Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

He is the very model of a Very Stable Genius: Trump cont

959 replies

PerkingFaintly · 08/01/2018 23:23

We rushed out of the last thread without even a pocket handkerchief: www.mumsnet.com/Talk/am_i_being_unreasonable/a3124599-Trump-2018-Resistance-is-Never-Futile

So here's a new one, with its own

I am the very model of a Very Stable Genius.
I have a mighty button and no problems with my penius.
I have no time for television, golf or social media
Since my brain is way way better than the best encyclopedia.

I'm cutting tax, I'll build a wall, I'll take away their medicare
You can trust me 'cos I'm orange and I have the most amazing hair.
So with my total ignorance of matters heterogeneous
I am the very model of a Very Stable Genius!

Compared to other leaders, my behavior's quite unusual
My twisted tweets and pissed-on sheets have managed to amuse you all
I have to drink two-handed 'cause my fingers are the teeniest
I need a sippy-cup with the inscription "Stable Genius."

OP posts:
Thread gallery
56
MsHooliesCardigan · 14/01/2018 21:45

Across I hear you. I didn’t mean to imply for a second that most Americans are racist, sorry.
As a Brit, I am very aware that there are many episodes of our history not to be too proud of - to put it mildly.

SenecaFalls · 14/01/2018 21:56

As a Brit, I am very aware that there are many episodes of our history not to be too proud of - to put it mildly.

As in the attitudes behind some of the support of Brexit, for example.

MsHooliesCardigan · 14/01/2018 22:17

Seneca totally agree but somebody will come and tell us that we can only talk about that on the Referendum threads Wink

PerkingFaintly · 14/01/2018 22:30

Agreed, Seneca.

OP posts:
AcrossthePond55 · 14/01/2018 22:39

I know we can all agree that all of us on this thread want the best future possible for all of us and for our children and their children 'to infinity and beyond'. And that it's good to know that there are more like 'us' than there are like Scrotus/Farage and their ilk.

Hands across the water and the borders.

PerkingFaintly · 14/01/2018 22:42

I think it's very relevant to mention on these threads, BTW.

It's not just the case that there's some nebulous background rise in "alt-right" supporters in the US and the UK/Europe: it's actually the same people and organisations involved in the disruption of which the racism is part. We can put names to them.

Farage is pals with Bannon and goes to stump for Roy Moore. Cambridge Analytica works for the Trump campaign and Brexit campaign. Jack Posobiec re/tweets hacked Macron material appearing on Wikleaks the night before the French election. Julius Assange of Wikileaks produces mass tweets in favour of division of Spain. Some of the EDL bugger off to Poland to make trouble there.

And so on and so on.

OP posts:
AcrossthePond55 · 14/01/2018 22:56

Absolutely right Perking!

These similarities don't simply appear on their own out of nowhere in all these countries. It's funny/not funny that the 'alt-right' goes on about liberalism/socialism via 'One World Order', the 'Illuminati', and 'Globalism', but if you look closely enough THEY are the ones actually dispersing their shit across the globe in order to marginalize, or worse exterminate, what they see as 'other'.

lionheart · 14/01/2018 23:18

Yes, I think it is a tricky one to navigate Across.

Alwaysinmyheart · 15/01/2018 00:06

I agree this is currently a global phenomenon, the rise of nationalism across the globe. Not sure what’s causing it? A reaction against globalisation or a byproduct of rising inequality like we have never seen before. Also conflicts causing pp to want to emigrate making Western countries feel threatened. Is a v toxic mix.

lionheart · 15/01/2018 00:09

'“Have you no sense of decency?” It’s the question that the members of the Republican majority in the Congress—51 senators, 239 representatives—might bear in mind, in the “shithole” era.

If only two of those senators would stand up against Donald Trump, with their votes rather than just their tweets or concerned statements, they would constitute an effective majority.

With the 49 Democratic and independent senators, these two would make 51 votes, which in turn would be enough to authorize real investigations. They could pass a formal resolution of censure. They could call for tax returns and financial disclosure. They could begin hearings, on the model of the nationally televised Watergate hearings of 45 years ago.'

www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2018/01/have-you-no-sense-of-decency/550502/?utm_source=atltw

cozietoesie · 15/01/2018 00:28

I'm hoping - 'hoping' - that we'll see something from those GOP members who have announced their retiral. Come next month........

cozietoesie · 15/01/2018 00:32

A CNN Money piece.

