Tuesday, October 06, 2020

Fox Business host compares Trump’s physician to North Korean ‘propaganda’

Published on October 6, 2020 By Alex Henderson, AlterNet
Physician to the President Sean Conley at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. (Official White House Photo by Tia Dufour) 
NOT A REAL DOCTOR,HE IS A QUACK A CHIROPRACTOR


Fox Business host Lisa Kennedy Montgomery this week compared President Donald Trump’s doctor and the Trump White House to North Korean “propaganda.”

Trump, who tested positive for COVID-19 last week, has been released from Walter Reed Medical Center and is back at the White House. Kennedy, during an appearance on the Fox News program “Outnumbered” on Monday, October 5, was highly critical of the Trump White House and Trump’s doctor, Navy Cmdr. Dr. Sean Conley, for being evasive about the president’s condition.


The 48-year-old Montgomery, a former MTV veejay turned libertarian/conservative pundit, told the “Outnumbered” panel, “I think we just had a sense that things were worse than they were letting on. If there’s one thing I don’t like, it is a lack of transparency. And everyone has been touched by the virus — either personally, or they know someone who’s contracted it and God forbid, has succumbed to it.”

On “Outnumbered,” she argued that the Trump White House is doing Americans a disservice by not being up-front about the president’s condition.

Montgomery stressed, “We know how quickly the virus can turn. And I think it’s really important to be straight-forward with the American people, because we’re not living in  North Korea — and we don’t have to be fed propaganda about the dear leader’s condition. So, if he is deteriorating — if he is requiring oxygen — I think it’s OK to tell people that.”


SEE 
MORE TRUMP QUACKERY
HIS SO CALLED DOCTOR IS A BONE CRUNCHER,
A CHIROPRACTOR BY ANY OTHER NAME 








Fox News doctor says he’s ‘concerned’ Trump could be experiencing ‘roid rage’


Published on October 6, 2020 By David Edwards

Trace Gallagher speaks to Ashish Jha (Fox News/screen grab)

Harvard Global Health Institute Director Dr. Ashish Jha told Fox News on Tuesday that President Donald Trump could be experiencing “roid rage” after taking the steroid dexamethasone for his COVID-19 infection.

During an interview on Fox News, host Trace Gallagher noted that steroids have side effects that include aggression, agitation, anxiety, irritability, mood changes and weight gain.

“The president is going to get a short course so I’m not worried about longterm effects of dexamethasone,” Jha explained. “But we definitely see in 30-40% of people pretty substantial effects on all those things that you mentioned: the anxiety, the agitation.”

“They used to call it roid rage,” Gallagher observed. “That was a real thing. And you know, a lot of bodybuilders and wrestlers have been through that.”

“What about psychologically?” the Fox News host asked. “Any concerns there about the use of steroids?”

Jha pointed to a recent study which found that a majority of COVID-19 patients had “some neurologic symptoms.”

“A third or so can get confusion,” he added. “And then you throw in steroids, which can also cause that. Again, I think all of that will have to be closely monitored by his doctors. I’m always concerned, especially in an older gentleman like our president that it’s going to be a risk factor.”
COVID 19 has killed more Americans than 5 wars combined

By Terry H. Schwadron, DCReport @ RawStory - Commentary
Published on October 6, 2020

Overworked doctor sitting in his office (Shutterstock.com)

Sometime this week, even as we see Donald Trump being treated for COVID-19, it is likely we will hit 212,000 American deaths from coronavirus in seven months.

That is a mark passing U.S. deaths from conflicts in Vietnam, Korea, Iraq, Afghanistan and World War I – reflected symbolically over the weekend with 20,000 empty chairs on the Washington Mall.

Globally, of course, we’re over a million deaths.

It’s a sober and ignoble achievement—a total that public awareness and attention should have kept lower, one whose growth rate should be diminishing and one that seems to encapsulate our divisive mentality about safety for others.

The problem will be getting Americans to take the contagion seriously.

Despite whatever efforts Trump, state governors, government health officials or others want to claim, the maps of disease growth show the United States faring worse than most other industrialized nations on most measures of per population disease control and deaths. This comes even as treatment options have improved and medical treatment has adjusted to recognizing opportunities for earlier intervention.

The total contagion counts show the insistence of Americans to resist even the simplest forms of protection, even while demanding that someone else provide it – for free.

And the president’s own nuttiness about insisting on a spin around the block as if to show off his good health before returning to the hospital just illustrates he is not even taking his own case very seriously. He just exposed everyone in the car. His personal campaign to look strong despite illness frankly is a mystifying version of leadership, for pushing for earlier-than-expected release back to the White House.

Even as pro-Trump crowds were gathering outside Walter Reed Hospital to cheer an ailing president, those waving flags and banners were standing together mostly mask-less, without proscribed physical distancing in some kind of tribal rejection of public health rules. The White House was reported to be doing little toward tracing those who may have been infected in contact with Trump or his close circle. And the president was taking pains to show himself publicly as a strong survivor of the coronavirus challenge, making the White House itself a live contagion point, as if that makes the disease less potent for those without his access to daily testing.

