U.S. Politics

Post Reply
User avatar
jimjay
udonmap.com
Posts: 590
Joined: July 5, 2012, 12:09 am

Re: Will Trump make the Grade.

Post by jimjay » June 4, 2018, 3:46 am

Former CIA Director John Brennan sharply criticized President Trump in a Washington Post op-ed published on Friday.

John Brennan: I will speak out until integrity returns to the White House

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions ... 661fd88de5
By John Brennan June 1

John Brennan served as director of the Central Intelligence Agency from March 2013 to January 2017.

My first visit to the Oval Office came in October 1990, when I was a 35-year-old CIA officer. Iraqi President Saddam Hussein had invaded Kuwait two months before, and President George H.W. Bush wanted to discuss the implications of a U.S.-led military coalition that would ultimately push the Iraqis out.

I remember the nervousness I felt when I entered that room and met a president of the United States for the first time. By the time the meeting ended, his intellectual curiosity, wisdom, affability and intense interest in finding the best policy course to protect and promote U.S. interests were abundantly evident.

Over the next quarter-century, I returned to the Oval Office several hundred times during the administrations of Presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama. The jitters that accompanied my first Oval Office visit dissipated over time, but the respect, awe and admiration I held for the office of the presidency and the incumbents never waned. The presidents I directly served were not perfect, and I didn’t agree with all of their policy choices. But I never doubted that each treated their solemn responsibility to lead our nation with anything less than the seriousness, intellectual rigor and principles that it deserved. Many times, I heard them dismiss the political concerns of their advisers, saying, “I don’t care about my politics, it’s the right thing to do.”

The esteem with which I held the presidency was dealt a serious blow when Donald Trump took office. Almost immediately, I began to see a startling aberration from the remarkable, though human, presidents I had served. Mr. Trump’s lifelong preoccupation with aggrandizing himself seemed to intensify in office, and he quickly leveraged his 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. address and his Twitter handle to burnish his brand and misrepresent reality.

Presidents throughout the years have differed in their approaches to policy, based on political platforms, ideologies and individual beliefs. Mr. Trump, however, has shown highly abnormal behavior by lying routinely to the American people without compunction, intentionally fueling divisions in our country and actively working to degrade the imperfect but critical institutions that serve us.

Although appalling, those actions shouldn’t be surprising. As was the case throughout his business and entertainment careers, Mr. Trump charts his every move according to a calculus of how it will personally help or hurt him. His strategy is to undercut real, potential and perceived opponents; his focus is to win at all costs, irrespective of truth, ethics, decency and — many would argue — the law. His disparagement of institutions is designed to short-circuit legitimate law enforcement investigations, intelligence assessments and media challenges that threaten his interests. His fear of the special counsel’s work is especially palpable, as is his growing interest in destroying its mandate.

For more than three decades, I observed and analyzed the traits and tactics of corrupt, incompetent and narcissistic foreign officials who did whatever they thought was necessary to retain power. Exploiting the fears and concerns of their citizenry, these demagogues routinely relied on lies, deceit and suppression of political opposition to cast themselves as populist heroes and to mask self-serving priorities. By gaining control of intelligence and security services, stifling the independence of the judiciary and discrediting a free press, these authoritarian rulers followed a time-tested recipe for how to inhibit democracy’s development, ****** individual freedoms and liberties, and reserve the spoils of corrupt governance for themselves and their ilk. It never dawned on me that we could face such a development in the United States.

On the international front, Mr. Trump pursues policies that are rooted in uninformed campaign promises, a determination to upend actions of his predecessors and an aversion to multilateral engagements. His ad hoc and frequently impulsive approach to national security is short-sighted and dangerous, as allies and partners are left uncertain about U.S. strategy and objectives.

The impact of the Trump presidency will be felt for many years to come. Most worrisome is that his use of falsehoods, his mean-spirited and malicious behavior, and his self-absorption will be emulated by many young Americans — indeed, young people globally — who look to the president of the United States as a role model.

The damage also will be felt by the millions of Americans who believe in Mr. Trump because of their concern about being left behind in a rapidly changing globalized world. These Americans have a legitimate gripe that politicians and political parties of all stripes have failed to deliver on the promise that America is the land of opportunity for all, irrespective of race, creed or place of residence. At a time when deep-seated fears of socioeconomic and cultural change need to be addressed honestly and without prejudice, Mr. Trump grandstands like a snake-oil salesman, squandering his formidable charisma and communication skills in favor of ego, selfishness and false promises.

