium – and, by extension, the Nazi regime. Then there was Albert Speer’s early 1930s makeover of Berlin, which channeled the regime’s totalitarian ambition into uniformly imposing and brutal neoclassical architecture.

Stalin replicated Hitler’s imperial model with his own architectural “classicism”: high rises with domes, spires, and other trimmings meant to denote power. Stalin also took inspiration from New York City’s Manhattan Municipal Building, which signified the Empire State’s grandeur in the 1910s.

Now, the Trump administration is circulating a draft executive order called “ Making Federal Buildings Beautiful Again,” which would have architects adhere to “classical” structures, inspired by Greek and Roman tradition. The order underscores the symbolic value of buildings, and explicitly opposes the 1962 “ Guiding Principles of Federal Architecture” – supported by President John F. Kennedy – which called for design to flow from the architectural profession to the government.

Perhaps this should not be surprising. Long before he became president, Trump was using architecture to assert his power and privilege. The gaudy gilded constructions that characterize his numerous Trump buildings, for example, have much in common with the lavish rococo tastes embraced by contemporary autocrats like China’s Xi Jinping, Russia’s Vladimir Putin, and Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

These leaders have also engaged in another classic form of authoritarian power projection: military parades, which are a tried-and-true method for authoritarian figures seeking to impress supporters and opponents alike. In 2017, Trump could not contain his excitement at a Bastille Day military parade in Paris – there, a ceremony rather than muscle-flexing – held next to the Arc de Triomphe (incidentally, one of Speer’s inspirations for Nazi Berlin). Two years later, Trump held his own, dizzyingly expensive military parade.

It may be tempting to dismiss such performances as distractions. But they directly enable a predilection for dangerous or reckless behaviors, including the rejection of all checks on executive power – crucial to a functioning democracy.

Trump’s inability to accept criticism is particularly concerning. Stalin prosecuted his perceived adversaries as “enemies of the people,” imprisoning or killing thousands for disloyalty. Of course, Trump may not be able to get away with quite that level of repression, but he has used the same rhetoric, calling his media critics the “enemy of the people.”

Moreover, immediately after his acquittal by the Republican-controlled Senate in a sham impeachment trial in which no witnesses were called, Trump fired those who had testified in the House of Representatives about his efforts to coerce Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate a political rival. It was a sterling example of the retribution on which dictatorships depend.

Indeed, when impeachment witness Lt. Col. Alexander S. Vindman was fired, security officers marched his twin brother, Lt. Col. Yevgeny Vindman, a lawyer on the National Security Council staff, out of the White House alongside him. It was pure petty vindictiveness. In the USSR in the 1930s, Yevgeny would have been dubbed a ChSVR (Member of an Enemy of the People Family) and sentenced to five years in a Siberian gulag.

This is how dictatorships begin. As the US prepares for its next presidential election in November, it is every citizen’s responsibility rationally to examine Trump’s dictatorial impulses, which reelection would only reinforce. It is not safe to assume that he won’t go too far, or that he is too much of a “mediocrity” – as Leon Trotsky called Stalin (an assessment with which many Bolsheviks agreed) – to transform his country.

Vladimir Lenin, himself a ruthless Bolshevik, wrote in 1922 that, “Stalin concentrated in his hands enormous power, which he won’t be able to use responsibly,” owing to traits like rudeness, intolerance, and capriciousness. Trump has all of them in spades. The more power he concentrates in his own hands, the dimmer the long-term outlook for American democracy becomes. His reelection could mean lights out.

\https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/trump-parades-propaganda-and-purges-by-nina-l-khrushcheva-2020-02?referral=94b859&fbclid=IwAR3NFFhohCA5HPg8hVgvsGBzOi3iwn-GSytTPYxVAv1G_7HhkBVPGSFqYWs



To: Sdgla who wrote (1202519)2/19/2020 2:25:14 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

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rdkflorida2

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Another achievement of The Great Gilded Turd:




To: Sdgla who wrote (1202519)2/19/2020 2:26:49 PM
From: Brumar89  Respond to of 1574056
 
Deadbeat Dad Bernie Sanders First Real Full Time Job Was Being Mayor Of Burlington, Vermont At 48 Years Old

Prior to his election as mayor of Burlington, Sanders’ income from a single film and writing was not enough to pay child support. In fact, the $33,800 (roughly $94,000 in today’s dollars) salary as mayor at 48-years old was his first real full-time employment. Sanders doesn’t even remember what type of regular work he did before he was elected mayor.

