This afternoon, President Biden gave the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Jens Stoltenberg, the Secretary-General of NATO.
To whom did Donald Trump give this high honor? Here’s a trip down memory lane.
Robin Acadian of the Los Angeles told this story on January 16, 2021:
Nothing makes sense anymore.
The party of “law and order” just rampaged through the Capitol, bludgeoning a police officer to death and calling for the lynching of the vice president. The party’s leader, President Trump, has pardoned a rogues’ gallery of thieves and murderers. And now, in a last-gasp effort to prove there is nothing that Trump won’t defile, he’s been handing out Medals of Freedom like Chiclets to his unprincipled political acolytes and enablers.
The Presidential Medal of Freedom, created by President Kennedy in 1963, was established to recognize individuals who have made an “especially meritorious contribution to the security or national interests of the United States, or world peace, or cultural or other significant public or private endeavors.”
There have been a few recipients who fell from grace after receiving the medal. Bill Cosby, for example, got one from President George W. Bush in 2002 and was later convicted of aggravated indecent assault. But presidents have generally maintained a high bar, awarding the medal to popes, astronauts, scientists, statesmen, military heroes, thinkers and artists. In 1985, President Reagan gave the award to Mother Teresa.
Then came Trump. Over the course of his tenure, Trump has awarded the medal to 24 civilians, 14 of whom are athletes. He has honored only three women, including golfer Annika Sörenstam; Miriam Adelson, the wife of his largest campaign contributor, the late Sheldon Adelson; and Olympic gold medalist Babe Didrikson Zaharias (who died in 1956).
Trump has used the country’s highest civilian honor to reward his most fervent supporters — angry, divisive partisans like Rush Limbaugh (who coined the term “feminazi”), Rep. Jim “Shouty” Jordan and, of course, his favorite cow-suing congressman, Rep. Devin Nunes.
Just as he has done with the presidency, Trump has debased the Medal of Freedom.
“Everything about Donald Trump screams narcissism, so it’s hardly a surprise he turns the highest civilian award into a tool to reflect his own interests,” said Rob Weissman, president of the government watchdog group Public Citizen. “He gave the Medal of Freedom to individuals for their service to him.”
Exactly. Nunes was cited for uncovering “the greatest scandal in American history” and helping “thwart a plot to take down a sitting United States president.”
“Congressman Nunes,” said the White House announcement, “pursued the Russia Hoax at great personal risk and never stopped standing up for the truth. He had the fortitude to take on the media, the FBI, the Intelligence Community, the Democrat Party, foreign spies, and the full power of the Deep State. Devin paid a price for his courage.”
The price? Columnists wrote mean things about him.
On Sunday, I asked Democratic Rep. Adam B. Schiff how he reacted to Nunes receiving the Medal of Freedom. “I feel like I am living in Alice in Wonderland,” Schiff said. “It grieves me to think about what that means to others who have received the honor.”
Now, I don’t mean to pick on Nunes. … Oh, who am I kidding? Yes, I do.
He has distinguished himself as Congress’ most thin-skinned member, suing for defamation newspapers, magazines, television networks, a fellow congressman, an organic fruit farmer and, of course, the anonymous author of a Twitter account who purports to be a cow. As the Washington Post’s Dana Milbank wrote last March, “That’s a lot of litigation for a guy who co-sponsored the Discouraging Frivolous Lawsuits Act of 2017.”
The other day, Nunes seemed to excuse Trump’s incitement of the crowd that stormed the U.S. Capitol and killed Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick. “Look,” he told Sean Hannity, “the president makes a lot of mistakes. All presidents make mistakes.”
Nunes’ unhinged performance during the House’s first impeachment inquiry in 2019 should go down as one of the most bizarre political displays of all time. He showed no interest in Trump’s alleged crimes but continually tried to drag an unknown Democratic National Committee operative named Alexandra Chalupa into the proceedings by implying with absolutely no proof that she’d sabotaged Trump’s 2016 campaign.
He and his colleagues, including most notably his fellow medalist Jordan, tried to out the anonymous whistleblower who first raised concerns about Trump’s phone call with the new president of Ukraine. That was, of course, the call during which Trump asked Volodymyr Zelensky, who wanted Trump to allow the release of nearly $400 million in aid to Ukraine, to “do us a favor though” and dig up dirt on Joe Biden.