The reality we still face is that whether Trump emerges days from now in peachy health to successfully pursue election victory as one who has survived the coronavirus or opponent Joe Biden wins for being a far more sober, careful candidate respectful of the demands of the disease, coronavirus is still going to be here. It will be a long slog to get through it – something that Trump does not want to own. Even if we get a vaccine, Americans are saying by droves that they don’t see taking it.
Change of Heart?

We can hope that a healed Trump, chastened by his own treatment much like Britain’s Boris Johnson, will revisit what has become at best a casual set of policies toward public health to embrace an actual plan with as much fervor as he does Law & Order.

But there is no evidence for a sudden turnaround.

It is much more likely that Trump, who sees the world as a reflection of himself, will think that all Americans can have the kind of free-to-him medical care that he is getting from a committed team of military staffers with helicopter trips to the hospital, and the use of experimental drugs that have not passed FDA muster. He is likely, indeed, to suggest that the disease is no big deal, and that if he can suffer only mild circumstances there is no need for wider public adherence to anything from mask-wearing to protective arrangements in the workplace.

Indeed, it seems that even if we want to show ourselves to be warriors against disease, the government is providing little to no effective tools.

In Wisconsin and in red states where the virus is arriving later, the hospitals and medical staff are still talking about the lack of protective gear and overrun emergency facilities.

At the Centers for Disease Control, they are busily rewriting any public health advice for you and me to best comport with the political message from the White House to keep the economy as open as possible.

In Florida and Georgia, Republican governors are throwing bars and restaurants wide open despite oodles of video showing unhealthful gatherings that seem to be feeding disease and lobbying the federal government to re-allow cruise ship voyages when those always have proved home for respiratory contagion. Other Republican governors and legislators have busied themselves with court challenges to emergency orders for masks and lockdowns rather than trying to fight illness.

And there is Trump’s own insistence on mask-less rallies in closed areas in close formation that are good for campaign cameras but not public health. And, if we’re to believe the emergent timelines about last week, Trump knowingly exposed donors, at least, to the virus just because there was a lot of campaign money on the table.
How Does It Get Better?

When the government leans on the CDC for more positive advice about schools and other public gatherings, when Atty. Gen. William P. Barr attacks emergency lockdowns and compares a takeaway of individual rights in the name of public health with slavery, when Trump himself disdains the wearing of protective masks, we’re asking for trouble.

When Trump refuses to consider financial help to “blue” states for political reasons after urban centers were hit hardest by coronavirus, how exactly is this helping to fight for a healthier country? How is a Supreme Court challenge of Obamacare with no Republican alternative ready to go helpful in the middle of a pandemic? How is hyping the benefits of a vaccine release before Election Day a mark of effective medicine? Is the White House aware that under 20% of poll respondents say they will take a vaccine at all?

That stubborn reality thing keeps getting in the way.

A Washington Post piece noted that even some Republican leaders are now questioning a strategy in which Team Trump downplayed the danger of the virus. “There was a panic before this started, but now we’re sort of the stupid party,” said Edward J. Rollins, co-chairman of the pro-Trump super PAC Great America. “Candidates are being forced to defend themselves every day on whether they agree with this or that, in terms of what the president did on the virus.”

Whether Trump or Biden in the coming months, the problem will be getting Americans to take contagion seriously – or we will be living with constantly rising public health emergencies for years, with its widespread effects on the economy, on education, and on our security as Americans.

It was a cultural acceptance of dangers from smoking, not government policy, that changed how cigarettes are viewed in this country. Or excessive drinking. Or even obesity, though we’re still working on that one.


But leadership? We need to see some to believe in it: Make Leadership Great Again.



Terry H. Schwadron
‘Promises made, workers betrayed’: Trump gave $425 billion in federal contracts to corporations that offshored 200,000 jobs


Published on October 6, 2020 By Common Dreams
President Donald Trump (Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Patrick Kelley.)

Despite the 2016 campaign promise that he made to voters in pivotal industrial swing states throughout the Midwest that he would end the profit-driven relocation of manufacturing jobs to lower-wage countries, President Donald Trump has awarded more than $425 billion in federal contracts to corporations responsible for offshoring 200,000 jobs held by U.S. workers, according to a new report published Monday by progressive think tank and advocacy group Public Citizen.

“Time and time again, Donald Trump has proven that he will always put his corporate friends’ profits over the lives of American workers.”
—Rep. Mark Pocan

The report (pdf), Promises Made, Workers Betrayed: Trump’s Bigly Broken Promise to Stop Job Offshoring, was released during a press conference and is based on an analysis of data from the Department of Labor on trade-related job loss as well as data on federal procurement.

Researchers at Public Citizen found that Trump’s claim that he would deny billions worth of lucrative government contracts to companies that offshored jobs in order to encourage those firms to bring jobs back to U.S. factories was an empty threat. Instead, the report reveals, eight of the top 10 corporations receiving government contracts during Trump’s time in office have participated in offshoring.

According to the analysis, of the more than 300,000 U.S. workers who have lost their jobs as a result of worsening trade deficits during the Trump presidency, just over 200,000 of those jobs were classified as offshored.

