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Eric Trump Thinks It'd Be Very Uncool of Deutsche Bank to Narc on His Dad Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=44994"><span class="small">Bess Levin, Vanity Fair</span></a>   
Thursday, 18 April 2019 08:25

Levin writes: "One of the great mysteries of the business world is why Deutsche Bank lent financial parasite Donald Trump more than $2 billion over two decades when other firms treated him like the bubonic plague."

Eric Trump. (photo: Ben Nelms/Bloomberg)
Eric Trump. (photo: Ben Nelms/Bloomberg)


Eric Trump Thinks It'd Be Very Uncool of Deutsche Bank to Narc on His Dad

By Bess Levin, Vanity Fair

18 April 19


Two House committees have subpoenaed the lender for all the information it has on the president and the bank appears poised to turn it over.

ne of the great mysteries of the business world is why Deutsche Bank lent financial parasite Donald Trump more than $2 billion over two decades when other firms treated him like the bubonic plague. It’s a riddle Democrats regularly attempted to solve during Trump’s first two years in office, but were unsuccessful in their pursuit because 1) the bank wasn’t talking, and 2) Republicans who’d effectively pledged to take a bullet for the president were controlling Congress and refused to help their colleagues subpoena the information they were seeking. Thanks to the results of the midterm elections, though, times have changed!

On Monday, the House Intelligence and Financial Services committees issued a subpoena to Deutsche Bank demanding information about the German lender’s famous client, as well as documents related to “possible money-laundering by people in Russia and Eastern Europe.” In a statement, Financial Services chairwoman Maxine Waters said that “the potential use of the U.S. financial system for illicit purposes is a very serious concern,“ and that her panel is “exploring these matters, including as they may involve the president and his associates, as thoroughly as possible pursuant to its oversight authority.” According to The New York Times, the subpoena had been in the works for several months, with congressional investigators working with the bank’s lawyers on specific demands. Deutsche reportedly argued that the scope should be narrowed to make it “easier and faster” for the bank to turn over the documents, a turn of events that is unlikely to please anyone in the Oval Office.

Trumpworld has responded predictably. Alan Garten, the Trump Organization‘s lawyer, said the family business was weighing its options for how to block the bank from complying with the request, while Eric Trump got extremely snippy about the whole thing, calling the subpoena “an unprecedented abuse of power and simply the latest attempt by House Democrats to attack the president and our family for political gain,” adding that is “set[s] a horrible precedent for all taxpayers.” A spokeswoman for Deutsche said the company was “engaged in a productive dialogue” with the committees and “remain[s] committed to providing appropriate information to all authorized investigations in a manner consistent with our legal obligations.”

Last month, a lengthy story by reporter David Enrich shed some light on the relationship between Trump and Deutsche Bank, which for many years had a “ravenous appetite for risk” that resulted in its executives ignoring repeated, glaring red flags from the ex-real-estate developer and going along with his cornucopia of financial lies, including his habit of inflating his assets. By the time Trump was elected, the powers that be at the bank, having apparently been asleep for the past two decades, reportedly uttered a collective Dear God, what have we done as they realized they had somehow “become the biggest lender to the president-elect.” Who, by the by, currently owes the bank a cool $340 million, making Deutsche Trump’s biggest creditor.

The House panels are not the only entities exploring the curious case of Trump’s relationship with Deutsche Bank. Last month, New York attorney general Letitia James, who has vowed to make Trump’s life a living hell, issued a subpoena to the German lender seeking information about loans it made to the president, before he became president.

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Trump Delivers Another Blow to Obama Policy, Announces Limits on Travel to Cuba Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=32183"><span class="small">Stephen A. Crockett Jr., The Root</span></a>   
Thursday, 18 April 2019 08:25

Crockett writes: "The Obama administration sought to thaw relations with Cuba, but the Trump administration is continually pushing to undo Obama's legacy and has decided to step on Cuba to hurt Cuban ally Venezuela, which the U.S. can't stand."

A vintage American car passes beneath a mural of Che Guevara in Revolution Square in Havana, Cuba. (photo: Phil Noble/Reuters)
A vintage American car passes beneath a mural of Che Guevara in Revolution Square in Havana, Cuba. (photo: Phil Noble/Reuters)


Trump Delivers Another Blow to Obama Policy, Announces Limits on Travel to Cuba

By Stephen A. Crockett Jr., The Root

18 April 19

 

n what can only be considered a continuous effort by the Donald Trump administration to undo former president (and best president to ever do it) Barack Obama’s legacy, National Security Adviser John Bolton has declared that Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua are the three wheels on the tricycle of socialism while announcing new sanctions against the Latin American countries.

From the Miami Herald:

The Trump administration is tightening restrictions on travel and remittances to Cuba, reversing the engagement policies of the Obama era while increasing pressure on the island’s government in response to its support of the Nicolás Maduro regime in Venezuela.

“In no uncertain terms, the Obama administration’s policies toward Cuba have enabled the Cuban colonization of Venezuela today,” National Security Advisor John Bolton said Wednesday during a speech at the Biltmore Hotel in Coral Gables. The changes were designed to reverse “the disastrous Obama-era policies, and finally end the glamorization of socialism and communism,” he added.

In layman’s terms, Bolton stated: “My boss doesn’t like Obama so he’s asked me to do this.”

Not only will travel be restricted to family visits to Cuba, the Herald notes that the new proposal might also end cruises to the island that became popular during the Obama years.

Oh, and for some reason, most likely because petty, the administration has also limited the amount of money that people living in the United States can send back to relatives in Cuba, to $1,000 per person every three months. Which means that four-year-olds will be sending money home once their family has used up their limits. There is always a workaround.

“Bolton, in a speech in Florida to veterans of the Bay of Pigs invasion, also announced sanctions on the Central Bank of Venezuela and financial services provider Bancorp, which he labeled a ‘slush fund’ for Nicaragua’s President Daniel Ortega,” Associated Press reports.

“The United States looks forward to watching each corner of this sordid triangle of terror fall: in Havana, in Caracas, and in Managua,” he said.

The Obama administration sought to thaw relations with Cuba, but the Trump administration is continually pushing to undo Obama’s legacy and has decided to step on Cuba to hurt Cuban ally Venezuela, which the U.S. can’t stand. In the Real Housewives of Atlanta of it all, if the U.S. is Porsha then Venezuela is Nene.

Basically, Cuba is full of brown people and the Trump administration doesn’t care about brown people. Earlier this month, Trump’s goons overturned an Obama administration decision to allow Cuban players to join Major League Baseball teams without defecting.

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Putin Almost Done Redacting Mueller Report Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=9160"><span class="small">Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Wednesday, 17 April 2019 13:10

Borowitz writes: "After putting in what one associate called a 'hellish all-nighter,' the Russian President, Vladimir Putin, is almost finished redacting Robert Mueller's report in time for its release, on Thursday."

Vladimir Putin. (photo: Alexei Nikolsky/AP)
Vladimir Putin. (photo: Alexei Nikolsky/AP)


Putin Almost Done Redacting Mueller Report

By Andy Borowitz, New Yorker

17 April 19

 

The article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column, "The Borowitz Report."


fter putting in what one associate called a “hellish all-nighter,” the Russian President, Vladimir Putin, is almost finished redacting Robert Mueller’s report in time for its release, on Thursday.

Earlier in the week, the U.S. Attorney General, William Barr, submitted the approximately four-hundred-page document to Putin for his approval, but the Russian President was reportedly “in a state of disbelief” over how much Barr had failed to redact.

Quickly assembling a crisis team at the Kremlin to implement further redactions, Putin told his associates, “Put some coffee on, boys—it’s going to be a long night.”

Although Putin is said to be satisfied that his redactions have rendered the Mueller report meaningless, he resents that the important task of obliterating damning evidence fell to him. “I have to do everything for these people,” he reportedly said.

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FOCUS: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=47382"><span class="small">Elizabeth Warren, TIME</span></a>   
Wednesday, 17 April 2019 12:12

Warren writes: "The year 2008 was a reckoning. While millions of Americans lost their livelihoods to Wall Street's greed, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez lost her dad to lung cancer, and her family fell off a financial cliff."

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. (photo: Time)
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. (photo: Time)


Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez

By Elizabeth Warren, TIME

17 April 19

 

he year 2008 was a reckoning. While millions of Americans lost their livelihoods to Wall Street’s greed, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez lost her dad to lung cancer, and her family fell off a financial cliff. She watched as our government bailed out Wall Street while it ignored families like hers. She learned the hard way that in America today, Washington protects the powerful while leaving hardworking people behind.

