‘Elites’ Conjure Hitler, Mussolini, & Ku Klux Klan To Explain “Trump’s Plot Against America”

It seems quite ironic that the tagline of Project Syndicate is "fake news or real views?" as it appears the latest scribblings from France's New Philosophers' Movement founder Bernard-Henri Levy have blurred the lines between propaganda, fake news, alternative facts, pure lies, and defamation.

Having slammed the so-called anti-intellectualism movement

The anti-intellectualism movement has swept the United States and Europe in the last 12 months, but it has been a long time coming. Trump is not the author of it, but rather the product, notes Lévy.

 

While intellectuals relish debate, the hashing-out and exchange of ideas is what the anti-intellectual movement fears most. “Debate now, truth tomorrow,” says Lévy. It’s funny then that social media is the hotbed of modern debate, but it’s also a cradle of life for anti-intellectualist sentiment.

 

Nowhere are idiots more warmly incubated or does misinformation spread faster than in the online community, which is why Facebook – the third most-visited website in the world – has such a responsibility to support verified information and not publicize fake news as equal on the platform.

 

Trump may be the heart of the anti-intellectual movement, but social media is the mechanism.

Having extolled us mere peions for our ignorance, Levy then relates Roth's fiction to his delusion of Trump's reality throwing in everyone from Hitler to KKK-leader David Duke proclaiming "the world is rejecting the most unsavory and hated demagogue of our time." (via Project Syndicate)…

On the day of Donald Trump’s inauguration, I met Philip Roth.

 

This was a surreal experience, given that, in his 2004 novel, The Plot Against America, Roth precisely described the sinister and chilling nightmare in which the United States now finds itself.

 

We met, along with our mutual friend Adam Gopnik, in Roth’s book-lined Manhattan apartment, where he has moved after announcing his retirement from writing.

 

Roth had spent the morning watching television, and, like many Americans, he had seen the stupefying images of the fussing, overgrown baby who, with diminutive fists raised, insulted the US establishment, the American people, and the world.

 

As his readers know, the author of The Plot Against America has a special fondness for literary heroines. So we dwelled on the case of Melania Trump, the new First Lady, who maintained a strangely absent air throughout the ceremony. Was she projecting lucidity? Were we observing the look of someone who has intimate knowledge of the catastrophes that are yet to come? Or was she just the most beautiful girl at the party – the one an avid adolescent had asked to dance, and then held on tightly?

 

The world is now collectively writing a new novel. Roth skillfully distilled the tragic and the comic elements of this process, and we spoke of the forces that might be able to stand up to the dark tide of vulgarity and violence under Trump.

 

The first is the sovereign people, who poured into the streets of every large city in the country with the knowledge that, in terms of total votes, it is they, not Trump, who won the election.

 

Second, there are some Republicans who understand that Trump, the former Democrat-turned-populist, and the Grand Old Party that he used as a stepping-stone to power are in a fight to the death.

 

A third force is the CIA, whose headquarters Trump visited the day after his inauguration. He positioned himself in front of the Memorial Wall – on which are engraved the names of 117 agents who have been killed in the line of duty – and issued a grotesque and puerile self-congratulation for the number of supporters who had come to Washington to celebrate his ascension.

 

Meanwhile, the American intelligence community will not soon forget that Trump doubted their probity in the matter of Russian hacking to influence the election in his favor.

 

I asked Roth if he thought that it was strange that the greatest democracy in the world must fall back on such an unlikely set of checks and balances. What is strange, he answered, with a burst of laughter and his head thrown back, is this new state of suspended insurrection, for which the improbably elected president bears responsibility. One might think that, owing to this insurgency from within, Trump could serve an even shorter term than that of the protagonist in The Plot Against America.

 

Of course, Roth’s novel and today’s situation are not precisely comparable.

 

Roth’s story unfolds in 1940, and depicts the heroic aviator and Nazi sympathizer Charles Lindbergh triumphed over incumbent President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. And Lindbergh was a virulent anti-Semite.

