Current Affairs Donald Trump POS: Judgement cometh and that right soon

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Think it's a bit sad that all those on the 'losing' side...while usually respecting the office of the Pres, can't get past the man...or is it the fact that
'He' beat them, not the republicans and many have threw their toys out the pram over the Inaugreation

It's the fact that every morning I wake up I hear about a fossil fuel exec with multiple legal cases against the EPA, heading up the EPA. Or some corporate lady who donated millions to the republicans heading up public schools even tho she never went to one. Or a guy heading up the department of energy who called for the irradiation of that department.
Once you get over his crazy ass cabinet, you have to hear Putin soundbites where he's drooling over Trump, you hear about press being barred from all sorts of places. You see Trump behave like an 8 year old at his press conference.
All that before you stop and think that yesterday he actually paid out on his $25m settlement for his fraudulent University or he never released his tax returns or he's invited Taiwan to the party or or or

On the plus side, I don't mind his pick for secretary of defense and McConnells wife might be ok in transport but the rest, so far, is as big a bag of flaming turd as you can imagine.
 
Fair point but....

others have much more admirable words and actions but then we find out they were paedophiles (several British politicians) or cause such immense damage in the middle east that hundreds of thousands die and decades of misery are caused (Bush/Blair).

So...IMO issue is more complex or nuanced than what you say
Yes, and they lose any and all respect at the point that it's discovered that's what they are.

We already KNOW that Trump is a racist and a misogynist.
 
Sounds like your typical top political office seeker - get over it, the world won't end, like all the others, he'll achieve next to nothing and leave his problems to the next guy or girl.

#bedwetters
If you don't think Trump is an absolute disaster waiting to happen, and is SIGNIFICANTLY worse in those bolded attributes than most (and CERTAINLY from what the US has had for the last 8yrs) then you really haven't been paying attention for the last 18 months or so.
 

lol
By the way, that photo of Trump was supposed to be him in his office at Mar-al-Lago in Florida, 3 weeks ago writing his inaugural address.

Putting aside the brilliant turning up of the corner, to hide that the paper's blank... putting aside the fact that he looks like he's trying to shift a particularly stubborn bowel movement.... it turns out it's not his office, it's actually the receptionist's desk. lollol
 
That's an incredible list, and it doesn't even include commuted sentences......
It is, although since we have one of the highest, if not the highest, incarceration rates in the world I personally welcome it and am slightly baffled by the ritual freakout by partisans on each side when the other side issues their pardons/commutations.

Guess you are going to love the fact that govenors can also pardon/commute as well ;)
https://www.gov.ca.gov/s_pardonsandcommutations.php
 
Trump planning to cut* the National Endowments for the Arts and Humanities, thanks Obama

http://thehill.com/policy/finance/314991-trump-team-prepares-dramatic-cuts

*Axe, remove, defund, obliterate, destroy, not to be confused with "cut back" or "reduce"

Plus rollbacks in nuclear science, energy efficiency, DOJ efforts to improve community policing, and violence against women programs, just to name a few

Donald Trump is ready to take an ax to government spending.

Staffers for the Trump transition team have been meeting with career staff at the White House ahead of Friday’s presidential inauguration to outline their plans for shrinking the federal bureaucracy, The Hill has learned.

The changes they propose are dramatic.

The departments of Commerce and Energy would see major reductions in funding, with programs under their jurisdiction either being eliminated or transferred to other agencies. The departments of Transportation, Justice and State would see significant cuts and program eliminations.

The Corporation for Public Broadcasting would be privatized, while the National Endowment for the Arts and National Endowment for the Humanities would be eliminated entirely.

Overall, the blueprint being used by Trump’s team would reduce federal spending by $10.5 trillion over 10 years.

The proposed cuts hew closely to a blueprint published last year by the conservative Heritage Foundation, a think tank that has helped staff the Trump transition.

Similar proposals have in the past won support from Republicans in the House and Senate, who believe they have an opportunity to truly tackle spending after years of warnings about the rising debt.

Many of the specific cuts were included in the 2017 budget adopted by the conservative Republican Study Committee (RSC), a caucus that represents a majority of House Republicans. The RSC budget plan would reduce federal spending by $8.6 trillion over the next decade.

Two members of Trump’s transition team are discussing the cuts at the White House budget office: Russ Vought, a former aide to Vice President-elect Mike Pence and the former executive director of the RSC, and John Gray, who previously worked for Pence, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) when Ryan headed the House Budget Committee.

Vought and Gray, who both worked for the Heritage Foundation, are laying the groundwork for the so-called skinny budget — a 175- to 200-page document that will spell out the main priorities of the incoming Trump administration, along with summary tables. That document is expected to come out within 45 days of Trump taking office.

The administration’s full budget, including appropriations language, supplementary materials and long-term analysis, is expected to be released toward the end of Trump’s first 100 days in office, or by mid- to late April.

Rep. Mick Mulvaney (R-S.C.), Trump’s choice to head the Office of Management and Budget, has not yet weighed in on the proposed spending reforms because he is still awaiting confirmation by the Senate.

