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On Trump’s picks — 20 Comments

  1. You nailed it, Neo. I have been thinking along the same lines. I hope Trump admin can do a lot, but anything will not be quick, nor complete. Just savor what we get, not what we didn’t.

  2. well there are some like neishewat who are concerning because her learning curve on lockdowns and masking were not great, am I’m charitable, and she’s being endorsed, or poison pilled by the wretched dwarf peter hotez but that is not so much of a policy making body like say the cdc or hhs,

  3. But the whole thing makes me more aware that people have been gathering four years of pent-up frustration that is quite extreme, and many are so jittery and so revved-up that they are ready to shriek if Trump doesn’t really solve everything on day one of his administration.
    ______
    I haven’t seen that much of that sort of thing. Really. Jittery, yes, we all are that. But impatient? Not so much. At the moment the main concern I see is that the Dems will torpedo too many nominees. Also the impact of Biden’s actions undermining the new administration.

  4. Trump has to honor commitments in his coalition including GOPt (traditional republicans). For those the labor secretary might be a bitter pill– since a party of and for the working class can’t deny unions a place.

    Moving forward, might it be an opportunity for labor and capital to collaborate rather than conflict? Yes I know. Extremely naive.

  5. Some old-fashioned hippie wisdom:
    ______________________________

    Ain’t no such thing as a revolution
    It’s got another name
    It’s called evolution
    Go slow

    –Shawn Phillips, “Second Contribution — Lookin Up'”
    ______________________________

    Phillips never made it to the first or second tier of rock acts. He started playing guitar at the age of seven. His brilliance sprawls over genres, so he is not easily classified. He wasn’t interested in fame.

    He collaborated with Donovan in the sixties and Phillips wrote the music for “Season of the Witch” — the great Summer of Love hit.

    I love that in the early 90s, when I guess his career was in decline, Phillips took time off to become an Emergency Medical Technician and still does some work in that area. He lives in Louisville, KY.

    In keeping with the JFK assassination anniversary:
    ________________________________

    [Shawn] Phillips’s uncle, David Atlee Phillips, was a top CIA officer who was associated with the assassin Lee Harvey Oswald.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shawn_Phillips#Family_and_personal_life

  6. It’s important for Trump to take a wrecking ball to the Deep State.

    But the Deep State isn’t unbuilt in a day, so we might have patience.

  7. I accept all that, but the Labor Secretary appointment is just bad. There’s no rationale for it.

  8. I try not to get my hopes up where government is concerned but with a couple of exceptions, I’m pleased with the picks so far. I think these appointments ae much more reflective of what Trump wants rather than what the GOP establishment tells him he should want.

    If someone other than Trump had made similar choices a few years ago, they would be complimented on the diversity of thought that these choices represent. Although it is also interesting how quickly some in the media now say they are willing to give Trump a chance, despite him being a fascist pig.

  9. A secure border, inflation under control, an economy that’s growing, and a foreign policy that seeks peace through strength. If Trump can accomplish that in four years, I’ll be very pleased.

    It isn’t going to be a walk in the park. Look at all the blue state governors and blue city mayors pledging to resist. They will start filing nuisance lawsuits immediately and will take every opportunity to bash/stall/derail Trump’s policies. It’s going to be brutal, IMO. A kind of cold civil war. Fortunately, the red states outnumber the blue and will allow Trump to make progress there. And the outmigration from blue to red states will continue.

  10. I am apprehensive about the disappointment that could lead to resentment from some overly expectant folks who think Trump can change the world. As much momentum as he has this time, the deep state will dig in its heels, and it will be very difficult to move them. I believe he’ll make wonderful progress, but people must expect disappointments.

    As a former “card-carrying” member of the deep state I recall how the State Department waited it out under Bush 2 and Trump 1. The attitude was “he’ll be gone in 4 years, and we can just hunker down till then.” State is probably one of the worst offenders, but every federal Department is entrenched in this way. To really overcome this, every Department Secretary must have a #2 with the authority, hunger, and mission to dig out the rotted wood, without caring about making friends or attending the right parties in Northwest DC.

    We should go into this next 4 years with high hopes while expecting some disappointment, and not allow the perfect to be the enemy of the good.

  11. At least we will have a president who loves his country and wants it to prosper, unlike Obama, Biden and Harris.

  12. I love those that say “I don’t like so n so” as if they can control who Trump picks. You can say “well I didn’t vote for so n so”, and I say so what.

  13. I saw someone on TV mention something about Trump’s “TV cabinet.” I had that same thought a few days ago. This Neishewat pick for surgeon general would be an example, although that particular job always struck me as being a PR job away. So, no big deal.

    Then Bessent for Treasury? I’d never heard of him. So not a TV pick.

    The Labor Sec.? I expect that Trump is serious about keeping the organized labor people happy and pulling them into the GOP tent.
    ______

    The one recent thing that got my hopes way up high, which I then reconsidered more pragmatically, was the Elon Musk enthusiasm for the Milton Friedman interview discussing the elimination of many federal departments.

    If Musk and Trump could eliminate just two departments, it would be a huge achievement.

  14. If Trump could just eliminate the Department of Indoctrination, I mean Education, he should get a medal.
    Reagan couldn’t do it.

  15. Tommy J…”he Labor Sec.? I expect that Trump is serious about keeping the organized labor people happy and pulling them into the GOP tent.”

    That’s fine as long is the organized labor is in the private sector, not fine at all if it is government employees such as the teachers union. I’m worried that this could undercut any significant education reform.

  16. David Foster:

    Education reform is one of the hallmarks of Trump’s campaign. I don’t think a Cabinet appointment could derail that, or that person would be fired.

    I think.

  17. I have been gathering, not pent-up frustration, but anger and steely resolve and a hard-edged remorseless determination for vengeance.

    But I’m not jittery.

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