is Let's Fix This Country | Articles on national issues, politics, foreign policy, and the culture
Let's Fix This Country

 governance

Trump’s Answer to Weather Disasters: Shut FEMA down.

He has a much cheaper plan.

President Trump has said that he intends to put an end to FEMA, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, after the current hurricane season ends. With 119 dead and 173 missing as this is written, and catastrophic damage inflicted on the hill country area of Texas, one would think he’d have second thoughts.

He had come to that conviction in January when he visited Asheville in North Carolina where in late September of last year Hurricane Helene had wrought devastation never experienced by the mountain region of the state:

“I’d like to see the states take care of disasters, let the state take care of the tornadoes and the hurricanes and all of the other things that happen. And I think you’re going to find it a lot less expensive. You’ll do it for less than half and you’re going to get a lot quicker response."

It was a stunning notion with no basis whatever in facts, and yet at end-April he appointed 13 people to review FEMA and gave them 180 days to come up with a recommendation.

One of the reviewing panel is Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem who can be counted on to turn thumbs down because that’s what Trump is looking for. She has already disrupted…

 taxes

The Great Budget Baseline Con

What debt? Creative accounting makes it go away.

Republicans now face the dicey task of persuading their voters that the "One Big Beautiful Bill" they've just passed is anything of the sort. Deeply unpopular, Fox News and Quinnipiac polls show an average of 57% of voters are opposed to the OBBB, with only 34% in favor. And when told that it could add $3.5 to $4.0 trillion to the national debt over the next 10 years while cutting $800 billion from Medicaid at a cost of 8-10 million people losing medical coverage, all to preserve the 2017 tax cuts that benefit the wealthy, support of even MAGA Republicans plunges 10% or so in polling. And wait until they discover that no taxes on tips, no taxes on overtime, both have limits, and together with the quadrupled state and local tax deductible, all expire in just three-and-a-half years at the end of Trump's term.

So what are Republicans to do? Step one, attack their own Congressional Budget Office which has always been the go-to source for non-partisan analysis. Several op-eds dug into historical examples of when the CBO got it wrong. "The CBO has a terrible track record of predicting health insurance losses", says the arch-conservative Washington Examiner's editorial board. "Most…

 war

Putin Confronts a “Surprised” Trump with a Dilemma »

"I don't like it, and it better stop" says our president

The Russian president “has gone absolutely CRAZY!”, President Trump tweeted last Sunday on his Truth Social site. Clearly bewildered, he bemoaned, "I've always had a very good relationship with Vladimir Putin of Russia, but something has happened to him”.

Might Trump be coming to the realization that he has been played all along? From the outset he was taken with Putin and made vulnerable thereby. In a Larry King interview in 2013 he said, “I think he's done a really great job of outsmarting our country". In 2015 he predicted, "I think I'd get along very well with Vladimir Putin”. That same year on the phone with “Morning Joe” he said, "He's running his country and at least he's a leader unlike what we have in this country." Putin saw his opportunity and won Trump over by flattery:

"He called me a genius. He said Donald Trump is a genius and he's gonna be the leader of the party and he's gonna be the leader of the world or something. He said some good stuff about me."

Trump took Putin’s word over his own intelligence agencies’ assessment of Russian election interference when he famously said in Helsinki in 2018,

”He just said it's not Russia. I will say this: I don't see any reason why it would be."

And Ukraine? When the Kremlin recognized the independence of two Russian separatist-controlled regions in eastern Ukraine, Trump said the day before Russia invaded,

"So Putin is now saying it's independent, a large section of Ukraine. I said, how smart is that? And he's going to go in and be a peacekeeper. You've gotta say, that's pretty savvy."

article illustration
Ukraine apartment building destroyed in Putin's campaign
against the civilian population.

Weeks ago he even called Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy “a dictator” and said it was Ukraine that started the war. At the United…

 foreign policy

Tariff Turmoil: Agreements with 195 Countries in 90 Days Is Impossible »

On April 9th, President Trump rolled back the high tariff schedule he had announced on April 2nd, his “Liberation Day”, allowing 90 days for the world's 195 countries to come forward to offer concessions for his consideration. In the interim, tariffs worldwide are 10% in almost all cases, but 145% for China.

On May 8th, twenty-nine days into the pause, he announced the first agreement. Great Britain’s tariff would stay at 10%, in return for U.S. access to their markets, specifically mentioning beef, ethanol, and other farm products. It’s a framework; details to be worked out.

It’s hardly a triumph. The United Kingdom is one of the very few with which we have a trade surplus. They buy more from the U.S. than we buy from them. They didn’t need fixing. And it was immediately pointed out that the British market is already wide open to our products, including beef, ethanol, etc.

China said it would not negotiate until the U.S. lowers the 145%.…

Tell your friends about our reports
If you find us informative, why not send a simple email to your address list? Just cut/paste:
"I subscribe to Let's Fix This Country (http://letsfixthiscountry.org) for their reporting and think you might want to subscribe too."
We rely entirely on word of mouth. Yours would be greatly appreciated.

 civil rights

Freedom of Speech, Trump Variant

Contradict him at your peril.

In his March 5th address to a joint session of Congress, President Donald Trump said, “I’ve stopped all government censorship and brought back free speech in America.” He backed that up with an executive order. What he did not say was that his free speech edict does not permit others to say or write what he doesn’t like.

Just before July 4th, Paramount announced it would pay Mr. Trump – his library fund supposedly — $16 million to settle a lawsuit brought by him about the editing of a snip of what Kamala Harris had to say in an interview with the CBS program “60 Minutes”. The suit, filed just before the election for a preposterous $10 billion, would have gone nowhere in court, but Paramount is up for sale to a Hollywood studio run by the son of the world’s third richest person, Larry Ellison, who co-founded Oracle Corporation, and the transaction needs the approval of the federal government.

To the extent that the broadcast journalists and their research and production staffs don't quit in protest, the sellout tarnishes the reputation and future credibility of “60 Minutes”, an institution that has been on air since 1968.

the official verdict

It doesn’t stop with CBS. Mr. Trump has now threatened to sue The New York Times and CNN for…

 the presidency

Immunity Wasn’t Enough. Supremes Void Checks and Balances for Trump.

article illustration
Last July, in the final decision of its term, the Supreme Court conferred immunity from prosecution on the U.S. president for any official act he might take, no matter if illegal. We wrote, "This Court has bestowed immunity on the one potential president most likely to commit illegal acts."

How true. As soon as Trump took office, he set about issuing a tsunami of executive orders, many of which broke laws. In response to lawsuits, a host of district court judges issued nationwide injunctions to block Trump's actions until the suits play out at trial.

So now what's happened? On Friday, the Court took a major step to doubly empower the president, winding up the current term by stripping the judges' presumptive power to issue universal injunctions.

off leash

The 6-to-3 decision thereby frees all of the president's decrees to go forward, legal or not. Gone are the checks and balances of the Constitution's grand design to forever prevent the newly formed United States from ever becoming a monarchy. There's nothing left to control the king. Certainly not Congress. The Republicans control both…

 woke purge

»

article illustration
Bill Bramhall, New York Daily News

"And maybe Pete Hegseth named the B2 that dropped the bomb on Fordow "Enola Straight" (Bill Maher).

 the president's military

Court Gives Trump License to Militarize U.S. Cities Against Protests »

On Thursday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit overturned a lower court's order that California's National Guard be returned to Governor Gavin Newsom's control, ruling that President Trump was justified in federalizing the state's Guard without Newsom's concurrence.

The three-judge panel, two of them Trump appointees, ruled unanimously that the protests over ICE agents seizing brown-skinned people off the streets of Los Angeles had become overheated enough that "affording appropriate deference to the president’s determination" is warranted, "that he likely acted within his authority (italics ours)".

article illustration
President Trump exulted in the decision, insulting the governor in the process, tweeting:

"The judges obviously realized that Gavin Newsom is incompetent and ill prepared, but this is much bigger than Gavin because all over the United States, if our Cities, and our people, need protection, we are the ones to give it to them should State and Local Police be unable, for whatever reason, to get the job done. This is a great decision for our Country..." (capitalization his).

This has been his dream, not to govern, but to rule. The doctrine of states' rights is not for him. Trump has long desired to use the United States military against the American people. Restrained by advisers who told him he needed to wait for governors to ask for federal help, he has regretted not taking direct action against the Black Lives Matter protests in 2020. "The next time, I am not waiting” to send in…

If you find LetsFixThisCountry interesting please spread the word