I was going to deconstruct Trump’s inane interview on Fox last night but Tom addressed it well earlier and I came across this and thought it was well done.
Trump ran through most of his greatest hits, mangling them like an aging crooner who forgot the words. And Levin sat there like a potted palm.
(I know that Steve Schmitt is an asshole — at best — but when he’s right, he’s right. Especially about Mark Levin.)
Behind closed doors, former president Donald Trump and his advisers have been talking for months about forming a commission led by prominent business executives to comb through the government books to identify thousands of programs to cut.
Lately, one particularly famous candidate has made clear he’d be up for it: Elon Musk. And he may have much to gain personally from the endeavor.
On several occasions, including on X, the social media platform he owns, the Tesla and SpaceX chief executive has expressed interest in being part of a “government efficiency commission” aimed at eliminating wasteful regulations and spending. Musk in August posted an apparently artificial intelligence-generated image of himself behind a lectern labeled “Department of Government Efficiency,” with the acronym DOGE — a meme-based cryptocurrency Musk has previously embraced.
Musk’s potential involvement in a government regulatory and spending commission has sparked concerns from ethics experts who point to conflicts of interest that could emerge between such a post and his business empire. But Trump advisers are eager to bring in prominent corporate leaders to compile a high-profile list of federal excess, reprising efforts similar to those led by President Ronald Reagan and Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), who once published an annual “Waste Book” on allegedly frivolous spending.
Trump last week downplayed the idea that Musk would join his Cabinet — but also said Musk might be a helpful consultant to the federal government.
“He wants to be involved, but look, he’s running big businesses and all that … so he can’t really” be in the Cabinet, Trump said on the Shawn Ryan Show. “He can sort of, as the expression goes, consult with the country and give you some very good ideas.”
Musk did not respond to a request for comment.
Musk has increasingly used X as a megaphone to support Trump and bash his opponent, Vice President Kamala Harris. But as the two billionaires have moved into a closer political alliance, scrutiny is mounting over the potential financial benefits a potential second Trump administration could deliver to Musk.
Scrutiny is mounting? Really? Gee, that’s good to know.
It’s not just Musk, although I can see why they chose to focus on him. It’s the idea itself. “Open the books to see what programs to cut” is such a ridiculous concept I don’t know where to start. This is the government we’re talking about not a grocery store chain.
I don’t have the energy to get worked up today about yet another completely insane Trump notion. Suffice to say that there is no end to it. (And if he wins, Elon Musk can do whatever he pleases.)
Let The Brotherhood Of The Damned be your tour guide
Kamala HQ flagged this clip of tech bro “thought leader” Curtis Yarvin advocating an American Caesar as the next step for America. This is the guy incels and billionaire tech autocrats like Peter Thiel (J.D. Vance’s mentor) look to for envisioning a future with them running the world and getting laid, like, anytime they want. Gaze upon Yarvin, all ye who dream big.
TPM’s Josh Marshall quipped, “Amazing that this college sophomore level thinker is a major force in Silicon Valley.”
I’m reminded of the formulaic pap The Sphinx (Wes Studi) spouted as wisdom in Mystery Men (1999). Invisible Boy (Kel Mitchell) gazes on in wonderment (or is it befuddlement?) and remarks, “It’s cool, isn’t it? It goes right up to the point of being, like, confusing.”
Shallow and stupid or not, don’t think they won’t attempt something like this. Marcy Wheeler predicts they’ll try. Violently, preferably.
It’s Labor Day. If counties have not begun preparations for the general election by now, it’s too late for this little guide to help. I’ll stop posting this link after today.
Every time one thinks Donald Trump cannot possibly get more demented, he surprises.
It’s as if Mark Levin were interviewing The Joker. Except The Joker sports a wide, lipstick-red smile.
Trump: “Who ever heard you get indicted for interfering with a presidential election where you have every right to do it.”
Who ever heard you get indicted for embezzling billions from the U.S. Treasury when (immunized by “conservatives” on the U.S. Supreme Court) you “have every right to do it”?
Think “the short-fingered vulgarian” won’t plunge his stubby mitts into the national cookie jar if reelected? That is, if he hopes to impress Russian dictator Vladimir Putin and get richer doing it?
No one more sentient than mold slime doesn’t know that’s exactly what Trump will do. Maybe even before sending troops into the streets to apprehend and throw into concentration camps anyone brown and migranty-looking .
For context, Trump was commenting on the superseding indictment filed last week by special counsel Jack Smith in the stolen documents case. It’s Trump’s fourth indictment, on four federal charges this time. He has pleaded not guilty to purloining the hundreds of national security documents FBI agents recovered from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club after Trump left the White House.
Former U.S. Attorney and Sisters-in-Law podcast co-host Joyce Vance responded to Trump’s statement on FKA Twitter:
There’s no right to “interfere” with a presidential election. This is the banality of evil right here—Trump asserting he can override the will of the voters to claim victory in an election he lost. And, he will do it again. We must vote against him in overwhelming numbers.
“Criming and then confessing to the criming. That’s a Trump specialty,” MSNBC’s Katie Phang (“The Katie Phang Show”), also an attorney, responded on FKA Twitter.
