January 6, 2018

ESCO IN TRUMPLAND:


Pence cast himself as blandly uninteresting, sometimes barely seeming to exist in the shadow of Donald Trump' 


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5240531/Jared-Ivanka-think-Pence-controlled-wife.html#ixzz53NtmQksz 
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

Jared & Ivanka think Pence is being controlled by his wife
Vice President Mike Pence has either 'solved the riddle' of how to work for Donald Trump or he's 'well short of intelligent,' his White House colleagues told Michael Wolff, author of Fire and Fury. Former deputy White House chief of staff Katie Walsh is quoted as saying, 'Pence is not dumb.'  But the president's daughter Ivanka and son-in-law Jared Kushner - and others in the White House, apparently - don't see it the same way. 'Many' called him an 'empty suit.'  'The Jarvanka side credited Pence’s wife, Karen, as the guiding hand behind his convenient meekness.'

A new book describes Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner fearfully eyeing special counsel Robert Mueller's probe out of concern their own finances could come under the microscope

Wolff said Friday that '100 percent of the people around' President Donald Trump question his intelligence and fitness for office, with some calling him a 'moron' and an 'idiot.' Even Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump have moved out of the way to let the bus roll over Trump, Wolff said. 'They all say he is like a child. And what they mean by that is he has a need for immediate gratification. It's all about him,' Wolff told 'Today' on Friday. 'They say he's a moron, an idiot.' The suggestion, Wolff said, purportedly quoting Steve Bannon, is: 'He's lost it.'

Trump didn’t read....Some thought him dyslexic; certainly his comprehension was limited. Others concluded that he didn’t read because he just didn’t have to, and that in fact this was one of his key attributes as a populist. He was postliterate—total television.


Insiders say Trump's 'dyslexia' is why he avoids reading
Trump also prefers to surround himself with 'office wives,' according to Wolff’s book. His 'office wives' include his daughter, Ivanka Trump (top left); White House communications director Hope Hicks (bottom left); Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders (top right) and Communications Director Kellyanne Conway(bottom right)

Trump accusing the Obama administration of “wiretapping” Trump Tower was a “turning point” for White House staff.


In a series of tweets on March 4, 2017, Trump accused former President Barack Obama of surveilling him, offering no evidence to support the claim. “This is McCarthyism!” Trump wrote, adding that Obama was a “Bad (or sick) guy!”
It was a turning point. Until now, Trump’s inner circle had been mostly game to defend him. But after the wiretap tweets, everybody, save perhaps Hope Hicks, moved into a state of queasy sheepishness, if not constant incredulity.
Sean Spicer, for one, kept repeating his daily, if not hourly, mantra: “You can’t make this shit up. 

Obstruction Inquiry Shows Trump’s Struggle to Keep Grip on Russia Investigation.

President Trump directed his White House counsel to tell Attorney General Jeff Sessions to not recuse himself from the Justice Department's Russia investigation.
When Don McGahn, the president's White House counsel, was unsuccessful, the president erupted in anger in front of multiple White House officials, telling them that he needed an attorney general who would protect him – the way Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy protected his brother, President John F. Kennedy, according to details in the New York Times.

The president then asked, 'Where's my Roy Cohn?' referring to his long-dead former lawyer, who had ben Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy's chief councsel during the lawmaker's controversial hunt for Communists in the 1950s, the Times reported. 

The episode is known to special counsel Robert Mueller and his team of prosecutors and is likely of interest to them as they look into whether Trump's actions as president, including the May firing of FBI Director James Comey, amount to improper efforts to obstruct the Russia investigation. 
Stephen K. Bannon is confronting political irrelevance, a dire fate for a publicity-hungry provocateur, as some of his most important backers recoil after his reported criticisms of President Trump and his family.

Republican mega-donor Rebekah Mercer publicly rebuked Bannon on Thursday in a rare, and brutal, public statement. But before she did, Mercer spoke to President Donald Trump.


F.B.I. Questioning Clinton Foundation Dealings Again
Career prosecutors shut down the case in 2016 over lack of evidence. The new interest comes as President Trump has taken the highly unusual step of calling for investigations of political rivals.



Steele, a former British spy, was tapped by Democratic opposition research firm Fusion GPS to compile dirt on Trump last year – what became known as the 'dirty dossier'
Christopher Steele, a former British spy,





Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) has recommended the Justice Department investigate former British spy Christopher Steele, the author of the now-famous “dossier” alleging the Trump campaign coordinated with the Kremlin during the 2016 presidential election. The move marks a major escalation in conservatives’ challenges to the FBI’s credibility as the agency investigates whether any Trump associates committed crimes.

Congress and a special counsel have been investigating whether the Trump campaign colluded with Russians to swing the 2016 election to the billionaire


There’s no doubt the U.S. economy and Wall Street have momentum heading into President Trump’s second year in office. But worker pay has stagnated. A similar problem plagued Barack Obama during his administration.






January 5, 2018


First Lady Melania Trump openly wept on the night her husband won the election - and the tears 'were not of joy.'
The whole campaign from the top down thought Trump would lose and everyone had planned for defeat, with Trump himself planning a TV network because he would be 'the most famous man in the world.'


There was, in the space of little more than an hour, in Steve Bannon’s not unamused observation, a befuddled Trump morphing into a disbelieving Trump and then into a horrified Trump. But still to come was the final transformation: Suddenly, Donald Trump became a man who believed that he deserved to be, and was wholly capable of being, the president of the United States.
Illustration: Jeffrey Smith

Trump Didn’t Want to Be President

One year ago: the plan to lose, and the administration’s shocked first days.
Election Night: It “looked as if he had seen a ghost.”


Trump's lawyer tries to ban publication of explosive book
The White House said Thursday that Donald Trump doesn't believe an explosive book leveling sensational claims about his time as president should go on sale January 9 as scheduled. The publisher responded hours later by saying it agreed – and bumped up the release by four days, to January 5. One of Trump's personal lawyers demanded on Thursday morning 'Fire and Fury,' by columnist Michael Wolff, be shelved because of what he said were maliciously false claims made in the book against the president. Press Secretary Sarah Sanders told reporters on Thursday afternoon that the book is 'full of false and fake information' and that Trump 'clearly believes that it shouldn't be' published. 'It's completely tabloid gossip, full of false and fraudulent claims,' she said.

HIGHLIGHTS
President Donald Trump doesn't think much of the intellectual abilities of his two sons Eric and Don Jr., according to new claims made in the controversial Fire and Fury book
President Donald Trump doesn't think much of the intellectual abilities of his two sons Eric and Don Jr., Their father took some regular pleasure in pointing out that they were in the back of the room when God handed out brains,' author Michael Wolff writes.The book goes on to say that the brothers eventually grew into 'reasonably competent' executives within their father's company because Trump had no patience to run it, according to Wolff.  

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5237489/Trump-doesnt-think-Don-Jr-Erics-intelligence.html#ixzz53HHeCwEP
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook


GettyImages-891934164
  • Steve Bannon described Don Jr's Trump Tower meeting with Russians as 'treasonous and unpatriotic' and thinks he will 'crack like an egg' under the pressure of the Russia investigation 'Wolff claims Don Jr., Jared and Paul Manafort's infamous meeting at Trump Tower for dirt on Hillary Clinton was Don's way of trying to impress his father. Bannon said there's 'zero' chance Donald Trump didn't know about the meeting and said Don Jr likely 'walked them to his father's office.  Wolff writes 'It was a case, or the lack of one, not of masterminds and subterfuge, but of senseless and benighted people so guileless and unconcerned that they enthusiastically colluded in plain sight.' 

'You realize where this is going,'[Bannon] said. 'This is all about money laundering. Mueller chose [senior prosecutor Andrew] Wessman first and he is a money-laundering guy. Their path to f***ing Trump goes right through Paul Manafort, Don Jr. and Jared Kushner … It's as plain as a hair on your face,' he said.

    December 28, 2017


    In New York, Killings at a Low as Crime Rate Dives




    Police recruits being sworn in at Madison Square Garden in October. Crime in New York City has declined for 27 straight years. CreditTimothy A. Clary/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

    • Crime has fallen in each of the major felony categories, with just 285 homicides in the city, the lowest since reliable records have been kept.
    • The numbers portray a city growing safer even as the police use less deadly force, make fewer arrests and scale back controversial practices like stop-and-frisk.