Her commitment to putting power in the hands of the people is forged in fire. Coming from a family in crisis and graduating from school with a mountain of debt, she fought back against a rigged system and emerged as a fearless leader in a movement committed to demonstrating what an economy, a planet and a government that works for everyone should look like.

A year ago, she was taking orders across a bar. Today, millions are taking cues from her. She reminds all of us that even while greed and corruption slow our progress, even while armies of lobbyists swarm Washington, in our democracy, true power still rests with the people. And she’s just getting started.

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FOCUS: Bernie Sanders and the Science of Smears Print
Wednesday, 17 April 2019 10:44

Taibbi writes: "The practice of painting dissident challenges as selfish, hypocritical acts - as opposed to the selfless altruism of corporate-funded candidates - has been going on forever."

Democratic presidential candidate U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I -VT) attends the National Action Network's annual convention on April 5, 2019 in New York City. (photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
Democratic presidential candidate U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I -VT) attends the National Action Network's annual convention on April 5, 2019 in New York City. (photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images)


Bernie Sanders and the Science of Smears

By Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone

17 April 19


The media’s focus on personality is designed to shift attention away from dangerous ideas

he satirist Ambrose Bierce, author of the Devil’s Dictionary, once defined radicalism as “the conservatism of tomorrow injected into the affairs of today.”

What Bierce wittily captured — that today’s radicals are tomorrow’s normies — means that at any given moment, the current political establishment will be fighting off the inevitable.

The Brahmins of today don’t battle with ideas, because as Bierce pointed out, their belief systems are usually regressive and unpopular, only they don’t know it yet. The battle is almost always waged instead over personality, because while certain “radical” ideas may be unstoppable, individual politicians are easily villainized, delaying change — a little.

Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders made headlines this week by taking on the Center for American Progress, long known as a messaging arm of the mainstream Democratic Party. Sanders wrote a letter criticizing the CAP board for playing a “destructive role” in the “critical mission to defeat Donald Trump,” a critique seemingly crafted in response to recent efforts by ThinkProgress, a news site founded by CAP, to paint Sanders as a hypocrite for being a millionaire author.

The Sanders letter to CAP formalized the rift between the Democratic establishment and the labor-based movement of millions Sanders represents. That we’re talking about a petty PR battle and not the hardcore disagreement about policy and (especially) campaign funding sources that created this divide is Exhibit A proving the old propaganda method is still working.

The practice of painting dissident challenges as selfish, hypocritical acts — as opposed to the selfless altruism of corporate-funded candidates — has been going on forever. Long before Sanders was framed as a thin-skinned, cranky narcissist who’s “all about himself,” Dennis Kucinich went through the same thing.

Kucinich was/is living proof of the Bierce aphorism. When he announced his run for president in October of 2003, the Ohio congressman “stood up against corporate interests,” promised to revoke NAFTA, endorsed decriminalization of marijuana, called for universal health care and trumpeted “amnesty and legalization for illegal immigrants.”

He was the only candidate promising to withdraw troops from Iraq, and in those jingoistic years after 9/11, he not only brought an imam on stage for his launch, he took a shot at Columbus Day. From the New York Times account:

“The Cleveland event had a tailored multicultural appeal, starting out with prayers from a rabbi, an imam and a Baptist preacher. The speakers were racially diverse, and Mr. Kucinich took a moment to acknowledge the American Indian communities on Columbus Day.”

Many of these ideas are now blue-state orthodoxy. “Universal health care” is an official goal of the Democratic Party, even if the party doesn’t mean it in the same way Kucinich did. He was right about Iraq — he was the only one right about Iraq in that field — and significant parts of the electorate are beginning to suspect he was right about NAFTA, the legalization of marijuana and a bunch of other things.

Kucinich may even have been ahead of the curve on Columbus Day: four states and 50 cities now celebrate “Indigenous Peoples’ Day” instead.

But back in the 2000s, when Kucinich still had a small voice in national politics, he was routinely denounced as something worse than a radical: a kook, nut and egomaniac. I covered both of the Kucinich runs for the presidency and saw how frustrated he became over time as his ideas were ignored and his campaigns were denounced as indulgences.