Levi Sanders ended up on welfare because his father would not support his child.

That makes Bernie Sanders a deadbeat dad. Sanders’ infatuation with his own political ambition kept him from supporting his own child.

Bernie Sanders’ neglect of his young child is not seen as an issue now only because he is a white man. Make no mistake, this is the precise behavior that is embedded in today’s cult of “Bernie Bro’s”.

For all his browbeating about “the establishment”, Bernie Sanders is a professional politician. He’s been running for office – instead of taking care of his child – since he was 30 years old. He’s been running for office or been in office for nearly 60 years. That is all he has ever done. And he didn’t let anything – even a duty to his child – get in the way of his political ambition.

Bernie Sanders is a professional politician and a deadbeat dad who records indicate still owes $70,000 plus unpaid interest to the Vermont taxpayers for child support.

mfi-miami.com



To: Sdgla who wrote (1202519)2/19/2020 2:28:36 PM
From: Brumar89  Respond to of 1574056
 
In 1974, Levi Sanders' mother, Susan Mott, is quoted in Burlington Free Press saying, "she is refused apartments because she is on welfare and has one child. @SenSanders, with a UChicago degree, isn't working but running for VT Senator where he wins 4% of the vote as a socialist.




To: Sdgla who wrote (1202519)2/19/2020 2:30:29 PM
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Deadbeat Dad Bernie Sanders Lets Vermont Taxpayers Take Care Of Levi While He Traveled Vermont Preaching Marxism To Trees No one knew deadbeat dad Bernie Sanders had a son while he traveled Vermont like a vagabond preaching Marxism from a tattered copy of The Communist Manifesto.

That was until 1971.

Vermont was debating a tenant’s rights bill. Susan Mott of Burlington testified in front of Vermont’s State Senate Judiciary Committee.

Mott said the legislation did not go far enough in prohibiting discrimination against single mothers. Especially, recipients of welfare benefits. Mott had one child and was on welfare.

That one child was Bernie Sanders’ son Levi Sanders.

Why did Bernie Sanders’ baby mama and his son have to be on welfare? What was 5-year-old Levi’s father doing that he couldn’t afford to support his own child?

It turns out, he was too busy preaching the wonders of Marxism to the trees on Mount Abraham.



To: Sdgla who wrote (1202519)2/19/2020 2:33:04 PM
From: Brumar89  Respond to of 1574056
 
Deadbeat Dad Bernie Sanders Never Paid Child Support! Sanders Let Vermont Taxpayers Feed And Clothe His Kid.

Deadbeat dad Bernie Sanders bought a piece of property in Vermont in 1964. He settled there full-time in 1968. Sanders’ first child, Levi Sanders, was born a year later to his then-girlfriend, Susan Campbell Mott.

The elder Sanders worked as a carpenter and a writer after he graduated from college. However, he quickly found his true calling. He became a perpetual political candidate.

Sanders joined the socialist Liberty Union Party and began running for governor and senator of Vermont in the 1972 elections. He got 2% of the vote for governor, and 1% for senator.

Bernie also didn’t have to work very hard because he didn’t have much competition to get the Liberty Union nominations. Party members recall they “ran anybody and everybody they could find.”

Then he ran again for the Senate on the Liberty Union Party ticket in 1974, and won 4% of the vote, and again for governor two years later, winning 6% of the vote.



To: Sdgla who wrote (1202519)2/19/2020 2:37:38 PM
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rdkflorida2

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Assange lawyer says Trump offered Assange a pardon if he lied to cover up Russian hacking:

Julian Assange court appearance today- His lawyer mentioned a statement, that alleges former US Congressman Dana Rohrabacher visited Assange, saying he was there on behalf of the President, offering a pardon if JA would say Russia had nothing to do with DNC leaks. @SBSNews

The court heard the statement making this allegation was made by a member of Mr Assange’s legal team. It will be submitted as evidence in the hearing which begins Monday.

Expect we’ll hear more about this come the main hearing. Rest of today’s brief appearance was mainly administrative.

Need to add- all this detail is an allegation from a statement- that Mr Assange’s lawyer was paraphrasing in open court. And it’s a statement by one of Mr Assange’s own legal representatives.

