Thursday, November 17, 2016

Drain the swamp

Continuing his practice of following no policies or strategies that cannot fit on a bumper sticker, Trump is now going to "drain the swamp". Apparently build the wall and lock her up will take a backseat for a while. The swamp is of course Washington D.C. If drain the swamp includes changing Congress, that's not going to happened. If it means changing administrations that will happen. But then, it nearly always does. Part of this strategy is apparently some sort of ban on ex Congressman senators and high officials becoming lobbyists. This would be accompanied by term limits. Good luck Donnie. What Donnie apparently has in mind is changing ideas he doesn't like for his own which fascinate him. I guess pouring toxic chemicals into a swamp could be the first step in draining and cleaning it.

Something cute was announced today. Mitt Romney has been invited to fly to trumps feet to discuss the position of Secretary of State. You may remember what Romney has said about Trump and how Trump typically reacts to such statements. Hey Mitt, he is screwing with you. Trump won't really have a cabinet. He will have a posse. The two qualifications will be first to tell Trump what he wants to hear and second to agree with every crackpot idea he has.

Trump has to figure out how to give good manufacturing jobs to the rust belt from Michigan through Pennsylvania. Will he require car manufacturers in South Carolina California etc. to move back to the Rust Belt? He is not into education and retraining. About the only way he could accomplish what he promised those people is to phase-in a total ban on the importation of steel ,steel products and automobiles. Or, place tariffs so high that importation would be cost prohibitive. Most economists seem to think that the type of trade isolationism he is advancing would cost millions of jobs. Maybe we will find out.

It is hard not to believe that within a short time of becoming president, Donnie will do something truly stupid. At this point, it is unbearable to try to think about Donnie as guiding foreign-policy.

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