Friday, January 17, 2025

AP reports: "WASHINGTON (AP) — Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is cohosting a reception with billionaire Republican donors next week for Donald Trump’s inauguration, [...] other cohosts are Miriam Adelson, the Dallas Mavericks owner and widow of casino magnate Sheldon Adelson; Tilman Fertitta, casino magnate, Houston Rockets owner and Trump’s pick to serve as U.S. ambassador to Italy; Todd Ricketts, the co-owner of the Chicago Cubs; and Ricketts’ wife, Sylvie Légère."

Link. Ross Perot once famously said, "Big sucking sound," but in a different context.

I looked it up, what Perot said, "Giant sucking sound," not big. There's a Wiki page.

Quoting Wikipedia:

In the second 1992 Presidential Debate, Ross Perot argued:

We have got to stop sending jobs overseas. It's pretty simple: If you're paying $12, $13, $14 an hour for factory workers and you can move your factory South of the border, pay a dollar an hour for labor, ... have no health care—that's the most expensive single element in making a car— have no environmental controls, no pollution controls and no retirement, and you don't care about anything but making money, there will be a giant sucking sound going south.
    ... when [Mexico's] jobs come up from a dollar an hour to six dollars an hour, and ours go down to six dollars an hour, and then it's leveled again. But in the meantime, you've wrecked the country with these kinds of deals.[1]

Perot ultimately lost the election, and the winner, Bill Clinton, supported NAFTA, which went into effect on January 1, 1994.

Arguably, plant mobility overseas has been supplanted by labor mobility, from overseas or cross-border to here. Trump promised deportations. Musk promised an H-1B "war."

Citizen Laborers, in large numbers among non-union labor, voted for Trump.

Aside from distant and yesterday's history, AP reports:

Zuckerberg once seemed a foe of the former president, banning him from Facebook and Instagram after a mob of Trump’s supporters attacked the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. But lately, he’s been endearing himself to Trump as one of a number of tech executives who have been seeking to improve their relationships with the new president.

Meta declined to comment Tuesday.

In a between-paragraph thing, AP notes another of its stories -

As Biden warns of an ‘oligarchy,’ Trump will be flanked by tech billionaires at his inauguration

where checking out the story it is saying - 

Elon Musk, the world’s wealthiest person, took an unprecedented, hands-on role in the final stretch of Trump’s campaign, spending some $200 million through a super PAC. Musk has a new role reshaping government in the upcoming administration and will be joined on the dais by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. Both men’s companies have enormous contracts with the federal government.

Rounding out the trio is Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who recently changed his company’s priorities to align with Trump’s and has cozied up to the president-elect less than six months after Trump threatened to imprison him.

The three men are worth nearly $1 trillion combined and will be joined at the inauguration by the chief executive officers of OpenAI and the social media platform TikTok, which is scheduled to be shut down in the U.S. over the weekend under a new law that Trump opposes.

 [links in original]

On the dining room table, a bookmark from The Nation, an outlet with the slogan, "Truth to Power," had that particular bookmark printed having an image of Franklin Roosevelt and a quote from him -

The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much, it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little.

And Roosevelt, who was s polio sufferer, might think little of the Kennedy health czar nominee, for we have effective polio vaccines now, along with anti-vaxxer idiot denialists, at the current time where Franklin, if alive, would be expected to opt for the pro-vaccine faction and think the Kennedy man is a total worthless blithering idiot. And a danger if given any power.

Perhaps Roosevelt might not think so, some can doubt for he's not around to ask for likelihood confirmation.. 

But we can rationally extrapolate.

Sheldon Adelson's first trip to Israel, he put his father's shoes on since his father died before being able to set foot on Israeli controlled soil. Widow Adelson, now atop the gambling empire, and having that basketball team while the nation allows sports betting, is also a pro-Israel maven who Trump gave, first term, the Presidential medal Biden gave to Hillary and Soros, and widow Adelson gave the campain a bundle while liking a Greater Israel policy where the occupied Palestinian land would be annexed. Zuck, we know him, while readers can google the other co-sponsoring billionaires if they care to know detail.

I've seen enough already


Thursday, January 16, 2025

The good guys. Your health is our business. And the business of America is business. [UPDATED]

 Link. Your trust is our badge of honor. Bet your life on it!

____________UPDATE___________

Yes, being ironic. That link is good, no pay wall nor subscription wall. Realizing readers might see a subscription wall with Strib, on a newer and different UH report, here is a quote of enough to give a fair-use flavor of reported outrageous crap - while if you want more, deal with Strib. It is their content and fair use is the rule. 

In case the headline does not say enough, a bit of the report is quoted too:

[...] Andrew Witty, CEO of the Eden Prairie-based health care giant, [,,,] during a conference call with investors that he opened by acknowledging condolences many have offered since the fatal ambush of Brian Thompson, 50, of Maple Grove.

[...] Witty said Thompson worked on improvements to prior authorization rules that are part of a broader system for claims processing that can frustrate patients and health care providers, [... ! ]

The country’s system for health care offers the most advanced clinical care in the world, Witty said, [...]  At the same time, industrywide fixes are needed for handling medical claims, he said, and the experience for consumers suffers from too much confusion and complexity.

Industrywide displacement by sane and far cheaper non-confusing and non-complex Medicare for All IS a different option which Witty apparently declined to mention. Talking to investors per a conference call. Next paragraph -

“America faces the same fundamental health care dynamic as the rest of the world: The resources available to pay for health care are limited, while demand for health care is unlimited,” he said.

So? Rationing done by sincere government experts not under a greedy profit-making motive can suffice better and cheaper than profit oriented goons for greed now deliver. Witty's perspective is limited. Next paragraph, says much

The commentary came as UnitedHealth Group released financial results showing the company beat estimates for fourth quarter earnings by posting a profit of $5.54 billion during the final three months of 2024.

End quote

Dylan sang, You Don't Need A Weatherman to Know Which Way the Wind Blows. We had Weathermen, but the authorities stifled them.

Yet . . . here we are, decades later, Dylan now an old man, but worth 1000 Wittys.

More even

Nobody ever said a UH top dog bean counter should hold a Nobel price.

Any straight shooter can tell you that.

Vivek on the move. In Ohio, what's vacant once Vance is sworn in as vice pres?

Link.

EmptyWheel has a post about Trump nominee non-answers to Senate hearing questions based on hypothetical inquiry. I.e. refusal to answer about any future conduct or decision matters.

 EmptyWheel phrased the matter -

IF YOU CAN'T STAND THE HYPOTHETICALS, GET OUT OF THE CABINET

First it was Pete Hegseth who said it, followed 24 hours later by Pam Bondi. In the days ahead, I am sure we will hear the same from Tusli Gabbard, Robert Kennedy Jr., Marco Rubio, Kash Patel . . . et cetera, et cetera. et f-ing cetera: “Senator, I am not going to talk about a hypothetical.” Implied in the body language and tone of voice is the unstated addition “. . . and how dare you ask me about mythical future possibilities, rather than focus on the here and now.” Though to be fair, sometimes, as with Bondi’s exchange with Adam Schiff, that “how dare you” is spoken out loud.

But here’s the thing: the job description of every member of the Cabinet, and every senior leader of a federal agency, is centered on hypotheticals.

The Department of Defense is certainly focused on hypotheticals. The senior leadership — the Secretary of Defense, the Joint Chiefs, the various regional commanders, and a host of others — spend a huge amount of energy imagining hypothetical situations, and then planning on how to address those situations. “What would we do, if Iran successfully lobs a bomb at Israel?” or “How would we react to China sending a fleet up and down the coast of New Zealand, at the same time that they run ‘war games’ around Taiwan?” or “How would we respond to a North Korean missile that appears headed to strike Japan?” Senior DOD folks fear one thing above all: something happens that they never even imagined would happen.

The State Department and the Intelligence agencies operate with much the same fear. Every one of them dwells on hypotheticals every day, both reactive (“What do we do if they do X?”) and also proactive (“How might we game out a path to Z, knowing how others would react to our actions?”) None of these national security leaders want to have to face the question “How could you have missed this?” Lower level staffers put together voluminous briefing books for senior leaders, trying to prepare them for all the hypothetical situations they might encounter on a foreign trip, or when meeting with a foreign counterpart here in the US.

[...] If Pete Hegseth and Pam Bondi hate talking about hypotheticals, they are angling for the wrong jobs. The jobs for which they are nominated require that they embrace hypotheticals, not reject them.

[...] Then, of course, there are agencies like the CDC, NIH, and FDA. Their whole reason for being, at the top of a public health system that goes down to local health departments, is to get ahead of diseases. Two questions drive every bit of their work: (1) How can we slow and stop a disease from spreading? and (2) How can we prevent an outbreak from starting in the first place? Both of those questions require imagining hypotheticals,  [...]

 The point is driven home by additional examples in EmptyWheel writing, so, again, the link is given at the start so readers can view the entire thing, with reader commentary there as part of the item, such as

David Brooks says:

One of the questions asked of Pam Bondi (by Adam Schiff) was of “Are you aware of any factual predicate to investigate Liz Cheney?” She even called that a hypothetical which, ftr, it isn’t.

........................... 

Unfortunately, the EmptyWheel post gives no links to any online hearings video by which readers could assess assertions. Some wonks may be spending all day watching hearings, others might have less discretionary time or other priorities.

 Crabgrass thinking on that argument: The future being uncertain to everyone, the "hypotheticals" trick is akin to nominated folks for SCOTUS saying it might come up for judgment so I defer. Here, this round, whether or not it might come up, I defer. 

And it seems Bondi bent things more that way than Hegseth.

So, justify past conduct and decisions as a predictive tool of how an uncertain future might be handled? Well, not even that if one can simply say assertions are being made while clearly intended to frustrate my confirmation chances and that is wrong. But why say that much, say, "Anonymous smear."

In effect, why have hearings if a noninee will not justify a single thing about him\her\their-self\selves? (Pronoun use-choice by Hegseth not needing any inquiry since he'd want his kind, his gender and only his gender to be in combat.)

Having sought out some video via web search, this segment is viewed positively -

Richard Blumenthal Presses Pete Hegseth About 'Financial Mismanagement' Of Veterans Group 

It is about the size and scope and looseness of Hegseth's past management of two veteran-oriented nonprofits. It is about worry over the money.  More thought on that later, below. Inexperience on the big stage. At higher ranks.

Worrisome, not as much for its anti-woke start as things happened, and which some hammer on, or about pushups, but the ending about expensive ship-building from an ex-Navy guy, (similar to Bannon and DeSantis loyal to their service).

Tim Kaine just went smarmy with the smear, showing an insincerity which might be why Ms. Clinton picked him.

Angus King, "Your Position Is Torture's Okay—Is That Correct?': Angus King Grills Pete Hegseth In Senate Hearing" mattered, and Hegseth's answers were troubling.

Nominee good or bad manners may show, (possibly hot-headedness or hubris or weasel-like body language when the shoe pinches), there are things shown if the nominee declines to answer specific current fact, (not future policy) questions or argues over them?

I strongly expect Hegseth does not think he has a drinking problem, but when asked at least he did not say, "Not to my knowledge." Instead he was confronted and gave a different non-answer. Give him one point for that.  And when asked about how many pushups Pete can do, Pete did not ask, "On a good day, or as a regular thing?" So give him a second point. For giving one direct answer. Proving he's above average on doing pushups and well versed on minutia of weapons that can be carried by combat infantry - but again, the ending dialogue about shipbuilding.

Bessant did well in saying Trump will set the policy, as Rubio did in discussing diplomacy with Rand Paul.

..............................

(Stupid is as stupid does, so did Norm Coleman write Hegseth's script, or was he scripted by committee? Maybe Tom Emmer prepped him the way Tom did for JD's VP debate.)

Give Hegseth a third point - when asked about possible military deployment stateside he fudged (going hypothetical we call it) instead of saying, "Haitians WILL NOT EAT eat other people's pets - CITIZEN's pets - when I'm heading the Defense Department [!!] and that's in Ohio or any other God-blessed state of the entire God-blessed U.S. of A.which I love! That will not happen or I'll eat my tattoos!" 

BOTTOM LINE: This may not sit well with many, but, first there was earlier video about perhaps Trump switching DeSantis as nominee if Hegseth does not pass.

 During the Trump-absent Republican candidate extravaganza, DeSantis articulated something not too different from Hegseth. Six of one, a half-dozen of the other.

But, personally, DeSantis creeps me out and seems a confrontation chaser, per earlier commentary and sidebar items. 

Hegseth is sincere, DeSantis' sincerity is questionable, and Hegseth is willing to give up a very cushey big Murdoch FOX paycheck to take a cut in pay with much harder responsibilities, which favors him on sincerity scoring.

Crabgrass sees a bottom line truth that DeSantis, talk being cheap, would kick the can down the road but Hegseth would embody a cultural remake, aware of money being a factor and doing okay with that. Those vet nonprofits did not build him his mansion in Tennessee, FOX did, and while sloppy with the books at the nonprofits it looks as if Hegseth ran them without looting them, no proof of that came out and if that were the case it would have washed out that way, and the Pentagon has, if anything, too many bean counter mess-ups where the top guy is not responsible for counting beans. With the haze that way over the nonprofit money Pete will watch things.

Back to Sen. Sheehy's and Hegseth's discussion of Navy and shipbuilding, Hegseth in passing said people talk of unmanned aircraft (where ships if monitored well by satellite are sitting ducks), Hegseth mentioned unmanned undersea vehicles. Those, as well as the nuclear submarine fleet, and carrier fleet missle ships as carrier defense craft, are part of the equation. It was an apt reply while giving the Senator the reply he sought.

It was well handled. Last, Hegseth is smarter than Ron DeSantis ever was, is or will be and that counts. Passionate for the job, willing for a pay cut for more reality than FOX could ever give him, Pete really wants the job.  I would expect a better result there with him in, over DeSantis as a fall-back offering. Faults exist, but confirming him is the better option over anything DeSantis could bring to the office. And Pete offers a better chance of the mess being lessened than DeSantis, who seems in over his head with Florida. Making Florida worse not better is the Ron DeSantis track record, so don't kick that upstairs unless having much love for a status quo.

Go with Hegseth. Trump setting policy is a bigger worry than Hegseth implementing it. And as ever, Trump could fire him on a whim whether he does a good or bad job, so that will be a constraint upon Hegseth straying too far in his own mood and direction.

I think Pete would close the revolving door on generals and admirals, which Ron also noted as a problem to be fixed. Pete seems less inclined to schmooze the defense contractors, while Ron could be buttered up. Defense contractors using connected former generals and admirals for entry and favors does need attention.

Trump had Flynn problems but seems to have been artful enough to put that into the past and forever so. Trump will not be lulled by revolving door former officers.

The military will be okay, even perhaps better, so long as Trump backs away from his noise about using them on U.S. soil against Americans. Which is expected.

_____________UPDATE_____________

There is a sense in the air that Hegseth and DeSantis each read Project 2025 and that Trump was somewhat disingenuous in disavowing any ownership there. That, going that way while JD wrote the preface of Kevin Robert's book. A Big Club and you're not in it?

Which Senator has been most aggressive in quizzing nominees about Project 2025, or will they all act shocked SCHOCKED once they see it happening.

Other possibility - if nobody is so crass as to mention it, the sense of it happening will not even take hold? Gee. And I went and mentioned it. Well, nobody yet . . . not anybody in the big club. Will that possibility gain mention in the Bezos Post?

Unlikely. But, Big Club, surprise me. Do you think Amy Klobuchar will be the one to point out our being Project 2025ed? Jake Sullivan? Will a peep be heard from anybody on Martha's Vineyard? A silence so universal that the Federalist Society will not crow over it?

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

It seems wildfires have fired up finger pointing.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14279915/LA-fire-chief-LAFD-Kristin-Crowley-accused-retaliation-jenny-park-axed.html

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14286121/los-angeles-fire-union-chief-department-freddy-escobar.html

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14272399/LA-water-chief-Janisse-Quinones-fire-hydrants-reservoir-failures-Palisades.html

From there you get names of the finger-pointing players saying, "Not me."

