As we all know, Jared Kushner is Trump’s son-in-law. He is also a boy-wonder. At the start of the administration, he was tasked with find a solution to the Middle East impasse; so far, nothing. He was also supposed to reorganize the entire federal government; so far, nothing. He was in charge also of building the wall that Mexico would pay for; the Wall is moving forward, but smugglers have sawed through it many times.
Karen Tumulty of the Washington Post reports on his latest bungled effort, running the coronavirus response with a team of his friends from Wall Street:
Whenever a member of the Trump family gets involved with a project, it is always smart to keep an eye out for the grift.
We might have hoped that a pandemic that has already cost more than 70,000 Americans their lives would be an exception to this rule. But no. President Trump’s decision to again put his unqualified son-in-law, Jared Kushner, in charge of a team charged with a vital national security interest — this time, procuring crucial supplies and protective equipment for hospitals and others on the front lines of fighting the coronavirus — is producing the usual results: incompetence and cronyism.
Both The Post and the New York Times report that Kushner and a small team of inexperienced volunteers from the private sector have overridden career officials at the Federal Emergency Management Agency and are making a deadly crisis even deadlier with their amateur-hour bungling. The two newspapers — which no doubt will be denounced by the White House as “fake news” — based their accounts on a whistleblower memo written by one of the volunteers and interviews with government sources familiar with the effort.
The story line, which sounds as though it might have been lifted from the reality show “Shark Tank,” had been that these whiz kids from consulting, venture capital and private equity firms were better equipped than federal officials who have spent years planning for a disaster like the one we are going through to sift through leads on where to find badly needed personal protective equipment (PPE) and other supplies and cut deals to acquire them.
That the volunteers would want to lend a hand is admirable, but finding and procuring the proper equipment require a high degree of technical knowledge. As my colleagues Yasmeen Abutaleb and Ashley Parker reported, “the team responsible for PPE had little success in helping the government secure such equipment, in part because none of the team members had significant experience in health care, procurement or supply-chain operations. In addition, none of the volunteers had relationships with manufacturers or a clear understanding of customs requirements or Food and Drug Administration rules, according to the complaint and two senior administration officials.”
And as you might expect in any operation run by a member of the Trump family, some leads and requests got better treatment than others. Documents and emails indicate there was a spreadsheet titled “V.I.P. Update,” which gave priority to Trump allies who included Republican members of Congress; former “Apprentice” contestant Tana Goertz, who now runs Women For Trump, and favored media figures such as “Fox & Friends” host Brian Kilmeade. Also put on a fast track were requests by Fox News Channel host Jeanine Pirro that a specific New York hospital receive a large quantity of masks.
In one case, Kushner’s volunteers forwarded a tip (that they claimed to have checked out) to New York state, which awarded a $69 million contract to a supposed supplier of ventilators. Not one was delivered. Meanwhile, more credible leads were being ignored.
All of this has been going on as the government’s warehouses of supplies have been emptying out and medical personnel have been trying to cobble together their own gear. Faced with complaints by governors and local officials that they were not getting what they needed from the Strategic National Stockpile, Kushner declared: “The notion of the federal stockpile was it’s supposed to be our stockpile. It’s not supposed to be state stockpiles that they then use.”
After Kushner made that comment, the Health and Human Services Department quickly changed the wording on a Web page about the stockpile. Where previously it indicated the stockpile existed for the states to use, it now is described as a “supplement” to state and local supplies during public health emergencies.
The president seems to have a bottomless faith that his son-in-law can solve any problem that lands on the Resolute desk. In addition to the coronavirus-response shop that Kushner has set up at FEMA, his “senior adviser” portfolio includes brokering peace in the Middle East, building a border wall, reforming the criminal-justice system, and of course, the highest priority of all, getting Trump reelected.
All of this is quite a load for a 39-year-old whose previous experience consisted of investments, real estate development and publishing a high-society newspaper.
We are seeing now why government cannot, and should not, be run like a family business. In normal times, nepotism is merely corrupt. But at a moment such as the nightmare that we are all living through, it can be fatal.

