Left-leaning, Progressive blog. I try to point out and explain what is really going on in US politics given the mainstream news self censorship on so many important issues.
Sunday, March 29, 2020
Friday, March 27, 2020
Thursday, March 26, 2020
Donald J Trump will resign the office of Presidency of the United States at Noon July 4, 2020 due to health reasons. Vice President Pence will be sworn in, in the oval office at that time.
...will read the headlines on or around July 3, 2020. Let me be clear up front, the president is not liable for either the coronavirus or the ailment it causes, COVID-19, and he was unable to have prevented it from hitting our shores regardless of whether he had done everything right. Nor is it the case that the president hasn't done anything right; truth be told, his choice to impose a travel ban on China was reasonable. Furthermore, any account that endeavors to nail the entirety of the fault to Trump for the coronavirus response is unjustified. The lure among the president's faultfinders to capitalize on his entire administration's failures in response to the pandemic as a way of paying back Trump for each awful thing he's done should be opposed. Americans are needlessly in fear and yes, dying. Shatenfrued at this time is uncalled for and diminishes the President's critics and the many American Patriots that have dedicated themselves to #resist movement these last few years.
All things considered, the president and his organization are liable for the grave, expensive blunders, most particularly the epic assembling decisions on indicative testing, the choice to test too few individuals, the deferral in increasing the number of testing labs outside the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and issues in the store network. These missteps have left our ability to get a handle early on of the spread of this disease impossible and we are subsequently gravely under-performing. For a couple of essential weeks, the many misguided decisions left the sensation that all is well and good. What we can be sure of is that the coronavirus quietly spread for some time, without us properly monitoring it and keeping it's spread in check. It is now crystal clear that we were doing nothing to stop it during these many critical weeks when we knew it had reared it's ugly head, initially in Portland, Oregan. Steps to control and alleviate the impact on the nation's citizens' endeavors could have altogether eased back its spread at an early, basic point, however, we squandered that chance. The World Health Organization had working tests that the United States refused, and researchers at a project in Seattle tried to conduct early tests for the coronavirus but were prevented from doing so by federal officials. (Doctors at the research project eventually decided to perform coronavirus tests without federal approval.)
However, that is not all. The president allegedly overlooked early alerts of the seriousness of the infection and became irate at a CDC official who in February cautioned that a flare-up was inescapable. The Trump organization destroyed the National Security Council's worldwide wellbeing office, whose object was to address worldwide pandemics; we're presently taking care of that. "We worked very well with that office," Fauci told Congress. "It would be pleasant if the workplace was still there." We may confront a deficiency of ventilators and clinical supplies, and emergency clinics may before long be overpowered, positively if the number of coronavirus cases increments at a rate anything like that in nations, for example, Italy. (This would cause unnecessary coronavirus-related passings, yet passings from those experiencing different afflictions who won't have prepared access to emergency clinic care.)
All things considered, the president and his organization are liable for the grave, expensive blunders, most particularly the epic assembling decisions on indicative testing, the choice to test too few individuals, the deferral in increasing the number of testing labs outside the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and issues in the store network. These missteps have left our ability to get a handle early on of the spread of this disease impossible and we are subsequently gravely under-performing. For a couple of essential weeks, the many misguided decisions left the sensation that all is well and good. What we can be sure of is that the coronavirus quietly spread for some time, without us properly monitoring it and keeping it's spread in check. It is now crystal clear that we were doing nothing to stop it during these many critical weeks when we knew it had reared it's ugly head, initially in Portland, Oregan. Steps to control and alleviate the impact on the nation's citizens' endeavors could have altogether eased back its spread at an early, basic point, however, we squandered that chance. The World Health Organization had working tests that the United States refused, and researchers at a project in Seattle tried to conduct early tests for the coronavirus but were prevented from doing so by federal officials. (Doctors at the research project eventually decided to perform coronavirus tests without federal approval.)
However, that is not all. The president allegedly overlooked early alerts of the seriousness of the infection and became irate at a CDC official who in February cautioned that a flare-up was inescapable. The Trump organization destroyed the National Security Council's worldwide wellbeing office, whose object was to address worldwide pandemics; we're presently taking care of that. "We worked very well with that office," Fauci told Congress. "It would be pleasant if the workplace was still there." We may confront a deficiency of ventilators and clinical supplies, and emergency clinics may before long be overpowered, positively if the number of coronavirus cases increments at a rate anything like that in nations, for example, Italy. (This would cause unnecessary coronavirus-related passings, yet passings from those experiencing different afflictions who won't have prepared access to emergency clinic care.)
To be clear, the torrent of bogus data from the president has been the most disturbing of all. The President's public statements and appearances with regards to the virus have been one shit show after another, a similar performance of which we have never before observed in a US President. Day after day after day he brazenly denied reality, in an effort to blunt the economic and political harm he faced. In any case, Trump is finding that he can't turn or tweet out of a pandemic. There is nobody who can do to the coronavirus what Attorney General William Barr did to the Mueller report: lie about it and pull off it.
Finally, I think it is important to point out that this President has blamed the Obama administration for his administration's criminal negligence in its response to this crisis each and every time he has spoken in front of reporters. While Trump has done this time after time during his three years, one month and twenty-four days in office, to make a point of outright lying every time he spoke in public these last few weeks about something involving the very health and welfare of our citizens will go down in history as not assertive and balssey as he and his supporter's think, but as an act of cowardice unlike any other, we collectively know of going back to before this nation was first formed. Therefore, I predict Donald J Trump will resign the office of Presidency at Noon July 4, 2020, due to health reasons. Vice President Pence will be sworn in, in the oval office at that time.
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