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Profiling 1 million? ?

(2016-06-20 09:26:29) 下一个

Profiling? exclusive? concentration camp?  separation? That 1 million? How can do you that? Another sloganeering product!

Wisconsin Sen. Joseph McCarthy? Who is it? Reading his story reminded me of those big names: Dwight "Ike" D. Eisenhower was the 34th president of the United States, Ronald Wilson Reagan - an American politician and actor who served as the 40th President of the United States from 1981 to 1989. Wikipedia, Chinese Qian Xue-Shen.

Sen. Joseph McCarthy conspired President Eisenhower worked with Red Russian (ISSR) to throw out the USA - huge/scary conspiracy! It took years for Eisenhower to clean that up.

Ronald Wilson Reagan? It's Joseph McCarthy labeld Nancy Davis (Reagan) as a socialist, forcing them together.

Chinese Qian Xue-Shen? You knew that story.

Well, Trump? copy Joseph McCarthy's idea, but suprisingly so effective now! So alarming to me!

"hunts for communists supposedly burrowed into every corner of American life. A handful of spies were ferreted out, but thousands of innocent people lost their livelihoods. Performers were blacklisted, teachers and union leaders were banished."

Evil thoughts echo the history. In reality, Trump's doing exactly - "Jihad will continue even if I am not around," said Osama bin Laden, hitting the nail on the head. " - divide and conquer ! So smart!

Why did our foundering fathers call "The United States?" - We unite in crisis, NOT DIVIDED!

So absurd that, during WWII, nobody suspected Trumps were spy of Germany, if given Trump's German heritage! It's American United theme saved his life not like his own rooted Germany.

"Joe Biden - US Military Academy
Biden's speech this year didn't make many headlines, which is too bad because his message about the importance of inclusivity obviously extends past the military and in to the workplace.

Treasury secretary Jacob Lew had similar advice for the graduates of the Jewish Theological Seminary, stressing the importance of inclusion, tolerance, and respect for leaders. "https://www.higheredjobs.com/Articles/articleDisplay.cfm?ID=939&utm_source=06_15_2016&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=InsiderUpdate

~~~~~~

Trump, like McCarthy, is master of conspiracy and innuendo

After long stewing over it, I finally realized who Donald Trump reminds me of, and it is scary.

His fire-and-brimstone speeches gave me a sense of deja vu. It seemed I'd heard his applause lines before, but I couldn't put my finger on whose shtick he was parroting. Partially it was because he rarely attacked one opponent or weighed in on a single issue. He sprayed rapid-fire insults and ticked off a long list of problems that, he claims, orthodox politicians have either ducked or botched.

 

Then a phrase he used in a rally shortly after the massacre in Orlando solved the mystery. Condemning President Barack Obama for not taking a tougher stance on radical Muslims, Trump offered several explanations: political correctness, weak leadership and the like.

Then he ominously added: "There is something more going on."

 

My mind's eye flashed back to June 14, 1951, when Wisconsin Sen. Joseph McCarthy warned his fellow senators of "a conspiracy of infamy so black that when it is finally exposed, its principals shall be forever deserving of the maledictions of all honest men."

McCarthy's alleged conspiracy involved Soviet secret agents and American fellow travelers.

The conspiracy to which Trump alluded presumably involves Muslim terrorists and their Democratic Party enablers.

That parallel doesn't mean we're fated to experience a rerun of the 1950s witch hunts for communists supposedly burrowed into every corner of American life. A handful of spies were ferreted out, but thousands of innocent people lost their livelihoods. Performers were blacklisted, teachers and union leaders were banished.

 

Before it comes to anything like that, Trump could move onto another campaign theme, as he has previously. But he might just stick with this one, thinking he could ride it to the White House. The idea of treasonous leaders meshes all too neatly with the times.

Now, as in the 1950s, Americans are confronted by enemies with an ideology whose power is difficult for us to comprehend. During the Cold War, it was communist assertions that capitalist society's days were numbered. "History is on our side," said Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev. "We will bury you."

That claim has been echoed more recently by militant Muslim leaders. "Jihad will continue even if I am not around," said Osama bin Laden, hitting the nail on the head. Since al-Qaida's founder was killed in 2011, terrorist groups have multiplied and, for all of its military might, the U.S. seems unable to stem that proliferation.

Our inability to put an end to radical Islamic terrorism can be understood rationally, but the explanations aren't emotionally satisfactory. Some troublesome facts hang out, like loose threads. By their very nature, conspiracy theories neatly tie everything together. That is why Trump is so fond of them.

He tried to link the father of his primary opponent Ted Cruz with John F. Kennedy's assassin. "I mean what was he doing — what was he doing with Lee Harvey Oswald shortly before the death? Before the shooting?" Trump asked, leaving the impression that the powers that be know the answer but aren't talking.

That conspiracy theory was woven of thin thread: an unsubstantiated story in the National Enquirer. Think of how much more Trump could do with our seemingly endless fight against "radical Islam" — words the president avoids like the plague.

How come he doesn't say them? It could be for perfectly understandable reasons. But I'd bet that the initial impulse of many readers upon seeing that question was to repeat it, perhaps adding one of their own:

"Why doesn't Obama say 'radical Islam'? Why did he change what he went by from 'Barry' to 'Barack'"?

Sen. McCarthy played that word game. Accusing Adlai Stevenson of communist sympathies, he referred to the Democratic presidential nominee as "Alger Stevenson." Alger Hiss was a former government official convicted of lying to a congressional committee investigating Soviet sympathizers in the State Department.

Should he choose to exploit them, Trump has some tall tales at his disposal. Like the 2012 attack on our diplomatic compound in Benghazi that killed an ambassador and three other Americans. It was said to be the work of a spontaneous mob angered by a video critical of Islam.

Yet even as government spokespeople were pedaling that line, television was showing damage to the compound done by heavy weapons. Was it believable that a snap mob was armed with bazookas?

"Was it because of a protest or was it because of guys out for a walk one night who decided that they'd they go kill some Americans?" asked Hillary Clinton, secretary of state at the time of the attack. "What difference, at this point, does it make?"

It might, if you assume the game has been rigged — an idea Trump has pitched, and I find absurd.

Currently he is berating Clinton for supposedly wanting to bring tens of thousands of Middle Eastern refugees into America — each a potential terrorist and collectively "a better, bigger, more horrible version than the legendary Trojan Horse ever was."

But that would mean that a presidential candidate was undermining our nation's security. That she has been doing so since serving in the Cabinet of a president either blind to America's interests, or worse — in the service of its enemies.

You would have to think that she and he were willing to expose Americans to more terrorist attacks on their own soil. Is that believable?

Only if you accept Trump's McCarthyite premise: "There is something more going on."

rgrossman@tribpub.com

The Trump Show isn’t funny. Time for GOP leaders to walk out.

Matt Bai
National Political Columnist
June 16, 2016
Ohio Gov. John Kasich and Donald Trump (Photo illustration: Yahoo News; photos: John Minchillo/AP, Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
 
Ohio Gov. John Kasich and Donald Trump (Photo illustration: Yahoo News; photos: John Minchillo/AP, Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

When I caught up with John Kasich yesterday in a Washington sports bar, I asked Ohio’s governor if he could see himself supporting Donald Trump. He shook his head.

“I’m waiting to see if at this point there’s going to be a Damascus Road experience, a dramatic change,” Kasich said. “And I haven’t seen it. You never know when it can happen. But without that, I won’t be involved.”

Kasich said he couldn’t even see voting for the guy, though he was quick to add he wouldn’t vote for Hillary Clinton, either.

I asked him why he thought Republican leaders in Washington continued to profess their support for Trump, even as they denounced his comments.

“Look, I think in either political party, there’s always a tug between party loyalty, being part of the team, and your conscience,” Kasich said. “And there’s a lot of people that are really torn. And I don’t want to excuse them. But human nature being what it is, there’s always a sense of ‘what’s my obligation to the team’ and ‘how does this affect the people I work with.’

“I think that’s why, to some degree, you’re seeing people run away. They won’t even talk to the press. Because they don’t know what to say.”

What about his own party loyalty?

“I’m a Republican,” he told me. “I’m going to travel for Republicans. I’m going to help the ticket in Ohio. But I’ve learned over the course of my career that I have to live with myself and with my family.”

You would think, after the worst mass shooting in American history, and after wave upon wave of Donald Trump’s stunning response to it, elected Republicans would be asking themselves a hard question right now.

Are they going to dutifully follow Trump down this twisted, rapidly descending path to the place where he promises there will be all kinds of winning and “everything is going to be fair” because there’s going to be “total justice”?

Or, like Kasich, are they going to say “enough is enough” and set off in search of higher ground?

I’ve had plenty of fun in this column at Trump’s expense. He’s said so many things over the last several months that cry out for a sense of humor. (I go back to his debate answer when he was asked about the nuclear triad: “I just think nuclear — the power and the devastation are very important to me.”)

But there’s nothing funny about where we are right now. First Trump took credit for his own prescience before the bodies in Orlando could even be counted. Then he reiterated his call for a ban on Muslims entering the United States — a proposal he had walked back because rivals and allies alike rejected it.

In the days since, he’s accused American Muslims of sheltering terrorists and has darkly vowed to keep a closer eye on their places of worship. He’s lied repeatedly about the national origin of the Orlando shooter, who was born in the same New York borough from which Trump himself hails.

He’s banned one of the nation’s premier newspapers, the Washington Post, from covering his campaign events, adding to his growing media enemies list.

Why? Because the Post had the temerity to report Trump’s clear insinuation that the president of the United States was hiding his sympathy for foreign terrorists, if not actively aiding them.

And to think the Russians had their hackers break into computers at the Democratic National Committee so they could steal the opposition research on Trump. Here’s a tip, Vladimir: Save yourself the trouble and turn on the TV, instead.

I don’t think Trump is a fascist — I really don’t. Fascism requires a belief system. All Trump knows is how to read a room and exploit the most powerful emotion lurking in it.

But like a storefront psychic who happens upon a genuine spirit, Trump is now playing with powerful historical currents he really doesn’t seem to understand. I can’t shake from my mind a tweet I saw this week from Jared Yates Sexton, a correspondent for the New Republic, who mingled among the crowd of parents and their children at one of these raucous Trump rallies in North Carolina.

Copyright © 2016, Chicago Tribune
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来源: TJKCB 于 2016-06-20 09:26:29 [档案] [博客] [转至博客] [旧帖] [给我悄悄话] 本文已被阅读:1706 次 (236158 bytes)
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