Reminds me of Ralph Nader’s comment on Timothy Geithner. He has succeeded by failing at everything he has ever done.
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Kushner and Gates should join in a team. They deserve one another.
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Unskilled American Somehow Still Employed…Borowitz [satire]
WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—Despite an increasingly grim employment picture, an unskilled American man remains gainfully employed, labor experts confirmed.
With millions applying for unemployment benefits each week, experts expressed bafflement and outright astonishment that a man with no identifiable skills, talents, or competence appears to be secure in his job.
“This unskilled individual’s continued employment defies any kind of economic logic,” Davis Logsdon, who studies employment trends at the University of Minnesota, said. “Of the 33.5 million Americans who have applied for unemployment benefits over the past seven weeks, approximately 33.5 million are more qualified than he is.”
Even more perplexing, experts said, is the unskilled man’s persistent employment after failing at a series of other jobs during the past three years…
https://www.newyorker.com/humor/borowitz-report/unskilled-american-somehow-still-employed?utm_source=onsite-share&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=onsite-share&utm_brand=the-new-yorker
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Well, . . . maybe we have learned something: “Whenever a member of the Trump family gets involved with a project, it is always smart to keep an eye out for the grift” . . .
. . . NOT to mention Kushner’s apparently endless ignorance. . . . if he weren’t ignorant of how government and professionalism are supposed to work, he wouldn’t have made that inane statement, about who owns the stockpiles, for all to hear.
Under those circumstances, failure is not an option, it’s the ONLY option. How long can they keep killing messengers before the whole democratic thing goes away? CBK
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desperately sad: under those circumstances, failure is the only option
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We have been fed a false narrative that the public sector is less efficient and more incompetent than the private sector. What we have repeatedly seen is that privatized systems that siphon from government engage in widespread inefficiencies to increase profits. They endlessly profiteer and implement schemes full of graft, nepotism, cronyism. They are after the common good, Trump just appointed a new crony, postmaster general, Louis DeJoy, who will work to privatize the postal services. DeVos and DeJoy are designated to disrupt, not serve the people.
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Americans never should have allowed this nepotism. It makes a mockery of any supposed commitment we have to merit. It makes us all into liars.
I worry there will be more and more of these unearned promotions and jobs along with ever-growing income inequality. If no one can move up because we gutted all the engines that allow people to move up then the people already on the top have no competition. They’ve set it up so they get all the plum positions in perpetuity, for generations. It’s a kind of decadence.
We need strong anti-corruption laws and regulations. These folks seem to have no inner monitors or guides- they don’t self-police. That means they have to be better policed. A complete and utter lack of personal ethics and standards. Has to come from without. They don’t have it within.
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Chiara . . . interesting commentary, which (in great part) points back to the long-term background education of so many of us–both formal and informal, e.g., cultural. We in education have more to do than to just get rid of the influence of reformers, “wallets,” and religious zealots. CBK
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Elizabeth Warren was/is all over conflicts of interest, self-dealing and nepotism.
I hope Biden takes her as his veep.
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A recent poll of Democrats indicated that 36% want Warren as VP. She had the highest support of any of the women under consideration. I also think it is the best way to get progressives out to vote for Biden. I hope the DNC is listening.
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Elizabeth Warren has been, consistently, the one who best understood this and has fought to reverse it. I share the hope that Biden will choose her as his VP. She’s extraordinarily smart and compassionate.
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Warren is my choice for VP. She has only one significant drawback. The governor of Massachusetts is a Republican, and he would replace her with a Republican, which might tip the Senate into Republican control if it is split.
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I concur, Diane! She would be a superb choice.
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Ah yes, the Slum Lord Billionaire. The ONLY good thing I can say about Jared is that he kept Chris Christie from being appointed to a WH position…… lLet’s not forget that Chris Christie put Jared Kushner’s daddy in jail for a while. Jared’s diploma from his ritzy Ivy League College was bought and paid for with daddy’s donation/endowment money. Boy Wonder has the mental capacity of an ugly, slimy garden slug.