Many have condemned my public criticism of Mr. Trump, arguing that as a former CIA director, I should bite my tongue. My criticisms, however, are not political; I have never been and will never be a partisan. I speak out for the simple reason that Mr. Trump is failing to live up to the standards that we should all expect of a president.

As someone who had the rare privilege of directly serving four presidents, I will continue to speak out loudly and critically until integrity, decency, wisdom — and maybe even some humility — return to the White House.



User avatar
Lone Star
udonmap.com
Posts: 5698
Joined: June 26, 2014, 11:52 pm

Re: Will Trump make the Grade.

Post by Lone Star » June 4, 2018, 5:48 am

Image

Young people and Black Americans are acquiring jobs faster than other groups, and they have been the groups that have been historically lagging in previous years.
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.

User avatar
Lone Star
udonmap.com
Posts: 5698
Joined: June 26, 2014, 11:52 pm

Re: Will Trump make the Grade.

Post by Lone Star » June 4, 2018, 6:05 am

tinpeeba wrote:
June 4, 2018, 3:18 am
Yes but Reagan was careful not to risk starting a trade war to the benefit no-one. The concluding paragraphs of the article:
Well, we've established what Reagan wanted. Trump has been trying to make bilateral deals with other countries, and very little seems to be moving forward.

Now it's time to come to the 21st Century and Trump's goals and objectives: https://ustr.gov/

Additionally, I have linked the outline of Trade Policy Objectives of the United States.

https://ustr.gov/sites/default/files/fi ... Agenda.pdf

I don't have much more to say about the trade issue until something new and current comes to light or the policies start moving forward and we see the results: good or bad.
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.

User avatar
papafarang
udonmap.com
Posts: 4300
Joined: August 2, 2013, 10:14 am

Re: Trump addresses EU trade deficit

Post by papafarang » June 5, 2018, 7:07 am

wow yo Yankees do love your high quality euro goods, funny how the blame goes on the seller for great value goods. strange last time in Tesco doing the shopping I too was wondering what Tesco are going to buy from me, after all Tesco can't just give me goods leaving me with a deficit every week. you need to be looking at unpatriotic americans,you know the ones that buy our stuff, those scum trailer trash driving BMW's and mercs... in fact their German sympathizers.....probably communists spies out of cuba too :lol:
one thing that seems to escape people .the tariffs are in fact sanctions, the move is deliberately meant to harm another countries economy .

Trade Sanction Mechanisms. Three common kinds of trade sanctions are: quotas, tariff, non-tariff barriers (NTBs), asset freezes or seizures and embargoes
Hansa village clubhouse . Tel 0981657001 https://www.google.co.th/maps/place/Han ... 5851?hl=en

User avatar
Lone Star
udonmap.com
Posts: 5698
Joined: June 26, 2014, 11:52 pm

Re: Trump addresses EU trade deficit

Post by Lone Star » June 5, 2018, 9:09 am

Giggle wrote:
June 4, 2018, 12:50 am
2012 trade deficit with EU $116 billion.
2013 trade deficit with EU $125 billion.
2014 trade deficit with EU $144 billion.
2015 trade deficit with EU $155 billion.
2016 trade deficit with EU $147 billion.
2017 trade deficit with EU $151 billion.

And Junker calls tariffs unacceptable. What a moron.
Yes, deficits of almost $1 Trillion ($838 Billion) over just six years.

Of course, you must consider the source of Juncker's beliefs that tariffs are unacceptable. First, the EU is used to having European countries bow to their will. Second, Globalist/Socialists like Juncker don't care about deficits. Those types like Juncker, and others who support and promote the EU, view deficits as necessary in order to take advantage of the Productive/Achiever Class to pay for their give-aways to the Unproductive.

That immoral stance -- the theft of resources, labor and assets from productive citizens -- is why socialism eventually collapses under its own weight. Eventually, the People see it all as Economic Slavery. The People eventually realize that they are forced to indirectly work for the government (instead of the government working for its citizens). The government oversees the forced redistribution of earned assets to others. The only difference between a socialist voter and a thief on the street is that the socialist votes for someone to steal for them.

