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Month: May 2016

And yet many of these people say they will vote for him anyway

And yet many of these people say they will vote for him anyway

by digby

The question is, why? According to the Huffpollster:

[A] combined 61 percent say they have reservations (19 percent) or are outright uncomfortable (42 percent) with Trump’s lack of experience in the kinds of positions traditionally held by American commanders-in-chief. To put that number in context: A lower total percentage of voters – 51 percent – expressed concern about Bernie Sanders potentially becoming the first self-described Democratic socialist to lead the country. Those who expressed concern about Trump’s lack of military or government experience included 68 percent of women, 60 percent of independents, 78 percent of undecided voters and about a third of Republican primary voters.”

Only a third of Repubicans care about this.  After caterwauling for 8 years about Barack OBama being unqualified. I guess it’s that “I vote for the guy I’d like to have a beer with him” concept. People figure they could do it themselves if they wanted — and certainly better than any lily-livered Democrat female — so it’s perfectly fine if the president is a know-nothing cretin who has no clue. And he is rich which automatically makes him a genius. Like the Olsen twins. He’ll figure it out.

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The “populist-conservative” coalition

The “populist-conservative” coalition

by digby

Here’s an update from the conservative movement fever swamps. There are still some holdouts, but the professional movement conservatives are working the angles hard and are bringing anyone who might find Trump to be a bridge too far around slowly but surely:

Two conservative thinkers for whom we have a great deal of respect, Bill Kristol and Erick Erickson, have finally jumped the shark and entered a bizarre new #NeverTrump political dimension where Mitt Romney is a viable candidate for president and forming a third party five months before the election is a realistic means of electing an alternative to Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. 

To be clear, we endorsed Ted Cruz and still believe Cruz is the candidate most likely to restore America to limited constitutional government, and if Senator Cruz had chosen to go to the Convention and challenge Donald Trump on the floor we would have supported him until the final votes were counted.

If Kristol and Erickson were advocating that Senator Cruz stay in the race we’d be there with them.

However, Ted Cruz for the good of the conservative cause, chose to suspend his campaign and he chose not to engage in a final round of political bloodletting with Donald Trump.

This is a harsh reality for many Cruz supporters who wanted to battle Trump until the bitter end, in part as payback for Trump’s scorched earth primary campaign.

The battle we wanted right now was Cruz versus Trump, the battle we’ve got is Trump versus Hillary Clinton, or the pipedream of a third party candidate.

Both Bill Kristol and Erick Erickson have recently made the case that a third party isn’t a pipedream and have pulled numbers from various polls to try to prove the claim that “Half the country is open to an alternative. The ABC poll shows half, basically half, 45 percent saying, we would like to have a third choice,” as Kristol told ABC’s George Stephanopoulos.

The problem for Kristol and Erickson is that their 45 percent is not ideologically conservative, so there’s no reason to believe that a conservative alternative to Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton automatically books that 45 percent of the vote.

So what’s the Kristol and Erickson “unity party” ticket, Mitt Romney and Bernie Sanders?

The idea that movement conservative should join forces with the #NeverTrump establishment Republican perpetrators of what has become a near-treasonous sellout of our country – and the country class citizens who believe in conservative ideas and have fought for them for decades – would be a disaster for the conservative movement and provide no guarantee of a conservative victory in November.

Setting aside the obvious challenge of funding a competitive campaign in an environment where the Democratic and Republican Party opponents would likely spend a combined total of over $2 billion, as they did in 2012, when Obama spent $1.123 billion and Romney spent $1.019 billion, the numbers just don’t add up for a candidate whose sole base is movement and especially cultural conservatives.

In 2012 about 117 million Americans voted in the presidential election, in 2008 about 125 million voted.

In 2008, white, born-again, Evangelical Christians represented 26 percent of the total vote for president, according to the exit polls. In 2012, white, born-again, Evangelical Christians represented 26 percent of the total vote for president, again according to the exit polls.

After four years of Obama’s disastrous anti-religious policies we saw no change at all in the percentage of the electorate accounted for by Evangelical Christians; no net gain, certainly no surge, and no record Evangelical turnout, despite the vast effort expended on contacting and turning out faith-first voters.

What’s more, when you zoom in a bit, according to Joel C. Rosenberg, you find that 21 percent of self-identified, white, born-again, Evangelical Christians voted for President Obama in 2012 – that means more than 6 million self-described “Evangelicals” voted for Obama.

