Peter Dreier is professor of politics at Occidental College in Los Angeles.
He writes here about Trump’s awful cabinet choices.
“Donald Trump, America’s Pathological Liar-in-Chief and First Bully, has nominated a cabinet of billionaires, corporate raiders, right-wing conspiracy theorists, and war hawks. In many cases, they oppose the mission of the agencies they’ve been picked to run. As a group, their web of affiliations and disdain for the common good should disqualify them from any policy-making position. As a group, they should be called the Conflict of Interest Network (COIN).”
They include:
“1. A Secretary of Labor (Andrew Puzder), CEO of the company that operates Carl’s Jr. and Hardee’s restaurants, who hates workers, unions, the minimum wage, and worker safety laws and whose company was found guilty (by the DOL) of labor violations – including wage theft offenses, such as failing to pay the minimum wage or overtime – in 60% of its inspections at these two fast food chains.
2. A Secretary of Education (Betsy DeVos) who opposes public education and has spent hundreds of millions of dollars promoting private charter schools.
3. An EPA director (Scott Pruitt) who, as Oklahoma Attorney General, sued the EPA to help oil companies and who doesn’t believe climate change is real
4. A Secretary of HUD (Ben Carson) who believes that government efforts to end racial discrimination is a form of socialism and who made a fortune shilling for a scam diet supplement company.
5. A Secretary of State (Rex Tillerson, CEO of Exxon Mobil) who has made billions by endangering the planet with fossil fuels and is good friends with the leader of country (Russia) that interfered with the U.S. election.
6. A national security advisor (Michael Flynn) who was fired as director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, has promoted what the New York Times called “unsubstantiated claims about Islamic law’s spreading in the United States and about the attack on the American diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, .” has profited from his work for defense contractors, and whose penchant for lying led his one-time employees at the DIA to identify his falsehoods as “Flynn facts.”
7. A director of the National Economic Council (Gary Cohn) who is president of Goldman Sachs, a bank that helped bring down the economy with reckless and risky lending practices.
8. A Secretary of the Treasury (Steve Mnuchin) who, as head of OneWest Bank, engaged in racial discrimination, foreclosed on tens of thousands of innocent homeowners, and preyed on senior citizens. He used his political connections to purchase the bank throught a sweetheart deal with the federal government. Judges and government regulators criticized OneWest for its predatory practices. He’s soon be in charge of dismantling the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
9. A Secretary of Commerce (Wilbur Ross) who “made a fortune purchasing bankrupt businesses and flipping them for a profit,” according to Forbes, and who owned a coal mining company that responsible for the deaths of 12 coal miners who suffocated after an explosion at its Sago coal mine in West Virginia mine that had a history of safety violations. Earlier this year, his private equity firm, WL Ross & Co. agreed to pay a $2.3 million fine to the Securities and Exchange Commission for failing to properly disclose fees it charged investors.
10. An Attorney General (Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III), Senator from Alabama, who was rejected for a federal judgeship by the Senate because of his racist views. He once called the NAACP “un-American” and “Communist-inspired” and that he thought the KKK was “OK until I found out they smoked pot.” He is against any form of immigration reform, is pro-life, opposes the Voting Rights Act, and opposes same-sex marriage.
11. A Budget Director (Cong. Mick Mulvaney of South Carolina) who is an member of the extremist Freedom (Tea Party) Caucus and, according to the New York Times, “a fierce advocate of deep spending cuts.”
12. A Secretary of Enegy (Rick Perry) who in 2012 wanted to eliminate the Department of Energy (but, “oops,” forgot its name), never saw an oil well he didn’t love and who, as Texas guv, was an outspoken climate change denier and a fierce champion of the oil and gas industry, from whom he raised more than $11 million from 1998 to 2010.”

Minority president-elect trump is not fit in any way to president and in charge of the military or anything else. Watch him implode. I just hope he doesn’t take us down with him.
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On SNL, Trump gets a visit from the ghost of election past: Shirtless Vladimir Putin
Published on Dec 18, 2016
President-elect Donald Trump (Alec Baldwin) receives a surprise visit from Vladimir Putin (Beck Bennett) and Rex Tillerson (John Goodman).
“Saturday Night Live” has a Christmas metaphor for Russia’s alleged role in trying to elect Donald Trump president, and it involves Vladimir Putin, shirtless (naturally), sliding down a chimney.
Alec Baldwin-as-Trump was paid a visit by Putin on SNL’s cold open this weekend, and he was embarrassed that he was unprepared.
“I didn’t know you were coming, so I do not have a gift for you,” Trump says.
“Please, Mr. Trump, you are the gift,” Putin assures him.
The two also discuss the CIA’s conclusion, which The Washington Post reported Friday that the FBI now joins in, that Russia’s goal was to help elect Trump. Trump has said that he’s not even sure Russia was behind the hacking of Democratic campaign and committee emails.
“So, you trust me more than American CIA?” Putin says.
“All I know is I won,” Trump says.
“Wooooowwww,” Putin responds incredulously. “This guy is blowing my mind.”
