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USA under presidency of a know-nothing, neo-fascist, racist, sexist, mobbed-up narcissist!! - Peter Lemkin - 29-01-2017

The Department of Homeland Security will continue to enforce Trump's order, defying the federal judge's ruling.


Following U.S. President Donald Trump's draconian executive order banning people from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the United States, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) took to court, and won an emergency stay against that order Saturday.
RELATED: In Blow to Trump, ACLU Claim 1st Victory Against 'Muslim Ban'
But on Sunday, the Department of Homeland issued a statement stating it will defy the judge's ruling and continue to enforce Trump's order.
"The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) will continue to enforce all of President Trump's Executive Orders in a manner that ensures the safety and security of the American people," the statement begins. "President Trump's Executive Orders remain in place prohibited travel will remain prohibited, and the U.S. government retains its right to revoke visas at any time if required for national security or public safety."


Despite the hundreds affected by the ban, and the thousands more protesting at airports around the country, the DHS was dismissive and domineering in its words.
"President Trump's Executive Order affects a minor portion of international travelers, and is a first step towards reestablishing control over America's borders and national security," it continued.
"Approximately 80 million international travelers enter the United States every year. Yesterday, less than one percent of the more than 325,000 international air travelers who arrive every day were inconvenienced while enhanced security measures were implemented."
RELATED:
Chaos and Massive Unrest on the Heels of Trump's Muslim-Ban
The statement also echoed anti-immigrant sentiments, espousing the rhetoric of Western benevolence when it comes to granting entry to refugees and immigrants, saying, "No foreign national in a foreign land, without ties to the United States, has any unfettered right to demand entry into the United States or to demand immigration benefits in the United States." Even before the DHS statement, many tweeted that customs agents were detaining people, defying the judge's orders, and that New York police were not letting riders board the airport's AirTrain to enter the city.
Trump's order affects travelers with passports from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. People with U.S. green cards were among those targeted by the ban on Saturday. He added that the government couldn't answer when the judge asked if those denied entry would face irreparable harm should they be sent back to their countries of origin. Despite the decision, activists said on social media that the ruling is temporary and that it should not be interpreted as a full victory. Others tweeted that customs agents were detaining people, defying the judge's orders, and that New York police were not letting rider board the airport's AirTrain to enter the city.

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USA under presidency of a know-nothing, neo-fascist, racist, sexist, mobbed-up narcissist!! - Peter Lemkin - 29-01-2017

Donald Trump's Demolition Derby

Posted on Jan 28, 2017

By Bill Moyers

We're a week into the Trump administration and it's pretty obvious what he's up to. First, Donald Trump is running a demolition derby: He wants to demolish everything he doesn't like, and he doesn't like a lot, especially when it comes to government.
Like one of those demolition drivers on a speedway, he keeps ramming his vehicle against all the others, especially government policies and programs and agencies that protect people who don't have his wealth, power or privilege. Affordable health care for working people? Smash it. Consumer protection against predatory banks and lenders? Run over it. Rules and regulations that rein in rapacious actors in the market? Knock em down. Fair pay for working people? Crush it. And on and on.
Trump came to Washington to tear the government down for parts, and as far as we can tell, he doesn't seem to have anything at all in mind to replace it except turning back the clock to when business took what it wanted and left behind desperate workers, dirty water and polluted air.
In this demolition derby, Trump seems to have the wholehearted support of the Republican Party, which loathes government as much as it worships the market as god. Remember Thomas Frank's book, The Wrecking Crew? Published in 2008, it remains one of the best political books of the past quarter-century. Frank took the measure of an unholy alliance: the century-old business crusade against government, the conservative ideology that looks on government as evil (except when it's enriching its allies), and the Republican Party of George W. Bush and Karl Rove the one that had just produced eight years of crony capitalism and private plunder.
The Wrecking Crew and what an apt title it was showed how federal agencies were doomed to failure by the incompetence and hostility of the Bush gang appointed to run them, the same model Trump is using now. Frank tracked how wholesale deregulation on a scale Trump already is trying to reproduce led to devastating results for everyday people, including the mortgage meltdown and the financial crash. Reading the book is like reading today's news, as kleptomaniacs spread across Washington to funnel billions of dollars into the pockets of lobbyists and corporations.
That may include the pockets of Donald Trump's own family. As Jonathan Chait wrote after the election in New York magazine, "[Trump's] children have taken roles on the transition team. Ivanka attended official discussions with heads of state of Japan andArgentina. [As president-elect, Trump himself] met with Indian business partners to discuss business and lobbied a British politician to oppose offshore wind farms because one will block the view at one of his Scottish golf courses." Only a couple of days ago it was reported that the Trump organization would more than triple the number of Trump hotels in America. And why not? Its chief marketer works out of the Oval Office.
Jonathan Chait went on to say: "Trump's brazen use of his office for personal enrichment signals something even more worrisome thanfour or more years of kleptocratic government. It reveals how willing the new administration is to obliterate governing norms and how little stands in his way."
And oh yes, something else: David Sirota at International Business Times has just published a new report showing that the Trump administration appears to be quietly killing the federal government's major ethics rule designed to prevent White House officials from enriching their former clients. Experts say a review of government documents shows that regulators appear to have abruptly stopped enforcing the rule, even though it remains the law of the land.
We were warned. Donald Trump himself told The New York Times, "The law is totally on my side, meaning, the president can't have a conflict of interest." Shades of Richard Nixon, who said, "When the President does it, that means that it is not illegal." And who also announced, "I am not a crook."
Which leads us to the second design now apparent in Trump's strategy of deliberate chaos. He may have run a populist campaign, but now it appears he aims to substitute plutocracy for democracy.
I know plutocracy is not a commonly used word in America. But it's a word that increasingly fits what's happening here. Plutocracy means government by the wealthy, a ruling class of the rich and their retainers. If you don't see plutocracy spreading across America, you haven't been paying attention. Both parties have nurtured, tolerated and bowed to it. Now we're reaching the pinnacle, as Trump's own Cabinet is rich (no pun intended) in millionaires and billionaires. He is stacking the agencies and boards of government with the wealthy and friends of wealth so that the whole of the federal enterprise can be directed to rewarding those with deep pockets, the ones who provide the bags and bags of money that are dumped into our political process today.
Yes, both Democrats and Republicans have been guilty of groveling to the wealthy who fund them; it's a staggering bipartisan scandal that threatens the country and was no small part of Trump's success last November, even as ordinary people opened their windows and shouted, "We're as mad as hell and we're not going to take it anymore." So now we have in power a man who represents the very worst of the plutocrats one who knows the price of everything but the value of nothing. I shudder to think where this nightmare will end. Even if you voted for Donald Trump for a reason that truly is from your heart, I cannot believe you voted for this.


