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Trump administration 2024-2028

These two things can both be true.

A guy made up a story about the Bidens' shady contracts.

The Bidens nevertheless had shady contracts, which is suggested by Joe's application of funding leverage to secure removal of an inconvenient investigator looking into a company with which Hunter was involved.
Fair.

Then there’s the $2 billion that the Saudis gave Jared Kushner, which the Saudis themselves had doubts over.


Or the Mueller Report - but then I’m sure it’s just collusion hoax.
 
These two things can both be true.

A guy made up a story about the Bidens' shady contracts.

The Bidens nevertheless had shady contracts, which is suggested by Joe's application of funding leverage to secure removal of an inconvenient investigator looking into a company with which Hunter was involved.
If you are referring to Viktor Shokin then you know that he was replaced not because he was looking into corruption in Ukraine, but because he wasn't investigating any crimes! His removal was welcomed not only by the United States, but also the European Union, the IMF and World Bank.
 
And in case anyone missed it, last night the US Senate passed the CR bill averting a government shutdown.


Murdoch Mysteries Crabtree GIF by Ovation TV
 
If you are referring to Viktor Shokin then you know that he was replaced not because he was looking into corruption in Ukraine, but because he wasn't investigating any crimes! His removal was welcomed not only by the United States, but also the European Union, the IMF and World Bank.
Again, two things can often simultaneously be true. He could be corrupt and useless, and he could be a thorn in Burisma's side at the same time. I know the conventional media concensus on what happened and why. I also know that the conventional media concensus can sometimes be a big lie. The appearance of impropriety hasn't been washed away.
 
Yep. And no suspension of the debt ceiling limit. Trump likely not pleased. Musk testing his own influence.
Trump has been acting like he wanted to avoid the political furball of being involved in the next debt ceiling negotiation by effectively pulling it into the present and giving the can a long kick. It will still happen, and when it does, I predict Democrats will - as usual - favour lifting it some more. They just don't want to do it right now, because there's no political advantage to be gained with terms expiring shortly. They know from past experience they will have media support to use it for their "Republicans' fault" orchestra. Republicans will - as usual - use it to negotiate some spending cuts (particularly the 30-odd who are the strongest fiscal hawks).

Musk enjoys the stage and having influence, but at the end of the day he's just the guy who challenged an emerging concensus and triggered a preference cascade in another direction. People ought to stop misrepresenting this as some sort of proto-oligarchical conspiracy.
 
Musk enjoys the stage and having influence, but at the end of the day he's just the guy who challenged an emerging concensus and triggered a preference cascade in another direction. People ought to stop misrepresenting this as some sort of proto-oligarchical conspiracy.
You mean the guy that in March, declared on Twitter that he isn’t donating money to either candidate?



It's sad there are likely a lot of disappointed Americans (and Canadians) because they can't blame US military members not getting payed on Trump and Musk.

CNN is calling it the Trump government. Isn't it still the Biden government?
Do people who don’t think it’s already their govt try to strong-arm their own reps to vote for certain things?

To be clear - I am not one of those disappointed Canadians. I’ve worked with enough US military and Coast Guard (I distinguish this because they are actually part of DHS, not DoD, so even if the US military got paid, the USCG may not) folks to know what type of shitshow it would be, regardless of political stripe of the people doing it.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again - the fact that the US federal service has an annual “will I continue to get paid” moment boggles my mind. It’s like an annual game of chicken with the lawmakers.
 
You mean the guy that in March, declared on Twitter that he isn’t donating money to either candidate?
I mean that donations and activism aren't a proto-oligarchy conspiracy. Would this be easier to believe if the criticism were aimed in the other direction at rich people who donate money to Democrats and work to advance Democratic policies?
Trump and Musk are acting as if it’s already their govt. Do people who don’t think it’s already their govt try to strong-arm their own reps to vote for certain things?
Incoming presidents sometimes try to shape events. Film at 11. See also: Obama, "bigfooting".
 
Do people who don’t think it’s already their govt try to strong-arm their own reps to vote for certain things?
I'm not sure. Maybe?

I was reading Biden is busy canceling half-finished bills and other things to prevent Trump from taking and using them (which would "set Trump back months or years worth of work").

If it's already a Trump government maybe Biden should be forced on annual leave and not be allowed to sign off on anything else.


To be clear - I am not one of those disappointed Canadians.
Absolutely not, but there are those people out there. It's a sad sign of how toxic our North American politics have become.

[In hindsight I suppose I'm guilty myself of suggesting Canadians deserve another term from Trudeau]
 
I mean that donations and activism aren't a proto-oligarchy conspiracy. Would this be easier to believe if the criticism were aimed in the other direction at rich people who donate money to Democrats and work to advance Democratic policies?
The criticism is fine by me on either side.

The hypocrisy I see (and I will freely admit that I didn’t think of this first), is that the folks clutching their pearls about Soros et al “controlling govts in the shadows”, are totally onboard with Musk’s actions controlling the future US admin openly. In the article I shared upthread, the Trump admin had no issues with the bill until Musk started tweeting away.

Incoming presidents sometimes try to shape events. Film at 11. See also: Obama, "bigfooting".
I’m not sure how that refutes that the incoming folks don’t think they’ll be leading the show soon.

Again, something I see here and other discussions is that some folks are totally fine with world and industry leaders speaking to Trump as if he’s already governing, but then say “isn’t Biden supposed to be the POTUS still?”

If it's already a Trump government maybe Biden should be forced on annual leave and not be allowed to sign off on anything else.
Ironically a shutdown would have done that.
 
The hypocrisy I see (and I will freely admit that I didn’t think of this first), is that the folks clutching their pearls about Soros et al “controlling govts in the shadows”, are totally onboard with Musk’s actions controlling the future US admin openly. In the article I shared upthread, the Trump admin had no issues with the bill until Musk started tweeting away.
He isn't going to "control the administration". People with interests - usually involving money - pursue them at city hall, in state and provincial legislatures, in parliaments and congresses, and in international bodies - usually with money. This has gone on for centuries, although rarely - and refreshingly - this openly by directly involving voters. What's different this time is that an entrenched political establishment saw its business model - pork-barreling and other mischief stirred into mega-bills - blown up in a few hours, and already knows the threat of being "primaried" is real. They're frightened, and they're trying to persuade others to adopt their fear, which is why so many people are digging for "reasons" why Musk got involved. The establishments are going to fight hard to resume their opaque ways. I have no interest in helping them in this fight, although others with their own adjacent political interests undoubtedly will.
Again, something I see here and other discussions is that some folks are totally fine with world and industry leaders speaking to Trump as if he’s already governing, but then say “isn’t Biden supposed to be the POTUS still?”
To judge by recent stories and the resulting discussions, Biden is POTUS-in-name-only and has been for some time.

Readers may judge whether unelected people implementing their agendas through a weak president behind closed doors is worse than unelected people working city hall, legislatures, etc, right out in the open.
 
But given the prevalence for hacking and the high profiles of these folks, leading to the outgoing transition insisting on in-person briefs, maybe using private email isn’t the best idea for govt correspondence.
Never too late to stop defending weak security practices. Amusingly and as usual, many of the reformers have changed tune after years of participating in a practice only when they are no longer in accord with those who hold the levers of power.
 
Never too late to stop defending weak security practices. Amusingly and as usual, many of the reformers have changed tune after years of participating in a practice only when they are no longer in accord with those who hold the levers of power.
To clarify - using US gov systems is the weak security practice?

He isn't going to "control the administration". People with interests - usually involving money - pursue them at city hall, in state and provincial legislatures, in parliaments and congresses, and in international bodies - usually with money. This has gone on for centuries, although rarely - and refreshingly - this openly by directly involving voters. What's different this time is that an entrenched political establishment saw its business model - pork-barreling and other mischief stirred into mega-bills - blown up in a few hours, and already knows the threat of being "primaried" is real. They're frightened, and they're trying to persuade others to adopt their fear, which is why so many people are digging for "reasons" why Musk got involved. The establishments are going to fight hard to resume their opaque ways. I have no interest in helping them in this fight, although others with their own adjacent political interests undoubtedly will.
open.
As you’ve said a few times in the past day or so, both can be true. Musk can control the administration via (as he publicly said) tossing funds at folks challenging the ones who don’t support his decisions. The USG can say “holy crap - this guy is upending our system”.

But I’m not so sure that Musk is doing this out of the generosity of reforming the American govt system. Or the German one. Or the UK one.
 
An interesting article from the CBC.


At first, when Trump was going on about 'drugs from Canada' I was pretty dismissive, but this article speaks to related money laundering through Canadian banks as well as the impact of Charter rulings on joint investigations; issues I had not thought of.
Stinchcombe is a real challenge. US police will share info with us, but often for leads/intelligence only. Getting them to release information for overt steps like getting judicial authorizations, or laying and prosecuting charges can be a challenge, and they absolutely will not in most cases subject their police to coming up here to testify. Given how much crime goes cross border, being hamstrung from leveraging evidence gleaned in the U.S. can be a real challenge. I’m dealing with this right now and it’s delayed us by probably a couple months, trying to clear some very basic information from their end for use up here.

And yeah, Canada is a massive haven for money laundering and very little is being done about it. It’s a problem that needs a bunch of dedicated cops and intelligence analysts thrown at it. But those are exactly the resources needed everywhere else.
 
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