Saturday, June 23, 2018

In reality, where is the "Fake News"


I can assure you I try really hard to believe President Trump when he makes a proclamation via his tweets, but it’s becoming more and more difficult to do so in light of the fact that during his 466 days of rule he has made 3001 incorrect or misleading claims, averaging 6.5 per day.

Some of the more noteworthy claims include the following:

The claim, that he passed the biggest tax cut in history, when in fact it ranks eighth.

The claim, that a border wall was needed to stop the flow of drugs across the southern border, even though the Drug Enforcement Administration says a wall would not limit this illegal trade, as much of it travels through legal borders or under tunnels unaffected by any possible physical barrier.

The claim his long-promised border wall is already being built, even though Congress denied him the major funding and prohibited the use of prototypes he had viewed with great fanfare.

The claim, that he has created 3 million jobs “since the election,” even though he did not assume the presidency until almost three months later. About 2.5 million jobs have been created since Trump took the oath of office.

The claim he made after his first year in office, that he had “incredible success” in terms of job growth, even though annual job growth under his presidency has been slower than the last five years of Obama’s term, and during Trump’s first year Americans witnessed the slowest job growth in six years.

The claim that, “wages are going up for the first time in many, many years,” even though they have been rising steadily since 2014.

The claim, that under the Iran nuclear agreement, the United States gave the country $150 billion. That money was always Iran’s money. Iran had billions of dollars in frozen assets in foreign banks around the globe because of international sanctions over its nuclear program. It was simply their money that was unfrozen which Iran estimated at $32 billion.

The claim, that President Xi Jinping of China instantly agreed to a request from Trump to allow the sale of U.S. beef after years of blocking it. China had already agreed to such sales under a deal brokered by the Obama administration.

The claim, that the U.S. trade deficit with China is $500 billion. In reality it is about $300 billion.

The claim “we have done more than anybody in a year” and “I accomplished more than I promised.” In reality, at the end of his first year, Trump had signed fewer bills than any president since Dwight D. Eisenhower.  However, he has made up for lost time since the one year mark and in a year and a half is now tied with George W. Bush.

The claim by President Donald Trump that he is “undoing the government’s rampant spending that occurred under former President Obama’s watch.”   The facts are President Trump signed  a  tax plan that will increase the deficit by an estimated $1.7 trillion.
 
The claim Trump made about rescinding the recent policy of separating border crossing immigrants from their children, “You can’t do it through an executive order.”  President Trump three days later signed an executive order doing just that.

However, one of my favorite Trumpian tweets was made approximately two weeks ago.  After the historical North Korean Summit our President stated, “Before taking office people were assuming that we were going to War with North Korea.  President Obama said that North Korea was our biggest and most dangerous problem. No longer - sleep well tonight!”

Last Friday Trump stated, “The existence and risk of proliferation of weapons-usable fissile material [nuclear] on the Korean Peninsula [and] the actions and policies of the Government of North Korea . . . continue to constitute an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security, foreign policy, and economy of the United States.”

Guess we shouldn’t “sleep well” after all, since this basically contradicts his earlier message.

President Trump consistently labels media outlets as “Fake News” and untrustworthy information sources for our citizens.  Perhaps as the old saying goes, “People who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones.”

Saturday, June 16, 2018

Was Korean Summit Truely Miraculous?


Once again the great white knight has swooped in and saved his people.  Before June 11th North Korea was characterized by the Trump administration as a “nuclear threat” not only to South Korea but also the United States.  On June 11th after a four hour meeting with one of the most notorious dictators in the world who had opponents and family members assassinated, jailed, poisoned, and whose people endure immense humanitarian suffering, President Trump declared that, “North Korea is no longer a nuclear threat.” 

Wow, and after only 4 hours we have wiped out centuries of proven lies, corruption, and deception.

Not only did President Trump claim to remove our nation from a “nuclear threat,” additionally in classic reality TV style he showered Kim Jong-Un with praises calling him “very smart,” with “a great personality,” “loved by his people.”  Hours later, in an interview with Voice of America’s Greta van Susteren, Trump went even further, declaring that Kim “loves his people,” brushing off concerns about the well-documented history of North Korea’s human-rights abuses.

I challenge all readers to actually read the document signed at this historic summit and tell me how one could conclude that the North Korea “nuclear threat” is eliminated by its signing.

But then again President Trump has a propensity for always interpreting things differently from the real world to garnish favor from his supporters.

His latest legal troubles with the state of New York over his interpretation of a non-profit charitable organization verses how it is legally defined and structured is a perfect example of Trumpism. New York’s attorney general filed suit against President Trump and his three eldest children Thursday, alleging “persistently illegal conduct” at the president’s personal charity.

According to President Trump one can establish a non-profit charitable organization to pay businesses’ creditors, to decorate golf clubs and to stage a multimillion-dollar giveaway at 2016 campaign events.  Marc S. Owens, a former head of the IRS’s nonprofit division acknowledges that President Trump’s handling of the New York Trump Foundation is a perfect example of how NOT to run a private non-profit foundation.  In fact he states, “There is little else [Trump] could have done that could have made it worse.”

So now we have a meeting of two world leaders, one whose past actions are totally illegal by U.S. standards, and the other who continually skirts the fringes of what is legal/illegal and spends a great of time in the U.S. court system because of it.

Was President Trump’s North Korea meeting historic?  Yes.  But the validity of the document is only as good as the integrity of the signatures on it.