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Trump's Bad Girl Jared Kushner and other stories - Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks℠ - 9:09 AM 6/3/2019
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks℠
Washington Post columnist George Will joins Morning Joe to discuss his new book 'The Conservative Sensibility' and if he sees President Trump as a conservative.
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George Will: President Donald Trump Has Nothing To Do With Conservatism | Morning Joe | MSNBC
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The Failure to Define Fascism Today The New Republic
"Putin and the Mob" - Google News
“You can’t define it as good or bad,” Caio Mussolini, great-grandson of Italian dictator Benito Mussolini, told reporters on May 8, discussing fascism during his run for the European Parliament. Fascism was a “complicated, nuanced period.” It’s not the first time the dictator’s progeny have defended him. Last October, granddaughter Alessandra Mussolini, a member of European Parliament, threatened on Twitter to “monitor” and “bring to court” anyone who disrespected the memory of her grandfather. In April, she tangled with Jim Carrey on Twitter after the actor posted a famous photograph of th...
"Putin and the Mob" - Google News
“The author reports a Trump fantasy concerning Allen Weisselberg, an Orthodox Jew and the Trump Organization’s chief financial officer. Weisselberg has reportedly cooperated with law enforcement. In turn, Wolff writes, Trump has “developed a riff on th…” gu.com/p/bta7j/stw
Posted by mikenov on Monday, June 3rd, 2019 2:28pm
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5G mania has swept the wireless industry, regulators and tech enthusiasts — but the hype may be getting ahead of the market demand for it.
Why it matters: The promise of 5G — with mobile broadband speeds up to 100 times faster than current 4G networks — and the pressure to keep up with global competitors are impacting major merger reviews and city budgets. But unrealistic expectations for 5G could lead to big disappointments.
Between the lines: It's always hard to anticipate how and when new technologies will catch on. No one predicted Uber and Airbnb would spring from 4G networks and the smartphone, for example.
- Yes, but: When 4G launched, the U.S. wireless market still had plenty of room to grow and revenue margins were relatively high. So the telecom industry's promotion of 4G service was more measured and less hyped.
- Now the wireless market is mature and has little subscriber growth (around 1%), so telecom companies are searching for ways to wring new revenue from current subscribers.
- That has driven the industry to push flashy marketing campaigns to sell consumers on the benefits of 5G.
Here's how the hype is playing out:
1. Unclear business case: The technology hasn't yet materialized on a large scale, and many business leaders aren't convinced there will be real use cases anytime soon.
- A McKinsey survey found roughly 60% of chief technology officers say the business case for 5G is the biggest challenge.
2. Lack of consumer demand: According to recent HarrisX research, most business decision makers (72%) believe 5G will be worth paying more for, but consumers are split on its value. Only 24% of wireless subscribers say they would switch to a new carrier for 5G, and only 19% say they'd switch to a new device to access 5G phones.
- Smartphones are lasting longer and new models are pricey, so consumers aren't upgrading to new devices as often. Unless they see a real benefit to 5G devices and services, most won't be willing to pay extra for them.
- "If the carriers are going to charge more for 5G, dramatically more value is going to have to be delivered in the form of better performance or new capabilities," said Kevin Crull, former chief strategy officer at Sprint.
3. Enormous investment: Without clear paths to revenue, analysts worry about lackluster return on investment for big carriers who've pumped billions of dollars into network upgrades.
- "Because there isn’t actually a revenue use case for 5G yet, going out and telling your investor base that we’re going to spend another $10 or $20 billion, let alone $100 billion, is a nonstarter if there’s nothing to justify that investment," said Craig Moffett, founding partner at MoffettNathanson Research.
4. Spotty rollout: 5G is rolling out commercially, but the highest speeds of 5G come with the drawback that signals don’t travel far. That means that, in most cases, 5G is coming to only parts of a few cities for each carrier.
- Sprint is a bit of an exception as it is using lower frequency spectrum so it is covering a bit more area, but not at the highest possible speed.
- AT&T drew criticism for labeling existing 4G devices and networks as 5G “E” even though they aren’t necessarily any faster than other 4G connections.
- Shortly after launching its 5G service in parts of Chicago and Minneapolis, Verizon waived the extra $10 charge to access it after complaints of limited coverage.
5. Global race: Mobile carriers have gained leverage over policy decisions that bolster their 5G ambitions by invoking the specter of a Chinese victory in the wireless competition.
- For example, the FCC set fee limits that weakened cities' leverage to negotiate with carriers over where they can place 5G antennas.
- Proponents argue the tradeoffs are worth it to realize the massive economic benefits of 5G. But skeptics say it's unclear when we'd actually see those benefits.
6. Merger review: 5G has even become a factor in the proposed merger of T-Mobile and Sprint. To convince regulators to approve the deal, T-Mobile has promised to cover 85% of rural Americans with its 5G network within 3 years, and 90% in 6 years.
- But the specific speed commitments T-Mobile made to the FCC are below the 5G speeds typically touted by the industry, noted Blair Levin, analyst at New Street Research.
- Plus, 5G is not well-suited for rural areas because the high-frequency signals have such short range.
- Still, the promise worked at the FCC, which signaled its approval. But the Justice Department seems to have bigger antitrust concerns.
The bottom line: "The hype is so preposterously misaligned with economic reality that inevitably there’s going to be this disastrous crash in expectations and people are going to call it a failure," Moffet said. "In fact, it’s not a failure other than inappropriate expectations. It will actually be better than 4G and it will be an impressive next step for the network."
Read the whole story
· · ·
5G mania has swept the wireless industry, regulators and tech enthusiasts — but the hype may be getting ahead of the market demand for it.
