Sunday, July 31, 2016

John McCain's Granddaughter Is Voting For Hillary

"... I learned something important in 2000 and again in 2008: the picture the opposition and the media paints of a candidate is not the whole picture, and it is not the truthful picture."

Caroline McCain, granddaughter of 2008 GOP candidate Senator John McCain. 

In an intriguing article at medium.com, she says she's voting for Hillary and explains why. Read it here.  

Saturday, July 30, 2016

Editors Are Important



What The Donald meant to say is: "Hillary Clinton should not be given any national security briefings in that she is a loose cannon with extraordinarily bad judgement and instincts.

Some meanies on Twitter are hitting him for "judgement" too, saying it should be "judgment," but my trusty Merriam-Webster says either way is fine. 

Wednesday, July 27, 2016

This Day In History, 2004



It was 12 years ago today that Barack Obama, then an unknown Illinois state senator, delivered the keynote address at the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston. The speech was a barn burner and many people believe it was that speech that sent him on the trajectory that resulted in his election to the presidency four years later.

Saturday, July 16, 2016

This Day In History, 1969


Thursday, July 14, 2016

Unintended Consequences

Update #2: It's Pence.

Lots of fun with this on Twitter:













Friday morning update: The plot has thickened where the GOP Veepstakes is concerned. Mike Pence was spotted in New York City last night, which would appear to confirm that it's him. Then the attack in Nice happened and The Donald tweeted this:
He also said, to Fox News I believe, that he hasn't really made up his mind yet. Again, based on the fact that Pence is in NYC, that would appear to be untrue. Trump's probably just trying to gin up suspense for whenever he gets around to making his official announcement. It does, however, put Mike Pence in a bind, as explained by Amber Phillips at The Washington Post:

The next few hours are critical to the Indiana governor's race. If, as expected, Trump picks Indiana Gov. Mike Pence (R) to be his running mate, Pence will have to drop out of his reelection race because Indiana law doesn't let you run for two offices on one ballot.

The rules say he has to make that decision by noon Friday. Trump was set to make his announcement at 11 a.m. Friday, but he postponed it in light of the terrorist attack in Nice, France. Now, an announcement might not happen until this weekend. That means Pence could be forced to make a tough decision Friday morning between staying on the ballot and forfeiting the vice presidential nomination or taking a risk and getting off the ballot. Yikes. (You can read the article here.)

As interesting as all that is, there's another wrinkle. Apparently the Republicans are having trouble paying for their convention, which takes place next week, and they've sent a letter to benefactor Sheldon Adelson for $6 million in assistance. From Politico.com:

The letter represents the most public acknowledgment to date that Donald Trump has directly cost convention organizers millions of fundraising dollars.

“Over the past couple months, negative publicity around our potential nominee resulted in a considerable number of pledges backing out from their commitments,” the letter says.

It goes on to list the companies and wealthy individuals who have withdrawn their financial commitments. Among those who have canceled their donations, according to the letter, are David Koch ($1 million), FedEx ($500,000), Visa ($100,000), Pepsi ($500,000) and Coca-Cola ($1 million).

The letter says the RNC has raised $58 million — putting the party $6 million below the $64 million that was promised to bring the convention to Cleveland.

They ask the Adelsons to singlehandedly close the RNC’s shortfall.

“We would greatly appreciate if you would consider a $6,000,000 contribution to the Cleveland 2016 Host Committee to help us cross the finish line,” states the letter, which was dated July 12. The convention begins July 18.

“Your support will allow our community to meet its obligation to the RNC, and will ensure our Republican nominee has the best possible platform to lay out his conservative case for our nation,” the letter concludes. “Thank you for your consideration and please let us know if you need any additional information.” (Read the article here.) 

What makes this interesting is that Adelson is a big supporter of, wait for it, Newt Gingrich. When Gingrich ran for president last time around, Adelson donated $5 million to a super PAC supporting the former House speaker. Double yikes. What if Adelson says, "Sure, I'll write you a check but in return I want Newt for VP." What does Trump do then?

I really love the Veepstakes.

Original post:
Does Chris Christie regret putting a man named Charles Kushner in jail back in 2005, when he was a U.S. attorney? Possibly. Is that the reason he wasn't chosen to be Donald Trump's running mate? Possibly. In a story dated March 4, 2005, the New York Times explains what happened:

NEWARK, March 4 - Charles Kushner, a multimillionaire real estate executive, philanthropist and one of the top Democratic donors in the country, was sentenced on Friday to two years in federal prison after pleading guilty to 18 counts of tax evasion, witness tampering and making illegal campaign donations.

Mr. Kushner, 50, built a construction business begun by his father into a private real estate empire that owned more than 25,000 apartments, millions of square feet of commercial and industrial space and thousands of acres of developable land.

But Mr. Kushner also became embroiled in a bitter family feud over the business and how proceeds were distributed. That dispute, plus his growing prominence as a political financier, helped lead to his downfall. The intrafamily acrimony was such that Mr. Kushner retaliated against his brother-in-law, who was cooperating with federal authorities, by hiring a prostitute to seduce him. He then arranged to have a secretly recorded videotape of the encounter sent to his sister, the man's wife.

The two-year sentence was the most Mr. Kushner could have received under a plea agreement, reached last September with the United States attorney, Christopher J. Christie, that called for 18 to 24 months in prison. But it was less than the sentence of nearly three years that Mr. Christie had sought in recent weeks after concluding that Mr. Kushner had failed to show "acceptance of responsibility" for his crimes as required by the plea deal. Read the article here

What does this have to do with the current Veepstakes? Charles Kushner's son Jared is now married to Ivanka Trump. He's The Donald's son-in-law and word on the street is that Jared Kushner does not want the man who put his father in jail on the ticket.  How about that!

Note that I'm writing this mid-afternoon on Thursday, when it looks like governor Mike Pence of Indiana is Trump's pick but it's not absolutely official. If Christie does in fact get the nod I'll update this post.

Monday, July 11, 2016

Did You Know...

... that The Donald once shilled for Pizza Hut?

Tuesday, July 5, 2016

Missing Kids, Current And Past

Issue dated July 18, 2016
Jaycee Dugard on Raising Two Healthy Daughters After They Were Born in Captivity

Issue dated July 11, 2016
Without a Trace: Almost a Year Since 2-Year-Old DeOrr Kunz Vanished from an Idaho Mountain, His Parents Speak Out| Crime & Courts, True Crime, Real People Stories

Sunday, July 3, 2016

The Fat Guy

Update:  Back in November, 2014, I wrote a few blog posts about Chris Christie's possible run for president in 2016. That didn't work out so well, but since Christie is on Trump's short list for VP, I'm re-posting part of what I wrote back then. Donald Trump may, or may not, care about the following:

...I've been re-reading "Double Down," the how-it-happened book about the 2012 election by Mark Halperin and John Heilemann. H and H provide a lot of details about Mitt Romney's process for choosing a VP candidate, including the fact that the campaign took a close look at Christie. What didn't get a lot of attention in late 2013 when the book came out, but may come back to bite him if he runs in 2016, is the fact that Christie didn't pass the Romney campaign's vet.

From the book: "For the past two and a half years, Christie had received skin-blanching exposure from the klieg lights of the national media. But the vetters were stunned by the garish controversies lurking in the shadows of his record."

From a 2010 Dept. of Justice Inspector General's investigation of Christie's spending patterns in his job as a U.S. attorney to the fact that Christie worked as a lobbyist on behalf of the Securities Industry Association at a time when Bernie Madoff was a senior SIA official to Christie's decision to steer hefty government contracts to donors and political allies, there was a whole lot of info that gave the vetters pause. And all of it was in addition to concerns about his weight, his health and his temperament and a couple of years before Bridgegate hit the fan.

One member of the vetting team told his colleagues, If Christie had been in the nomination fight against us, we would have destroyed him - he wouldn't be able to run for governor again. When you look below the surface, he added, it's not pretty. (For the entire story, see Double Down, hard-cover edition, pages 349-356.) Read my entire post here

Original post:
Image result for Chris Christie with Donald Trump

Slate.com has a fascinating article about what it was like working with The Donald on The Apprentice. There's lots of good stuff, including an intriguing theory about the dynamic between Trump and Chris Christie:

“There was a fat contestant who was a buffoon and a fuckup,” recalls the midlevel producer. “And he would fuck up week after week, and the producers would figure that he’d screwed up so badly that Trump would have to fire him. But Trump kept deciding to fire someone else. The producers had to scramble because of course Trump can never be seen to make a bad call on the show, so we had to re-engineer the footage to make a different contestant look bad. Later, I heard a producer talk to him, and Trump said, ‘Everybody loves a fat guy. People will watch if you have a funny fat guy around. Trust me, it’s good for ratings.’ I look at Chris Christie now and I swear that’s what’s happening.”

Read the article here

And just so it's not "all Trump all the time" here at Writing The World, I'll mention one of my other fave blog topics, Sarah Palin, and I'll start with a question: Do you know what "exacerbates" means? Sarah doesn't, apparently, because she used it recently to refer to the experience of having grandchildren and, well, it kinda came out wrong, at the 57 second mark:


From my Merriam-Webster dictionary: Exacerbate, "to make more violent, bitter, or severe." Presumably not what Sarah meant to say about the grandkids. If you're keeping track, she currently has three (Bristol's son Tripp, Bristol's daughter Sailor, and eldest son Track's daughter Kayla Grace,) with number four rumored to be on the way. Word on the street is that Track's girlfriend (yes, the one he threatened with a gun during the domestic violence incident earlier this year,) is due in October.