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


To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1252569)8/7/2020 7:45:14 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

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pocotrader
rdkflorida2

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576881
 
Wrong, I sincerely think cheating the membership is wrong. You don't because you're loyal to the badorangeman who says cheating saps is good.

Now go grab some pussy.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1252569)8/7/2020 7:46:14 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

Recommended By
pocotrader
rdkflorida2

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576881
 
@CIA assessed Russia paid money to people to kill US troops
-Russian hackers attacked #COVID__19 research centers

-Russia is spreading disinformation in the US, including about the virus

But @realDonaldTrump still cannot utter a single sentence condemning Vladimir Putin. Why? t.co

— Ted Lieu (@tedlieu) August 6, 2020



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1252569)8/7/2020 7:47:40 PM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

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pocotrader
rdkflorida2
Wharf Rat

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576881
 
ANNOUNCING THE FIRST GROCERY STORE FOR PATRIOTS WHO REFUSE TO WEAR MASKS
by JASON ROEDER

Come one, come all! Grab your family, friends, and hatred of fabric muzzles, and join us this Saturday for the grand opening of FreeMart — America’s first and only grocery store specially designed for patriots who won’t wear masks and who want the world to know they won’t back down from some glorified flu. Why shop at Costco or Sam’s Club and be hassled by Dr. Fauci’s social-distancing sheep? At FreeMart, you can scream and smash all you want. In fact, your country depends on it!

Your annual FreeMart membership covers almost any act of righteous destruction you can think of. So go ahead and spike a pint of ice cream on the floor. Stomp on a lime. If a box of cereal seems like it wants to tell you when and how to exhale, you dropkick that box of Honeycomb all the way back to China. Tear down that potato chip display. It had it coming. Or maybe it didn’t, but you’re an American, and you’ll be damned if you’re not going on a rampage in the Prepared Foods section.

FreeMart’s different. No masks allowed. No science allowed. No shame allowed. Your spittle’s always good here.Sounds pretty great, doesn’t it? Like the America you know and love. Still, you remember what happened last time you went shopping in what you thought was the Land of the Free. Some self-appointed member of the breathing police started recording you on their phone just for deliberately coughing in the face of an old woman with lupus. Before you know it, you’re all over social media. You’re an out-of-control “Karen” or a “Kevin,” and your boss is calling to make absolutely sure you’re the person shrieking, “You will not persecute me!” in the express lane before she fires you.

At FreeMart, you never get caught on camera. Oh sure, you’ll still be recorded, but only by fellow lovers of The Constitution of the USA. Your Twitter feed is going to be filled with supportive posts like “Steroid-fueled HERO goes off on coronavirus hoax!” or “Give this threat to himself and others a medal!!!” or “I was shopping today when this woman got in my face about the ‘Wuhan virus,’ and I was so grateful to be in the presence of an unapologetic guardian of liberty, I literally wept.”

You never have to worry about our employees either, thanks to our zero-interference policy. If you’re ever approached by a member of our floor staff, it’s just to say hello, ask if they can assist you, or even swap a vaccination myth or two — if they’re going to scold you for anything, it’s maybe that your hands are looking a little too sanitized!

Shopping doesn’t have to be a wholly unnecessary political statement in the midst of a national health crisis — but it sure ought to be. So come on down to FreeMart. Leave your mask at home, bring your outrage, and fill your cart with America.And when you get to the register, you don’t have to concern yourself with off-putting plexiglass shields (which, as everyone knows, only reflect harmful germs back into your face anyway) or withering looks from our cashiers. That’s because our cashiers are specially screened for living on the knife’s edge of homelessness and are more than happy to put up with anything in this punishing economy. If they want to wipe down a conveyor belt, they can do it at home!

mcsweeneys.net



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1252569)8/7/2020 7:52:13 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

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pocotrader
rdkflorida2

  Respond to of 1576881
 
@HKrassenstein

BREAKING: Trump's Postmaster General has just admitted to intentionally slowing down the US mail. That means Trump is intentionally making sure life-saving medicine arrives late to those in need, just so he can sabotage Americans' rights to vote!



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1252569)8/7/2020 7:53:07 PM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

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pocotrader
rdkflorida2
Wharf Rat

  Respond to of 1576881
 
@Demosthenes561

Trump hates America. That’s why he botched the pandemic response, and refuses to protect our soldiers from Russian paid Taliban murders.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1252569)8/7/2020 7:55:15 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

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pocotrader
rdkflorida2

  Respond to of 1576881
 
@UrbanAchievr

Gorka stares into the camera and nods seriously when his caller says he’d like to massacre people engaged in peaceful protest

Brendan Karet

caller, discussing athletes who kneel in front of the flag: "I'd put them up against the wall with the firing squad. I'm not kidding when I say that." Gorka: "God bless you, thank you for calling ... I want to give you a signed copy of every single one of my books"



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1252569)8/7/2020 8:03:27 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

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pocotrader
rdkflorida2

  Respond to of 1576881
 
He rawdogs paid escorts and porn stars. He raped w/ Epstein. He launders money for russian mobsters. He follows the advice of Vladimir Putin over and above anyone else on planet earth. He never earned an MBA from Wharton. He's not a billionaire. He's a criminal now and always.

D.K.R. Boyd

1. Trump is not a billionaire; he's a swindler 2. His sister did his homework at Fordham (& Wharton) and paid a friend to get into Wharton 3. He threatened to sue every school he attended to hide his grades 4. He has the vocabulary of a third grader



@CJ_Feher

One of his Wharton professors describes him as follows......



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1252569)8/7/2020 8:05:51 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

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rdkflorida2

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576881
 
The Great Escape: Donald John Trump’s Exit StrategyWhere does the President go from here? THAT SOUND YOU HEAR is the death rattle of a presidency.

A thousand Americans are dying of the novel coronavirus every day. Volume Five of the Senate Intelligence Committee Report is due for release any day now. Senators, Congressmen, and emeritus members of the intelligence community have stopped pulling punches and are sounding the alarms. Cy Vance announced that his investigation is wider than originally thought, and likely includes tax fraud; the New York Times reported that Deutsche Bank has already turned over Trump’s financial documents to prosecutors. The vaunted economy is falling along with the president’s poll numbers. And the presumptive guy in charge gave the most unflattering interview of all time ever, unequivocally exposing himself as a complete and total moron:

Even the Trump people know they can’t win the election without banana-republic-level fuckery, as the indefatigable historian Heather Cox Richardson writes:

No one is pretending that Trump is going to win the popular vote. He’s not even trying to. He’s doubling down on the culture wars that excite his base in the hopes of getting them to turn out in strong numbers, most recently by sending federal law enforcement officers into cities led by Democrats in order to create images of what looks like rioting, to enable him to set himself up as defending “law and order.”

At the same time, he and his supporters in the Republican Party are working to guarantee an undercount of votes for his opponent by attacking mail-in voting, shutting down polling places, kicking people off voter rolls, undercutting the United States Postal Service, and even, perhaps, by permitting a wave of evictions that will make it significantly harder for displaced people to vote.

It is notable that, as a country, we are not talking about policies or winning majorities. We are talking about how Trump can win by gaming the Electoral College, or by cheating.

Even so, enthusiasm for cheating to keep a low-IQ mobster in office seems to be on the wane, even among Republicans, who must be sick of the guy. There have been many cracks in the facade these last few weeks. Sure, Bill Barr is boss at torpedoing investigations, but he can only do so much—and as Lincoln’s Bible pointed out during his embarrassing House hearing, the AG is not nearly as smart as he thinks he is:


Lincoln's Bible @LincolnsBible
Watching some of Barr’s emotional exchanges again. He’s a terrible attorney who thinks he’s the world’s most brilliant one. Very fragile ego around his legal prowess. This is a weakness that can be exploited.
July 28th 2020


(Sidenote: Being not nearly as smart as one thinks one is is the prevailing character trait of everyone involved with this White House. Other than, you know, pure uncut greed).

So, like, now what? Where does Trump go from here?

We’ll know more by the end of the month. The Republican National Convention is scheduled for August 24-27. Whether it’s in Charlotte, Jacksonville, the South Lawn of the White House (illegally, but whatevs), or the back nine of Bedminster, that’s the moment when Republicans will certify the Trump/Pence ticket—or not certify it.

The Republican National Committee, chaired by the ever-mendacious Ronna Romney McDaniel, decided to eschew a proper primary process, likely fearing that some dark horse candidate, perhaps Ronna’s own Uncle Mitt, would prevail. Last week came the curious report that the convention would be closed to the press. While that original announcement has been walked back, it brought up the obvious question: Why would the RNC opt to go dark at the precise moment when it should want every TV channel in the country broadcasting its propaganda program?

The ostensible reason—concerns over the coronavirus—is laughably ridiculous; this is the party whose leader has worn a mask maybe three times in the last five months, and whose pathetic insistence to hold a rally in Tulsa resulted in the premature death of one of its own former presidential candidates, Herman Cain, who in Tulsa contracted the covid-19 that killed him. Could it be that the RNC is considering changing horses mid-stream, benching Trump in favor of Mitt Romney, or Nikki Haley, or Liz Cheney, or anyone else capable of doing basic math? That the Trump campaign has stopped buying ads supports this theory—although there are plenty of other reasons why the RNC would not want footage of this event to exist. Shame, for one.

As a practical matter, Trump could be withdrawn from consideration up until the night of the election, but after mid-September, it becomes tricky to remove his name from printed ballots, as Ballotpedia explains:

In 2016, the bulk of the dates for certifying the names of major party presidential candidates were in August and September. Mid-August was the point at which either party could have found a replacement nominee and still have been able to get its candidate's name on the ballot in enough states to be competitive in November without having to navigate the courts and ballot access issues. For example, if a nominee had dropped out in late August, his or her name would already have been certified to appear as the party's candidate for president in about 20 states. If he or she had dropped out in late September, that number would have risen to almost 40 states.

So if they are going to dump Trump, and have any hope of competing in November, the RNC has to do so at the RNC.

If the president survives August, and retains the lickspittle Mike Pence on the ballot, he will face the challenge of several debates with Joe Biden—or, more likely, refuse to face that challenge, while lying to his supporters that it’s Biden who’s afraid to debate him. (For what it’s worth: Biden has experience winning debates in which his opponent is a clueless imbecile.)

Election Day is the next milestone for Trump. Unless the Russians attack our election systems and alter vote totals, poisoning the result and grinding the country to a halt, the president will lose bigly. We rightly assume Russia will do this—and don’t get me wrong; we should take this very very VERY seriously—but it’s no sure thing. Consider: Joe Biden is already pissed at Putin for dragging his son Hunter into the public eye; it’s now his personal mission to destroy him. If Russia attempts any more election fuckery, that will only give Joe even more incentive to go hard at that little KGB twerp, which means confiscating the hundreds of billions of dollars Putin and his cronies have parked in Western banks. Putin’s hold on power in Russia is tenuous right now; there have been massive protests in some of the eastern oblasts. Can he afford to risk all that cheddar for four more years of Trump? Furthermore, even if Russia does do its thing, cheating only works if the vote totals are close—and this is going to be a blowout. Think Reagan-Mondale, Nixon-McGovern, Cowboys-Bills.

Trump will huff and puff and cry foul, but if he goes down, nothing he says or does will change the result. His cultists will be angry, but—newsflash—they’re angry already. (And really, after four years of MAGA, they can go fuck themselves.) Meanwhile, for the rest of us, the catharsis of a Biden victory will be off the charts. There will be joyful shouting, hollering, and weeping. There will be dancing in the streets. There will be sex. There will be nights of restorative, Ambien-free sleep.

But even after he loses the election, Trump will remain in the Oval Office until noon on January 20. He has the New York indictments looming, and the rape case the press never talks about, and god knows what all when Biden takes over and appoints an AG who isn’t a foreign spy and mob toady. That gives him two full months to concoct an escape plan to avoid a post-presidency of litigation, prosecution, asset forfeiture, and prison.

There are three ways to elude that fate:

First, Trump could resign and have Pence pardon him—the Nixon template. That won’t work, because, first, Pence is a co-conspirator, and second, some of the crimes are state crimes, and a presidential pardon doesn’t work with state crimes. Also, if you’re Pence…why would you even do that? Mother will allow him to pardon Trump for rape?

Second, Trump could drop dead. The novel coronavirus seems not to bother him, but he’s in his seventies, morbidly obese, and in poor health due to shitty diet and rampant drug use—plus the stress must be brutal, even for a narcissistic sociopath. He is pretty obviously unwell. Would anyone be surprised if he stroked out? (If there is an afterlife, of course, he will be delivered to Hell instantaneously, where his infernal torment—maybe a vegan yoga retreat and sweat lodge that goes on for all eternity?—will be worse than prison, but let us confine ourselves in this space to temporal matters).

Third, he could flee. That would look like this: In December, he makes one last state visit to Saudi Arabia. He brings his namesake son, his charity-cheating son, his feckless daughter, and her criminal husband. Once in the Kingdom, he formally resigns, gets political amnesty, and the Trump family lives out their lives as guests of Jared’s BFF, Mohammad Bone-Saw. (Or maybe he’d go to the UAE, where Betsy DeVos’s brother now lives. Crown Prince or Eric Prince, pick your poison.)

That’s what a smart man would do—but Trump is not smart, as the Axios interview conclusively shows. Because he’s never faced any real consequences for his lifetime of crimes, Trump will likely assume that this will also be the case going forward. Odds are, he will ride it out and hope for the best, giving We The People the opportunity to indict him, try him, convict him, and lock him up—and in so doing, make America great again.

gregolear.substack.com



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1252569)8/7/2020 8:07:47 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

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pocotrader
rdkflorida2

  Respond to of 1576881
 
Trumpism
I keep telling people that Trump is forever and no one believes me.

I get that. I don't want to believe me, either.

But there are two ways to view 2016.

The first is that Donald Trump broke apart the fusionist Republican coalition by discovering that GOP voters have different policy priorities than GOP elites.

The second is that Donald Trump broke apart the fusionist Republican coalition by discovering that some large core of GOP voters are motivated primarily by identity-grievance politics and, unlike GOP elites, have no policy priorities.

Most of the post-Trump analysis you will see over the next couple years will assume the first view, which, just for shorthand, we'll call the Conservative Reformation Theory. My friend David Brooks lays this out very nicely in a long piece this morning that goes through all of the different strains of conservatism, from paleocons to reformicons to front-porchicons and more. And he notes the Republican politicians and professional conservatives who are diligently scurrying around, trying to build out policy frameworks for these varying ideological poses.

I suspect that everyone in Washington even tangentially connected to Team Elephant will subscribe to the Conservative Reformation theory because (1) it's comforting; (2) it means that their work is relevant; (3) to subscribe to the other view leads to a chain a logic that is not especially congenial.

I'm open to changing my mind—these are just theories, after all, and more evidence will accrue—but I am deeply skeptical of the Conservative Reformation Theory.

The other view—let's call it Identity Politics Conservatism until we come up with something better—is largely agnostic on questions of policy. Do these people want tariffs, or free trade? Do they hate socialism, or do they want the government picking winners and losers according to the national interest? Are they pro-life, or are the deaths of 160,000 people just something that "is what it is"?

The Identity Politics Conservatism theory would say that these people don't care a whit about the policies—they care about who is doing the policymaking. Like old-guard Leninists, their primary concern is Who? Whom?

And the logic of Identity Politics Conservatism suggests that all of this think tanking and speechifying is—at best—tertiary to what these voters care about. They do not want a new strategy for bringing tech giants to heel.

They want Lafayette Park.

If I could distill the difference between the Conservative Reformation and the Identity Politics Conservatism viewpoints to a single sentence, it would be this:

One theory holds that voters responded to Trump despite the tweets; the other posits that voters responded to Trump because of the tweets.

But as I said, to believe the second view is to be forced to confront a number of thoughts that aren't very nice.

thebulwark