 

Trump, nevertheless, employs rhetoric that is reminiscent of Mussolini. And he has professed his solidarity with the worst populists and outright fascist leaders on the other side of the Atlantic, from Nigel Farage and Viktor Orbán, to Marine Le Pen and Vladimir Putin.

 

Then there is that slogan, “America First.” It is astounding that those words have not turned stomachs across the American political spectrum.

 

After all, as anyone with a modicum of historical and political awareness should know, “America First” was American Nazi sympathizers’ slogan in 1940, during Lindbergh’s time.

 

It was the response thrown back at those who wanted the US to resist Hitler’s Germany.

 

It was used to denounce the Jewish “warmongers” who were accused of placing their interests over the national interest.

 

And it is this slogan, which Trump repeated on the Capitol steps, that leads the likes of former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke to unmask himself and crow, “We did it!”

 

Trump knows all of this, and when it is pointed out to him, he replies that he is looking toward the future, not back at the past.

 

But there are only two teams in this game: nihilists with no memory, and those who know that languages have a history and, therefore, an id. The first team thinks that a speaker can invoke a white-supremacist slogan repeatedly in a single speech without having malign intentions; the second team knows that the genealogy of words cannot be denied without the past taking its revenge.

 

Trump, a would-be ally to the most unsavory and hated demagogues of our time, is being rejected worldwide. But consider this particularly odd and sinister twist: America’s most unpopular president recently visited Jerusalem, and developed an affinity for the very same people that his fictional predecessor considered to be subhuman.

 

May the recipients of Trump’s sudden solicitude be as wary of this new friend as they are of their enemies.

 

May they never forget that Israel’s fate is too serious of a matter to be used as a pretext for an impulsive, uncultured adventurer to demonstrate his authority or supposed deal-making talents.

 

And may they be spared the dilemma, depicted in Roth’s novel, of having to choose between two equally dreadful fates: that of the victim, Winchell, or the willing hostage, Bengelsdorf.

 

America has not read enough of Philip Roth.

 

His world or Trump’s: that is the question.

*  *  *

Terrified yet? You should be! One wonders when this website will be labeled "fake news" and this author subjected to Wilders-style retribution for his hate-speak.

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Trudeau, Sturgeon Respond To Refugee Ban: “Welcome To Those Fleeing Persecution, Terror And War”

In response to Trump’s immigration ban, Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tweeted on Saturday afternoon “To those fleeing persecution, terror & war, Canadians will welcome you, regardless of your faith. Diversity is our strength #WelcomeToCanada.”

Moments later, his statement was echoed by Scotland’s Nicola Sturgeon, who retweeted Trudeau’s comment and added “Welcome to Scotland too.”

We look forward to how the respective electorates of Canada and Scotland will react to this latest example of Twitter diplomacy, and whether Trump will soon be calling for a wall along the nothern border next.

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Everything You Need To Know about School Choice and Why It’s Growing

For the past seven days, we’ve been celebrating National School Choice Week (NSCW), an annual week-long event designed to promote and energize efforts to give parents and students more options when it comes to K-12 education. Now in it’s seventh year, NSCW coordinated over 20,000 events in every state in the country, a strong showing that mirrors the growth of charter schools, voucher programs, tax credits, and other systems that give more people a way to find a school that’s right for their children.

All of our coverage—about 20 articles, videos, and podcasts—can be found under our “school choice” tab but I wanted to flag a few entries for readers who might have missed them during a week that was filled with all sorts of other news.

First up is a video shot at a NSCW rally in Austin, Texas that explains the big new development in choice, Education Savings Accounts (ESAs). These function like Health Savings Accounts or Medical Savings Accounts, with participants being given a debit card preloaded with money that can be spent for tuition, experiences, tutoring, certficiations, and more. It allows parents and students to radically personalize their education.

