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Donald Trump's Reckless Response to North Korea's Nuclear Test Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=46032"><span class="small">Amy Davidson Sorkin, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Tuesday, 05 September 2017 08:44

Sorkin writes: "Even at a moment of historic crisis, Trump can't shake his bully's instincts: disdain those who you think are weak; home in on and mock the vulnerable; blind yourself to the realities of your own circumstances and character; and pretend that a brawl will make it all better, despite the certainty that it won't."

Donald Trump. (photo: Al Drago/NYT)
Donald Trump. (photo: Al Drago/NYT)


Donald Trump's Reckless Response to North Korea's Nuclear Test

By Amy Davidson Sorkin, The New Yorker

05 September 17

 

t ’s not clear what time Donald Trump, our restless President, was told of the latest North Korean nuclear test, which took place close to midnight Saturday, Washington time, and was that nation’s largest yet—Kim Jong-un’s first hydrogen bomb, apparently. But it only took until 7:30 A.M. for Trump to make an extremely dangerous and volatile situation worse. He did so, in part, by attacking South Korea, America’s ally and a country at risk in any confrontation—its capital, Seoul, home to ten million people, is close to the border, within range of the North’s artillery—for a supposed lack of toughness. Even at a moment of historic crisis, Trump can’t shake his bully’s instincts: disdain those who you think are weak; home in on and mock the vulnerable; blind yourself to the realities of your own circumstances and character; and pretend that a brawl will make it all better, despite the certainty that it won’t.

The first tweet was relatively straightforward: “North Korea has conducted a major Nuclear Test. Their words and actions continue to be very hostile and dangerous to the United States.....” “Major” is an apt word: tremors of the underground test, including an aftershock suggesting the collapse of whatever cave or chamber it was in, were felt in both South Korea and China, and detected as far away as Argentina. North Korea has falsely bragged about the size of its bombs before, and the stage management of this test—a picture of Kim inspecting a mystery weapon, shown on North Korean television hours before—might have signalled that this, North Korea’s sixth nuclear test, was exaggerated. But the seismic measurements indicate that its power is many times that of North Korea’s previous detonations, and also about a half dozen times more powerful than the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima. But, as Trump’s elongated ellipsis suggested, he wasn’t just going to talk about the facts. He had some blame to dole out.

“North Korea is a rogue nation which has become a great threat and embarrassment to China, which is trying to help but with little success,” he tweeted next. And then: “South Korea is finding, as I have told them, that their talk of appeasement with North Korea will not work, they only understand one thing!”

What is that “one thing”? War, missiles, tweets, Trumpism? “Fire and fury like the world has never seen,” as Trump promised to inflict on North Korea last month if the country acted in a hostile manner? (Trump made that threat at an event at which he was supposed to be talking about the opioid crisis, and it had the effect of distracting attention from that situation; similarly, his latest remarks may take necessary attention away from the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey.) It seems to have escaped Trump that matters with North Korea, never good, have deteriorated during his Presidency. What has changed is not the South’s “appeasement” but his heedless will toward escalation. That the people of Seoul, who have built up their city, and, over the years, their democracy, in the face of the spectre of war, might have their own definition of fortitude is an idea that he doesn’t seem able to grasp. (As the Times noted, Trump’s anger at South Korea appears to be connected to his anger over his so far unsuccessful attempt to rewrite trade deals with that nation—an issue that, one hopes, will not be entangled with the question of triggering a nuclear war.) Instead, last week, Trump said that he thought that Kim had begun to show “respect” for him. That boast was followed by North Korea’s firing of a ballistic missile on a flight path that took it over the Japanese island of Hokkaido. Trump responded by tweeting, “The U.S. has been talking to North Korea, and paying them extortion money, for 25 years. Talking is not the answer!” What, again, is Trump’s answer? China, which quickly condemned the test, could certainly do more, but baiting its officials with talk of their “embarrassment” may not be the best mode of persuasion—unless Trump thinks that he has cowed President Xi Jinping into a state of abject respect for him, too.

“Mr. President, will you attack North Korea?” a reporter asked Trump on Sunday morning, as he was leaving church, a couple of hours after his tweets. He answered, “We’ll see.” By then, his national-security team had mustered, to deal with both Kim and, presumably, Trump. In yet another tweet, a little after noon, Trump said, “I will be meeting General Kelly, General Mattis and other military leaders at the White House to discuss North Korea. Thank you.” It is revealing that Trump still classifies John Kelly, his chief of staff, who, like James Mattis, his Secretary of Defense, is retired from the Marines, as a general and a military leader. And was that “Thank you.” directed at them? There are reasons it should be: within an hour of Trump’s rejection of talk last week, Mattis told reporters that “we’re never out of diplomatic solutions.”

Mattis was also asked, in a separate encounter with reporters last week, why he hadn’t quit working for Trump. “You know, when a President of the United States asks you to do something, I come,” he said. “I don’t care if it’s Republican or Democrat; we all have an obligation to serve. That’s all there is to it.” Mattis added that he had had arguments with Trump, he said, but “this is not a man who’s immune to being persuaded, if he thinks you’ve got an argument. So anyway, press on.” Press on, and hope, meanwhile, that President Trump will not press any buttons.

Perhaps Mattis put that proposition to the test in his meeting with Trump Sunday afternoon. Afterward, Mattis emerged to make a brief statement, in which he said that North Korea should be aware that any threat to America or its allies could be met with a “massive military response.” But he also noted that the United States was not a lone enforcer, and that the United Nations had spoken with a “unified voice” in calling for a denuclearization of the Korean peninsula. He hoped that Kim was listening to all of them, “because we are not looking to the total annihilation of a country, namely North Korea. But as I said we have many options to do so.” President Trump, Mattis said, had “wanted to be briefed on each one of them.”


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What Do Dreamers Do Now? Print
Tuesday, 05 September 2017 08:42

Villazor writes: "President Trump is expected on Tuesday to rescind protections for young immigrants who arrived in the United States illegally as children, but with a six-month grace period to let Congress respond."

Dozens of immigration advocates and supporters attend a rally outside of Trump Tower along Fifth Avenue on August 15, 2017, in New York City. (photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
Dozens of immigration advocates and supporters attend a rally outside of Trump Tower along Fifth Avenue on August 15, 2017, in New York City. (photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images)


What Do Dreamers Do Now?

By Rose Cuison Villazor, The New York Times

05 September 17


"At least two things are clear, however. First, the government must continue to treat current DACA recipients as people with deferred action, who should not be removed unless they violate the terms of DACA. The Department of Homeland Security has its own standard operating procedures that specify the process of how one’s particular DACA approval may be rescinded. The government must continue to comply with its own guidelines and not revoke a person’s deferral arbitrarily."

resident Trump is expected on Tuesday to rescind protections for young immigrants who arrived in the United States illegally as children, but with a six-month grace period to let Congress respond. The program, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, grants those who qualify for the program a reprieve from deportation, which they must renew every two years.

The White House claims that DACA, which President Barack Obama announced in 2012 and which has broad bipartisan support, is illegal, but deferred action is a widely accepted legal principle. Over the last five years, DACA has become a core part of America’s immigration landscape: DACA has been granted to more than 800,000 immigrants, allowing them to attend school, work and contribute to their communities. Its repeal would upend the lives not only of these “Dreamers,” as participants are called, but also of their families, co-workers and employers.

Until the White House makes an official announcement, it’s unclear what ending DACA in six months means. Does it mean that individuals can continue applying for DACA in the next six months, and obtain permits that will expire two years afterward? Does it mean that all DACA permits that have been issued will expire in six months, regardless of when the government approved them? Is an employer required to fire a worker in six months because her DACA permit has expired?


READ MORE

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Republicans Will Let America Burn While Holding Out for Tax Cuts Print
Monday, 04 September 2017 13:09

Burmila writes: "They care about the rule of law and the Constitution; they just don't care about them as much as they care about cutting taxes. Again."

As Speaker of the House, Paul Ryan is in a better 
position to do something to rein in Trump than anyone in the country. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
As Speaker of the House, Paul Ryan is in a better position to do something to rein in Trump than anyone in the country. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)


Republicans Will Let America Burn While Holding Out for Tax Cuts

By Ed Burmila, Rolling Stone

04 September 17


The core principle of the GOP is to make the rich richer, and that's more important to its congressional leaders than any U.S. institution

ome prominent Republicans are getting more vocal in their criticism of Donald Trump. Yet from the other side of their mouths, they continue to push for tax "reform" amid the growing chaos. See, they care about the rule of law and the Constitution; they just don't care about them as much as they care about cutting taxes. Again.

Whether he's calling Nazis "fine people," doubling down on nativism by pardoning a xenophobic ex-sheriff, taking a whack at transgender people for the amusement of his rubes or badly lying his way through yet another damning revelation about his Russian connections, Trump has been receiving unprecedented criticism from prominent Republicans. In addition to media favorites like John McCain and Lindsey Graham, House figures like Liberty Caucus chairman Justin Amash are increasingly critical. Even Orrin Hatch – a man with all the aggressiveness of a Keebler elf – has chastised Trump a time or two.

The famously timid Paul Ryan also has made an effort to take a stronger tone with Trump, offering a Charlottesville commentary entitled "Let There Be No Confusion." For a nation that has been wondering where exactly the line is for Trump's fellow Republicans – when they'll stop tolerating the president's authoritarian behavior – this sharper tone seems like a sign that they're tiring of his act.

At the same time, though, Republicans are making it clear that talk is all we are going to get so long as there is any chance of pushing through tax cuts before Trump has a Chernobyl-level meltdown. If the breakdown of the rule of law and the institutions of government troubles them, it doesn't trouble them enough to give up the prospect of getting the wealthiest Americans their 100th tax break of the last four decades. The GOP claims its corporate tax cut from 35 percent to 15 percent will not raise the debt, an assertion that relies upon the repeatedly disproven claim that economic growth will skyrocket after tax cuts. Paul Ryan urges you not to notice that due to extensive loopholes, American corporations currently pay nowhere near the nominal 35 percent rate. Oh, and they're also sitting on $2 trillion in cash, which negates the argument that investment is being held back by the tax rate.

It's good to have priorities.

Ryan is in a better position as Speaker of the House to do something to rein in Trump than anyone in the country. If it bothers him that the president surrounds himself with white supremacists, attempts to convince key senators to obstruct the Russia investigation to his benefit and pardons a guy with a truly horrific record of using the Fourth Amendment as a door mat, Ryan should recognize that he and his large House majority are the Constitution's prescribed remedy for an out-of-control president.

Trump's Republican critics may be sincere. It makes sense they're getting fed up with having to answer for a guy they didn't want as a nominee in the first place. The Trump circus has derailed all attempts to focus on the GOP agenda. So surely at some point they'll tire of him, if for no reason other than self-interest.

Tired or not, though, they cannot break free from the deeply cynical strategy of ignoring what a disaster Trump is for supposed Republican principles like limited government, adherence to the Constitution and defense of the rule of law for as long as they think they can get some of their regressive agenda passed. Ryan's public championing of tax reform amidst a major natural disaster and the ever-worsening revelations about Trump's connections to Russia is almost surreal, a real-life version of the dog in the "This is Fine" meme; just ignore the flames and focus on important things like giving millionaires what they want.

Their priority will not change no matter what Trump does and no matter how many vastly more pressing problems confront the nation. The core principle of the GOP is to make the rich richer, and that is more important to people like Ryan than any of our institutions. As reality dawns on the naively hopeful GOP members who believed they could "manage" Trump, their willingness to keep the nuclear codes in the hands of a giant toddler says a lot about their values.

In their more reflective moments, Republicans may be troubled by what is happening in the White House. Too bad they're not troubled enough to do anything about it. As the great democratic theorist DMX once famously noted, "Talk is cheap, motherfuckers." All the anguished and disapproving tweets in the world don't matter when Republicans are still cynically and selfishly trying to use this unfolding disaster as cover to revive the same discredited economic policies they've been pushing for decades. Soon we'll reach a crossroads where they'll have to choose between the Constitution and making Tax Day easier on the Koch brothers. Their recent words and actions don't inspire much confidence that they'll make the right choice.


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Working Americans Need $15-an-Hour and a Union to Make It in This Economy Print
Monday, 04 September 2017 13:06

Kander writes: "This Labor Day, if working families across the country feel like they're under fire, it's because they are."

Bernie Sanders making a speech for labor rights 
and fair wages. (photo: Getty Images)
Bernie Sanders making a speech for labor rights and fair wages. (photo: Getty Images)


ALSO SEE: Labor Unions Are Trying to
Take Back Politics in the Midwest

Working Americans Need $15-an-Hour and a Union to Make It in This Economy

By Jason Kander, The Hill

04 September 17

 

conomists and folks in Washington and Wall Street tell us that America’s economy is nearly fully recovered. Many point to surging corporate profits and a stock market at record highs, while the latest jobs report touts that unemployment is at a 16-year low. But for too many working families, this news has little actual impact on their lives. With limited shifts, low wages and scarce benefits, it feels almost impossible for many Americans to get their slice of the pie.

This Labor Day, if working families across the country feel like they’re under fire, it’s because they are. Over the last four decades, Republican politicians and their corporate allies have declared open season on America’s workers, doing everything in their power to drive down people’s paychecks by cutting minimum wages and gutting their unions.

Perhaps nowhere is this onslaught on more dramatic display than in my home state of Missouri. Earlier this year, after years of going on strike to raise the minimum wage and protect union rights, workers in St. Louis won a minimum wage increase to $10 an hour, a modest raise, but significant in our state where the minimum wage is just $7.70 an hour.

The Republican legislature and Gov. Eric Greitens (R-Mo.) didn’t blink before trying to undo what so many people in St. Louis had fought for so long. Once the city increased minimum wage to $10 an hour, lawmakers in Jefferson City rushed through a bill stripping cities of their right to set their own minimum wage. Greitens allowed this unconscionable bill to become law, and as a result, the minimum wage in St. Louis went back down to $7.70 an hour last week, literally taking money out of the paychecks of 30,000 St. Louis workers.

No one seriously believes that cutting the minimum wage is good for workers. In fact, just this month, voters on the other side of my state in Kansas City approved a ballot measure by a more than 2-1 margin calling for the city’s minimum wage to go to $15 an hour. Workers and lawmakers in Kansas City now are demanding that Jefferson City politicians get out of the way and let them implement this raise. Missouri Republicans haven’t stopped at cutting the pay of minimum wage workers.

Together they have eviscerated one of the most effective tools for improving the lives of workers: organized labor. State by state, Greitens and other Midwestern governors like Gov. Scott Walker (R-Wis.) have forced through “right to work” laws, a perversely named policy that decimates the ability of workers to bargain collectively and rules that keep workers safe. This law has gotten support of Republican legislatures across the country eager to cash in on corporate campaign funding. Reports are now surfacing about huge “dark money” contributions pouring into anti-worker groups in an effort to defend the “right to work” law Greitens signed earlier this year.

Their plan is working. Just last year, nationwide union membership hit an all-time low. Studies have shown these trends have a devastating impact on working Americans, indicating a direct link between the decline in union membership and the middle class’s falling share of national income. Unions continue to be important for raising the standard of living for working Americans, whether or not they happen to be in a union.

According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, union workers are paid higher wages and enjoy better benefits and working conditions than non-union workers. These advantages extend to their friends and neighbors, as census data show that the middle class earns more in states with higher levels of union membership. On the other hand, wages in right to work states are 3.1 percent lower than those in other states. That means on average, someone working full time is making about $1,500 a year less in right to work states, whether or not they are in a union.

Working people across the country are clamoring for change, not more of the same anti-worker policies that fail to make anything better. To improve the standard of living for working folks, we have to raise the minimum wage and empower workers to fight for their interests in an economic and political system that’s stacked against them. This Labor Day, workers from my hometown of Kansas City and across the country will join together, led by the “Fight for $15” movement, to confront those in power who continue to advance policies that hurt working families.

Whether they’re on Capitol Hill or at the statehouse, politicians are on notice. They must do what they have been elected to do and help improve the lives of those who sent them there. Support for a $15 minimum wage and strong unions isn’t just good for workers, it is also critical to who we are as a country: a nation where all people can stand together to improve the lives of their families and their communities.


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FOCUS | Green Energy Jobs: Top 7 Pieces of Rare Good News for US Workers on Labor Day Print
Monday, 04 September 2017 11:16

Cole writes: "Each day, US workers erect 10 new wind turbines around America. Each creates 44 years of full-time employment."

Solar and wind projects are being built in more places 
around the globe more cheaply than any time in history. (photo: EcoWatch)
Solar and wind projects are being built in more places around the globe more cheaply than any time in history. (photo: EcoWatch)


Green Energy Jobs: Top 7 Pieces of Rare Good News for US Workers on Labor Day

By Juan Cole, Informed Comment

04 September 17

 

ne. The Christian Science Monitor says that in 2016, US solar businesses employed 260,077 workers – up 25 percent from 2015.

2. That is, the solar energy sector alone employs more people than Apple, Google, and Facebook combined!

3. Solar also employs more people in US electricity generation than oil, gas and coal combined!

4. Solar energy sector jobs grew at a rate 17 times faster than the economy in 2016.

5. SC Times reports that wind jobs grew 9 times faster than the economy as a whole in 2016 and adds,

6. “wind turbine technician is the fastest-growing job in the country.”

7. Each day, US workers erect 10 new wind turbines around America. Each creates 44 years of full-time employment. So at an average of 30 years per worker, that is the equivalent of generating over 200,000 full time jobs that last for a lifetime every year.


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