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The US Presidency 2018

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As it should be.  Regardless of one's political outlook, that kind of disloyalty is toxic and anathema to the good governance.  There are proper and legal ways to oppose legal authority, but such blatant obstructionism (sedition is probably too strong of a word) is not one of them.
 
"13 people who might be the author of The New York Times op-ed"
https://www.cnn.com/2018/09/05/politics/donald-trump-mystery-op-ed/index.html

Or, none of the above.

 
The book and this op-ed are timed to influence the mid terms.  My feelings are the op-ed is fake and from what I know of the book I feel it is probably greatly exaggerated if not all complete BS.

I'm bracing for more gigantic scandalous releases between now and November...  ::) 

 
 
QV said:
The book and this op-ed are timed to influence the mid terms.  My feelings are the op-ed is fake and from what I know of the book I feel it is probably greatly exaggerated if not all complete BS.

I'm bracing for more gigantic scandalous releases between now and November...  ::) 

You are likely spot on as far as the mid terms are concerned.  I'm curious, given the author's reputation though (Pulitzer prize winner, stellar reputation etc) why you would think it is complete BS?
 
Remius said:
You are likely spot on as far as the mid terms are concerned.  I'm curious, given the author's reputation though (Pulitzer prize winner, stellar reputation etc) why you would think it is complete BS?

Political bias and extreme polarization ?
 
Halifax Tar said:
Political bias and extreme polarization ?

Woodward has gone after administrations of both parties. If he was easily tarred as some rabid democrat we'd have seen it already.

As for the NYT piece- I think they're smart enough to know that fabricating and publishing such an Op Ed would be an absolute disaster if the fabrication leaked, which it would. I find it more likely that someone within the administration is in fact disaffected enough to have written than. A bunch of the various insider accounts that have emerged of the current white house corroborate the general feel and attitudes within the present administration. I'm going with Occam's razor on this one.
 
I find difficult to believe that Generals Kelly or Mattis would give their personal opinion of their President to any but their most intimate.  They have too much experience operating successfully in military circles such as the Pentagon.
As for Woodward: "Kindred subscribes to the triumphant school of Bob Woodward evangelism and thinks that Woodward and Carl Bernstein were the precursors of the great, crusading, truth-seeking reporting that, with Watergate, brought on a golden era of investigative journalism.  He does not mention Woodward's book Veil, where the author simply invented a hospital-deathbed interview with former CIA director William Casey, nor the wild exaggerations of the Watergate literature that claimed Woodward and Bernstien feared for their physical safety while reporting the crisis." {C Black in A House that Murdoch Bought, National Post Nov/Dec 2010 review of D Kindred's (Wash. Post) Kingdom & the Power.}
I can think of very little good to say about the image of Trump which we receive via the media. Nevertheless I question these attributions to Kelly and Mattis, and therefore the source.
 
Mattis and Kelly have both vehemently denied this. 
 
QV said:
Mattis and Kelly have both vehemently denied this.

As, of course, they must, or they instantly lose their jobs and any ability to keep things in check. I don't really know what to believe.
 
Brihard said:
As, of course, they must, or they instantly lose their jobs and any ability to keep things in check. I don't really know what to believe.

Mattis and Kelly are both good soldiers and will act accordingly.  They would probably resign rather than write an OP ED so I doubt they did that.  but one thing is certain, this administration is unravelling exponentially at this point.
 
Infanteer said:
As it should be.  Regardless of one's political outlook, that kind of disloyalty is toxic and anathema to the good governance.  There are proper and legal ways to oppose legal authority, but such blatant obstructionism (sedition is probably too strong of a word) is not one of them.

It seems to me that the article lends credence to the notion of the Executive Staff being personally loyal to the President.  The checks and balances are programmed into the system to work externally to the Executive Office.  That probably doesn't extend to the Attorney General but should likely extend to his Chief of Staff and the typists.

The Civil Servants have just demonstrated that they cannot be trusted to be neutral.
 
We're not totally free from this either.

https://www.cpsa-acsp.ca/papers-2011/Jeffrey.pdf

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/yes-minister-no-more-todays-bureaucrats-have-a-different-attitude/article26551463/
 
Infanteer said:
We're not totally free from this either.

https://www.cpsa-acsp.ca/papers-2011/Jeffrey.pdf

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/yes-minister-no-more-todays-bureaucrats-have-a-different-attitude/article26551463/

Pace Yakabuski 2015 - Thanks Infanteer.

...This view is echoed in a March article in Optimum Online, a public-sector management journal that Prof. Paquet edits. The article, by a senior Ottawa-based policy analyst using a pseudonym, asserts that "many senior federal public servants [develop] a conviction that they are better guardians of basic values of our democracy than elected officials. While this attitude had to be somewhat tamed while they were on active duty, it has become fully unleashed in retirement."

The author goes on: "This has naturally generated a flow of self-righteous condemnation of current government policies by many newly unencumbered retired senior officials, and has thereby provided immense moral support for those senior public servants still in active duty – former colleagues and friends – to heighten their own passive (or semi-active) opposition to the elected government from within. As a result, the corridor of what has come to be regarded as tolerable disloyalty from within would appear to have widened considerably."...
 
... being employed in a form of the public service, I can say without a doubt there is a definite and substantial bias in favour of socialist ideology. To the extent that correlates with the "Liberals" is anybody's guess.

This stinging quote about the Harper Government (TM) from the Jeffrey article provided by Infanteer was an eyebrow raiser:
"This Canadian version of the Maoist cultural revolution, in which expertise is routinely derided in favour of anecdotal evidence, has arguably introduced an entirely new element into the already tense relationship between the Conservative politicians and their bureaucrats."

Where are the bodies?
 
whiskey601 said:
"This Canadian version of the Maoist cultural revolution, in which expertise is routinely derided in favour of anecdotal evidence, has arguably introduced an entirely new element into the already tense relationship between the Conservative politicians and their bureaucrats."

While it certainly seems odd to post this in a 'US Presidency' thread, especially on this site, I recommend Tom Nichols' The Death of Expertise: The Campaign Against Established Knowledge and Why it Matters  (2017)  Amazon Link
 
Journeyman said:
While it certainly seems odd to post this in a 'US Presidency' thread, especially on this site, I recommend Tom Nichols' The Death of Expertise: The Campaign Against Established Knowledge and Why it Matters  (2017)  Amazon Link

Oh I think that book is quite appropriate for the US President 2018 thread.
Ordered the book.
 
Temporarily breaking my Trump moratorium to drop this awesome story.

Professor shoots himself in the arm to protest Trump.

https://www.reviewjournal.com/crime/shootings/report-las-vegas-professor-shot-himself-in-arm-to-protest-trump/


The Trump presidency is bringing out some interesting American views.

Ironically the professor didn't have a licence to possess the gun  ::)
 
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