If you care about it, it might help hone your own web research to see what happened, and who is responsible for it. If nothing else, public servant compensation packages in LA seem prime from checking those links.

Hegseth, again, but more the particular outlet featuring him - is it really a helpful site to anybody?


 Yes, it is advertorial, which is okay, speech can freely move in that manner. So, clearly allowable speech. But, worthwhile? 

https://patriotpost.us/articles/111897-trumps-hegseth-pick-is-unconventional-2024-11-13

 Slanting things too much can be a turn-off for all but fanboys.

And, yes, Crabgrass is more editorial than unbiased. And it can be argued as less effective for being that. Readers are invited to check the link and decide, does it encompass a "Breitbart Effect" to where it might be accessed less?

The Internet is allowing subjectivity to be "Thinking outside the Beltway" as much as quoting Bernie is not Beltway chapter/verse. Quoting Bernie makes sense to me, but it is like this site, just from the other political pole.

As another example, when Republican Senator Ron Johnson and Breitbart tell you this, how do you react? Thankful for the advice, or more skeptical than before?

Going to the other side's influence peddling sites has its value, in giving notice and informing about something possibly worth informed skepticism.

"Thinking outside the Beltway" is a good phrase, but it makes me no more a Hegseth fan than previous to stumbling onto the post. But it does inform me that Pete has supporters, vocal supporters, and gives me a better idea of his chances of Senate confirmation as DoD head. How he may act if confirmed, no insight there, but the fear factor is heightened somewhat from the manner in which support is voiced. Over four years, Trump could even change his mind. He's undone appointments first term, and has not changed much, or seems not to have.

If Trump likes what Hegseth does, he keeps him. Just liking Hegseth will get him more leeway, but they will talk and work together, unless they don't.

______________UPDATE_____________

There is this, linked to from here, where you can check the longer speaking example on YouTube, and see what you think better than from reading touting from within a clear tout website. 

The man talking to friends. He sells speeches. See who he is when doing that. Compare here, a not too subtle hit piece disguised as news. He will have a close vote, whatever the outcome.

But seeing him in action with a friendly crowd, skimming through parts of that video if not watching the whole thing, perhaps a best view scenario. (Yet what if anything has that got to do with likely performance if confirmed to head DoD?)

Trump likes him, for now if not forever, and thinks he's good for the job. That really is the most we know of him.

Wasn't bought with Green Stamps. How was it paid for? Where did the money come from after leading and severing connections with two veterans promotional adventures.

 The Mansion.

FOX paid for the Mansion, or may have, regardless of the vet booster businesses.

So, a motivation to seek the DoD boss status beyond paycheck?

A nomination now, not yet a confirmation. Where will it lead, where will things go if we end up having a Hegseth military? It is a worthwhile question, now, not later when tears may flow amid told-you-so's. Here, linking to the net since I never met the man, nor watched him on TV. Nor having read any of his published work. Only second hand analysis, via links. From what I see, I don't like him, but our so-capable Senators do hold a hand in the process. 

In Senators We Trust. Wave a flag for them Senatorial special people. And the bigger question beyond where will it lead - Do we want to go there?

Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Don't californicate California. It pays for respect.

DWT

[...] In 2023, California contributed approximately $500 billion to the federal treasury while receiving only $350 billion in return. That’s a net contribution of $150 billion, making California a donor state keeping the federal budget afloat. Contrast this with Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee and West Virginia— states whose representatives love to rail against “coastal elites” while taking far more than they give. Combined, these states contributed only $95 billion but received $235 billion in federal aid—a net deficit of $140 billion. In other words, California’s taxes bankroll the very systems these states rely on for survival.

You can figure out the rest of the justified indignation, wildfire aid being in some minds conditioned on extracting symbolic pay as well as tons of money pay.

Possibly Louisiana pays a fairer chunk of its returned federal largess, given its oil and having Gulf port worth and river trade. But the implication is Mike Johnson cares not about the above quoted fact, when he can score points. Or it seems implied in the starting image of the post - bowing being a common thread in this and the prior post.

sneaker sniffer? or a bow to authority>?