It should also be noted that, despite his war on the Catholic Church, 50 percent of the Catholic vote went for Obama in 2012. This was down from the 54 percent that Obama won in 2008.

Plus, the reality is this cultural conservative #NeverTrump third party would not appeal to all cultural conservative voters; Trump booked forty-two percent of the Evangelical votes in heavily Evangelical North Carolina and in Ohio, 39 percent of Evangelicals voted for Trump.

The final issue to be dealt with in this scenario is the myth of the 17 million (or 10 or 5 million) missing Christian voters.

The argument is made every election that, if only we had a cultural conservative candidate, millions of hitherto absent Christian voters would show up and sweep a cultural conservative into the White House, but history has proven the idea that there are millions of “missing” Christian voters to be a myth.

Putting principled cultural conservative Rick Santorum on the primary ballot didn’t draw them to the polls in 2012, running Baptist minister Mike Huckabee didn’t draw them to the polls in 2008 or 2016, neither did putting high profile TV evangelist Pat Robertson on the ballot in 1988.

The reality is the millions of “missing” Christian voters are not missing.

After thirty-six years, millions of dollars spent on Christian voter guides, hours spent leafleting churches and intense telephone, mail and social media campaigns it is time to recognize that these voters are not “missing,” they are simply Christians who do not vote.

Counting on such people to power a Third Party campaign to victory is not merely the triumph of hope over experience, it is a fool’s errand that would have disastrous consequences for the preservation of constitutional liberty.

This deep-seated discomfort with Donald Trump’s life-style expressed by Erickson and Kristol is real, but from a strictly political perspective it does not constitute a reason for movement conservatives to abandon their natural populist allies to form a coalition with the establishment Republicans whose misrule, lies and betrayals have created the present political environment and enabled the rise of Donald Trump.

History, in the form of the 1980 and 1992 elections is instructive and history tells us that the only winning right-of-center coalition is one of conservatives and populists.

In 1980 the all-but-dead liberal Rockefeller wing of the Republican Party chose to walkout and back the Third Party candidacy of liberal Republican Congressman John Anderson against conservative Ronald Reagan.

The liberal Anderson booked 5,719,850 votes or 6.6 percent of the vote while Reagan won a majority of the popular vote with 43,903,230 votes and 50.8 percent of the total.

In contrast, in 1992, H. Ross Perot running as a conservative populist against the moderate Republican George H.W. Bush booked 19,743,821 votes or 18.91 percent of the popular vote. Bush was soundly defeated even though Democratic rival Bill Clinton did not get anywhere near a majority of the popular vote, booking only 44,909,806 votes or 43.01 percent of the votes cast.

So, on one side of the scale are principles and values, particularly the principles and values of our fellow cultural conservatives, and our desire to have leaders and elected officials who respect and live those values and principles.

On the other side is the white-hot anger of millions of grassroots limited government constitutional conservatives and conservative leaning populists who are not only angry with the leadership of the establishment Republican Party, but disappointed and frustrated with many leaders of the conservative movement as well.

The millions of disenfranchised country class voters who have been turning out for Trump look at the Republican establishment and see enemies who have been complicit in – if not the actual authors of – the three-decade long destruction of their quality of life.

But they have not found relief through many of Washington’s conservative leaders, some of whom have often failed to even try to fight the government policies that have contributed to the degradation of our culture that is enforced by political correctness, the vast increase in the spending and the reach of the federal government and the hijacking of middle class prosperity by crony government policies on trade and immigration.

Country class Americans are now tired of politicians and conservative movement leaders who lecture them about the Constitution, but who have done nothing to fight crime, improve education, prevent Islam from being taught in their schools, control the borders or encourage domestic economic growth.

The country class wants change and an end to the misrule of politically correct elites who are indifferent to their plight, and they may very well trample anyone who gets in the way of that change – even those who have heretofore led the long fight against the progressive Big Government Republican and Democratic establishments.

Don’t get us wrong – Donald Trump’s lack of interest in many elements of the cultural conservative agenda is no small thing – that’s why we preferred Ted Cruz over Trump.

In 1975, Ronald Reagan was approached by a number of leading conservatives, including ConservativeHQ Chairman Richard A. Viguerie, who wanted to launch a Third Party campaign with Reagan as the candidate.

