Showing posts with label Bedminster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bedminster. Show all posts

Sunday, July 3, 2022

July 15-17, 2017: The President Insists Most Politicians Would Have Met with Russians

 

7/15/17: Trump Sr. spends the day at his golf course in Bedminster, ogling the ladies of the LPGA. as they tee up their shots. Don’t they look good bending over to putt! Don’t you wish you could grab one by the… 

No, restrain yourself, Orange Leader!

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7/16/17 The president starts tweeting at 5:35 a.m.: “HillaryClinton can illegally get the questions to the Debate & delete 33,000 emails but my son Don is being scorned by the Fake News Media?”  

He’s mad because polls show his approval ratings are low: “The ABC/Washington Post Poll, even though almost 40 % [approval] is not bad at this time, was just about the most inaccurate poll around election time!” 

It’s easy to check polls on RealClearPolitics. They’re all bad for Trump because Americans grow weary watching him behave like an ass.

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7/17/17: Trump campaign promises keep dropping dead like Napoleon’s soldiers during the retreat from Moscow in the winter of 1812. Not that we want to keep bringing up Russians. Remember the nuclear deal with Iran? Trump called it the worst deal ever made, by any country, including any deal involving any king or queen of Westeros. He would scrap that deal as soon as he sat down in the Oval Office. Who said so? Candidate Trump! Also, his sidekick, Vice President Jesus. “When Donald Trump becomes president of the United States of America,” Mike Pence told a cheering crowd at a rally, “we’re going to rip up the Iran deal!” 

Oddly enough, once in office, the Trump administration discovers the deal is working, not perfectly, of course, but enough to keep Iran from developing nuclear weapons. In May, and for a second time this day, the president recertifies the treaty, indicating to Congress it remains valid.

 

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MEANWHILE: DON JR. is in a pickle. He’s no sleazebag, his dad insists. Trump Sr. tweets: “Most politicians would have gone to a meeting [with Russians] like the one Don jr attended in order to get info on an opponent. That’s politics!” 

Actually, it could be colluding with an enemy nation. Keep investigating, Bob Mueller. Keep up the good work!

 

BLOGGER’S NOTE: The president spends the next two years denying anyone in his campaign ever met with Russians in hopes of gaining information that would swing the election in his direction. Then, asked if he’d take foreign help in 2020, if offered, Trump says he would. Of course, he would. Wouldn’t anyone? See: 6/12/19.)

Thursday, June 2, 2022

August 11-12, 2018: President Trump Hires Terrible People - Says President Trump

 

8/11/18: Trump is enjoying what the White House calls a “working vacation” at his private golf club in Bedminster. 

Of course, a Trump “working vacation,” is hard to distinguish from an ordinary Trump “workday.” We know the president has already spent a fourth of his time in office at his private clubs. 

 

Trump fires a “lowlife” he hired. 

Also, Trump’s “work” seems to consist of tweeting angry denials about having colluded with Russians and hurling insults at people he hired. First, there’s Omarosa, former star of The Apprentice. For some reason, she was awarded a place on the White House staff. (Cost to taxpayers: $179,700 a year.) Now, having been fired, she’s about to release a book chronicling life behind the scenes. It’s expected she’s going to say Trump is a racist, a bigot, a misogynist, and a blithering idiot. 

To say that Omarosa is not the most reliable witness, or even a likeable one, would be to understate the case. Still, it’s amusing to consider the president’s response. Asked Saturday if he felt betrayed by his reality-star friend, Trump placed an open hand at the side of his mouth, as if to keep a secret. With the cameras running he muttered: “Lowlife. She’s a lowlife.”

 

The president wasn’t just mad at one lowlife who had written a book. (It’s titled Unhinged, if you want to rush right out and secure a copy.) He was furious with several people he hired. After lunch, Trump was on the attack again. This time his target was Jeff Sessions, the man he selected to head the Department of Justice. 

