Tag: donald trump
Dismal Turnout For 'Massive' Trump Rally Dims Fox's 'Freedom 250' Propaganda Push

Dismal Turnout For 'Massive' Trump Rally Dims Fox's 'Freedom 250' Propaganda Push

President Donald Trump’s Fox News propagandists would like to use this summer’s celebration of the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence to smear Democrats as unpatriotic. But if Wednesday night’s launch of the Great American State Fair in Washington, D.C. — a poorly-attended campaign-style Trump rally — is any indication, the strategy's fatal flaw is the president’s catastrophic unpopularity.

Trump, in collaboration with Freedom 250, the political group he launched to supplant the congressionally established organization overseeing the semiquincentennial, has turned America’s 250th birthday into a celebration of himself. After several musical acts originally slated to perform on Wednesday dropped out earlier this month in response to this politicization, Trump announced that he would be the night’s main attraction at what he termed “the Greatest Rally, EVER.”

Fox, led by Kayleigh McEnany, the former Trump White House press secretary turned network host, set the expectations sky-high in the hours before the event.

McEnany told viewers on Outnumbered that the president would be “kicking off” America 250 “with a massive rally on the National Mall.”

“I'm very excited about tonight because Trump has said this is going to be the greatest rally he has ever done, and I've been to a lot of his rallies,” she added on Jesse Watters Primetime. “But if he's saying this is the greatest rally he's ever done, I'm here for it.”

But the event turned out to be a low-energy dud, with the listless president praising himself and his administration’s accomplishments to a shockingly small audience.

NBC News estimated attendance at “more than 1,000,” while The Washington Post reported that “the crowd thinly covered an area about the length of the National Museum of American History, smaller than some summer outdoor movie screenings.”

The Post further reported that the president “did not appear to enjoy the speech” and “wrapped in under a half-hour,” adding: "He asked for a bigger turnout for his next appearance on July 4."

“Please show up, he said. ”Because if we have two empty seats, you know what’s going to happen: the fake news is going to say he didn’t fill out the arena.”

Trump’s performance, his attempt to refocus the semiquincentennial around himself, and the shrinking percentage of Americans who think he is doing a good job pose a problem for Fox’s effort to use the celebration as a cudgel against Democrats.

On Jesse Watters’ show, contributor Joe Concha used the events on the network to draw purported contrasts between “patriotic” Republicans and Democrats “downright miserable about the country.”

“As we see this communist takeover continue in major American cities, I mean, do you want to be the party that hates this country, they want to tear it all down because some people just want to watch the world burn, or do you want to be the party that embraces what makes this country so awesome?” Concha said.

He then provided a list of such things: “Amazon, Apple, White Castle, Top Golf, the Jersey shore, Savannah Bananas, Sydney Sweeney.” (Notably, he did not mention the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, or any part of the American creed.)

“So the entire lead-up to July 4, I consider it one big trigger warning to the Mamdani minions out there, because after all they are happiest when foreign flags are flying,” host Laura Ingraham likewise sneered on Wednesday before Trump’s speech. “Because to them, red, white, and blue, the big extravaganza, is like sunshine to a vampire.”

But on Thursday morning, Fox’s coverage of Trump’s rally was as sparse as the previous night’s crowd. The network’s reality distortion machine is unable to countenance their beloved president’s unpopularity, and it will ignore or deny all such evidence in order to carefully shield viewers from the historic levels of dissent Trump faces.

Reprinted with permission from Media Matters

Mocking Watergate Scandal, Vance Flaunts Corrupt Cynicism Of Trump White House

Mocking Watergate Scandal, Vance Flaunts Corrupt Cynicism Of Trump White House

In his clueless and clumsy style, JD Vance has unmasked the cynical corruption at the core of Trump’s White House.