    December 27, 2017

    Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

    Trump Has Already Carved a Lasting Legacy


    ELIZABETH DREW, NEW REPUBLIC


    Can the GOP’s victories be reversed? Some Democrats may be comforting themselves with the thought that the legislative damage caused by Trump can be rolled back if they take both houses of Congress in next year’s midterms—an uncertain but not impossible prospect. But they and much of the rest of the country might well find that repairing Trump’s domestic policy damage is very difficult. Even if they could pass a new tax bill to offset the just-passed one it’s highly doubtful they‘d have enough votes (two-thirds of each chamber) to overcome a presidential veto. Further, it’s unlikely in any event to be easy to eliminate the 2017 tax bill root and branch. While Democratic presidents have been able to raise rates to overcome big cuts by their Republican predecessors, it could be quite difficult to take away all the numerous breaks that businesses will have just won. Democrats also have business donors, if not as many of them—which makes them all the more valuable. And those individuals who’ve been hurt by the bill  cannot be retroactively healed. The pain will have been suffered, and the Republicans have made sure that there won’t be enough money to compensate for what was lost.

    In the 2018 legislative year, the Republicans will push for cutbacks in almost all domestic spending, with an emphasis on entitlement programs such as Medicare and Medicaid and also the welfare program. While creating a debt through tax cuts and then cutting benefit programs for ordinary citizens has been Paul Ryan’s dream since his college days (and he has allies for this on the far right), such cutbacks could be harder for the Republicans to pull off than the tax bill was. With the addition of Alabama’s Doug Jones, and the Democrats presumably united against such cutbacks, and at least two Republicans presumably unwilling to go along with steep cuts in these programs, it could be difficult to get a majority behind them. Moreover, in light of the $1.5 trillion by which it’s estimated that the tax bill will raise the national debt—some estimates say its cost will turn out to be higher, but the $1.5 trillion figure is convenient because that’s all the new debt that’s allowed under the budgetary rules—Democrats will be hard-pressed to increase spending on any domestic program, much less enact new ones. This is exactly how Ryan and his like-minded colleagues want it. 

    December 20, 2017






    Senate Republicans Pass Final Tax Plan  Favoring Corporations.




    • The sweeping overhaul of the American tax code, a G.O.P. objective for decades, passed through both houses of Congress.

    The bill is, without a doubt, Trump and the GOP Congress’s most significant legislative achievement since Republicans gained control of the House, Senate and White House. Republican leaders were determined not to let the 1,100 page final bill linger so it might get picked apart by critics.
    But the “win” may end up costing Republicans. This bill is far from the congressional victory Republicans had sought to run on during next year’s midterm elections: It’s deeply unpopular, with approval ratings that were already significantly under water and grew worse over the past few weeks as the legislation neared final passage.
    A CNN poll ...conducted in the past week showed 33 percent supporting the bill, but 6 5 percent against it.
    Republican Senator from Utah and Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee Orrin Hatch (center) speaks beside Senate Majority Leader Republican Mitch McConnell (center right) and other Republican Senators during a news conference after Republicans pass Trump's $1.5 trillion tax cut bill
    Republican Senator from Utah and Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee Orrin Hatch (center) speaks beside Senate Majority Leader Republican Mitch McConnell (center right) and other Republican Senators during a news conference after Republicans pass Trump's $1.5 trillion tax cut bill

    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5197219/Republicans-force-tax-cuts-Senate.html#ixzz51nMicYbg 
    Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
    The facts of this bill are what make it unpopular. For one, the bill repeals the individual mandate in Obamacare, which would result in higher prices for people relying on Obamacare for health insurance. And far from a “middle-class tax cut,” as Trump and other Republicans promised, the measure is truly a massive corporate tax cut ― the top rate goes down from 35 percent to 21 percent ― and a smaller tax cut for individuals in the seven individual income brackets.
    Independent analysts have said wealthy taxpayers would benefit the most, in large part because they pay more taxes from the start. But households at every income level would see a tax cut next year, according to an analysis of the conference bill from the Joint Committee on Taxation, which scores tax legislation for Congress.
    Starting in 2021, however, some income groups would start seeing slightly higher rates. And because the proposal sets most individual cuts to expire in eight years ― a budget gimmick to reduce the bill’s cost in a 10-year budget window ― all households earning less than $75,000 would see higher taxes in 2027 (due in large part to the bill including an unfavorable permanent change to the way tax brackets are indexed to inflation)
    Republicans have waved off concerns about the sunsetting tax cuts by saying a future Congress won’t let them expire.... Republicans finance these cuts, in part, by raising taxes on some people. The bill ends much of the state and local tax deduction, which lets filers write off the cost of their local taxes. As a compromise to some of the high-tax states most affected, the bill allows filers to deduct up to $10,000 of their local taxes by some combination of their choice. 
    The majority of the bill is “paid for” by increasing deficits. The measure would add $1.4 trillion to the national debt, the Joint Committee on Taxation said. Republicans have claimed that increased economic growth would boost business receipts and offset the revenue loss, though no credible economic analysis has shown that.
    Republicans have largely ignored those criticisms by just focusing on how the tax cuts would boost the economy.
    The legislation would increase the standard deduction from $12,700 to $24,000 for a married couple.  Families earning less than $25,000 a year would receive an average tax cut of $60, while those earning more than $733,000 would see an average cut of $51,000, according to the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center. Personal exemptions are repealed.
    The JCT projected that the ... plan would boost economic growth by 0.8 percent over a decade, far lower than the 3 percent growth Republicans on Tuesday promised their plan would unlock.
    “Today is a terrible day for millions of hard-working people, but it is a great day for giant multinational corporations and billionaires who fund Republican campaigns across this country,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) said on the Senate floor Tuesday ahead of the vote. “It’s not tax reform. It’s a heist.”

    December 13, 2017



    Image result for TRUMP

    The Trump Plutocracy is Demolishing American Government.



    SEAN WILENTZ, ROLLING STONE


    Despite its legislative setbacks of the past year, the presidency of Donald Trump has been stunningly effective in its core mission, the dismantling of modern American government as it has evolved since the Progressive Era of the early 20th Century. And even though a civil war looms inside the Republican Party, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, House Speaker Paul Ryan and even frequent presidential critics like Sen. Bob Corker have firmly supported most of Trump's program. This should surprise no one: In many respects, the administration's agenda jibes with the main lines of Republican conservatism as laid down by Ronald Reagan more than 30 years ago, pressing massive tax reductions for the wealthy along with deregulation of finance and business. Trump's adherence to Reagan's dictum that "government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem" is what permits McConnell and the others to behold him as a flawed but useful vehicle for their own politics. Yet in irreducible ways, the anti-government Trump is in fact the anti-Reagan. As Trump consolidates his unmovable popularity among the Republican rank and file, it's become undeniable that his dark political vision has supplanted smiley-face Reagan-style conservatism as the supreme guiding force inside the GOP.

    Image result for Reagan caricatures


    President Reagan believed deeply that the United States had a mystical, even providential mission to stand before the world as a beacon of democracy and opportunity. He spoke often of America as the "shining city upon a hill," its eminence enlarged by the generations of immigrants who had arrived in the wake of the Pilgrims. Reagan upheld traditional virtues of discipline, restraint, hard work and gracious self-effacement as essential to the nation's spiritual foundations. Although he repeatedly asserted that America's best days lay ahead of it, he never doubted America's greatness in the present as well as the past. 
    Trump, by contrast, sees no American mission in the world, only a brutal contest for domination in which the United States must be the winner through him alone. He describes America not as a shining city but as a carnage-filled jungle, beset by crime and drugs and overwhelmed by vicious illegal immigrants. Although Reagan couldn't recall that he skirted the Constitution and violated it in the Iran-Contra affair, he never showed open, truculent disdain for the rule of law as Trump has done with his pardoning of the racist Arizona sheriff Joe Arpaio, convicted of criminal contempt for failing to obey the law. Trump denounces Washington as a thoroughly corrupted swamp, even as he cashes in by turning the White House into a money funnel for his far-flung business operations in violation of the Constitution's foreign-emoluments clause.
     At the core of Reagan's politics was his stern anti-communism, which centered on the "Evil Empire" of the Soviet Union. It was Reagan's disenchantment with what he saw as liberal appeasement of communists, at home and abroad (as well as high income taxes), that first led him to cut his old New Deal ties. Drifting to the right, as a spokesman for the anti-union General Electric, Reagan came to regard the welfare state as a stalking horse for Soviet-style domination.

    Image result for donald trump caricature
    ----
    But Trumpism is not just the usual mendacious special pleading for the super-rich. In fact, Trump cares little about policy or policy ideas or, for that matter, any ideas at all, even bogus or illusory ones. He only cares about self-gratification and self-glorification. His towering ego is his only ideal. But his megalomania is about more than his narcissism – for his fortune and his family riches, and his criteria for powerful leadership, have long-standing links to organized crime.... His long record, as meticulously reconstructed by investigative reporters including David Cay Johnston and the late Wayne Barrett, contains a web of associations with Mob kingpins like Anthony "Fat Tony" Salerno and Paul Castellano, and it shows that Trump will stab anyone in the back and cut off anyone who can no longer feed his supremacy or serve his malice. But Trump's depraved character also has a political model, which is his own version of Putin's authoritarian regime, what the journalist Masha Gessen has called a mafia state, with entrenched oligarchs entirely beholden to the patriarch and his clan, a syndicate that hobbles all political opposition while it deflects criticism with wild distractions and brazen falsehoods, lying not simply to elude detection or to get its way but, as Gessen remarks, "to assert power over truth itself."
    Image result for trump caricatures
    ---
    Inside the executive branch, where Trump is virtually unchecked, the demolition of modern American government] has been severe.
    Trump commenced his destruction when he selected a Cabinet. By the time his nominations finally shook out, he had surrounded himself with a group of pliant department heads that were, according to Forbes, "the richest in modern U.S. history," estimated by the magazine in July as worth, in aggregate, nearly $4.3 billion. They included, not surprisingly, some of Trump's oldest friends and biggest donors. Their stupendous collective sycophancy – displayed for the world at the embarrassingly choreographed ring-kissing Cabinet meeting in June, resembling nothing so much as Stalin's flunkies singing his praises – typified Trump's mafia-state yearnings.
    But most telling of all were the new secretaries' credentials, or lack thereof. For secretary of education, Trump chose a billionaire champion of privatized education who had called public schools a "dead end." His secretary of state would be an Exxon Mobil CEO whose chief qualifications were being awarded an "Order of Friendship" medal by Putin and negotiating an oil-drilling deal reportedly worth hundreds of billions of dollars in the Russian Arctic that had been frozen by U.S. sanctions. To run the Environmental Protection Agency, Trump selected a climate-change denier. On it went: An ex-governor of Texas who campaigned to abolish the Department of Energy was chosen to head it; a neurosurgeon who considered poverty "a state of mind" took charge at the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
    His administration expresses an unprecedented contempt for the American government itself, placing the direction of large and powerful federal agencies, essential to the general welfare, in the hands of people who are fiercely opposed to the mission of the agencies they would direct. Trump's appointments are not a simple matter of drastically changing course; they signal a belief that the very purposes of the institutions that formulate national policy – institutions built up over generations – are rotten. From the start, Trump has been out to delegitimize large parts of the government he has been elected to run.
    Image result for trump caricatures
    ----
    The administration further undermined its own departments by ignoring and alienating career staff and failing to fill crucial positions. Indeed, five months into Trump's presidency, the Senate – the Republican-controlled Senate – had approved only 33 of Trump's 96 nominees for top-tier positions, the slowest pace on record. But that still left roughly 1,000 important jobs to which nobody had been nominated, an alarming number of vacancies. Max Stier, CEO of the Partnership for Public Service, gently described it as a "failure to understand the operating needs of the government."
    Above and beyond incompetence, though, there was the president's autocratic arrogance and disregard for professional expertise. When pressed by Fox News about his failure to staff key positions, Trump replied, "I'm the only one that matters." Stier allowed that some of the 4,000 politically appointed federal jobs are superfluous, but he charged that Trump is disregarding many critical positions, "including," he said, "those that directly affect our national and economic security, public
health, food safety and immigration enforcement."
    Image result for trump and the courts
    ----
    The one area above all others where the administration worked with sureness and efficiency was in securing appointments to the federal judiciary. This, though, required no heavy lifting: Beginning during the Reagan years, conservatives had already built an impressive recruiting, training and vetting network, stretching from the law schools to the right-wing think tanks all the way to the White House, in order to furnish Republican lawmakers with a steady supply of jurists. The goal, as Reagan's Attorney General Edwin Meese once remarked, was simple: to institutionalize the right-wing attack on the progressive state "so that it cannot be set aside no matter what happens in future presidential elections."
    Nearing the end of Trump's first year in office, it seemed that naming the ideologically strident Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court might be his only notable success. This, though, was deceiving, as the Republican-controlled Senate also swiftly approved more than a dozen Trump nominees for lifetime appointments to the crucial lower federal courts, with dozens more in the offing.
    The quality of some of Trump's lower-court nominees has disconcerted Republicans standing as far to the right as Sen. John Cornyn of Texas. (One of Trump's selections has publicly called transgender children part of "Satan's plan.") Nevertheless, with 144 vacancies in the federal judiciary still to be filled, Trump could well reduce the judicial check that has thus far thwarted his agenda, from the Muslim ban to methane rules on oil and gas drilling. No matter the outcome of future elections, the damage inflicted by Trump's subversion will stand for at least a generation.
    As Trump's dismantling of what his former strategist Steve Bannon sneeringly calls "the administrative state" continues apace, his greatest triumph over the past year has actually been political – the transformation of the Republican Party...Among Republicans, approval of Trump has been generally registering in the low 80s. But over the same period, Republicans all but repudiated Congress – its approval rating among Republican voters collapsed from 50 percent around the time of the inauguration to a low of 16 percent following the failure to repeal Obamacare. Plainly, rank-and-file Republicans stand by Trump, no matter his disgraces – indeed, because of them – and they chiefly blame the party leadership in Congress (along with the Democrats and the media) for his setbacks. At least in red states, meanwhile, Republicans who dare to break with the president can expect to pay a heavy price: Sens. Jeff Flake and Bob Corker both saw their support among Republicans in their home states crater after they spoke out strongly against the evils of Trump....He has captured the hearts of the vast majority of Republicans, screaming a post-Reagan conservatism that is not conservative at all and a right-wing populism serving the interests of racketeerism. Historically, these kinds of party transformations are very difficult to reverse. They would seem all the more difficult now, with a charismatic leader whose every outrage reinforces his appeal. 


    President Trump's approach to terrorism and immigration is backfiring.

    Image result for Akayed Ullah detonated an explosive device at the Port Authority Bus Terminal,

    MAX BOOT, DAILY NEWS

    On Monday, according to police, a 27-year-old immigrant from Bangladesh named Akayed Ullah detonated an explosive device at the Port Authority Bus Terminal, seriously injuring no one but himself.
    Within hours, White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders was claiming: “This attack underscores the need for Congress to work with the president on immigration reforms that enhance the national security and public safety. We must protect our borders and we must ensure that individuals entering our country are not coming to do harm to people, and we must move to a merit-based immigration system.”
    It’s true that Ullah was born abroad, but it’s hard to see what his attack has to do with immigration reform, and specifically Trump’s version thereof — any more than did the Halloween car-ramming attack in downtown New York carried out by Uzbekistan native Sayfullo Saipov.
    There is no evidence that either Ullah or Saipov was an Islamist radical when they came here years ago; if they had been, it’s hard to imagine why they waited so long to strike and, in Ullah’s case, did so in such failed fashion. Neither of their attacks required much planning or preparation, and both were inspired by Islamic State’s online propaganda. Like the Boston Marathon bombers, Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, they were radicalized while living in the United States.
    In short, it’s hard to see how tougher immigration screening would have helped, unless the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents who admitted them were clairvoyant and could foresee that they would become drawn, years into the future, toward radical Islamist ideology.
    Certainly the various forms of Trump’s Muslim ban would not have prevented these terrorists’ entry into America. Neither Bangladesh nor Uzbekistan nor Kyrgyzstan — the place where the Tsarnaev brothers were born of Chechen ancestry — were included on Trump’s list of forbidden countries. The original executive order, issued Jan. 27, affected Iraq, Syria, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen, even though terrorists from those countries have never actually killed anyone in the United States.
    Image result for Akayed Ullah detonated an explosive device at the Port Authority Bus Terminal,
    ----
    Whatever form it takes, the travel ban is utterly disconnected from, indeed at odds with, the requirements of counter-terrorism. What the Port Authority attack underscores is that the No. 1 terrorist threat to the homeland comes from people who are radicalized while already living here — whether they are white supremacists or Islamists. Perversely, Trump’s rhetoric — tolerant of white supremacism, intolerant of Islam — helps both groups of extremists.
    Image result for Akayed Ullah detonated an explosive device at the Port Authority Bus Terminal,
    ---
    Instead of blustering on about the problems of immigration and Islam, the president would be better advised to acknowledge that America’s biggest success story is our ability to assimilate immigrants from all over the world.
    The New York Police Department exemplifies that diversity — its officers hail from 88 different countries, and Muslim officers and analysts are essential to monitoring Muslim terrorist networks. Yet Trump always speaks of the problems, never the promise, of immigration. Rather than falsely claiming vindication from every terrorist attack, the President would be well advised to rethink his entire approach.