US It’s Joe Biden’s Swamp Now - So far, Joe Biden’s transition has hired liberally from Wall Street and corporate America

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https://archive.li/cp675 (Article)

With Joe Biden now weeks into the transition for his presidency, it’s time to play a game. That game is called, “What Would People Say If This Was a Trump Pick?”


For instance, what would people say if Donald Trump’s pick to head the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) was a figure who not only floated cutting entitlements, but has hoovered up millions from Wall Street and virtually every malign corporate interest you can imagine? What if she was someone who once privately suggested the United States solve its debt issues by having Libya hand over its oil for the privilege of being destroyed by its military? What if, in addition to all this, she was also a union-buster who outed a sexual harassment victim and punched an employee for asking Hillary Clinton a question about the Iraq War?


Or what if, for secretary of state, director of national intelligence, and lower ranking positions helping staff his administration, Biden had nominated people who had parlayed the experience and relationships they’d gained serving while in government into lucrative private-sector jobs opening doors for military contractors and multinationals, sometimes with that very same government?


What if his likely pick for secretary of defense was a partner at those same firms, and just this year had advocated for the Pentagon to team up with “companies that are part of the traditional defense industrial base and non-traditional partners,” and “create more substantial recurring revenue opportunities for these companies”? What if one of those firms had recently filed an SEC document boasting that its “deeply connected partner group of former U.S. defense and government officials” would “ensure exposure to a significant number of proprietary opportunities?”


What would happen if, after running a campaign where he cast the election as a choice between Scranton and Park Avenue and where he repeatedly told workers they, not Wall Street, built the country, Trump quickly turned Wall Street and corporate America into a recruitment pool? Venture capital executive, director of a financial firm, a pharma and insurance lobbyist: Wouldn’t such picks for his White House staff make a mockery of this campaign? And what if another possible Wall Street hire was not only colleagues with one of the men most responsible for the 2008 financial crash, but had covered up the police murder of a black teenager while he was mayor of one of the largest US cities?


Or how about if, as a “climate czar,” he had appointed someone who enthusiastically supported the expansion of US fossil fuel exploitation? Or, as a top economic adviser, a fossil-fuel supporting finance executive who headed “sustainable investing” at a firm while it was dubbed the “world’s largest investor in deforestation”? Or, as his climate movement liaison, an official with a poor environmental record who’s one of the top recipients of fossil fuel donations? What if he was planning to reappoint as energy secretary someone who not just opposes the Green New Deal, but who sits on the board of one of the country’s worst fossil fuel polluters? Wouldn’t it all make a mockery of the campaign he just ran, insisting he’ll listen to science?


Of course, Trump didn’t run that campaign. Joe Biden did. In fact, all of the above describes individuals Biden has either already appointed and nominated for various posts or is considering doing so.


We don’t have to try hard to imagine how Trump’s picks might have been received if they had these pedigrees, because we already lived through it. Trump’s pick of the entitlement-hating Mick Mulvaney as OMB director was roundly noted as contradicting his campaign promises to protect such programs. After lamenting “Trump’s cabinet of horrors” and warning that “Earth has reason to worry,” the National Resources Defense Council (NRDC) has had only words of praise for Biden’s picks. Newspapers warned of an “unprecedented amount of influence from the fossil fuel industry in Trump’s cabinet,” and experts spoke of a “frightening moment” with “how the reins of the federal government are being handed over to the fossil fuel industry.” After assailing Trump’s “cabinet of fossil fools,” with their “enormous conflicts of interest,” the Sierra Club is now “applauding” Biden’s appointment of John Kerry and offering to do the incoming administration’s PR.


It’s impossible to catalogue all of the many, many instances of establishment news outlets and even entertainment shows quite rightly hammering Trump for the hypocrisy of filling his administration with plutocrats and “swamp creatures” after a campaign nominally hostile to them. The press compiled their combined wealth and many conflicts of interest. The Associated Press memorably tracked down one Trump voter heartbroken by Trump’s appointment of the man who stole her home. “I have no faith in our government anymore at all,” she said. “They all promise you the world at the end of a stick and take it away once they get in.”


“Trump’s critics have said that the picks represent a departure from his anti-Wall Street rhetoric during the campaign, and that they are out of touch with the working-class Americans whom he vowed to champion during the campaign,” wrote the Boston Globe, in a sentence that could be, word for word, repurposed for the incoming Biden administration, except for the fact that no such critics exist in respectable circles this time around.