Why it matters: The promise of 5G — with mobile broadband speeds up to 100 times faster than current 4G networks — and the pressure to keep up with global competitors are impacting major merger reviews and city budgets. But unrealistic expectations for 5G could lead to big disappointments.
Between the lines: It's always hard to anticipate how and when new technologies will catch on. No one predicted Uber and Airbnb would spring from 4G networks and the smartphone, for example.
- Yes, but: When 4G launched, the U.S. wireless market still had plenty of room to grow and revenue margins were relatively high. So the telecom industry's promotion of 4G service was more measured and less hyped.
- Now the wireless market is mature and has little subscriber growth (around 1%), so telecom companies are searching for ways to wring new revenue from current subscribers.
- That has driven the industry to push flashy marketing campaigns to sell consumers on the benefits of 5G.
Here's how the hype is playing out:
1. Unclear business case: The technology hasn't yet materialized on a large scale, and many business leaders aren't convinced there will be real use cases anytime soon.
- A McKinsey survey found roughly 60% of chief technology officers say the business case for 5G is the biggest challenge.
2. Lack of consumer demand: According to recent HarrisX research, most business decision makers (72%) believe 5G will be worth paying more for, but consumers are split on its value. Only 24% of wireless subscribers say they would switch to a new carrier for 5G, and only 19% say they'd switch to a new device to access 5G phones.
- Smartphones are lasting longer and new models are pricey, so consumers aren't upgrading to new devices as often. Unless they see a real benefit to 5G devices and services, most won't be willing to pay extra for them.
- "If the carriers are going to charge more for 5G, dramatically more value is going to have to be delivered in the form of better performance or new capabilities," said Kevin Crull, former chief strategy officer at Sprint.
3. Enormous investment: Without clear paths to revenue, analysts worry about lackluster return on investment for big carriers who've pumped billions of dollars into network upgrades.
- "Because there isn’t actually a revenue use case for 5G yet, going out and telling your investor base that we’re going to spend another $10 or $20 billion, let alone $100 billion, is a nonstarter if there’s nothing to justify that investment," said Craig Moffett, founding partner at MoffettNathanson Research.
4. Spotty rollout: 5G is rolling out commercially, but the highest speeds of 5G come with the drawback that signals don’t travel far. That means that, in most cases, 5G is coming to only parts of a few cities for each carrier.
- Sprint is a bit of an exception as it is using lower frequency spectrum so it is covering a bit more area, but not at the highest possible speed.
- AT&T drew criticism for labeling existing 4G devices and networks as 5G “E” even though they aren’t necessarily any faster than other 4G connections.
- Shortly after launching its 5G service in parts of Chicago and Minneapolis, Verizon waived the extra $10 charge to access it after complaints of limited coverage.
5. Global race: Mobile carriers have gained leverage over policy decisions that bolster their 5G ambitions by invoking the specter of a Chinese victory in the wireless competition.
- For example, the FCC set fee limits that weakened cities' leverage to negotiate with carriers over where they can place 5G antennas.
- Proponents argue the tradeoffs are worth it to realize the massive economic benefits of 5G. But skeptics say it's unclear when we'd actually see those benefits.
6. Merger review: 5G has even become a factor in the proposed merger of T-Mobile and Sprint. To convince regulators to approve the deal, T-Mobile has promised to cover 85% of rural Americans with its 5G network within 3 years, and 90% in 6 years.
- But the specific speed commitments T-Mobile made to the FCC are below the 5G speeds typically touted by the industry, noted Blair Levin, analyst at New Street Research.
- Plus, 5G is not well-suited for rural areas because the high-frequency signals have such short range.
- Still, the promise worked at the FCC, which signaled its approval. But the Justice Department seems to have bigger antitrust concerns.
The bottom line: "The hype is so preposterously misaligned with economic reality that inevitably there’s going to be this disastrous crash in expectations and people are going to call it a failure," Moffet said. "In fact, it’s not a failure other than inappropriate expectations. It will actually be better than 4G and it will be an impressive next step for the network."
Read the whole story
· · ·
Trump's Bad Girl Jared Kushner and other stories - Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks℠ - 9:09 AM 6/3/2019
Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks℠
Trump’s Bad
(Stupid, Vicious, Psychopathic, Pretentious, Lying and Rotten to the core, Self Serving, Greedy, Predatory)
Girl Jared Kushner – 8:16 AM 6/3/2019
The Devil is in the Genes:
Kushner Bielski Crime Family – GS
They acted as the Abwehr’s Enforcers in Belorussian forests during WW2; and now they are the Money Launderers and Managers for the Mob and the New Abwehr – The German Intelligence, who mask under the covers of the “Religious Orthodox Jews” – the height of criminal hypocrisy.
Investigate the Kushner Bielski Crime Family!!! – GS
Twitter Searches:
#KushnerBielskiCrimeFamily
Kushner Bielski Crime Family
_______________________________________
Trump News Review – Saved Stories
Saved Stories – None | ||
---|---|---|
Siege review: Michael Wolff’s Trump tale is Fire and Fury II – fire harder | US news | ||
Michael Wolff is back and not with a whimper. The latest installment of his Trump chronicles picks up where Fire and Furyended. Once again, it leaves the president bruised and readers shaking their heads.
Jared Kushner, Mike Pence, Don McGahn. None escape unscathed.
As Wolff describes it, Donald Trump calls Kushner “a girl”. As for his vice-president, he’s a “religious nut”. “Why does he look at me like that?” Trump asks about Pence’s beatific gaze. As for Pence’s wife, Karen? “She really gives me the creeps.”
Steve Bannon supplies a running commentary for which Wolff calls him his Virgil. Like Dante’s Inferno, Siege ends on hell’s bottom rung.
Wolff’s tale is credible enough to be taken seriously and salacious enough to entertain. If you have doubts about Wolff’s credibility, and many do, the latest blowup over the USS John S McCain is one more reminder that in the Age of Trump, truth is weirder than fiction. Much weirder.
Beyond that, by early 2018 Wolff had captured the centrality of Robert Mueller in Trump’s life, and nailed Trump’s and Kushner’s insatiable cravings for cash. Fire and Fury records Bannon as saying: “This is all about money laundering … It goes through Deutsche Bank and Kushner and all that shit.” Talk about getting the big picture right.
This time, Wolff finds himself pitted against the special counsel’s office, as to whether Mueller’s team drew up or had drawn up a three-count indictment against the president in March 2018. Team Mueller has issued something other than a categorical denial: “The documents that you’ve described do not exist.” Let us parse.
Note the expression “documents that you’ve described”. Note the use of the present tense. As an impeached former presidentsaid: “It depends on what the meaning of the word ‘is’ is.”
Regardless, Wolff’s guide, the major-domo of Trump’s 2016 campaign who became a White House adviser until he wasn’t, enjoys tweaking his former boss. Bannon volunteers that he helped concoct the story that the Mueller investigation was the demon spawn of the “deep state”, and says there was never much substance to it.
As Wolff tells it, “among the nimblest conspiracy provocateurs of the Trump age, Bannon spelled out the … narrative in powerful detail”. But then Bannon’s voice pierces his own self-generated din: “You do realize … that none of this is true.” Allow that one to sink in.
Wolff also has Bannon calling the Trump Organization a criminal enterprise and predicting its downfall: “This is where it isn’t a witch-hunt – even for the hardcore, this is where he turns into just a crooked business guy … Not the billionaire he said he was, just another scumbag.” Allow that to sink in, too.
Expect Bannon to be quoted by Nancy Pelosi, Jerry Nadler, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and the eventual Democratic candidate. Also look for the Democratic National Committee to send chocolates to Bannon, once head of Breitbart and a partner in Cambridge Analytica, next Easter.
More broadly, Wolff injects that “Trump measured loyalty, that significant currency of his business and walk-on-the-wild-side lifestyle, by who was so dependent on him, and as clearly exposed as he was, that they would of course lie for him”. Said differently, there are ample reasons as to why Mueller refused to give Trump anything approaching a clean bill of health on the issue of obstruction of justice.
‘A new alternative reality’
Siege also ladles out what we have come to expect from deep dives into Trumpworld – sex (real or imagined), race and religion.
Wolff reports of Trump bragging to others of a dalliance with the former United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley and of his supposedly “banging” a junior White House staffer who had “a way about her”.
Wolff badly burned himself when he first raised the notion of a Trump-Haley affair. Haley herself angrily and adamantly denied it.
As for the unnamed White House staffer, Wolff ponders: “Locker room talk? Or all part of a new alternative reality that only he seemed to be living in?”
Still, Trump can count on the Rev Franklin Graham leading our nation in prayer on Sunday 2 June, on behalf of its beleaguered leader. That is two days before Wolff’s book comes out.
Bannon refuses to rule out that Trump is a racist. As for antisemitism, Bannon doesn’t think so. But Wolff has his doubts.
The author reports a Trump fantasy concerning Allen Weisselberg, an Orthodox Jew and the Trump Organization’s chief financial officer. Weisselberg has reportedly cooperated with law enforcement. In turn, Wolff writes, Trump has “developed a riff on the horrors that an Orthodox Jew would probably encounter in jail, one that sketched a vivid picture of a tattooed Nazi cellmate”.
Catholics come in for their share of distrust and scrutiny, too. After Trump nominated Brett Kavanaugh to the supreme court, in Wolff’s telling the president became sensitized to the absence of a lifelong Protestant on the highest court.
According to Wolff, Trump began to suspect that he was being played by McGahn, his lawyer, and by Leonard Leo of the Federalist Society who was purportedly a member of Opus Dei, a traditionalist Catholic group. Specifically, Wolff writes, Trump started to ask whether Kavanaugh was the end product of a Catholic plot to abolish abortion. Trump is not so pro-life. Who’d have guessed?
Wolff’s Trump also blamed his nominee’s weepy persona on the church. “He seems weak,” the president is quoted as saying. “Not strong. He was probably molested by a priest.”
‘A single unstable individual’
Wolff’s Siege guns are also turned on Kushner. The author goes into granular detail about business deals and foreign partners. Trump and Kushner come in for scathing criticism for conflating America’s national interest with personal financial needs. “L’état cést moi”, indeed.
On that score, Wolff quotes a stinging rebuke by Henry Kissinger at a small lunch attended by Rupert Murdoch, among others: “The entire foreign policy is based on a single unstable individual’s reaction to perceptions of slights or flattery. If someone says something nice about him, they are our friend; if they say something unkind, if they don’t kiss the ring, they are our enemy.”
Murdoch, Wolff writes, nodded in approval.
After the Guardian published its initial report on Siege, a loyal administration veteran sent a text to this reviewer.
“Why,” it read, “isn’t anyone writing the story that the Mueller investigation [was] designed as a cloak/shield”, as a plot to “overthrow a duly elected president”. To the response that people the individual had worked with had spoken to Wolff on the record, and that the Guardian had not written Siege, the reply was terse: “Got it.”
Doubtful. On Wednesday, Mueller told the world that if his office believed Trump had not obstructed justice, he would have said so. As Michael Wolff returns to torment Donald Trump, the sword of impeachment dangles more ominously than ever.
|
Read the whole story
· · · · · · · · · · · · ·
Trump’s Bad
(Stupid, Vicious, Psychopathic, Pretentious, Lying and Rotten to the core, Self Serving, Greedy, Predatory)
Girl Jared Kushner – 8:16 AM 6/3/2019
The Devil is in the Genes:
Kushner Bielski Crime Family – GS
They acted as the Abwehr’s Enforcers in Belorussian forests during WW2; and now they are the Money Launderers and Managers for the Mob and the New Abwehr – The German Intelligence, who mask under the covers of the “Religious Orthodox Jews” – the height of criminal hypocrisy.
Investigate the Kushner Bielski Crime Family!!! – GS
Twitter Searches:
#KushnerBielskiCrimeFamily
Kushner Bielski Crime Family
_______________________________________
Trump News Review – Saved Stories
Saved Stories – None | ||
---|---|---|
Siege review: Michael Wolff’s Trump tale is Fire and Fury II – fire harder | US news | ||
Michael Wolff is back and not with a whimper. The latest installment of his Trump chronicles picks up where Fire and Furyended. Once again, it leaves the president bruised and readers shaking their heads.
Jared Kushner, Mike Pence, Don McGahn. None escape unscathed.
As Wolff describes it, Donald Trump calls Kushner “a girl”. As for his vice-president, he’s a “religious nut”. “Why does he look at me like that?” Trump asks about Pence’s beatific gaze. As for Pence’s wife, Karen? “She really gives me the creeps.”
Steve Bannon supplies a running commentary for which Wolff calls him his Virgil. Like Dante’s Inferno, Siege ends on hell’s bottom rung.
Wolff’s tale is credible enough to be taken seriously and salacious enough to entertain. If you have doubts about Wolff’s credibility, and many do, the latest blowup over the USS John S McCain is one more reminder that in the Age of Trump, truth is weirder than fiction. Much weirder.
Beyond that, by early 2018 Wolff had captured the centrality of Robert Mueller in Trump’s life, and nailed Trump’s and Kushner’s insatiable cravings for cash. Fire and Fury records Bannon as saying: “This is all about money laundering … It goes through Deutsche Bank and Kushner and all that shit.” Talk about getting the big picture right.
This time, Wolff finds himself pitted against the special counsel’s office, as to whether Mueller’s team drew up or had drawn up a three-count indictment against the president in March 2018. Team Mueller has issued something other than a categorical denial: “The documents that you’ve described do not exist.” Let us parse.
Note the expression “documents that you’ve described”. Note the use of the present tense. As an impeached former presidentsaid: “It depends on what the meaning of the word ‘is’ is.”
Regardless, Wolff’s guide, the major-domo of Trump’s 2016 campaign who became a White House adviser until he wasn’t, enjoys tweaking his former boss. Bannon volunteers that he helped concoct the story that the Mueller investigation was the demon spawn of the “deep state”, and says there was never much substance to it.
As Wolff tells it, “among the nimblest conspiracy provocateurs of the Trump age, Bannon spelled out the … narrative in powerful detail”. But then Bannon’s voice pierces his own self-generated din: “You do realize … that none of this is true.” Allow that one to sink in.
Wolff also has Bannon calling the Trump Organization a criminal enterprise and predicting its downfall: “This is where it isn’t a witch-hunt – even for the hardcore, this is where he turns into just a crooked business guy … Not the billionaire he said he was, just another scumbag.” Allow that to sink in, too.
Expect Bannon to be quoted by Nancy Pelosi, Jerry Nadler, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and the eventual Democratic candidate. Also look for the Democratic National Committee to send chocolates to Bannon, once head of Breitbart and a partner in Cambridge Analytica, next Easter.
More broadly, Wolff injects that “Trump measured loyalty, that significant currency of his business and walk-on-the-wild-side lifestyle, by who was so dependent on him, and as clearly exposed as he was, that they would of course lie for him”. Said differently, there are ample reasons as to why Mueller refused to give Trump anything approaching a clean bill of health on the issue of obstruction of justice.
‘A new alternative reality’
Siege also ladles out what we have come to expect from deep dives into Trumpworld – sex (real or imagined), race and religion.
Wolff reports of Trump bragging to others of a dalliance with the former United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley and of his supposedly “banging” a junior White House staffer who had “a way about her”.
Wolff badly burned himself when he first raised the notion of a Trump-Haley affair. Haley herself angrily and adamantly denied it.
As for the unnamed White House staffer, Wolff ponders: “Locker room talk? Or all part of a new alternative reality that only he seemed to be living in?”
Still, Trump can count on the Rev Franklin Graham leading our nation in prayer on Sunday 2 June, on behalf of its beleaguered leader. That is two days before Wolff’s book comes out.
Bannon refuses to rule out that Trump is a racist. As for antisemitism, Bannon doesn’t think so. But Wolff has his doubts.
The author reports a Trump fantasy concerning Allen Weisselberg, an Orthodox Jew and the Trump Organization’s chief financial officer. Weisselberg has reportedly cooperated with law enforcement. In turn, Wolff writes, Trump has “developed a riff on the horrors that an Orthodox Jew would probably encounter in jail, one that sketched a vivid picture of a tattooed Nazi cellmate”.
Catholics come in for their share of distrust and scrutiny, too. After Trump nominated Brett Kavanaugh to the supreme court, in Wolff’s telling the president became sensitized to the absence of a lifelong Protestant on the highest court.
According to Wolff, Trump began to suspect that he was being played by McGahn, his lawyer, and by Leonard Leo of the Federalist Society who was purportedly a member of Opus Dei, a traditionalist Catholic group. Specifically, Wolff writes, Trump started to ask whether Kavanaugh was the end product of a Catholic plot to abolish abortion. Trump is not so pro-life. Who’d have guessed?
Wolff’s Trump also blamed his nominee’s weepy persona on the church. “He seems weak,” the president is quoted as saying. “Not strong. He was probably molested by a priest.”