Trump's DJT Stock Dives Amid Accusations Of Insider Trading And Fraud

Trump's DJT Stock Dives Amid Accusations Of Insider Trading And Fraud

On Wednesday, President Donald Trump’s DJT stock symbol plummeted to its lowest point ever, plunging to $7.53 per share as of this writing. According to Futurism, the stock — which represents Trump’s Truth Social social media platform — has been “circling the drain for over a year now.”

The DJT stock made its public debut in 2022 for just under $10 per share, and it was rapidly hyped up to its all-time high of just under $94.20 before dropping back into the low teens. Then in early 2024, it was relaunched after a merger, briefly shooting up to around $60. Since then it has lost nearly 90 percent of its value, and the decline shows no sign of slowing.

According to Futurism, the DJT symbol is “part of Trump’s efforts to build out his ailing conservative social media network and personal megaphone, Truth Social. However, desperate stabs at reinvention, from attempts to break into the prediction and cryptocurrency markets to a bizarre and unexpected merger with a fusion power company called TAE Technologies late last year, have done little to instill confidence.”

Futurism suggests that confusion surrounding the company’s future is likely hurting its stock, explaining, “Earlier this month, TMTG announced it was abandoning plans to spin off Truth Social into a separate publicly listed company, with the help of a special purpose acquisition company called Texas Ventures Acquisition III, without ever elaborating why. Instead, the company reaffirmed plans to merge with TAE, cementing its efforts to break into the fusion energy industry — unproven tech that has nothing to do with a far-right microblogging platform.”

The company’s numbers have also undoubtedly scared off potential investors. As Futurism notes, "Beyond the chaos and a continuously revolving door of executives, TMTG has been burning through cash at an alarming rate. Last month, the company posted a stunning net loss of more than $400 million in the first quarter of this year alone — while netting less than $1 million. That’s in large part due to its steep investments in cryptocurrencies, tying the value of its operations to speculative assets that have also been plummeting this year.”

As Futurism reports, the failure of DJT comes amid accusations of wide-ranging insider trading and similar grift within the administration, including allegations that Trump himself has been buying stock then publicly praising the companies to drive up their prices. And the DJT stock has not been spared from suggestions of illegal activity.

In June 2024, Bloomberg reported that the Securities and Exchange Commission was hit by a wave of complaints from analysts warning of shady behavior regarding DJT. As one complaint asserted, “The Market Makers in DJT are manipulating the OPTIONS prices. I am a leading expert in OPTION FRAUD and a former member of the CBOE, CBOT and CME [referring to leading exchanges]. I know what is going on.”

Reprinted with permission from Alternet

Iran Hawks Confidently Predict Trump Will Resume War After Midterm Elections

Iran Hawks Confidently Predict Trump Will Resume War After Midterm Elections

The right-wing hawks who applauded Donald Trump for launching the war with Iran earlier this year are adopting a new argument to avoid criticizing the president as he fumbles toward enacting a weaker, piecemeal version of the Obama-era Iran nuclear deal he once decried. According to their theory, the current negotiations are a sham: Trump is merely laying off the Iranian regime temporarily to forestall Republican defeat in the midterms and will resume hostilities after the November elections.

Iran’s obvious and expected counterstroke of closing the Strait of Hormuz in response to U.S. and Israeli military strikes succeeded in hamstringing the global energy and fertilizer trade, sending prices soaring. Now Iran’s regime is intact and in control of its nuclear materials and ballistic missile stockpile, and the U.S., having failed to achieve the administration’s stated war goals, is negotiating surrender terms that will leave it in a weaker geostrategic position than before the war began.

“You go back to January, shipping was moving, Iran's nuclear program had been bombed six months before and was largely destroyed,” former NATO Ambassador Kurt Volker said on Fox News last week. “We launched this war, the global economy took a big hit. Oil prices skyrocketed. Now we're winding this down but we have Iran now emboldened to exercise some kind of control over the Strait of Hormuz.”

