reagansghost (01-21-2019)
From the get go, we were told this was a man who prides himself on 'how things LOOK'. Frankly, beyond the wife and kids, the rest was the bloated, the ugly, the weird and in general, a kind of freak show. Not the least was the head 'freak'--a '70 year old' man with tan lines, pompadour bleached hair, ill fitting suits 'capped' off with red hats with the speaking skills of a 10th grader from the streets of Brooklyn. And then comes THEIR CREDENTIALS. The ass kissers, the Russian DEALERS, the crooked, the incompetent, the greedy, the ABUSIVE, and the FOX'rs.
Regarding Christie and sour grapes? Likely, probably! Doesn't mean it ISN'T true.
Riff-Raff’: Chris Christie tells the painful truth about Trump’s White House
TANA GANEVA
21 JAN 2019 AT 09:29 ET
In an upcoming memoir set to be published January 29th, former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie continues to unload on the Trump administration.
In an excerpt published on Axios, Christie slams Trump for hiring unqualified people, or “riff-raff.”
“Donald so urgently needed the right people around him and a solid structure in place. … Far too often, he’s found himself saddled with the riffraff. …” Christie writes.
“Instead of high-quality, vetted appointees for key administration posts, he got the Russian lackey and future federal felon Michael Flynn as national security adviser. He got the greedy and inexperienced Scott Pruitt as administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency.”
Christie himself famously missed out on a senior post in the administration, thought to be in large part due to Jared Kushner’s vendetta against Christie for overseeing the prosecution of his father, Charles Kushner.
Flynn and Pruitt aren’t Christie’s only targets.
“He got the high-flying Tom Price as health and human services secretary. He got the not-ready-for-prime-time Jeff Sessions as attorney general, promptly recusing himself from the Justice Department’s Russian-collusion probe. He got a stranger named Rex Tillerson as secretary of state. …”
'Riff-Raff': Chris Christie tells the painful truth about Trump's White House
I
Last edited by Centerleftfl; 01-21-2019 at 09:57 AM.
WK1 3/28-/4 _Cases 301k--Dead 18.1k Lethality 2.72%
WK2 4/5-/13 _Cases 555k--Dead 22.1K Lethality 3.9%
WK3 4/20-/21 Cases 774k -Dead 37.2K Lethality 4.8%
WK4 4/22-/29 Cases 1M --Dead 58.8K Lethality 5.9%
WK5 5/1-/8__ Cases 1.3M -Dead 75.7K Lethality 6.1%
WK6 5/9-16__Cases 1.4M --Dead 85.8K Lethality 6.1%
WK7 5/17-24_Cases 1.7M - Dead 97.6K Lethality 5.9%
WK8 5/28 Cases 1.7M - DEAD 101.2K - Same
reagansghost (01-21-2019)
"....he got the Russian lackey and future federal felon Michael Flynn as national security adviser. He got the greedy and inexperienced Scott Pruitt as administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency.”
He makes it sounds like they forced their way into the Toadstool administration, rather than being hand-selected as "the best people, the very best." In other words, he's apologizing for the incompetent Mango Mussolini.
reagansghost (01-21-2019)
WK1 3/28-/4 _Cases 301k--Dead 18.1k Lethality 2.72%
WK2 4/5-/13 _Cases 555k--Dead 22.1K Lethality 3.9%
WK3 4/20-/21 Cases 774k -Dead 37.2K Lethality 4.8%
WK4 4/22-/29 Cases 1M --Dead 58.8K Lethality 5.9%
WK5 5/1-/8__ Cases 1.3M -Dead 75.7K Lethality 6.1%
WK6 5/9-16__Cases 1.4M --Dead 85.8K Lethality 6.1%
WK7 5/17-24_Cases 1.7M - Dead 97.6K Lethality 5.9%
WK8 5/28 Cases 1.7M - DEAD 101.2K - Same
ThatOwlWoman (01-21-2019)
what a FUCKING IDIOT.. Flynn does what? wants to work with Russia against Iran and on terrorism an he's a "lackey"he got the Russian lackey and future federal felon Michael Flynn as national security adviser.
Christie the Whale on the Beach needs to get deflated
Wow, ALL IN! The beached whale was the golden boy about 2 years ago! Those were the good ol days, huh?
Irony. He still would be! Except Jared's daddy GOT BUSTED for a couple of felonies by the whale and put his daddy in jail and JARED is till pissed and deep sixed the whale.
(You just can't make this shit up!)
WK1 3/28-/4 _Cases 301k--Dead 18.1k Lethality 2.72%
WK2 4/5-/13 _Cases 555k--Dead 22.1K Lethality 3.9%
WK3 4/20-/21 Cases 774k -Dead 37.2K Lethality 4.8%
WK4 4/22-/29 Cases 1M --Dead 58.8K Lethality 5.9%
WK5 5/1-/8__ Cases 1.3M -Dead 75.7K Lethality 6.1%
WK6 5/9-16__Cases 1.4M --Dead 85.8K Lethality 6.1%
WK7 5/17-24_Cases 1.7M - Dead 97.6K Lethality 5.9%
WK8 5/28 Cases 1.7M - DEAD 101.2K - Same
He who is the author of a war lets loose the whole contagion of hell and opens a vein that bleeds a nation to death. Thomas Paine
ThatOwlWoman (01-21-2019)
Book by Former Staff Member Describes a White House ‘Out of Control’
New York Times· 1 day ago
Kelly, as White House chief of staff, presented himself as the man leading a charge of “country first, president second.” The attorney general suggested administering ...
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/20/u...ite-house.html
Jan. 20, 2019
John F. Kelly, as White House chief of staff, presented himself as the man leading a charge of “country first, president second.” The attorney general suggested administering lie-detector tests to the small group of people with access to transcripts of the president’s calls with foreign leaders. And President Trump sought a list of “enemies” working in the White House communications shop.
Those are some of the portraits of the Trump White House sprinkled throughout “Team of Vipers,” an inside account of working there written by Cliff Sims, a former communications staff member and Trump loyalist who worked on the campaign.
A White House spokeswoman declined to comment on the book.
The book, which will be published at the end of January, describes a nest of back-stabbing and duplicity within the West Wing, a narrative by now familiar from other books and news media reports. But Mr. Sims, who left last year after clashing with Mr. Kelly, is one of the few people to attach his name to descriptions of goings-on at the White House that are not always flattering to Mr. Trump, and many of the scenes are not particularly flattering to anyone, including himself.
“It’s impossible to deny how absolutely out of control the White House staff — again, myself included — was at times,” Mr. Sims writes.
The president often comes across as unfamiliar with Washington and stymied by aspects of the job. According to Mr. Sims, Mr. Trump was unsettled by the condition of the West Wing, which he found dilapidated. He delighted in giving tours of the Oval Office, down to the private bathroom and the small study he converted to a dining room with a television on the wall. He explained in detail to aides how important the chyrons on television are, because so many people consume programs muted.
The book does not always present the president in a negative light, describing an emotional reaction by Mr. Trump to the first death of a service member during his presidency.
Its descriptions of Mr. Trump and the first lady, Melania Trump, defy the public perception of their marriage. Mr. Sims paints Mrs. Trump as protective of her husband as it related to his staff. In the book, he recalls the first lady calling the president to complain about a Politico article about his first communications director and suggesting that Mr. Trump needed to try to get rid of him.
But Mr. Sims also describes painfully awkward interactions with Paul D. Ryan, the former speaker of the House, during efforts to repeal the health care law and after the Charlottesville white nationalist riots. During the legislative discussions, according to Mr. Sims, Mr. Trump abruptly left the Oval Office during a meeting with Mr. Ryan to watch television in the adjacent dining room, before returning some moments later.
When Mr. Ryan expressed displeasure with the president’s statements after the Charlottesville riots, Mr. Trump called Mr. Ryan, Mr. Sims writes.
“I remember being in Wisconsin and your own people were booing you,” Mr. Trump yelled, recalling Mr. Ryan distancing himself from Mr. Trump after the infamous “Access Hollywood” tape emerged in October 2016. “You were out there dying like a dog, Paul. Like a dog!”
Feuds and chaos among the staff occupy much of the book.
For instance, Mr. Sims describes his part in propelling Anthony Scaramucci to the role of communications director, suggesting in internal conversations that it was a wise idea.
Mr. Scaramucci ended up getting fired after 11 days, but not before he served the purpose that Mr. Trump’s family had hoped he would, Mr. Sims writes. Mr. Scaramucci helped accelerate the end of the tenure of Reince Priebus as White House chief of staff. In another scene, Mr. Sims describes the White House press secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, explaining to Mr. Trump that little could be done about a journalist he did not care for when he asked why the person could not be “suspended.”
In one scene, Mr. Sims describes Mr. Trump’s top policy adviser, Stephen Miller, openly undermining his onetime ally, Stephen K. Bannon, as Mr. Miller appealed to Mr. Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser, Jared Kushner. Mr. Miller described Mr. Bannon as “leaking” to reporters.
Some White House officials have expressed concern about the book, as they have with others that have been written. Those officials have suggested that Mr. Sims either was in meetings he did not belong in — a claim he addresses in the book — or was not in as many as he claimed to be.
But like other accounts of the Trump White House written by former staff members or journalists, the narrative and anecdotes support much of the real-time reporting about the administration. Mr. Sims also writes that leaks by various staff members have been in service of creating specific portraits of events or undermining rivals. They have not always portrayed the full truth, he suggests.
continued
He who is the author of a war lets loose the whole contagion of hell and opens a vein that bleeds a nation to death. Thomas Paine
^ I believe it. Trump's style is to let staff fight it out, and it's messy and chaotic.
The idea is to let the factions fight it out, and then Trump picks the policy.
Plus you had a bunch of neverTrumps and self serving dweebs..it's not pretty.
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