Originally posted by wufan
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I don't care whose side Trump is on. He's incompetent, felonious, nepotistic, petty, and incapable of leadership. Less a person, more a collective of terrible traits, according to the people that work with him. He denigrates the executive branch by treating his unqualified family as cabinet members, casually is in a major scandal a week (last week it was "paid off and threatened a prostitute with campaign money"), and is dangerously ignorant on every aspect of policy.
Yes, put Pence in the office. Not because he is more/less conservative or will be better/worse for conservatism. But because he is simply more capable. Well, and less likely to ramble in a stupor on Twitter at 3 A.M. in bad English. And less likely to send Pence Jr. to Mexico to negotiate.
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Originally posted by wufan View PostTrump has no ideology/direction. He has some conservative and some democratic ideals. There’s nothing wrong with that, but Trump appears to have no cohesiveness in his philosophy, neither in logic nor over a timeline.
Operationally, he has put on a master class for those aspiring to be a CEO, if you are willing to pay attention and set aside political bias and prejudices. Our country has never seen anything like it. Obviously you won't like his efficiency if you don't like his policy, and I get that.
Kung Wu say, man who read woman like book, prefer braille!
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Originally posted by Kung Wu View Post
The Heritage Foundation disagrees. Trump gets absolutely no press (gee, I wonder why) for the mind-numbing efficiency he has brought to Washington.
Operationally, he has put on a master class for those aspiring to be a CEO, if you are willing to pay attention and set aside political bias and prejudices. Our country has never seen anything like it. Obviously you won't like his efficiency if you don't like his policy, and I get that.
Where I have issue is with the wishy-washy 2nd amendment stance, tariff talk, failure to cut spending. These are not conservative ideas.
Finally, the constant shifting of cabinet members is an indication that he has not decided on a philosophical strategy, but is plucking momentary ideas to push forward.Livin the dream
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Originally posted by Kung Wu View Post
The Heritage Foundation disagrees. Trump gets absolutely no press (gee, I wonder why) for the mind-numbing efficiency he has brought to Washington.
Operationally, he has put on a master class for those aspiring to be a CEO, if you are willing to pay attention and set aside political bias and prejudices. Our country has never seen anything like it. Obviously you won't like his efficiency if you don't like his policy, and I get that.
I read the article and didn't see anything about him being efficient.
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Originally posted by CollegeHillShocker View Post
A true CEO master class. Kill anything the guy before you did just because you don't like him. Then add a billion to the debt for good measure. Kill all medical programs cause they cost to much. Fire people the day before their pension kicks in. Sounds about right.
I read the article and didn't see anything about him being efficient.
In his first year, Trump has already beat Reagan's entire first term conservative agenda as defined by Heritage.
Efficient.Kung Wu say, man who read woman like book, prefer braille!
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We're about to have 50% of the population become experts on attorney-client privilege and the other 50% become experts on exceptions to attorney-client privilege.
As kind of a funny twist in the whole thing, it's my understanding that the communications were seized by the US attorney's office of the Southern District of New York. The US attorney in this district was formerly Preet Bharara, the individual whose podcast I'm always peddling. Preet was fired when he refused to resign after being asked to do so by Jeff Sessions, since he was an Obama appointee. The new guy is a Trump appointee. And yet, here we are. Though, admittedly, I haven't heard a ton about how involved the new guy was in everything.
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Originally posted by jdshock View Post
We're about to have 50% of the population become experts on attorney-client privilege and the other 50% become experts on exceptions to attorney-client privilege.
As kind of a funny twist in the whole thing, it's my understanding that the communications were seized by the US attorney's office of the Southern District of New York. The US attorney in this district was formerly Preet Bharara, the individual whose podcast I'm always peddling. Preet was fired when he refused to resign after being asked to do so by Jeff Sessions, since he was an Obama appointee. The new guy is a Trump appointee. And yet, here we are. Though, admittedly, I haven't heard a ton about how involved the new guy was in everything.Livin the dream
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Originally posted by wufan View Post
You’re a lawyer. Fill us in on the legal implications of this.
My totally baseless two cents is that we've got one of two scenarios: (1) very strong evidence to support the warrant. If I were a judge, I can't even begin to describe how reluctant I would be to provide a warrant to search the house, office, and hotel of the sitting president's personal lawyer. Or (2) real conspiracy theory, deep-state stuff. I tend to think (1) is more likely, but if you already believe the federal judicial system is filled with folks willing to mutiny, this definitely fits in with what you already believe. The reason I don't think it's all that likely that there is a middle option (i.e., not tons of evidence, and a magistrate judge made kind of a judgment call) is because I can't imagine there's a level headed judge who doesn't give the sitting president the benefit of the doubt on this kind of thing. If the warrant hadn't been granted, we might not have ever heard about it. Once it was granted, there was no turning back.
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