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Trump / Musk (other than DOGE)

  • Thread starter Thread starter nycfan
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Growing up there were always television shows which featured a neighborhood blowhard who thought he knew everything and had the solution to every national problem and was very loud and obnoxious about it, but who in actuality didn't know shit outside their chosen field of work. And in real life I've met plenty of people like that over the years, unfortunately. It seems to me as if the whole phenomenon of Trumpism has been the process of allowing these people to take over the Republican Party and eventually the country. The chubby guy who used to sit at the end of the bar bitching about everything and had simple solutions to every problem are now the guys running the country.
 
Growing up there were always television shows which featured a neighborhood blowhard who thought he knew everything and had the solution to every national problem and was very loud and obnoxious about it, but who in actuality didn't know shit outside their chosen field of work. And in real life I've met plenty of people like that over the years, unfortunately. It seems to me as if the whole phenomenon of Trumpism has been the process of allowing these people to take over the Republican Party and eventually the country. The chubby guy who used to sit at the end of the bar bitching about everything and had simple solutions to every problem are now the guys running the country.
I remember two blowhards on WRAL-Channel 5 - Cousin Chubb and Jesse Helms.
 
The irony is that the dollar losing reserve status would be better for US trade than tariffs. Of course Trump doesn't know the first thing about economics, but it's funny because his own treasury secretary has been calling for the dollar to lose reserve status.

There's a view among economists -- including Bessent! -- that reserve currency status keeps the dollar permanently higher than its equilibrium value, and that this overvaluation hurts American competitiveness. I'm unsure whether I buy this story (there's much to recommend it, but I also see multiple problems and I'm far from the only one), but if it's true, that means losing reserve currency status would do much of the work Trump wants from tariffs, and mostly inflation-free.

Of course, when you're calling Mike Flynn to ask him whether a strong dollar is good, this point will not be understood. Far too subtle and complex.
 
Trump’s best Cabinet pick might be Li’l Marco.

That says it all.

The Cabinet Secretary nominees are a distraction - especially Hegseth, Kennedy Lite, Tulsi, and Patel; and, Gaetz. Trump AND the Heritage Foundation/Project 2025 HOPE they remain distractions……hell, they hope several (all?) are shot down so that Trump and Heritage can whine about the “Deep State.”

It’s not the Caninet Secretary who will gut departments…….it’s the 10-to-20-to-50 Heritage appointees we ignore while Kennedy Lite pisses us off.

This is NOT Trump playing 3-D Chess; this is Heritage and other right-wingers realizing that Trump is completely a tool……and they can use his ignorance.
 
“… We’re getting clearer indications now that the effort to bamboozle, frighten and entice federal workers into resigning their positions in exchange for non-existent “buy outs” was very much a product of the Elon Musk/DOGE cabal now wilding through and embedding itself within the federal government.

We don’t need a lot of confirmation: they left a slew of meme Easter eggs scattered through the process more or less announcing it.

What’s notable is that the White House is now going out of its way to tell reporters that it definitely wasn’t them. They were, in that well-worn phrase, out of the loop, etc.

I suspect this is true, as far as it goes. But that understates — straight up ignores, really — the degree to which Donald Trump and his top advisors have, entirely by design and intentionally, spun up a series of independent fiefdoms, with Musk’s being the largest, to move fast and break things and push every boundary in the interest of a number of overlapping but distinct ideological agendas. In other words, they probably did “bypass key Trump officials.”

But that’s pretty much the idea when you wind up guys like Elon Musk and Russell Vought with “let’s be legends” gusto and give them the keys.


The news, linked above, that the resignation emails were Team Elon’s idea and didn’t have the okay of the White House comes from a Washington Post article. But we get pretty much the same story in an Ashley Parker article published overnight in The Atlantic, only this time about the across-the-board federal spending freeze and the “memo” that kicked it off Monday. That one was Vought’s team — if not Vought himself, who has yet to be confirmed — at OMB. White House officials told Parker that the memo “was released without going through the usual White House approval processes.”

So the White House is saying they were out of the loop, caught as off guard as everyone else, by the two big conflagrations that have roiled the federal government over the course of this week and led to what is now universally conceded to be a fairly epic face plant little more than a week into the administration. It’s not exonerating. It’s by design.

But I suspect that in this narrow sense it’s true. Because that’s how these folks operate. Trump remains entirely a transactional creature. Ideology, in any articulate sense, is entirely alien to him.

He wants to be loved, which in his mind means total power and total subservience. Amidst the raging bureaucratic storm and planes tumbling out of the sky after two decades-plus of near-perfect safety in U.S. airspace, we learned yesterday afternoon that Trump told Mark Zuckerberg last November that the price of being “brought into the [Trump] tent” was arranging a $25 million bribe in the form of settling a meritless lawsuit from 2020 which had no hope of success. …”

 
Kash Patel at FBI is most dangerous

Trump Administration Shocks Senior F.B.I. Ranks by Moving to Replace Them​

Top officials have been told to retire or be fired in the coming days, fueling fear within an agency that has been a target of President Trump and Kash Patel, his nominee to be F.B.I. director.


“…The steps came as Kash Patel, the president’s nominee to lead the agency, sought to assure lawmakers during a contentious, hourslong Senate confirmation hearing that he would not begin a campaign of retribution or look backward by pursuing perceived rivals. It is unclear whether he was informed of the decisions, which were disclosed on the condition of anonymity to describe personnel matters.

The employees given the apparent ultimatum had been promoted under Christopher A. Wray, who stepped down as F.B.I. director this month.

In an email to colleagues, one of the senior agents said he had learned he would be dismissed “from the rolls of the F.B.I.” as soon as Monday morning.

… F.B.I. directors have more latitude than most agency chiefs in whom they place into senior positions, but they typically do so gradually. Until senators vote on Mr. Patel’s nomination, Brian Driscoll is the bureau’s acting director. …”
 
“… During Mr. Patel’s confirmation hearing, Senator Cory Booker raised the abrupt dismissals of nearly a dozen career prosecutorsat the Justice Department who worked on the criminal investigations into Mr. Trump under the special counsel Jack Smith and whether similar moves would extend to the F.B.I.

“Are you aware of any plans or discussions to punish in any way, including termination, F.B.I. agents or personnel associated with Trump investigations?” asked Mr. Booker, Democrat of New Jersey, after reminding Mr. Patel that he was under oath.

Stating that he had not been involved in the decisions at the Justice Department, Mr. Patel replied, “I am not aware of that, Senator.” …”
 
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