Another pair of tweets was required: 

The big story that the Fake News Media refuses to report is lowlife Christopher Steele’s many meetings with Deputy A.G. Bruce Ohr and his beautiful wife, Nelly. It was Fusion GPS that hired Steele to write the phony & discredited Dossier, paid for by Crooked Hillary & the DNC....

 

....Do you believe Nelly worked for Fusion and her husband STILL WORKS FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF “JUSTICE.” I have never seen anything so Rigged in my life. Our A.G. is scared stiff and Missing in Action [emphasis added]. It is all starting to be revealed - not pretty. IG Report soon? Witch Hunt! 

 

So, there it was. Trump says it’s a witch hunt although his F.B.I. director says it’s not (see: 8/5/18). Omarosa is a lowlife – but Trump put her on his White House staff. Jeff Sessions is a coward – and he picked him, too.

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8/12/18: The president has no public events scheduled for the day. He’s still on vacation at Bedminster.

Wednesday, April 13, 2022

April 12, 2020: The New York Times Outlines Early Steps to Handle the Coronavirus Crisis

 

4/12/20: A quiet Easter passes. Even churches are closed until the coronavirus abates. The Pope delivers a sermon to Catholics round the world on the “contagion of hope,” but speaks from a nearly empty St. Peter’s Basilica. Like many good Christian leaders, Pastor Greg Ball of Destiny Church Naples in Naples, Florida holds a drive-in Easter service. “What we’re doing is practicing social distancing,” he tells a reporter, “asking everyone to stay in their cars and to separate with a good distance between them.”

 

Members of the congregation listened to his sermon on the radio. Some offered praise while standing in open sunroofs. “My heart was filled with so much joy,” Ball said afterwards. “Everyone waving to each other in the cars and smiling.”

 

So that was all good.

 

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Patriots gather to hug and shake hands and cough in each other’s faces.

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One man who insisted on exercising his right to gather people together in clusters and scoff at the possibility of infection, was Ammon Bundy, in Idaho. This is the same Mr. Bundy who led an armed occupation of a wildlife refuge in Oregon to protest federal overreach. He had pledged to hold a nondenominational Easter service in a venue holding up to 1,000 people.  

Because, let’s face it, nothing says “I am exercising my freedoms,” quite like gathering people together, where they might pass the virus along, and go back out into the world and spread it among family, friends, and innocent bystanders. 

Alas, only 60 “patriots” showed up to hug and shake hands and cough in each other’s faces.


 

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ACROSS THE NATION, and around the world, the toll continued to rise. According to Johns Hopkins University, as of Sunday afternoon the U.S. had 550,016 confirmed cases of COVID-19. Spain stood next, with 166,127. But if we adjust for population, Spain, Italy, France, Germany, and the United Kingdom have all been harder hit, as have a number of smaller countries.

 

As of Sunday, the U. S. had suffered 21,965 deaths.

 

Several states which were slow to issue stay-at-home orders were seeing large increases. Those states included Florida (19,895 confirmed cases), Texas (13,484) and (Georgia 12,452), now ninth, tenth and eleventh worst hit.

 

Washington, once the state with the most cases, has done a good job of slowing the spread, and fell to thirteenth.


 

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MEANWHILE, The New York Times published a scathing report on Saturday, outlining President Trump’s fumbling efforts to deal with the coronavirus threat when it first developed. By Sunday, the Narcissist-in-Chief had digested the article, which meant he spent Sunday raging on Twitter.

 

If you don’t read the Times, you might not know that six reporters worked on the piece (and updated it Monday). They talked to dozens of sources and had access to numerous documents.



 

SUMMARY OF KEY FINDINGS 

In early January, the National Security Council office responsible for tracking pandemics had already received intelligence reports “predicting the spread of the virus to the United States.” Discussion focused on what might have to be done to keep Americans home from work and shut down cities the size of Chicago. 

In early January, Matthew Pottinger, deputy national security adviser, took a call from a longtime friend and Hong Kong epidemiologist. Pottinger had worked in Hong Kong during the SARS epidemic in 2003. 

As the Times explains,

 

Now, seventeen years later, his friend had a blunt message: You need to be ready. The virus, he warned, which originated in the city of Wuhan, was being transmitted by people who were showing no symptoms an insight that American health officials had not yet accepted. Mr. Pottinger declined through a spokesman to comment.

 

Around that same time, the State Department’s epidemiologist warned in a report that the virus was likely to spread across the globe, resulting in a pandemic. 

Pottinger, reporters said, “began convening daily meetings about the coronavirus. He alerted his boss, Robert C. O’Brien, the national security adviser.” 

Trump and his economic advisers continued to focus on keeping the economy booming, and resisted pressing China for more information about the spreading virus, rather than upend chances for a trade deal.

 

January 18: Secretary Azar briefed the president on the coronavirus during a phone call  to Mar-a-Lago. “Mr. Trump,” according to the Times, “projected confidence that it would be a passing problem.” 

(The Times has also tracked Trump’s visits to golf courses, his private resorts, and especially Mar-a-Lago. As of March 9, 2020, he had visited Mar-a-Lago 31 times, and spent a total of 135 days there. Add 90 days spent at his private golf resort in Bedminster, N.J., 85 at Trump International Golf Club, West Palm Beach, Fla., and 76 at Trump National Golf Club, Sterling, Va. The man vacations a lot.)



By this time, Trump has spent 386 days as president at private clubs he owns.

Bedminster, N.J.

  

“I have a great relationship with President Xi.” 

Four days later, while attending the World Economic Forum in Switzerland, Trump sat down for an interview with Joe Kernen of CNBC. 

This exchange followed: 

KERNEN: Before we get started with we’re going talk about the economy and a lot of other things the CDC has identified a case of coronavirus in Washington state. The Wuhan strain of this. If you remember SARS, that affected GDP. Travel-related effects. Do you have you been briefed by the CDC? And…

 

PRESIDENT TRUMP: I have, and…

 

KERNEN: …are there worries about a pandemic at this point?

 

PRESIDENT TRUMP: No. Not at all. And we’re we have it totally under control. It’s one person coming in from China, and we have it under control. It’s going to be just fine.

 

JOE KERNEN: Okay. And President Xi there’s just some talk in China that maybe the transparency isn’t everything that it’s going to be. Do you trust that we’re going to know everything we need to know from China?

 

PRESIDENT TRUMP: I do. I do. I have a great relationship with President Xi [emphasis added, unless otherwise noted]. We just signed probably the biggest deal ever made. It certainly has the potential to be the biggest deal ever made.

 


So: the president isn’t worried, and President Xi of China is his pal.


 

January 28: A senior medical advisor at Veteran’s Affairs warns colleagues in an email about the new coronavirus. “Any way you cut it,” he says, “this is going to be bad. The projected size of the outbreak already seems hard to believe.”

 

Health experts are reluctant to shut down air travel to and from China, which will cut any contacts health officials from the two countries might have.

 

 

“It is still possible to interrupt virus spread.”

 

January 30: Dr. Anthony Fauci, Dr. Redfield, head of CDC, and others call Secretary Azar. They have changed their minds and believe a travel ban should be put in place with China.

 

The World Health Organization declares a global public health emergency. “The Committee believes that it is still possible to interrupt virus spread,” they explain, “provided that countries put in place strong measures to detect disease early, isolate and treat cases, trace contacts, and promote social distancing measures commensurate with the risk. 

The Centers for Disease Control reports the first confirmed case of person-to-person transmission inside the United States.

 

In a phone call to the president on January 30, Secretary Azar warns that a pandemic is possible. Trump agrees to a travel ban, but tells Azar to stop panicking.


 

January 31: The travel ban on China is issued.

 

Here, an aside from the blogger seems in order: Trump has insisted he made all the right calls. He consistently cites imposition of the travel ban as the critical decision.

 

Unfortunately, it would be another six weeks before he was ready to admit publicly that the U.S. was confronting a colossal danger. It was as if, after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, Franklin D. Roosevelt had waited until February 18 to ask Congress to declare war.

 

In the next six weeks the war against the coronavirus was nearly lost. On February 5, for example, Derek Kan, a senior official from the White House Office of Management and Budget, told a group of senators that the Trump administration had all the money needed to combat the spread of the disease. 

“Just left the Administration briefing on Coronavirus,” Senator Christopher S. Murphy, a Democrat, wrote in a tweet shortly after. “Bottom line: they aren’t taking this seriously enough.”

 

February 10: At a rally in Manchester, New Hampshire, President Trump tells a crowd of adoring, but-science-challenged fans, he isn’t worried about the coronavirus. 

And by the way, the virus, they’re working hard, looks like by April, you know in theory when it gets a little warmer it miraculously goes away. I hope that’s true. But we’re doing great in our country. China, I spoke with President Xi and they’re working very, very hard. and I think it’s going to all work out fine.” 

 

“We were flying the plane with no instruments.” 

February 14: Secretary Azar announces the federal government will create a “surveillance” system in five U.S. cities to, in the words of the Times, “measure the spread of the virus and enable experts to project the next hot spots.” The system ends up being delayed for several weeks. 

That same day, Dr. Robert Kadlec, the top disaster response official at the Health and Human Services Department, puts out a memo. He details what drastic measures to slow the spread of the disease might look like. Titled “U.S. Government Response to the 2019 Novel Coronavirus,” it lists steps that might become necessary:

 

…significantly limiting public gatherings and cancellation of almost all sporting events, performances, and public and private meetings that cannot be convened by phone. Consider school closures. Widespread “stay at home” directives from public and private organizations with nearly 100% telework for some.

 

In days to follow the government botches early testing. The first test kits sent out don’t even work. 

In the words of one official, “We were flying the plane with no instruments.”

 

By the third week in February, top public health experts had decided to recommend a new approach to the growing threat. The American people, they planned to tell the president, should be urged to observe social distancing rules, and stay home from work. 

When Dr. Kadlec, called for a meeting of the White House coronavirus task force on February 21, “his agenda was urgent.” (The Times had a copy of the agenda to use in writing the article). It was already clear, Kadlec believed, that it was going to be necessary to lock down the country to prevent the virus from spreading. 

The only real question was: When? 

 

“People are carrying the virus everywhere.” 

February 23: Dr. Kadlec learned that a 20-year-old Chinese woman had infected five relatives even though she had never displayed symptoms. That meant Americans who appeared healthy could be spreading the virus. “Is this true?!” Dr. Kadlec wrote back to the researcher who had warned him. “If so we have a huge whole [sic] on our screening and quarantine effort.” 

Her response was blunt: “People are carrying the virus everywhere.” 

This isn’t “Fake News.” Reporters for the Times had the emails.

 

Trump was traveling in India at the time. But on February 24, Dr. Kadlec and a team of other experts made up their minds to present Mr. Trump with a plan titled “Four Steps to Mitigation” when he returned. 

The next day, however, Dr. Nancy Messonier, director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, publicly issued the blunt warning they had all agreed was necessary. 

The stock market started to drop. When Trump returned from his trip, he was furious. The health experts decided to cancel the meeting.

 

On February 26, Trump did select Vice President Pence to head up the White House coronavirus task force. 

February 27: President Trump wasn’t exactly laser-focused on the threat from the virus. Instead, he decided to meet with African American leaders at the White House. That is, African American leaders like “Diamond and Silk,” who would gladly smooch his posterior. 

(You’d almost think Mr. Blogger was making it up. But we have the video!)



With Pence and his staff in charge, the Times says, “the focus was clear: no more alarmist messages. Statements and media appearances by health officials like Dr. Fauci and Dr. Redfield would be coordinated through Mr. Pence’s office.” 

On March 6, Trump told reporters that the coronavirus crisis was “an unforeseen problem.” So, you couldn’t blame him! 

Five days later, the president told a group of bankers,We’re having to fix a problem that, four weeks ago, nobody ever thought would be a problem.” 

March 10: Trump is still pushing the idea that a wall on the border with Mexico will help stop the spread of the coronavirus. “Going up fast,” he tweets. “We need the Wall more than ever!” 

 

Your house is still going to burn down. 

March 11: The president speaks to the American people in an Oval Office address. He announces a travel ban to and from 26 countries in Europe. He does not call for school closures or stay-at-home orders. Nor does he suggest social distancing. 

Various health officials and even Trump’s former Homeland Security Adviser Tom Bossert react to his speech in a series of emails. 

They all know the virus is spreading internally and spreading fast. Shutting off travel from outside no longer matters. It’s as if your house were burning down and you decided to post no trespassing signs on the corners of your property. Your house is still going to burn down. 

The Times has emails:


 

The president was still focused on keeping the economy going strong. Rather than heed the health experts, he reached out to investors like Stephen A. Schwarzman, the chief executive of Blackstone Group. 

What did Schwarzman think he should do? 

It required a tense Oval Office meeting a few days later to overcome the resistance of the president and his economic advisers. The health experts called for stern measures to stop the spread. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin balked. The economy would tank. According to the Times, “Mr. O’Brien, the national security adviser, who had been worried about the virus for weeks, sounded exasperated as he told Mr. Mnuchin that the economy would be destroyed regardless if officials did nothing.” 

According to the Times, three individuals played the biggest role in swaying a stubborn president. They were Dr. Scott Gottlieb, the former commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, Dr. Deborah L. Birx, who the president likes because he thinks she’s “elegant,” and Vice President Pence. 


March 16: President Trump announces guidelines calling for two weeks of social distancing. 

The next day, during what has since become a daily press conference, the president made a stunning announcement. “This is a pandemic,” he said, which wasn’t stunning at all. That was obvious. “I felt it was a pandemic long before it was called a pandemic,” he added. That was the stunning part. 

The brazenness of his lie.

Tuesday, April 5, 2022

August 7, 2020: Unemployment Highest since 1983

 

8/7/20: The Bureau of Labor Statistics announced today that 1,783,000 jobs were “added” to the U.S. economy in July. That marked the third month in a row, jobs “added” since the pandemic caused the economy to implode. 

In Trumpian circles this was cause for joyous celebration – followed by presidential bragging. A deeper dive, however, would put an end to self-congratulation. The unemployment rate remains at 10.2%. The last time the rate was higher was March 1983, when it stood at 10.3%.

 



 

Despite those “added” jobs, the Labor Participation Rate ticked down, from 61.5 percent in June to 61.4 percent in July. When an individual stops searching for work the Bureau of Labor Statistics drops them from the ranks of the unemployed. A lower percentage of Americans are working now than on the day Trump took office. 

That didn’t stop the president from heading for his private golf resort in Bedminster, New Jersey for the weekend. Safe among his superrich pals, there would be no need to worry about ordinary folk out of work.

 

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TRUMP ALSO FOUND TIME to gather several dozen rich buds at his resort, and invite them to a hastily-arranged press conference. There they had an opportunity to boo members of the free press for asking questions. Both Trump’s friends and the long-suffering reporters who follow him were treated to another one of the president’s rambling discourses, though he did manage to say that he was all for social distancing, mask-wearing, and regular washing of one’s hands. 

The problem, as reporters noted, was that Trump’s pals, including children, were clustered together like grapes on the vine. 

Not till the free press started tweeting out photos did Trump aides decide to pass out masks, and only then did a few of Trump’s fat cat friends put them on. 

Meanwhile, the president said again that the coronavirus “would disappear” and don’t you worry!

 

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THE CDC REPORTED that while the president played golf and his friends booed practitioners of the First Amendment, the nation piled up another

 

62,042 cases of COVID-19.