FAH1223 wrote:
The China-Russia strategic partnership:
China's playing 4D Chess.
Moderators: montestewart, LyricalRico, nate33
FAH1223 wrote:
The China-Russia strategic partnership:
gtn130 wrote:Trump is playing checkers Candy Land
dckingsfan wrote:gtn130 wrote:remember when Republicans were stalwart deficit hawks lol
Yep, there were a few at the federal level - guess we can stick a fork in that one. There used to be Ds that cared about sustainable government - they seem to be gone as well.
Still a few at the state level on both sides - hope they move to the federal level at some point.
gtn130 wrote:Trump is playing checkers Candy Land
Pointgod wrote:FAH1223 wrote:
The China-Russia strategic partnership:
China's playing 4D Chess.
Russian gas major Gazprom said this month it had completed record deliveries towards Europe and the southern Mediterranean in 2017 at a total of 193.9 billion cubic metres - 8 per cent higher than its previous record, set in 2016.
Deliveries to Germany and Austria reached a historic high and exports to France rose by 6.7 per cent compared to 2016, according to Gazprom's figures.
Some random troll wrote:Not to sound negative, but this team is owned by an arrogant cheapskate, managed by a moron and coached by an idiot. Recipe for disaster.
TGW wrote:Foreign leaders just swaggin all over Trump. This is going to be a bloodbath.
you're a fool if you believe any of that. we consume most of their exports. they cant afford a trade war with us. They also own a lot of out debt. which is in US Dollars. not Yuan. So if things get real messy with china, we can maniplate via issuing not bond backed notes which will make that debt virtually worthless and crush their banking system. Simple as that. The president can issue issuing notes instead of bonds and write a single check for the entire amount we owe them. we could announce it months in advance and by the time they cashed the check it would not be worth even 10 cents on the dollar due to massive world wide inflation. Sure, it would harm us too at home but our banking system could survive as well as our and really this is the bandaid that we are eventually going to have to rip off anyway. its only a matter a time until we do exactly this. We dont have a choice as americans will not accept real tax increases. so instead we will be forced to hide the tax via inflation. No way around this. The entire world knows its coming. And thats why we sell our debt mostly to china and not stronger allies. Even China knows its coming. china accepts our debt because we buy most of the goods they prodice as well protect their supply to the natural resources for which they use to manufacture said goods.
Just in the past few days, he has rolled back mileage standards instituted by the previous administration, a move that is almost certainly going to get him and the EPA sued by the state of California, whose standards were the model for the new federal ones. From The Washington Post:
“This is a politically motivated effort to weaken clean vehicle standards with no documentation, evidence or law to back up that decision,” Mary Nichols, head of the California Air Resources Board, said in a statement. She argued that the move would “demolish” the nation’s shift toward cleaner cars and that “EPA’s action, if implemented, will worsen people’s health with degraded air quality and undermine regulatory certainty for automakers.”
Meanwhile, Pruitt seems to have missed few opportunities to live fat off the largesse of the federal government he purports to distrust. We've learned even more about Pruitt's travel preferences, and then there’s the sweetheart $50-per-night lodgings in D.C. that he got from the wife of a man who lobbies for the energy industries for whom Pruitt has been a career finger-puppet.
The primary engine of Pruitt’s entire career—and, believe me, he’s got plans for the future, too—has been contempt: contempt for the government, contempt for the environment, contempt for science, and contempt for any concept of limits on any of the people to whom he has sold his favor.
In this, he is the most powerful example of the fact that what Republicans now deplore as “Trumpism” existed in their party long before the president* came along. There is nothing that Pruitt has done—both in office and out—that would not have been done under any Republican president since Ronald Reagan was inaugurated. (Listening to Hewitt explain how “policy” was driving the resistance to Pruitt’s vandalism was to hear even further evidence of this proposition.) Trumpism is modern conservatism with dementia, but the policies were less than sane all along.
James Gaius Watt served as U.S. Secretary of the Interior under President Ronald Reagan from 1981 to 1983. He was probably the most destructive and disruptive of all President Reagan's controversial cabinet appointments to senior advisory positions. He became the most obvious public leader of anti-environmentalism, and he played an instrumental role in ending the Sagebrush Rebellion, an attempt to preserve natural lands of the West against mining and over-grazing. Watt, and his appointees blocked wilderness designation legislation and slowed the work of federal land management agencies.
He was a life-long political apparatchik; trained as a lawyer at the University of Wyoming, but then entering political life as an aide to Republican senator Milward Simpson of Wyoming. His power-base was developed through the US Chamber of Commerce, where he served as Secretary to the Natural Resources Committee, and the Environmental Pollution Advisory Panel - both dedicated to exploiting, rather than preserving.