Wall St not Main St is the big winner

lionheart · 15/01/2018 01:30

heartbeat of racism is denial

MsHooliesCardigan · 15/01/2018 01:37

mobile.twitter.com/_delaaneyy/status/951849165826519041/photo/3

Brilliant!

OnTheDarkSideOfTheSpoon · 15/01/2018 04:16

Re: it only takes two - Flake has strong words of condemnation for the president but his voting record currently stands at voting 90% voting with trump. It’s a shame that even those that verbally reprimand trump, such as McCain, still largely provide cover for him on policy

Flake compares Trump's treatment of press to Stalin

www.politico.com/amp/story/2018/01/14/flake-trump-stalin-media-fake-news-340605?__twitter_impression=true

Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) said Sunday that President Donald Trump's declaration that media is "the enemy of the people" is a throwback to Josef Stalin that should have no place in political discourse.

"I'm saying he borrowed that phrase," Flake told MSNBC's Kasie Hunt of Trump's choice of words. "It was popularized by Josef Stalin, used by Mao as well — enemy of the people. It should be noted that Nikita Khrushchev who followed Stalin, forbade its use, saying that was too loaded and that it maligned a whole group or class of people, and it shouldn't be done.

"I don't think that we should be using a phrase that's been rejected as too loaded by a Soviet dictator."

One of the Republican Party's most vociferous critics of Trump, Flake decided not to run for reelection after his popularity dove in Arizona, in part due to his criticism of the president, which he expanded on his book "Conscience of a Conservative: A Rejection of Destructive Politics and a Return to Principle." Taking to the Senate floor to announce his decision to retire in October last year, Flake warned his colleagues to never adjust their tone to what is set at the top and to "never ever accept the deadly sundering of our country."

On Wednesday, Flake will return to the Senate floor to excoriate Trump and White House for their treatment of the press, ahead of Trump's planned "fake news" awards. The goal of the speech, Flake said, is to nudge the president back to the right form of behavior when it comes to dealing with the press.

"We can't just retreat into camps like we're doing," Flake told Hunt on "Kasie DC." "People need to stand up and say this is not right. This is not normal."

According to excerpts, Flake will say on Wednesday that 2017 was "a year which saw the truth — objective, empirical, evidence-based truth —more battered and abused than any other in the history of our country, at the hands of the most powerful figure in our government."

He will add that the White House engaged in an "unrelenting daily assault on the constitutionally protected free press was launched by that same White House, an assault that is as unprecedented as it is unwarranted."

Addressing Trump's favored "fake news" insult, Flake will caution that "when a figure in power reflexively calls any press that doesn’t suit him “fake news,” it is that person who should be the figure of suspicion, not the press."

"Those of us who travel overseas, especially to war zones and other troubled areas around the globe, encounter members of U.S.-based media who risk their lives, and sometimes lose their lives, reporting on the truth," Flake will say. "To dismiss their work as fake news is an affront to commitment and their sacrifice."

OnTheDarkSideOfTheSpoon · 15/01/2018 04:23

The heartbeat is strong with this one

Hallie Jackson
@HallieJackson
President Trump, tonight, to reporters: “No. I’m not a racist. I’m the least racist person you will ever interview.” (via pool)

MsHooliesCardigan · 15/01/2018 05:02

FFS. Why can’t he just say he’s not a racist? Why does he have to be THE BEST person ever at not being racist?
It’s pathetic.

TheClaws · 15/01/2018 06:07

Agreed, MrsHoolies. That’s why his blanket statements are so inherently ridiculous - because he is the BEST, the MOST, the SMARTEST, the RICHEST ... or in this case, the least racist. It is the qualifiers that undo him (plus the fact he is none of those things to start with).

OnTheDarkSideOfTheSpoon · 15/01/2018 07:03

Bandit Aléatoire
@BanditRandom
BREAKING: #Haiti held emergency high court session that resulted in an agreement to unseal and release information within ex-dictator Jean-Claude 'Baby Doc' Duvalier's indictments relating to #MoneyLaundering via Trump Tower condo.

More background here → link: www.thedailybeast.com/trump-tower-dictators-home-away-from-home

OnTheDarkSideOfTheSpoon · 15/01/2018 07:07

The Jerusalem Post
@Jerusalem_Post
#BREAKING: Russia deploys more surface-to-air missiles in Crimean build-up: dlvr.it/QB7jPk

lionheart · 15/01/2018 08:08

I saw that Papa Doc report, Pain and was looking to see if it was picked up elsewhere.

Of course if Trump says he is the least racist it draws attention to the other white supremacists with whom he has been associated.