Donald Trump is incessantly irate at Democrats and liberal media for probing his ties and flattering deference to Vladimir Putin, calling it a “Russia, Russia, Russia” obsession and a hoax. In office a little over a month, let’s see what transpired:
Vice President JD Vance went to the Munich Security Conference to tell European governments that their greatest threat was not Russia but “from within” – their migrant problem and curtailment of free speech that shuts out extremist rightwing parties such as AfD.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told a Brussels meeting of almost 50 of
Rob Dobi, Washington Post.
Ukraine’s Western backers that a return to Ukraine’s pre-war borders was “unrealistic,” that NATO membership for Kyiv was off the table, and that…"We're also here today to directly and unambiguously express that stark strategic realities prevent the United States of America from being primarily focused on the security of Europe.”
It was a thunderclap, a reversal of 80 years of American policy in a single stroke.
Hegseth further announced the halt of offensive cyberoperations against Russia by U.S. Cyber Command, notwithstanding Russia’s continuing cyber activity against the U.S.
Trump called Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy “a dictator” and said it was Ukraine that started the war.
The U.S. delegation to the United Nations followed up by voting against a resolution condemning Russia for its aggression against Ukraine. America thus took Russia’s side and joined North Korea, Belarus, Israel (yes, Israel), fourteen other countries in Russia’s orbit, and of course Russia.
In an Oval Office meeting that played like the ambush it surely was, Trump and Vance attacked Zelenskyy, accusing him of not being sufficiently grateful for U.S. support.
For Zelenskyy’s not being respectful enough, Trump “paused” any further shipments of weapons to Ukraine, creating an opening for Russia to gain more ground.
In a deadly betrayal, Trump then denied the intel we've always provided to help Ukraine down incoming Russian missiles, resulting in Putin going all out to kill the civilian population.
So it’s finally out in the open. In actions he has directed, Trump has confirmed that it really was and continues to be Russia, Russia, Russia. On his own, without any referendum or “mandate”… Read More »
Wall Street breathed a "collective sigh of relief", said Politico when President-elect Trump chose a traditional financial sort, Scott Bessent, to be the next Secretary of the Treasury. He is a "legendary stock trader who understands financial markets", said the Wall Street Journal. And surprise! The investor and hedge fund manager was once the chief investor for George Soros's fund.
But nothing rubbed off the left-wing philanthropist billionaire onto Bessent, as we just learned
They largely won. States have steadily raised the minimum
wage, but far from all of them.
from his appearance at the Senate confirmation hearings. Senator Bernie Sanders asked Bessent if he would join legislators "who want to raise the federal minimum wage to a living wage to take millions of Americans out of poverty". Back came the standard, reflexive conservative evasion in this exchange:
Bessent: Senator, I believe that the minimum wage is more of a statewide and regional issue.
Sanders: You don’t think we should change the federal minimum wage of seven dollars and twenty-five cents an hour?
Bessent: No sir.
The last time the minimum wage was changed to $7.25 an hour was 2009. The sixteen years since are the longest stretch without increase since the minimum wage was made law in 1938. And, of course, inflation has eaten away at even that low wage. For what $7.25 got you in 2009 you would need $10.60 today. Put another way, 2009's $7.25 has the buying power of only $4.96 today. And this way: A person working an eight-hour shift with no time off over 52 weeks would make only $15,080 for the year the poverty level Sanders and cohort… Read More »
The United States faces no greater threat than China, which Donald Trump would have to face come 2027. Let's Fix This Country put together this series to show how vastly unprepared the U.S. is to confront China militarily compared to our leadership's blind assumption of U.S. invincibility. Click the titles to read each of the subsequent installments:
I. Our Focus Elsewhere, the U.S. Neglects the China Threat
II. What Would War With China Look Like?
III. War with China: Could America… Read More »
Days ago the House came forth with a budget resolution that makes clear that Republicans have no concern at all for the nation’s future. Given how subservient Speaker Mike Johnson is to President Trump, we can be sure that the House plan is closely aligned with the president’s often expressed desires. Trump bellowed on Truth Social,
"We need both Chambers to pass the House Budget to ‘kickstart’ the Reconciliation process, and move all of our priorities to the concept of, 'ONE BIG BEAUTIFUL BILL.'”
With the country flying past $36 trillion in debt, Trump plans still more tax cuts, beyond extending his 2017 cuts, which will be the fourth set in this quarter century, all by Republican administrations.
The House resolution obliges Trump by deliberately allowing for cuts costing an alarming $4.5 trillion over the decade to come.
Money in the budget cannot be found to backfill that bunker busting crater, and the plan hasn’t figured out where to start. Johnson has simply directed the various committees to come up with $1.5 to $2.0 trillion in savings across the next ten years. Even if that were somehow possible, it still leaves as much as a $3 trillion shortfall. And, by the way, committees, stay clear of defense because, to make your task a bit more difficult, the House is voting for an added $100 billion, up from this year’s $849.9 billion defense budget.
befuddlementMost significantly, the Energy and Commerce Committee, which handles health care spending, is asked to cut $880 billion over the decade and that unmistakably takes aim at Medicaid at least. Trump has vowed many times over that Social Security and Medicare will… Read More »
A mere two days after his confirmation as Secretary of the Treasury, Scott Bessent stunningly handed the keys of the vault to Elon Musk. Apart from bewilderingly ceding control of his fief, Bessent's action was entirely illegal, but immune Donald Trump told him to do so.
The Department of the Treasury issues almost all of the U.S. government’s disbursements, some $6 trillion a year in Social Security payments,
tax refunds, veterans benefits, and then some.
Musk, with neither Senate confirmation nor FBI background check nor security clearance, has been declared a “special government employee” to head a Potemkin “department” that by law could only exist if Congress creates it, but which has nevertheless been given illegal free agency to roam the government departments supposedly to sniff out inefficiencies.
Musk has brought along a troop of engineers age 19 to 25 who have no government clearance, yet the publication Wired reports they have apparent access to all of the data in the department’s systems. That would include your social security number, your tax returns, your… Read More »
For over a year as he campaigned for the presidency, we have heard Donald Trump voice intentions that do not sound like our country's constitutional democracy. We heard about Project 2025, a 920-page treatise prescribing the harsh measures needed to transform America into a Christian conservative nation.
We learned that a central tenet was the "unitary presidency" in which the president has direct control over the entire federal government. The liberal media filled with opinion pieces about the coming autocracy. Trump quipped that he would be a dictator, but only on Day One.
But few reporting Trump's plans went so far as to apply the "fascism" label. With Trump now in office and after just a single week of action, it's time the scales fall from their eyes.
a definitionFascism has no one definition. Its most succinct is from Mussolini himself: “Everything within the State, nothing outside the State, nothing against the State”, and as dictator he could have added… Read More »