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Monthly Archives: September 2018


MARK OSBORNE,
Good Morning America 2 hours 58 minutes ago

John Kerry slams Trump for Iran accusations: ‘You should be more worried about Paul Manafort’ originally appeared on ABC news.go.com
Former Secretary of State John Kerry fired back against attacks by President Donald Trump and current Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Friday, saying the president “should be more worried about Paul Manafort meeting with Robert Mueller than me meeting with Iran’s PM.”
Trump originally attacked Kerry on Thursday evening, saying on Twitter that Kerry had “illegal meetings with the very hostile Iranian Regime.” The tweet was an apparent reference to Kerry admitting on Hugh Hewitt’s radio show on Wednesday to meeting with Iranian officials, specifically Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, “three or four times” at gatherings of world leaders, such as the World Economic Forum.
Kerry said he did not try to “coach” Iran through the Trump administration’s rejection of the JCPOA, a nuclear deal with Iran implemented under Kerry’s watch. The meetings came while Rex Tillerson was secretary of state and before Trump’s withdrawal from the JCPOA in May.

(MORE: Book excerpt: John Kerry’s ‘Every Day Is Extra’)
“No, that’s not my job, and my coaching him would not, you know, that’s not how it works,” Kerry told Hewitt. “What I have done is tried to elicit from him what Iran might be willing to do in order to change the dynamic in the Middle East for the better.”
Kerry took delight in ripping the president on Friday afternoon. He chided him over former campaign chairman Paul Manafort’s guilty plea and even former White House staffer Omarosa Manigault Newman’s leaked recordings.
“Mr. President, you should be more worried about Paul Manafort meeting with Robert Mueller than me meeting with Iran’s FM,” he tweeted. “But if you want to learn something about the nuclear agreement that made the world safer, buy my new book, Every Day Is Extra.”

He followed that tweet with the line, “PS – I recorded the audio version, not Omarosa.”
But the attacks from the Trump administration continued on Friday afternoon.
Pompeo, the current secretary of state, followed up on Trump’s criticism at a briefing, calling the meetings “unseemly,” “unprecedented” and “beyond inappropriate.”
“What Secretary Kerry has done is unseemly, and unprecedented,” Pompeo said passionately at the top of a press briefing Friday afternoon. “You can’t find precedent for this in U.S. history. And secretary ought not to, Secretary Kerry ought not to engage in that kind of behavior. It’s inconsistent with what the foreign policy of the United States is as directed by this president. And it is beyond inappropriate for him to be engaged.”
A spokesperson for Kerry responded Friday evening, “Let’s cut through the distractions and talk about real facts, not alternative facts. Secretary Kerry stays in touch with his former counterparts around the world just like every previous Secretary of State, and in a long phone conversation with Secretary Pompeo earlier this year he went into great detail about what he had learned about the Iranian’s view. No secrets were kept from this administration.”

The spokesperson cited Henry Kissinger, who served as secretary of state under Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, as having met “for decades with Russia and China.”
“There’s nothing unusual, let alone unseemly or inappropriate, about former diplomats meeting with foreign counterparts,” Kerry’s spokesperson said.
Former Undersecretary of State Wendy Sherman, who was also singled out by Pompeo, tweeted the current secretary of state “tried to distract from Manafort and gain points with president by attacking me today.”

(MORE: Anonymous op-ed shows ‘we don’t really have a president,’ Kerry tells Colbert)
Ned Price, former CIA analyst and adviser to Barack Obama on his National Security Council, was even more direct.
“Pompeo was speaking to an audience of one,” Price said in a statement, referring to the president. “This was nothing more than an attempt to parrot and please his boss. We know that because Pompeo’s State Department was briefed on these discussions, which are commonplace among former diplomats, both before and after the fact.”
Kerry is in the midst of a promotional tour for his new book, “Every Day is Extra,” including stops in Los Angeles and Portland, Oregon, over the weekend.
ABC News’ Conor Finnegan and Sarah Kolinovsky contributed to this report.