While MAGA’s hacks are eager to praise any deal as an historic victory for Trump and downplay the implications of the memorandum of understanding he signed with Iran, the movement’s hawks recognize that these negotiations are, as The Daily Wire’s Ben Shapiro put it, “a disaster.”

Over the last week, the hawk faction has scrambled for a response that doesn’t risk their own MAGA audiences by directly attacking Trump. Many have turned their vitriol on Vice President JD Vance for his role in the negotiations, absolving the president of responsibility for the document that he signed and publicly describes as “a very strong deal.”

But another argument recently adopted by right-wing hawks posits that the MOU is effectively meaningless because Trump is negotiating in bad faith. In this telling, the president only agreed to the MOU in order to bring down the cost of gas and thus boost the GOP’s standing in the midterm elections — and after they pass, he will order the U.S. military to resume its attack on Iran.

This argument has some benefits for the hawks:

  1. It doesn’t require them to admit they made a mistake in supporting the war with Iran.
  2. It doesn’t require them to criticize Trump.
  3. It lets them wave away whatever emerges from the U.S.-Iran negotiations.
  4. It buys them time to once again talk the president into military action through his TV.

Fox host Mark Levin, the shrill-voiced megahawk, and network contributor Hugh Hewitt, a higher-brow Sean Hannity, got this argument going on Thursday, as The Bulwark’s Jonathan V. Last noted.

“Time for a change in strategy,” Levin, who previously described himself as “very skeptical about any deal,” posted on social media. “We should consider slow walking the enemy, building up our munitions, our oil reserves, get the price of gasoline down, get through the midterms, then knock them out. Instead of rushing to a deal, building up their oil industry, transferring billions to them, etc.”

Hewitt responded affirmatively to Levin’s post and added that he believed this was actually the president’s strategy.

“Assume that many inside the Administration, including President Trump, settled on this course weeks ago,” he wrote. “Keeping the Senate and (against all odds) the House in GOP hands isn’t just a political goal for Republicans, it’s critical to the national security,” he continued, adding, “President Trump factoring in the realities of domestic politics and their consequences is a right and proper calculation.”

Hewitt’s theory contradicts Trump’s own prior statements — for which the pundit had praised the president — insisting that he would not take domestic politics into account in negotiating with the Iranians.

“They thought they were gonna outwait me. You know, ‘We'll outwait him. He's got the midterms,’” Trump said during a May 27 Cabinet meeting . “I don't care about the midterms.”

Responding to those remarks on Fox later that day, Hewitt said: “What I appreciate is the president said he's not caring about the midterms. What that means, and I think everyone understands, is he's putting the national security ahead of gas prices.”

Hewitt brought his revised views on Trump factoring domestic politics into Iran negotiations to Fox during last Friday’s edition of Special Report.

Hewitt described the MOU as “halftime, probably the longest halftime in the history of modern war since the phony war after Germany overran Poland in the fall of 1939. There was seven months when there was no war, and then Germany invaded France.”

(Note that in Hewitt’s historical analogy, Trump is Adolf Hitler.)

“We're going to go back on the battle damage assessment and figure out how to finish the job, unless Iran actually capitulates,” he predicted. “The MOU's language is bad. I think everyone is reading into it what they want but the reality is talk to me in five months, after the election, and I think we'll be back in the battle with Iran.”

Fox & Friends co-host Brian Kilmeade, who has described the deal as “not acceptable” and repeatedly blamed it on Vance, added his voice on Tuesday morning.

“The closer it gets to the midterms, I think the less likely the president [is] to act,” he explained. “But after the midterms, the gloves come off.”

The upshot, however, is that the hawks’ escalation plans are unlikely to succeed and have huge potential downsides — while Iranian officials now know they can easily close the Strait of Hormuz, shut down a huge chunk of the global energy trade, and punish American consumers.

Their idea to attack Iran was foolhardy, the president’s belief he could pull off a strategic victory was ill-conceived, and now we are all dealing with the consequences.

Reprinted with permission from Media Matters

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