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Month: March 2017

Sick people are a bunch of losers

Sick people are a bunch of losers

by digby

Bring out your dead

Trump means that literally:

The 18 percent cut to the Department of Health and Human Services includes a $5.8 billion reduction for the National Institutes of Health, or about a fifth of its budget.

This will decimate the basic and clinical scientific infrastructure in the United States, said Joseph Ross, a professor of medicine at Yale University. Spending on health R&D in the US has already been flagging, and most of the NIH’s budget goes to an army of 300,000 outside researchers, so a very broad community of researchers would feel the effects of a budget reduction of this size.

According to Matt Hourihan, the director of the R&D Budget and Policy Program for the American Association for the Advancement of Science, when the NIH’s budget dropped 5 percent from sequestration cuts, they had to cut around 700 individual grants (out of about 9,000). With a 20 percent cut, “We’re likely talking about [grant] cuts in the hundreds, if not the thousands,” he told Vox’s Brian Resnick.

The cuts would mean less publicly funded science on things like how to treat pain, fight aging, or create vaccines for diseases like Ebola. “Our [research] showed that publicly funded science conducted at academic research institutions and government labs is the source of the most important innovations and products that become transformative therapeutics,” said Aaron Kesselheim, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. “Deep cuts like this will turn off the discovery of the important new therapies of tomorrow.”

The budget also calls for “a major reorganization of NIH’s institutes and centers to help focus resources on the highest priority research and training activities.” There’s not much detail on exactly what this reorganization would look like, except that the budget proposes eliminating the Fogarty International Center, a $69.1 million global health program at NIH that funds 400 research and training projects involving more than 100 US universities and other countries.

To hell with a bunch of foreign sickness, amirite? We’re Americans and we’re going to be great again and we won’t suffer from any so-called “global health problems” because Americans are stronger and better and healthier than anybody on the planet and don’t let anyone tell you otherwise. MAGA!!!!

And anyway, the wall will keep out all the Mexicans AND all the germs. I heard that. It’s going to be really, really high.

This is Bannon’s American greatness plan, I guess. Maybe we can bring back the plague to cull the herd.

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“Trump is here now!”

“Trump is here now!”

by digby

Feel the love

This poor guy isn’t a bigot. He just wants his good paying factory job back. As soon as he get’s home from his vacation in Aruba:

An airline passenger accused of kicking and mocking a Muslim worker at a Kennedy Airport lounge was indicted Thursday on hate crime charges.

Robin Rhodes, 57, of Worcester, Mass., yelled “F–k Islam! F–k ISIS!” after he assaulted Rabeeya Khan, at Terminal Two’s Delta Sky Lounge at 7:10 p.m. on Jan. 25, Queens District Attorney Richard Brown office said.

“Trump is here now,” he taunted, according to prosecutors. “He will get rid of all of you. You can ask Germany, Belgium and France about these kind of people. You will see what happens.”

Rhodes was returning from Aruba and awaiting a connecting flight home when he began harassing Khan as she sat at her desk in the lounge, authorities said.

“Are you f—ing sleeping?” he asked, court papers said. “Are you praying? What are you doing?”

Rhodes then allegedly punched the door, which hit the back of Khan’s chair.

Khan, who wears a hijab, asked Rhodes what she did to him to set him off.

He kicked her in the right leg and blocked the door as she tried to leave, according to court papers. She ran out when a witness came inside to break up the dispute, but Rhodes chased after her and bent down on his knees and began to bow in imitation of a Muslim praying, authorities say.

“I guess I am going to jail for disorderly conduct,” he said while being arrested, according to police.

On Thursday, he was indicted on charges of assault as a hate crime, unlawful imprisonment as a hate crime, menacing as a hate crime and aggravated harassment.

If convicted of the most serious offense, he faces up to four years in prison. Rhodes was released on $50,000 bond. His next court date is June 12.

It sounds like he was drunk although it doesn’t say so. It’s not about free speech in this case. He got violent and he’s going to pay a price for that, drunk or not.