What little coverage he got tended to be stuffed below the fold, and focused on him as a “lower-tier” eccentric, a vegan who dabbled in ventriloquism, wore wing-tips and was too short (the standard modifier attached to him was “elfin,” as in “the elfin peace candidate”).

Reporters from 2008 will remember the “hot mic” debate exchange between Hillary Clinton and John Edwards, when the contenders whispered about thinning a field of eight that included Kucinich and Mike Gravel.

“We should try to have a more serious… smaller group,” Edwards offered, leading to the following exchange:

Clinton: Well, we’ve got to cut the number, because they are just being trivialized.
Edwards: They are not serious.
Clinton: No.

About the seriousness: when asked later that year by Wolf Blitzer why he was the only candidate who’d had a chance to vote on the Patriot Act to vote against it, Kucinich shot back, “Because I read it.” He was probably right that none of the others had.

But he was seen as the unserious one. By 2010, when he was opposing the Affordable Care Act for many of the same reasons driving today’s Medicare-for-All movement, even would-be liberal commentators like Markos Moulitsas were denouncing him. He was a modern Nader, pushing “unrealistic” and “self-defeating” politics, someone who’d never accomplished anything.

The treatment of Kucinich was pure high school. I used to get an unpleasant pang of recognition listening to the cool kids on the press plane laughing at the “lefty elf” who refused to get the hint he wasn’t wanted on the debate stage.

Back when Sanders didn’t seem like a threat to win anything, he got much of the same. He was dismissed as a geek and a wallflower who’d be defined by whether he chose to be a help or a hindrance to the real candidate, Clinton. The New Yorker’s John Cassidy in early 2015 mock-welcomed Bernie to the race, insisting the entrance of the “loner” would be a “plus” for the Clinton campaign, since he would “occupy the space to the left of Clinton, thus denying it to more plausible candidates, such as Martin O’Malley.”

It wasn’t until Sanders started piling up delegates that he began to take on the villainous characteristics for which he is now infamous. After he won primaries in 2016, suddenly reporters ripped him as a divisive narcissist with three houses who was the ideological mirror of Donald Trump, boasting racist, sexist and violent followers.

This was all part of the age-old technique of focusing on the person instead of the ideas or the movement behind them. Sanders wasn’t winning in 2016 because Bernie Sanders is some great stump act — he isn’t. A fair portion of his support was coming from people who were fed up with both parties even before he decided to run.

The easiest way to avoid dealing with uncomfortable truths is to create an ick factor around the politician benefiting from them. That was Sanders in 2016 and it’s still him, mainly. However, Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii have also been pre-emptively dipped in the ick this cycle, cast as crippled politicians whose mere presence in the race will “undermine” Democrats in the end.

Additionally, and I could see it coming even a year ago, politicians benefiting from domestic discontent with the status quo are being denounced as Kremlin favorites as well as selfish agents of division.

On the day Gabbard announced her run for the presidency, MSNBC ran a story claiming Russian-linked social media accounts were pushing a “possible campaign of support” for the Hawaii Democrat. The story was sourced to the firm New Knowledge, which had been caught by the Times faking an almost identical story about Russian trolls and Alabama Republican Roy Moore.

Sanders was described as the Kremlin candidate in the Washington Post just a few days ago. This was unsurprising since the Post was asking as far back as the fall of 2017 how Democrats would respond to Putin playing dirty tricks for Sanders in 2020.

There are people who will protest that descriptions of such Russian activity boosting Sanders are rooted in fact, as efforts to reach his supports are described in Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s indictment of the Internet Research Agency. That’s fine. I would counsel anyone who thinks Russia is responsible for the rise of Sanders or people like Gabbard or Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez should go out and interview voters around the country, especially in remote areas.

The anger toward the political establishment that drives support for such politicians began to be visible over a decade ago, long before Sanders or Gabbard were factors in any kind in national politics.

Those voters aren’t selfish, or hypocrites, or Kremlin favorites, and they’re not going anywhere. What a lot of DC-based reporters and analysts don’t grasp is that if you remove Bernie Sanders from the scene, there will still be millions of people out there mad about income inequality. Remove Gabbard, and discontent about the human and financial costs of our military commitments will still be rampant. Removing Warren won’t cancel out anger about Wall Street corruption.

Covering personalities instead of political movements only delays things for a while. Sooner or later, the conservatism of tomorrow arrives. You can only delay the inevitable for so long.

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