USA under presidency of a know-nothing, neo-fascist, racist, sexist, mobbed-up narcissist!! - Peter Lemkin - 30-01-2017




USA under presidency of a know-nothing, neo-fascist, racist, sexist, mobbed-up narcissist!! - Peter Lemkin - 30-01-2017

American Psychosis

Posted on Jan 29, 2017
By Chris Hedges
[Image: Smilefish_590.jpg]
Mr. Fish / Truthdig
Reality is under assault. Verbal confusion reigns. Truth and illusion have merged. Mental chaos makes it hard to fathom what is happening. We feel trapped in a hall of mirrors. Exposed lies are answered with other lies. The rational is countered with the irrational. Cognitive dissonance prevails. We endure a disquieting shame and even guilt. Tens of millions of Americans, especially women, undocumented workers, Muslims and African-Americans, suffer the acute anxiety of being pursued by a predator. All this is by design. Demagogues always infect the governed with their own psychosis.
"The comparison between totalitarianism and psychosis is not incidental," the psychiatrist Joost A.M. Meerloo wrote in his book "The Rape of the Mind: The Psychology of Thought Control, Menticide, and Brainwashing." "Delusional thinking inevitably creeps into every form of tyranny and despotism. Unconscious backward forces come into action. Evil powers from the archaic past return. An automatic compulsion to go on to self-destruction develops, to justify one mistake with a new one; to enlarge and expand the vicious pathological circle becomes the dominating end of life. The frightened man, burdened by a culture he does not understand, retreats into the brute's fantasy of limitless power in order to cover up the vacuum inside himself. This fantasy starts with the leaders and is later taken over by the masses they oppress."
The lies fly out of the White House like flocks of pigeons: Donald Trump's election victory was a landslide. He had the largest inauguration crowds in American history. Three million to 5 million undocumented immigrants voted illegally. Climate change is a hoax. Vaccines cause autism. Immigrants are carriers of "[t]remendous infectious disease." The election was riggeduntil it wasn't. We don't know "who really knocked down" the World Trade Center. Torture works. Mexico will pay for the wall. Conspiracy theories are fact. Scientific facts are conspiracies. America will be great again.
Our new president, a 70-year-old with orange-tinted skin and hair that Penn Jillette has likened to "cotton candy made of piss," is, as Trump often reminds us, "very good looking." He has almost no intellectual accomplishmentshe knows little of history, politics, law, philosophy, art or governancebut insists "[m]y IQ is one of the highestand you all know it! Please don't feel so stupid or insecure, it's not your fault." And the mediocrities and half-wits he has installed in his Cabinet have "by far the highest IQ of any Cabinet ever assembled."
It is an avalanche of absurdities.
This mendacity would be easier to repulse if the problem was solely embodied in Trump. But even in the face of a rising despotism, the Democratic Party refuses to denounce the corporate forces that eviscerated our democracy and impoverished the country. The neoliberal Trump demonizes Muslims, undocumented workers and the media. The neoliberal Democratic Party demonizes Vladimir Putin and FBI Director James Comey. No one speaks about the destructive force of corporate power. The warring elites pitalternative facts against alternative facts. All engage in demagoguery. We will, I expect, be condemned to despotism by the venality of Trump and the cowardice and dishonesty of the liberal class.
Trump and those around him have a deep hatred for what they cannot understand. They silence anyone who thinks independently. They elevate pseudo-intellectuals who adhere to their bizarre script. They cannot cope with complexity, nuance or the unpredictable. Individual initiative is a mortal threat. The order for some employees of several federal agencies, including the Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's research service, the National Park Service and the Department of Health and Human Services, to restrict or cease communication with the press or members of Congress, along with the attempt to impose10-year felony convictions on six reporters who covered the inauguration protests, signals the beginning of a campaign to marginalize reality and promote fantasy. Facts depend solely on those who have the power to create them. The goal of the Trump administration is to create an artificial consistency that conforms to its warped perception of the world.
"Before they seize power and establish a world according to their doctrines, totalitarian movements conjure up a lying world of consistency which is more adequate to the needs of the human mind than reality itself; in which, through sheer imagination, uprooted masses can feel at home and are spared the never-ending shocks which real life and real experiences deal to human beings and their expectations," Hannah Arendt wrote in "The Origins of Totalitarianism." "The force possessed by totalitarian propagandabefore the movements have the power to drop iron curtains to prevent anyone's disturbing, by the slightest reality, the gruesome quiet of an entirely imaginary worldlies in its ability to shut the masses off from the real world."
Trump's blinding narcissism was captured in his bizarre talk to the CIA on Jan. 21. "[T]hey say, is Donald Trump an intellectual?" he said. "Trust me, I'm, like, a smart persona."
"I have a running war with the media," he added. "They are among the most dishonest human beings on earth. And they sort of made it sound like I had a feud with the intelligence community. And I just want to let you know, the reason you're the number one stop [in the new presidency] is exactly the oppositeexactly. And they understand that, too."