But this kind of Trump ranting is not uncommon. Remember this one?

Meanwhile, these assholes are getting their wish:

The president of Portland State University, Wim Wiewel, met last week with 10 prospective students in Hyderabad, India. But what started as a get-acquainted visit quickly turned into more of a counseling session, as the students expressed fears about coming to the United States this fall.
One student, who is Muslim, said his father was worried that America had an anti-Muslim attitude, Mr. Wiewel recounted. “Several others said they were concerned about the ‘Trump effect,’” he said in an email. 

“I’d say the rhetoric and actual executive orders are definitely having a chilling effect,” Mr. Wiewel wrote, referring to the Trump administration’s travel ban.
Like many universities across the country, the Oregon university is getting fewer international applications.
Nearly 40 percent of colleges are reporting overall declines in applications from international students, according to a survey of 250 college and universities, released this week by the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers. The biggest decline is in applications from the Middle East.

Mathias Sunardi, right, an International student, worked with Brendan Ball on an artificial intelligence project at Portland State. Leah Nash for The New York Times
Many officials cited worries among prospective students about Trump administration immigration policies. “International student recruitment professionals report a great deal of concern from students all over the globe,” the study said. 

I wouldn’t come here if I were a foreigner. It’s a big world and the US isn’t the only game in town. People like that man who kicked the Muslim worker and rich white Master of the Universe are the only people who really matter in America and they say what goes. The rich white guys don’t care about anything but money and the white working class guys don’t like anyone who isn’t exactly like them.

The rest of us Americans are having to put up with this ignorant garbage but people from other countries don’t. That’s our burden unfortunately. We have a very large white male anxiety cult in America and we all have to walk around on eggshells to make sure they don’t feel disrespected or all hell breaks loose. Why would any foreigner want to deal with that crap?

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They’ve got to take away his TV

They’ve got to take away his TV


by digby



Bumbling Idiots:

The US has made a formal apology to Britain after the White House accused GCHQ of helping Barack Obama spy on Donald Trump.
Sean Spicer, Mr Trump’s press secretary, repeated a claim on Thursday evening – initially made by an analyst on Fox News – that GCHQ was used by Mr Obama to spy on Trump Tower in the lead-up to last November’s election.
The comments prompted a furious response from GCHQ, which in a break from normal practice issued a public statement: “Recent allegations made by media commentator Judge Andrew Napolitano about GCHQ being asked to conduct ‘wiretapping’ against the then president-elect are nonsense. They are utterly ridiculous and should be ignored.”
Intelligence sources told The Telegraph that both Mr Spicer and General McMaster, the US National Security Adviser, have apologised over the claims. “The apology came direct from them,” a source said. 
General McMaster contacted Sir Mark Lyall Grant, the Prime Minister’s National Security adviser, to apologise for the comments. Mr Spicer conveyed his apology through Sir Kim Darroch, Britain’s US ambassador.
Mr Spicer had earlier repeated claims that Barack Obama used GCHQ to spy on Mr Trump before he became president.
“He’s able to get it and there’s no American fingerprints on it,” Mr Spicer said of the intelligence supposedly provided to Mr Obama by Britain.
“Three intelligence sources have informed Fox News that President Obama went outside the chain of command – he didn’t use the NSA, he didn’t use the CIA, he didn’t use the FBI and he didn’t use the Department of Justice – he used GCHQ.”
Mrs May’s official spokesman said the White House has assured the Government that allegations that British intelligence services spied on Donald Trump will not be repeated.
The Government “made clear” to the US that the “ridiculous” claims should be ignored and received assurances in return that they will not be repeated, showing that the administration does not give them any credence, Mrs May’s spokesman said.
Tim Farron, the Liberal Democrat leader, described Mr Spicer’s comments as “shameful”.
“Trump is compromising the vital UK-US security relationship to try to cover his own embarrassment,” he said. “This harms our and US security.”
A White House official said: “Ambassador Kim Darroch and Sir Mark Lyall expressed their concerns to Sean Spirce and General McMaster. “Mr Spicer and General McMaster both explained that he was simply pointing to public reports and not endorsing any specific story.”
The president is under increasing pressure to justify his claims, which his opponents charge calls the whole integrity of his administration into question. 
In an attempt to provide credibility to the claims, Mr Spicer quoted from a series of articles which discussed surveillance.
He referenced comments made earlier this week on Fox News TV by former judge Andrew Napolitano in relation to Mr Trump’s controversial claim that wiretaps had been installed at his New York residence:
Last on Fox News, on March 14th, Judge Andrew Napolitano made the following statement:

He used GCHQ. What is that? It’s the initials for the British intelligence-finding agency. So, simply by having two people saying to them president needs transcripts of conversations involving candidate Trump’s conversations, involving president-elect Trump, he’s able to get it and there’s no American fingerprints on this. Putting the published accounts and common-sense together, this leads to a lot.

British officials were quick to rubbish Mr Napolitano’s claims earlier this week. A government source reportedly said the claim was “totally untrue and quite frankly absurd”.
The British official told Reuters that under British law, GCHQ “can only gather intelligence for national security purposes” and noted that a US election “clearly doesn’t meet that criteria”.
Mr Spicer’s press conference on Thursday was held shortly after the senate intelligence committee published a statement saying they had no evidence for Mr Trump’s claim, made on March 4, that Mr Obama ordered wiretaps on Trump Tower.

Napolitano seems to have gotten his information from Alex Jones who seems to have got it from RT.  

This is ridiculous. Someone has got to stop Trump from watching Fox and reading these ridiculous conspiracy sites. It’s like something out of Chayefsky. It’s insane.

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Bring back the Medicare Buy-in. Even Trump voters would like it

Bring back the Medicare Buy-In. Even Trump voters would like it

by digby

Yeah, this is the guy who screwed it up before.

I wrote about the health care battle today for Salon:

If you’re a Democrat, watching the GOP tie itself up in knots over its health care bill can’t help but evoke a strong feeling of schadenfreude. After all, the Republicans have spent the last seven years screaming from the sidelines about the horrors of Obamacare. The House voted to repeal or alter the program 60 times in that period. And apparently they were so busy casting those votes they never had time to create the replacement bill they promised. The one they finally threw together and released this month is a royal mess. And because this is 100 percent a GOP program it’s also 100 percent a GOP problem.

On Thursday, the House Budget Committee managed to keep the Republican defections down to only three votes and passed the bill on to the Rules Committee, where Speaker Paul Ryan will have the opportunity to make some changes to get him to 218 votes in the full House. At the moment, the Washington Post estimates that 37 House members oppose the bill — which is 16 more than Ryan can afford to lose. And they are all opposed for different reasons: The Freedom Caucus wants to obliterate the whole thing and let the invisible hand of the market decide whether people should live or die, while slightly more sane Republicans recognize that killing or bankrupting their own voters might not be a popular policy. As much as Ryan wanted to deliver this reeking pile of offal to the Senate before his people have to face the voters over the extended spring break, it’s not looking good.

The Senate is just as divided. Most Republican senators would like nothing more than to see this thing buried in the House so they don’t have to deal with it. The problem is that they all promised to repeal the hated Obamacare and their loyal voters took them seriously. If they don’t pass the bill Ryan produced to go through the reconciliation process with a 51-vote majority, they need to get some Democrats on board to break a filibuster. To put it mildly, that’s not happening.

We know President Trump doesn’t care. As I wrote the other day, he thinks he’s got a clever strategy: He can make the Affordable Care Act implode and then blame the Democrats. Maybe he’s right that his voters won’t hold him responsible for it, but they’ll definitely blame Paul Ryan and the GOP Congress. Right-wing media is already on it, starting with Trump adviser Steve Bannon’s former crew at Breitbart News.

But Democrats shouldn’t get too smug about this. It’s not as if passage of the original ACA legislation in 2010 was a walk in the park.The House took the lead on it, and then too Democrats had to pass the bill on a pure party-line vote, which wasn’t easy. Just as the Republicans are all arguing among themselves and breaking into factions today, the same thing happened to the Democrats seven years ago. In both cases it was the right wing of the ruling party that threw the most sand in the gears.

To their credit, unlike the Republicans, the House leadership took its time in order to write a serious piece of legislation that made sense and had numbers that added up. And Democratic lawmakers also had a president who was committed to getting something passed. Nonetheless, it was an ugly fight that left many scars.

There are a number of Democrats who will be remembered for their perfidy in that fight. There was the infamous Rep. Bart Stupak of Michigan, who used the occasion to throw reproductive rights on the chopping block and succeeded in making pro-choice women take one for the team, as usual. But it was the Senate prima donnas who really put on a show, from the old-school conserva-Dem Ben Nelson of Nebraska, who demanded special dispensation for his state and got tarred as a low-rent operator for doing so, to the lugubrious Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, who danced around the bill for months, using his vote as a way to punish liberals for having beaten him in a 2006 primary, forcing him to win re-election as a third-party candidate.

Lieberman’s most famous double-cross in that negotiation came to mind this week when the Congressional Budget Office figures came in and showed that Ryan’s Trumpcare plan would hit older middle-class and working-class people like a Mack truck, with premiums in some cases rising to more than 50 percent of their incomes. That group of people, aged 55 to 65, has always been a major focus of concern in these health care battles.

That group is at greater risk for developing a major illness as they get older, and is also highly vulnerable to job loss in a major economic downturn like the one that began in 2007. Their health insurance premiums tend to be quite high, and before Obamacare people in that group often had difficulty obtaining insurance at all. Even if they had insurance but became seriously ill, they were at risk of maxing out their lifetime limits, which could lead to financial ruin for their entire family.

During the health care debates in 2009, an idea that had been around for ages was floated again by a number of health care experts and endorsed by the White House. That was the proposal to allow people in that 55-to-65 bracket to buy into Medicare. It would simultaneously boost the Medicare program by adding younger and healthier younger people into the mix and make the general population covered by the ACA less burdened by folks over 55. Its most vociferous proponent for years had been none other than Sen. Joe Lieberman.

As the negotiations wore on and the diva Lieberman became one of the sticking points, former Vermont governor and Democratic Party head Howard Dean — who is also a physician — stepped up to propose the Medicare buy-in as a perfect way to break the logjam. As many of you will remember (but might like to forget), Lieberman said no. He even admitted to the New York Times that he balked at this proposal because liberals were a little too excited about it. On every level — tactical, strategic and humanitarian — it was a grievous failure. The ACA would have been a much stronger program today had Lieberman not been such a petulant SOB.

I only bring this up now because it seems obvious that Democrats shouldn’t fall into the same trap the Republicans did over the last seven years. Obamacare has suddenly turned popular again, but it won’t be enough for Democrats to simply shout about how great it is and have everyone cheer. They need to have a proactive plan in place besides just saying “everything’s terrific” — and Paul Ryan has handed one to them on a silver platter: the 55-to-65 Medicare buy-in plan. It’s a simple and specific solution to a problem that the Republicans created and that’s something the Democrats can run on, in 2018 and perhaps beyond. Even Trump voters like Medicare.

Someday, if the country survives, Democrats are going to have to clean up this mess. Joe Lieberman is long gone, thank goodness. It would be a fitting tribute to his tormented legacy to pass the plan he once backed and then threw away to punish liberals.

Invasion of the soul snatchers by @BloggersRUs

Invasion of the soul snatchers
by Tom Sullivan

Someone might want to check if there are alien seed pods on the White House lawn. Pod people is somehow a less worrisome explanation for Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney than he and his colleagues lacking souls. Taking questions from the press yesterday, Mulvaney explained why Donald Trump’s proposed budget reflects compassion. The 2018 budget would eliminate programs for the poor and unemployed, but boost spending for the military (wars being such great jobs programs).

CNN’s Jim Acosta asked about cuts to Meals on Wheels and Head Start:

These are programs, Mulvaney argued, that “aren’t showing any results.” If feeding 80 yr-olds would get them to go back to work in the salt mines, I mean, OK. But what’s the ROI in feeding them if we see no increase in GDP? Speaking for the entire United States, Mulvaney said we can’t spend money anymore on programs that don’t get “results.” It’s an actuarial, cost-benefit thing. No one followed up to ask what results justified spending more than $1.6 trillion in Iraq and Afghanistan since 9/11, yet in Trump’s budget the Defense Department gets a 9 percent increase in its spending.

The exchange with Mulvaney continued:

Acosta: You were talking about the steel worker in Ohio and the coal miner in Pennsylvania and so on. But those workers may have an elderly mother who depends on the Meals on Wheels program, who may have kids in Head Start. And yesterday or the day before you described this as a ‘hard power budget’ but is it also a hard-hearted budget?

Mulvaney: I don’t think so. I think it’s probably one of the most compassionate things we can do to—

Acosta: Cutting programs that help the elderly?

Mulvaney: You’re only focusing on half of the equation, right? You’re focusing on recipients of the money. We’re focusing on recipients of the money and people who give us the money in the first place. I think it’s fairly compassionate to go to them and say, look, we’re not going to ask you for your hard-earned money anymore. Single mom of two in Detroit, OK, “Give us your money!” We’re not going to do that anymore unless we can—please let me finish. Unless we can guarantee that money will be used in a proper function. That is about as compassionate as you can get.

Slate’s Jordan Weissmann writes:

Got that? Mulvaney says the White House is cutting Head Start to make sure it doesn’t waste the taxes of single mothers in Detroit, because it’s just that compassionate. Honestly, I would have more respect for the man if he’d stood up on stage with a stock pot and said the administration had decided that the poor should be boiled into bone broth. At least then he’d have the courage of his convictions.

“Proper function” is a most curious turn of phrase. In What is America for? a few weeks ago, I noted that caring for money has taken the place of caring for people in American governance. Mulvaney’s response confirms that, as does Trump’s choice of Goldman Sachs veterans for high positions in his administration (and Obama’s before him). Serving money takes precedence over serving people — unless they have lots of money.

At Netroots-Detroit in 2014, Anat Shenker-Osorio spoke to the conceptual shift that makes not feeding hungry children and the elderly “compassionate.” With schools, for example:

We’ve moved from this garden metaphor to the language of the factory, right? So we have inputs, and we have outputs and we ratchet up expectations, and the kid is a product of a good school.

The entailments of that metaphor are that children are like widgets, they’re all uniform and why would the widgets need art? And the teachers are factory workers and they do a thing to the kids, and it’s all the same and they’re on a conveyor belt and they move to the next one after they’ve been tested and a stamp is put on their ass and they’re… none are left behind.

This mechanistic language is so widespread, that we have now monetized children, right? We invest in the future and we invest in our kids, and they’re too small to fail. And we can kid ourselves all we want, but the prevailing understanding of the investment frame is financial return. That is how it is used in language. And so we are saying, “The reason to do a thing, the reason it’s right, is because it’s lucrative”

Who knows lucrative better than Donald Trump? Trump and a lot of other pod people view the world through that frame. Where once we had souls, now we worry about “proper function” and whether spending money on (investing in) our fellow citizens will deliver an increase in productivity that generates more money. Because the only proper function of pod government is to serve money or to turn people into it as they sleep. It is a fetish of the sort for which we otherwise require violators to register when they move into a neighborhood with a school.

I need some beers today, preferably not the color of money.

Trump’s American Carnage agenda

Trump’s American Carnage agenda 

by digby

Just for reference:

And the budget is from the 9th circle of hell.

That’s not a populist budget. That’s an authoritarian budget. That’s what he is. That’s all he is.

Let the carnage begin.

Defending the draconian spending cuts in the first Trump budget, the White House’s top budget official suggested Thursday that “Meals on Wheels” isn’t “showing any results.”

I don’t know what “results” they expected. But the point of the program was simply to feed poor elderly and disabled people. I guess they feel it’s created a “dependency.” Or something.

There’s more…

The Trump administration proposes deep cuts in job training, affordable housing, environmental protection, medical research, and programs that help the poor and assist those struggling in rural areas.

Forget about all of them.

The increases? Defense spending would skyrocket by $54 billion, that border wall that Trump promised Mexico will pay for would cost Americans $2.6 billion, and a school choice program would invest $1.4 billion of taxpayer money into private schools.

There’s no shortage of irony and outrage to explore here. Or as my Post colleague Drew Harwell tweeted, “Today: Trump proposes massive cuts in medical research and Meals on Wheels. Tomorrow: Trump begins fifth publicly funded trip to Mar-a-Lago.”

We shell out about $3.3 million every time the president gases up Air Force One and heads to Florida for the weekend. That’s an interesting way to spend our money, forgotten ones.

That’s right, we’re spending millions to ferry that asshole back and forth to Florida every week-end and millions more to keep his super model wife at arms length in his golden tower in New York. But they’re going to starve old people and kids. Literally.

I’ll say it again. He’s Saddam Hussein.

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The stricken looks on the faces of the Intelligence Committee

The stricken looks on the faces of the Intelligence Committee

by digby

Yesterday the Senate Intelligence Committee finally got a full classified briefing from FBI Director James Comey. They didn’t say much when they came out but he observations by people who follow intelligence matters was interesting:

Grassley looks pretty stricken too, although it’s hard to tell with him. He’s never Mr Cheerful.

We may never know what was said in there.But it sure seems serious and I’m very doubtful that it’s because they found out that Obama wiretapped Trump.

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QOTW: The President

QOTW: The President

by digby

From his speech in Nashville yesterday:

It’s time to embrace our glorious American destiny.  Anything we can dream for our country we can achieve for our country.  All we have to do is tap into that American pride that is swelling our hearts and stirring our souls.  And we found that out very recently in our last election — a lot of pride.  We are all Americans, and the future truly belongs to us.  The future belongs to all of you.  This is your moment.  This is your time.  This is the hour when history is made.  All we have to do is put our own citizens first, and together we will make America strong again.  We will make America wealthy again.  We will make America proud again.  We will make America safe again.  And we will make America great again.  

Tricky Dick without brains or experience

Tricky Dick without brains or experience


by digby 




I wrote about Trump’s Nixonian paranoia for Salon this morning. It’s getting worse.

Presidents almost always hate the press or at least find them a necessary evil. Some handle the relationship better than others. John F. Kennedy’s press conferences were celebrated for their erudition and Ronald Reagan’s were often upbeat laugh fests. But part of the reason that presidents hate the press is because people inside the government leak information to reporters and they publish it for all to see.

One can only imagine how stressful this is, even if a president isn’t hiding illegal or unethical behavior. Bill Clinton was fighting scandal throughout his presidency and seemed to become inured to the din after a while. But he had to have been distressed by leaks from the Justice Department and the independent counsel’s office throughout the Monica Lewinsky affair. Reagan was notably calm about the Iran-contra scandal but he also professed to not recall any involvement, which no doubt spared him a lot of anxiety.

The president who most passionately loathed the press, in the modern era anyway, was good old Richard Nixon. In 2008 some previously unheard Nixon tapes were released that reminded the world just how overwrought Tricky Dick was about his perceived enemies. In one conversation in December 1974 he uttered these now-famous words to his national security advisers, Henry Kissinger and Alexander Haig:

Never forget, the press is the enemy, the press is the enemy. The establishment is the enemy, the professors are the enemy, the professors are the enemy. Write that on a blackboard 100 times.

Nixon was also preoccupied by his predecessors, particularly Kennedy, who had beaten him by an agonizingly narrow margin in 1960 and someone with the casual, stylish confidence he didn’t have. Nixon was desperate to discredit JFK and even ordered his chief of staff, Bob Haldeman, to have someone raid the Brookings Institution to uncover information about Kennedy.