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Chris Christie put Jared’s dad in federal prison for two years.
That’s not the kind of thing that a son doesn’t forgive or forget, even if his father did engage in criminal behavior.
One good thing Chris did: he led the transition team and prepared briefing books for every cabinet department. He gave them to the Trump team, which immediately threw them away.
They didn’t want to know anything in advance.
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Can you imagine the cat fights between Christie and Kushner if the 2 were vying for Trumps love and adoration in the WH? Oh my, that would have been a fun show to watch.
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Canada is doing much more for its people than the US. Should we be surprised?
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CANADA
Trudeau’s daily coronavirus update: Feds extending CEWS beyond June (Full transcript)
In his May 8 briefing to Canadians, the PM announced that the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy will be extended ‘to help kickstart our economic reopening and boost jobs’
By Maclean’s
May 8, 2020
…Since it launched last week, employers have applied for subsidies for almost two million workers. And as provinces and territories start to gradually reopen over the coming months and the CERB becomes less and less needed, this subsidy will play an even greater role. That’s why I can announce today that we will be extending the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy beyond June to help kickstart our economic reopening and boost jobs.
We’ll have more details next week, but to businesses hit by COVID-19, know this: the wage subsidy will continue to be there for you to help you keep your employees on the payroll. So, fill out the application at Canada.ca if you haven’t already done so. And if you had to let people go, try to bring them back. It’s those workers who will drive our economy’s short and long term recovery.
On other support, the Canada Emergency Business Account has been accessed by well over half a million businesses to give them much needed loans. Between the CEBA and the wage subsidy, we’re helping employers across the country keep Canadians on the job. Now, even though we’re reaching millions of Canadians, we need to reach even more. We’re working around the clock to update and adjust so that help gets to as many workers, small businesses, families and young people as possible…
On that note, Minister Guilbeault will have more details at noon about how our $500 million package for arts, culture, and amateur sport, is now being rolled out to support workers in those sectors. This investment will help people access wage support and help organizations access funding. Our artists, creators and young athletes inspire us and help us feel connected even when we’re at home. They’re there for us and we’re gonna be there for them. No matter where you work, no matter who you are, these are tough times. But with the right plan, we will get through this and we’ll come back stronger than ever…
https://www.macleans.ca/news/canada/trudeaus-daily-coronavirus-update-feds-extending-cews-beyond-june-full-transcript/
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As much as I hate to quote Ayn Rand, her description of people like the Trump family and the Trump administration as LOOTERS is dead on. I wonder if her fanboy Paul Ryan has the guts and integrity to confirm this. I seriously doubt it, but I wonder.
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The new age of Ayn Rand: how she won over Trump and Silicon Valley
…The Republican speaker of the US House of Representatives, Paul Ryan, is so committed a Randian, he was famous for giving every new member of his staff a copy of Rand’s gargantuan novel, Atlas Shrugged (along with Freidrich Hayek’s Road to Serfdom). The story, oft-repeated, that his colleague in the US Senate, Rand Paul, owes his first name to his father Ron’s adulation of Ayn (it rhymes with “mine”) turns out to be apocryphal, but Paul describes himself as a fan all the same.
But Rand’s philosophy of rugged, uncompromising individualism – of contempt for both the state and the lazy, conformist world of the corporate boardroom — now has a follower in the White House. What is more, there is a new legion of devotees, one whose influence over our daily lives dwarfs that of most politicians. They are the titans of tech.
So who is this new entrant on the A-level syllabus, the woman hailed by one biographer as the goddess of the market? Born Alisa Zinov’yevna Rosenbaum in 1905 in St Petersburg, Russia, she saw her father impoverished and her family driven to the brink of starvation by the Soviet revolution, an experience that forged her contempt for all notions of the collective good and, especially, for the state as a mechanism for ensuring equality….
In those novels, and in the essays and lectures she turned to afterwards, Rand expounded – at great and repetitive length – her philosophy, soon to be taught to A-level students alongside Hobbes and Burke. Objectivism, she called it, distilled by her as the belief that “man exists for his own sake, that the pursuit of his own happiness is his highest moral purpose, that he must not sacrifice himself to others, nor sacrifice others to himself”…
Perhaps her most significant early follower was Alan Greenspan, later to serve as chairman of the US Federal Reserve for 19 years. In the 1950s, Greenspan was one of the Collective, and he would be among the mourners at her funeral in 1982, where one floral wreath was fashioned into that same 6ft dollar sign, now understood to be the logo of Randism…
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2017/apr/10/new-age-ayn-rand-conquered-trump-white-house-silicon-valley?CMP=share_btn_link
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We’ve had a terrible shortage of toilet paper here in this part of the country, as elsewhere. Fortunately, I have copies of Ayn Rand’s massive, cartoonish novels.
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NIH clinical trial testing antiviral remdesivir plus anti-inflammatory drug baricitinib for COVID-19 begins
Friday, May 8, 2020
A randomized, controlled clinical trial evaluating the safety and efficacy of a treatment regimen of the investigational antiviral remdesivir plus the anti-inflammatory drug baricitinib for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has begun. The trial is now enrolling hospitalized adults with COVID-19 in the United States. The trial is expected to open at approximately 100 U.S. and international sites. Investigators currently anticipate enrolling more than 1,000 participants. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, is sponsoring the trial.
https://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/nih-clinical-trial-testing-antiviral-remdesivir-plus-anti-inflammatory-drug-baricitinib-covid-19-begins#.XrWqukUJUGU.gmail
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Jared is definitely a ‘good relation’. He kisses Trump’s _________.
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White House pushes back on Kushner critics
05/08/20
The White House is pushing back on criticism of Jared Kushner’s role in responding to the coronavirus crisis after a sustained barrage of media fire on the president’s son-in-law.
Kushner has been hit for some upbeat comments he has made in interviews — which critics have derided as hopelessly optimistic — as well as alleged shortcomings in the work of the team of volunteers he has headed.
Now the administration is pressing the case in Kushner’s defense, after both The New York Times and The Washington Post reported extensively on the volunteer group.
The administration characterizes that group as a major asset in the race to get various kinds of medical supplies to COVID-19 hot spots amid an unprecedented emergency.
“It is just kind of sad that they are looking for reasons to criticize a very successful effort instead of doing real reporting,” one senior administration official told The Hill. “This was an unusual situation and [the group] did some unconventional things, but ultimately there has been a lot of success.”
President Trump has also joined the pushback himself. At a meeting with GOP lawmakers on Friday, Trump invited Kushner to outline his work on acquiring ventilators and tests.
After he had done so, Trump added, “You’ve done a great job. Some day people are going to appreciate it. They say, ‘Oh, he’s a relation.’ Well if he wasn’t a good relation, I’d get him out of here so fast.”…
https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/496839-the-memo-white-house-pushes-back-on-kushner-critics
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I worked for Jared Kushner. Of course he says his covid-19 failure is a success.
May 8, 2020
…Kushner’s lack of experience and expertise has not been remedied in any way during his now three-plus years in the White House. After bungling many high-profile efforts to address various problems and often making them worse (see, Middle East, peace in), he keeps being handed more responsibilities with higher stakes. He has wasted taxpayer resources and endangered lives trying on policy roles usually reserved for the country’s top experts with the sophistication of a child playing dress-up, cavalierly discarding them when he can’t fit into them.
There have been no consequences. In any normal administration, an adviser with Kushner’s string of failures would be fired, but Kushner, like his father-in-law, keeps crediting himself with imaginary successes. Most recently, he declared the administration’s coronavirus response “a great success story,” a mind-boggling assertion that raises the question of what, if anything, Kushner thinks failure looks like. He has also continued to bash the actual experts, disputing their assessments and implying that they, not he, are the amateurs, and he is here to clean up their mess…
https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2020/05/08/jared-kushner-coronavirus-failure/
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