I would never expect anyone who lives in and accepts a Globalist/Socialist society/economy to understand. After all, those who support the EU have also inadvertently (or maybe purposely in some cases) supported the destruction of their individual cultures and societies and opened their borders for any and all to pillage. We all witness this out-of-control destruction weekly in news reports -- IF those news reports are allowed to be written without the authors of truth being thrown in jail.

It would be unwise to take advice from those who are so passive about deficits or to take any of their arguments seriously in light of what they have invited and/or allowed to occur within their own borders.

The United States, as with any autonomous country, should have a duty to protect its society, economy, citizens, jobs and industries. I wouldn't fault any other county for doing the same. However, the other countries involved in this trade imbalance with the US aren't running deficits. They are profiting on the backs of US labor and have the gall to be upset that the United States has a president who puts America first and wants to close the deficits.
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.

skinner
udonmap.com
Posts: 480
Joined: June 17, 2015, 1:57 pm
Location: Nong bua lamphu

Re: Trump addresses EU trade deficit

Post by skinner » June 5, 2018, 11:02 am

Americans choose to buy the imported goods. Presumably they prefer them to American goods. Europeans obviously choose not to buy the same quantity of American goods. Pretty simple stuff.
All the nationalist ranting and raving obviously doesn't extend to buying your own products.

User avatar
Giggle
udonmap.com
Posts: 1895
Joined: October 18, 2016, 4:24 pm
Location: In your head

Re: Trump addresses EU trade deficit

Post by Giggle » June 5, 2018, 11:34 am

Europeans obviously choose not to buy the same quantity of American goods.
Because the EU tariffs are too high -- as has already been explained. Protectionism here is no more unilateral than the "pretty simple stuff" of importing and exporting goods.
Ashli Babbitt -- SAY HER NAME!

User avatar
papafarang
udonmap.com
Posts: 4300
Joined: August 2, 2013, 10:14 am

Re: Trump addresses EU trade deficit

Post by papafarang » June 5, 2018, 12:23 pm

skinner wrote:
June 5, 2018, 11:02 am
Americans choose to buy the imported goods. Presumably they prefer them to American goods. Europeans obviously choose not to buy the same quantity of American goods. Pretty simple stuff.
All the nationalist ranting and raving obviously doesn't extend to buying your own products.
True , I suppose LS is happy with his jap chopper. perhaps he should buy American .
Hansa village clubhouse . Tel 0981657001 https://www.google.co.th/maps/place/Han ... 5851?hl=en

skinner
udonmap.com
Posts: 480
Joined: June 17, 2015, 1:57 pm
Location: Nong bua lamphu

Re: Trump addresses EU trade deficit

Post by skinner » June 5, 2018, 12:53 pm

papafarang wrote:
June 5, 2018, 12:23 pm
skinner wrote:
June 5, 2018, 11:02 am
Americans choose to buy the imported goods. Presumably they prefer them to American goods. Europeans obviously choose not to buy the same quantity of American goods. Pretty simple stuff.
All the nationalist ranting and raving obviously doesn't extend to buying your own products.
True , I suppose LS is happy with his jap chopper. perhaps he should buy American .
Of course , everybody understands why he wouldn't buy an American wife lol

User avatar
Giggle
udonmap.com
Posts: 1895
Joined: October 18, 2016, 4:24 pm
Location: In your head

Re: Trump addresses EU trade deficit

Post by Giggle » June 5, 2018, 12:54 pm

March 15, 2018

Trump may have a point about EU tariffs, ifo says

A leading German think tank says Donald Trump is right that tariffs between the United States and Europe are asymmetrical, but urges negotiations to lower import taxes across the board.

US President Donald Trump may actually have a point when it comes to unfair taxes on US goods coming into Europe. That is the finding of a new study by a leading German think tank. Where they differ is how to deal with it: The group urges new talks to lower tariffs across the board, instead of engaging in a tit-for-tat escalation in new taxes.

“The EU is by no means the paradise for free traders that it likes to think,” said Gabriel Felbermayr, director of the ifo Center for International Economics, a division of the Munich-based ifo Institute. The European Union actually comes off as the bigger offender when compared to the US, he added. The unweighted average EU customs duty is 5.2 percent, versus the US rate of 3.5 percent, according to ifo’s database.

So when Mr. Trump complains of “massive tariffs” he is not that far off the mark in several cases. And he does complain. “If the EU wants to further increase their already massive tariffs and barriers on US companies doing business there, we will simply apply a tax on their cars, which freely pour into the US,” the president tweeted earlier this month. “They make it impossible for our cars (and more) to sell there. Big trade imbalance!”

Cars are a particular sore point. Imports into the US are not quite free, but pay a tariff of only 2.5 percent, compared with the EU tariff of 10 percent on US car imports. Some other examples from the EU include a 17 percent tax on apples and 20 percent on grapes.

Overall, tariffs totaling $5.7 billion were levied on US exports to the EU in 2015. The far greater volume of EU exports into the US were subject to customs duties of just $7.1 billion. This does not even take into account the inhibitory effect of the higher EU tariffs on the volume of US exports.

The US is not blame-free. The lower average level of tariffs masks higher duties that hit particular European products, from 9 percent on chocolate to 20 percent on key milk products, and 25 percent on small trucks.

https://global.handelsblatt.com/politic ... ays-899083

Tariffs exist on both sides -- just as the chronic perennial trade imbalance. Do something about the imbalance or it will be addressed with more tariffs.
Ashli Babbitt -- SAY HER NAME!

tinpeeba
udonmap.com
Posts: 360
Joined: March 14, 2006, 2:51 am
Location: London or Udon

Re: Trump addresses EU trade deficit

Post by tinpeeba » June 6, 2018, 3:58 am

Koch brothers take on Trump over tariffs:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-44366737

glalt
udonmap.com
Posts: 2990
Joined: January 14, 2007, 10:35 am
Location: Nong Hin, Loei

Re: Trump addresses EU trade deficit

Post by glalt » June 6, 2018, 11:06 am

Why do Americans buy imported items? It doesn't take a rocket scientist to answer that. It's all about money. Over the years the lower tech companies have left the US for the much cheaper labor markets. Americans make more in an hour than most foreign workers make in a day.

User avatar
Lone Star
udonmap.com
Posts: 5698
Joined: June 26, 2014, 11:52 pm

Re: Trump addresses EU trade deficit

Post by Lone Star » June 6, 2018, 12:17 pm

Giggle wrote:
June 5, 2018, 12:54 pm
March 15, 2018

Trump may have a point about EU tariffs, ifo says

A leading German think tank says Donald Trump is right that tariffs between the United States and Europe are asymmetrical, but urges negotiations to lower import taxes across the board.

US President Donald Trump may actually have a point when it comes to unfair taxes on US goods coming into Europe. That is the finding of a new study by a leading German think tank. Where they differ is how to deal with it: The group urges new talks to lower tariffs across the board, instead of engaging in a tit-for-tat escalation in new taxes.

. . .

Tariffs exist on both sides -- just as the chronic perennial trade imbalance. Do something about the imbalance or it will be addressed with more tariffs.
I believe that this has been lost on the whole issue. Trump has been in bilateral negotiations for months to do just that -- address the chronic imbalance in import duties that existed before now. It wasn't until a deadline was reached on being able to close the difference that the new tariffs were enacted, and negotiations continue to occur.

The imbalances occur on what is allowed to be sold and amount of import duties placed on the products. There is no way that there could ever be a balance on the NUMBER of products sold because CONSUMERS decide that. An imbalance in the number of products sold is not the issue.

This wasn't something that just fell out the sky. Trump has been emphasizing trade imbalances for years.
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.

User avatar
Lone Star
udonmap.com
Posts: 5698
Joined: June 26, 2014, 11:52 pm

Re: Will Trump make the Grade.

Post by Lone Star » June 6, 2018, 1:09 pm

There are more jobs than people out of work. First time in history.

There are 6.7 million job openings and just 6.4 million available workers to fill them, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. April marked the second month in a row that there were more vacancies than available hires, a phenomenon that had not happened before 2018.
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.

User avatar
Lone Star
udonmap.com
Posts: 5698
Joined: June 26, 2014, 11:52 pm

Re: Will Trump make the Grade.