All this comes to mind as we read the latest stories of chaos and ineptitude leaking out of the Trump administration. Frankly, they make Nixon look good by comparison. I’m not the first to note the similarities, but when you think about the fact that Donald Trump has declared the press to be the “the enemy of the people” and accused his predecessor of illegally wiretapping him. it’s clear that the new president is in a different league altogether — and he has been in office less than eight weeks. The sheer scope of grievance, pettiness, petulance and vindictiveness he shows daily in his tweets and interviews is staggering. As the historian Rick Perlstein has said, on a Nixonian scale of 1 to 10, “Trump is an 11.”

But Nixon was a shrewd and intelligent man despite his psychological issues. He understood what the presidency is and what it does. He was competent at doing the actual job — exceptionally so in certain ways — and surrounded himself with professionals who did what they were hired to do. Trump is in completely over his head and so is his staff.

One of the ways we know this is because the Trump administration is nearly paralyzed. Politico published a piece on Tuesday with this startling headline: “‘People are scared’: Paranoia seizes Trump’s White House.” The subhead suggested that Trump staffers were leaving their personal phones at home and monitoring one another on social media and the piece gave further details:

It’s an environment of fear that has hamstrung the routine functioning of the executive branch. Senior advisers are spending much of their time trying to protect turf, key positions have remained vacant due to a reluctance to hire people deemed insufficiently loyal, and Trump’s ambitious agenda has been eclipsed by headlines surrounding his unproven claim that former President Barack Obama tapped his phone lines at Trump Tower during the 2016 campaign.

One senior administration aide, who like most others interviewed for this story spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the degree of suspicion had created a toxicity that is unsustainable.

The story goes beyond the Oval Office. This is pervasive throughout the executive branch. Tellingly, the article says that after one Trump loyalist was forced to resign when a career federal employee noticed that the man’s Facebook page was filled with racist Islamophobic posts, many other political appointees rushed to erase elements of their social media, complaining that they were being unfairly examined. Apparently “extreme vetting,” or any vetting at all, is no longer a requirement for a presidential appointment.

Another Politico article observed a bizarre custom in the Trump White House: Every close adviser is in every meeting. Nobody has ever run a presidency this way. Usually, the work is delegated by the chief of staff and only people who needed are there at meetings. In this administration all the top advisers stick to Trump like glue, going with him on every trip and crowding into the room for every photo op, meeting and gathering. An insider is quoted as saying this is because “they are all terrified of being undercut.” The article explained:

[B]ecause the president doesn’t like to read policy papers or use the Internet, he is more focused on advice and information delivered to him verbally — putting even greater importance on proximity. . . . “He likes to ask other aides what they think about each other,” said a former campaign aide. “If you’re not with him, he might be listening to someone else tell him how you’re wrong. You might be the topic of conversation, and it might not be good for you.”

As anyone who’s ever read a management book knows, dysfunctional workplace cultures like this are generally attributable to dysfunctional leadership. To put it more crudely, the fish rots from the head.

Nixon was brought down by his paranoia and grievances and they were legion. The same thing may happen to Trump. But if he goes down, it could just as easily be for blatant corruption or sheer incompetence. There is literally no aspect of this job for which he has shown any aptitude at all.

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Liberal southerners are the best

Liberal southerners are the best

by digby

You’ve got to love this:

Smother ’em in honey.

That was Nashville. Inside the rally it was a different story:

President Donald Trump railed against a judge’s order blocking his immigration restrictions on Wednesday, saying the ruling made America “look weak” — and drew chants from supporters of “lock her up!” when he attacked his defeated rival.

Campaigning in Tennessee more than four months after winning the presidency, Trump continued to attack Hillary Clinton. While reading a legal code that the president said backed his authority to enact the travel ban, Trump interrupted himself to say that “fortunately” the former secretary of state was not in the White House.

“The law and Constitution give the president the power to suspend immigration when he deems – or she, or she. Fortunately, it will not be Hillary,” he said.

He does love that Il Duce strut. And his good little followers love it too.

By the way, running his mouth last night about how he thinks they should have kept their original order was idiotic. He just gave the courts another piece of evidence about his intent.

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