‘A single unstable individual’
Wolff’s Siege guns are also turned on Kushner. The author goes into granular detail about business deals and foreign partners. Trump and Kushner come in for scathing criticism for conflating America’s national interest with personal financial needs. “L’état cést moi”, indeed.
On that score, Wolff quotes a stinging rebuke by Henry Kissinger at a small lunch attended by Rupert Murdoch, among others: “The entire foreign policy is based on a single unstable individual’s reaction to perceptions of slights or flattery. If someone says something nice about him, they are our friend; if they say something unkind, if they don’t kiss the ring, they are our enemy.”
Murdoch, Wolff writes, nodded in approval.
After the Guardian published its initial report on Siege, a loyal administration veteran sent a text to this reviewer.
“Why,” it read, “isn’t anyone writing the story that the Mueller investigation [was] designed as a cloak/shield”, as a plot to “overthrow a duly elected president”. To the response that people the individual had worked with had spoken to Wolff on the record, and that the Guardian had not written Siege, the reply was terse: “Got it.”
Doubtful. On Wednesday, Mueller told the world that if his office believed Trump had not obstructed justice, he would have said so. As Michael Wolff returns to torment Donald Trump, the sword of impeachment dangles more ominously than ever.
At this critical time…
… for our natural world, our societies and our media, The Guardian is committed to a different model for open, independent journalism – sustained through generous reader support. When progressive ideals are being challenged by those in power across the globe, we’re dedicated to investigating with courage and reporting with honesty. But we need your ongoing support to keep working as we do.
The Guardian will engage with the most critical issues of our time – from the escalating climate catastrophe to widespread inequality to the influence of big tech on our lives. At a time when factual information is a necessity, we believe that each of us, around the world, deserves access to accurate reporting with integrity at its heart.
Our editorial independence means we set our own agenda and voice our own opinions. Guardian journalism is free from commercial and political bias and not influenced by billionaire owners or shareholders. This means we can give a voice to those less heard, explore where others turn away, and rigorously challenge those in power.
We need your support to keep delivering quality journalism, to maintain our openness and to protect our precious independence. Every reader contribution, big or small, is so valuable. Support The Guardian from as little as $1 – and it only takes a minute. Thank you.
| ||
7:39 AM 6/3/2019 – #JaredKushner The #Enforcer, of #KushnerBielsky #Abwehr’s “#Jewish” #Enforcers #CrimeFamily: “Swan: So you agree with the president’s position? | #Kushner: I’m here to #enforce his positions” #Slate: “The #ClownShow”:… slate.com/news-and-polit | ||
7:39 AM 6/3/2019 – #JaredKushner The #Enforcer, of #KushnerBielsky #Abwehr’s “#Jewish” #Enforcers #CrimeFamily: “Swan: So you agree with the president’s position? | #Kushner: I’m here to #enforce his positions” #Slate: “The #ClownShow”:… slate.com/news-and-polit
Posted by mikenov on Monday, June 3rd, 2019 11:41am
| ||
#JaredKushner The #Enforcer, of #KushnerBielsky #Abwehr’s “#Jewish” #Enforcers #CrimeFamily: “Swan: So you agree with the president’s position? | #Kushner: I’m here to #enforce his positions” #Slate: “The #ClownShow”: slate.com/news-and-polit… #FBI #CIA #ODNI #Counterintelligence pic.twitter.com/OMZN5BFRI1 | ||
#JaredKushner The #Enforcer, of #KushnerBielsky #Abwehr’s “#Jewish” #Enforcers #CrimeFamily: “Swan: So you agree with the president’s position? | #Kushner: I’m here to #enforce his positions” #Slate: “The #ClownShow”: slate.com/news-and-polit… #FBI #CIA #ODNI #Counterintelligence pic.twitter.com/OMZN5BFRI1
Posted by mikenov on Monday, June 3rd, 2019 11:43am
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#JaredKushner #Clown & #Enforcer, of #KushnerBielsky #Abwehr’s “#Jewish” #Enforcers #CrimeFamily: “Q: So you agree with the president’s position? #Kushner: I’m here to #enforce his positions” #Slate: “The #ClownShow”: slate.com/news-and-polit #FBI #CIA #ODNI #Counterintelligence pic.twitter.com/rSWcrXZWsx | ||
#JaredKushner #Clown & #Enforcer, of #KushnerBielsky #Abwehr’s “#Jewish” #Enforcers #CrimeFamily:
“Q: So you agree with the president’s position? #Kushner: I’m here to #enforce his positions” #Slate: “The #ClownShow”:
#FBI #CIA #ODNI #Counterintelligence pic.twitter.com/rSWcrXZWsx
Posted by mikenov on Monday, June 3rd, 2019 11:47am
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#Siegereview: #MichaelWolff’s #Trumptale is #FireandFury II – fire harder theguardian.com/us-news/2019/j… | ||
#Siegereview: #MichaelWolff’s #Trumptale is #FireandFury II – fire harder theguardian.com/us-news/2019/j…
Posted by mikenov on Monday, June 3rd, 2019 12:06pm
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“Jared Kushner, Mike Pence, Don McGahn. None escape unscathed. As Wolff describes it, Donald Trump calls Kushner “a girl”. As for his vice-president, he’s a “religious nut”. “Why does he look at me like that?” Trump asks about Pence’s beatific gaze. As…” gu.com/p/bta7j/stw | ||
“Jared Kushner, Mike Pence, Don McGahn. None escape unscathed.
