Showing posts with label Larry Kudlow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Larry Kudlow. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 8, 2022

April 18, 2018: The Trump Administration Doesn't Know what the Trump Administration is Doing

  

4/18/18: We learn again today. The Trump administration has no idea what the Trump administration is doing. Sometimes we’re getting out of Syria quick. Sometimes we’re hitting Syria with missiles and talking tough. Most of the time, the president is focused on insulting James Comey and couldn’t care less how many of his own people Bashar al-Assad slaughters. 




Sometimes, U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley says we’re going to increase sanctions on Russia. Sometimes the White House says, yeah, we are. Then the White House says, no, we’re not, and the reason Haley said we were was that Ms. Haley got “confused.” Clearly, this is better than admitting Trump has no idea what he wants. 

Cue the idiocy! 

Out steps National Economic Council Director and Head Presidential Cheerleader Larry Kudlow to explain to reporters. Kudlow chooses to ignore reports that it was the president himself who stomped the brakes and suddenly canceled plans, already announced by the White House, to sanction the Russians. It was easy to sort out, said Larry. Haley “got ahead of the curve. She’s done a great job, she’s a very effective ambassador. There might have been some momentary confusion about that,” he explains. 

Ah, poor Nikki Haley, the little lady – she was the problem – it wasn’t President Bloato’s fault!

 

Clearly, getting blamed for the idiocy of others did not sit well with U. N. Ambassador Haley. “With all due respect,” she replied in a statement obtained by Jake Tapper on CNN, “I don’t get confused.” 

In fact, I think we can already see that any promises that might be made to foreign countries by this president are to be trusted to about the same degree as a Donald J. Trump wedding vow. (See: 4/19/18.)

Sunday, April 17, 2022

March 6, 2020: President Trump Calls Governor of Hard-Hit State a "Snake."

 

3/6/20: Friday was another rough day for Dr. Zero (a.k.a. President Trump). First, the stock market continued to have chills and fell 256 points. 

At the close Friday, the Dow Jones stood at 25,865. That left the Dow, the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite all down at least 10% since February 24, putting them in “correction territory.”



Bite of a poisonous snake.

 

* 

IN THE MEANTIME, the spread of COVID-19 continued to baffle Dr. Zero and his virus-fighting team. New cases popped up in several more states. The total rose to 307, and the death toll to 17. Friday morning, it was announced that Dr. Zero would not be stopping by the headquarters of Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta on his way to Mar-a-Lago for a restful weekend. 

Why no stop, reporters wondered, since the schedule Thursday night said there would be one?

 

____________________ 

“I told Mike not to be complimentary of the governor, because that governor is a snake, okay, Inslee.” 

Dr. Zero

____________________

 

 

The White House explained: “The CDC has been proactive and prepared since the very beginning and the president does not want to interfere with the CDC’s mission to protect the health and welfare of their people and the agency.” 

See. Dr. Zero had the best possible reasons not to stop and disrupt the fine work CDC was doing. 

Then, a change of plans! Not long after the trip was canceled, for the best of reasons, Trump told reporters that the trip might be on again for the best of reasons. “They thought there was a problem at CDC with somebody that had the virus,” Dr. Zero explained. “It turned out negative so we are seeing if we can do it. They’ve tested the person fully and it was a negative test. So I may be going. We’re going to see if they can turn it around with Secret Service. We may be going.” 

And go he did! For the best of reasons. Namely a photo op that might make him look like he was involved.

 

The change, on top of the other change, really did cause confusion at CDC, as officials scrambled to make arrangements. But then, there he was. The great Dr. Zero, laser-focused on the COVID-19 case. At times he asked penetrating questions, like, what did the medical people think of a Fox News town hall he participated in Thursday night? “How was the show last night?” he asked. “Did it get good ratings by the way?” 

Really. He asked. 

