Donald John Trump

Stories and links about our 45th President, Donald John Trump, to help you keep informed on what our president is up to these days.

โ€˜Will work when drunk!โ€™ – New York Daily News

NYC subway riders greeted by ad hyping โ€˜crazyโ€™ Rudy Giulianiโ€™s law offices: โ€˜Will work when drunk!โ€™ – New York Daily News

Rudy Giuliani is off the rails, according to a cheeky ad that popped up in the New York City subway Tuesday.

The satirical ad, which was spotted on at least one A train Tuesday afternoon, touts the ex-New York mayor-turned-Trump attorneyโ€™s โ€œcrazyโ€ legal services, including โ€œback-channel dealsโ€ and โ€œcable news appearances.โ€

The blue-banner ad also features a mug of Giuliani with his tongue partially out of his mouth, along with a phone number and a link to โ€œCrazyRudyLaw.com.โ€

How a Failed Trump Golf Course Became a Dilapidated State Park | Time

How a Failed Trump Golf Course Became a Dilapidated State Park | Time

When Donald Trump bought 436 acres in upstate New York two decades ago, he envisioned adding two new championship golf courses to his collection.

He bought the wet, overgrown, tree-tangled parcels that sit miles off a state parkway beginning in 1998 for less than the current price of a two-bedroom condo in Trump Tower.

But local leaders nixed the golf-course plans and his subsequent efforts to sell it to a homebuilding company faltered. So he gave it away.

Trump Calls for Fedโ€™s โ€˜Boneheadsโ€™ to Slash Interest Rates Below Zero – The New York Times

Trump Calls for Fedโ€™s โ€˜Boneheadsโ€™ to Slash Interest Rates Below Zero – The New York Times

Mr. Trump’s request is extraordinary for several reasons. The United States economy is still growing solidly and consumers are spending strongly, making this an unusual time to push for monetary accommodation, particularly negative rates, a policy that the Fed debated but passed up even in the depths of the Great Recession. It is also typical for countries with comparatively strong economies to pay higher interest rates, not the “lowest” ones.

Negative rates, which have been used in economies including Japan, Switzerland and the Eurozone, mean that savers are penalized and borrowers rewarded: Their goal is to reduce borrowing costs for households and companies to encourage spending. But they come at a cost, curbing bank profitability.

While it’s unclear how effective they have been as a policy tool — some research suggests negative rates could curtail lending — they are increasingly a reality in much of the world as central banks rush to support economic growth and investors look for safe assets

I think we can all agree on who is the bonehead here.

Why do I sort of like Trump?

I still can’t fully put my finger on why I sort of like Donald Trump.๐Ÿ™„ He says such vulgar, awful things. Bar maybe his opposition to new wilderness areas and gun control, I canโ€™t figure out on much that we would agree with. I certainly disagree with him on international trade, international relations, climate change, or energy policy more generally. Trump doesn’t seem to have many good policy ideas.

That said, Donald Trump taps in my anger, and that of many Americans about the dysfunction in Washington DC, and the elitism of the establishment which seems to always know whatโ€™s right and proper without actually understanding the issue at hand. Itโ€™s great the technocrats seem to know what always is right, but there should be somebody in government challenging them and questioning what is right for our country.

Labor Day Weekend and Trump

It’s rained the past three years on Labor Day Weekend. While no single storm can be linked directly to election of President Trump, the trend of rainy weather on Labor Day correlates closely with his election.

I think Trump could be re-elected

Similar to what we saw in 2016, the media is completely missing the fact that President Donald Trump may very well be re-elected in 2020:

  1. Incumbents often are re-elected because they are proven winners and known quantities to voters
  2. Don’t discount the ability of the Federal Reserve and the president to keep the economy healthy through the end of 2020 by manipulating the money supply and tarrifs
  3. Liberals think they are winning on the gun issue but they are also activating gun owners – both suburban men and rural folk to get out and vote too
  4. America while becoming more diverse isn’t necessarily becoming more liberal. Many Hispanics are quite conservative on abortion, and even guns for the more rural and agriculture connected ones
  5. Suburban communities often have a socially conservative undertone that’s being ignored by liberals – and not just taxes or race. A lot of suburbanites have hunting camps
  6. A lot of white liberals are not doing a good job at connecting with African American communities. Saying your for more funding for historically black colleges isn’t necessarily going to engage minorities.
  7. Race and dog whistles still work with many whites who fear losing what they’ve worked hard to earn
  8. The electoral college and US Senate bias towards the conservative leaning small and modest size cities in less populated states like Montana, North Dakota and Iowa. Even if a lot of the vote comes from the city, they are in a more conservative culture.
  9. Politicians, many of them who are conservative, draw house districts, set the time and manor for voting, set voter identification requirements
  10. Lastly, the liberal narrative we hear in New York and California may sound very different in Texas or the Mid West.

Trump’s large union crowd at Shell was given the option of not showing up โ€” and not getting paid | Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trump’s large union crowd at Shell was given the option of not showing up โ€” and not getting paid | Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The choice for thousands of union workers at Royal Dutch Shell’s petrochemical plant in Beaver County was to either spend Tuesday standing in a giant hall waiting for President Donald Trump to speak, or to take the day off with no pay.

“Your attendance is not mandatory,” read the rules that Shell sent to union leaders a day ahead of the visit to the $6 billion construction site. But only those that showed up at 7 a.m., scanned their cards, and prepared to stand for hours — through lunch but without lunch — would be paid.

“NO SCAN, NO PAY,” the rules said.

Those that decided to sit out the event would have an excused absence, the company said, and would not qualify for overtime pay on Friday. The company has a 56-hour workweek with 16 hours of overtime. That means those workers who attended Mr. Trump’s speech and showed up for work on Friday meeting the overtime threshold are being paid at a rate of time and a half, while those that didn’t go to hear the president are being paid the regular rate, despite the fact that both groups did not do work on the site on Tuesday.