Trump reverses position on Great Lakes restoration
By Todd Spangler Detroit Free Press
Facing a potentially tough re-election effort in Michigan next year, President Donald Trump returned to Grand Rapids on Thursday, promising to fund a Great Lakes restoration program that his administration has threatened to cut the last three years.
Trump told the crowd that he has “always” supported the Great Lakes.
Making it sound as though he was restoring money that had been taken away by someone else — when it was his administration that proposed to eliminate or virtually end the $300 million Great Lakes Restoration Initiative.
“I’m going to get, in honor of my friends, full funding of $300 million for the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, which you’ve been trying to get for over 30 years,” he said.
“It’s time.”
Oh, yes, suckers. I tried to take away what you already had, and now that a few of you have caught on to my bullshit, I won’t take it away. Instead I’ll tell you it’s a gift from me.
And you’ll believe me, just like you suckers always do
You suckers will believe me, just like my three wives did.
It was the second major reversal for the administration on Thursday:
On his way to Michigan, facing bipartisan backlash over the budget plan to cut $18 million in funding for the Special Olympics, Trump said he would restore that funding after Education Secretary Betsy DeVos spent several days being pilloried for the move.
Hey, suckers, it was all Betsy’ fault for doing exactly what I told her to do.
Gee Betsy, I hope it’s not too uncomfortable under that bus. It is, after all, your job to take the blame for my lies, isn’t it?
Trump has also taken heat for a budget that cuts Medicare, a program the president had steadfastly promised not to touch.
Of course, I want to cut Medicare. What did you think? Did you suckers really buy into my bullshit? Wow, you really are even more stupid than I thought.
Let me explain it, even though you still won’t get it: I want to cut Medicare, Obamacare, Social Security, and all poverty aids, to make you financially desperate.
Then, my wealthy business owner pals and I can pay you peanuts, and force you to work into your 80’s — maybe even longer — because I won’t let you save enough to retire.
My old trick was to screw immigrants out of their wages, but screwing you legally is much better — less hassle.
My best buds
But you’re so stupid, all I have to do is say, “Socialism, socialism,” and you’ll vote against your own best interests.
Meanwhile, I’ll make millions in personal deals with the ultimate socialists, Vladimir Putin, Kim Jong-un and that rich Saudi prince, whatever his name is.
Thankfully, I don’t have to worry about you figuring this out. There’s a sucker born every minute.
Remember, I’m your savior, honest Donald J. Trump. I would never lie to you.
The most important problems in economics involve the excessive income/wealth/power Gaps between the richer and the poorer.
Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics.
Implementation of The Ten Steps To Prosperity can narrow the Gaps:
While he still was a candidate, Donald Trump said:
“The level of hatred between Republicans and Democrats was unbelievable.
“The level of — I’ve never seen anything like it,” Trump said. “I’m going to unify. This country is totally divided. Barack Obama has divided this country unbelievably.
“And it’s all, it’s all hatred, what can I tell you. I’ve never seen anything like it…I’ve gotten along with Democrats and I’ve gotten along with Republicans. And I said, that’s a good thing.
“I will be a great unifier for our country.”
That was then. This is now.
Here are just a few of the people and institutions the “great unifier for our country” has blasted in his ongoing tweetstorms, interviews, and speeches.
I will be a great unifier for our country.
Adam Schiff
Alec Baldwin
Anderson Cooper
Arianna Huffington
Barack Obama
Bernie Sanders
Bill Kristol
Bill Cosby
Bill Maher
Boston Globe
California
Carly Fiorina
Charles Krauthammer
China
CIA
CNN
Cuba
Dave Roberts
Democrats
Des Moines Register
Don Lemon
FBI
Fox News (!)