Getting lots of Assange related questions- in short, it's an allegation (not proven) made in a statement by one of Mr Assange's own lawyers. We only know about its existence now as there was a discussion between judge and legal teams about the evidence that's being submitted.

District Judge Vanessa Baraitser said the evidence is admissible. That's not a ruling on its accuracy, just that Mr Assange's lawyers can submit it as part of their case.
threadreaderapp.com



To: Sdgla who wrote (1202519)2/19/2020 2:42:53 PM
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Fox News Panel Slams Trump For Abusing Pardon Power: ‘Doesn’t Fit Mission Of Draining The Swamp’

[ As if they care. Trumphumpers love Blago now because he praises Trump now and he was doing what Trump would do, profiting from his office. ]

In a press release from Oct. 17, 2016, then-candidate Donald Trump pledged to “drain the swamp in Washington, D.C.” He then tweeted: “I will Make Our Government Honest Again — believe me. But first, I’m going to have to #DrainTheSwamp.”

Fast forward to this afternoon when President Trump granted pardons or commutations to 11 convicted felons, including Michael Milken, the disgraced former junk bond king who waged a decades-long campaign for a pardon, in a mass clemency that expanded the president’s interventions in judicial matters since his Senate impeachment acquittal.

Trump also commuted former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s sentence, who has served eight years of a 14-year prison term. He was found guilty of trying to sell an open U.S. Senate seat that had been held by Barack Obama.

Trump also told reporters that he had not ruled out pardoning his longtime friend Roger Stone, who is scheduled to be sentenced in federal court on Thursday.

While discussing the mass clemency on Tuesday, Fox News hosts Jesse Watters and Greg Gutfeld issued a rare rebuke of the president.

“He tried to sell a senate seat and then got caught,” Waters noted, before telling viewers that Trump likely pardoned Blagojevich because he appeared on NBC’s “The Apprentice” in 2009, a reality TV show then hosted by Trump.

“I think he probably got his sentence commuted because he was on Celebrity Apprentice,” Waters said. “Everybody knows it was probably a personal connection.”

“This doesn’t fit the mission of draining the swamp,” Gutfeld said. “Blago was one of the worst kind of swamp rats. He was selling a seat. And we did that story here…we talked about what a crook he was and how bad it was.”

“I would prefer to see other people more deserving of commutation,” he added.

theguardiansofdemocracy.com



To: Sdgla who wrote (1202519)2/19/2020 2:48:07 PM
From: Brumar89  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574056
 
What is the 'boogaloo?' How online calls for a violent uprising are hitting the mainstream
The movement says it wants a second Civil War targeting liberal political opponents and law enforcement.


Gun rights advocates wearing body armor and carrying firearms leave a rally in Richmond, Virginia, last month.Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images file

Feb. 19, 2020, 9:10 AM CST
By Brandy Zadrozny

[ Gun these mf's down. ]

An anti-government movement that advocates for a violent uprising targeting liberal political opponents and law enforcement has moved from the fringes of the internet into the mainstream in recent months and surged on social media, according to a group of researchers that tracks hate groups.

The movement, which says it wants a second Civil War organized around the term “boogaloo,” now includes groups on mainstream internet platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and Reddit as well as fringe websites including 4chan, according to a report released Tuesday night by the Network Contagion Research Institute (NCRI), an independent nonprofit of scientists and engineers that tracks and reports on misinformation and hate speech across social media.

While calls for organized and targeted violence in the form of a new Civil War have previously circulated among some hate groups, the emergence of the term “boogaloo” appeared to be a new and discrete movement. NCRI researchers analyzed more than 100 million social media posts and comments and found that through the use of memes — inside jokes commonly in the form of images — extremists have pushed anti-government and anti-law enforcement messages across social media platforms. They have also organized online communities with tens of thousands of members, some of whom have assembled at real-world events.

The report “represents a breakthrough case study in the capacity to identify cyber swarms and viral insurgencies in nearly real time as they are developing in plain sight,” John Farmer, a former New Jersey attorney general and current director of the Miller Center for Community Protection and Resilience at Rutgers University, wrote in the report’s forward.

