The Second Term of Donald J. Trump as President of the United States of America

Sheer coincidence I'm sure

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And the actual ad

 
"On 7/31/2019 Trump has a private meeting with Putin. On 8/3/2019, just 3 days after his private meeting with Putin Trump issues a request for a list of top US spies. By 2021 the CIA reports an unusually high number of their agents are being captured and / or being murdered. During the search executed at Mar A Lago the FBI find more documents with lists of U.S. informants on them." unidentified source #261

in context of Valerie Plame & Ambassador Wilson:
"Even though I'm a tranquil guy now at this stage of my life; I have nothing but contempt and anger for those who betray the trust by exposing the name of our sources. They are in my view the most insidious of traitors."
Former CIA head, U.S. President Bush (the elder), at the dedication of the George Bush CIA HQ in 1991 [ source: NBC-TV Meet The Press ]

If the #261 quote is true, President Trump is clearly unmistakably both a dangerous traitor, and unfit for his office, and should be removed expeditiously, as a matter of urgent U.S. national security.
If it is true, does it not then mean there's a Russian mole in the presidency? And that's not cause for immediate corrective action?

Even if SCOTUS suddenly sobered up, and got after Trump, they can't unring the bell. Damage Musk / Trump / Vance are inflicting now may be subject to repair, over time, recovery. But it cannot simply be reversed in such way as if it never happened. It's happening!

"transgender" #262
Jimmy Kimmel suggested what Trump was addressing was "transgenic" mice.

Did Trump say we're paying Social Security benefits to recipients in excess of 130 years old? If so, I have a problem with that.
 
Did Trump say we're paying Social Security benefits to recipients in excess of 130 years old? If so, I have a problem with that.
The US is not paying Social Security benefits to recipients who are over 130 years old.

That claim arose because the computer geeks that Musk hired in DOGE couldn't understand (COBOL) the computer language that the system is written in. And most of the programmers who actually worked in that language retired twenty or thirty years ago.

And it's not always possible to find an accurate year of birth for many "old people" so if it's not entered the system defaults to a point that's some 150 years ago (just the way the system works and has nothing to do with how old the people actually are).

And when someone dies the funeral home is required to report it to the gov't.
 
I thought it was exceedingly rare any human ever reached age 120. Methuselah aside, count me a skeptic.

Believe it or not, government databases list 4.7 million Social Security members from people aged 100 to 109 years old. It lists 3.6 million people from ages 110 to 119. I don’t know any of them. I know some people that are rather elderly, but not quite that elderly. 3.47 million people from ages 120 to 129, 3.9 million people from ages 130 to 139, 3.5 million people from ages 140 to 149, and money is being paid to many of them, and we’re searching right now. In fact, Pam, good luck, good luck. You’re going to find it. But a lot of money is paid out to people, because it just keeps getting paid and paid, and nobody does, and it really hurts Social Security and hurts our country, 1.3 million people from ages 150 to 159 and over 130,000 people, according to the Social Security databases, are age over 160 years old. We have a healthier country than I thought, Bobby.

According to this transcript: "1.3 million people from ages 150 to 159 and over 130,000 people, according to the Social Security databases, are age over 160 years old. We have a healthier country than I thought"
130,000 ?!
160 years old ?!

I can't make sense of this.

And on COBOL, yeah, I took a course in that.
The problem there was the Y2K problem. When COBOL first entered industry, computer bits were so expensive they couldn't afford a four digit year. So they only used the last two digits.
So they didn't know if someone born in 01 was one year old, or 101.
"Space is cheaper than sort [& has been since 2006]." cryptographer Bruce Schneier
What Schneier means is, before 2006 the labor intensive process culling useless text from computer storage acquired additional computer storage space, more cheaply than buying more.

In 2025 the cost per terabyte is so low, it's too expensive to cull.
 
According to this transcript: "1.3 million people from ages 150 to 159 and over 130,000 people, according to the Social Security databases, are age over 160 years old. We have a healthier country than I thought"
#265
Attempt #3:
My intended meaning here: Trump's not addressing this as a system problem of paying persons that can't possibly exist.
My read of Trump's words are that they're "people", 130,000 of them.
The late, great Hannibal Lecter, is a wonderful man.
He often times would have a friend for dinner." President Trump Wildwood, NJ 24/05/11
OK
So Trump has included gallows humor in his repertoire. - dandy -

Trump jokes about 130,000 people collecting Social Security? In prime-time?
 
And on COBOL, ... The problem there was the Y2K problem.
And when Y2K came around companies were hiring retired COBOL programmers because nobody that was currently working had any experience with COBOL.

Most universities stopped teaching COBOL in the 1980's and early 1990's and some earlier than that.
 
"And when Y2K came around companies were hiring retired COBOL programmers because nobody that was currently working had any experience with COBOL." S2 #267
With 20:60 hindsight (bifocal recollection?) the Y2K scare straddled the fence between ominous risk, and groundless conspiracy theory.
The dire warnings seemed plausible. But the event was a fizzle, thank goodness (or the geeks that averted it).

"Most universities stopped teaching COBOL in the 1980's and early 1990's and some earlier than that." S2
I got mine from a NY Community College in about 1978 on the G.I. Bill.

If you'll pardon a sharp turn: Ebony & Ivory ...
computing power has been, remains a duality, hardware, and software.
The hardware guys have long seemed far ahead of the software guys playing ham-handed catch-up. BUT !!

A.I. to the rescue !
Reductio ad absurdum. Biological, human intelligence evolves, but slowly over millions of years.
Artificial Intelligence (A.I.) is also evolving, but wicked quick in comparison.
Bio got a rompin' stompin' gang-busters head start.
But A.I. is closing the gap, and has already surpassed bio in narrow categories of expertise.

Extrapolate the curves, they intersect. We may not yet be able to nail that down to a date & time. But it's inevitable, if Putin / Trump haven't terminated the human race before that.

IBM's Watson, the computer they stacked together to beat contestant [now Jeopardy host] Ken Jennings wasn't abandoned after the victory.
Watson changed careers, from quiz show contestant to medical cancer screening. The Sorcerer's Apprentice

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This is similar to a COBOL flowcharting template, a dinosaur in our terabyte world.

"And when Y2K came around companies were hiring retired COBOL programmers because nobody that was currently working had any experience with COBOL." S2 #267
Remind you of anyone? Elon Musk perhaps? Frantically trying to rehire indispensable talent he haphazardly fired a day or two before?
 
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Warren Kinsella


EVERY CANADIAN NEEDS TO READ THIS NEW YORK TIMES REPORT

I’m a longtime subscriber – that’s not going to change, either, because (a) they are the official opposition in the United States and (b) they are literally the only American media that pays serious attention to the Canadian perspective – so I will share with all of you, who are my friends, this story by the Times’ Matina Stevis-Gridneff. It contains truly shocking details which no Canadian media outlet has published to date.

We are under attack, friends. Trump’s America is the enemy. Read this.

"After President Trump imposed tariffs on Canada on Tuesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made an extraordinary statement that was largely lost in the fray of the moment.

“The excuse that he’s giving for these tariffs today of fentanyl is completely bogus, completely unjustified, completely false,” Mr. Trudeau told the news media in Ottawa.

“What he wants is to see a total collapse of the Canadian economy, because that’ll make it easier to annex us,” he added.

This is the story of how Mr. Trudeau went from thinking Mr. Trump was joking when he referred to him as “governor” and Canada as “the 51st state” in early December to publicly stating that Canada’s closest ally and neighbor was implementing a strategy of crushing the country in order to take it over.
The February Calls

Mr. Trump and Mr. Trudeau spoke twice on Feb. 3, once in the morning and again in the afternoon, as part of discussions to stave off tariffs on Canadian exports.

But those early February calls were not just about tariffs.

The details of the conversations between the two leaders, and subsequent discussions among top U.S. and Canadian officials, have not been previously fully reported, and were shared with The New York Times on condition of anonymity by four people with firsthand knowledge of their content. They did not want to be publicly identified discussing a sensitive topic.

On those calls, President Trump laid out a long list of grievances he had with the trade relationship between the two countries, including Canada’s protected dairy sector, the difficulty American banks face in doing business in Canada and Canadian consumption taxes that Mr. Trump deems unfair because they make American goods more expensive.

He also brought up something much more fundamental.

He told Mr. Trudeau that he did not believe that the treaty that demarcates the border between the two countries was valid and that he wants to revise the boundary. He offered no further explanation.

The border treaty Mr. Trump referred to was established in 1908 and finalized the international boundary between Canada, then a British dominion, and the United States.

Mr. Trump also mentioned revisiting the sharing of lakes and rivers between the two nations, which is regulated by a number of treaties, a topic he’s expressed interest about in the past.

Canadian officials took Mr. Trump’s comments seriously, not least because he had already publicly said he wanted to bring Canada to its knees. In a news conference on Jan. 7, before being inaugurated, Mr. Trump, responding to a question by a New York Times reporter about whether he was planning to use military force to annex Canada, said he planned to use “economic force.”

The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

During the second Feb. 3 call, Mr. Trudeau secured a one-month postponement of those tariffs.

This week, the U.S. tariffs came into effect without a fresh reprieve on Tuesday. Canada, in return, imposed its own tariffs on U.S. exports, plunging the two nations into a trade war.

(On Thursday, Mr. Trump granted Canada a monthlong suspension on most of the tariffs.)

Glimpses of the rupture between Mr. Trump and Mr. Trudeau, and of Mr. Trump’s aggressive plans for Canada, have been becoming apparent over the past few months.

The Star, a Canadian newspaper, has reported that Mr. Trump mentioned the 1908 border treaty in the early February call and other details from the conversation. And the
Financial Times has reported that there are discussions in the White House about removing Canada from a crucial intelligence alliance among five nations, attributing those to a senior Trump adviser.

Doubling Down

But it wasn’t just the president talking about the border and waters with Mr. Trudeau that disturbed the Canadian side.

The persistent social media references to Canada as the 51st state and Mr. Trudeau as its governor had begun to grate both inside the Canadian government and more broadly.
While Mr. Trump’s remarks could all be bluster or a negotiating tactic to pressure Canada into concessions on trade or border security, the Canadian side no longer believes that to be so.

And the realization that the Trump administration was taking a closer and more aggressive look at the relationship, one that tracked with those threats of annexation, sank in during subsequent calls between top Trump officials and Canadian counterparts.

One such call was between Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick — who at the time had not yet been confirmed by the Senate — and Canada’s finance minister, Dominic LeBlanc. The two men had been communicating regularly since they had met at Mar-a-Lago, Mr. Trump’s home and club in Florida, during Mr. Trudeau’s visit there in early December.

Mr. Lutnick called Mr. LeBlanc after the leaders had spoken on Feb. 3, and issued a devastating message, according to several people familiar with the call: Mr. Trump, he said, had come to realize that the relationship between the United States and Canada was governed by a slew of agreements and treaties that were easy to abandon.

Mr. Trump was interested in doing just that, Mr. Lutnick said.

He wanted to eject Canada out of an intelligence-sharing group known as the Five Eyes that also includes Britain, Australia and New Zealand.

He wanted to tear up the Great Lakes agreements and conventions between the two nations that lay out how they share and manage Lakes Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie and Ontario.

And he is also reviewing military cooperation between the two countries, particularly the North American Aerospace Defense Command.

A spokesperson for Mr. Lutnick did not respond to a request for comment. A spokesperson for Mr. LeBlanc declined to comment.
In subsequent communications between senior Canadian officials and Trump advisers, this list of topics has come up again and again, making it hard for the Canadian government to dismiss them.

The only soothing of nerves has come from Secretary of State Marco Rubio, the four people familiar with the matter said. Mr. Rubio has refrained from delivering threats, and recently dismissed the idea that the United States was looking at scrapping military cooperation.

But Canada’s politicians across the spectrum, and Canadian society at large, are frayed and deeply concerned. Officials do not see the Trump administration’s threats as empty; they see a new normal when it comes to the United States.

On Thursday, at a news conference, a reporter asked Mr. Trudeau: “Your foreign affairs minister yesterday characterized all this as a psychodrama. How would you characterize it?”
“Thursday,” Mr. Trudeau quipped ruefully."
 
“The excuse that he’s giving for these tariffs today of fentanyl is completely bogus, completely unjustified, completely false,” Mr. Trudeau told the news media in Ottawa. #269
It's been a decade.
Trump was well recognized for speaking in superlatives long before he announced his presidential candidacy.

Can we accept that Trump is a prolific, compulsive liar and move on?

Mr. Lutnick called Mr. LeBlanc after the leaders had spoken on Feb. 3, and issued a devastating message, according to several people familiar with the call: Mr. Trump, he said, had come to realize that the relationship between the United States and Canada was governed by a slew of agreements and treaties that were easy to abandon. #269
"Easy"? Perhaps, for a lawless U.S. president.
Legal? Ratified international treaties are considered binding in law.
A U.S. president's Constitutional authority to abrogate a U.S. treaty is limited, if it exists at all. The inmates have overtaken the asylum.

On Thursday, at a news conference, a reporter asked Mr. Trudeau: “Your foreign affairs minister yesterday characterized all this as a psychodrama. How would you characterize it?”
“Thursday,” Mr. Trudeau quipped ruefully." #269
?
Thursday, so slam back a jolt of Jack?
 
"Trump bragged about negotiating and signing the free trade agreement with Canada and Mexico and pretty much the first thing he did after taking office was violate it." #271
Not in any way to diminish or dismiss the peril of numerous adversaries around the globe, representing Iran, China, al Qaida, ISIL, etc.
But President Donald J. Trump may be the most dangerous human on Earth.

Quibbling about a trade agreement here or there distracts from the broader potentially cataclysmic peril that confronts us.
 

Trump administration to drop case against plant polluting Louisiana’s ‘Cancer Alley’

Biden-era suit sought to curb emissions of the carcinogen chloroprene at Denka plant formerly owned by DuPont

The Donald Trump administration has formally agreed to drop a landmark environmental justice case in Louisiana’s “Cancer Alley” region, marking a blow to clean air advocates in the region and a win for the Japanese petrochemical giant at the centre of the litigation.

Legal filings made public on Friday morning reveal that Trump’s Department of Justice agreed to dismiss a long-running lawsuit against the operators of a synthetic rubber plant in Reserve, Louisiana, which is allegedly largely responsible for some of the highest cancer risk rates in the US for the surrounding majority-Black neighborhoods.

The litigation was filed under the Biden administration in February 2023 in a bid to substantially curb the plant’s emissions of a pollutant named chloroprene, a likely human carcinogen. It had targeted both the current operator, the Japanese firm Denka, and its previous owner, the American chemical giant DuPont, and formed a central piece of the former administration’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) efforts to address environmental justice issues in disadvantaged communities. A trial had been due to start in April 2025 following lengthy delays.

Community leaders in Reserve had expressed grave concerns about the case’s future following Trump’s return to the White House after the president moved to gut offices within the EPA and justice department responsible for ....

 
If you're looking for relief from the sort of news that dominates this thread cheer up, relief is at hand

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Have to say that they're pretty optimistic:

1,461 473mL cans of Moosehead. Just enough Canadian Lagers to get through a full presidential term.

No idea how that's going to last a full term ....
 

Job Cuts Surge on DOGE Actions, Retail Woes; Highest Monthly Total Since July 2020 #275

No surprise that there was a ratio between public & private sector employment.
If that, should it surprise us that when public sector employment is slashed, the ratio would be restored by commensurate cuts in the private sector?

What's surprising is the speed of the private sector reaction.


Moosehead Canadian Lager
- yum -
What could possibly be more savory than a refreshing adult carbonated beverage named after the body part of an ungulate?


Have to say that they're pretty optimistic:
No idea how that's going to last a full term ....
(y)
At a garden party I was told the time we are allotted in life on Earth is fixed, unchangeable,
except that time spent fishing is not included.
Probably because of all the beer.


No idea how that's going to last a full term ....
Either a Canadian light-weight,
or addressed to the U.S. market.


"Jimmy Kimmel suggested what Trump was addressing was "transgenic" mice." s #263
Snopes: https://news.yahoo.com/news/analyzing-claim-trump-confused-transgenic-232200449.html

Back to Trump: Status Check
Trump still horrid. Spring Forward
 
"Martial law anyone?" S2 #278
No. Thank you.

I'm a unifier. 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.
Now: I'm going to unify the country. I'll be a unifier. I think I'll bring people together. And that includes Blacks and Whites and everything. I think people will come together." Republican primary candidate Trump October 2015
Success.

France, Germany, Italy and UK back Arab plan for Gaza reconstruction​

By Reuters / March 8, 20257:01 AM GMT-5
ROME, March 8 (Reuters) - The foreign ministers of France, Germany, Italy and Britain said on Saturday they supported an Arab-backed plan for the reconstruction of Gaza that would cost $53 billion and avoid displacing Palestinians from the enclave.

Well Don, you've got Western Europe and Arabia in unison. Kudos for willingly sacrificing your fabulous Middle East Riviera, Mr. "unifier".
 
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