Next up is an Reason Podcast with Jay P. Greene of the University of Arkansas. Greene explains that successful state-wide experimentation in Arizona have changed the politics of the school choice movement by bringing in middle- and upper-class families who want more options for their kids. While the movement’s original focus on low-income students made sense—those kids needed reform, and fast—wealthier parents have more political clout. Greene also discusses the trend away from teaching the liberal arts and toward teaching to state-proficiency and other standardized tests. That’s a major loss, he says, as different parents want different things for their kids and the full flowering of educational opportunities is stunted by common yardsticks that don’t actually create the sort of engaged, critical, self-directed students who will be able to create their own lives. To my mind, his cornucopic vision of all sorts of radically different types of schools with different structures, curricula, and emphases is inspiring as hell.

As a final sample of what we’ve offered, check out Robby Soave and Tyler Koteskey’s feature from the March print issue of Reason. “Why Are Cops Putting Kids in Cuffs?” looks at how a variety of federal and state laws have transformed K-12 schools into minimum-security prisons. A snippet:

When 14-year-old Ryan Turk cut ahead of the lunch line to grab a milk, he didn’t expect to get in trouble. He certainly didn’t plan to end up in handcuffs. But Turk, a black student at Graham Park Middle School, was arrested for disorderly conduct and petty larceny for procuring the 65-cent carton. The state of Virginia is actually prosecuting the case, which went to trial in November.

Chief among the many ironies of this story is that Turk didn’t actually steal anything: He participates in Virginia’s free lunch program, which entitles him to one complimentary carton of milk each day. On the afternoon in question, Turk had forgotten to claim his drink during his first pass through the line, so he went back. That’s when the trouble started, for a very specific reason: A police officer spotted him and misunderstood what was happening. A police officer. In the cafeteria.

Graham Park Middle School is among the roughly 43 percent of public schools in the U.S. with a School Resource Officer (SRO): a cop specifically assigned to patrol the school. SROs exist ostensibly to keep students safe and classrooms crime-free. But the staggering increase in their ranks over the last several decades has produced thousands of questionable suspensions and arrests. Many due process advocates and education reformers now wonder if the presence of so many cops is actually undermining school discipline.

You can find all of our school choice offerings here.

For more information on National School Choice Week, go here.

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Highlights From The Trump, Merkel Call: NATO, Terrrorism, Middle East, Russian Relations

Concluding a busy Saturday, in addition to speaking on the phone to Japan‘s prime minister Abe, and Russia’s president Putin calling for “establishing real coordination of U.S. and Russian actions in order to defeat ISIS and other terrorist groups in Syria” as well as discussing the importance of “restoring business ties”, Trump also prepared to sign three also on to sign three executive orders dealing with the reorganization of the NSC, focusing on cyberthreats to the US and a crackdown on ISIS, and spoke on the phone with German chancellor Angela Merkel.

In their first conversation, Trump & Merkel covered “a range of issues, including NATO, the situation in the Middle East and North Africa, relations with Russia, and the Ukraine crisis.”  The two also agreed on the “fundamental importance to the broader transatlantic relationship and its role in ensuring the peace and stability of our North Atlantic community.” The leaders agreed on the need to strengthen already robust cooperation in the fight against terrorism and violent extremism, and to work to stabilize conflict areas in the Middle East and North Africa.

Finally, Trump said he accepted Germany’s invitation to attend the G-20 summit in Hamburg Germany, and said he “looked forward” to receiving the Chancellor in Washington soon.

The full readout of the conversation is below.

READOUT OF THE PRESIDENT’S CALL WITH CHANCELLOR ANGELA MERKEL OF GERMANY

 

President Trump and Chancellor Merkel today held an extensive telephone conversation covering a range of issues, including NATO, the situation in the Middle East and North Africa, relations with Russia, and the Ukraine crisis. Both leaders affirmed the importance of close German-American cooperation to our countries’ security and prosperity and expressed their desire to deepen already close German-American relations in the coming years. The President and Chancellor also agreed on the NATO Alliance’s fundamental importance to the broader transatlantic relationship and its role in ensuring the peace and stability of our North Atlantic community. In this vein, the leaders recognized that NATO must be capable of confronting 21st century threats and that our common defense requires appropriate investment in military capabilities to ensure all Allies are contributing their fair share to our collective security. The leaders agreed on the need to strengthen already robust cooperation in the fight against terrorism and violent extremism, and to work to stabilize conflict areas in the Middle East and North Africa. The President accepted the Chancellor’s invitation to attend the G-20 Summit in Hamburg, Germany, in July, and said he looked forward to receiving the Chancellor in Washington soon.