Mulvaney voted for the RSC budget offered as a more conservative alternative to the main House Republican budget in 2015. The House did not vote on the RSC budget for fiscal year 2017.

The preliminary proposals from the White House budget office will be shared with federal departments and agencies soon after Trump takes the oath of office Friday, and could provoke an angry backlash.

Trump’s Cabinet picks have yet to be apprised of the reforms, which would reduce resources within their agencies.

The budget offices of the various departments will have the chance to review the proposals, offer feedback and appeal for changes before the president’s budget goes to Congress.

It’s not clear whether Trump’s first budget will include reforms to Social Security or Medicare, two major drivers of the federal deficit.

Trump vowed during the campaign not to cut Medicare and Social Security, a pledge that Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.), his pick to head the Department of Health and Human Services, told lawmakers in testimony Wednesday has not changed.

Yet it could be very difficult to reduce U.S. debt without tackling the entitlement programs. Conservative House budgets have repeatedly included reforms to Medicare and Social Security, arguing they are necessary to save the programs.

The presidential budget is important in setting policy and laying out the administration’s agenda, though Congress would be responsible for approving a federal budget and appropriating funds.

Moving Trump’s budget through Congress could be difficult. In 2015, with the GOP in control of the House, the RSC budget failed by a vote of 132 to 294.

Moderate Republicans and Democrats on the Appropriations Committee are likely to push back at some of the cuts being considered by Trump.

But they seem likely to have the support of Mulvaney, a conservative budget hawk who backed the RSC budget.

“Mick Mulvaney and his colleagues at the Republican Study Committee when they crafted budgets over the years, they were serious,” said a former congressional aide. “Mulvaney didn’t take this OMB position to just mind the store.”

“He wants to make significant, fundamental changes to the structure of the president’s budget, and I expect him to do that with Vought and Gray putting the meat on the bones,” the source added.

The Heritage blueprint used as a basis for Trump’s proposed cuts calls for eliminating several programs that conservatives label corporate welfare programs: the Minority Business Development Agency, the Economic Development Administration, the International Trade Administration and the Manufacturing Extension Partnership. The total savings from cutting these four programs would amount to nearly $900 million in 2017.

At the Department of Justice, the blueprint calls for eliminating the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, Violence Against Women Grants and the Legal Services Corporation and for reducing funding for its Civil Rights and its Environment and Natural Resources divisions.

At the Department of Energy, it would roll back funding for nuclear physics and advanced scientific computing research to 2008 levels, eliminate the Office of Electricity, eliminate the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy and scrap the Office of Fossil Energy, which focuses on technologies to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.

Under the State Department’s jurisdiction, funding for the Overseas Private Investment Corporation, the Paris Climate Change Agreement and the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change are candidates for elimination.

Conservatives allied with fiscal hawks such as Pence, Paul and the Heritage Foundation say the time is long past due to get serious about cutting the federal deficit.

“The Trump Administration needs to reform and cut spending dramatically, and targeting waste like the National Endowment for the Arts and National Endowment for the Humanities would be a good first step in showing that the Trump Administration is serious about radically reforming the federal budget,” said Brian Darling, a former aide to Paul and a former staffer at the Heritage Foundation.
 
It is, although since we have one of the highest, if not the highest, incarceration rates in the world I personally welcome it and am slightly baffled by the ritual freakout by partisans on each side when the other side issues their pardons/commutations.

Guess you are going to love the fact that govenors can also pardon/commute as well ;)
https://www.gov.ca.gov/s_pardonsandcommutations.php

I don't have a problem with a process for pardons, it shows that sometimes we get things wrong and it can be corrected. I do admit though that I didn't realise that a President could commute the sentence of drug related inmates etc etc in such huge numbers. It's open to political abuse.......
 
I don't have a problem with a process for pardons, it shows that sometimes we get things wrong and it can be corrected. I do admit though that I didn't realise that a President could commute the sentence of drug related inmates etc etc in such huge numbers. It's open to political abuse.......
It is, but given all the other avenues open to politcal abuse by a president that imo have much wider implications it is pretty far down a list of reforms I'd make.

Having an incoming president release his full tax records would be pretty high though ;)
 
I don't have a problem with a process for pardons, it shows that sometimes we get things wrong and it can be corrected. I do admit though that I didn't realise that a President could commute the sentence of drug related inmates etc etc in such huge numbers. It's open to political abuse.......
It was political abuse that put these people in prison in the first place, well, according to Nixon's chief advisor anyway.
 
Another "mediocre negro" ?

Before you all explode I suggest you watch this video. Theres something very wrong going on in America.


I think it's quite strange that you would take one poorly phrased quote from one person to make a wider point that like. The fact that one person described the black celebrities Trump has endorsing him as 'mediocre negros' has absolutely nothing to do with anything, and it certainly doesn't point to something which is 'goof very wrong in America'. Black people have always been descriminated against.
 
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