Even better, Dr. Zero decided he could help CDC out by talking about the spread of the virus in Washington State, where most of the deaths have occurred. He wanted reporters to spread the word. He had sent Vice President Pence out to the coast to examine the situation firsthand. Pence had met with Gov. Jay Inslee to ask what he might need in the way of help. “All of America’s hearts are with you,” Mr. Pence said. (Mr. Pence actually has a heart, unlike his boss.)

 

To make a point about safety, the VP and the governor elbow-bumped rather than shake hands. Mr. Inslee said that it was nice to know about all those hearts being with the people of his state, but added that doctors needed more testing kits. 

He explained later that the State of Washington would pick up the cost of testing for those who lacked health insurance. State workers’ compensation rules would be adjusted to provide for healthcare workers and first responders who were forced into quarantine as a result of the risks of their jobs. 

Dr. Zero was ready with his own heartfelt response. “I told Mike not to be complimentary of the governor,” Trump told reporters trailing him at CDC, “because that governor is a snake, okay, Inslee. I said if you’re nice to him he will take advantage ... Let me just tell you, we have a lot of problems with the governor, the governor of Washington ... so Mike may be happy with him, but I’m not.” 

Dr. Zero was having a tough week and people weren’t calling him the greatest president ever. And he kept venting.

 

If we came up with a cure today and tomorrow everything is gone and you went up to this governor, who’s not a good governor by the way, if you went up to this governor and you said to him, “How did Trump do?” He’d say, “He did a terrible job.”...it makes no difference.

 

I told Mike that would happen, I said no matter how nice you are, he’s no good, that’s the way I feel.

 

Having vented his fury, the good Dr. Zero was off to Mar-a-Lago yet again, where he would treat any patient who could afford the $450,000 initiation fee to join him at his private club.

 

* 

ALL AROUND THE COUNTRY, the situation was much the same. Gov. Roy Cooper of North Carolina weighed in on the threat. “It’s clear,” he said, that, “North Carolina and other states need more test kits from the CDC.” In fact, he labeled it “a critical need.” Gov. Ned Lamont, of Connecticut, where 18 people had been tested – and 13 cleared – with five cases pending – also said Connecticut needed more kits. Health officials in New York City pleaded for kits, warning that a shortage was impeding their ability to “beat back” the spread of COVID. By Friday night, New York State had 33 confirmed cases, with five patients hospitalized, and 4,000 people in quarantine. 

 

“America should stay at work.” 

Dr. Zero’s economic adviser, Larry Kudlow, insisted everything was going pretty great! “I don’t want to downplay anything,” he said during an appearance on CNBC. “Worry about the effect on human beings, for heaven’s sake. But I’m just saying, let’s not overreact. In many ways, America should stay at work.” 

Cough, cough, cough. 

For good measure, he added, “We don’t actually know what the magnitude of the virus is going to be, although frankly so far it looks relatively contained.” 

Cough!!!!!!

Thursday, April 7, 2022

June 23, 2020: The President Wants Another Critic Locked Up


6/23/20: The bad news keeps piling up. GNC, the health and wellness retailer, announces it will file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, and close 800 to 1,200 stores. There are estimates that 25,000 U.S. stores will close this year. The International Monetary Fund predicts that the global economy will contract by 4.9% in 2020. The estimated recover in 2021 is expected to be weaker than predicted as recently as April. If there’s a major new outbreak of the coronavirus, the recovery will shrivel to nothing.


 

____________________ 

A typical day in Trumpistan. Bend the rule of law. Silence the critics. Protect the felons.

____________________

  

Meanwhile, in a speech to a group called “Students for Trump,” at the packed Dream City megachurch in Phoenix, Arizona, the 3,000 young people in attendance were clearly counting on God to protect them from the virus. Masks were conspicuous by their near-total absence. Social distancing was impossible. 

