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Trump Believes in Eugenics, According to Trump's Biographer
So presidential!
Donald Trump
BY SAMMY NICKALLS
SEP 28, 2016
The Frontline documentary "The Choice" premiered this week on PBS, and it proves that Trump is pretty much an orange, sniffily pro-eugenics asshole.
In the documentary, Trump biographer Michael D'Antonio explains that Trump was raised to believe that success is genetic, and that some people are just more superior than others:
"The family subscribes to a racehorse theory of human development. They believe that there are superior people and that if you put together the genes of a superior woman and a superior man, you get a superior offspring."
Huffington Post also took the liberty of compiling a whole bunch of times Trump suggested that genes are the main factor behind brains and superiority. Here are just a few choice quotes from good ol' Trump:
"All men are created equal. Well, it's not true. 'Cause some are smart, some aren't."
"When you connect two racehorses, you usually end up with a fast horse."
"Secretariat doesn't produce slow horses."
"Do we believe in the gene thing? I mean, I do."
"I have great genes and all that stuff which, I'm a believer in."
Oh, good.
http://www.esquire.com/news-politics/ne ... iographer/
8bitagent » Tue Nov 22, 2016 4:02 am wrote:…Why is CBS, NBC, ABC, etc giving so much airtime trying to normalize neo nazis? …
Luther Blissett » Tue Nov 22, 2016 3:23 pm wrote:8bitagent » Tue Nov 22, 2016 4:02 am wrote:…Why is CBS, NBC, ABC, etc giving so much airtime trying to normalize neo nazis? …
Very good question.
Cozy Overlap Between Flynn’s Drone Company and Trump’s Border Plans
by Eli Clifton
Last week, President-elect Donald Trump’s announced that Ret. Lt. Gen. Michael T. Flynn will serve as his national security adviser. The announcement was controversial due to Flynn’s embrace of Islamophobia – “fear of Muslims is RATIONAL,” he tweeted – calls for regime change in Iran, and his paid work on behalf of a Turkish businessman with close ties to Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
But little attention has been paid to his role as vice chairman of a small drone company, Drone Aviation Holding Corp (DAC). The corporation received a series of Department of Defense contracts after he joined the company in April, while he was simultaneously serving as an adviser to the Trump campaign. If Trump follows through on his campaign promise to deploy more surveillance drones on the Canadian and Mexican borders, DAC would be well-placed to win even bigger contracts.
The company, which is developing a line of small, tethered, surveillance aircraft, issued a statement about Flynn’s new role saying that he “will work with Drone Aviation’s growing list of Department of Defense (‘DoD’), government agency and commercial customers to harness the unique data collection, communications and surveillance capabilities of the Company’s tethered tactical aerostat and drone platforms.”
Flynn’s appointment to DAC’s board on April 27, 2016 coincided with a series of DoD contracts that significantly contributing to the bottom line of a company valued at $25 million and whose stock currently hovers around three dollars per share.
Flynn is paid $36,000 per year for his work. He was issued 100,000 restricted shares, which will vest over two years, commencing with his appointment as a director last April. DAC also helped Flynn promote his book The Field of Fight: How We Can Win the Global War Against Radical Islam and Its Allies, cosponsoring a July 27 stop on his book tour in Herndon, Virginia with ACT! For America, an organization the Southern Poverty Law Center calls “the largest grassroots anti-Muslim group in America.”
In March, the month before Flynn was appointed to the board, the company was awarded a DoD contract “in excess $780,000” for a lighter-than-air surveillance and communications aircraft. That contract was followed by a $194,000 “upgrade contract” for the same project.
Following Flynn formally joining the company, DAC won a $125,000 contract in August “for equipment and engineering services including the integration of an advanced sensor suite for long endurance, persistent, tethered aerial applications for a current DoD customer.”
In October, they were awarded a $400,000 contract for the company’s electric tethered drone and a contract “valued at more than $200,000” for communications sensors integration onto its lighter than air UAV.
