Urban75 Home About Offline BrixtonBuzz Contact

What stupid shit has Trump done today?

On BuzzFeedNews The Pentagon Can't Believe Trump Told Another President About Nuclear Subs Near North Korea
...
A US official who had previously seen a version of the transcript confirmed to BuzzFeed News that the published version appeared accurate.

By announcing the presence of nuclear submarines, the president, some Pentagon officials privately explained, gives away the element of surprise — an irony given his repeated declarations during the campaign that the US announces far too many of its military plans when it comes to combatting ISIS.

Moreover, some countries in the region, particularly China, seek to develop their anti-sub capability. Knowing that two US submarines are in the region could allow them to test their own military capabilities.

Finally, it is unclear why Duterte would need to know the specific number of subs in the region. The Philippines is not a part US military efforts to deter North Korea so why would Duterte need to know such details?

In the past, the US Navy has acknowledged that nuclear submarines were part of a deploying strike group. By doing so, the public knows the general deployment schedule regional destination. But saying that submarines are in the region is not the same as saying how many there are and that they are near North Korea, as Trump did during the phone call. Strikes groups don’t stick together and sail as one big unit but can break off as needed.

The military also has announced roughly 48 hours beforehand when a nuclear submarine deployment is returning home, in part, to notify families.
...
More on that sub story.

Trump just can't resist blabbing on about all his toys when another big boy comes round to play.
 
  • Like
Reactions: CRI
On Kottke.org Foursquare: US tourism is down sharply in the age of Trump
foursquare-tourism.jpg

Electing a vocal xenophobe may not be the best way of making the US tourist industry (7.6 million jobs, $1.6 trillion in economic output) great again.
 
On Cambridge.org No Substitute for Experience: Presidents, Advisers, and Information in Group Decision Making
Abstract

Despite advances in the study of individuals in international relations, we still know little about how the traits and biases of individuals aggregate. Most foreign policy decisions are made in groups, usually by elites with varying degrees of experience, which can have both positive and negative psychological effects. This paper addresses the aggregation problem by exploring how the balance of foreign policy experience among leaders and advisers affects decision making in war, using a principal-agent framework that allows the relative experience of leaders and advisers to vary. A leader's experience affects decision making and, ultimately, the risks associated with conflict, through three mechanisms. First, experience influences a leader's ability to monitor advisers. Second, a leader's experience affects the credibility of delegation to experienced advisers and, in turn, the nature and extent of information gathering. Third, experience affects whether leaders are able to diversify advice, as well as their preference for policies that appear certain. I illustrate the argument using two cases that hold an unusual number of factors constant: the 1991 and 2003 Iraq Wars. George W. Bush's inexperience exacerbated the biases of his advisers, whereas his father's experience cast a long shadow over many of the same officials. Understanding the experience and biases of any one individual is insufficient—the balance of experience within a group is also important. Experience is therefore not fungible: a seasoned team cannot substitute for an experienced leader.
...
Poppy Bush was a war veteran who ditched at Midway and in a long career in government had run the CIA. The younger Bush at least had been a reasonably successful governor of Texas. Both Bush Presidents had to deal with unexpected events. Poppy had to throw Saddam's invasion back out of Kuwait. Something he did pretty much by the numbers. It can be argued Dubya was a chastened, more experienced President in his second term dealing with the disastrous legacy of his response to the shock of 9-11 in the first.

Trump managed to lose money as a Casino owner and his family firm recovering from that bankruptcy is perhaps his only real claim to having a leader's character. He does not appear to be learning on his feet and seems intimidated rather than intrigued by the details of things like healthcare.

This paper mentions him just once but it does make you think how he'd perform in a crisis. So far in the rather small, safe war against IS he's basically delegated the implementation of Obama's policies to the Pentagon. If he stumbles into the big war the KSA wants how would that go?

This tail end part makes me think of Gen Mattis's bullish attitude to Iran that dates back to a barracks full of Marines getting slaughtered in 83:
...
Finally, there is a sobering lesson for the politics of leadership. A team of seasoned veterans cannot fully compensate for an inexperienced leader, and inexperience in a presidential principal may enable or underwrite risky behavior by advisers. More generally, deviations from rationality depend not only on who you are and where you sit, but also who is in charge. The same experienced adviser may exhibit bias in some settings but not others. It is thus not enough to understand the biases of any one individual—the balance of characteristics within a group is also important. A fruitful next step in the new behavioral revolution would be to revisit questions about how powerful individuals interact, using theoretical and empirical tools to understand the political and institutional forces that bridge from the minds of decision makers to outcomes on the international stage.
 
Last edited:
I've no view on her celebrity status, good or bad, but she is clearly deeply unhappy. I know, I know, she chose this life but I don't like seeing this at all. She's clearly trapped in a vile situation. Agreed, she has put herself there but nobody could have predicted just what a vile, baseless, utterly fucking thick twat The Donald was.

This is nonsense celeb gossip based on nothing.
 
Based on nothing but pics (I don't follow sleb gossip) I would say she's not the happiest person either. Maybe it's her default expression though, I dunno.
 
Teresa May is going to "tackle Mr Trump" apparently (Guardian) about the leaking of the manchester bombing info.
Seems to me she's probably really regretting holding his hand that day, and will be working hard to try to distance herself as he becomes increasingly isolated and embarassing.
 
  • Like
Reactions: CRI
On Slate “Nothing but Slumlords”

On Kushner's real estate empire. It's just such a sordid business.

Lots of people voted for Trump because they fell for his magical billionaire businessman schtick. This was not a run of the mill politician but a clean handed outsider who would fix everything.