As Wolff describes it, Donald Trump calls Kushner “a girl”. As for his vice-president, he’s a “religious nut”. “Why does he look at me like that?” Trump asks about Pence’s beatific gaze. As…” gu.com/p/bta7j/stw
Posted by mikenov on Monday, June 3rd, 2019 12:08pm
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‘I wasn’t involved in that’: Kushner is mum on Trump’s birther conspiracy theory washingtonpost.com/nation/2019/06… | ||
‘I wasn’t involved in that’: Kushner is mum on Trump’s birther conspiracy theory washingtonpost.com/nation/2019/06…
Posted by mikenov on Monday, June 3rd, 2019 12:09pm
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Trump in new book: Jared Kushner is a girl – Google Search | ||
Siege review: Michael Wolff’s Trump tale is Fire and Fury II – fire harder
The Guardian–Jun 1, 2019
Beyond that, by early 2018 Wolff had captured the centrality of Robert Mueller in Trump’s life, and nailed Trump’s and Kushner’sinsatiable …
Michael Wolff’s trip inside Trumpworld, and inside the president’s head …
Washington Post–May 29, 2019
So the new Wolff book is much like the last one: a sail through the Trump … John Kelly and Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner — and making money off their … (Karen Pence); “feeble” (John Kelly); “a girl” (Kushner); “looks like a …
John Kelly Is Still Fuming Over Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump
Vanity Fair–May 8, 2019
Less wonderful in Kelly’s book? Presidential favorite Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner, who not … out how to get his kids back to New York, far away from the bloodthirsty media. (“Ivanka’s still his little girl,” one source told The Washington Post of Trump’s desire to protect his senior adviser.).
‘And Tiffany!’ They may have the same father, but Donald Trump’s two …
National Post–May 31, 2019
The former was raised in New York with her father and his riches, the latter in … Tiffany Trump, Ivanka Trump, right, and her daughter Arabella look at … Ivanka has been married to mute vampire doll Jared Kushner, who now … In Ivanka’s profoundly moving first book The Trump Card: Playing To Win In Work …
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Trump in new book: Jared Kushner is a girl – Google Search | ||
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Jared Kushner – Google Search | ||
‘I wasn’t involved in that’: Kushner is mum on Trump’s birther …
Washington Post–1 hour ago
Jared Kushner, President Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser, professed his own innocence when asked in an interview on “Axios on HBO” …
Jared Kushner Butchers His Own Defense That Trump Isn’t Racist
International–New York Magazine–9 hours ago
Jared Kushner defends Trump against racism allegations but dodges …
International–Business Insider–7 hours ago Jared Kushner casts doubt on Palestinian ability to self-govern
The Guardian–8 hours ago
Jared Kushner, Donald Trump’s Middle East adviser and son-in-law, has expressed uncertainty over the ability of the Palestinians to govern …
Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner questions whether Palestinians can …
In-Depth–The Straits Times–10 hours ago
Exclusive: Kushner uncertain Palestinians are capable of governing …
International–Axios–12 hours ago ‘Last Week Tonight’: John Oliver Addresses Jared Kushner’s Israel …
Deadline–6 hours ago
But he did spend some time unpacking the Jared Kushner‘s visit to Israel and his bizarre gift to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as well as …
The Paparazzi Staked Outside Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner’s DC …
The New York Times–Jun 1, 2019
Since 2017, when Ms. Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner, moved to Kalorama, a luxe neighborhood for D.C. elites, paparazzi hired by …
Why Jared Kushner’s Middle East peace plan is dead on arrival
Washington Post–50 minutes ago
When it comes to the Arab-Israeli peace process, the Trump administration wants to pretend that the last 70 years never happened. And like …
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Jared Kushner HUMILIATED on Live Television – YouTube |
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· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·
Michael Wolff is back and not with a whimper. The latest installment of his Trump chronicles picks up where Fire and Fury ended. Once again, it leaves the president bruised and readers shaking their heads.
Jared Kushner, Mike Pence, Don McGahn. None escape unscathed.
As Wolff describes it, Donald Trump calls Kushner “a girl”. As for his vice-president, he’s a “religious nut”. “Why does he look at me like that?” Trump asks about Pence’s beatific gaze. As for Pence’s wife, Karen? “She really gives me the creeps.”
Steve Bannon supplies a running commentary for which Wolff calls him his Virgil. Like Dante’s Inferno, Siege ends on hell’s bottom rung.
Wolff’s tale is credible enough to be taken seriously and salacious enough to entertain. If you have doubts about Wolff’s credibility, and many do, the latest blowup over the USS John S McCain is one more reminder that in the Age of Trump, truth is weirder than fiction. Much weirder.
Beyond that, by early 2018 Wolff had captured the centrality of Robert Mueller in Trump’s life, and nailed Trump’s and Kushner’s insatiable cravings for cash. Fire and Fury records Bannon as saying: “This is all about money laundering … It goes through Deutsche Bank and Kushner and all that shit.” Talk about getting the big picture right.
This time, Wolff finds himself pitted against the special counsel’s office, as to whether Mueller’s team drew up or had drawn up a three-count indictment against the president in March 2018. Team Mueller has issued something other than a categorical denial: “The documents that you’ve described do not exist.” Let us parse.
Note the expression “documents that you’ve described”. Note the use of the present tense. As an impeached former president said: “It depends on what the meaning of the word ‘is’ is.”
Regardless, Wolff’s guide, the major-domo of Trump’s 2016 campaign who became a White House adviser until he wasn't, enjoys tweaking his former boss. Bannon volunteers that he helped concoct the story that the Mueller investigation was the demon spawn of the “deep state”, and says there was never much substance to it.
As Wolff tells it, “among the nimblest conspiracy provocateurs of the Trump age, Bannon spelled out the … narrative in powerful detail”. But then Bannon’s voice pierces his own self-generated din: “You do realize … that none of this is true.” Allow that one to sink in.
Wolff also has Bannon calling the Trump Organization a criminal enterprise and predicting its downfall: “This is where it isn’t a witch-hunt – even for the hardcore, this is where he turns into just a crooked business guy … Not the billionaire he said he was, just another scumbag.” Allow that to sink in, too.
Expect Bannon to be quoted by Nancy Pelosi, Jerry Nadler, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and the eventual Democratic candidate. Also look for the Democratic National Committee to send chocolates to Bannon, once head of Breitbart and a partner in Cambridge Analytica, next Easter.
More broadly, Wolff injects that “Trump measured loyalty, that significant currency of his business and walk-on-the-wild-side lifestyle, by who was so dependent on him, and as clearly exposed as he was, that they would of course lie for him”. Said differently, there are ample reasons as to why Mueller refused to give Trump anything approaching a clean bill of health on the issue of obstruction of justice.
‘A new alternative reality’
Siege also ladles out what we have come to expect from deep dives into Trumpworld – sex (real or imagined), race and religion.
Wolff reports of Trump bragging to others of a dalliance with the former United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley and of his supposedly “banging” a junior White House staffer who had “a way about her”.
Wolff badly burned himself when he first raised the notion of a Trump-Haley affair. Haley herself angrily and adamantly denied it.
As for the unnamed White House staffer, Wolff ponders: “Locker room talk? Or all part of a new alternative reality that only he seemed to be living in?”
Still, Trump can count on the Rev Franklin Graham leading our nation in prayer on Sunday 2 June, on behalf of its beleaguered leader. That is two days before Wolff’s book comes out.
Bannon refuses to rule out that Trump is a racist. As for antisemitism, Bannon doesn’t think so. But Wolff has his doubts.
The author reports a Trump fantasy concerning Allen Weisselberg, an Orthodox Jew and the Trump Organization’s chief financial officer. Weisselberg has reportedly cooperated with law enforcement. In turn, Wolff writes, Trump has “developed a riff on the horrors that an Orthodox Jew would probably encounter in jail, one that sketched a vivid picture of a tattooed Nazi cellmate”.
Catholics come in for their share of distrust and scrutiny, too. After Trump nominated Brett Kavanaugh to the supreme court, in Wolff’s telling the president became sensitized to the absence of a lifelong Protestant on the highest court.
According to Wolff, Trump began to suspect that he was being played by McGahn, his lawyer, and by Leonard Leo of the Federalist Society who was purportedly a member of Opus Dei, a traditionalist Catholic group. Specifically, Wolff writes, Trump started to ask whether Kavanaugh was the end product of a Catholic plot to abolish abortion. Trump is not so pro-life. Who’d have guessed?
Wolff’s Trump also blamed his nominee’s weepy persona on the church. “He seems weak,” the president is quoted as saying. “Not strong. He was probably molested by a priest.”
‘A single unstable individual’
Wolff’s Siege guns are also turned on Kushner. The author goes into granular detail about business deals and foreign partners. Trump and Kushner come in for scathing criticism for conflating America’s national interest with personal financial needs. “L'état cést moi”, indeed.
On that score, Wolff quotes a stinging rebuke by Henry Kissinger at a small lunch attended by Rupert Murdoch, among others: “The entire foreign policy is based on a single unstable individual’s reaction to perceptions of slights or flattery. If someone says something nice about him, they are our friend; if they say something unkind, if they don’t kiss the ring, they are our enemy.”
Murdoch, Wolff writes, nodded in approval.
After the Guardian published its initial report on Siege, a loyal administration veteran sent a text to this reviewer.
“Why,” it read, “isn’t anyone writing the story that the Mueller investigation [was] designed as a cloak/shield”, as a plot to “overthrow a duly elected president”. To the response that people the individual had worked with had spoken to Wolff on the record, and that the Guardian had not written Siege, the reply was terse: “Got it.”
Doubtful. On Wednesday, Mueller told the world that if his office believed Trump had not obstructed justice, he would have said so. As Michael Wolff returns to torment Donald Trump, the sword of impeachment dangles more ominously than ever.
At this critical time…
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Head clown.
HBO
The second season of Axios premiered on HBO Sunday night, and it kicked off with an interview with Senior Advisor to the President of the United States Jared Kushner. It was, to borrow a phrase from a Senior Advisor to the President of the United States, “a clown show.” Axios reporter Jonathan Swan pushed back at some of Kushner’s more ridiculous statements, and in response, Kushner fell flat on his face so quickly he appeared to be suffering from some sort of localized anomaly in Earth’s gravitational field. It turns out that the president’s son-in-law has been reticent with the press for reasons that become painfully clear as the interview progresses: He doesn’t know anything and he believes even less. Here are three of his most spectacular face-plants.
On Abortion
Kushner first ran into trouble when Swan pushed him on Donald Trump’s extremely late-in-life conversion to the anti-abortion movement. To naïve observers, it might seem like political operatives should work to achieve political goals they believe in, but as Kushner explained, there’s nothing unseemly about “enforcing” policies that hurt other people, even if you don’t support those policies yourself:
Kushner: … I think [Trump] respects people who are willing to be honest with him. When I do disagree, you’ll never read about it in the press, and I wouldn’t say it publicly. But I will say there’s a lot more things I agree with him on than disagree.Swan: So you agree with him on economics, on foreign policy. Where do you stand on abortion?Kushner: Again, I was not the person who was elected.Swan: So you agree with the president’s position?Kushner: I’m here to enforce his positions. His position is the one that as a staffer in the White House, we’ll work to push.
So if you don’t like Jared Kushner’s current work “enforcing” his father-in-law’s anti-abortion positions, don’t hold it against Jared Kushner: he doesn’t really believe in any of it. Maybe he can work for a pro-choice administration next and undo some of the damage!
On Whether or Not Palestinians Can Govern Themselves
Kushner’s next gaffe comes from a tactic more interviewers should employ when dealing with the Trump administration: Asking an open-ended question that allows the interviewee to ramble on until they reveal how far out of their depth they are. In this case, Swan asks if Palestinians are “capable of governing themselves.” Let’s see if Kushner spots the racism inherent in treating that like an open question, or if he tries to bullshit his way through by giving what he thinks sounds like a judicious answer:
Swan: Do you believe that the Palestinians are capable of governing themselves without Israeli interference?Kushner: I think that’s a very good question. I think that that’s one that we’ll have to see. The hope is is that they, over time, can become capable of governing …Swan: They being the Palestinians.Kushner: The Palestinians. I think there are some things that the current Palestinian government has done well and there are some things that are lacking. And I do think that in order for the area to be investable, for investors to come in and want to invest in different industries and infrastructure and create jobs, you do need to have a fair judicial system, freedom of press, freedom of expression, tolerance for all religions, and so …Swan: Can they have freedom from any Israeli government or military interference?Kushner: I think that it’s a high bar.
Well, that didn’t go well. Kushner is not willing to talk about the specifics of his long-promised plan for the middle east, but if the goal is to make the area “investable” while we all wait around until Jared Kushner decides that the Palestinians can be treated like adults, that doesn’t sound like great news for the Palestinians. It’s also a pleasure to watch Kushner scurry off into vague poll-tested phrases whenever he’s asked about something concrete, like his half-remembered salute to the Four Freedoms above. There’s also this exchange, in which Kushner makes the claim that the Palestinians are too focused on bread-and-butter issues to worry about anything as abstract as sovereignty; he could have a bright future running messaging for the Democratic Party:
Swan: Do you believe the Palestinian people deserve their own independent sovereign state with a capital in East Jerusalem?Kushner: There’s a difference between the technocrats and there’s a difference between the people. The technocrats are focused on very technocratic things, and when I speak to Palestinian people, what they want is they want the opportunity to live a better life. They want the opportunity to pay their mortgage, to have …Swan: You don’t think they want their own state, free from Israeli government and military?Kushner: I think that they want an opportunity.
Damn those technocrats, always focusing on the wrong things!
On Whether or Not Donald Trump Has Ever Done Anything Racist
This is probably the most telling exchange in the interview, and it’s worth savoring how beautifully Swan crafts its one-two punch. First he lets Kushner ramble on and on about how much Donald Trump isn’t a racist. Then he asks him about specific racist actions Trump has taken recently, leaving Kushner to explain how Trump’s birtherism and promise of a ban on Muslim immigration were not, in fact, racist or bigoted. (He doesn’t even get into the Central Park Five.) You can see Kushner trying to pull off the traditional Republican move of pondering whether or not Trump is “a racist” while Swan keeps refocusing on Trump’s racist actions rather than the contents of his heart.
Swan: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, she calls, she has called President Trump a racist. Have you ever seen him say or do anything that you would describe as racist or bigoted?Kushner: So the answer is no. Absolutely not. You can’t not be a racist for 69 years and then run for president and be a racist. What I’ll say is that when a lot of the Democrats cause the president a racist, I think they’re doing a disservice to people who suffer because of real racism in this country.Swan: Was birtherism racist?Kushner: Um, look, I wasn’t really involved in that.Swan: I know you weren’t! Was it racist?Kushner: Like I said, I wasn’t involved in that.Swan: I know you weren’t! Was it racist?Kushner: Um, look, I know who the president is and I have not seen anything in him that is racist. So, again, I was not involved in that.Swan: Did you wish he didn’t do that?Kushner: Like I said, I was not involved in that. That was a long time ago.Swan: The other issue that often gets brought up in this conversation is that he campaigned on banning Muslims. Would you describe that as religiously bigoted?Kushner: Look, I think that the president did his campaign the way he did his campaign, and I think…Swan: He did! But do you wish he didn’t? Do you wish he didn’t make that speech?Kushner: Uh, I think he’s here today and I think he’s doing a lot of great things for the country, and that’s what I’m proud of.
“I think that the president did his campaign the way he did his campaign” is an amazing statement from a man who claimed only seconds earlier to have never seen Donald Trump do anything racist. Kushner is perfectly fine with allying with white supremacists for tactical reasons, and seems annoyed that anyone would ask him if Trump was being sincere about it. Kushner’s answer seems to be, essentially, that of course Donald Trump’s belief in white supremacy isn’t sincere, which is why it is okay to work for him. (Similarly, Kushner resents that people might assume he is personally anti-abortion simply because he is helping a president with the stated goal of overturning Roe v. Wade: He’s a pure mercenary.) But no one would care what Donald Trump believed if he were a brain in a jar: It’s what he does that people object to. And as ridiculous as Kushner’s Axios interview was, it’s what Jared Kushner has done that matters, not anything he said in this embarrassing television appearance. Still, it’s hard to say whether or not talking to Axios will help or hurt Kushner in the long run. On the one hand, he revealed himself and the administration that hired him to be even more dangerously unqualified than the nation had previously imagined. On the other hand, he’s going to be squirming and dissembling his way through awkward explanations of his time working for the Trump administration for the rest of his life. It can’t hurt to get a little practice in.
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· · · · · · ·
Jared Kushner HUMILIATED on Live Television
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Siege review: Michael Wolff's Trump tale is Fire and Fury II – fire harder
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John Kelly Is Still Fuming Over Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump
Vanity Fair-May 8, 2019
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10 Books in Business and Journalism You Should Read This Spring
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· · · · ·
James Comey should be worried about his own conspiracy theory ...
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Trump Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney concedes Russia interfered in 2016 election, but "didn't make a difference" newsweek.com/mick-mulvaney-…
Posted by mikenov on Sunday, June 2nd, 2019 6:56pm
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