Drone Aviation Holding Corp. doesn’t markets its products just for the DoD. Its website advertises that it “uses include border patrol, emergency response, search and rescue and law enforcement response to crowd management, hostage situations, and large event security and protection.”
Trump, who took Flynn on as a campaign adviser in February, embraced the idea of utilizing UAVs for border surveillance, alongside his initial plan to build a wall across the entire 2,000-mile southern border.
Twelve days before Flynn signed his contract with DAC, Trump told Syracuse.com that, if elected president, he would expand the deployment of drones on both the Canadian and Mexican borders for 24-hour surveillance of the borders.
“They would work in conjunction with the Border Patrol, who are fantastic people who want to do their job,” Trump told Syracuse.com. “I want surveillance for our borders, and the drone has great capabilities for surveillance.”
According to a federal audit published in January 2015, the decade-long use of surveillance drones on the borders cost more than initially estimated and the Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general found “little or no evidence” that border drones had performed effectively.
DAC spokesperson Michael Glickman confirmed to LobeLog that Flynn continues to serve as vice chairman of the company but could not comment on his future plans.
When asked if Flynn had taken steps to liquidate his shares, Glickman responded, “No, shares owned by Lt. General Flynn are currently restricted under vesting schedules commenced in 2016.”
The Trump transition team did not respond to a request for comment.
http://lobelog.com/cozy-overlap-between ... der-plans/
Calls for Deutsche Bank, a Big Trump Lender, to Face Independent Prosecutor
By MATTHEW MOSK BRIAN ROSS Nov 22, 2016, 3:39 PM ET
PHOTO: A statue is seen next to the logo of Germanys Deutsche Bank in Frankfurt, Germany, Jan. 26, 2016. Kai Pfaffenbach/Reuters
A statue is seen next to the logo of Germany's Deutsche Bank in Frankfurt, Germany, Jan. 26, 2016.
Two Justice Department investigations of the German bank that has loaned Donald Trump more than $300 million must be turned over to an independent prosecutor, a senior U.S. Senator said this week, because there will be “a clear conflict of interest” between Trump’s personal business interests and his public duties.
“The credibility of this investigation will be completely undermined, and our criminal justice system will be diminished by this obvious conflict of interest,” Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticut Democrat and former federal prosecutor, told ABC News in an exclusive interview this week. “What's needed here is clearly an independent prosecutor, without any connection to an Attorney General who likely will be someone who is a personal confidant and campaign surrogate for Donald Trump.”
Deutsche Bank has become one of his company’s most reliable lenders. The German bank has helped finance the renovation of the Trump Old Post Office development in Washington, D.C., his purchase of the Doral golf course and country club in Florida, as well as the construction of a Trump office building in Chicago.
At the same time, the bank has been the target of two long-running federal investigations – one looking at lending practices leading up to the massive mortgage meltdown of 2007 and 2008, and another focused on allegations that the bank helped clients illegally funnel money out of Russia.
Deutsche Bank has confirmed in public filings that the Justice Department’s demands in settlement negotiations over the mortgage fraud case could be steep – the initial U.S. position was to demand a back-breaking $14 billion settlement. In the filings, the bank said it was "cooperating fully," with the investigation.
Sen. Blumenthal said if the Justice Department gets what it wants, the settlement “would gravely threaten the bank, possibly bankrupt it, and thereby impact Donald Trump’s business interests very, very severely.”
The bank declined comment to ABC News, but has conveyed in public statements that it hopes the settlement amounts will be reduced significantly after more negotiating.
“Talks are ongoing,” the bank reported to investors.
The status of the investigation has been a dominant topic in German financial circles, but a German embassy spokesman in Washington said the topic did not come up during Trump’s phone call with Chancellor Angela Merkel last Thursday.
“I’m pretty sure this was not part of it,” said Markus Knauf, the embassy spokesman. “She congratulated him for winning the presidency and pledged that the U.S. and Germany would continue to work together.”
How a Trump Justice Department will proceed with those talks has become the latest in a series of questions about how the incoming president will navigate between his many business entanglements and his new and powerful government post.