As Mr. Viguerie recounted in his book TAKEOVER, Reagan heard them out and then told them they were nuts because most of America’s conservative voters were Republicans and he did not believe enough of them were likely to abandon the GOP to allow him to win a general election.

When faced with a choice between Trump’s lack of interest in many issues on the conservative agenda versus the deep and abiding hostility of Hillary Clinton, and the betrayals and lies of the Republican establishment, or a hopeless third party effort, Trump’s indifference to much of the conservative agenda would leave us with a candidate who, unlike John McCain and Mitt Romney, might at least be educable.

We haven’t endorsed Donald Trump, so at this point call us firmly against a third party effort and skeptical on the Trump candidacy, but persuadable if there’s concrete evidence of a Trump commitment to a populist – conservative coalition.

I still think it’s so adorable that they tacked on the word “populist” without changing any of the their ideology. But they know their people and so they must believe that’s all it’s going to take to keep them donating and subscribing and reading and watching.

It just makes me laugh to think of The Club for Growth as “populist conservative.”

W. Virginians Can Now Carry Concealed Guns With No Permit Or Training @spockosbrain

W. Virginians Can Now Carry Concealed Guns With No Permit Or Training
by Spocko
Not an official West Virginia sign, but it’s the thought that counts.

Starting today, May 24, 2016, legislation goes into effect that will allow most West Virginia residents to carry concealed handguns without a permit.

They also aren’t required to have any training. At all. As in zero. Nadda. Zilch.

That means no safety training with a gun is required. No live-fire training with a gun is required. They aren’t even required to watch a 5 minute video on gun safety.

This is insane.

West Virginia is now one of eight states where no permits are required: Alaska, Arizona, Wyoming, Kansas, Maine, Mississippi and Vermont.

I watched some of the video of West Virginians legislators talking about this decision and it boggles my mind this passed.

Friends who carry concealed guns take the required training very, very seriously. One has explained how dangerous it is for people from states with weak or no training requirements to be allowed reciprocity carry with his state.

West Virginia, no permits, no training and the cheapest guns in America! Credit: Taber Andrew Bain Creative Commons license 2.0

The people in the conceal carry world hammer on the need for training. I was watching a live fire conceal carry training video today. A guy who regularly carries a gun and spends hours at the firing range froze up and screwed up in a live fire training session. And he knew this training was happening!

But apparently the good legislators from West Virginia know better than the experts in the conceal carry world and their own experts in law enforcement.

Incompetent Guys With Guns

I often wonder what it would take to convince legislators to tighten up conceal carry gun laws in states like this. Do they need to see a specific number of gun negligence accidents caused by lack of training? Do they have a certain number of  kids killing themselves with guns they are shooting for? Do they need to see more stories of people with no training with concealed weapons killing innocent people?

It appears to me that all the deaths and injuries are allowable because a few people with no training and no permit once stopped a bad guy with a gun.

Starting tomorrow we can keep track of what this lack of permits and training brings the good people of West Virginia. Link to Gun Violence Archive West Virginia incidents the last two years.

CNN bravely trying to put the genie back in the bottle

CNN bravely trying to put the genie back in the bottle

by digby

We’ll see if it works:

The problem is that nobody believes fact checks they don’t already agree with. And from what I’m hearing from some of my readers, this is all news to them and they’re ready to believe it. Clinton lies about everything so why not about murder?

So, good luck. This is going to be an awful shit show …

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The race to the bottom

The race to the bottom

by digby

Not that it will matter, but if you haven’t seen the clip of Trump defending Clinton back in the 1990s, here it is:

This is how his surrogates defended that tape today:

Top Donald Trump surrogate and attorney Michael Cohen struggled to explain Tuesday why his boss demonized those who accused Bill Clinton of rape and sexual impropriety in the 1990’s but now believes those accusations, saying that Trump was just “being a good friend” at the time.

“He defended Bill Clinton for years. He said the same allegations that you guys are talking about now were a waste of time, were wrong, were hollow, that Bill Clinton was a terrific guy. That he was a great president, that the impeachment was wrong, that it was a waste of time…” the host of CNN’s New Day Chris Cuomo rattled off.

“He was a private citizen who was friendly with the Clintons and he was trying to protect a friend,” Cohen explained. “Now, it’s a different game. It’s 2016, he is the Republican presidential nominee.”

“So he was lying then?” pressed Cuomo.

“He was not lying, he was protecting a friend. There’s a difference,” Cohen insisted. “The difference is he was being a true friend. It didn’t matter to him.”

Cuomo returned to the topic later in the interview. “Why would I trust you if you say all the things you said then were false?” he asked.

“He was a private individual…” Cohen began.

Cuomo cut in: “So you tell the truth when you’re politician but lie when you’re a private individual?”

“…he had no obligation to say anything to anybody,” Cohen finished.

“He said plenty,” Cuomo shot back.

“So what? Because he’s Donald Trump,” Cohen said.

The media keeps saying this shows we’re going to have a race to the bottom and laments that both sides do it.

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The unpopularity of the workaholic

The unpopularity of the workaholic

by digby

I would also point out that whenever she talks about her grand daughter or has a beer everyone says she’s a phony so she can’t really win. But that’s an old story for women trying to gain entry into a closed boys club. You can’t go to the strip club or play on the basketball court or on the golf course. If you do something more “woman” oriented, you’re not a serious player. Like this, which was criticized as both phony and pandering:

So, any woman who wants to be successful has to be very serious and work focused and for women politicians I’m sure it’s even worse because they are supposed to be “men of the people” as well, but if they try, people don’t like it.

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Newtie’s back

Newtie’s back

by digby

And Trump’s got him. I wrote about it for Salon:

It looks as though we’ve reached that point of the presidential election where the tedious “who will he choose for VP” stories begin. They’ve really kicked into high gear for the Trump campaign as every meeting between Trump and an elected official is greeted with paparazzi and hours of speculation on cable news. Yesterday the story was all about the highly respected former used car salesman and current Senator from Tennessee, Bob Corker, who was filmed hurrying in and out of Trump Tower as if he were Kim Kardashian debuting a new haircut. Corker played down the VP rumors assuring the assembled press pack that he and Trump were just getting to know each other and chewed the fat over Russia and China.

But Corker isn’t the possible VP choice that really got the Villagers tongues wagging. That would be none other than former Speaker of the  House, Newt Gingrich. As my colleague Simon Maloy wrote earlier, the idea of Gingrich being a member of the most “outsider” ticket in American history is ridiculous considering the fact that he’s spent his entire adult life either in politics or political media. But then Trump has been saying for months, as he did in a Q & A with Pat Robertson back in February, that he wanted someone “political” because he wants to “get lots of great legislation we all want passed.” As usual, he also elaborated on his own terrific gifts in that department:

I would want somebody who can help me with government. So most likely that would be a political person, because I’m business, and I’m very good at what I do and all of that – and I’m also very, very political – you’ve see me. When you can get zoning on the West Side of Manhattan to build almost 6,000 units of housing and you have to go through New York City politics, believe me, that’s tough. That’s as tough – I don’t say Israel-Palestine but it’s about as tough a deal – the single toughest deal.”

Now why Trump would think Gingrich, who hasn’t been in congress for over 16 years, is the mover and shaker who can move his agenda through congress today is a mystery, but he certainly has a working knowledge of how the government functions which is something Trump is completely lacking.  It’s unclear if he even knows that there are three branches and what they do. (But then, George W. Bush was famously confused on that as well, saying it is the executive branch’s responsibility to “interpret the laws”, so it isn’t unprecedented.)

And Trump already likes the cut of Newt’s jib. According to this article by Eliana Johnson in National Review, he’s already one of the campaign’s most important advisers:

Gingrich’s influence within Trump World is widespread. Inside Trump’s newly established campaign offices in Washington, D.C., his fingerprints are everywhere. “Right from the minute I joined we were told that Newt will have his hand in every major policy effort,” says one Trump aide. “So one of the things I do when I’m researching or writing anything, in addition to looking at what Trump has said about anything, I look at what Newt has said.”

Back in the 90s after he helped usher in the first GOP House majority in 50 years he was known to muse publicly about the presidency asking no one in particular, “do I have to get into this thing?” as if only he could save the Republic. Unfortunately for him he was run out of the speakership and had to resign his House seat, a casualty of the botched impeachment gambit and his own overwhelming hubris. But he never really went away.