It’s particularly ironic now to read this January 2017 report on Trump’s cabinet from the Center for American Progress, the corporate-funded Democratic think tank that has provided Biden’s pick for OMB director. In between pointing out the threat money in politics poses to US democracy and the deleterious “effect of having elected officials dependent on and aligned with the wealthiest few,” it asserted that the “government cannot have the foxes guarding the hen house.”


“When people move between working in government service and private business and special interest lobbying, often repeatedly, it raises great risks that the interests of business will remain paramount and given priority consideration in government decisions,” the report warned.


Meanwhile, Trump’s cabinet picks inspired a series of rolling, nationwide protests, particularly aimed at, though not limited to, their environmental and climate records. At one point, people donned swamp creature masks and encamped outside Goldman Sachs.


It remains to be seen if Biden’s picks, with their own conflicts of interest and terrible records, will face the same intensity of popular pressure. In an encouraging sign, climate groups protested at the Democratic National Committee headquarters two weeks ago, objecting to Biden’s fossil fuel–infused appointments.


But one thing’s for sure: whatever urgency and outrage once existed in establishment and Democrat-aligned circles on this issue when it was Trump in question has dissipated. While the New York Times, as one notable exception, has continued scrutinizing the backgrounds of Biden’s appointees, mainstream media coverage of Biden’s transition has almost entirely jettisoned the oppositional approach it took under Trump during this same period, and has overwhelmingly been obsessed instead with the demographic diversity of Biden’s team.


It’s a clever sleight of hand. With Biden’s team defined by similar kinds of conflicts of interest, corporate influence, and concerning histories to the ones that defined Trump’s, the whole spectacle undermines the Trump-as-historical-aberration narrative the press has run with for the last four years, as well as Biden’s “return to normal” campaign message that much of the media has adopted as its own. Narrow as it is, the diversity of Biden’s appointees gives the press something to contrast with Trump’s, as it appears increasingly clear that the much-ballyhooed hopes for a Rooseveltian Biden presidency that breaks from what came before were hollow PR.


Just as we’ve seen on the immigration front, we’re quickly finding out what the four-year-long portrayal of Trump as a unique, unprecedented horror really means: that any president, before or after, will be excused by the press and parts of the liberal establishment for doing substantially the same awful and corrupt things Trump did, as long as they’re not actually Trump himself.


“I just wish that I had not voted,” Teena Colebrook, the disenchanted Trump voter, told the AP after finding out Trump had picked Steve Mnuchin for treasury secretary. And that’s exactly why the coverage of Biden is focused on feel-good bromides instead of scrutiny. There’s an election coming up, after all, and Trump is going to run again. The stakes are just too high to let people get disillusioned with the system again. Better to keep them away from the truth.
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It's Joe Biden so what can you expect, still slightly disappointing how similar it is to Trump, not shocking though.
 
@Arm Pit Cream, Why so mad? Don't call it a grave, it's the progressive utopia you chose!

Orange man bad, neoliberal stagnantion and forever war good!
Even for you this is lame and low effort lol

Never left any of those wars under Trump genius, more troops are there, and nothing has changed except for even more countries hate the US. Keep telling yourself lies cause you would rather use Twitter talking points than actually address why people dislike Trump.
 
Even for you this is lame and low effort lol

Never left any of those wars under Trump genius, more troops are there, and nothing has changed except for even more countries hate the US. Keep telling yourself lies cause you would rather use Twitter talking points than actually address why people dislike Trump.
To be fair a lot of them are salty as fuck about the loss.
 
Even for you this is lame and low effort lol

Never left any of those wars under Trump genius, more troops are there, and nothing has changed except for even more countries hate the US. Keep telling yourself lies cause you would rather use Twitter talking points than actually address why people dislike Trump.
Now you're just being retarded.




Keep up with your own sides narrative here. Watching you explain why all of this is great is going to be my favorite part of a Biden presidency.
 
He promised an Afghanistan pullout at the start and never delivered. Call me when he actually does a full pull out. Cause he could sign an EO tomorrow and get it done with, but he doesn't.
Doesn't change what he did the Syria, Yemen, Iraq and numerous middle eastern nations and how much of a warmonger he is. The big difference between me and you is I don't support foreign wars at all, you do if Trump does them.
If your cope is "well maybe he's gonna finally do it", then you already started with your ass fucked. But keep telling me how good the assfucking is, lick it up cucky.
To be fair a lot of them are salty as fuck about the loss.
Yea they're confusing me for people who don't really exist on KF. It's just silly.
 
