Tag: donald trump
Donald Trump

Part Infant, Part Gangster: It's Very Hard To Keep Donald Trump Happy

The older he gets, the bigger the baby. Donald Trump has turned the U.S. government into one giant pacifier to calm his fear of seeming less than all-powerful. Consider those billionaires now dropping bags of gold at his feet, concerned that he would use his presidential powers to hurt them.

Donald Winnicott, a prominent English pediatrician and psychoanalyst, famously wrote that babies have "the illusion of omnipotence." They think the world revolves around their needs being met.

To reinforce his illusion that he embodies Roman Emperor command, Trump has turned to the cameras to publicly name formerly skeptical, or even just neutral, moguls now paying tribute:

"So Tim Cook (Apple) was here."

"We do have Jeff Bezos, Amazon, coming in."

"The top bankers, they're all calling."

Reputable political analysts say this executive behavior reflects alarm that Trump might try to sabotage their business and hurt their investors. Anyway, the commentators add, paying a million or two in tribute is "just a rounding error" to these guys.

The analysts are not wrong. More amazing is that they would calmly portray threats toward leading American enterprises —engines of the economy, creators of jobs — as something a normal president would do.

Another word for this is extortion. It's the mobster message: "If you don't want trouble, you know what to do."

Recall during the first term when Trump tried to punish Amazon through higher postal rates and by taking away a $10 billion Pentagon cloud servicing contract. Trump's motives were not at all hidden. Bezos owned The Washington Post, which was often critical of him.

The nomination of vaccine foe Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to head Health and Human Services could be seen as a classic baiting operation. Its intention is also to dare senators, Republicans included, to challenge his choice of this weirdo. If Trump wins, then he's proven he has them all in a headlock.

The objective isn't just to get away with things but to send the mob message, "If you don't want trouble, you know what to do." And to add, Caligula style, "Let them hate me, so long as they fear me."

Seeing that Bobby Jr. may be a crackpot too far even for cowed Republicans, Trump could drop the nomination. But that might seem like surrender. Instead, he's gaslighting the public on what RFK Jr. stands for. It happens that the lawyer helping Bobby choose staff for HHS petitioned the government to revoke its approval of the polio vaccine.

"You're not going to lose the polio vaccine," Trump recently told reporters. Big of him. That the public needs that kind of reassurance shows how deep Trump thinks he can take it into the rabbit hole of mind-bending. Until he came along, no one even imagined that an American leader might deny their families protection from a polio epidemic causing paralysis, long-term muscle weakness, fatigue and pain.

But suppose Trump arm-twists the Senate into approving a health official who would "put the public's health in jeopardy," according to 75 Nobel laureates. That would be hard to beat as a display of omnipotence. He would again be matching Caligula, who is said to have appointed a horse as a consul.

Uber and its CEO have just contributed a combined $2 million to Trump's inauguration. What makes this example of executive submission special is that Uber's chief legal officer, Tony West, is Kamala Harris' brother-in-law. Uber's CEO did little to veil his motive. It was his biggest donation ever to a political candidate, he noted, and showed "Uber's eagerness to work with the incoming administration."

Babies grow out of the obsessive need to display dominance. Trump hasn't, and he's almost 80.

Follow Froma Harrop on Twitter @FromaHarrop. She can be reached at fharrop@gmail.com. To find out more about Froma Harrop and read features by other Creators writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Web page at www.creators.com.

Reprinted with permission from Creators.

Tulsi Gabbard

GOP Senators Signal Trump To Drop Weakest Nominees Before 'It Gets Ugly'

According to Ryan Nobles of NBC News, Donald Trump is getting dire warnings from Republican lawmakers that some of his more problematic nominees for his Cabinet are in for rough sledding if they don't drop out before their nationally televised confirmation hearings.

Appearing on MSNBC's Morning Joe and speaking with host Willie Geist, Nobles explained that there are fears about what will come out if nominees like Fox News personality Pete Hegseth and ex-Rep. Tulsi Gabbard are forced to explain their views under hostile questioning.

"These Republicans want him to win and when they go through the advise and consent role here it's not because they want to trip him up, not because they want to make his life difficult," Nobles reported. "It's because they want him to have the best people around him in these Cabinet posts when he takes office on January 20th and beyond."

"So what they would like to see happen is, behind the scenes there is a conversation, they talk to the administration, they talk to these sherpas that are working with these candidates and they say, 'Do you know what? It's just not going to happen. If you go through this confirmation process it's going to be ugly, we're going to have a hearing where, remember, Democrats get to ask questions, they're going to expose a lot of these issues that have come up in media reports. Your nominees are going to have to deal with all of this and it's ultimately going to look bad for you, and then, at the end of all of it, after this brutal situation, we may have to vote against you and make it look like we are in opposition to you," he added.

"The other path is behind the scenes we quietly talk about how this isn't necessarily the right person for this job for a whole range of reasons, why don't you find someone else and let that person bow out on their own," he elaborated. "That's how it worked with [failed attorney general nominee] Matt Gaetz because it was clear that under any circumstance Matt Gaetz was not going to get the votes," he elaborated before remarking, "Trump got that message. '

Watch below

Reprinted with permission from Alternet.

Elon Musk

Democrats Blast GOP For Risking Shutdown On Orders From Elon Musk

House Democratic leaders strongly criticized Republicans on Thursday for falling in line with billionaire Elon Musk’s demand to scrap legislation that will fund the federal government.

Following criticism from Musk (which was later echoed by President-elect Donald Trump), Republicans pulled the continuing resolution that had bipartisan support. In addition to supporting ongoing government operations, the bill contains disaster relief for thousands of Americans affected by hurricanes and other natural disasters in recent months.

If the House doesn’t come up with a stopgap appropriations bill by Friday, it could trigger a partial government shutdown.

“That bipartisan agreement has now been detonated because House Republicans have been ordered to shut down the government and hurt the very working-class Americans that many of them pretend to want to help,” House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries said at a press conference.

Musk led the uprising against the bill along with failed presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy. Both men are part of the gaggle of billionaires and millionaires who make up the upper echelon of Trump advisers. The duo has been appointed to lead the unofficial Department of Government Efficiency, which claims it will cut $2 trillion in government spending.

House Minority Whip Katherine Clark castigated Republicans for how their actions will affect middle-class families and business owners.

“What's really hard is you are already struggling to pay your bills, and all of a sudden the aid for your small business that you thought was coming is going to not come because Elon Musk and Donald Trump decided to inject this chaos and hardship into your life,” Clark said.

Hard-line Republicans who oppose the bill have indicated that as payback for this budget proposal, they may withhold support for Speaker Mike Johnson in the leadership elections scheduled for January when Congress reconvenes. The GOP has a very small majority in the House despite the party’s success in the recent election.

Jeffries was asked if Democrats might back Johnson in the upcoming speaker election in exchange for including some Democratic priorities in the next funding bill. His answer was succinct: “No.”

Even as Democrats slam Musk and Trump for their disruptive actions, members of the Republican caucus are voicing support for the South African multibillionaire and chaos agent.

During an interview on Fox Business, Rep. Andy Barr of Kentucky was asked if Musk is exerting undue influence over Congress from his unelected position.

“No, I don't think so. I think this is exactly what the American people voted for,” he responded.

Musk reportedly spent at least $250 million to prop up Trump in the election and now has congressional Republicans doing as he demands. The Democratic Party’s leadership has now shown it’s not on board with the Musk-GOP alliance.

Reprinted with permission from Daily Kos.

Bipartisan Rejection Of Trump/Musk Budget Leaves Congress In Chaos

Bipartisan Rejection Of Trump/Musk Budget Leaves Congress In Chaos

The vote was 235 to 174, not even close to the two-thirds majority necessary under the special provision under which Speaker MIKE Johnson had brought the bill to the House floor. Dozens of Republicans joined Democrats in rejecting the bill, most of them because the bill included a two-year suspension of the debt ceiling Trump had demanded for his support.

The two-year lifting of the debt ceiling would have allowed Trump to run up the deficit to levels “never seen before,” as he is fond of saying, during his first years in office. When he takes off the last two years of his term to play golf, the debt ceiling would have been reimposed. But what would he care? Trump and his pals, including Elon Musk, would have their tax cuts that will balloon the deficit and send inflation into the stratosphere.

Congress still faces the midnight Friday deadline to pass a continuing resolution to fund the government. If they don’t, much of the government will be furloughed over the Christmas holidays, with TSA agents, air traffic controllers, and the nation’s military all forced to work without pay, at least until the new Congress is sworn in on January 3 and returns to “work.” The administrator of the Transportation Security Administration said this afternoon that a government shutdown would lead to longer lines at airports over the holidays.

Elon Musk is probably doing the YMCA dance in celebration. Musk had recommended shutting down the government completely until Trump is inaugurated on January 20. There are no TSA lines for people who fly on private aircraft such as Musk’s fleet of Gulfstreams.

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