• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

Nader Denounces Trump Budget as Corporatist, Militarist & Racist: "The Mask is Off".

Status
Not open for further replies.

Boney

Banned
https://www.democracynow.org/2017/3/17/ralph_nader_denounces_trump_budget_as

check out the 25 minute interview here. Support independant media.

RALPH NADER: Well, so much for Donald Trump's campaign promises to the forgotten men and women of America. They're the ones who are the big losers, as you pointed out with your many examples of these budget cuts. Overall, this is a budget that reflects corporatism, militarism and racism. The mask is off Donald Trump, his braggadocio, his lurid promises, his assurances that everything will be safe, and people will have—all people will have health insurance, and there will be plenty of jobs. The mask is off. The fangs are now out. And he is collaborating with what is, on the record, the most vicious, ignorant Republican Party in its history, since 1854. Senator Robert Taft, a conservative in the Senate in the 1950s, would have been astonished at the viciousness, the corporatism, the militarism, the racism of these Republicans, with few exceptions.

Now, when you go into this 50-page-or-so budget—the details will all come out, Amy, in May, in a bigger budget. When you go into it, you see that Sean Spicer's daily assurances, that they want to go after what he calls inefficiency, waste and government duplicity, leaves out hundreds of billions of dollars of corporate fraud on the taxpayer. For example, they talk about the need to cut healthcare in this way and that way and push 14 million people off the health insurance rolls in a year, and 24 million by 2026, according to the Congressional Budget Office, or thereabouts. Just look at this. He says he doesn't—he doesn't want to fund programs that don't work. OK. Almost $10 billion a year, since Reagan—a year—is spent on a total boondoggle project in the Pentagon called ballistic missile defense. It doesn't work. It won't work. We're talking about the intercontinental ballistic missiles. The Society of Physicists, which includes physicists who consult with the Pentagon, have said that it won't work, it's too easily decoyed by balloons. There are a lot of other easier ways to get nuclear weapons in a country than this way. And yet, as a corporate welfare program for Raytheon, Boeing and others, it goes on every day. Now, this is a budget inside the Pentagon that's bigger than the entire budget of the Environmental Protection Agency. So, you see they're not going after the corporate crime, the corporate waste, the corporate fraud, that lathers itself throughout the federal budget.

Imagine. They talk about health insurance programs. OK, so they're going to squeeze Medicaid. They're going to threaten to corporatize Medicare. They're cutting taxes on the drug companies, which was going to pay for Obamacare, on the health insurance companies, on the medical device companies, a few little taxes on the rich—getting rid of all of those in the pursuit of efficiency. Now look what they don't talk about. They don't talk about what the Government Accounting Office of the U.S. Congress said years ago, that 10 percent of all healthcare expenditures in this country goes down the drain because of computerized billing fraud and abuse. And that is considered a conservative figure by the expert on this, professor Malcolm Sparrow at Harvard University. Now, that means $340 billion—that's with a B—this year down the drain. So if they're interested in efficiency, why don't you go after corporate crime? Just go to CorporateCrimeReporter.[com], and you'll see more of this.

The second thing that's fascinating and very tragic is that when they talk about healthcare and efficiency, they're not talking about the huge numbers of people who die because they cannot afford health insurance to get diagnosed and treated in time. And now it's about 35,000 a year. That's based on an extrapolation from a Harvard Medical School peer-reviewed study that appeared in the Journal of Public Health in 2009. They never talk about that. They never talk about 60,000 people losing their lives every year due to air pollution—EPA figures. They never talk about 58,000 people losing their lives due to workplace-related diseases and trauma—OSHA figures.