He launched into an attack on the media for not reporting that "a million, million and a half people" showed up for his inauguration. "They showed a field where there was practically nobody standing there," he said about the media's depiction of the inauguration crowd. "And they said, Donald Trump did not draw well. I said, it was almost raining, the rain should have scared them away, but God looked down and he said, we're not going to let it rain on your speech."
He has been on the cover of Time "like, 14 or 15 times," Trump said in speaking of his criticism of the magazine because one of its reporters incorrectly wrote that the president had removed a bust of Martin Luther King Jr. from the Oval Office. "I think we have the all-time record in the history of Time magazine. Like, if Tom Brady is on the cover, it's one time, because he won the Super Bowl or something, right? I've been on it for 15 times this year. I don't think that's a record, Mike, that can ever be broken. Do you agree with that? What do you think?" [Editor's note: Photographs or drawings of Trump were on the cover of Time 10 times in the last year and a half and once in 1989.]
Trump's theatricality works. He forces the press and the public to repeat his lies, inadvertently giving them credibility. He is always moving. He is always on display. He has no fixed belief system. Trump, as he consolidates power, will adopt the ideology of the Christian right to fill his own ideological vacuum. The Christian right's magical thinking will merge seamlessly with Trump's magical thinking. Idiocy, self-delusion, megalomania, fantasy and government repression will come wrapped in images of the Christian cross and the American flag.
The corporate state, hostile or indifferent to the plight of the citizens, has no emotional pull among the public. It is often hated. Political candidates run not as politicians but as celebrities. Campaigns eschew issues to make people feel good about candidates and themselves. Ideas are irrelevant. Emotional euphoria is paramount. The voter is only a prop in the political theater. Politics is anti-politics. It is reality television. Trump proved better at this game than his opponents. It is a game in which fact and knowledge do not matter. Reality is what you create. We were conditioned for a Trump.
Meerloo wrote, "The demagogue relies for his effectiveness on the fact that people will take seriously the fantastic accusations he makes, will discuss the phony issues he raises as if they had reality, or will be thrown into such a state of panic by his accusations and charges that they will simply abdicate their right to think and verify for themselves."
The lies create a climate in which everyone is assumed to be lying. The truth becomes suspect and obscured. Narratives begin to be believed not because they are true, or even sound true, but because they are emotionally appealing. The aim of systematic lying, as Arendt wrote, is the "transformation of human nature itself." The lies eventually foster somnambulism among a population that surrenders to the magical thinking and ceases to care. It checks out. It becomes cynical. It only asks to be entertained and given a vent for its frustration and rage. Demagogues produce enemies the way a magician pulls rabbits out of a hat. They wage constant battles against nonexistent dangers, rapidly replacing one after the other to keep the rhetoric at a fever pitch.
"Practically speaking, the totalitarian ruler proceeds like a man who persistently insults another man until everybody knows that the latter is his enemy, so that he can, with some plausibility, go out and kill him in self-defense," Arendt wrote. "This certainly is a little crude, but it worksas everybody will know who has ever watched how certain successful careerists eliminate competitors."
We are entering a period of national psychological trauma. We are stalked by lunatics. We are, as Judith Herman writes about trauma victims in her book "Trauma and Recovery: The Aftermath of ViolenceFrom Domestic Abuse to Political Terror," being "rendered helpless by overwhelming force." This trauma, like all traumas, overwhelms "the ordinary systems of care that give people a sense of control, connection, and meaning."
To recover our mental balance we must respond to Trump the way victims of trauma respond to abuse. We must build communities where we can find understanding and solidarity. We must allow ourselves to mourn. We must name the psychosis that afflicts us. We must carry out acts of civil disobedience and steadfast defiance to re-empower others and ourselves. We must fend off the madness and engage in dialogues based on truth, literacy, empathy and reality. We must invest more time in activities such as finding solace in nature, or focusing on music, theater, literature, art and even worshipactivities that hold the capacity for renewal and transcendence. This is the only way we will remain psychologically whole. Building an outer shell or attempting to hide will exacerbate our psychological distress and depression. We may not win, but we will have, if we create small, like-minded cells of defiance, the capacity not to go insane.




USA under presidency of a know-nothing, neo-fascist, racist, sexist, mobbed-up narcissist!! - Peter Lemkin - 30-01-2017

MARCH 8, 2016 |
KLAUS MARRE Who/What/Why

"I'm always being audited by the IRS, which I think is very unfair… maybe because of the fact that I'm a strong Christian and I feel strongly about it."

This was perhaps the quintessential Trump moment of the year. It came after a Republican debate in late February when the GOP frontrunner claimed that the IRS was targeting him because of his religion.
It was classic Trump. He used the IRS audit as an excuse for not revealing his tax returns even though experts and the IRS both said nothing would preclude him from doing so and tried to score with evangelical Christians in the same breath.
The reaction of CNN host Chris Cuomo (56 seconds into this video) says it all. Even though Trump is winning the evangelical vote, it is almost easier to believe that Mexico will build him a wall than that he is a "strong Christian."
So we investigated. After all, Trump is not just a public figure but a very public figure. He has written many books, including some semi-autobiographies and others laying out what he thinks about the world, and he is seemingly on TV all the time.
Trump loves to talk. In fact, he'll say just about anything. He certainly wasn't shy when he was hinting at the size of his genitals during last week's Republican presidential debate. And in 2006, he said he would date his then 24-year-old daughter if they weren't related.
But he has a tendency to get a bit tongue-tied when talking about religion.

What We Know

.
Trump was confirmed in June of 1959 in the First Presbyterian Church in Jamaica, New York.
"I am Presbyterian, Protestant. I go to Marble Collegiate Church," Trump told reporters when asked about his religion. "The church I was originally with was the First Presbyterian Church in Jamaica, which is out in Queens, New York. And I've had just great experiences in church, whether it's Sunday school or whatever it may be. But, now I go to Marble Collegiate Church."
But the church denies that he is an active member.
"Donald Trump has had a longstanding history with Marble Collegiate Church, where his parents were for years active members and one of his children was baptized," the church said in a statement to WhoWhatWhy and other media outlets.
"However, as he indicates, he is a Presbyterian, and is not an active member of Marble."
But he does have a long-standing history with the church that includes Trump getting married there to his first wife in 1977. And, according to The New York Times, it's also where he met Marla Maples, the woman with whom Trump cheated on his first wife and who would become his second wife.
[Image: 3-6-1024x682.jpg]Dr. Norman Vincent Peale Photo credit: Roger Higgins / Wikimedia

According to Trump's own writing, the most lasting impact Marble Collegiate seems to have had on him was through the sermons of Dr. Norman Vincent Peale, who led the church for half a century and authored The Power of Positive Thinking.
Trump talked about his pastor in July at the Iowa Family Leadership Summit. He said Peale, who died in 1993, would give "unbelievable" sermons that made him feel disappointed when they were over.
In the next breath, by the way, Trump said he had never asked God for forgiveness.
"I think if I do something wrong, I think I just try and make it right. I don't bring God into that picture," Trump said.
"When we go to church and when I drink my little wine, which is about the only wine I drink, and have my little cracker, I guess that's a form of asking for forgiveness," he added. "And I do that as often as possible because I feel cleansed. But to me it's important I do that."
Of course, why would Trump be an active member of Marble Collegiate Church? After all, it is not his denomination.
In an email to WhoWhatWhy, Catherine Ortiz, the church's director of Marketing Communications, stressed that "Marble Collegiate Church is part of the Reformed Church in America, and is not a Presbyterian Church."
The church did not respond to follow-up questions whether its leaders believed that Trump's campaign was consistent with Marble Collegiate's stated mission of diversity and inclusion.

Two Corinthians Walk into a Bar…

.
It would not be terribly shocking if Trump did not know the difference between denominations. With regard to religion, there is very little he seems to know or be certain of. Which is surprising because he has repeatedly said that the Bible is his favorite book.
When he addressed students at Liberty University earlier this year, members of the audience laughed at him for citing a passage from "Two Corinthians" instead of "Second Corinthians."
Trump blamed Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, for the error. Perkins had given him some notes ahead of the speech and had (correctly) written out the scripture reference that Trump had hoped to score points with as "2 Corinthians 3:17."
Commenting on Trump's misstep, Perkins said the episode shows that Trump "is not familiar with the Bible."
While this gaffe allowed Trump's rival Ted Cruz to wisecrack about Trump's religious naivete ("Two Corinthians walk into a bar …"), ultimately the joke is on Cruz, the son of a minister, because these missteps have not hurt the frontrunner.
Still, the Liberty University video is representative of how unsure of himself Trump appears when talking about religion or, even worse, having to answer questions about it.
Even when the interviewer is friendly and asks simple questions, Trump always has the appearance of a student who is called on by the teacher to discuss the reading assignment he had forgotten was due on that day. Trump's responses always lack specifics.
In researching his own words for this article, we were unable to find a single instance in which Trump gave an answer on a religious topic that could even remotely be labeled as "deep."
When asked about his favorite Bible verses, Trump says he does "not want to get into specifics" and then whiffs on the follow-up question on whether he is more of an "Old Testament guy or a New Testament guy."
Trump thinks for a second and answers: "Probably equal, I think. It just an incredible…the whole Bible is an incredible…" and then starts talking about how he jokes that his own book The Art of the Deal is only his second favorite book.

The Art of the Deal

.
Which brings us to Trump's own writing. In total, we looked at five of his books and focused on the ones that are either autobiographical or about the state of the United States.
Donald Trump's bestseller The Art of the Deal, which was published in 1987, is an autobiography/business book billed as "an unguarded look at the mind of a brilliant entrepreneur." Trump dishes on his upbringing, family, business and his success.
He doesn't, however, talk about religion, faith, God, or the Bible.
In fact, a search for the words "faith", "religion", "church", "Christian", "God", "Jesus", "Bible", "Presbyterian" and "Protestant" yielded five combined hits. None of the words were used in a religious context and certainly not in describing Trump's spirituality.
[Image: 4-1-1024x682.jpg]Books by Donald J. Trump Photo credit: Tahiro Nagao / Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

The America We Deserve

.
The second book we looked at is The America We Deserve. It was published in 2000 and is described as Trump's "position paper on major political issues facing our country."
The worldly view he expresses in this book appears to be at odds with the need for a country built on Christian values that evangelical voters would like to see. In a 2015 poll, 57% of all Republicans, and 94% of the supporters of Mike Huckabee, the one-time champion of the religious right, supported the establishment of Christianity as the national religion.
In the book, Trump referenced "faith" nine times. However, it is used only once in a context that is related to religion:
"Americans support a wall of separation between church and state because it protects their religious organizations from government encroachment, and also because it ensures that no denomination or faith is able to seize power," Trump writes.
"Religion" is mentioned twice but only in the context of how the terrorists and the Chinese don't believe in freedom of religion.
"Church" is used 11 times, but there are no references to Trump's own.
"God" is mentioned three times but the only remotely religious context in which it is used is when Trump writes "God bless" Americans who help others.
"Jesus" is mentioned once, but only because that was the first name of the designer of the book's cover.
And Trump's "favorite book," the Bible, is not mentioned at all.

Never Give Up

.
Of the five Trump books we examined, Never Give Up might have been the most interesting. Published in 2008, it is billed as follows:
"In Never Give Up, Donald Trump tells the dramatic stories of his biggest challenges, lowest moments, and worst mistakes and how he uses tenacity and creativity to turn defeat into victory. Each chapter includes an inspiring story from Trump's career and concludes with expert commentary and coaching from adversity researcher and author Paul Stoltz. Inspirational and intelligent, Never Give Up will help you deal with your own personal challenges, failures, and weaknesses."
It would seem like the perfect opportunity for a religious person to talk about how his faith helped him overcome obstacles and maybe thank God for being a source of inspiration in those low moments.
However, "faith" is mentioned only six times in 206 pages and not once in a religious context. Instead, Trump talks about having faith in oneself.
"Faith in yourself can prove to be a very powerful force," Trump wrote. "…Sometimes when you are fighting a lonely battle, keeping yourself company with positive reinforcement and faith in yourself can be the invisible power that separates the winners from the losers. Losers give up."
That sounds a lot like Norman Vincent Peale, the pastor Trump so admires. Peale, by the way, is mentioned several times in the book while "Jesus" or "Christ" are not referenced at all and "God" just once (when Trump writes about how a former New York parks commissioner considered some plans he gave her "a gift from God").
The Bible is, once again, not mentioned.

Time to Get Tough

.
In 2012, Trump was seriously flirting with a presidential run for the first time. To lay the groundwork, he wrote Time to Get Tough, which was published in 2011. The book is a scathing critique of President Barack Obama and lays out Trump's plan to "Make America #1 Again."
Contemplating a White House run, Trump for the first time really dips his toe into religion at least a little bit. He writes about the country having to "resolve to keep the faith," and how Islamic terrorists "hate our religion."
Trump refers to somebody as a "fellow Christian" and calls marriage "the greatest anti-poverty program God ever created." He even cites the Gospel of Matthew once.
Still, Time to Get Tough is only the precursor for what was to come.

Crippled America

.
Crippled America was released in November of 2015 when Trump was already the frontrunner in the race and less than four months before Iowans cast the first votes and it describes his vision of what it takes to make America great again.
Basically, it is Trump's way of distributing his campaign platform and getting paid $25 per hardcover copy sold (we're a non-profit and got the $3.99 online version). It even has pictures the kind that will appeal to Republican voters. One shows Trump with Ronald Reagan, but there is also one of Trump on his confirmation day at First Presbyterian Church.
While it is short on specifics, Crippled America references religion more than all of the other books combined.
In a segment on "Values," Trump writes that the happiest people are those with "great families and great values."
"Religion also plays a very large factor in happiness," he adds. "People who have God in their lives receive a tremendous amount of joy and satisfaction from their faith."
Trump also described the two churches he attended: First Presbyterian and Marble Collegiate Church (which stated that he is no longer an active member). And he once again writes about Rev. Peale.
He also notes that people are "shocked" when they learn that he is a Christian and a "religious person."
"They see me with all the surroundings of wealth so they sometimes don't associate that with being religious," Trump writes. "That's not accurate. I go to church. I love God, and I love having a relationship with Him."
He then immediately describes how "the Bible is the most important book ever written."
In the space of three paragraphs (and he goes on for another page or so), published after he was already running for president (his campaign manager is mentioned in the acknowledgements), Trump writes more about his faith, God and the Bible than in the hundreds of pages in similar books that were published in the nearly three decades before he ran.
In short, our extensive review of Trump's record, his books, many public statements, interviews in which the subject of spirituality came up, etc. allows only one conclusion: If Donald Trump is being audited for being a "strong Christian," then the late Christopher Hitchens, author of God is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything, might also have been on the IRS's short list.


USA under presidency of a know-nothing, neo-fascist, racist, sexist, mobbed-up narcissist!! - David Guyatt - 30-01-2017

Peter Lemkin Wrote:American Psychosis

Posted on Jan 29, 2017

By Chris Hedges
[Image: Smilefish_590.jpg]
Mr. Fish / Truthdig
Reality is under assault. Verbal confusion reigns. Truth and illusion have merged. Mental chaos makes it hard to fathom what is happening. We feel trapped in a hall of mirrors. Exposed lies are answered with other lies. The rational is countered with the irrational. Cognitive dissonance prevails. We endure a disquieting shame and even guilt. Tens of millions of Americans, especially women, undocumented workers, Muslims and African-Americans, suffer the acute anxiety of being pursued by a predator. All this is by design. Demagogues always infect the governed with their own psychosis.
"The comparison between totalitarianism and psychosis is not incidental," the psychiatrist Joost A.M. Meerloo wrote in his book "The Rape of the Mind: The Psychology of Thought Control, Menticide, and Brainwashing." "Delusional thinking inevitably creeps into every form of tyranny and despotism. Unconscious backward forces come into action. Evil powers from the archaic past return. An automatic compulsion to go on to self-destruction develops, to justify one mistake with a new one; to enlarge and expand the vicious pathological circle becomes the dominating end of life. The frightened man, burdened by a culture he does not understand, retreats into the brute's fantasy of limitless power in order to cover up the vacuum inside himself. This fantasy starts with the leaders and is later taken over by the masses they oppress."
The lies fly out of the White House like flocks of pigeons: Donald Trump's election victory was a landslide. He had the largest inauguration crowds in American history. Three million to 5 million undocumented immigrants voted illegally. Climate change is a hoax. Vaccines cause autism. Immigrants are carriers of "[t]remendous infectious disease." The election was riggeduntil it wasn't. We don't know "who really knocked down" the World Trade Center. Torture works. Mexico will pay for the wall. Conspiracy theories are fact. Scientific facts are conspiracies. America will be great again.
Our new president, a 70-year-old with orange-tinted skin and hair that Penn Jillette has likened to "cotton candy made of piss," is, as Trump often reminds us, "very good looking." He has almost no intellectual accomplishmentshe knows little of history, politics, law, philosophy, art or governancebut insists "[m]y IQ is one of the highestand you all know it! Please don't feel so stupid or insecure, it's not your fault." And the mediocrities and half-wits he has installed in his Cabinet have "by far the highest IQ of any Cabinet ever assembled."
It is an avalanche of absurdities.
This mendacity would be easier to repulse if the problem was solely embodied in Trump. But even in the face of a rising despotism, the Democratic Party refuses to denounce the corporate forces that eviscerated our democracy and impoverished the country. The neoliberal Trump demonizes Muslims, undocumented workers and the media. The neoliberal Democratic Party demonizes Vladimir Putin and FBI Director James Comey. No one speaks about the destructive force of corporate power. The warring elites pitalternative facts against alternative facts. All engage in demagoguery. We will, I expect, be condemned to despotism by the venality of Trump and the cowardice and dishonesty of the liberal class.
Trump and those around him have a deep hatred for what they cannot understand. They silence anyone who thinks independently. They elevate pseudo-intellectuals who adhere to their bizarre script. They cannot cope with complexity, nuance or the unpredictable. Individual initiative is a mortal threat. The order for some employees of several federal agencies, including the Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's research service, the National Park Service and the Department of Health and Human Services, to restrict or cease communication with the press or members of Congress, along with the attempt to impose10-year felony convictions on six reporters who covered the inauguration protests, signals the beginning of a campaign to marginalize reality and promote fantasy. Facts depend solely on those who have the power to create them. The goal of the Trump administration is to create an artificial consistency that conforms to its warped perception of the world.
"Before they seize power and establish a world according to their doctrines, totalitarian movements conjure up a lying world of consistency which is more adequate to the needs of the human mind than reality itself; in which, through sheer imagination, uprooted masses can feel at home and are spared the never-ending shocks which real life and real experiences deal to human beings and their expectations," Hannah Arendt wrote in "The Origins of Totalitarianism." "The force possessed by totalitarian propagandabefore the movements have the power to drop iron curtains to prevent anyone's disturbing, by the slightest reality, the gruesome quiet of an entirely imaginary worldlies in its ability to shut the masses off from the real world."
Trump's blinding narcissism was captured in his bizarre talk to the CIA on Jan. 21. "[T]hey say, is Donald Trump an intellectual?" he said. "Trust me, I'm, like, a smart persona."
"I have a running war with the media," he added. "They are among the most dishonest human beings on earth. And they sort of made it sound like I had a feud with the intelligence community. And I just want to let you know, the reason you're the number one stop [in the new presidency] is exactly the oppositeexactly. And they understand that, too."

He launched into an attack on the media for not reporting that "a million, million and a half people" showed up for his inauguration. "They showed a field where there was practically nobody standing there," he said about the media's depiction of the inauguration crowd. "And they said, Donald Trump did not draw well. I said, it was almost raining, the rain should have scared them away, but God looked down and he said, we're not going to let it rain on your speech."
He has been on the cover of Time "like, 14 or 15 times," Trump said in speaking of his criticism of the magazine because one of its reporters incorrectly wrote that the president had removed a bust of Martin Luther King Jr. from the Oval Office. "I think we have the all-time record in the history of Time magazine. Like, if Tom Brady is on the cover, it's one time, because he won the Super Bowl or something, right? I've been on it for 15 times this year. I don't think that's a record, Mike, that can ever be broken. Do you agree with that? What do you think?" [Editor's note: Photographs or drawings of Trump were on the cover of Time 10 times in the last year and a half and once in 1989.]
Trump's theatricality works. He forces the press and the public to repeat his lies, inadvertently giving them credibility. He is always moving. He is always on display. He has no fixed belief system. Trump, as he consolidates power, will adopt the ideology of the Christian right to fill his own ideological vacuum. The Christian right's magical thinking will merge seamlessly with Trump's magical thinking. Idiocy, self-delusion, megalomania, fantasy and government repression will come wrapped in images of the Christian cross and the American flag.
The corporate state, hostile or indifferent to the plight of the citizens, has no emotional pull among the public. It is often hated. Political candidates run not as politicians but as celebrities. Campaigns eschew issues to make people feel good about candidates and themselves. Ideas are irrelevant. Emotional euphoria is paramount. The voter is only a prop in the political theater. Politics is anti-politics. It is reality television. Trump proved better at this game than his opponents. It is a game in which fact and knowledge do not matter. Reality is what you create. We were conditioned for a Trump.
Meerloo wrote, "The demagogue relies for his effectiveness on the fact that people will take seriously the fantastic accusations he makes, will discuss the phony issues he raises as if they had reality, or will be thrown into such a state of panic by his accusations and charges that they will simply abdicate their right to think and verify for themselves."
The lies create a climate in which everyone is assumed to be lying. The truth becomes suspect and obscured. Narratives begin to be believed not because they are true, or even sound true, but because they are emotionally appealing. The aim of systematic lying, as Arendt wrote, is the "transformation of human nature itself." The lies eventually foster somnambulism among a population that surrenders to the magical thinking and ceases to care. It checks out. It becomes cynical. It only asks to be entertained and given a vent for its frustration and rage. Demagogues produce enemies the way a magician pulls rabbits out of a hat. They wage constant battles against nonexistent dangers, rapidly replacing one after the other to keep the rhetoric at a fever pitch.
"Practically speaking, the totalitarian ruler proceeds like a man who persistently insults another man until everybody knows that the latter is his enemy, so that he can, with some plausibility, go out and kill him in self-defense," Arendt wrote. "This certainly is a little crude, but it worksas everybody will know who has ever watched how certain successful careerists eliminate competitors."
We are entering a period of national psychological trauma. We are stalked by lunatics. We are, as Judith Herman writes about trauma victims in her book "Trauma and Recovery: The Aftermath of ViolenceFrom Domestic Abuse to Political Terror," being "rendered helpless by overwhelming force." This trauma, like all traumas, overwhelms "the ordinary systems of care that give people a sense of control, connection, and meaning."
To recover our mental balance we must respond to Trump the way victims of trauma respond to abuse. We must build communities where we can find understanding and solidarity. We must allow ourselves to mourn.
We must name the psychosis that afflicts us. We must carry out acts of civil disobedience and steadfast defiance to re-empower others and ourselves. We must fend off the madness and engage in dialogues based on truth, literacy, empathy and reality. We must invest more time in activities such as finding solace in nature, or focusing on music, theater, literature, art and even worshipactivities that hold the capacity for renewal and transcendence. This is the only way we will remain psychologically whole. Building an outer shell or attempting to hide will exacerbate our psychological distress and depression. We may not win, but we will have, if we create small, like-minded cells of defiance, the capacity not to go insane.


I'm a huge fan of Hedges. I think the point made in (highlighted in red) para, applies not just to Trump. It applies to any government that decides it needs to deceive and corral its citizens.

The sentence (highlighted in green) is very valid. However, for my twopence worth, I would argue that what is being experienced is a psychological possession rather than simply a trauma - and with psychological possession it is vital to disassociate oneself from the prevailing group-think (egregore), as that is the unconscious carrier of the contagion.

Hedges is right in saying that "we must name the psychosis that afflicts us" and I also think he is partially right in his remedy - given that the vast majority of people continue to flee from the effort required to confront their personal Shadow (which is, of course, the name of the contagion.

Quote:Filling the conscious mind with ideal conceptions is a characteristic of Western theosophy, but not the confrontation with the Shadow and the world of darkness. One does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light, but by making the darkness conscious. The latter procedure, however, is disagreeable and therefore not popular.

Carl Jung. CW 13: Alchemical Studies, par 335, pg 265



USA under presidency of a know-nothing, neo-fascist, racist, sexist, mobbed-up narcissist!! - Peter Lemkin - 30-01-2017

David Guyatt Wrote:
Peter Lemkin Wrote:American Psychosis

Posted on Jan 29, 2017

By Chris Hedges
[Image: Smilefish_590.jpg]
Mr. Fish / Truthdig
Reality is under assault. Verbal confusion reigns. Truth and illusion have merged. Mental chaos makes it hard to fathom what is happening. We feel trapped in a hall of mirrors. Exposed lies are answered with other lies. The rational is countered with the irrational. Cognitive dissonance prevails. We endure a disquieting shame and even guilt. Tens of millions of Americans, especially women, undocumented workers, Muslims and African-Americans, suffer the acute anxiety of being pursued by a predator. All this is by design. Demagogues always infect the governed with their own psychosis.
"The comparison between totalitarianism and psychosis is not incidental," the psychiatrist Joost A.M. Meerloo wrote in his book "The Rape of the Mind: The Psychology of Thought Control, Menticide, and Brainwashing." "Delusional thinking inevitably creeps into every form of tyranny and despotism. Unconscious backward forces come into action. Evil powers from the archaic past return. An automatic compulsion to go on to self-destruction develops, to justify one mistake with a new one; to enlarge and expand the vicious pathological circle becomes the dominating end of life. The frightened man, burdened by a culture he does not understand, retreats into the brute's fantasy of limitless power in order to cover up the vacuum inside himself. This fantasy starts with the leaders and is later taken over by the masses they oppress."
The lies fly out of the White House like flocks of pigeons: Donald Trump's election victory was a landslide. He had the largest inauguration crowds in American history. Three million to 5 million undocumented immigrants voted illegally. Climate change is a hoax. Vaccines cause autism. Immigrants are carriers of "[t]remendous infectious disease." The election was riggeduntil it wasn't. We don't know "who really knocked down" the World Trade Center. Torture works. Mexico will pay for the wall. Conspiracy theories are fact. Scientific facts are conspiracies. America will be great again.
Our new president, a 70-year-old with orange-tinted skin and hair that Penn Jillette has likened to "cotton candy made of piss," is, as Trump often reminds us, "very good looking." He has almost no intellectual accomplishmentshe knows little of history, politics, law, philosophy, art or governancebut insists "[m]y IQ is one of the highestand you all know it! Please don't feel so stupid or insecure, it's not your fault." And the mediocrities and half-wits he has installed in his Cabinet have "by far the highest IQ of any Cabinet ever assembled."
It is an avalanche of absurdities.
This mendacity would be easier to repulse if the problem was solely embodied in Trump. But even in the face of a rising despotism, the Democratic Party refuses to denounce the corporate forces that eviscerated our democracy and impoverished the country. The neoliberal Trump demonizes Muslims, undocumented workers and the media. The neoliberal Democratic Party demonizes Vladimir Putin and FBI Director James Comey. No one speaks about the destructive force of corporate power. The warring elites pitalternative facts against alternative facts. All engage in demagoguery. We will, I expect, be condemned to despotism by the venality of Trump and the cowardice and dishonesty of the liberal class.
Trump and those around him have a deep hatred for what they cannot understand. They silence anyone who thinks independently. They elevate pseudo-intellectuals who adhere to their bizarre script. They cannot cope with complexity, nuance or the unpredictable. Individual initiative is a mortal threat. The order for some employees of several federal agencies, including the Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's research service, the National Park Service and the Department of Health and Human Services, to restrict or cease communication with the press or members of Congress, along with the attempt to impose10-year felony convictions on six reporters who covered the inauguration protests, signals the beginning of a campaign to marginalize reality and promote fantasy. Facts depend solely on those who have the power to create them. The goal of the Trump administration is to create an artificial consistency that conforms to its warped perception of the world.
"Before they seize power and establish a world according to their doctrines, totalitarian movements conjure up a lying world of consistency which is more adequate to the needs of the human mind than reality itself; in which, through sheer imagination, uprooted masses can feel at home and are spared the never-ending shocks which real life and real experiences deal to human beings and their expectations," Hannah Arendt wrote in "The Origins of Totalitarianism." "The force possessed by totalitarian propagandabefore the movements have the power to drop iron curtains to prevent anyone's disturbing, by the slightest reality, the gruesome quiet of an entirely imaginary worldlies in its ability to shut the masses off from the real world."
Trump's blinding narcissism was captured in his bizarre talk to the CIA on Jan. 21. "[T]hey say, is Donald Trump an intellectual?" he said. "Trust me, I'm, like, a smart persona."
"I have a running war with the media," he added. "They are among the most dishonest human beings on earth. And they sort of made it sound like I had a feud with the intelligence community. And I just want to let you know, the reason you're the number one stop [in the new presidency] is exactly the oppositeexactly. And they understand that, too."

He launched into an attack on the media for not reporting that "a million, million and a half people" showed up for his inauguration. "They showed a field where there was practically nobody standing there," he said about the media's depiction of the inauguration crowd. "And they said, Donald Trump did not draw well. I said, it was almost raining, the rain should have scared them away, but God looked down and he said, we're not going to let it rain on your speech."
He has been on the cover of Time "like, 14 or 15 times," Trump said in speaking of his criticism of the magazine because one of its reporters incorrectly wrote that the president had removed a bust of Martin Luther King Jr. from the Oval Office. "I think we have the all-time record in the history of Time magazine. Like, if Tom Brady is on the cover, it's one time, because he won the Super Bowl or something, right? I've been on it for 15 times this year. I don't think that's a record, Mike, that can ever be broken. Do you agree with that? What do you think?" [Editor's note: Photographs or drawings of Trump were on the cover of Time 10 times in the last year and a half and once in 1989.]
Trump's theatricality works. He forces the press and the public to repeat his lies, inadvertently giving them credibility. He is always moving. He is always on display. He has no fixed belief system. Trump, as he consolidates power, will adopt the ideology of the Christian right to fill his own ideological vacuum. The Christian right's magical thinking will merge seamlessly with Trump's magical thinking. Idiocy, self-delusion, megalomania, fantasy and government repression will come wrapped in images of the Christian cross and the American flag.
The corporate state, hostile or indifferent to the plight of the citizens, has no emotional pull among the public. It is often hated. Political candidates run not as politicians but as celebrities. Campaigns eschew issues to make people feel good about candidates and themselves. Ideas are irrelevant. Emotional euphoria is paramount. The voter is only a prop in the political theater. Politics is anti-politics. It is reality television. Trump proved better at this game than his opponents. It is a game in which fact and knowledge do not matter. Reality is what you create. We were conditioned for a Trump.
Meerloo wrote, "The demagogue relies for his effectiveness on the fact that people will take seriously the fantastic accusations he makes, will discuss the phony issues he raises as if they had reality, or will be thrown into such a state of panic by his accusations and charges that they will simply abdicate their right to think and verify for themselves."
The lies create a climate in which everyone is assumed to be lying. The truth becomes suspect and obscured. Narratives begin to be believed not because they are true, or even sound true, but because they are emotionally appealing. The aim of systematic lying, as Arendt wrote, is the "transformation of human nature itself." The lies eventually foster somnambulism among a population that surrenders to the magical thinking and ceases to care. It checks out. It becomes cynical. It only asks to be entertained and given a vent for its frustration and rage. Demagogues produce enemies the way a magician pulls rabbits out of a hat. They wage constant battles against nonexistent dangers, rapidly replacing one after the other to keep the rhetoric at a fever pitch.
"Practically speaking, the totalitarian ruler proceeds like a man who persistently insults another man until everybody knows that the latter is his enemy, so that he can, with some plausibility, go out and kill him in self-defense," Arendt wrote. "This certainly is a little crude, but it worksas everybody will know who has ever watched how certain successful careerists eliminate competitors."
We are entering a period of national psychological trauma. We are stalked by lunatics. We are, as Judith Herman writes about trauma victims in her book "Trauma and Recovery: The Aftermath of ViolenceFrom Domestic Abuse to Political Terror," being "rendered helpless by overwhelming force." This trauma, like all traumas, overwhelms "the ordinary systems of care that give people a sense of control, connection, and meaning."
To recover our mental balance we must respond to Trump the way victims of trauma respond to abuse. We must build communities where we can find understanding and solidarity. We must allow ourselves to mourn.
We must name the psychosis that afflicts us. We must carry out acts of civil disobedience and steadfast defiance to re-empower others and ourselves. We must fend off the madness and engage in dialogues based on truth, literacy, empathy and reality. We must invest more time in activities such as finding solace in nature, or focusing on music, theater, literature, art and even worshipactivities that hold the capacity for renewal and transcendence. This is the only way we will remain psychologically whole. Building an outer shell or attempting to hide will exacerbate our psychological distress and depression. We may not win, but we will have, if we create small, like-minded cells of defiance, the capacity not to go insane.