Trump has indicated he would leave his business dealings to his children, and focus his attention on his duties as president.
In an interview after his election, he told CBS 60 Minutes, “I don’t care about hotel occupancy. It’s peanuts compared to what we’re doing here.”
Since the election, reports suggest that the line between his business dealings and his official work has been blurred.
That included a report about comments he made to British officials about his Scottish golf course, and a meeting he held with Indian businessmen about a project in Mumbai. A Trump Organization official who refused to be named described the meeting with the Indian businessmen as a "congratulatory exchange in passing."
PHOTO: Donald Trump leaves after a meeting at the New York Times, Nov. 22, 2016, in New York.Timothy A. Clary/AFP/Getty Images
Donald Trump leaves after a meeting at the New York Times, Nov. 22, 2016, in New York.
A review of his financial disclosure filings indicates that Trump has business interests around the globe, generating more than $50 million in income from various entities in 18 countries.
Already, Trump has garnered attention for meeting with developers of a Trump project in India, and for raising the issue of wind farms during a meeting with British officials – an issue for the operation of his Scottish golf club.
Ethics experts have warned that if Trump maintains a role in advocating for his business empire, those actions could taint any negotiation between Deutsche Bank and the Justice Department during a Trump administration.
“The scope of possible conflicts is tremendous,” said Noah Bookbinder, executive director of CREW, a prominent ethics group in Washington, DC. “Perhaps most problematic are foreign policy issues, where he might have an incentive, to, for instance, try to improve the reputation of and brand of Trump and Trump Hotels and Trump Buildings in countries where he has businesses, and that could conceivably affect the kinds of decisions he makes in terms of American foreign policy.”
“And that's a really disturbing thought,” Bookbinder said.
Bookbinder, a former federal prosecutor, described a range of scenarios that would complicate the federal case against Deutsche Bank.
Would Trump object, for instance, to imposing steep fines on the bank if that would create such serious financial distress that bankers could be forced to call in Trump’s loans? Conversely, he said, if Trump’s loans were re-negotiated with more favorable terms, critics could question whether such an effort was done to curry favor with the incoming president.
“I think that even if Donald Trump says and does nothing, the attorneys and the employees at the Department of Justice who are working on this are going to know that the new president has an interest potentially in Deutsche Bank getting a good deal,” he said. “So there's going to be some suspicion even if there's no evidence of Donald Trump actually doing anything to try to influence the result.”
ABC News sought comment from the Trump transition team and the Trump Organization, but has not received a response.
Overnight, Trump tweeted in apparent response to criticism of his references to business dealings during talks with foreign leaders: “Prior to the election it was well known that I have interests in properties all over the world. Only the crooked media makes this a big deal!”
And on Tuesday, a defiant president-elect told the New York Times: “The law is on my side, the President can’t have a conflict of interest.”
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/calls-de ... d=43722765
Perhaps being underestimated is a foundation of his approach to strategy.
Nordic » Wed Nov 23, 2016 3:39 am wrote:Please, the old left/right paradigms have been destroyed. The game board has been flipped over and the pieces thrown everywhere. The Democratic Party has become as right wing and corrupt as the GOP ever did, since the neocons took over the COUNTRY back in 2000. The two parties basically merged and became one especially during the last 8 years. Some group behind the scenes got tired of these Zionist Armageddon-bound nut jobs running the country and managed to trick them right out of power using Trump as the decoy figurehead trickster. Now everything has changed. It's a Big Deal. Right/left means nothing now. Tulsi Gabbard saw tight through the Obama/neocon schtick and went public with it so she's the new face of the "other" party. (She's still an Israel Firster). The Trumpites are old school Paleoconservative who actually are tired of seeing he country run by Israel and Saudi Arabia and sold for parts by the PTB. Perhaps they didn't want to go to war with Russia, knowing what a disaster that would be.
Everything is changing. Kill your old attachments to what you think right and left are because it's all obsolete now.
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