On the face of it this isn't such an awful idea. Consider the whole 2016 Primary field. Trump was a very bright orange in a field of very dull apples. America does produce uninspiring politicians but on the other hand American management really is world class and some of their big corporations CEOs are remarkable products of a very tough selection process. It's perhaps a simplistic understanding of what institutionally plodding US politics are but not entirely implausible that such a technocratic figure might fix things. Similar impulses and PR fakery led Italians to embrace the bouncily entertaining scapegrace Berlusconi. A sort of Private Sector Man On The White Horse. That whole Ayn Randian fantasy is beloved by lots of Americans. Enough had been culturally conditioned to be suckers for a demigod of Mammon.

What they elected as President was a bullshitting real estate jerk who has only run a family firm he created with a big loan from daddy and daddy's political connections. A man whose only brush with politics was through the ever corrupt world of property deals. Whose early mentor was Roy Cohn, a thuggish NYC lawyer who ended up disbarred on ethics charges. Trump's idea of diplomacy is schmoozing with dictators in order to make grubby deals. These people would run America as business but you have to understand what squalid reality their idea of a business is based on. Forget Bannon's pseudo-intellectual ideological schtick this is where the clan running America come from. Kushner is literally a ruthless extractor of rents and Trump's vision for America is based on the same life experience.
 
On Slate Trump’s Infrastructure Plan: Let Wall Street Build and Operate America
...
That’s where Trump’s “asset recycling” might come in, as cities and counties would be paid (by Washington, and by the buyer) to transfer their profitable public assets to private equity groups. The megafunds aiming at American infrastructure investment, like a Saudi-backed $40 billion fund run by Blackstone, whose CEO Steve Schwarzman heads Trump’s business council, could buy airports or bridges, while local governments use the new cash to pay for the new projects—like pipes for Flint—that the private market can’t or won’t provide. In the long term, governments would be left with money-losing assets while Wall Street runs more lucrative public assets such as bridges, airports, utilities, and prisons.
Very swampy: welcome to the Wall St rentier state. All those tasty British PPFI deals come to mind.
 
It's called a "mantilla", and it's obligatory for women to cover their head in certain contexts in the RC church (no idea what the specifics are, though)
It's traditional but not obligatory to wear head covering when meeting the pope, but I'm sure the women in the party were told to dress this way to appeal to conservative Catholic voters, who still wish Vatican II never happened.

Pope clearly not bothered by lack of fancy headgear on other women.

dam9atwxuaehyox.jpg

154143818-79c62313-fd73-49d3-a4e5-e5f7da3ea3db.jpg

304D225200000578-3404770-image-m-219_1453127796788.jpg

AP3970044_Articolo.jpg
 
Sounds even worse from the eye-witness accounts (several Fox journalists, surprisingly), they say he grabbed the grauniad reporter by the neck, slammed him to the ground, and then punched him. Madness.
I can't "like" this but yeah, I heard the audio and read the description and just wow.

Strangely though, I doubt this incident will deter most who plan to vote for him. If anything, it will make him more popular. The mainstream media has been painted by Trump and his bunch as the enemy of the people, un American, paid by Soros, etc. He got what was coming to him, and they probably cheered the big tough man leader who took him down. Basically, he wouldn't have done this if he thought it would harm his chances. :(
 
On Kottke.org Foursquare: US tourism is down sharply in the age of Trump
foursquare-tourism.jpg

Electing a vocal xenophobe may not be the best way of making the US tourist industry (7.6 million jobs, $1.6 trillion in economic output) great again.
That's true, but think about where Trump's core supporter base is. It's not concentrated on the coasts or big cities, where tourists tend to visit. It's in places where few people from outside the area ever venture. They also aren't the sort of people who travel outside the US much, or to "touristy" places. Fishing and hunting trips, trail riding, maybe once or twice in a lifetime trip to Disney or Florida, but even that's not common. They've never benefited from tourism, so won't notice or care about the loss.
 
You could just imagine a pair of handcuffs on those wrists.

And she always seems to look petrified. Not just her face - her whole stance.

She does. She should run away as fast as she can. It doesn't look like a healthy place to be. I imagine that despite the resources she has, she's under a lot of pressure not to leave.

He always seems to look like the cat that's eaten the canary.
 
  • Like
Reactions: CRI
That's true, but think about where Trump's core supporter base is. It's not concentrated on the coasts or big cities, where tourists tend to visit. It's in places where few people from outside the area ever venture. They also aren't the sort of people who travel outside the US much, or to "touristy" places. Fishing and hunting trips, trail riding, maybe once or twice in a lifetime trip to Disney or Florida, but even that's not common. They've never benefited from tourism, so won't notice or care about the loss.
Given that an awful lot of US illegal immigration is by folks coming in on tourist visas they might even see it as a good thing.
 
  • Like
Reactions: CRI
Trump Declines to Affirm NATO's Article 5

Speaking in front of a 9/11 and Article 5 Memorial at the new NATO headquarters, Trump praised NATO’s response to the 9/11 attacks and spoke of “the commitments that bind us together as one.”

But he did not specifically commit to honor Article 5, which stipulates that other NATO allies must come to the aid of an ally under attack if it is invoked.

The only time in history that Article 5 has been invoked was after the September 11 attacks, a fact that Trump mentioned. The memorial Trump was dedicating is a piece of steel from the North Tower that fell during the attacks.

The New York Times reported on Wednesday evening that Trump would use the speech to finally endorse Article 5. Though top members of his administration, including Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and Vice President Mike Pence have done so, Trump’s refusal has shaken NATO allies.

Trump has been a harsh critic of NATO overall, at one point calling it “obsolete.” He has repeatedly criticized other allies for not paying their fair share of the defense burden of the alliance. He has pushed the alliance to do more to combat terrorism. At the NATO leaders summit, counter-terrorism and burden-sharing will dominate the agenda—not Russia.
 
Back
Top Bottom