In 1969 he became deputy assistant secretary o water and power development at the Department of the Interior, and in 1975 he was appointed vice chairman of the Federal Power Commission.
In 1976, Watt founded the Mountain States Legal Foundation, a law firm-cum-think-tank foundation "dedicated to individual liberty, the right to own and use property, limited and ethical government and economic freedom."[1] Both Gale Norton and Ann Veneman worked in the MSLF with Watt, and later became associates in the Reagan Administration…
According to the environmental advocacy group Center for Biological Diversity, for over two decades, Watt held the record for protecting the fewest species under the Endangered Species Act in United States history.[1]
James Watt, Reagan's Secretary of the Interior was indicted on 41 felony counts for using connections at the Department of Housing and Urban Development to help his private clients seek federal funds for housing projects in Maryland, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Watt conceded that he had received $500,000 from clients who were granted very favorable housing contracts after he had intervened on their behalf. In testifying before a House committee Watt said: "That's what they offered and it sounded like a lot of money to me, and we settled on it." Watt was eventually sentenced to five years in prison** and 500 hours of community service.
cammac wrote:The Rape of the EPAJust in the past few days, he has rolled back mileage standards instituted by the previous administration, a move that is almost certainly going to get him and the EPA sued by the state of California, whose standards were the model for the new federal ones. From The Washington Post:
“This is a politically motivated effort to weaken clean vehicle standards with no documentation, evidence or law to back up that decision,” Mary Nichols, head of the California Air Resources Board, said in a statement. She argued that the move would “demolish” the nation’s shift toward cleaner cars and that “EPA’s action, if implemented, will worsen people’s health with degraded air quality and undermine regulatory certainty for automakers.”
Meanwhile, Pruitt seems to have missed few opportunities to live fat off the largesse of the federal government he purports to distrust. We've learned even more about Pruitt's travel preferences, and then there’s the sweetheart $50-per-night lodgings in D.C. that he got from the wife of a man who lobbies for the energy industries for whom Pruitt has been a career finger-puppet.The primary engine of Pruitt’s entire career—and, believe me, he’s got plans for the future, too—has been contempt: contempt for the government, contempt for the environment, contempt for science, and contempt for any concept of limits on any of the people to whom he has sold his favor.
In this, he is the most powerful example of the fact that what Republicans now deplore as “Trumpism” existed in their party long before the president* came along. There is nothing that Pruitt has done—both in office and out—that would not have been done under any Republican president since Ronald Reagan was inaugurated. (Listening to Hewitt explain how “policy” was driving the resistance to Pruitt’s vandalism was to hear even further evidence of this proposition.) Trumpism is modern conservatism with dementia, but the policies were less than sane all along.James Gaius Watt served as U.S. Secretary of the Interior under President Ronald Reagan from 1981 to 1983. He was probably the most destructive and disruptive of all President Reagan's controversial cabinet appointments to senior advisory positions. He became the most obvious public leader of anti-environmentalism, and he played an instrumental role in ending the Sagebrush Rebellion, an attempt to preserve natural lands of the West against mining and over-grazing. Watt, and his appointees blocked wilderness designation legislation and slowed the work of federal land management agencies.
He was a life-long political apparatchik; trained as a lawyer at the University of Wyoming, but then entering political life as an aide to Republican senator Milward Simpson of Wyoming. His power-base was developed through the US Chamber of Commerce, where he served as Secretary to the Natural Resources Committee, and the Environmental Pollution Advisory Panel - both dedicated to exploiting, rather than preserving.
In 1969 he became deputy assistant secretary o water and power development at the Department of the Interior, and in 1975 he was appointed vice chairman of the Federal Power Commission.
In 1976, Watt founded the Mountain States Legal Foundation, a law firm-cum-think-tank foundation "dedicated to individual liberty, the right to own and use property, limited and ethical government and economic freedom."[1] Both Gale Norton and Ann Veneman worked in the MSLF with Watt, and later became associates in the Reagan Administration…
According to the environmental advocacy group Center for Biological Diversity, for over two decades, Watt held the record for protecting the fewest species under the Endangered Species Act in United States history.[1]James Watt, Reagan's Secretary of the Interior was indicted on 41 felony counts for using connections at the Department of Housing and Urban Development to help his private clients seek federal funds for housing projects in Maryland, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Watt conceded that he had received $500,000 from clients who were granted very favorable housing contracts after he had intervened on their behalf. In testifying before a House committee Watt said: "That's what they offered and it sounded like a lot of money to me, and we settled on it." Watt was eventually sentenced to five years in prison** and 500 hours of community service.