Trump was happy because people were cheering him again. He told listeners they were the defenders of our culture. He said they would never “kneel to the radical left.” He warned, without citing proof, that Democrats wanted to let everyone vote, “even if they’re not citizens.” The way the virus is spreading lately with Trump getting a large, well-earned share of the blame and the way the polls are running, the Democrats won’t need help from non-citizen voters, even if they did want it. 

(They don’t.)

 

With five months until the election, you never know what will happen. Still, GOP leaders must be sweating. A poll of Montana voters last month showed Trump favored over Biden by five points (45%-40%), in a state he won by 20 four years ago. Even more ominously, if your name is Milksop Mitch McConnell, former Democratic Governor Steve Bullock had a seven-point lead in the same poll, over incumbent U.S. Sen. Steve Daines, 46%-39%.


* 

AND WHAT DAY in Trumpistan is ever complete without fresh evidence that there is no rule of law Trump won’t bend to protect himself and those he loves. Namely: he loves those who protect him. 

Tomorrow, Aaron Zelinsky, one of four prosecutors who quit the Roger Stone case in protest, will tell the House Judiciary Committee that they were pressured to give Stone a break because he was a pal of the president. “What I heard – repeatedly – was that Roger Stone was being treated differently from any other defendant because of his relationship to the President,” the former DOJ lawyer will say in prepared testimony. 

“Zelinsky will appear alongside antitrust prosecutor John Elias, who plans to testify that Attorney General William Barr personally ordered the Justice Department's Antitrust Division to launch politically motivated reviews of 10 cannabis mergers,” Politico reports. Zelinsky’s testimony will be “a stunning – and stunningly rare – public rebuke of Justice Department leadership by a sitting official.” 

Zelinsky will also say that prosecutors were prepared in February to hit Stone with a steep sentencing recommendation. This, they believed, would be merited, due to Stone’s “long-term lying to impede an investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 election, a grave national security matter.”  

Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee will shrug their shoulders, and Rep. Jim Jordan will start yelling about Hunter Biden again. (See: 6/24/20.) Because let’s be honest. They don’t want to know what Stone might really know about the law-breaking efforts of President Trump. 

And Trump supporters won’t have a hint of a clue – that you don’t really want to have a president who cuts people who break the law breaks, so long as they help him break the law too.

 

* 

“Bending the criminal justice system to benefit” the president. 

IT’S NOT JUST Zelinsky and Elias who are deeply worried and fear Attorney General Barr is up to no good. 

Sixty-five law professors and faculty members at George Washington University Law School, Barr’s alma mater, have issued a statement of protest. Barr’s actions as attorney general, they write, “have undermined the rule of law, breached constitutional norms, and damaged the integrity and traditional independence of his office and of the Department of Justice.” 

Among the Attorney General’s sins, they note that he 

obfuscated and misled the American public about the results of the Mueller investigation. He wrongfully interfered in the day-to-day activities of career prosecutors, and continues to do so, bending the criminal justice system to benefit the President’s friends and target those perceived to be his enemies.

 

Finally, they add, “We include members of both major political parties, and of none. We have different legal specialties and represent a broad spectrum of approaches to the law.” 

And in this blogger’s words: They smell a skunk, who works for a bigger skunk. In the White House.

 

The New York City Bar Association chimed in in a letter sent to House and Senate leaders, stating emphatically that Barr is unfit for the “high position he occupies in our federal government” and should step aside.

 

* 

LAST, BUT NOT LEAST, we learn again that Donald J. Dictator has no idea how the First Amendment works. In an interview with Brian Kilmeade, on Fox News (free press working), he calls John Bolton a “stupid guy,” and a guy “with no heart (still the free press working). 

“I fired him. And I didn’t think it was a big deal. And I wasn’t around him very much,” the president said. 

Kilmeade does not bother to ask, “He was your National Security Advisor. Do you mean you didn’t spend any time with the man?” (Kilmeade is the free press not working.) 

“But what he did do is he took classified information, and he published it during a presidency,” Trump insisted, adding: “I believe that he’s a criminal, and I believe, frankly, he should go to jail for that.” 