Unlike most politicians whose careers ended so ignominiously, Gingrich didn’t go home to Georgia. He landed a nice Fox gig for a while and wrote books and Amazon reviews and ran for president for real in 2012, performing pretty well all things considered. And he’s still a member in good standing of the Republican Party with deep contacts throughout the permanent establishment. And that brings us to why Gingrich might be a particularly scary choice for a Trump presidency.

One of the common refrains among those writing about this Gingrich boomlet is the idea that he could be Trump’s Dick Cheney, by which they are saying that he could help the inexperienced Trump in the same way Cheney “guided”  George W. Bush. Of course, those who remember the years of Cheney and David Addington and Scooter Libby secretly running half the government with no accountability are appalled at the suggestion. And people should be just as leery of Gingrich as they should have been about Cheney. He’s someone you definitely don’t want in that role, particularly when it comes to national security.

Gingrich grew up as an Army brat but never served himself.  Nonetheless he has seen himself as a military expert for many years even having 5 active military officers assigned to his congressional staff at one time, which was highly unusual. He has developed elaborate ideas about American power and global strategy based upon theories by “Future Shock” authors Alvin and Heidi Toffler, the futurists Newt considered his mentors.  These ideas have been highly influential in certain Pentagon circles. After he left the congress he served on the secretive “Defense Policy Board”, the advisory group that included some of the more aggressive neoconservatives who pushed for the invasion of Iraq.

The conservative columnist Robert Novak reported at the time that there was some resistance in the Pentagon to Gingrich’s involvement:

What most bothers the generals is Rumsfeld’s preference for outside advice.For example, Pentagon sources say a frequent consultant with the secretary is former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, an amateur military expert and member of the Pentagon’s Defense Policy Board. There is no distribution through the Pentagon of such advice. 

It’s unknown what Gingrich has been doing along these lines in the the intervening years other than running for president and writing children’s books with his wife, who seems to be strangely attached at his hip since they are together 24 hours a day. But he seems to have provoked the ire of GOP regulars for criticizing the Iraq war. Considering his role in it, it’s a typical act of Gingrichian chutzpah.  There’s only one politician on the scene who can out-do him in that department and that would be Trump.

But it is safe to assume that even if he now claims to be an isolationist, he has not lost his interest in military affairs and will be in a perfect position as a Cheney-esque Vice President to exercise power in national security and military policy in a crazy Trump administration using the concept of the “fourth branch”:

In the past, when he has been asked to comply with various congressional requests and orders, Cheney has claimed executive privilege because he’s the Vice President. But last week, he claimed he wasn’t a member the executive branch of the government, but was a member of the legislative branch. That was because he’s the president of the Senate, and therefore he felt he wasn’t subject to the presidential order giving the National Archives’ Information Security Oversight Office the right to make sure that Cheney and his office have demonstrated proper security safeguards. By the end of the week, he was back claiming that he was actually the vice president, and therefore could claim executive privilege once again as he rejected demands from Congress about information regarding the firing of U.S. attorneys. How does he keep track of which job he’s going to claim he has each day? Does he put on a different tie? 

As opposed to the millions of Americans who have more than one job, the vice president didn’t do this so he could make an extra buck. He went back and forth with these claims just so he could avoid complying with Congress and the law. 

Since Trump has a shaky concept of the constitution in the first place it wouldn’t be too hard for Gingrich to seize power in this way. Trump will be so busy “negotiating” trade deals he probably wouldn’t even notice.

And Gingrich has a score to settle. The pinnacle of his political career was the pitched battle with Bill Clinton between 1992 and 1998.  And he lost. Bill Clinton became a respected elder statesman doing global charitable work and Newt Gingrich became an occasional Fox News commentator and failed presidential candidate. This is his last chance for revenge. But Trump might want to think twice. If Newt’s luck holds up the way it always has in the past, Hillary Clinton will be in the White House next January.

Not a good look by @BloggersRUs

Not a good look
by Tom Sullivan

Social media has largely taken over the family-and-friends propaganda market from email. I’ve mentioned my collection of over 200 specimens of right-wing “pass-it-on” emails. You know the ones: the lies, smears and disinformation we all have received from fathers and T-party uncles, the kind with large, colored type and maybe a gif of praying hands above the exhortation to “pass it on.” But in-box Izvestia pretty much tailed off as Facebook, Reddit, etc. gained market share. Sadly, what with email was overwhelmingly a phenomenon of the right has shifted left with social media. Not a good thing. We should be better than this.

In the misty past before the dawn of the internet (1980?), I was visiting the home of a friend who told me with some alarm that I should never buy any more products from the Procter & Gamble company of Cincinnati, Ohio. Its president, she said, was on the Phil Donahue Show and said the company gave money to the Church of Satan. As proof she told me, you could look on their packaging and see a small crescent moon and stars symbol, a “satanic symbol.”

“When did you see this?” I asked.

Oh, well, she had not seen it. A friend had told her about it. Except, of course, her friend had not seen it either, because it never happened. But because the news came from a friend and confirmed her darkest fears about how the world worked, she never questioned it.

For its part, P&G had to issue a press statement denying the rumor. It eventually changed its logo and some years later won a lawsuit against Amway for spreading it.. This is one of the earliest urban myths of the sort that gave rise to Snopes.com. Rumors once passed over telephones and in living rooms have since gone digital.

Enter Facebook. “Pass it on” has given way to “Share.”

Frank Bruni opined in the Times over the weekend on how Facebook is warping our perception of the world. Bruni writes, “We construct precisely contoured echo chambers of affirmation that turn conviction into zeal, passion into fury, disagreements with the other side into the demonization of it.” Appealing to authority, Donald Trump said, “All I know is what’s on the Internet.” Bruni continues:

Those were his exact words, a blithe excuse for his mistaken assertion that a protester at one of his rallies had ties to Islamic extremists. He’d seen a video somewhere. He’d chosen to take it at face value. His intelligence wasn’t and isn’t vetted but viral — and conveniently suited to his argument and needs. With a creative or credulous enough Google search, a self-serving “truth” can always be found, along with a passel of supposed experts to vouch for it and a clique of fellow disciples.

Carnival barkers, conspiracy theories, willful bias and nasty partisanship aren’t anything new, and they haven’t reached unprecedented heights today. But what’s remarkable and sort of heartbreaking is the way they’re fed by what should be strides in our ability to educate ourselves. The proliferation of cable television networks and growth of the Internet promised to expand our worlds, not shrink them. Instead they’ve enhanced the speed and thoroughness with which we retreat into enclaves of the like-minded.

[…]

We’re less committed to, and trustful of, large institutions than we were at times in the past. We question their wisdom and substitute it with the groupthink of micro-communities, many of which we’ve formed online, and their sensibilities can be more peculiar and unforgiving.

The presidential primary has enhanced the effect. My feed is filled with caustic posts shared by friends who got it from their friends, gleaned from numerous sites I’ve never heard of with vaguely credible-sounding names. Shared by partisans as “research,” the praying hands are missing, but the point is the same as right-wing talk and chain email. Not to inform, but to inflame. To get people angry and to keep them that way.

For the left, it’s not a good look.

Oh man, it’s going to be a long six months

Oh man, it’s going to be a long six months

by digby

I just … oy:

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump is reviving some of the ugliest political chapters of the 1990s with escalating personal attacks on Bill Clinton’s character — centered on past accusations of sexual assault — amid a concerted effort to smother Hillary Clinton’s campaign message with the weight of decades of controversy. 

Trump’s latest shot came Monday when he released an incendiary Instagram video that includes the voices of two women who accused the former president of sexual assault, underscoring the presumptive Republican nominee’s willingness to go far beyond political norms in his critique of his likely Democratic rival. 

The real estate mogul has said in recent interviews that a range of Clinton-related controversies will be at the center of his case against Hillary Clinton. 

“They said things about me which were very nasty. And I don’t want to play that game at all. I don’t want to play it — at all. But they said things about me that were very nasty,” Trump told The Washington Post in a phone interview. “And, you know, as long as they do that, you know, I will play at whatever level I have to play at. I think I’ve proven that.” 

Clinton’s campaign has largely refused to engage the recent attacks directly, instead focusing — as Clinton did Monday during an appearance in Detroit — on Trump’s demeanor and job qualifications.

But you understand that “very nasty” is questioning anything he has said or done or wants to do.
Think about his quote there. “I will play at whatever level I have to play at. I think I’ve proved that.”