So we know what their game is. So this whole corporatism, militarism, racism is a huge opportunity for just 1 percent of people becoming active and focusing on the one branch of government that can have beneficial consequences for the 2018 election, as well as stop the Trumpsters in their tracks, and that's the U.S. Congress. So, you had less than a couple hundred thousand people in the last few weeks, Amy, apart from the demonstrations in Washington on January 21st, go to congressional town meetings. And the Republicans who were there came back to the Congress, and they were shuddering. They said, "What's going on here? I mean, something's changing. The seats are no longer empty." They used to have town meetings where sometimes the staff was more numerous than the attendees. Now, there are three major recesses in Congress, two coming up before the one-month August recess. Fill those seats. If the congresspeople do not have town meetings—they're already considering canceling them or having telephone town meetings—so much for meeting the people—then you have your own town meetings. You announce your own town meetings, and you have a formal summons to your senators and representatives on a set date in a convenient public location, where they have to address your agenda. That's why I wrote this book, Breaking Through Power, a little paperback, 140 pages. And it shows the way, how very few people have changed our country throughout the history. And it never takes more than 1 percent, often far less than 1 percent, to do so. So this is a great opportunity. By being so cruel, vicious and blatantly apparent in trying to further transform our government into the pits of militarism, corporatism and racism, it can become like a boomerang, if people take advantage of it.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, you certainly see the effect of this, for example, on Senator Tom Cotton, and the massive anger and response when he held a town hall meeting, with thousands there. You see Darrell Issa in California, perhaps for the first time we've seen him changing as a result of the huge town hall meeting, after he refused to—as we see all over the country, people putting up "wanted" signs for their congressmembers and actually take out ads in the papers, saying "wanted" or "have you seen?"

RALPH NADER: [...] There was a 60-year-old couple in western New York that came in with a sign and said, "We're not paid, Congressman Reed, but you are," which raises the question: Once people back home say to their members of Congress, "Don't you dare pass any cuts for the vulnerable, the poor, the middle class, unless you have to share the same one" [...] You've got to have face-to-face interaction with members of Congress, not just massive rallies where the energy often goes into the ether on a weekend. You've got to get them into these public auditoriums or town halls back home, where you confront them face to face.

RALPH NADER: What's happening is, you have left-right opposition to what the Republicans and Trump are doing. That's the big opportunity now. I think Senator Cotton was shaken, because he looked at that auditorium, and he said, you know, "Some of these people are my supporters." And when you get a left-right alliance back home on the senators, representatives, it's politically unstoppable. So you have this health—so-called health insurance system—it's not healthcare, often it's confused—a health insurance system proposal that is going to throw millions of people off the rolls. It's soliciting corporate support by getting rid of these taxes I mentioned on the health insurance industry and the medical device. But the hospital lobby is upset with Trump on this proposal. They see real problems down the road, and they're already putting ads in papers. And they're going to be a—they're going to be joining with a lot of citizens in opposing this.

Now, there is an argument, Amy, that these crazy proposals—they are so nutty. I mean, they're cutting further the IRS budget so it can't collect any of the $430 billion that is uncollected taxes in this country. How are they going to pay for all this stuff, this infrastructure and so on? A lot of this stuff is really nutty. They're increasing the Department of Homeland Security budget, but the indications are they want to cut the Coast Guard budget. So they can use money to build the wall, they're going to further debilitate the hard-pressed Coast Guard, which is providing security and rescue on the coastlines of America. But what I think is going on here is these are trial balloons. Trump has this idea, throughout his business career and bankruptcies, where he says outrageous things, and then he backs down a little, and people say, "Oh, he's really much more reasonable." So I think we're seeing here a trial balloon situation to get the response. And in May, they'll probably moderate these cuts.

But make no mistake about it: When you have Steve Bannon in the White House, when you have the Roy Cohn in the White House—name is Steve Miller—basically, influencing or pushing the more extreme attributes of Donald Trump in terms of militarism, corporatism and racism, there is going to be a lot of tension with some of the heads of the Cabinet. And that's going to be in the news shortly. There's going to be a lot of tension, for example, between the secretary of the interior, who does not want to sell off the public lands, who's looking at a budget which is going to facilitate the selling off of some of the public lands. So—

AMY GOODMAN: Before we get to public lands, I want to ask you about Meals on Wheels.

RALPH NADER: Yeah, look at the asymmetry, the cruel asymmetry. He's a very glib guy—you're going to get used to him—Mick Mulvaney, extremely radical, extreme in terms of cutting budgets that deal with vulnerable, sick, powerless people. He's a bully, pure and simple. But there are other budgets that are going to be cut. Law enforcement on nursing homes are going to be cut. Public transit support is going to be cut, like Amtrak, that affect lower-income people.

So, we're looking here—we should also pay some attention to the Democratic Party, Amy. Can they rise to the occasion? I mean, look at the wonkish talk of—that you just showed a clip of, of Nancy Pelosi: "deconstruction of the federal government." Boy, that really excites people to get out on the streets, doesn't it? They've got to talk in common language. People are going to lose their lives because of this budget, here and abroad. They're cutting support for international famines. They don't want our country to be a humanitarian power, just a military brute force power. We've got a situation where you have a regime that's going to be very soft on corporate crime. After all, you've got a former businessman, Donald Trump, who shafted his consumers, his workers, his creditors; used bankruptcy, in his terms, as a competitive advantage; tried to avoid all possible taxes. He's shut down casinos, unemployed workers. Atlantic City is increasingly desolate economically, in part due to his bad business acumen.

So, what you have is—what is the Democratic Party going to do? You have this group, Indivisible.org, which tells you, by the way, when there are town meetings with members of Congress back home. But what is the Democratic Party going to do? Are they going to field candidates in all 50 states who are viable? Are they going to spend their time dialing for corporate dollars? Or are they going to go the Bernie Sanders way, in small contributions in big volume? Are they going to really push for single payer? There are 64 members of the House, Democrats, who have signed on to John Conyers' single payer. It's HR 676, the gold standard. And they're keeping quiet about it. They're not pushing it, because Nancy Pelosi and Steny Hoyer are telling them, "Keep quiet about single payer," supported by 60 percent of the American people already—

AMY GOODMAN: Ralph, let me take that for one example. How would you see that playing out if at this point, when there's major questioning of Obamacare, but clearly the Republican Party is crumbling over the repeal and replace, of whatever Ryan has put forward—clearly, it's not going to be in the form he wants it. If you see this is the moment for single payer, for Medicare for all, how would you see it working? How would you see them strategizing to introduce it now?

RALPH NADER: Well, it's a good idea for some of the progressive press to start talking about it, instead of getting mired in what's being done to Obamacare. You almost never see the questions—Chuck Todd and others on Sunday TV programs—so they get it into the public dialogue.

But here's what I see. Check out The Wall Street Journal recently. There was a lead editorial on what's going on with Obamacare and the Republicans, etc. And at the end, they said, if the Republicans lose this battle to get rid of Obamacare, they might as well get on board with single payer, because that's going to be the future of politics. And that was reaffirmed by a columnist in The Wall Street Journal very recently, this week, Henninger, who basically said the same thing. So here you have these right-wing corporatists basically saying, if the Republicans fall on this attempt to create this cockamamie system that deprives people of health insurance and gets rid of the ways to fund it by all these tax cuts on these corporations and so on, if they fail, then the only alternative left—that's the way they talk in The Wall Street Journal—is full Medicare for all, everybody in, nobody out, free choice of doctor and hospital, none of these narrow networks like in West Virginia, and which is called single payer.

So, the opportunity for the Democrats is classic. This is the time to move. And what do you see? The chief issue of Senator Bernie Sanders, when he's running for president last year, was full Medicare for all, single payer. Has he introduced a bill yet? He hasn't even introduced a bill yet in the Senate. Here's the leader of the single-payer movement, being told by Chuck Schumer and others, "Stay low. Keep quiet, Bernie. We've got to deal with the Republicans trying to dismantle Obamacare."

AMY GOODMAN: Let me go to foreign policy, very quickly. You have the secretary of state, former head of ExxonMobil, Rex Tillerson, now in Asia. In Korea, in South Korea, he goes to the Demilitarized Zone. He says that the U.S. is going to take a different approach, may well take a military approach. At the same time, on the same trip, he endorses the massive cuts to the State Department. And we know the defense secretary, James Mattis, once famously said, while serving as the commander of U.S. Central Command, "If you don't fund the State Department fully, then I need to buy more ammunition." Is this budget, in itself, leading to war?

RALPH NADER: Well, it certainly diminishes the diplomatic capability and the Foreign Service capability of the State Department. And what do you think is going to take the—fill the vacuum? But the State Department itself, under both Republicans and Democrats, and Hillary Clinton, Madeleine Albright, Ms. Rice, they're all—they're all militarists. And you began to wonder. The militarist language coming out of the State Department was often more militant than coming out of the Department of Defense. So, even though the budget is going to be cut, the question is: Is the culture of the State Department going to be true to their ancient charter, which was not just dealing with customs, but being the harbinger of diplomacy, the harbinger of soft impact on the world, the harbinger of negotiations?

For example, all this talk on cyberwarfare and cybersecurity, there isn't a single move by our federal government in the last 20 years to bring all these nations together for an international treaty on cybersecurity and cyberwarfare, like was done in nuclear arms control with the Soviet Union and the chemical and biological warfare treaties. Rex Tillerson is sort of a dilemma wrapped into a conundrum. We don't know what's going on with him, other than he's very, very low-key. But I was just looking at some—

AMY GOODMAN: Not just low-key, secretive, not allowing any reporters on the plane, but a reporter with a—

RALPH NADER: Yes.

AMY GOODMAN: —a news organization most people don't know the name of, that was set up by two Republican consultants, who has not covered the State Department in any regular way before. But, Ralph, before we end, the whole issue of Donald Trump saying that President Obama wiretapped him? We just have less than a minute right now before we move on to our next segment.

RALPH NADER: Well, first of all, it's been repudiated by his Republican allies in the House Intelligence Committee. That's a pretty severe thing. Second, he's in control of all the classified information. He's now president. He can say to the NSA, the CIA, he can say, "The FISA court decisions, bring them to me and prove my point," which was charging Obama, absurdly, with wiretapping Trump Tower in New York. And he hasn't done that. And they say he hasn't done it, because he doesn't want to see that he's interfering in the investigation. He wants Congress to do so. OK, already, his own Republicans on the Intelligence Committee are repudiating him. I think there should be a national petition demanding that Donald Trump do what he's never done in his life, and that is publicly apologize to President Obama. It's not that President Obama didn't start six undeclared wars in six countries abroad, in the Middle East and elsewhere, which Donald Trump is pursuing. But on this one point, he's got to show some humility and remorse.

Will Trump show humillity and remorse? Will Schumer continue to run around like a headless chicken?

Stay tuned
 
What mask?

His budget is a direct assault on many communities that voted overwhelmingly for him.

This is a watershed "WE TRIED TO TELL Y'ALL" moment.

Like in Bloodborne, after you kill Rom. Yeah, the veil has been lifted, and many are now seeing the eldritch grotesquerie for the first time.
 

gaugebozo

Member
His budget is a direct assault on many communities that voted overwhelmingly for him.

This is a watershed "WE TRIED TO TELL Y'ALL" moment.

Like in Bloodborne, after you kill Rom. Yeah, the veil has been lifted, and many are now seeing the eldritch grotesquerie for the first time.
Lots of people have been working with 99 insight and have seen it the whole time.
 

Boney

Banned
His budget is a direct assault on many communities that voted overwhelmingly for him.

This is a watershed "WE TRIED TO TELL Y'ALL" moment.

Like in Bloodborne, after you kill Rom. Yeah, the veil has been lifted, and many are now seeing the eldritch grotesquerie for the first time.
This.

Which goes to his second and most important point. The building of the left-right alliances. These town halls that are being flooded by people demanding their representatives act in their best interest presents itself as a golden opportunity.

But Chuck Schumer thinks it's better to stay quiet. Nancy Pelosi thinks alienating people through beaurocratic language so they don't have to be held accountable once they get into power is a good strategy.
 

CoolOff

Member
https://www.facebook.com/FutureOfficial/videos/1822321621126855/

giphy.gif
 

pigeon

Banned
This.

Which goes to his second and most important point. The building of the left-right alliances. These town halls that are being flooded by people demanding their representatives act in their best interest presents itself as a golden opportunity.

But Chuck Schumer thinks it's better to stay quiet. Nancy Pelosi thinks alienating people through beaurocratic language so they don't have to be held accountable once they get into power is a good strategy.

I'm actually fascinated by the idea that you think Pelosi is "alienating people through beaurocratic (sic) language" as a strategy, rather than that just being how she talks.
 

Slayven

Member
Funny Nader want to call out racism when not a year ago he said
https://psmag.com/election-season-politics-with-ralph-nader-public-interest-crusader-82d6fbd6e13d
A lot of these people grew up on ethnic jokes, which are totally taboo now. Do you know, Lydia, there are no ethnic-joke books in bookstores anymore? A lot of these people grew up on ethnic jokes, which are totally taboo now. Do you know, Lydia, there are no ethnic-joke books in bookstores anymore?

All the time. There were Negro-joke books, Jewish-joke books, Polish-joke books, Italian-joke books. They used ethnic jokes to reduce tension in the 1930s, ’40s, ’50s. And they’d laugh at each other’s jokes and hurl another one. But it still flows through ethnic America, you know. There are hundreds of things that people would like to say. So here’s this guy — he doubles down on them, he blows their minds. So that’s the first way he got their attention.
 
Trump does everything he campaigned to do...
Mask off now?
If I recall he campaigned on healthcare for all a plan to defeat Isis in 30 days, help for the coal areas suffering from high unemployment and getting Mexico to pay for the wall. What he didn't campaign on was putting 5 Goldman Sachs executives into the administration, cutting funding for PBS and meals on wheels among many other programs including economic development grants for the aforementioned coal areas, gutting diplomacy and going golfing every weekend.
So from what I see he isn't doing the cornerstones of his campaign (and that's all someone else's fault) and he is doing whole lot of stuff he either criticized Hillary or obama for or just didn't mention.
 

kirblar

Member
This.

Which goes to his second and most important point. The building of the left-right alliances. These town halls that are being flooded by people demanding their representatives act in their best interest presents itself as a golden opportunity.

But Chuck Schumer thinks it's better to stay quiet. Nancy Pelosi thinks alienating people through beaurocratic language so they don't have to be held accountable once they get into power is a good strategy.
How dare people speak like intelligent, educated adults! The nerve!
 

Boney

Banned
I'm actually fascinated by the idea that you think Pelosi is "alienating people through beaurocratic (sic) language" as a strategy, rather than that just being how she talks.

Because as house leader, from a top down perspective, she needs to be energizing the base and have the rest of the party adopt her language in opposition.

Amy. Can they rise to the occasion? I mean, look at the wonkish talk of—that you just showed a clip of, of Nancy Pelosi: "deconstruction of the federal government." Boy, that really excites people to get out on the streets, doesn’t it? They’ve got to talk in common language. People are going to lose their lives because of this budget, here and abroad. They’re cutting support for international famines. They don’t want our country to be a humanitarian power, just a military brute force power. We’ve got a situation where you have a regime that’s going to be very soft on corporate crime. After all, you’ve got a former businessman, Donald Trump, who shafted his consumers, his workers, his creditors; used bankruptcy, in his terms, as a competitive advantage; tried to avoid all possible taxes. He’s shut down casinos, unemployed workers. Atlantic City is increasingly desolate economically, in part due to his bad business acumen.

Any of this would perfectly catch people's attention. It's hard to do worse than democrats.
 
Which goes to his second and most important point. The building of the left-right alliances. These town halls that are being flooded by people demanding their representatives act in their best interest presents itself as a golden opportunity.

What? Now you want to throw the right a bone? What happened to shitting on Hillary for attempting the same thing?
 

kirblar

Member
What? Now you want to throw the right a bone? What happened to shitting on Hillary for attempting the same thing?
Because it's a different type of right wing compromise.

Hillary's outreach involved going after Urban/Suburban Rs who leaned more to the libertarian side (more socially liberal, less racist, more conservative on economics, military, etc.) We've seen the data, we know that racism was a strong predictor of both Obama->Trump flips and lack of racism was also a strong predictor of Romney->Clinton flips. In reaching out to this group, you're expressing a willingness to compromise on economic issues. Generally, we've been willing to do this because the emerging economic consensus has been moving leftwards for some time, and because we're willing to try libertarian solutions for achieving liberal policy goals.

But here, Nader and Boney aren't talking about going after that group. Those people voted for Clinton or sat out. Instead, these two are talking about the opposite - the angry people at town halls are the ones who actually followed through and voted for Trump. They're not liberal on social issues, but are open to increased government spending and welfare benefits (as long as they think they're not going to.....those people.) And, historically, these types of alliances are very possible... if you're willing to throw minorities under the bus. We've seen it happen time and time again over the course of US history.
 
Its interesting that for some the whole acceptability on a left-right alliance is entirely determined by how much or how little money these folks (mostly the right wing ones) have and not say where they fall on human and civil rights issues....
 

Amir0x

Banned
Its interesting that for some the whole acceptability on a left-right alliance is entirely determined by how much or how little money these folks (mostly the right wing ones) have and not says where they fall on the human rights issues....

it's almost as if these "leftists" think social issues need to take a backseat because they're privileged and otherwise unaffected by the severe imbalance in America's systems.
 

Ishan

Junior Member
I'm actually for the ballistic missile defense program . Or maybe some alternative using lasers. The ability to block icbms post launch before impact is a highly relevant defense in the nuclear age . It's the only defense against rogue regimes like nk holding the world hostage because they have nukes . Sadly he is correct in that it is currently in bad shape . I wonder if high powered rapid fire long range lasers will be better ... But again this may be decades if not more off cause were talking about a high powered laser firing multiple rounds within a few minutes and on a small target 1000s of km away
 
Will the average voter even care? Trump basically said this is what he would do and now he is doing it. Until the wheels fall off and the people who voted for him really start to feel it i doubt they will care. Even then i'm still not sure they will.

Trump has done so many things that you would think would instantly rule him out from winning the presidency or remaining president and yet here we are.
 
His budget is a direct assault on many communities that voted overwhelmingly for him.

This is a watershed "WE TRIED TO TELL Y'ALL" moment.

Like in Bloodborne, after you kill Rom. Yeah, the veil has been lifted, and many are now seeing the eldritch grotesquerie for the first time.

But I'm seeing a lot of support for this budget proposal from Trump supporters. (On Facebook)
 
Fuck Nader. He fucks the country in 2000 and shat on Hillary through the election and now he's all "OH WOW TRUMP FUCKED YOU GOOD!"?

Nader can go take a long walk off a short pier as far as I'm concerned. The country would be far better off for it.
 
The funny thing is that Nader is basically a smarter, progressive version of Trump. He's an insane egomaniac who spouts off a ton of nonsense for attention (see: ethnic joke books mentioned already, or his Uncle Tom comments about Obama.) He's also alienated himself from all the groups and work he became famous for for being a controlling, hypocritical shit.

But sometimes he rants about the right stuff and hits the right notes and you can't help but agree with him.
 

aaaaa0

Member
Trump is taking advantage of a classic cognitive bias called "anchoring".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anchoring

By throwing a ridiculous first budget proposal, he frames the discussion around moving away from that first offer, rather than starting at a reasonable budget and starting negotiations around that.
 
Trump is taking advantage of a classic cognitive bias called "anchoring".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anchoring

By throwing a ridiculous first budget proposal, he frames the discussion around moving away from that first offer, rather than starting at a reasonable budget and starting negotiations around that.

I always wondered if there was a word for that.

Same thing lawyers do when asking for damages? Ask for 30mill get 7mill which is what you wanted.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom