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Elected to Break the Law?

I’ve heard many commentators make the point that Donald Trump was elected to shake up the system or to challenges the establishment or, in his words, to drain the swamp.

This opinion piece is just one more example whereby his apologists attempt to tell the majority of voters in this country, you know, the ones who voted against him, that Trump should be given the benefit of his victory to enact whatever policies he wants. Please don’t impeach him; he’s only doing what he was elected to do.

This is an argument?

I will say from the outset that I do agree with some of the premises of the article because we have elected a class of officials who have enacted policies that enrich themselves and their businesses, foundations, universities, and foreign cronies. Hunter Biden should never have gotten the position with Burisma. We have reenacted the Gilded Age and defended it by elevating money to the point that it’s become the point of the discussion.

Box office receipts lead the Monday morning news. Salaries for athletes, performers, CEOs and hedge fund managers are defended as what the market will bear, or that their talents are so specialized, that they are worth the (m)(b)illions Stock market programs lead the ratings. And we have, to use a timely phrase, bought the goods. Literally. We are in an unending war in Iraq because George W. Bush decided to lie about the threat it posed to the country. It poses a threat now, but only because of his policies. President Obama never confronted Syria over its use of chemical weapons. The middle of the country was left to rot and ruin while international trade took jobs from the working class.

Donald Trump was elected to clean all this up, and in some ways he’s tried to do that. The problem is that his methods and policies are informed by conspiracy theories, FOX News hosts who know he’s watching and feed him a steady diet of fear for him to tweet to the general public, and his own wide, bloated, unending ignorance of the law, the constitution, and basic manners. So when I read the article above, I saw the point that Mr. McCarthy was trying to make. The problem is that the course Donald Trump has followed has been disastrous for the country, and now for him.

To address a few of McCarthy’s points, Mr. Trump is more than crude. He uses vile, divisive language that attacks people and calls them unfit, traitorous and dangerous simply for disagreeing with him.

He is being impeached not for doing something analogous to Vice President Biden’s asking the Ukrainian President to investigate corruption in his own administration, but because Trump believed in a debunked conspiracy theory and wanted Biden investigated to help Trump get elected.

There might not be direct evidence of Trump working with Vladimir Putin, but the effect of Trump’s policies and pronouncements have benefited Putin handsomely, from taking his word that Russia didn’t interfere in the 2016 election to denying Ukraine aid to fight the Russians.

Donald Trump might have been elected to transform America’s foreign policy, but he has done nothing of the sort, except to make it worse. Our allies don’t trust us, he’s made decisions in a moment based on faulty information, and refuses to think about the long-term effects of his actions. When Kim Jong-un, Vladimir Putin, Racep Tayyip Erdogan, and Xi Jinping have all played you, you’re not making anything better. Remember that we sold out the Kurds so we could keep the oil, at a time when the last thing the world needs is more oil. Isn’t that where our foreign policy went awry in the first place? In 1919?

And now the president is putting himself in the middle of the military justice system, going beyond his powers as Commander-in-Chief to act as both judge and jury. Please tell me how that helps the country.

If a minority of the country’s voters want a president who bathes in conspiracy and wants to bend the law to his own benefit, then they should vote for that. It doesn’t mean that it’s the right thing or the moral thing or the legal thing. Because its isn’t.

For more, go to www.facebook.com/WhereDemocracyLives or Twitter @rigrundfest

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Conspiracy of One

It began with conspiracy theories and it might well end because of conspiracy theories.

Not that I needed any other reason to oppose Donald Trump before he became president, because he was a publicity-addicted real-estate developer who lied, cheated, withheld payments from people who did work from him, declared bankruptcy six times, and was (is) a vile, prejudiced, sexist. But the main reason I disqualified him was his belief in the conspiracy theory that president Obama was not born in this country. That sort of lazy, disjointed intellect is a sign that you are susceptible to other manipulators who can seize on your confusion to sow doubt, fear, and chaos.
 
Pretty much the Trump presidency so far, no?
 
Now it’s a conspiracy theory that has Ukraine, not Russia, hacking into, and apparently harboring, the Democrats’ computer server that led to Hillary Clinton’s defeat in 2016. The president has been told that this is, in fact, a conspiracy theory and that his own intelligence services know that it was Russia that hacked the computers, but he either doesn’t learn good or doesn’t care. Ether way, his failure to analyze is why he’s on the brink of impeachment.
 