Post by Lone Star » June 7, 2018, 6:17 am

Yesterday, Trump signed the VA Mission Act. It allows veterans waiting at government-run hospitals to get care from private health institutions. Another promise fulfilled!!!

“As a candidate for president, I promise to make reforming the VA one of my absolute highest priorities, and from the first day of my administration, that is exactly what we have done,” Trump said at the signing ceremony in the Rose Garden. Trump explained that the bill was the result of a long fight with political interests to finally deliver on veteran access to private care.

“No one who defends our country in uniform should have to fight for their lives when they come back,” he said.

The bill consolidates and streamlines several community care programs in Veterans Affairs and includes funding for modernizing the infrastructure used to handle veterans’ claims.

STEADY WINNING.
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.

User avatar
Lone Star
udonmap.com
Posts: 5698
Joined: June 26, 2014, 11:52 pm

Re: Will Trump make the Grade.

Post by Lone Star » June 8, 2018, 4:31 pm

According to the Federal Reserve, household net worth rose by 1% from the previous quarter. As a result, Americans’ wealth surpassed the $100 trillion mark for the first time in history.

American wealth is at a record $100.768 trillion.

STEADY WINNING.
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.

User avatar
tamada
udonmap.com
Posts: 17322
Joined: February 21, 2007, 4:03 am
Location: Down two...then left

Re: Will Trump make the Grade.

Post by tamada » June 9, 2018, 11:44 pm

Lone Star wrote:
June 8, 2018, 4:31 pm
According to the Federal Reserve, household net worth rose by 1% from the previous quarter. As a result, Americans’ wealth surpassed the $100 trillion mark for the first time in history.

American wealth is at a record $100.768 trillion.

STEADY WINNING.
[/quote]

U.S. Deficit to Surpass $1 Trillion Two Years Ahead of Estimates, CBO Says
April 9, 2018, 7:00 PM GMT+1 Updated on April 9, 2018, 9:18 PM GMT+1

"The U.S. budget deficit will surpass $1 trillion by 2020, two years sooner than previously estimated, as tax cuts and spending increases signed by President Donald Trump do little to boost long-term economic growth, according to the Congressional Budget Office."

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... 0-cbo-says

STEADY SOMETHING.

User avatar
tamada
udonmap.com
Posts: 17322
Joined: February 21, 2007, 4:03 am
Location: Down two...then left

Re: Will Trump make the Grade.

Post by tamada » June 9, 2018, 11:54 pm


User avatar
Lone Star
udonmap.com
Posts: 5698
Joined: June 26, 2014, 11:52 pm

Re: Trump addresses EU trade deficit

Post by Lone Star » June 10, 2018, 5:59 am

As Trump departed the G7 Summit, he left with these words:

Trump prefers totally free trade without any tariffs, no barriers and no subsidies.

"That’s the way it should be, no tariffs, no barriers … and no subsidies. That’s the way you learned at the Wharton school of finance, I mean that would be the ultimate thing."

This would be an entirely free-trade approach, which would be fair for everyone because there would be no tariffs or barriers or subsidies to offset from one country to another. Totally free -- and FAIR.

As for NAFTA, Trump suggested that the US would probably negotiate unilateral deals with Canada and Mexico separately.

Trump repeated that America’s allies had repeatedly won on trade deals, hurting American workers and jobs. "We’re the piggy bank that everybody is robbing," Trump said. "And that ends."

As one unnamed official stated, "If they thought they were going to lecture Trump on the glories of free trade, they got a rude awakening. He came to a gun fight armed with a stealth bomber."
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.

User avatar
Lone Star
udonmap.com
Posts: 5698
Joined: June 26, 2014, 11:52 pm

Re: Will Trump make the Grade.

Post by Lone Star » June 10, 2018, 6:04 am

Warren Buffett and Jamie Dimon cite several aspects of the economy as reasons for optimism.
- "Right now, there's no question: It's feeling strong. I mean, if we're in the sixth inning, we have our sluggers coming to bat right now," Buffett tells CNBC.
- "The way I look at it, there is nothing that is a real pothole," Dimon adds. "If you look at how the table's set, consumers are in very good shape."

https://www.cnbc.com/2018/06/07/buffett ... trong.html
AMERICA: One of the Greatest Stories Ever Told.

Post Reply

Return to “U.S. Politics”