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2018/4/4/1754319/-Charles-Pierce-Trumpism-is-modern-conservatism-with-dementia
Pointgod wrote:cammac wrote:The Rape of the EPAJust in the past few days, he has rolled back mileage standards instituted by the previous administration, a move that is almost certainly going to get him and the EPA sued by the state of California, whose standards were the model for the new federal ones. From The Washington Post:
“This is a politically motivated effort to weaken clean vehicle standards with no documentation, evidence or law to back up that decision,” Mary Nichols, head of the California Air Resources Board, said in a statement. She argued that the move would “demolish” the nation’s shift toward cleaner cars and that “EPA’s action, if implemented, will worsen people’s health with degraded air quality and undermine regulatory certainty for automakers.”
Meanwhile, Pruitt seems to have missed few opportunities to live fat off the largesse of the federal government he purports to distrust. We've learned even more about Pruitt's travel preferences, and then there’s the sweetheart $50-per-night lodgings in D.C. that he got from the wife of a man who lobbies for the energy industries for whom Pruitt has been a career finger-puppet.The primary engine of Pruitt’s entire career—and, believe me, he’s got plans for the future, too—has been contempt: contempt for the government, contempt for the environment, contempt for science, and contempt for any concept of limits on any of the people to whom he has sold his favor.
In this, he is the most powerful example of the fact that what Republicans now deplore as “Trumpism” existed in their party long before the president* came along. There is nothing that Pruitt has done—both in office and out—that would not have been done under any Republican president since Ronald Reagan was inaugurated. (Listening to Hewitt explain how “policy” was driving the resistance to Pruitt’s vandalism was to hear even further evidence of this proposition.) Trumpism is modern conservatism with dementia, but the policies were less than sane all along.James Gaius Watt served as U.S. Secretary of the Interior under President Ronald Reagan from 1981 to 1983. He was probably the most destructive and disruptive of all President Reagan's controversial cabinet appointments to senior advisory positions. He became the most obvious public leader of anti-environmentalism, and he played an instrumental role in ending the Sagebrush Rebellion, an attempt to preserve natural lands of the West against mining and over-grazing. Watt, and his appointees blocked wilderness designation legislation and slowed the work of federal land management agencies.
He was a life-long political apparatchik; trained as a lawyer at the University of Wyoming, but then entering political life as an aide to Republican senator Milward Simpson of Wyoming. His power-base was developed through the US Chamber of Commerce, where he served as Secretary to the Natural Resources Committee, and the Environmental Pollution Advisory Panel - both dedicated to exploiting, rather than preserving.
In 1969 he became deputy assistant secretary o water and power development at the Department of the Interior, and in 1975 he was appointed vice chairman of the Federal Power Commission.
In 1976, Watt founded the Mountain States Legal Foundation, a law firm-cum-think-tank foundation "dedicated to individual liberty, the right to own and use property, limited and ethical government and economic freedom."[1] Both Gale Norton and Ann Veneman worked in the MSLF with Watt, and later became associates in the Reagan Administration…
According to the environmental advocacy group Center for Biological Diversity, for over two decades, Watt held the record for protecting the fewest species under the Endangered Species Act in United States history.[1]James Watt, Reagan's Secretary of the Interior was indicted on 41 felony counts for using connections at the Department of Housing and Urban Development to help his private clients seek federal funds for housing projects in Maryland, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Watt conceded that he had received $500,000 from clients who were granted very favorable housing contracts after he had intervened on their behalf. In testifying before a House committee Watt said: "That's what they offered and it sounded like a lot of money to me, and we settled on it." Watt was eventually sentenced to five years in prison** and 500 hours of community service.
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2018/4/4/1754319/-Charles-Pierce-Trumpism-is-modern-conservatism-with-dementia
This is what his voters wanted! Down with regulations, down with regulations! I don't think a lot of people in the US will get the picture until the the country is enveloped in smog like China, the water is polluted and unusable and all the national parks have been sold off to special interests.
cammac wrote:you're a fool if you believe any of that. we consume most of their exports. they cant afford a trade war with us. They also own a lot of out debt. which is in US Dollars. not Yuan. So if things get real messy with china, we can maniplate via issuing not bond backed notes which will make that debt virtually worthless and crush their banking system. Simple as that. The president can issue issuing notes instead of bonds and write a single check for the entire amount we owe them. we could announce it months in advance and by the time they cashed the check it would not be worth even 10 cents on the dollar due to massive world wide inflation. Sure, it would harm us too at home but our banking system could survive as well as our and really this is the bandaid that we are eventually going to have to rip off anyway. its only a matter a time until we do exactly this. We dont have a choice as americans will not accept real tax increases. so instead we will be forced to hide the tax via inflation. No way around this. The entire world knows its coming. And thats why we sell our debt mostly to china and not stronger allies. Even China knows its coming. china accepts our debt because we buy most of the goods they prodice as well protect their supply to the natural resources for which they use to manufacture said goods.
Another moronic post by SD20 and that's not even getting into the Rothchild part.![]()
SD20 is a typical American that knows little about economics in general and China in particular.
What he suggests would cause a worldwide economic crisis and cement the domination of China over the USA. The American GDP would crater the $ would be worthless like the Argentina Peso 20,000 to 1 USA or Venezuelan Bolivar at 10 million to USD. Your asinine prattle would likely make the Yuan the dominant currency on earth. You live in a fools paradise if you think somehow you can effect a country of 1.3 billion people. China has been rapidly moving from a export economy to a internal economy and no the USA doesn't protect Chinese supply lines of natural resources. If you think rational nations would back such a move you are in need of rehab with Spanky MacTrump.
dckingsfan wrote:Pointgod wrote:cammac wrote:The Rape of the EPA
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2018/4/4/1754319/-Charles-Pierce-Trumpism-is-modern-conservatism-with-dementia
This is what his voters wanted! Down with regulations, down with regulations! I don't think a lot of people in the US will get the picture until the the country is enveloped in smog like China, the water is polluted and unusable and all the national parks have been sold off to special interests.
Well, we want smarter regulations. Look at the deregulation in terms of coal dust disposal - even those in the industry didn't wanted smarter regulation not stupid deregulation. Then look at what they did with trucks that should be off the road due to their pollution. The vast majority of truckers didn't want that either.
montestewart wrote:TGW wrote:Foreign leaders just swaggin all over Trump. This is going to be a bloodbath.
A lot of Trump's moves look like false flag operations. If all these moves just go South, I can see supporters yelling USA! USA! all the louder, as if it were ferners that made it all happen, and of course insisting on patriotic national unity while not giving an inch on any positions at all.
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Trump tells USDA chief farmers won’t be hurt by China trade dispute
© Greg Nash
Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue said on Wednesday that President Trump told him farmers will not be hurt by an ongoing trade dispute with China.
Speaking at a town hall discussion in Ohio, Perdue said that the recently announced Chinese tariffs on $50 billion worth of U.S. products could be concerning to farmers but noted that the president said they shouldn’t worry.
"I talked to the president as recently as last night," Perdue said. "And he said, 'Sonny, you can assure your farmers out there that we're not going to allow them to be the casualties if this trade dispute escalates. We're going to take care of our American farmers. You can tell them that directly.'"
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) warned that Chinese tariffs could greatly hurt farmers.
"The United States should take action to defend its interests when any foreign nation isn’t playing by the rules or refuses to police itself. But farmers and ranchers shouldn’t be expected to bear the brunt of retaliation for the entire country," Grassley said in a statement.
http://thehill.com/homenews/administration/381627-trump-tells-agriculture-secretary-farmers-they-wont-be-hurt-by-trade
This is a story by a daughter of a farm family who is liberal and does go against mainstream thinking in her State. But does put the farming communities thought process succinctly.I am the daughter, granddaughter, niece, and cousin of Kansas farmers. Soybean has and continues to be an important cash crop. My family grows several other cash crops such as corn, wheat, milo, and cotton. They raise sheep and cattle. They work hard, rarely take a day off, and struggle to pay bills.
I am torn between loyalty to my family and loyalty to my authentic self. The farming economy has been reeling from oversupply and increased competition. Kansas farm incomes collapsed, from an average of $196,000 in 2011 to a mere $4,568.00 in 2015. Crop prices dropped to historic lows while production prices increased. The average cost for a new harvesting combine is over $400,000.00, and Trump’s tariffs on imported aluminum and steel are expected to increase costs by nearly 25% this year alone. China’s retaliatory tariffs, so far restricted to soybeans and pork but expected to widen quickly, have sent rural producers into a frenzy.I am torn because my family voted for this to happen and ignored repeated warnings that their choices would harm them. They have voted uniformly Republican since the 1980s, mesmerized by rhetoric which tells them that because they are white, heterosexual Christians that they are somehow “special,” “God’s chosen,” and the “rightful” rulers of America. They have been told that people with brown skin, non-Christians, the LGBT community, and women are “weakening” the United States by simply asking to be treated equally. The refrain “God, gays, and guns” is how my family has voted for two generations. Donald Trump doubled and tripled down on the hateful rhetoric, daring to voice what many members of my family believe. Trump won 95% of the vote in several rural Kansas counties.
“We may have a little bit of short-term pain but we're certainly going to have long-term success.”