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Kremlin Confirms Trump-Putin Call Was “Friendly, Constructive, Mutually Beneficial”, Prioritized “Fighting Terrorism”

Vladimir Putin reportedly congratulated Donald Trump for officially assuming office and wished him success in his future activities, during the two controversial leaders’ first conversation since the inauguration.

As The Kremlin reports (via Google Translate):

During the meeting, both sides had shown a disposition to actively work together on stabilization and development of Russian-American interaction – in a constructive, equal and mutually beneficial basis.

 

Thoroughly discussed current international issues, including the fight against terrorism, the situation in the Middle East, the Arab-Israeli conflict, the sphere of strategic stability and non-proliferation, the situation around the Iranian nuclear program and the Korean Peninsula. Also touched upon the main aspects of the crisis in Ukraine. It was agreed to establish a partnership in all these and other areas.

 

At the same time highlighted the priority of joint efforts in the fight against the main threat – international terrorism. The Presidents called for establishing a real coordination of US and Russian actions in order to defeat ISIS and other terrorist groups in Syria.

 

Underscired was the importance of the restoration of mutually beneficial trade and economic ties between the business communities of the two countries, which could further stimulate progressive and stable development of bilateral relations.

 

Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump agreed to work on possible dates and a venue for their personal meeting.

 

Donald Trump asked to convey the wishes of happiness and prosperity to the Russian people, noting that the US people are sympathetic to Russia and its citizens.

 

Vladimir Putin, in turn, stressed that the Russian experience similar feelings towards the Americans. He recalled that our country for more than two centuries, America has supported, has been an ally in two world wars, and now considers the US as an important partner in the fight against international terrorism.

 

The leaders agreed to maintain regular personal contacts.

 

The conversation took place in a positive and businesslike manner.

We look forward to CNN’s (and Chuck Schumer’s and John McCain’s) spin on this.

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France’s Richest Man Warns “Every Time We Get This Euphoric, It Ends Badly”

Despite the world's elite 'prepping', and 'Davos man' fearful of the rise of populism, it seems 'average joe' remains exuberant (if sentiment and stocks are to be believed). But France's richest man, LVMH CEO Bernard Arnault, has seen this all before and is very anxious.

France's richest man is chairman of LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton, the world's largest maker of luxury goods. He controls about half of LVMH, which had revenue of 35.7 billion euros ($39.6 billion) in 2015 from products including Louis Vuitton leather goods, TAG Heuer watches and Dom Perignon champagne.

The boss of the world's largest luxury brands company began his earnings call with an 'unusual' proclamation of the reality he fears the world is missing…

It's been a very good year. A pretty mixed year on the whole. The first part of the year more restrained with the second part of the year displaying sharp acceleration. I'd like to review the various business groups before giving you my views on 2017, which is one of caution and I'll explain why.

 And after expounding on how well things were going, Arnault dropped the uncomfortable truth bomb…

In spite of all that and in spite of the fact that the year is beginning with green lights, so I'm very cautious about 2017. Why? It may sound strange. Well, first of all, when everything's going well as it is, it's always in these times that something unexpected occurs and that we have to be very vigilant. So, I said to the teams, let's be vigilant in a period that may seem euphoric and may give – encourage people to let our people congratulate each other. The stores are full. We don't know how we can meet demand. That's pretty much summary of the situation. And they tend to ease up, but I believe we need to be extremely vigilant, because from experience, every time we found ourselves in such a situation, the year ended not so well.

 

And why could that happen? First of all, for almost 10 years now, there hasn't been a major crisis. The last one dates back to 2008. And when I see my friend, Warren Buffett, he always tells me I'm very optimistic for the long-term. I'm also very optimistic for the long-term, but over a 10-year period, normally there are eight good years and two not so good years or even a very bad year. Now we're coming to the end of the 10-year period. So what's going to happen when we see a global outlook with interest rates that are defying gravity as low as they are, with share prices that are rising with exuberance to quote a well-known term, with a geopolitical situation that's difficult to read?

 

There's talk of a trade war, tariff war, currency war with very low growth in Europe. So can all that continue to be buoyant for all our business? I think we need to remain cautious. It's better to expect a first half that will be relatively easy, because comparisons are easy. 2016, the first half wasn't that great, so this year should be okay.

 

Geopolitical, economic events that might unfold in a way that isn't particularly helpful, and the way the second half of 2016 was promising, we must expect things to be far more difficult in the second half of the year. So this year, and I've conveyed this to my teams, I've conveyed to them a message of great caution in spite of the results and the excellence of the figures that we're presenting. It doesn't currently have disadvantages, a difficult situation, because these are the periods when we can seize on opportunities.

 

Currently, share's at very high, so people continue to buy. But when share price drops, that's when they tend to sell. But they lay down their arms, but a few years later, it picks up. Perhaps during this year or next year, there will be opportunities for the group, because it's true that it's in more challenging times, I've noticed that we've always managed to increase our market share and to outperform our peers. But one never knows. We really need to be prudent. But I believe nevertheless we will strengthen our lead over the market this year.

Ironically, his CFO Jean-Jacques Guiony – who took over the call right after Arnault's soliloquy – began… "Good evening. I don't want you to get too depressed…"

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One Of These Is Likely To Break

By Chris at http://ift.tt/12YmHT5

Market dislocations occur when financial markets, operating under stressful conditions, experience large widespread asset mispricing.

Welcome to this week’s edition of “World Out Of Whack” where every Wednesday we take time out of our day to laugh, poke fun at and present to you absurdity in global financial markets in all its glorious insanity.

While we enjoy a good laugh, the truth is that the first step to protecting ourselves from losses is to protect ourselves from ignorance. Think of the “World Out Of Whack” as your double thick armour plated side impact protection system in a financial world littered with drunk drivers.

Selfishly we also know that the biggest (and often the fastest) returns come from asymmetric market moves. But, in order to identify these moves we must first identify where they live.

Occasionally we find opportunities where we can buy (or sell) assets for mere cents on the dollar – because, after all, we are capitalists.

In this week’s edition of the WOW we’re covering oil and the USD

Ok, so I’ve laid out the dollar thesis many times here. Basically, it’s not finished with its bull run. In fact, I think it’s going to surprise even the bulls as to how high it goes in the next few years. In the near term, however, weakness is to be completely expected.

Now that “the Don” has been anointed to the throne, investors will likely take profits on the reflationary trade and dollar bets come off. Do they come off rapidly or slowly where the market can easily digest the selling? I don’t pretend to know.

What I do know is that investors are very long dollars right now so it doesn’t make a lot of sense to try dive into the dollar. But all that said, I also don’t want to be out of what I believe to be a major trend, so I’m still long USD and using it as my base currency for the time being.

Do I care if it gets beaten up in the next 6 months? Not particularly, as my time horizon isn’t a 6-month time horizon.

Part of the rigorous questioning process I go through (because we’re all wrong sometime and someplace, and finding out fast and cutting losses is the hallmark of every great investor) is to look for evidence of being wrong.

And this is where I want to bring to your attention today – the disconnect between the dollar and oil.

We know that oil trades inversely to the dollar.

Now, take a look at speculative long positioning in oil.

Whoah! Something is out of whack!

So now we have a conundrum: The market is long the USD and it’s long oil.

Markets are like wives. They exhibit just three outcomes: Happy (up), grumpy (down), or neutral (sideways).

One of these outlooks is wrong.

Either the dollar longs are wrong and oil goes higher, in which case those speculative oil longs are right.

Or oil goes lower and the dollar goes higher.

The third option is that over time the speculators slowly reduce positions and we get back to levels which don’t exhibit such extremes. That can easily happen. One other interesting factoid is that the physical producers are currently the shortest in history. Hmmm, out of whack!

Clearly someone is wrong here.

It’s times like this that you can either sit out of the market, or you could take a market neutral stance and sell position on both sides of the fence awaiting convergence.

I’m not a short-term trader as I find it too stressful, and I’ve always found the big money never comes from trying to be cheeky on short term bets. Rather, it comes from taking positions on long-term trends, doing your homework, and having conviction to hold through any shakeouts and volatility.

I’ve also found that the amount of work you put in is directly correlated with the amount of steel you will find in your balls because it is often balls of steel that you’ll need to hold through gut wrenching volatility and volatility is seriously underpriced.

For this week’s World Out of Whack I ask the following question:

Oil vs. USD

Cast your vote here and also see what others think

– Chris

“Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, and sorry I could not travel both.” — Robert Frost

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Trump Unveils Three More Executive Orders

President Trump is set to unveil three new executive orders at 3pm on Saturday which according to the White House press pool will include an order to reorganize the National Security Council's procedures and structure, an order to make the White House's NSC more adaptive to cyber threats, and will also seek a Joint Chiefs plan to defeat the Islamic State.

Today's actions will bring the total number of executive orders signed by Trump since taking office to 17. A summary list of the previous fourteen, courtesy of Politico, is presented below.

1. Providing “relief” from the Affordable Care Act
Trump’s first executive order on Inauguration Day involved “minimizing the economic burden” of the Affordable Care Act. This order allows the Secretary of Health and Human Services and the heads of other departments and agencies to waive or delay the implementation of any ACA provisions that would impose a financial burden or any state or a regulatory burden on any individuals.

2. Freezing all regulations
Trump froze all pending regulations until they are approved directly by his administration or by an agency led by Trump appointees. The action, given in a memorandum from White House chief of staff Reince Priebus, delays all regulations with the exception of health, safety, financial or national security matters allowed by the Office of Management and Budget director.

3. Reinstating the “Mexico City” abortion policy
The president reinstated the so-called “Mexico City Policy”, which blocks the use of U.S. taxpayer dollars to fund foreign non-governmental organizations that perform or promote abortions. It was established by former president Ronald Reagan and has been rescinded by Democratic presidents and reinstated by Republican presidents ever since.

4. Scrapping the Trans-Pacific Partnership
Trump’s next executive action withdrew the United States from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which former President Barack Obama negotiated with 11 other pacific nations. The deal was never ratified by the Senate, so it had not gone into effect. Instead, the Trump administration says it plans on negotiating bilateral deals with individual nations.

5. Freezing the federal workforce
Trump issued a presidential memorandum Tuesday that prohibits government agencies from hiring any new employees, effective as of noon on January 22. The order does not apply to military personnel and the head of any executive department may exempt positions that include national security or public safety responsibilities.

6 & 7. Advancing the Dakota Access and Keystone XL Pipelines
Trump’s next actions encouraged the construction of two controversial pipelines, the Dakota Access Pipeline and Keystone XL Pipeline. The DAPL action instructs an expedited review and approval of the remaining construction and operation of the pipeline by the Army for Civil Works and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The Keystone XL action invites TransCanada, the Canadian energy company behind the pipeline, to re-submit its application for a presidential permit to construct the pipeline. It also instructs the Secretary of State to reach a final determination within 60 days.

8. Expediting Environmental Reviews on Infrastructure Projects
On Tuesday, Trump issued an executive order to streamline environmental reviews of high-priority infrastructure projects. The action states that infrastructure projects in the U.S. “have been routinely and excessively delayed by agency processes and procedures.” The action instructs the Chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality to create expedited procedures and deadlines for environmental reviews and approvals for high-priority infrastructure projects.

9. Promoting “Made-in-the-USA” pipelines
This memorandum instructs the Secretary of Commerce to create a plan for pipelines created, repaired or expanded in the United States to use materials and equipment produced in the country “to the maximum extent possible.” It establishes that all steel and metal used in such pipelines be completely produced in the United States, from the initial melting stage to the application of coatings.

10. Reviewing domestic manufacturing regulation
Trump issued an action that instructs the Secretary of Commerce to contact stakeholders to review the impact of Federal regulations on domestic manufacturing. After the review, the Secretary of Commerce is instructed to create a streamlined Federal permitting process for domestic manufacturers.

11. Increasing border security measures
Trump signed an executive order Wednesday that directed the secretary of homeland security to:

  • Begin planning, designing and constructing a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, including identify available federal funds and working with Congress for additional funding
  • Construct and operate detention facilities near the border to make adjudicate asylum claims, subject to the availability of existing funding,
  • Hire 5,000 additional Border Patrol agents, subject to the availability of existing funding,
  • End “catch and release” policy
  • Quantify all “sources of direct and indirect Federal aid or assistance to the Government of Mexico on an annual basis over the past five years”
  • Take action to empower state and local law enforcement to act as immigration officers

12. Pursuit of undocumented immigrants
Trump signed an executive order Wednesday that directed the secretary of homeland security to:

  • Prioritize certain undocumented immigrants for removal, including those with criminal convictions and those who have only been charged with a crime
  • Hire 10,000 additional immigration officers at U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, subject to the availability of existing funding,
  • Prohibit federal funding, with the help of the attorney general, to “sanctuary” jurisdictions, where local officials have declined to help enforce federal immigration laws
  • Reinstate the Secure Communities program, which was terminated in 2014 and enables state and local law enforcement to effectively act as immigration agents
  • Sanction countries, with the help of the secretary of state, that refuse to accept the return of undocumented immigrants deported from the U.S.
  • Create a list, updated weekly, of crimes committed by undocumented immigrants in sanctuary jurisdictions
  • Create an “Office for Victims of Crimes Committed by Removable Aliens” to “provide proactive, timely, adequate and professional services to victims of crimes committed by removable aliens and family members of such victims”

13. Reevaluating visa and refugee programs
Trump signed an executive order Friday evening making significant changes to the visa and refugee programs in the United States. It includes:

  • Cuts the number of refugees allowed into the United States in fiscal 2017 from 110,000 to 50,000
  • Suspends for 120 days the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program, which identifies and processes refugees for resettlement in the United States
  • Suspends the entry of all “immigrants and nonimmigrants” from Iraq, Iran, Sudan and Libya for a period of 90 days. This may also apply to citizens of Libya, Yemen and Somalia depending on the interpretation.
  • Bars all Syrian refugees for an indefinite period
  • Directs the secretary of homeland security, the director of national intelligence and secretary of state to put together a list of countries that do not provide adequate information to vet potential entry of foreign nationals into the United States. Foreign nationals from those countries will be banned from entering the United States.
  • Directs the secretary of state, the secretary of homeland security, the director of national intelligence, and the director of the FBI to implement uniform screening standards for all immigration programs
  • Directs the secretary of homeland security, upon the resumption of the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program, to “prioritize refugee claims made by individuals on the basis of religious-based persecution, provided that the religion of the individual is a minority religion in the individual's country of nationality.”
  • Directs the secretary of homeland security to implement a biometric entry-exit tracking system
  • Grants state and local jurisdictions, whenever possible a “role in the process of determining the placement or settlement” of refugees
  • Suspend the Visa Interview Waiver Program, which allows certain people renewing their visas to skip an in-person interview
  • Directs the secretary of state to expand the Consular Fellows Program

14. Strengthening the military
The president on Friday issued a presidential memorandum directing the secretary of defense, James Mattis, to conduct a review on the military’s readiness in the next 30 days and develop a budget for fiscal 2018 capable of improving the “readiness conditions.” He also directed Mattis to complete a National Defense Strategy and to review the country’s nuclear capabilities and missile-defense capabilities

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Iran Bans US Visitors In Retaliation

One of the most vocal, and angry, reactions to Trump’s anti-immigration executive order came from Iran whose foreign ministry, as noted previously, vowed to take reciprocal measures, as the Iranian government called the ban “an insult to the Muslim world.” Tehran did not waste any time, and shortly after Iran said it would ban U.S. citizens entering the country in retaliation to Washington’s visa ban against the nation.