Drafts are alot easier to convince people to join after a year or three of lockdowns, just saying.
You've got it backwards. The issue with drafts is that in democratic countries, they rely upon a shared national identity and communal notion of self-sacrifice. The Obama and Trump years have shredded the first and the lockdowns have wrecked the second. Trying to shoot for a draft at this point would be the stupidest thing possible... which is why Biden Harris would totally go for it.
 
>Proof that Biden's corporate through and though.

Will A&N quit doomposting about Commies now?
That's like asking if the sun will rise in the west tomorrow.

Regardless, I'm just waiting to see what the Democrats do with antifa. We know they'll still be peddling CRT, but if they actually go after them, fine. If not, then that's just going to be another failure.
 
Looks like Swalwell's dick got him in trouble. Good. Fuck him, fully.

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That's like asking if the sun will rise in the west tomorrow.

Regardless, I'm just waiting to see what the Democrats do with antifa. We know they'll still be peddling CRT, but if they actually go after them, fine. If not, then that's just going to be another failure.
They won't be able to Stalin-ize Antifa since they also support defunding the cops letting criminals out of jail. Remember that cops are Union types that typically stay for the state-funded pension. The fact that so many competent ones quit while the others get kicked out by these terrorists tells you the state of the Democrat's enforcement arm. They'll just let them metastasize unless they get too close to their mansions, but it's clear Antifa's numbers are growing, not shrinking since many of the problems that caused them to grow have not be addressed.

 
Sorry to bring back this thread from the dead but American Thinker posted this article about the swamp.
October 19, 2022

The swamp wins as Igor Danchenko acquitted on all 4 counts of lying to the FBI​

By Thomas Lifson


Special Prosecutor John Durham has struck out in his prosecution of FBI source (and Brookings Institution employee) Igor Danchenko, just as he did with the acquittal of Michael Sussman. Via Sundance:
A jury found Igor Danchenko not guilty on four counts of lying to the FBI, on four occasions. (1) Danchenko told FBI agents he received a phone call in late July 2016 Sergei Millian. However, Danchenko knew he had never received a call from Millian. (2) Danchenko gave a false statement to FBI agents that he “was under the impression” that the late July 2016 call was from Millian. (3) Danchenko falsely stated to FBI agents that he believed he spoke to Millian on the phone on more than one occasion. And (4) Danchenko lied that he “believed he has spoken to [Millian] on the telephone,” when Danchenko well knew he had never spoken to Millian.
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Durham faced an almost impossible task because in order to obtain a conviction he had to prove that the lies affected the investigation. But, as the evidence he presented showed, the FBI knew the lies were lies and didn’t care. In trying to salvage some value from the trial, many have commented that the FBI has been discredited by the revelations from the trial. For example, Kimberly Strassel of the Wall Street Journal wrote during the trial:
Unofficially, Mr. Durham is putting the Federal Bureau of Investigation itself on trial for incompetence and political chicanery.
And Techno-Fog, written after the verdict:
What is more important is that which informs our understanding of the Trump/Russia investigation and the FBI/DOJ/Mueller misconduct that sparked Crossfire Hurricane and continued through the Mueller investigation. That information was revelatory. The institutions were on trial alongside Danchenko, with Durham recognizing in closing arguments that “the FBI mishandled the investigation at issue.” And the institutions rightly suffered. Danchenko might have been spared, but is there any reasonable doubt as to the FBI’s incompetence - and guilt?
The big problems with merely discrediting the FBI via the testimony at the trial:
  1. There are no formal consequences for the FBI as an institution or for the individual miscreants who lied to the FISA court in obtaining warrants for US citizen Carter Page, and
  2. The swamp has a terrific talking point in trying to discredit the Durham report that is to follow – IF AG Garland permits it to be published. They can say, “Pay no attention to this report from a Special Counsel that couldn’t obtain convictions in his major cases!”
Why didn’t Durham indict the FBI personnel who lied to the FISA court? Was he prevented from doing so? Or is there some regulation that I don’t know about or some other reason?
 
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