A patch with the image of an armed Pepe the Frog is worn by an attendee during a rally organized by The Virginia Citizens Defense League on Capitol Square near the state capitol building Jan. 20, 2020 in Richmond, Virginia.Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images file
The report comes as U.S. law enforcement officials and researchers at various levels have issued warnings about the growing threat posed by domestic extremists motivated by fringe ideologies and conspiracy theories. Joel Finkelstein, NCRI’s director and a research scholar at the James Madison Program at Princeton University, said the report had been sent to members of Congress and the Departments of Defense, Homeland Security and Justice, among others.

Paul Goldenberg, a member of the Homeland Security Advisory Council, said the report was “a wake-up call.”

“When you have people talking about and planning sedition and violence against minorities, police, and public officials, we need to take their words seriously,” said Goldenberg, who is also CEO of the security consulting company Cardinal Point Strategies.

Goldenberg said the report had “gone viral” within law enforcement and intelligence communities since its limited release last week. People are reading it and distributing it “far and wide,” he said.

The current boogaloo movement was first noticed by extremism researchers in 2019, when fringe groups from gun rights and militia movements to white supremacists began referring to an impending civil war using the term boogaloo, a joking reference to “Breakin’ 2: Electric Boogaloo,” a 1984 sequel movie about breakdancing.

The term is used to describe an uprising against a seemingly tyrannical or left-wing government, often in response to a perceived threat of wide-spread gun confiscation. For many, the term boogaloo — silly on its face — is used jokingly, or ironically, but for others, the boogaloo memes are shared alongside violent text and images, seemingly to inflame an eventual confrontation.

In the last three months, boogaloo-related conversation has grown rapidly, according to the researchers, who found that use of the term has increased nearly 50 percent on platforms like Reddit and Twitter over the last few months. Increased exposure, the researchers warn, carries the danger of indoctrination.

...... uctions for explosives and 3-D printed firearms, distribute illegal firearm modifications, and siphon users into encrypted messaging boards en mass,” according to the NCRI report. The report also notes how the boogaloo concept has been monetized, through merchandise advertised through Facebook and Instagram ads, and marketed to current and former members of the military.

On Facebook and Instagram, the researchers pointed to several boogaloo-themed public groups and accounts with tens of thousands of members and followers.

A Facebook spokesperson said in an emailed statement that the company monitored groups that called for violence.

“We’ve been studying trends around this and related terms on Facebook and Instagram,” the spokesperson said. “We don’t allow speech used to incite hate or violence, and will remove any content that violates our policies. We’ll continue to monitor this across our platform.”

Since NCRI generated the report last week, membership in several boogaloo groups on Facebook has nearly doubled, according to an NBC News analysis. During the same period, two of Facebook’s most popular boogaloo groups that boasted nearly 20,000 followers are no longer available this week.

Much like the OK hand symbol co-opted by white nationalists who later denied the association, the ambiguity of the term boogaloo works to cloak extremist organizing in the open.

“Like a virus hiding from the immune system, the use of comical-meme language permits the network to organize violence secretly behind a mirage of inside jokes and plausible deniability,” the report states.

The term “boogaloo” has also been seen in real-world activism. At the Virginia Citizens Defense League’s annual Lobby Day in Richmond in January, one group of protestors who go by Patriot Wave, wore Pepe the Frog patches emblazoned with “Boogaloo Boys.” One man carried a sign that read, “I have a dream of a Boogaloo.” The rally was held on Martin Luther King Day.

NCRI was able to trace the origin of the use of the term boogaloo to 4chan’s politics-focused message board, where racist and hateful memes often get their start. Boogaloo was often associated with apocalyptic and racist terms like “racewar” and “dotr,” a white power fantasy that imagines a time when “race traitors” will be murdered.

The report tracked events when online chatter about an impending boogaloo spiked. The analysis found a peak during a November standoff in upstate New York between an army veteran and police over a domestic dispute. The veteran, Alex Booth, chronicled the standoff on his pro-gun Instagram account “Whiskey Warrior 556,” claiming to followers that his guns were being confiscated. The incident made the boogaloo meme go viral, and gained Booth over 100,000 followers.

nbcnews.com



To: Sdgla who wrote (1202519)2/19/2020 3:07:12 PM
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rdkflorida2

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His ultimate Master consoles the IMPOTUS



To: Sdgla who wrote (1202519)2/19/2020 3:08:21 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

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rdkflorida2

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Trumphumpers rejoicing today over Blago commutation