France
George W. Bush
George Pataki
Germany
Guatemala
Hillary Clinton
Honduras
Ilhan Omar
Immigrants
Iran
James Mattis
Jeb Bush
Jeff Sessions
Jimmy Fallon
John Kasich
John McCain
Jonah Goldbert
Jussie Smollett
Karl Rove
Kim Jong-un
Kristen Stewart
Lawrence O’Donnell
LeBron James
Mark Cuban
Meghan McCain
Megyn Kelly
Mexicans
Mitt Romney
MSNBC
Nancy Pelosi
NATO
NBC
New York
OPEC
PBS
Penn Jillette
People from “shithole countries”
Pfizer
Rachel Maddow
Rand Paul
Rick Perry
Robert Mueller
Rosie O’Donnell
Russia
Saudi Arabia
Spike Lee
The media
Transgenders
William McRaven
Yes, he has been “a great unifier for our country.” He has unified the intelligent, compassionate, and patriotic Americans in ways he never could have imagined.
Unified, they voted against his Republican Party in the last election, and one hopes they will remain unified for the next. Perhaps taking healthcare from millions of poor and middle-income Americans will be the glue.
The most important problems in economics involve the excessive income/wealth/power Gaps between the richer and the poorer.
Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics.
Implementation of The Ten Steps To Prosperity can narrow the Gaps:
While Donald Trump was engaged in his usual, grade-school name-calling, by referring to Rep. Adam Schiff as “Little pencil neck Adam Schiff. He has the smallest, thinnest neck I have ever seen.” — and while Trump’s supporters lustily laughed and cheered at that childish reference from the President of the United States — those same supporters missed hearing one of the great Congressional speeches of our time.
The day we do think that’s OK, is the day we look back and say, “That is the day America lost its way.”
Long after Trump and his foul-mouthed, lying tirades will be forgotten, Schiff’s speech, before the House Intelligence Committee, will be remembered as a pivotal point in American history, defining a microcosm of where America is today and where America could be tomorrow.
It is a choice between accepting the continuing lying and lawlessness of a President and his criminal associates vs. demanding the constitutional democracy we fought so hard to achieve.
Here is the complete text of Adam Schiff’s marvelous speech, which should be read by every America politician, and every American voter:
My colleagues may think it’s OK that the Russians offered ‘dirt’ on a Democratic candidate for president as part of what was described as the Russian government’s effort to help the Trump campaign. You might think that’s OK.
My colleagues might think it’s OK that when that was offered to the son of the president, who had a pivotal role in the campaign, that the president’s son did not call the FBI, he did not adamantly refuse that foreign help. No, instead that son said that he would ‘love’ the help of the Russians.
You might think it’s OK that he took that meeting.
You might think it’s OK that Paul Manafort, the campaign chair, someone with great experience at running campaigns, also took that meeting. You might think it’s OK that the president’s son-in-law also took that meeting. You might think it’s OK that they concealed it from the public.
You might think it’s OK that their only disappointment after that meeting was that the dirt they received on Hillary Clinton wasn’t better. You might think that’s OK.
You might think it’s OK that when it was discovered, a year later, that they lied about that meeting and said that it was about adoptions. You might think that it’s OK that the president is reported to have helped dictate that lie. You might think that’s OK. I don’t.
You might think it’s OK that the campaign chairman of a presidential campaign would offer information about that campaign to a Russian oligarch in exchange for money or debt forgiveness. You might think that’s OK, I don’t.
You might think it’s OK that that campaign chairman offered polling data to someone linked to Russian intelligence. I don’t think that’s OK.
You might think it’s OK that the president himself called on Russia to hack his opponent’s emails, if they were listening. You might think it’s OK that later that day the Russians, in fact, attempted to hack a server affiliated with that campaign. I don’t think that’s OK.
You might think that it’s OK that the president’s son-in-law attempted to establish a secret back channel of communication with the Russians through a Russian diplomatic facility. I don’t think that’s OK.
You might think it’s OK that an associate of the president made direct contact with the GRU through Guccifer 2.0 and WikiLeaks, that is considered a hostile intelligence agency.
You might think it’s OK that a senior campaign official was instructed to reach that associate and find out what that hostile intelligence agency had to say in terms of dirt on his opponent.