The sketch is basically one big sendup of the idea that Trump is Putin’s stooge, uninterested in actually being president and unprepared to deal with the job at hand or people like Putin.
“We think you are the best candidate,” the Russian leader says.
Trump: “Sure.”
Putin: “The smartest candidate.”
Trump: “No doubt.”
Putin: “The Manchurian candidate.”
Trump: “I don’t know what that means, but it sounds tremendous.”
The sketch also features a late cameo by John Goodman, who plays secretary of state nominee Rex Tillerson, whose ties to Putin have set off alarm bells even among some Republicans. We won’t spoil that part, but rest assured, he and Putin are pretty chummy.
And later in the show, Kate McKinnon-as-Hillary Clinton shows up “Love Actually”-style to try to convince a Trump elector not to vote for him when the electoral college meets Monday.
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Note how the GOP website doesn’t mention two words on its Steve Mnuchin: Goldman and Sachs: https://gop.com/meet-steven-mnuchin-americas-next-treasury-secretary/
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Seems like a sequel to The Usual Suspects, or Seven Psychopaths.
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A Christmas comparison from IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE comes to mind.
It’s almost like we’re watching Bedford Falls transform into Pottersville right before our eyes, only it’s our entire country that’s being irreversibly wrecked, and not Frank Capra’s fictional and idyllic city. All the different “Potters” are taking over.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zCFePlm0Gkw
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Or imagine A Face in the Crowd, with the lead character replaced by Charly after the elevated intelligence has worn off.
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It’s a rogue’s gallery of regressives on steroids. Gee, do you think Trump will reach across the aisle and pick a progressive Democrat or Bernie Sanders to some post in his administration? Ha, ha, as likely as Trump raising the top marginal tax rate to 91% (what it was under Ike). The present tragedy reminds me of various films: Invasion of The Body Snatchers, Aliens, Zombie Apocalypse, Nosferatu, Nightmare On Elm Street, etc.
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Characters from the unwritten spaghetti western: For a Few Billion Dollars More
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Well, Dr. Strangelove — I mean, Kissinger — seems as happy as Dr. Frankenstein in a lightning storm.
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This is absurd-and scary. What can we do?
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The country will have to learn the hard way, there’s no easy way out of this whole corporate establishment mess, and colluding with con artists out of desperation will have predictable results.
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Granted many are happily buying into the con, but there is desperation in there deep down.
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Who do you think will be his first Supreme Court nominee? I’d bet on El Chapo.
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My summarizing haiku:
Trump’s nominees want
Nothing less than to destroy
What they should defend.
Best, Rheta N. Rubenstein Professor Emerita University of Michigan-Dearborn Dept of Mathematics and Statistics
On Mon, Dec 19, 2016 at 3:15 AM, Diane Ravitch’s blog wrote:
> dianeravitch posted: “Peter Dreier is professor of politics at Occidental > College in Los Angeles. He writes here about Trump’s awful cabinet > choices. “Donald Trump, America’s Pathological Liar-in-Chief and First > Bully, has nominated a cabinet of billi” >
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Rolling Stone: Matt Taibbi: The Vampire Squid Occupies Trump’s White House!
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/features/the-vampire-squid-occupies-trumps-white-house-w456225?utm_source=email
…”I know the guys at Goldman Sachs. They have total, total control over [Cruz],” Trump said. “Just like they have total control over Hillary Clinton.”
Trump demonized the bank enough that it almost seemed like genuine animosity existed between candidate and squid. When Goldman announced in September that it was banning employees from donating to Trump’s campaign, it seemed official…
The bank has an extraordinary history of placing its executives in high-ranking governmental and quasi-governmental positions, from treasury secretaries to senators to the heads of the World and European Central Banks. Goldman has been implicated in the trafficking of toxic mortgages, a sprawling state corruption case in Malaysia, the manipulation of world commodity prices and a heinous episode involving Greece in which the bank helped to mask the country’s ballooning debt while simultaneously working with JPMorgan Chase to create an index for betting against Greece’s economy….
One surprise election result and a mountain of jubilant #draintheswamp hashtags later, Donald Trump has filled his White House with, you guessed it, Goldman veterans.
His chief strategist, the unabashed white-supremacist loon Steve Bannon, is a former Goldman banker, as is adviser Anthony Scaramucci. Steve Mnuchin marks the fourth Goldman-pedigreed treasury secretary in the last four presidencies, after Bob Rubin, Lawrence Summers and Hank Paulson.
But the real shocker is the recent appointment of Goldman Chief Operating Officer Gary Cohn to the post of director of the National Economic Council…Cohn, meanwhile, is undoubtedly at least the number-two figure at the world’s most despised bank, if not the outright co-head with Blankfein. He has been at the center of many of its most infamous episodes, including the Greek affair.
So much for draining the swamp.
The new party line, emanating both from Washington and from Alt-Right yahoos on the Internet, is that people like Gary Cohn are no longer the swindling scum-lords Trump said they were a few months ago, but simply smart businessmen.
As Trump put it, “Gary Cohn is going to put his talents as a highly successful businessman to work for the American people.”
This mantra is often used to explain Goldman’s legend…The bank has worked very hard to nurture exactly that image, particularly when there are darker explanations for the bank’s success that they would rather leave unexplored. A great example involves Cohn, Trump’s new “top economic adviser.”…
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Get ready for the next tactic of both-siderism: to legitimize and normalize the fascist right, I’ve noticed a couple of references of progressives as “alt-left” on some randomly found online comments. How long will it be until media lemmings start using this to create a “fair and balanced” scenario equating a violent, racist fringe with those who want to save Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, public education, environmental protections, etc.? They will soon become the “alt-left.” Buckle your rhetorical seats.
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There’s a non-negligible number of people on the left who seem to take the position that there is no meaningful difference between Trump and Obama or establishment Democrats generally. That’s an argument that literally normalizes Trump, in my view.
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Can’t argue with clear logic like that.
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FLERP,
Some people who see no difference between Trump and Obama comment here. Some who believe Trump is preferable to Hillary comment here. I think Trump is the least qualified, least competent person ever “elected.” He was right about one thing: the election was rigged. I think Mike Pence is picking the cabinet. Trump doesn’t know, doesn’t care, isn’t interested. He just wants to have rallies and hear the cheering crowds and talk about his “landslide.”
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FLERP!: Just had a conversation with someone who made the false equivalence you described. Told them to get back to me in four years. That was all I could muster.
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“Some people who see no difference between Trump and Obama comment here.”
I’ve not seen anyone comment that there is no difference between those two. Please reference the quote that says that. TIA, Duane
“Some who believe Trump is preferable to Hillary comment here.”
Yes, there are some who prefer THETrumpster to Hillary. Why would you expect any difference in an open pluralistic society. I wouldn’t expect you to pull a Putin and silence those who don’t agree with you on things.
“I think Trump is the least qualified, least competent person ever “elected.””
I have a tendency to agree with you on that thought although Georgie the Least has a proven track record of being the least competent person ever elected (speaking of rigged elections).
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I am no longer posting attacks on Hillary. That is sick.
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How is my post an “attack on Hillary”?
It certainly wasn’t meant as an attack. I think you’d know right away if I were to “attack Hillary”. I usually don’t beat around the bushes on that sort of thing.
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Duane,
I did not say you attacked Hillary.
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Thanks for the clarification as I was quite confundido thinking it was a response to my post.
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Today’s NYT editorial, “Ben Carson’s Warped View of Housing,” opens with a sentence the pretty much sums the Trumpworld and this post:
“Antigovernment ideologues resent the Department of Housing and Urban Development even when they know nothing about it.”
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I wish that ONLY those who voted for Trump had to live with his wrecking crew along with the head wrecker.
George W was a catastrophe for the country. It will NEVER be the same.
Trump seems bent on destroying any worth while vestige of democracy that we still have.
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Certainly can’t disagree with your second paragraph, Gordon!
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Trump’s loyal followers don’t have a clue about his lack of understanding regarding other cultures. He doesn’t read and therefore, goes by his intuition. How many more countries will he offend?
A journalist in Hong Kong at the South China Morning Post wrote an opinion column about Trump. Notice that Mr. Plat refers to Trump as having a “brittle personality and questionable global views”.
Here is a connecting link and a partial quote from the article:
Read More: http://www.scmp.com/comment/insight-opinion/article/2055730/underwater-drone-spat-shows-why-china-us-relations-are-tense
Headline: Underwater drone spat shows why China-US relations are tense – and can only get worse under Trump
“Tom Plate says the latest Sino-US tensions show both sides need to make a lot more adjustments to get along. For China, it means accepting a US leader who will certainly offend its sensibilities”
…”The brittle personality and questionable global views of Trump are well suited to further roil the waters of the China-US relationship. As far as anyone can tell, his beliefs are that the world needs to remain America’s oyster; a treaty has no higher reverence than, say, a rental-lease arrangement; and alliances are solely for convenience – always shifting, never foundational, spare any emotion or foolish loyalty. International diplomacy is, at bottom, the art of the deal.
Based on any sympathetic understanding of Chinese diplomacy since 1949, this won’t do. Pick up a copy of Ten Episodes in China’s Diplomacy by Qian Qichen ( 錢其琛 ), who from 1988 to 1998 was China’s foreign minister, and you will see the problem. The Chinese find “deal diplomacy” extremely tacky. In Qian’s 2005 memoir, the figure of James A. Baker, the US secretary of state under president George H. W. Bush, emerges not as a skilled statesman but as a vulgar discount-car dealer: “Baker handled foreign affairs as if he were doing business. At the negotiating table, he liked to say, ‘Let’s make a deal’.” The irritation of Qian, who was respected among world diplomats, notwithstanding his hawkishness on Taiwan, is palpable throughout the book. America’s incoming “Dealer in Chief” will grate against Chinese sensibilities; Trump is Baker without the finesse….”
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