(Note to Trump fans: Your president really wants to see a lot of critics go to jail.)

 

Later, he vented his spleen in another unhinged tweet. “Washed up Creepster John Bolton is a lowlife who should be in jail,” the President of the United States insisted, “money seized, for disseminating, for profit, highly Classified information.” (Free press dying – if Trump has his way.) 

Practitioners of the free press in this country have every reason to defend themselves and the whole “freedom” concept. 

So it didn’t help when Secretary of State Mike Pompeo backed Trump in his call to jail a critic. 

Pompeo said he had seen “young soldiers” prosecuted for the release of classified information “at a much lower level, who were much more junior” than Bolton. “This is something that has real criminal risk associated with it,” he told conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt. “And for the life of me, I can’t figure out how it’s the case that this can be permitted to stand without a real response.”

 

Oddly enough, during a State Department briefing highlighting the importance of the free press, held via Zoom today, the spokesperson for State takes offense to a reporter’s question about Bolton’s book. 

“AT&T, we can mute that line,” the spokesperson says. 

And they did. 

Later, the spokesperson defended her decision, calling the reporter’s question about the book “offensive.” 

You know. Free press (the reporter) asking about Bolton’s book (more free press involved).

 

Shaun Tandon, the president of the State Department Correspondents’ Association, described the muting of the reporter as “richly ironic” considering the subject matter of the briefing itself. 

“We obviously do not draw any comparison between the conduct on this call and the tactics of the People’s Republic of China,” Tandon wrote in a letter of protest to the spokesperson. “But we believe that muting a reporter’s phone line, and describing a question as ‘offensive’ at the end of a briefing, run counter to the spirit of press freedom and to the professional atmosphere that we have both sought at the Department of State.” 

Yeah. Not in Trumpistan. Sorry. Silence the critics. 

Protect the felons.

 

BLOGGER’S NOTE (7/16/21) I missed this story at the time, but on June 23, 2020, top White House aide Larry Kudlow makes it clear, as for the virus, we have nothing to fear but wearing masks.

 

“There is no second wave coming.” 

He says he’s not worried about a surge of COVID-19 cases. We shouldn’t be either. “There is no second wave coming. It’s just hot spots. They send in CDC teams, we’ve got the testing procedures, we’ve got the diagnostics, we’ve got the PPE. And so I really think it’s a pretty good situation,” he says. 

“There are some hot spots,” he adds. “We’re on it. We know how to deal with this stuff now, we’ve come a long way from last winter.” 

As we now know, this was a truly terrible prediction.

 

BLOGGER’S NOTE #2: The Department of Justice opens a case against Bolton, but in the seven months remaining before Joe Biden takes over, no evidence is ever produced that Bolton revealed classified information in his book. In fact, a review found just the opposite. (See: 9/23/20.) 

The criminal investigation against Bolton is finally closed in June 2021, with no charges lodged against him.

Wednesday, April 6, 2022

July 17, 2020: Sixty-Four Percent Don't Believe the President

 

7/17/20: As a retired teacher, Mr. Blogger hopes schools can open safely in a few weeks. The children would benefit. Parents would breathe a sigh of relief. Many could go back to work. That doesn’t mean it won’t be dangerous for older teachers, janitors, cafeteria workers and others. You also have the grave risk of children passing around infection and carrying it home to families and causing collateral damage.

 

____________________ 

This was the president trying to warp the narrative to suit his twisted intent.

____________________

  

There’s no easy answer. Yet some of the fools who work for Trump claim there is. See, for example: comments by Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos. Or watch the clueless Larry Kudlow, below.


  

What I don’t understand and no rational human being should accept was a decision by Team Trump to block experts from the Centers for Disease Control from testifying before Congress about plans to reopen schools safely. As always, this was the president trying to warp the narrative to suit his intent. He wants schools open because he wants parents back to work. He wants parents back to work because he doesn’t want to be running for reelection with an unemployment rate in double digits. Trump wants to win in November.

He doesn’t care about kids, or school staff, or parents, or how many people die or get sick if reopening goes badly. 

Trump is always in it for himself.

 

More and more Americans have come to realize this. In a new poll 64% of us say we don’t believe what he says when he talks about the virus. Still, 1 in 3 do believe when he talks about scientists “rigging” numbers of deaths and hospitalizations. The president’s problem, and therefor ours, is that he can’t BS his way out of the corner he painted himself into in the early days of the COVID crisis. He can’t call for the kind of controls we need because he mocked those controls. If he changed now, his stark failure would be clear even to his followers. 

That means we’re going to have to ride it out. It won’t be easy. The State of Texas has decided to continue with online school classes until November. Hard hit by a wave of infection, the state has seen 543 people die from the coronavirus in five days. Another 10,632 Texans are hospitalized with COVID-19. 

As long as the virus continues to spread, the country will continue to suffer economic dislocation. Colleges, employees of colleges, and college towns are suffering cascading financial losses. The University of Akron voted last week to lay off one fifth of its unionized work force. The school reorganized 11 academic departments and merged them into five. The University of Michigan cut 40% of the 300 lecturers who carry most of the campus teaching load. Ohio University has had three rounds of layoffs. Experts warn we could see a 15% drop in college enrollments in the fall. That would represent a $23 billion loss of revenue.

 

Towns near national parks face similar damage. Reservations for visitors to Yosemite have been capped. This has led to a major drop in business at nearby towns and inside the park. Twelve thousand workers in Coconino County, home to Grand Canyon National Park, have jobs reliant on tourist flow. The park has 3,500 employees in the summer and 2,500 year-round. Any decline in travel spells trouble. And any visitor from a state where infections are spreading could bring the virus inside the park, resulting in catastrophic economic loss.

 

* 

ON A LIGHTER NOTE, Kanye West says he’s running for president. (I, for one, hope he will make Taylor Swift his running mate.) 

Mr. West may be a bit of a loose musical cannon; but he’d still be a better president than the one we have. 

West says, if elected, he will offer all Americans “free weed” and if anyone has a baby, they will get $1 million.


 

*

 

ON JULY 17, a grim record for the spread of the coronavirus is set with

 

74,710 new cases.

Wednesday, March 30, 2022

October 23, 2020: McConnell Blocks Larger Stimulus Package - Trump Blames Pelosi

 

10/23/20: Day #6 of Character Counts Week and we have two more negative examples for teachers to share!




Who doesn't want a bigger stimulus package?

This guy.


 

____________________

 

More capitalist crooks. A second stimulus plan in the works?

____________________

 


 

If you are a huge fan of President Trump, and you think Antifa and Hunter Biden are the biggest threat to our country right now, you probably haven’t been following these two stories.

 

First, Goldman Sachs, the company that brought you the 2008 financial meltdown, has agreed to pay fines and penalties totaling $5 billion for their role in a massive fraud, perpetrated by government officials in Malaysia. Executives with Goldman thought it would be good business to bribe officials in return for their investing money in a fund Goldman was supposedly creating to help the Malaysian people. This turned out to be a mistake when the bribed officials turned out not to have any scruples and looted the fund to the tune of $6.5 billion.

 

This is not to be confused with the $5 billion fine Goldman paid for touting “high quality” securities they were selling in 2005-2007. Those securities turned out to be worthless when the housing bubble burst. (See: 10/16/20.)

 

Second, if you missed it, Purdue Pharma, makers of oxycontin – guaranteed to end any pain you might be feeling – often forever – has agreed in federal court to pay a fine of $8.3 billion.

 

It’s the price you pay when your company claimed oxycontin was perfectly safe, even for babies, and contributed mightily to an epidemic of drug overdose deaths that has killed 450,000 Americans in twenty years.

 

The Sackler family, which owns Purdue, will now find it harder to hide billions of dollars from state officials suing their ass.


 

*

 

THURSDAY MORNING, it seemed like a second stimulus deal was in the works. The president’s economic advisor, Larry Kudlow, announced that an agreement was shaping up. This package would, according to President Trump, rescue all the people who weren’t part of the greatest economy this nation has ever seen, or will ever see, if the republic lasts for 10,000 years.

 

If Trump gets a second term it won’t even last four.

 

 

“A relatively sunny, optimistic morning.”

 

Ever the optimist (Kudlow predicted in 2007 that the housing bubble Goldman Sachs helped burst was not going to burst), and gazing at the proverbial glass, Kudlow decided it was not half full. It was brimming with fresh trillions Congress would spend, the spending of which Trump would love, love, love to see.

 

After all, once you run up a deficit of $3.1 trillion in Fiscal Year 2020, why not shoot for $4 trillion in FY 2021!

 

In an appearance on CNBC, Larry said it seemed to him like “a relatively sunny, optimistic morning in terms of the negotiations. Things are moving in a favorable direction. I can’t promise anything, but things are getting better, looking better for this.”

 

Friday morning, the situation was unchanged. Democrats had already passed a $2.2 trillion stimulus package and delivered it to the Senate, where Mitch McConnell has the votes to pass it if he wants.

 

President Trump looked at the glass, and told everyone he was in favor of an even bigger glass, filled with more deficit spending.


 

“Let me just explain,” Trump said during an interview on Fox & Friends. “I want to do it even bigger than the Democrats. Not every Republican agrees, but they will [emphasis added]. I want to do it even bigger, because this is money going to people who did not deserve what happened to them.”

 

“I would rather go bigger than that number, but we’ll see,” he added in his usual nonsensical fashion. (None of the three hosts seemed to notice the incongruity, which is part of their job.) Pelosi, he said, “doesn’t want to do anything until after the election, because she thinks it helps her. I actually think it helps us, because everyone knows she’s the one who’s breaking up the deal.”

 

Time for a reality check.


 

Dear Fox News viewers:

 

If you are watching Fox & Friends regularly, you probably can’t see past Ainsley Earhardt’s shapely legs.

 

Speaker Pelosi has already sent over a large package. The president says he wants to go larger, still!

 

How is it possible the fool in the Oval Office can’t work out a deal?

 

                                                                                    Your friend in patriotism,

                                                                                    The Blogger

 

(See below.)


 

*

 

SENATE MAJORITY LEADER Mitch McConnell looks at the same glass, grabs it, and pours the contents down the kitchen sink. He warns the White House not to push for a big bailout until after the election.

 

If a vote were held, a whole bunch of Republican senators would vote against it. Voters, millions of whom are hurting, would get mad.

 

So: Save the senators!

 

Blame Pelosi and move on.

 

In fact, “maybe never” would be the right time to pass a big stimulus bill, if McConnell has his way. Mitch had gazed upon the Democrats’ $2.2 trillion package, and labeled it “outlandish.”

 

Wednesday, we know Trump himself saw the glass, spit in the glass, and handed it back to the American people, via Twitter. “Just don’t see any way Nancy Pelosi and Cryin’ Chuck Schumer will be willing to do what is right for our great American workers, or our wonderful USA itself, on Stimulus,” he groaned. “Their primary focus is BAILING OUT poorly run (and high crime) Democrat cities and states.”

 

Apparently, when he was talking about “our wonderful USA,” he had in mind states and cities were most people voted for him.

 

Then Kudlow said it was a bright, shiny morning.

 

And then, today, a whole lot of nothing from either side. The president known for making deals, fails to get a deal done.


 

The sun sets on Washington, D.C., but Trump is not there to see it go down. He’s off to Mar-a-Lago for the first time in months.

 

Since taking office he has spent 406 days, more than a year’s worth of his first term in office, at properties he owns.