You might think it’s OK that the national security adviser-designate secretly conferred with the Russian ambassador, about undermining U.S. sanctions, and you might think it’s OK that he lied about it to the FBI. You might say that’s all OK. You might say that’s what you need to do to win. But I don’t think it’s OK.
I think it’s immoral. I think it’s unethical. I think it’s unpatriotic. And yes, I think it’s corrupt and evidence of collusion.
Now I have always said that the question of whether this amounts to proof of conspiracy was another matter. Whether the special counsel could prove beyond a reasonable doubt the proof of that crime would be up to the special counsel, and I would accept his decision, and I do.
He is a good and honorable man and a good prosecutor.
But I do not think that conduct, criminal or not, is OK. And the day we do think that’s OK, is the day we look back and say, “That is the day that America lost its way.”
And I will tell you one more thing that is apropos of the hearing today.
I don’t think it’s OK that during the Presidential campaign Mr. Trump sought the Kremlin’s help to consummate a real estate deal in Moscow that would make him a fortune, according to special counsel, hundreds of millions of dollars.
I don’t think it’s OK that he concealed it from the public. I don’t think it’s OK that he advocated a new and more favorable policy toward the Russians even as he was seeking the Russians help – the Kremlin’s help to make money.
I don’t think it’s OK that his attorney lied to our committee.
There’s a different word for that than “collusion,” and it’s called “compromised.”
And that is the subject of our hearing today.
Send a copy to your Senators. Send a copy to your Representative. Send a copy to your friends and relatives. Read it to your children.
President Donald J. Trump hired an anti-environment guy to run the Environmental Protection Agency, and an anti-consumer guy to run the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (followed in that role by an unqualified Peace Corps volunteer), so it figures that he would hire a Fed Chairman who is ignorant about economics.
Hereis what Trump’s Fed Chair Jerome Powell told Congress, recently:
“The idea that deficits don’t matter for countries that can borrow in their own currency I think is just wrong … U.S. debt is fairly high to the level of GDP — and much more importantly — it’s growing faster than GDP, really significantly faster.
We are going to have to spend less or raise more revenue.“
Powell called out “unsustainable” federal debt in his opening remarks. But in response to questions from senators, he emphasized that “decisions about spending and controlling spending and paying for it” are up to Congress, not the Fed.
He didn’t use the word, “austerity,” but his use of “unsustainable” federal debt, and his comments about, “decisions about spending and controlling spending and paying for it” are right in line with the worst of the austerity sellers.
He apparently is right on board with the Republican “cut-social benefits and raise taxes on the middle-classes” philosophy.
Compare him with previous Chairmen, who though not always stating truth, at least acknowledged it:
Alan Greenspan: “A government cannot become insolvent with respect to obligations in its own currency.”
Ben Bernanke: “The U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost.”
And as has become the rule with debt nuts, Powell never gives any specific reasons why the deficits are “unsustainable,” or why “controlling and paying for deficits” are necessary. Do you think he learned that at Trump University?
And to top it off, get this:
“Defaulting on these debts—as the hetereodox macroeconomic theory Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) proposes simply unthinkable,” Powell said.
Oh really? Exactly when did MMT propose defaulting on debts? Not only is that a Trumpian-style lie, but it demonstrates that Powell has no idea what MMT is all about. The man’s ignorance is as shocking as Trump’s.
MMT (like Monetary Sovereignty) specifically says the federal government never will need to default, because it has the unlimited ability to create dollars.
Last week, the government announced that February’s red ink set a monthly record — $234 billion.
In a growing economy, setting an annual deficit record is like having your house go into foreclosure when the family income is $500,000. Something is wrong.
Huh? How is a federal deficit anything “like having your house go into foreclosure”? It’s a completely senseless analogy?
As recently as 2015, the deficit was $438 billion. Yet Republican policies have the deficit on track to be $1.1 trillion for this year. In a growing economy.
For perspective, the deficit was $1.4 trillion in 2009.
Remember, though, that to hold off a second Depression Congress had to pass the $700 billion financial bailout and the $787 billion fiscal stimulus during that budget cycle.
And revenue tanked with the economy. Republicans can’t use calamity as a defense.
Talk about not seeing what is right in front of his nose, Schultz acknowledges that deficit spending — “the $700 billion financial bailout and the $787 billion fiscal stimulus “– held off a second Depression.
Though he admits that deficit spending saved and grew the economy, he decries deficit spending. Amazing.
In fiscal terms, the GOP sinned most notably by passing the 2017 tax cut on a party-line vote in the Senate and a mostly party-line vote in the House. Thirteen GOP House members honorably defected.
Republicans crafted that legislation to please megadonors and corporations.
The plan offered no structural changes to help the economy over time and thus needlessly increased the deficit.
The sin was not the tax cut itself. That is helping to grow the economy. The sin was to cut taxes on the rich, with widened the Gap between the rich and the rest.
President Trump proclaimed that the tax cut would help the middle class. Of course, he also proclaimed that he would lower the trade deficit, which is at a 10-year high.
The president said companies would use tax savings to boost pay and hire more employees. In fact, many large corporations used the money on stock buybacks, which set a record last year after the tax plan became law.
What a surprise. Trump either lied or spoke out of ignorance. Who could have predicted that?
Amid the current fiscal misfeasance, recall that the country ran budget surpluses from 1998 until 2001.
Will someone please mention to Schultz that those budget surpluses led to the recession of 2001?
How austerity kills: Everything below the horizontal black line is a federal surplus (money flowing out of the economy, i.e austerity). The recession was cured by eliminating the federal surplus (i.e. adding money to the economy).
Why would a federal budget surplus lead to a recession? Because a federal surplus occurs when the federal government takes more money out of the private sector than it puts in.
One would hope that a Chairman of the Fed would understand that starving the private sector of money leads to recessions. Sadly, one would be disappointed.
In April 2000, Clinton addressed the American Society of Newspaper Editors and mused about the country paying off its debt, which was about $5 trillion. It’s now $22 trillion.
Had the federal government cut spending and increased taxes to take $5 trillion from the economy, we would have slipped into a monster Depression that would have made 1929 look like heaven.
Of course, Schultz doesn’t understand this, but paying off the federal debt need not require a reduction in deficit spending. The government could pay off the debt simply by returning the dollars that are in T-security accounts.
This would not have required deficit reduction, and it actually would have increased liquidity. But why worry about facts?
Deficit reversal began under President George W. Bush. Seeing those surpluses, he proposed a tax cut to “give the people their money back.”
Democrats were complicit in passing that plan, which did no more good than the 2017 tax cut.
“No more good” than to increase GDP growth. Otherwise a failure??
For good measure, Republicans in 2003 passed the Medicare prescription drug benefit.
With no payroll taxes or premiums to finance it, Part D adds roughly $100 billion to the deficit.
“Part D adds roughly $100 billion to the deficit,” which means the federal government added $100 billion to the nation’s economy. And this is a bad thing??
Last week, Federal Reserve Chairman Lawrence Powell said, “Deficits matter.” But he sounds like the housemother trying to break up the frat party.
No, he sounds like either a damn fool, who doesn’t understand economics, or like a liar who doesn’t want the public to learn the truth.
A few adults are around. Speaker Nancy Pelosi faced down an attempt by young, ultra-liberal Democrats to reject “PAYGO” – offsetting new spending with tax increases or cuts.
House Democrats have presented a sensible plan to shore up Social Security. Some Senate Republicans have offered ideas to reduce the deficit.
In the above two paragraphs, we are told that the “young, ultra-liberal Democrats” understand economics and want to help the economy grow, while the “House Democrats” would rather promulgate the Big Lie, that federal spending is funded by federal taxes.
Though Republicans once chided Democrats as “tax and spend liberals,” they abdicated on fiscal policy years ago.
Now the chaperones outdrink everyone.
More like the debt scare-mongers want everyone to drink the austerity Koolaid.
The most important problems in economics involve the excessive income/wealth/power Gaps between the richer and the poorer.
Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics.
Implementation of The Ten Steps To Prosperity can narrow the Gaps: