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Category Archives: My Opinion


Draining the swamp really means TOTUS wants his own nefarious group of deplorables so that his prior and possibly continuing Illicit activities will be hidden or ignored. Meanwhile the current swamp dwellers aka Congress  are seeking to stick us (the oft cited American people) with THEIR choice of a high court justice rather than a justice who is capable of judging in an impartial manner using current and established law and/or precedent rather than their own opinion. It seems that on paper Judge K is wonderful but it seems that his past is as dark as TOTUS’. Each Justice on the high court needs to be above politics but we have been unable to get that formula right. It is indeed a difficult job being on the High court but many have managed to do the work especially when it affects the legal rights of the American public. This candidate is a political pawn who could upend the progress made on so many fronts. Congress is looking to cement a Conservative court rather than a court for us all. DJT just wants his name stamped on something high profile because that is what he is about. It is our duty to deny this candidate a seat at the big table since we currently have a misogynist already seated. We have enough swamp dwellers in this administration  and that includes the Congress.

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TOTUS has packed his cabinet and staff with the “best people” who have proceeded to pull the country deeper into division and debt under the auspices of a neer do well Congress. Now TOTUS wants to put another Justice on the high court whose values do not reflect the values of the American people as a whole. The current nominee has some accusations similar to Justice Thomas’s so do we want another Justice to serve under a cloud that could predict his judgement on future and existing law? Could it be that “best people” are people whose morality is on a par with TOTUS? The time is now to express our dissatisfaction for this administrations lack of leadership on many fronts. It is well to remember that our Congress is as much at fault as TOTUS as they are moving their one-sided agenda under the cover of TOTUS. There are no redeeming characteristics for most of the Congress and the staff of the White House so it is our job as the “Bosses” of the Administration and Congress we need to be sure we are getting the best people in office. The way we accomplish this is to understand how any laws, executive orders and ALL legislation affects us now and later. High court decisions have huge impact on all of us. Having an unbalanced court is why we have the unending flow of billions of dollars in campaigns from private and corporate donors. These donors want people elected that will benefit them not us (the American People).  The special interest groups have control of our country through the Congress and the minimally informed TOTUS. Forget party and vote as informed Americans.

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Kuttner on TAP
A Dose of McConnell’s Own Medicine. We don’t know how the Brett Kavanaugh nomination will play out, of course. This depends partly on whether Christine Blasey Ford either testifies or succeeds in getting an FBI investigation.
But it does appear that just enough Republican senators are queasy about these accusations and about Kavanaugh’s other dissembling before the Judiciary Committee that his nomination is in serious jeopardy. The way these things usually play out is that the White House pulls the plug, the nominee solemnly declares that the controversy “has become a distraction,” and he’s gone.
If that were to occur, what then?
The White House would race to get another nominee vetted and jammed through the Senate Judiciary Committee, but this would make some Republicans very nervous so close to an election. In addition, two Republicans who loathe Trump and who are not running for re-election, Senators Jeff Flake of Arizona and Bob Corker of Tennessee, seem to be finding a bit of spine. Both called for the Kavanaugh nomination to be delayed and may not wish to help Trump rush through a substitute.
This would get even more awkward for Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell if he tries to get a nominee confirmed in the post-election lame-duck session. McConnell blocked consideration of President Obama’s nominee, Merrick Garland, on grounds that Obama was a lame-duck president, even though his term had ten months to run when he named Garland to the high court in March 2016.
The lame-duck session of Congress runs for less than two months. It will be even more lame if Democrats take back the Senate.
Beyond that, the more potentially impeachable evidence that keeps coming out against Trump, the stronger is the case that he has no business making a Supreme Court nomination. Even more satisfying than blocking this nomination would be seeing McConnell hoist with his own petard. ~ ROBERT KUTTNER

It is worth noting that our Congress appears to have the attitude of “when I want your opinion, I’ll give it to you” and we seem to accept it with little fanfare.MA

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The best intentions of the founders were based on the issues of the times but had undertones of some of the same issues we face now, primarily Racism, elitism and protectionism. To wit we have made some progress but not as it was imagined nearly 250 years ago. What we currently have is political parties at constant war and lying to us all rather than doing the jobs they were elected to do. Under their auspices the religious right has imposed or attempted to impose a religious onus on us all. This is still America but now with a wake up call from a demigod who is now in the White House, all Americans need to wake up and step up, stop voting on the basis of party lines and the continuous media furor over things that we have been told are good for us with no background facts to examine.MA

Kuttner on TAP
Trump’s Bastard Children. Political scientists use the word legitimacy to mean a government that is broadly seen as having the right to govern. Consent of the governed was also a prime concern of America’s Founders.
For most of America’s history, our government enjoyed broad legitimacy. It look a long time, of course, for the national government to regain legitimacy in Dixie. And if you scratch below the surface, many Southern whites still question its legitimacy. But for most of the post-World War II era, our government was seen as broadly legitimate.
Alas, it has not been legitimate since 2000, when George W. Bush, with the complicity of five Supreme Court justices, stole the election. That means citizens might rightly question the legitimacy of policies enacted by Republican presidents and their Supreme Court appointees ever since.
Under President Obama, Democrats soldiered on and sought to find common ground. But Republicans spat in their eye, and doubled down on their own claims that Obama’s entire presidency was illegitimate. Had Hillary Clinton been elected, the Republican game plan was to question her legitimacy as well.
Now, we already have one Supreme Court justice, Neil Gorsuch, who is the bastard child of Republicans’ successful efforts to block the appointment of a perfectly legitimate Obama nominee, Merrick Garland. Republicans are hoping to jam onto the Court yet another nominee of dubious legitimacy, Brett Kavanaugh. A president who has already committed several impeachable offenses has no legitimate business filling a high court seat.
Here’s the larger problem. A republic of lost legitimacy has a great deal of difficulty functioning. Failed republics, however, do get legitimacy back. France did it on several occasions, and Germany after 1945.
But we might as well stop pretending that in exceptional America there is an unbroken line of legitimacy winding back from Trump to the Founders. There isn’t. Legitimacy is something that we will have to earn back. ~ ROBERT KUTTNER

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It has become evident that TOTUS holds grudges for perceived and real wrongs done to him. Many of these wrongs were the fruit of his own ineptitude and his dishonest ways. Looking at his past business deals, he has always been the winner (?) while his partners took the losses. He has stiffed many of his business associates from the workers to the owners. His foray into the now defunct USFL is a perfect example of DJT’s attempt to compete. It is unfortunate that many voters did not vote at all and many voted against their own interests because they were and are still are unhappy with their current representatives in Congress. The facts often overlooked are that we have become complacent and willing dupes for the political elites who have some how convinced some of us that they are working on our behalf. The real facts are that they are no more than scammers who say what ever it takes to get and stay in office. If these neer do wells were really working for us then we would not have any extreme candidates for the high court where we really need impartial members so that all issues are decided fairly for the good of us all. The party system has become a weight on the neck of the voters along with the several sub sects of special interests that benefit the elected elites. We are now experiencing the emergence of the poisons of the past.

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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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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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