“Trump lied to America’s workers when he told them jobs were staying in the United States,” said Rep. Raúl M. Grijalva (D-Ariz.), chair of the House Committee on Natural Resources, in a statement. “Under his watch jobs have left while he continues rewarding outsourcing corporations with millions of dollars in lucrative government contracts—in the middle of a pandemic.”

At least $425.6 billion in public money has gone to firms that moved jobs overseas in the past four years, according to the analysis, which means that “at least one of every four taxpayer dollars spent by the federal government on procurement contracts during the Trump administration went to the pockets of companies that offshored American jobs.”

The report states that “the Trump administration awarded an average of 2.5 times the amount, or $10 billion more, in contracts to firms that offshored during his term than those that did not.”

“Time and time again, Donald Trump has proven that he will always put his corporate friends’ profits over the lives of American workers,” said Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.). “An administration that has promised to bring jobs back to our country… has given some of the largest government contract handouts to companies known for offshoring jobs.”

According to the analysis, Boeing, General Electric (GE), and United Technologies (UT) have been among the biggest beneficiaries of government contracts during the Trump era even though all three corporations moved jobs to lower-wage locations.

Public Citizen found that during the Trump administration alone, Boeing offshored 5,800 jobs, GE offshored 2,046, and UT offshored 1,572. The latter was awarded $15.1 billion dollars in federal procurement contracts between 2017 and 2019 even while offshoring at least 1,300 jobs at its Carrier subsidiary that President-elect Trump promised to save.

“Trump lied to America’s workers when he told them jobs were staying in the United States.”
—Rep. Raúl M. Grijalva


This report shows what workers in my state already know: the Trump Administration awarded at least $425 billion in government contracts to corporations that offshored US jobs. citizen.org/wp-content/upl


Despite President-elect Trump’s well-publicized 2016 intervention, during which he gained national attention for pledging to prevent offshoring at Carrier, the jobs of nearly 600 unionized workers at the company’s Indianapolis plant and all 700 at its Huntington, Indiana factory were relocated to Mexico in 2017, the report explains.

“This report is more evidence that Donald Trump is the King of Offshoring,” said Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). “For his entire term in office, Trump has awarded billions in new government contracts to firms notorious for serial American job outsourcing, showered giant multinational corporations with tax giveaways, shrugged his shoulders while people get laid off and jobs are shipped overseas—and he keeps lying through his teeth about it all.”

Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) explained how “in 2016, Trump struck a chord with voters in my district, and across the country by promising to bring those jobs back—but he has done just the opposite.”

Trump “has failed to use any of the expansive authorities over procurement policy that all presidents have and that past presidents have employed to deliver on their policy commitments and goals,” researchers wrote in the report. “Despite authority under the Procurement Act of 1949 to enact ‘policies and directives’ for federal contracting, Trump failed to exclude offshoring firms from qualifying for federal contracts.”

“Since elected, President Trump has given tax incentives and awarded hundreds of billions of dollars in federal contracts to corporations that send jobs overseas,” Ryan said. “Enough is enough. It is past time to level the playing field and cut American workers in on the deal.”

Rep. Brendon Boyle (D-Pa.) echoed Ryan, pointing out that “working families know this economy is stacked against them as American workers face stagnant wages, benefit reductions, and unfair foreign competition… President Trump simply failed in holding up his end of the bargain when he allowed these jobs to land in foreign countries.”

Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch, summarized the glaring contradiction between Trump’s ostensibly pro-worker campaign pledges and his administration’s actual corporate-friendly policies.

“This is straight up promises made, workers betrayed,” she said.
Eric Trump says his father ‘literally saved Christianity’
 
October 6, 2020 By Sarah K. Burris
Eric Trump (screengrab)

President Donald Trump can add to his resume that he apparently “saved Christianity,” according to his son Eric Trump, the KFile posted on Twitter.

The moment came as part of a North Dakota radio interview. The middle Trump son rattled off a list of his dad’s accomplishments, saying of his father, “he literally saved Christianity.”

He didn’t give examples of how Trump managed to save the 2.4 billion people practicing the faith, or even what the president saved Christianity from. However, he did say that there was some kind of war going on between Democrats and Christians. Most of the elected Democrats in office are Christians. He didn’t provide any evidence, Christians aren’t being shot in the streets or thrown in jail. However, the first lady did complain she “doesn’t give a f*ck about Christmas decorations.”


Around the time the comments were made, allegations were surfacing that Trump openly mocked his Christian supporters as “full of sh*t.”

“They’re all hustlers,” Trump said, according to former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen.

“His view was ‘I’ve been talking to these people for years; I’ve let them stay at my hotels—they’re gonna endorse me. I played the game,’” a former campaign adviser to Trump said.

You can hear the video of Eric Trump in the tweet from the KFile below:



Eric Trump speaking on North Dakota radio last week on his dad's accomplishments says of his father, "he literally saved Christianity."
Here's the audio of Eric Trump listing "he literally saved Christianity" as one of his father's accomplishments in office.