And that doesn’t even take into account his denial of climate change, labeling it a Chinese hoax, or his saying that millions of illegal immigrants vote were the reasons why Hillary had more popular votes than he did. 
 
It’s no wonder, then, that he reacts to verified facts in the way he does, lashing out with language that would appall any American, much less the not-ever-again moral Republican party.
 
Also, for someone who demands blind loyalty in his appointees and employees, the president is remarkably eager to undermine, attack and intimidate anybody who even seems to disagree with him. He’s churned through appointees and cabinet members and doesn’t even bother to fill vacancies he’s not interested in. He doesn’t seem to read briefing books or to be interested in policy nuances. What we’re left with is being governed by the gut instincts of someone who is ill-informed about how the United States government works, constitutional laws and norms, and plain old decent behavior. 
 
It’s beyond absurd.
 
Which is why it’s imperative that the Democrats nominate a candidate who can stand up to him, expose his ignorance, and attract wavering Republicans and Independents who voted for him last time. I believe that candidate is already in the field and that neither Mike Bloomberg nor Deval Patrick will turn out to be anything other than late entrants who make headlines, but nothing else.
 
The election in less than one year away. Please register to vote if you are eligible, and help to register people who will vote for common sense and decency.
 
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I Like Mike

And Pete, Joe, Elizabeth, Bernie, Amy and all the rest. As in more presidential election years, I would like to take the best policies of all the candidates and roll them into one person. Perhaps in a few years we’ll be able to do that, but for now we are limited by scientific laws, or at least the ones that rational people still adhere to. And truth be told, I will likely vote for a rusty nail if the Democrats nominate one, rather than vote for a president who uses vile language and is more comfortable with fear, blame, and fiction than he is with the truth and actually running the country.

But back to the nominees.

I am at the point now where I don’t believe the Democrats should nominate Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders. If last week’s elections told us anything (again), it’s that the vast middle of American voters truly wants a president who will reflect policies that will make their lives easier or more productive. They don’t want fear and attacks from the right, so why would they want them from the left?

I understand what Sanders and Warren are saying, and in I completely agree that our culture has been too tolerant of social and economic inequality and that we need to fix the problems that are associated with them. Moving too far to the left will not attract the people the Democrats need to win in November.

What about Mike?

I think Mike Bloomberg has some very strong strengths in terms of his style, his ideas, his record, and the fact that he used to be a moderate Republican and is now a moderate Democrat. He certainly has his weaknesses: Stop and Frisk, being a billionaire, being a technocrat, and his policy on guns, which will not be popular with people he’ll need to win over.

The key will be how Mr. Bloomberg communicates his message and how he will address those on the left who are suspicious of his moderation and his wealth. It would be a great sign if he were to actually and forcefully come out against the carried interest rule, which would send the message that the very wealthy need to pay their fair share. It’s a better message than soaking the rich, and it would raise needed revenue to pay for health care and education.

It took 40 years for the country to move as far to the right as we are now. Moving back to the far left will not happen in this one election and nominating a candidate who promises to do that will, I think, be a great mistake. Change occurs slowly and Democrats need to respect the fact that many people like the Republican stances on immigration and foreign policy, but they don’t like the way Donald Trump is conducting those policies. The Democratic nominee has to be one who addresses those concerns and offers a more respectable, more responsible, more thoughtful response, as opposed to the disjointed, fearful, emotional screeds we hear daily from the White House.

Nominate a moderate who can talk about the day-to-day issues that concern most Americans in a way that assures them that Democrats will run the country in a fair, equitable manner. Run a hard-fought campaign and don’t be afraid to confront the president on his lies and his ignorance.

That’s the path to victory.

For more, go to www.facebook.com/WhereDemocracyLives or Twitter @rigrundfest

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November’s Debate Will Be Decisive

We are at the point now where the Democratic candidates for president need to break out or go home. It looks like we will lose some key voices, such as Kamala Harris and Corey Booker, and Beto O’Rourke has already left the building. The November debate could also be the turning point for Andrew Yang and Julian Castro, though the latter had a late surge in fundraising which allowed him to qualify for the show.

Then there was the Iowa poll that showed Elizabeth Warren leading the pack, and a new national poll that shows Biden with a lead not just among Democrats, but a 12 point lead over the president. And it’s got FOX News written all over it. Another poll puts Biden in the lead, but with a smaller margin and some caveats about his policy positions and performance on the campaign trail.

This week also saw Warren give some details about what will likely be a $20 trillion dollar plan to pay for her Medicare for all health policy. Other estimates put the cost at $34 trillion because she seems to be overestimating just how efficient the government can run the program, but you get the idea. It’s going to be expensive and it redistributes the tax system so that the ultra wealthy pay a lot more.

Many people have criticized the plan because they say it will ultimately require middle class taxpayers to pay more too, but I’d like to see how much the middle class will save in health insurance premiums in return for tax increases. I’m thinking that those will turn out to be far less than the premiums, making it a net gain for most earners. Warren, and the press, need to publicize that aspect of her plan.

Pete Buttigieg is also rising in these polls and is fourth in both Iowa and nationally. He and Amy Klubichar are hoping they can build on their more moderate positions in the November debate and attract those who are wary of the Warren?Sanders left and the more jittery Biden supporters who are unsure that he can rise above his other debate performances.

November’s debate will be key because there are no debates in December, and then only a month before the voting begins, so each candidate will be looking for that signature moment, or to quell any concerns from past debates.  In the end, this election will come down to the Midwestern states that the president won in 2016, and possibly North Carolina. Texas is still a long-shot.

For more, go to www.facebook.com/WhereDemocracyLives or Twitter @rigrundfest

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At a Time of Less, Schools Need More

I realize that the country is going to get precious little in terms of public education out of the know-nothings who are presently in charge, and the chief of that group, Betsy DeVos, has unfortunately stayed on while other cabinet members have fallen away due to having some common sense or scandals that in previous administrations wouldn’t allow them to be unattended in Lafayette Park, much less have an office in the White House.

And honestly, I can’t say that I supported President Obama’s approach to education because it relied far too heavily on punishing teachers for student test scores that might be influenced by some minor inconveniences like poverty, divorce, disease, hunger, or emotional problems. At least, though, Obama had some understanding of the importance of the public school system. DeVos and Trump are happy to let the system atrophy on the alter of private enterprise and competition, without seeing that every school, no matter where it is located, must provide a thorough, excellent, modern education for the children who attend.

With the budget deficit reaching $1 trillion dollars, I can’t imagine that there will be any new federal spending on education, and the states are constrained by their requirements to balance their budgets. Yes teachers education professionals continue to strike, not just over pay, but over the health of their students. This article details many of the demands that these professionals are making, and in many cases they’re not about salary.

One of the most troubling facts is that only 39% of schools employs a full-time nurse. That’s shockingly low, even if there’s a part-time person or a nurse on call. All schools should have a full-time nurse because you never know when a child will need one, and any delay can result in a tragedy. The same is true for school psychologists and an adequate number of guidance counselors. More and more children now rely on these vital resources, yet districts are not providing them in numbers to meet the demand.

The political winds have shifted back to the states on education after a robust era that began with George W. Bush. The result is less federal influence and more local control. This is generally how we’ve run education for most of our history, but with local control come local constraints, and most of those are fiscal. This means that school districts that struggle to raise funds will continue to do so and will not be able to adapt to the changing needs of their constituents.

Remember that we’re talking about children. We must meet our obligations.

For more, go to www.facebook.com/WhereDemocracyLives or Twitter @rigrundfest

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American Troops Pelted with Rotten Potatoes While Leaving Syria – Video

Thanks Dump… I mean, Trump!

Donald Trump tried pulling the wool over our eyes. The heat from the impeachment inquiry was too much for the orange guy in the White House, so removing the Kurds’ protection by ordering US troops out of Syria was nothing more than an attempt to cast our attention to the expected chaos that ensued – the intentional displacement of thousands and the hundreds of Kurds who have already lost their lives in the process.

Today, as our troops began leaving our Kurdish friends behind, the disgust in Trump’s decision was shown as Kurds threw rotten vegetables at the Americans.

https://twitter.com/USMCLiberal/status/1186268733045727234
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Just When You Think It Can’t Get Worse

Given what we know about the president’s ability to sink lower and lower as the weeks pass, I am hesitant to say that we’ve reached rock bottom in his swampy, immoral, ill-informed, and ignorant administration, but we’re getting close.

This, of course, is not a soothing thought, but I can see the light at the end of the tunnel. Republicans are rebuking him over his unconscionable sell-out of the Kurds, and every day there’s a new revelation in the tar pit of his Ukrainian outrage.

Mick Mulvaney admitted that the president tied American military support to Ukrainian acquiescence to investigating Joe Biden and the wayward computer server that the president believes holds the key to Democratic malfeasance in the 2016 election. Mick took back his words later in the day, but we can always roll the tape. And we have.

The president is going to be impeached. There’s no doubt about that. And there will be a trial in the Senate that even Mitch McConnell can’t ignore, simply because a majority of Americans believe there is evidence that the president did something wrong. As the weeks pass, there will be more evidence, and the old evidence is not going to go away because it’s been verified. So it can only get worse. How much worse is the key detail.

That Trump believes he’s doing a great job will be his undoing, because he obviously believes that he can do no wrong, make no wrong decision, or be held accountable for his actions. He believes that this is all a plot by the Democrats, or those government employees who don’t agree with him. Change American foreign policy with an off-hand comment? Write a letter that a high school junior would be embarrassed to send (and they’ve told me how embarrassed they would be to send such a letter)? Curse your way through a campaign rally? Ignore the Constitution?  Just another day at the White House.

And this business of holding the 2020 G7 summit meeting at Trump’s Doral Hotel in Miami? Tone deaf doesn’t even begin to tell the story, but he doesn’t care and probably doesn’t even see what the fuss might be. It’s Chris Christie on a closed beach. No conflict of interest here, my fellow Americans. It’s terrible.

Our allies are incredulous and are concerned about our trustworthiness and commitment to the stability of the world. We can sign as many bilateral trade agreements as the president wants, but that’s not going to solve the issue of our foreign policy. In fact, I see that as disadvantageous. Our strength, and the strength of democracy in the face of dictators and theocrats, is in our numbers and our alliances. These are under threat.

And have I mentioned that next year is an election? Get registered. Vote.

For more, go to www.facebook.com/WhereDemocracyLives or Twitter @rigrundfest

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Rest In Peace Rep. Elijah Cummings

Sir, your morals and clear objectives were like beacons of hope in this god-forsaken Trump-led Washington. You will be missed.

The Baltimore Congressman Democrat died on Thursday at the age of 68.

May you rest in peace! 

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But Now for Something Completely Different – Sport.

With great thanks to Monty Python. I had no idea that you could read all of the episodes online.

But back to sport.

I was thinking the other day, after China rolled its collective ankle over a pro-Hong Kong tweet by a Houston Rockets executive, about the time in the late 1960s and early 1970s, when athletes adopted Islamic names. I know, I know; how quaint, right? An athlete changing their name to match their religion today would yield precious little backlash on the social media.

Right.

I also remembered Tommie Smith and John Carlos raising their fists at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics. And having the Australian who won the bronze sympathize with them. And Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. And Ahmad Rashad. And the others. There was a significant backlash but in the end, sports enthusiasts generally accepted the changes.

Money changes everything. Remember when Micheal Jordan refused to get involved in the political debates of the 1980s and 90s? Or the relative peace within the Olympic movement after the fall of apartheid and the Soviet Union? Those days are now gone. Sports is a huge business, and having the Chinese buy stuff is every sports marketer’s dream. That’s why the tweet was a wake up call. The temperature lowered a bit at the end of the week, but this episode will not go away.

The athletes who now represent their sports grew up in the same political and social milieu as the rest of us, and they see themselves as more than just paid athletes. They are role models, ambassadors, social media stars and, yes, political animals. They speak out against police actions, injustice, sexism, economic inequality, and now, international affairs.

Well, at least the team executives do.

I also remember when American athletes protested the Gulf War and the invasion of Iraq. They were not labeled traitors. Carlos Delgado, who played for the Mets, and is not an American citizen, came under criticism for not coming out of the dugout for the national anthem. Sports radio provided lame attacks, but in the end, he didn’t change his behavior. Lebron James tweets back when the president attacks him.

And honestly, someone has to stand up to the Chinese. They have had an outsized influence on the world economy because sellers want to sell to a billion people. But when we are on the brink of a Chinese incursion into Hong Kong, someone also has to stand up for justice and democracy. It’s not going to come from the White House, so it might as well come from more famous people who have morals. I understand that some of the athletes want to keep their noses out of the fray. Self-preservation, higher salaries and all that.

If you want to stand up to a bully, though, you need to have the right argument. And we do.

For more, go to www.facebook.com/WhereDemocracyLives or Twitter @rigrundfest

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Shepard Smith Leaves Fox News

Shep Smith is probably the only Fox News personality quoted on this blog site. He was one of the only Fox personality who, on many occasions, stood up against Donald Trump and his Republican minions. With him gone, Fox News will drift even more right, something I didn’t think was even possible.

From The Hollywood Reporter;

In a shocking turn of events that stunned the media industry, Fox News anchor Shepard Smith announced his departure from the network after more than 23 years on Friday afternoon.

Smith is one of the faces of the network’s news division and one of its most important journalistic assets. The decision was Smith’s, Fox News said.

“Recently I asked the company to allow me to leave Fox News and begin a new chapter,” Smith said. “After requesting that I stay, they graciously obliged. The opportunities afforded this guy from small town Mississippi have been many. It’s been an honor and a privilege to report the news each day to our loyal audience in context and with perspective, without fear or favor. I’ve worked with the most talented, dedicated and focused professionals I know and I’m proud to have anchored their work each day — I will deeply miss them.”

Video

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The Smoking Cannon

So much evidence, so little time.

 
It seems like every time the president speaks, he says something that could be construed as abuse of power or something that the founders clearly meant to protect us from. Trump calls these things, “perfect.”
 
Now comes the unraveling.
 
The president is obviously not going to get contrite. He’s getting angrier and angrier and his communications are getting more and more abusive, personal and vile. He’s clearly angry because Rudy and his other sycophants probably told him that what he was asking of foreign leaders was perfectly fine, and that in their opinion, the president cannot be the subject of a criminal complaint while in office. Of course, that’s just conjecture and will have to be tested before a judge, but I’m thinking that once somebody tells the president something he wants to hear, then the president takes this as an iron-clad guarantee of correctness.
 
Uh oh.
 
There’s that darned United States Constitution in the way again.
 
And the real issue is that most of the other people who work in government know what the rules are and that what the president has either asked them to do or what he’s done under the impression that everything a president does is legal, is actually not.
 
The next phase of this drama has already begun. It’s where the civil servants and the credentialed professionals, as opposed to the aforementioned sycophants, begin to talk, release documents, ask for whistle-blower status, hire attorneys, or seek bargains. They will not give up their humanity or morals for a president who seems to have left his in Queens at the spot where Trump and his father decided to build apartments, but not rent them to African-Americans.
 
We are almost at the “my kingdom for a horse” moment. But first, the president has to repeat conspiracy theories while accusing Joe Biden of something for which there is no evidence. He must curse and sputter and offer excuse after contradicting excuse to cover his behavior. Then he will ask the last of his sycophants to fall on their professional and person swords. And some will.
 
In the end, though, his behavior makes the country less secure, more divided, and sullied by the mud he’s slinging.
 
For more, go to www.facebook.com/WhereDemocracyLives or Twitter @rigrundfest
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Calling the Impeachment Bluff

Well. That was predictable.

And given that the administration has also moved phone calls to Russian and Saudi leaders into a classifies computer shows you just how common it is for the president to embarrass, at the least, and be criminally liable, at the worst, when performing his presidential duties.

This president, though, has always been woefully unprepared to be president, both temperamentally and intellectually. And he clearly believes that anything goes in foreign policy because, well, he has advisers who  support that view.

And this was not just Trump’s interpretation. The powers, both real and perceived, have grown exponentially since the end of World War II, and were greatly enhanced in the Nixon White House because of Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney. Until now, though, we’ve had presidents who understood the constitution and the basic ideas of democratic republicanism. Now we have an executive who thinks he has unlimited powers and doesn’t understand how to use the system to get his agenda passed.

Which also makes Trump’s lament that an impeachment inquiry will bring his legislative program to a halt, the howler he doesn’t recognize it to be. He had two years of Republican rule and barely got a terrible tax cut bill passed. He could have started with infrastructure and had a bipartisan agreement  on something that would help the whole country. When you rule through your base, you don’t go very far.

So here we are, facing months of investigation because the president put us here. And I’m sure there are more revelations to be learned, more finger-pointing, more resignations and more vile, unrepentant, personal attacks from a graceless man who considers himself history’s greatest victim.

I don’t know what else he expected when he released the transcripts of his phone call with the Ukrainian president and essentially confirmed everything in the whistle-blower’s report. The president is the perpetrator, not the victim, and thankfully we have people in the government who see his actions as undemocratic and dangerous. Add in the fact that Rudy Giuliani was acting as a de facto Secretary of State, you can see why this scandal is so grave.

Unlike the Mueller Report, which showed the president trying his best to cover up and ask people to do illegal things, and his people delaying, stonewalling and denying his requests, we have a clarifying situation here where the president has been caught red-handed perpetrating an offense that he doesn’t see as a problem.

That’s a problem. And like Nixon, but unlike Clinton, there is far more below the surface of his actions that will reveal him to be the unfit leader we always suspected he was.

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