In a later comment to Levin, Trump accused Vice President Kamala Harris of treating his vice president, Mike Pence, horribly. (What he meant, if anything intelligible, is unclear.)
Harry Dunn, the former United States Capitol Police officer bloodied and called the N-word by rioters during the Jan. 6 insurrection, responded to Trump, “You sent a mob to kill him,” meaning Pence.
This question by Levin leaves one asking which universe Levin inhabits.
Harris and the Democrats came out of their August convention exuberant about the bright future they hope to create for America. Trump and his MAGA base inhabit Gotham City, dark corrupt, and plundered by clownish sociopaths in bad makeup.
Alfred Pennyworth: “Some men aren’t looking for anything logical, like money. They can’t be bought, bullied, reasoned or negotiated with. Some men just want to watch the world burn.”
And then there’s Donald Trump.
● ● ● ● ● ● ● ●
It’s Labor Day. If counties have not begun preparations for the general election by now, it’s too late for this little guide to help. I’ll stop posting this link after today.
On November 21, 1922, the New York Times published its very first article about Adolf Hitler. It’s an incredible read — especially its assertion that “Hitler’s anti-Semitism was not so violent or genuine as it sounded.” This attitude was, apparently, widespread among Germans at the time; many of them saw Hitler’s anti-Semitism as a ploy for votes among the German masses.
Times correspondent Cyril Brown spendsmost of the piece documenting the factors behind Hitler’s early rise in Bavaria, Germany, including his oratorical skills. For example: “He exerts an uncanny control over audiences, possessing the remarkable ability to not only rouse his hearers to a fighting pitch of fury, but at will turn right around and reduce the same audience to docile coolness.”
But the really extraordinary part of the article is the three paragraphs on anti-Semitism. Brown acknowledges Hitler’s vicious anti-Semitism as the core of Hitler’s appeal — and notes the terrified Jewish community was fleeing from him — but goes on to dismiss it as a play to satiate the rubes (bolding mine):
He is credibly credited with being actuated by lofty, unselfish patriotism. He probably does not know himself just what he wants to accomplish. The keynote of his propaganda in speaking and writing is violent anti-Semitism. His followers are nicknamed the “Hakenkreuzler.” So violent are Hitler’s fulminations against the Jews that a number of prominent Jewish citizens are reported to have sought safe asylums in the Bavarian highlands, easily reached by fast motor cars, whence they could hurry their women and children when forewarned of an anti-Semitic St. Bartholomew’s night.
But several reliable, well-informed sources confirmed the idea that Hitler’s anti-Semitism was not so genuine or violent as it sounded, and that he was merely using anti-Semitic propaganda as a bait to catch masses of followers and keep them aroused, enthusiastic, and in line for the time when his organization is perfected and sufficiently powerful to be employed effectively for political purposes.
A sophisticated politician credited Hitler with peculiar political cleverness for laying emphasis and over-emphasis on anti-Semitism, saying: “You can’t expect the masses to understand or appreciate your finer real aims. You must feed the masses with cruder morsels and ideas like anti-Semitism. It would be politically all wrong to tell them the truth about where you really are leading them.”
Nicolas Kristof says that we shouldn’t demean people like the parents of this little boy because they are good people who are just suffering from economic inequality. Just so you know, they’re still saying it.
But it’s true. He was never qualified and he didn’t learn anything on the job. He’s even more unfit than he was the first time since he is so filled with bitterness that he’s losing what few marbles he had.
The story of how VP Harris worked to diffuse a transition of power crisis in Guatemala – while Trump undermined the U.S. by supporting the loser of the election – is both incredible and a sign of how ready she is to lead.
Biden gave Harris the job of reducing migration from Central America and by late 2023 her effort was showing remarkable success. Rates had come down 50%.
But a political crisis in Guatemala risked throwing that key country in chaos, potentially erasing many of her gains. President Alejandro Giammattei had just lost the election handily, but supported by Trump surrogates, he signaled he would refuse to give up power.
The inauguration of the winner, Bernardo Arévalo de León, was at risk. A Trump-backed Central American coup was at hand.
Harris did not hesitate. She led an effort to quickly sanction hundreds of Giammattei backers, sending a clear signal that there would be a huge price to pay for anyone who joined the coup attempt.
She sent her top foreign policy advisor to Guatemala to directly engage.
On the eve of Inauguration Day, the situation was still uncertain. Trump’s envoys were there, trying to stop the inauguration.
Along with @PowerUSAID, Harris’s team went back to work. They worked with Colombian President @petrogustavo to rally regional support for Arévalo.
Harris’s intervention worked. Arévalo was sworn in shortly after midnight on January 15.
Yes it’s scary how openly Trump now works to undermine democracy not just in the U.S., but around the world.
But in this case and this November, Kamala Harris is there to stop him.
That sounds like a success to me…
I knew Trump was actively undermining American foreign policy and national security but I didn’t realize that Trump and his henchmen were backing right wing coups all over the world. But it figures. In refusing to accept the 2020 loss, they continued to operate as a shadow government, doing whatever they choose to advance their own causes.
Will we be able to put this genie back in the bottle? I truly wonder. When you have “leaders” like Tom Cotton, Josh Hawley, Marco Rubio fully bought in, where is the pushback going to come from?