Trump / Musk (other than DOGE) Omnibus Thread

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It’s insane that they think the U.S. can just hold everyone else hostage with all of tariff bullshit. The world can and will just tell us to fuck off. We don’t provide anything they cant get elsewhere.
Speaking of your avatar, I'd sell any stock one has in American car companies, once the Canadian reprisal tariffs kick in.

 
Canada is ready. That government isn't run by mooks. It will not only be red states. It will be swing states. And it will be states where there are GOPers up for Senate in 26. Susan Collins, babe, nobody gonna save you now.

I imagine it will be impossible to sell a lobster from the US to Canada
Most of Northern Maine, where a lot of red voters are, gets its electricity from Canada.
 
US going to need to mine that coal a bit...

 
Between the FBI purge and the OBM/ Treasury lock out, Elon Musk is taking your country.
 

Experts have raised questions over Trump’s demand from Canada, with so little fentanyl entering the US through its northern border that the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) omitted to even mention Canada in a 2020 report.

...

Canada sends 75% of all its goods and services exports to the United States, its largest trading partner and closest ally. Trudeau said the trade spat and diplomatic tangle “is not what we want”, but that if Trump followed through on his threats, “we will also act”.

A first round of retaliatory tariffs would cause minimal damage to the US, covering C$37bn of its exports to Canada, but if needed, Canada’s federal government plans to escalate by imposing tariffs on C$110bn worth of goods.

Canada’s dollar has plunged against its US counterpart and experts warned Canada’s economy could fall into a recession.

“We don’t have a lot of good historical examples where we’ve had tariff shocks of this magnitude,” Tiff Macklem, the Bank of Canada governor, told reporters earlier this week. “Exactly how quickly, how big, how people react, what the implications are for inflation – there is a certain zone of uncertainty.”

Trump’s vague demands to “secure the border” have unsettled and confused Canadian negotiators shuttling between Ottawa and Washington with increased frequency and desperation.

“The reality is that a large, uncontrolled bully is using his position as the most powerful political leader in the world, to put pressure on a whole range of allies,” said Lawrence Herman, an international trade lawyer and senior fellow at the CD Howe Institute. “We have to, in Canada and the rest of the world, recognize that we’ve entered a new era.

“With the Trump administration, there are no rules. There is no respect for international treaties or agreements. There is no longer value to the US signature on international documents.”

Mark Carney, the frontrunner to replace Trudeau, said on Friday he was “foursquare” behind all lobbying efforts by Canadian ministers in Washington.

The former governor of the Bank of Canada and Bank of England said Canada would “never back down to a bully” and that the “fever” gripping the US would eventually break.

But others remain skeptical that a full resolution is possible.

Herman, who advises governments and companies on trade issues, worries that tension between the two nations has “shattered” a shared history.

“Repairing the longstanding relationship will be very, very difficult. It will depend on goodwill on the US side and Trump has dissipated most of that goodwill,” he said. “I don’t see it returning to where it was under the previous era. It’ll be a strained and difficult and contentious relationship going forward, and Canadians have to be prepared for that.”
 




Hostile takeover of the Federal Government by the Technoligarchs is underway.

I worked for one of Marc Andreesen’s companies, LoudCloud. Founders were Andreesen, Ben Horowitz, Tim Howes (helped create LDAP), and In Sik Rhee.

I was in sales in the New York office. Our regional VP said she’d fire us if we sold a deal to a dot.com. We signed some good Fortune 500 companies. Not enough.

Andreesen was still mostly the fat, anti-social computer geek he’d been since before Netscape. Ben was sharp; but, goofy - ALL of the Silicon Valley conference rooms were named after rap stars. Tim Howes was sharp as hell and great with clients, customers, and prospects. In Sik - he wanted to be in front of customers; one couldn’t let him meet with customers or prospects.

Andreesen was getting fit. He had consultants who helped him dress and speak. Kudos to him - he knew his weaknesses and was trying to fix them.

He was a draw to some prospects (he was still the Internet wunderkind to some). He was not good in front of Fortune 500 executives.

I’m not surprised that he’s a TechBroligarch.

I’m not surprised he’s a whiny-as-hell billionaire.
 
The influx of tech folks Imost with good intentions but not all( is not new. Visitor logs during Prez obama term had Google officals as top visitors. They set up tje US Digital Service and "fixed" the ACA web site after its disastrpis debut. That is where they can be most useful.

Of course back then, they came to assist, not to take over govt amd take over the US check disbirsing system as Musk has tried to dp.

Ypi can't rum the federal govt like Silicon Valley. Completely different purposes and you need far more checks and balances in tt. You cannot award a gpvt cpmtract on a whim as you can do in the private sector. Conflict of interst rules are corrently far more strict in the federal government.
 
The buyout stuff can be pretty effective at convincing folks that have full retirement earned and just had counted on doing their jobs 2,3,4 more years. MCcroy did it and gutted a lot of expert and Manager level folks
I got my 8 month buyout
Nobody believes they’ll actually be paid. Tendering your resignation removes most of your civil service protections.
 
As a member of Congress noted in an interview the other day, you can'' do a federal govt buyour like a Twitter buyout. You can;t promise govt money for any purpose until it has been authorized, obligated and with a budget line. Otherwise, you would have chaos and rampant lack of accountability, fraud and favoritism to cronies or friends. These rules exist for a good rason and there are ways to do emergency spending when needed, which a buyout is definitely not.
 
Nobody believes they’ll actually be paid. Tendering your resignation removes most of your civil service protections.
That is my concern. It would be perfect in my situation as our townhouse is on the market and I will be moving back to NC when it sells. I'm expecting a big pay cut when i move back, just like when I moved back in 2019. My townhouse mortgage is quite high and I cannot afford to leave my job until it sells, especially with my wife having knee surgery in a couple weeks. Fortunately I have acquired enough sick leave hours to put toward FMLA leave to help her for 4 weeks. She moved back early last fall and wants me in NC full time. If I took the early resignation offer, I could collect my salary(minus the night differential) and move back to NC and take some time off and eventually start a new job.
 
I worked for one of Marc Andreesen’s companies, LoudCloud. Founders were Andreesen, Ben Horowitz, Tim Howes (helped create LDAP), and In Sik Rhee.

I was in sales in the New York office. Our regional VP said she’d fire us if we sold a deal to a dot.com. We signed some good Fortune 500 companies. Not enough.

Andreesen was still mostly the fat, anti-social computer geek he’d been since before Netscape. Ben was sharp; but, goofy - ALL of the Silicon Valley conference rooms were named after rap stars. Tim Howes was sharp as hell and great with clients, customers, and prospects. In Sik - he wanted to be in front of customers; one couldn’t let him meet with customers or prospects.

Andreesen was getting fit. He had consultants who helped him dress and speak. Kudos to him - he knew his weaknesses and was trying to fix them.

He was a draw to some prospects (he was still the Internet wunderkind to some). He was not good in front of Fortune 500 executives.

I’m not surprised that he’s a TechBroligarch.

I’m not surprised he’s a whiny-as-hell billionaire.
Did you see his interview with Ross Douthat? Whiny elevated to an ethos.
 
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