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Think of a Piñata decorated in yellow and orange but empty inside, therein lies a brief description of TOTUS. The weight of this ill-fated administration is beginning to bear down on the White House with the conviction of Mr. Manafort and his decision to aid in the Mueller investigation there is potentially more fallout possibly involving the “VEEP”, the Reverend Mr. Pence since Mr. Manafort was a factor in Mr. Pence being  selected for the V.P. slot. In retrospect this Race baiting behavior is not new and quite possibly was a factor in DJT’s life from his Grandfather and fathers time as they were immigrants. All that was necessary for this bizarre behavior and his eventual election was a catalyst like Steve Bannon whose own heritage was possible much like many other Americans whose ancestry is based in Europe and other countries. The only people who I believe have a right to tell anyone to “go back where you came from” are the Native Americans who have been robbed and ill treated for most of the time this nation has existed. This current administration has caused a rift in the American psyche that will take some time to heal but possibly not without a big legal outcome such as Watergate (or “Muellergate”) and a possible resignation but do not hold out for TOTUS to do anything rational as an egocentric cannot see beyond his own mirror image.

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Kuttner on TAP
A Tale of Two Hurricanes. You can bet that when Hurricane Florence slams into the Carolinas, FEMA will be there with everything possible to help. That is, to the extent that Trump’s inept appointees are capable of managing it. It’s fortunate that the Carolinians are not mostly Spanish-speaking.
Meanwhile, in the aftermath of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico’s full accounting that 2,975 people died as a result of Hurricane Maria, not 64 as originally reported, most of them needlessly in the aftermath, the best Trump can do is blame local officials and praise FEMA’s pathetic foot-dragging.
In the never-ending contest for Trump’s biggest lie, this will surely go down as one of the most grotesque:
We got A Pluses for our recent hurricane work in Texas and Florida (and did an unappreciated great job in Puerto Rico, even though an inaccessible island with very poor electricity and a totally incompetent Mayor of San Juan). We are ready for the big one that is coming!
Now Trump is compounding the lie by blaming San Juan’s heroic mayor, Carmen Yulín Cruz, for FEMA’s failures and his own administration’s treatment of Puerto Ricans as second-class Americans. Cruz told Trump, “You left us here to die because you were more concerned about the political spin than about the human reality that we were dying.”
This shameful double standard should be front and center in Florida’s critical elections this November. ~ ROBERT KUTTNER

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The ongoing somehow mystical actions of this administration have lulled some of us into a complacency that makes us a threat to our selves. The current administration under the smoke of ongoing tweets has been undoing  Federal lands protections, immigration reforms and a multitude of activities that will hurt us for years to come. While this is all happening the top superlative monger continues to insist that his election caused a “huge” increase in jobs and uptick in the economy. Unfortunately 90 to 95% of what comes out the administration is outright and thinly veiled lies and deception. If this were a criminal case the participants would be charge with deceptive practices as would any “con” artists or flim flammers. The willingness of too many voters to participate in the deception is troubling in that they (the believers) will be affected by these dubious to criminal actions. I believe if we want entertainment , there’s always movies and TV but there should be none in the Government that has an effect on all parts of our lives. This administration has more entertainment value as a side show than an actual Governing agency.

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Typical of the mindless workings of the “best people” in the TOTUS administration and how uninformed the leadership is.MA
Alexander Nazaryan 3 hours ago

WASHINGTON — The Department of Interior is quietly preparing to offer hundreds of thousands of acres of public land for leasing to energy companies, a move critics have charged is being undertaken with minimal public input and little consideration for ecological and cultural preservation.
According to data compiled by environmental groups, the Bureau of Land Management will put 2.9 million acres up for potential leasing in the next four months. Because the land in question — in states including New Mexico, Colorado and Arizona — lacks designation as a national park or monument, it can be used for commercial purposes such as mining for minerals and drilling for oil and gas. Supporters say that bolstering the extractive industries will ensure energy independence for the United States, though shifting energy preferences and falling oil prices appear to undermine that assertion.
Some 250 million acres of land are under the bureau’s control nationwide, with the overwhelming majority of the parcels concentrated in a dozen Western states, which sometimes chafe at what they regard as Washington’s inept oversight. That tension was most dramatically on display in 2014, when federal agents engaged in an armed standoff with the family of Cliven Bundy, a Nevada rancher with extreme right-wing views. The dispute arose from Bundy’s insistence on allowing his cattle to graze on public lands, a practice that saw him accrue some $1 million in fines, which he refused to pay.

The Bureau of Land Management is part of the Department of the Interior, which is today headed by Ryan Zinke, a Montana native who has styled himself a rugged conservationist, even as he maintains close ties to private enterprise. Many of his closest advisers at Interior have ties to the oil and gas industry, either as lobbyists or executives. His top deputy, for example, is David L. Bernhardt, a veteran Republican operative who has also lobbied on behalf of California agribusiness.
During his confirmation hearing, Zinke said that he was “absolutely against transfer and sale of public lands.” But that claim would not prevent him from issuing leases for oil and gas companies, as the land would technically remain under public control, even as it was being used for private gain. Such leases are issued for 10 years at exceedingly favorable terms, often for the minimum bid of $2 per acre at a competitive sale, after which they are available for two years at the even-more-discounted price of $1.50 per acre if they do not sell at that first sale.
Leasing land was a common practice before Trump. What’s different now, detractors say, is that the Bureau of Land Management is moving with uncommon speed to make improper determinations without allowing public to comment. That has led, these critics say, to widespread damage to the environment of the American West.
“We can’t just get it back,” says Nada Culver, a leader in the Wilderness Society’s land-use division. “Mistakes are made when you’re rushing.”
The Obama administration offered plenty of land to energy and mineral prospectors, but it did so in far more considered fashion. In 2016, the Obama administration put 1.9 million acres up for leasing, down from a high of 6.1 million acres offered in 2012. In its first year, the Trump administration offered 11.9 acres, the vast majority of them in Alaska. In the end, only 792,000 acres were leased, which represented just 7 percent of the offerings. In 2016, conversely, the Obama administration offered a much smaller total number of acres (1.9 million), but sold a far greater share: 47 percent, or 921,240. That suggests the Obama administration was more judicious in determining lands that would be desirable to industry.
Those numbers, however, do not tell the full story. Less important than the amount of land offered, conservationists say, is where those parcels are located, as well as their significance as either natural resources or cultural landmarks. In this, too, the Obama administration appears to have been significantly more successful than its successor. In 2012, for example, only 17 percent of the parcels offered by the Obama administration were “protested” by the public (those figures are for fiscal years, where as the compilation of acres offered is for calendar years; the two correlate closely, if not exactly). Conversely, of the parcels offered in 2017, a full 88 percent were contested, suggesting the Trump administration has been largely indiscriminate in the land it is offering.
An even higher percentage of lands could be contested this year, given how close they are to protected areas in some of the country’s most rugged, cherished regions. The greatest share of offerings are in Wyoming, where about 1.1 million acres are being offered for lease. There were also 721,705 acres offered in Nevada, 329,826 in Utah and 230,944 in Colorado, along with smaller parcels in New Mexico, Montana and Arizona. Some of these are near national monuments and national parks, including Petrified Forest National Park in Arizona, Canyonlands National Park in Utah and Dinosaur National Monument in Colorado.
Many of the lands also represent habitat of the sage grouse, a bird whose native habitat is the high desert of the West. The sage grouse’s numbers have been drastically diminished by commercial and residential development.

President Obama considered protecting the grouse under the Endangered Species Act. Similar protection for the spotted owl in 1990 had laid waste to many a logger’s plans. Instead, in 2015, his Interior Department struck a deal with Western states. The sage grouse remained off the endangered species list, but there were 98 separate plans across the region to protect the bird —and, just as importantly, the landscape it lived on.
Zinke ordered those plans reviewed in the fall of 2018, indicating that he was preparing to offer some of the land set aside for sage grouse to energy or mineral-extraction companies. It’s unlikely that Zinke had personal animosity towards the bird. Rather, the sage grouse stands in the way of greater development of open lands across the West.
Aware that leasing land across the West could prove highly unpopular, the bureau canceled a 30-day comment period on any proposed lease, and the time to appeal a proposed lease already in the works was reduced to a mere 10 days. During the Obama administration, the total time for both comment and appeal had been 60 days.
“Were operating under a new guidance that has radically cut out opportunities for public input,” says Culver of the Wilderness Society.
Not only that, but Interior officials who worked in parks and national monuments were pressured to make land available for leasing, even when it was clear that studding that land with oil derricks and mining equipment would destroy the landscape and drive away the millions of tourists, both foreign and domestic, who came to see it each year.
“Why in the world, for a short-term gain, would you jeopardize those places by doing something stupid?” wonders Walt Dabney, who served as a park ranger for many decades and is now retired and living in Utah. He says that Moab, Utah, where he lives, is full of tourists and that French and Mandarin are commonly heard in local stores. The tourists bring millions to the local economy, and they “don’t boom-bust like the oil and gas business.”
Energy-related development will drive them away, according to Dabney, who says he’s not against energy. He is only against doing things quickly, and without consideration.
Among those challenging the Bureau of Land Management lease offerings is Conservatives for Responsible Stewardship, a group whose members lean red — and green. Its president, David Jenkins, has called for 117,000 acres across five states to be set aside by Interior. “It certainly makes no sense to lock up these important public resources,” Jenkins said, since the “oil and gas industry has shown no interest in them,” a reference to the tepid response to 2017’s offerings. The fear, of course, is that the non-Alaska offerings of 2018 will be more enthusiastically received.

The Department of Interior says such concerns are unfounded. “Congress specifically requires regular lease opportunities for energy and mineral production on federal lands,” department spokesperson Heather Swift told Yahoo News. “President Trump promised the American people that he would restore the balance of multiple use of federal lands, make America energy dominant, and generate economic growth. Federal lands play a huge part of that.”
The leasing of public lands represents “real money that will go to state governments for education, roads and public safety,” she added.
But because the funds from leased lands are shared between states and the federal government, and because the Trump administration has so far struggled to lease lands, those proceeds are not likely to be especially great. For example, of the 900 lots in Alaska offered by the Department of Interior in 2017, only seven found a lessor.
In all, Alaska received nearly $580,000. That is about a sixth of what the American taxpayer pays for each of Trump’s trips to Mar-a-Lago.

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Dear Congress, Just a quick note to explain your duties:

  1. Work to improve the lives of your constituents, not just the ones who donate huge amounts of cash
  2. Install IMPARTIAL high court justices
  3. Avoid the influences of groups who do not represent ALL Americans
  4. Enact laws that allow for reasonable salaries for you and your constituents.
  5. Remember Democracy is not a single party activity
  6. Personal beliefs are not a basis for Governing
  7. The Civil War is over and the Rebels lost, please assimilate the last vestiges into the America for all.
  8. Above all ,Tell your constituents the truth, we are not idiots!
  9. Trust is everything and right now you have nothing that resembles it as far as we are concerned.
  10. Stop citing us (The American People) as a reason for your actions especially when it is not in our interests.

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Some of the points made in the Op-ED are points I have made over time about TOTUS and his lack of ability to govern or learn the job. While I have never been in the White House or even in D.C., the idea of folks thinking a failed businessman is capable of leading a country when his method of chaos to hide his ineptitude if laughable and ridiculous. It is highly possible this OP-ED could have been a group write, we may never know until this term of disappointment is over. So who ever penned this OP-ED, thanks.

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As Far back as I can remember there was always some mistrust of the political system and the participants involved in it. This mistrust is not a bad thing as it should keep us always questioning their actions and motives. This does not mean each participant is untrustworthy however the system may very well be a bit out-of-order. We as voters should never put complete trust in all political systems or participants as the system has been  controlled by long serving members of the system from the local to the Federal level. We currently have an inordinate level of suspect information being issued by these folks under the guise of “looking out” for the voters. This suspect information allows for voters to support actions against themselves and to their own detriment. We have become a nation of puppets guided by an administration and Congress who seem to think we are merely puppets and can be handled as such. My go to explanation of what Congress has done for themselves is the law they enacted to receive an automatic cost of living adjustment. Prior to that law they had to publicly present it and vote  it in.Public outcry was such that they enacted the law so they did not have to publicly announce it.  Do Members of Congress get Automatic Pay Hikes (COLAs)?
Under the terms of Public Law 101-194, the Government Ethics Reform Act of 1989, lawmakers receive an annual adjustment in pay [a cost of living adjustment or COLA] equal to the change in the government’s Employment Cost Index for the fourth quarter of the prior calendar year versus the year before that (this constitutes a one-year time lag between when the pay raise is measured and when it actually takes effect). An automatic provision is made for this pay hike each year, and is self-implementing without any specific vote by Congress (i.e., passage of the overall Treasury appropriations bill enables the raise to occur). However, Members of Congress can, by majority vote, block the pay increase from taking place. This occurred for salary hikes slated for 1994-1997 and for 1999.
P.L. 101-194 also created a new Citizens Commission on Public Service and Compensation to make quadrennial recommendations on salaries for top-level federal officials. However, according to an October 31, 2005 Congressional Service Report, this Commission has not convened.
Members of Congress have linked their own pay increase to that of thousands of other high-ranking personnel in the federal government, including cabinet agency heads and judges. 

Given the actions of Congress in regard to the often cited American People why should they get paid at all? Why not tie their pay to their productivity? I am sure they get adequate compensation from big money backers even after leaving office. Voters need to pound the water line on our elected officials until reform and accountability occurs.

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We’re supposed to stand up to bullies’: Obama delivers stinging rebuke of Trump presidency.
Dylan Stableford 1 hour 13 minutes ago

 

Former President Barack Obama on Friday delivered his sharpest rebuke of President Trump since leaving office while urging U.S. citizens to vote in the upcoming midterm elections because “our democracy depends on it.”
“We’re supposed to stand up to bullies, not follow them.” Obama said in a speech at the University of Illinois in Urbana, where he accepted an award for ethics in public service.
The former president mocked Trump’s response blaming “both sides” for the deadly violence at a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017.
“We’re supposed to stand up to discrimination,” Obama said. “We’re sure as heck supposed to stand up clearly and unequivocally to Nazi sympathizers! How hard can that be? Saying that Nazis are bad!”

Obama, who had not once invoked his successor’s name in public appearances since exiting the White House, did so on Friday while describing people who stoke fear and division in order to “keep their power and keep their privilege.”
“It did not start with Donald Trump,” Obama said. “He is a symptom, not the cause. He’s just capitalizing on resentments that politicians have been fanning for years.”
But the former president also said the country finds itself at crossroads under Trump.
“This is one of those pivotal moments when every one of us as citizens of the United States need to determine just who it is that we are and what we stand for,” Obama said. “Just a glance at recent headlines should tell you that this moment really is different. The stakes really are higher.”
While there have been plenty of big elections in U.S. history, Obama said the current political climate makes this one different.
In the past, Obama said, “there’s been at least rough agreement among an overwhelming majority of Americans that our country is strongest when everybody is treated fairly when people are judged on the merits and content of their character and not the color of their skin or the way in which they worship god or their last names.”
But the breakdown in political discourse has led the country to stray from its core principles of “the rule of law, human rights and democracy,” Obama said.
“Over the past few decades, the politics of division and resentment and paranoia has unfortunately found a home in the Republican party,” he added.
Obama also skewered the anonymous Trump administration official who authored the New York Times op-ed about efforts inside the West Wing to actively subvert Trump’s “half-baked, ill-informed and occasionally reckless” impulses.
“They’re not doing us a service by actively promoting 90 percent of the crazy stuff that’s coming out of this White House, and then saying, ‘Don’t worry, we’re preventing the other 10 percent,’” Obama said. “That’s not how things are supposed to work. This is not normal.”

The former president tossed shade at Trump’s ongoing war with the press.
“I complained plenty about Fox News, but you never heard me threaten to shut ’em down, or call them enemies of the people,” Obama said.
Trump, however, was not the only target for Obama. He took aim at the Republicans who have refused to speak out against the current president’s cozy relationships with Russian President Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
“What happened to the Republican Party?” Obama said. “In a healthy democracy, there are some checks and balances on this kind of behavior, on this kind of inconsistency. But right now there’s nothing.”
He also chastised the GOP response to gun violence.
“If you’re tired of politicians who offer nothing but thoughts and prayers after a mass shooting, you’ve got to do what the Parkland kids are doing,” Obama said. “They’re not giving up until they see a Congress that values your lives more than a campaign check from the NRA. You’ve got to vote.”

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Mitch McConnell has already stated that Judge Kavanaugh will be confirmed before the hearing even began. This is just another indication that Congress is more broken than the current Presidency. What we know already is that TOTUS is unfit to lead and Congress understanding that his ineptitude allows them to enact and pass anything they want that will enhance their positions and retirements. Essentially these 535 (save a few) are not looking out for the voters or the country. Their focus is what their big donors want in spite of the fact that many big donors are not happy with TOTUS and his machinations. Today Senator Rubio essentially  skated around issues during an interview on air, this why we have such poor governance and souring relations with our allies. With all of this it is essential that we all vote and get some new Congressional members who have new ideas that comport with the Modern world.

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