Trump himself, you’ll recall, had already endangered the safety of the unnamed whistleblower by accusing him of treason. During the impeachment inquiry, Nunes repeatedly tried to get witnesses like Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman to reveal the identity of the whistleblower, a CIA officer who was detailed to the White House.
“It was shocking to see Devin Nunes receiving the medal for his work in the first impeachment and [Russian election interference] investigations,” said Irvin McCullough, a national security analyst who specializes in military and intelligence community whistleblowing for the Government Accountability Project. “How did I react? With a mixture of disgust and disappointment.”
In Trump’s first impeachment, McCullough said, “Republicans just abandoned the bipartisan tradition of whistleblower protection.”
And it hasn’t gotten any better.
In December, Foreign Policy magazine reported, Nunes blocked reforms to the Whistleblower Protection Act that would have strengthened those protections. Among other things, the reforms would have imposed criminal penalties on anyone who shares a whistleblower complaint with the target of an investigation without the whistleblower’s permission (as happened with the complaint about Trump’s Ukraine call), McCullough said.
“Supporting whistleblowers is supporting the safeguards that prevent our democracy from going off the rails,” McCullough added. “Opposing strengthening protections for whistleblowers is the same as opposing oversight. From a national security standpoint, that makes us all less safe.”
I would certainly not lump Nunes in with his fellow medalist Cosby, a serial assaulter of women. But no one should get a Medal of Freedom for assaulting the Constitution, either.

““He gave the Medal of Freedom to individuals for their service to him.”
I can’t think of a more apt reason of why Trump has no business being anywhere near the presidency.
In the 9 or so years we have been inundated with Trump’s actions and speeches, has he even once done anything that is all about what he thinks is good for him?
“What’s good for Trump is good for the country” has been normalized and since authoritarianism and the end of democracy seems like it might be useful to Trump, we are in grave danger.
Trump is like a toddler, incapable of thinking beyond himself ever. Including his own family. I don’t believe he has even once put the needs of someone else before his own. How frightening that this man is so close to being president again, and all the NYT can do is talk about Biden’s aging. I’d trust Biden 1,000x more than Trump in the office, regardless of whether his memory is half what it was. Biden is GOOD. Trump is inhuman. How the f’ did the media make Trump normal and ignore the evidence of their own eyes?
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Trump is used to paying people to service him.
But sometimes he reneges on the payment.
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What a national nightmare Trump was and may soon be again.
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Which Candidate Most Needs to Step Down? | Bob Shepherd | Praxis (wordpress.com)
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Trump v. Biden: Comparing the Records | Bob Shepherd | Praxis (wordpress.com)
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If Biden does not step down, one MUST vote for him. Obviously, no one interested in preserving democracy would vote for Donald Trump, and if one stays at home, this is equivalent to voting for that lowlife POS. Anyone who does that will be partially to blame for the catastrophe that the United States and the world experiences under a second Trump presidency.
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Dear cajesaw432:
Shob tebe deti v sup srali
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I’d say “Sukinzeeggs”
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Maybe I should leave that spam posted so everyone know it comes from a bot.
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The Republican Party of today is not the party of Eisenhower. It is the party that has legalized ex post facto bribery. It is the party that just made it exceptionally easy to challenge and defeat regulations that protect ordinary people from everything to profoundly dangerous food additives to workplace injuries to contaminated drinking water and fake medicines and buildings and bridges that will fall down. It is the party that has taken from women the right to control their own reproduction and the right to abort pregnancies due to rape or incest or ones that will surely kill them. It is the party that voted not to safeguard the right to contraception. It is the party that has been banning books. It is the party that wants to make lesbian and gay marriages illegal. It is the party that is doing everything in its power to bring about widespread disenfranchisement. And that’s just the shit they tell you up front.
We are at a cusp, a turning point. Right now, as things stand, WE COULD EASILY LOSE THE PRESIDENCY AND THE SENATE. And then the party that has absolutely submitted to Donald Trump will be in a position to confer on itself absolute power. If you think that that can’t happen here, you are sorely mistaken. This could easily happen unless we make a major change RIGHT NOW.
There is too much at stake for the obviously extremely elderly and frail Biden not to step down. the precautionary principle applies.
If he doesn’t, we have a high likelihood of descending into darkness comparable to that of Germany in the 1930s.
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