Iranian President Hassan Rouhani

“While respecting the American people and distinguishing between them and the hostile policies of the U.S. government, Iran will implement the principle of reciprocity until the offensive U.S. limitations against Iranian nationals are lifted,” a Foreign Ministry statement said cited by Reuters. “The restrictions against travel by Muslims to America… are an open affront against the Muslim world and the Iranian nation in particular and will be known as a great gift to extremists,” said the statement, carried by state media.

Trump’s temporary ban would make it virtually impossible for family members and friends of an estimated one million Iranian-Americans to visit the United States.

Earlier on Saturday, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said it was no time to build walls between nations and criticised steps towards cancelling world trade agreements, without naming Trump.

“Today is not the time to erect walls between nations. They have forgotten that the Berlin wall fell years ago,” Rouhani said in a speech carried live on Iranian state television. “To annul world trade accords does not help their economy and does not serve the development and blooming of the world economy,” Rouhani told a tourism conference in Tehran. “This is the day for the world to get closer through trade.”

Rouhani, a pragmatist elected in 2013, thawed Iran’s relations with world powers after years of confrontation and engineered its 2015 deal with them under which it curbed its nuclear programme in exchange for relief from sanctions.

That may soon change. Trump’s order “certainly doesn’t do anything to convince Iranians that the Trump administration has any interest in reducing tensions with Iran,” said Trita Parsi, author of the forthcoming book “Losing an Enemy – Obama, Iran and the Triumph of Diplomacy,” and president of the National Iranian American Council. With Iran holding a presidential election in May, any spike in tensions between the foes could swing support behind hardline critics of President Hassan Rouhani. According to Parsi, hardliners will point to Iran’s compromise as part of the nuclear accord and “say ‘look what it generated: this extremely negative response against Iranian people’.”

via http://ift.tt/2k3SGDg Tyler Durden

Amazon Enters Trillion Dollar Ocean Freight Business: How Many Jobs Will Vanish?

Submitted by Michael Shedlock via MishTalk.com,

Amazon has begun shipping products from Chinese merchant partners to its U.S. warehouses via its own ocean freighters.

Amazon used to outsource exclusively.

Question: How long will it be before Amazon has minimal to no staff on self-guided transports?

amazon-ocean

Supply Chain 247 reports Amazon Enters Trillion Dollar Ocean Freight Business.

Amazon doesn’t want to have to rely on (and pay) third-party delivery companies. It’s already taken control of lorries and planes and now it’s taking control of ships, The Wall Street Journal reports.

 

Specifically, the Seattle-headquartered ecommerce giant has started handling the shipment of goods from Chinese retailers that sell on its platform to its vast US warehouses.

 

Previously it left this to global freight-transportation companies.

 

Since October, Amazon has helped to ship some 150 containers of goods from China to the US, according to The Wall Street Journal, which cites shipping documents collected at ports of entry.

 

“Amazon has integrated all those services into one basket,” said Steve Ferreira, chief executive of Ocean Audit, in the report.

 

He noted that, for Amazon, creating this type of shipping service will give it “a lot of strategic value.”

 

Shipping is a trillion dollar industry, according to MIT Technology Review.

Supply Chain 247 Comment

I appreciate these supply chain articles. In contrast to Bloomberg, Financial Times, the Wall Street Journal, and essentially all of mainstream media, Supply Chain 247 links to its sources.

If you want to see the MIT review, the link is handy. Much of mainstream media would mention the article but not link to it.

Some of mainstream media would not credit the source at all.

In comparison, Bloomberg Econoday economic reports are a complete joke. Never, and I mean never does Econoday actually link to the BLS, BEA, Commerce, or Census report on which they base their economic commentary.

Question of the Day

With that slam out of the way, here’s my question that once again: How long will it be before Amazon has minimal to no staff on self-guided transports?

Self-guided ships has to be easier than self-driving cars. There will not be collisions. Risk of a cat or a human running out in front of the ship is zero.

There is hijacking risk, much greater than with cars or trucks, simply because help is far away. So, some minimal security crew will be needed, unlike trucking.

Guidance crew and maintenance crew, say goodbye, except perhaps a token person or two.

via http://ift.tt/2kezQM6 Tyler Durden