In other words, there is nothing he won’t do to win. And as he’s made clear in the past, he believes that once you have won something, you are given license to bully and dominate:

The coalition building for me will be when I win. Vince Lombardi, I saw this. He was not a big man. And I was sitting in a place with some very, very tough football players. Big, strong football players. He came in — these are tough cookies — he came in, years ago — and I’ll never forget it, I was a young man. He came in, screaming, into this place. And screaming at one of these guys who was three times bigger than him, literally. And very physical, grabbing him by the shirt. 

Now, this guy could’ve whisked him away and thrown him out the window in two seconds. This guy — the player — was shaking. A friend of mine. There were four players, and Vince Lombardi walked in. He was angry. And he grabbed — I was a young guy — he grabbed him by the shirt, screaming at him, and the guy was literally. . . . And I said, wow. And I realized the only way Vince Lombardi got away with that was because he won.”

When are we going to start thinking about this is psychological terms?  That’s not a normal way of thinking for a well-balanced, mature adult.

Neither is this thoroughly ridiculous comment:

When asked in an interview last week about the Foster case, Trump dealt with it as he has with many edgy topics — raising doubts about the official version of events even as he says he does not plan to talk about it on the campaign trail. 

He called theories of possible foul play “very serious” and the circumstances of Foster’s death “very fishy.” 

“He had intimate knowledge of what was going on,” Trump said, speaking of Foster’s relationship with the Clintons at the time. “He knew everything that was going on and then all of a sudden he committed suicide.” 

He added, “I don’t bring [Foster] up because I don’t know enough to really discuss it. I will say there are people who continue to bring it up because they think it was absolutely a murder. I don’t do that because I don’t think it’s fair.”

That nasty piece of work is the GOP nominee for president of the United States.

The Mooch is in

The Mooch is in

by digby

The latest from the new NBC/WSJ poll:

I understand why people think he’ll “shake things up”, “stand up for America’s trade interests” and “stand up for America.”  The trade thing is wrong, but I see how they could think it. I do not understand why anyone thinks he’ll be better for the economy and dealing with Wall Street unless you automatically assume that the one with the most money has to be the best at doing that.

I guess you could say that his promises to “win” may make some people believe he’ll be better at the economy but he is unerringly hostile to Wall Street regulation and promises to repeal Dodd-Frank.

A couple of years ago I wrote a piece for Salon about a finance player by the name of Anthony Scaramucci, affectionately referred to as “The Mooch.” He was, at that time, making a move to being a major GOP donor and “adviser” to candidates. I assumed at the time that eccentric rich guys like him were the biggest danger for the GOP but I didn’t anticipate Trump. (I did mention him in the article, though…)

Anyway, if you want to know what Trump’s position on Wall Street is going to be, this article in Vanity Fair will fill you in. After some hemming and hawing, The Mooch is all in with Trump. And he’s being very helpful:

The Mooch expressed to me that he wanted the candidate to be “well organized” and he took comfort in Trump’s successful recruitment of Steven Mnuchin, the former Goldman Sachs banker whom Trump had recently named as his national finance chairman. “For this guy to join forces with Donald Trump says two things,” the Mooch continued. “He’s a very good recruiter of super-talented people and there is something different going on here that could be a potential entrepreneurial disruption in Washington. And whether you like Donald Trump or you don’t like Donald Trump, he is an entrepreneur and he might be able to create an entrepreneurial Washington, D.C.”

During one of his conversations with Trump, Scaramucci said, the candidate explained that he needed his help raising outside funds, and suggested that Scaramucci get in touch with Mnuchin, himself. (While much of Trump’s primary campaign was self-funded, he is widely expected to try to raise more than $1 billion to compete in the general election.) For Scaramucci, this was all good. He knew Mnuchin from their shared time at Goldman. In fact, he had also worked for Mnuchin’s father, the legendary Goldman partner Robert Mnuchin. (Robert is one of the many bankers, like his son, to prove there is life after Goldman. He left to start his own high-end art gallery on the Upper East Side.)

So Scaramucci got on the horn with his old colleague and promptly invited him to SALT, where Mnuchin spent Wednesday trawling the well-heeled crowd for Trumpian-size donations. Mnuchin also attended the dinner Wednesday night, sitting across the oval table from Will Smith, who stars in a new adventure movie, Suicide Squad, that Mnuchin helped produce. (Mnuchin made a fortune after the financial crisis when he bought a piece of a failed bank, IndyMac Bancorp, in Southern California, renaming it OneWest Bank, and then selling it to CIT Group for $3.4 billion and nearly doubling his investment.) “It was easy for me,” the Mooch told me of his decision to align with Mnuchin in support of Trump. “Steve Mnuchin is an accomplished guy. A Wall Street guy! A Hollywood guy! He’s built an incredible career.”
[…]
But the vibe in Vegas seemed to be moving in Trump’s direction, especially as the conference unfolded. “We talk all day long about Wall Street,” Scaramucci told me, “but there are two streets: Entrepreneurial Avenue, that’s Donald Trump Street, or the Clinton cul-de-sac. Tell me, which street do you want to live on?”

Update: There’s also this from the liberal think tank EPI

It’s pretty clear that pinning Donald Trump down on actual policy specifics is going to be tough. He has released a tax plan (written down on actual paper), and until he decides to tear it up, it’s the best road map we have for what he wants to do with tax policy.

The road map charts the course to really large tax cuts, with the bulk of them going to very-high-income households: At the plan’s core is a mostly-routine Republican tax plan that includes giveaways similar to those intended by Marco Rubio, Jeb Bush, and Ted Cruz. The difference is that the plan throws people off the scent of who it benefits, because it contains some novel (and particularly stupid) detours that make no sense as good policy.

When Trump says things like “But the middle class has to be protected. The rich is probably going to end up paying more,” one might come away with the idea that this is a middle-class focused tax cut. The guts of Trump’s tax proposal, however, reveal how obvious of a giveaway to the already-rich it is. To get an idea of just how much money is being doled out, the Tax Policy Center (TPC) estimates that Trump’s plan would cost about $9.5 trillion over a decade. 35 percent of Trump’s tax cuts go to the top 1 percent of households during the first year of his tax plan (TPC estimates that as households making over $732,323 annually). This is more than the combined share that the 80 percent of us making under $142,601 a year can expect to see. And this regressivity actually grows over time: By 2025, the top 1 percent will take about a 40 percent share of the tax cut – almost equivalent to the combined share that the bottom 90 percent will see. The tax cut’s regressivity is highlighted even further by looking at the share within the top 1 percent. About half of the share going to the top 1 percent is actually going to just the top 0.1 percent – households making over $3,769,396 in the first year.

All of this likely underestimates both how large the tax cuts would be and how much would go to wealthy households, because Trump creates a special loophole in his tax plan. Following the lead of Kansas Governor Sam Brownback (who is probably not the world’s best authority to turn to on sensible tax policy), Trump caps taxes on income generated by pass-through entities at 15 percent instead of his new 25 percent top tax rate. Pass-through entities are businesses whose incomes are not taxed at the corporate level, but instead “passed through” entirely to the business owners and then taxed at individual income-tax levels. This creates enormous incentives and opportunities for tax avoidance by high-income households, who could simply reclassify themselves as pass-through entities to avoid paying the 25 percent top tax rate on individual income. Adding this loophole to their estimate, Citizens for Tax Justice found that Trump’s tax plan would cost $1.2 trillion more and increase tax breaks for high-income earners substantially.

There is clearly a huge contradiction between Trump’s on-paper tax plan and his rhetoric about taxes on the campaign trail, and it doesn’t seem likely that middle class will come out on top. A quick example:. All of the remaining presidential candidates, including Trump, intend to close the carried interest loophole. And since it often allows hedge fund managers, the top 25 of which earned $12.94 billion last year, to be taxed at the preferable 23.8 percent capital-gains-rate instead of the higher rate charged to ordinary income, it’s easy to see why. Trump has even called out hedge fund managers for not being taxed enough. In doing so, Trump masquerades as a man of the people when the reality of his proposed tax changes will actually benefit hedge-fund managers even more. As TPC points out, the entities that earn carried-interest income—including hedge fund managers—are organized as a type of pass-through entity. This means that Trump is actually proposing to lower the tax rate hedge-fund managers pay from 23.8 percent to the new 15 percent rate his plan introduces for pass-through entities. This hardly sounds like a crackdown on people allegedly “getting away with murder.”

The only details Trump has committed to when it comes to taxes show that he intends to hand out massive tax cuts to the rich.

But sure. He’s gonna be great. We’re all gonna win so much it’ll make our heads spin.

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