I'm a huge fan of Hedges. I think the point made in (highlighted in red) para, applies not just to Trump. It applies to any government that decides it needs to deceive and corral its citizens.

The sentence (highlighted in green) is very valid. However, for my twopence worth, I would argue that what is being experienced is a psychological possession rather than simply a trauma - and with psychological possession it is vital to disassociate oneself from the prevailing group-think (egregore), as that is the unconscious carrier of the contagion.

Hedges is right in saying that "we must name the psychosis that afflicts us" and I also think he is partially right in his remedy - given that the vast majority of people continue to flee from the effort required to confront their personal Shadow (which is, of course, the name of the contagion.

Quote:Filling the conscious mind with ideal conceptions is a characteristic of Western theosophy, but not the confrontation with the Shadow and the world of darkness. One does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light, but by making the darkness conscious. The latter procedure, however, is disagreeable and therefore not popular.

Carl Jung. CW 13: Alchemical Studies, par 335, pg 265

I'd not, and will not, argue that there is not a 'dark side' to all humans, which Jung called the Shadow. We all possess it to varying degrees and are masters over it to varying degrees. That said, the situation one finds one's life/society in can effect it, as can propaganda and societal pressures from those around us and societal pressures of all sorts. Yes, we are all responsible for what WE do with the good and evil in us; however, under war/extreme poverty-deprivation/threats of various kinds/torture-mental or physical/stresses-internal or external, etc. we sometimes loose part of what control we have - or have to battle even harder to control/master it. Modern [sic] Western Society [sic] is not IMHO conducive to good mental health nor easily dealing with the dark side in us - as the society itself is so full of 'Darkness and Evil'. The same procedures are needed and will work to turn away from the darkness, I'm only saying that for many or most it will be more difficult in a malevolent society and system.


USA under presidency of a know-nothing, neo-fascist, racist, sexist, mobbed-up narcissist!! - David Guyatt - 30-01-2017




USA under presidency of a know-nothing, neo-fascist, racist, sexist, mobbed-up narcissist!! - Peter Lemkin - 30-01-2017

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Thousands of protesters flooded airports across the United States over the weekend after President Donald Trump signed an executive order Friday temporarily banning all refugees from entering the country, and barring access for 90 days to nationals from seven majority-Muslim nations. The draconian measure instantly cut off access to the United States for 218 million people from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. It indefinitely suspended the admission of Syrian refugees.
AMY GOODMAN: Across the world, travelers were left stranded, while scores were detained by customs officials after landing at U.S. airports. As news of the order spread Saturday, thousands gathered at JFK airport in New York City for an impromptu protest. Democracy Now!'s Nermeen Shaikh was there.
PROTESTERS: Let them in! Let them in! Let them in! Let them in! Let them in! Let them in!
NERMEEN SHAIKH: We're outside New York City's John F. Kennedy airport, outside Terminal 4, where thousands of people have gathered to protest the Trump administration's executive order, which has prevented many people from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the United States, more than 10 of them here detained at Terminal 4. Thousands of people here are chanting "Let them in!" "This is what democracy looks like! and "Refugees welcome here." Let's talk to some of the people here.
MOUMITA AHMED: My name is Moumita Ahmed, and I'm here today because, as a Muslim woman, I find this ban extremely just personal to me, because I have family members who are on visa, and now they'rethey are at risk of not being able to leave or enter the country. And again, as a Muslim, I feel like this is targeting our community in an unfair way. I was here since 12:30, and before, it was like a hundred people that showed up. And then we were live-streaming. I actually tweeted for people to be here, and it had like 2,000 retweets. And then, just I was live-streaming, which I got a lot of shares, like almost a thousand shares. And I think other people that were here did the same thing. And next thing you know, there's like entire huge crowds started showing up. And now there's protests happening all over the country.
PROTESTERS: No hate! No fear! Refugees are welcome here!
SHERRY: My name is Sherry, and I'm here as a Jewish American who is very aware of what we did just a couple generations ago, and I don't want to see us do this again. Muslims are my brothers, and they deserve to be here just as much as I do. And no person is illegal. So I'm here to express that on this super-cold night.
DAVID: My name's David. I live here in New York. I'm from Texas, but my parents are from Vietnam.
NERMEEN SHAIKH: And what brings you here tonight?
DAVID: I am angry. I am so angry at this. If it wasn't for the country letting my parents in here when they were refugees, none of us would be here. New York is made up of immigrants and refugees. And this is infuriating.
NERMEEN SHAIKH: So your parents came here as refugees?
DAVID: They did, from Vietnam. My entire family did. And it's absurd that Muslims are being targeted. It's ridiculous. When my parents first came to this country, they had nothing, and they came here with a hope to escape their country and everything horrible that was going on over in Vietnam, and to build a life. And they built a life from scratch here. They paid their taxes. They had their children. They looked to America as a beacon of hope. And it's unfair that right now we want to ban Muslims. It's terrible.
LIONEL: My name is Lionel, and I'm from Brazil, but I've been here for over 20 years. I went through the green card process. I know how much of a vetting process that actually is already, and even just the visa process. And I know that it takes very little of a suspicious note in your résumé, in your history, as a person, of your family, to even be not allowed in at that point. So, to even add to that something so ridiculous and arbitrary as a Muslim ban, it makes absolutely no sense and is completely xenophobic.
NERMEEN SHAIKH: The people who are being prevented from entering the U.S. even include legal permanent residents, people who have green cards, from those seven countries that have been designated by the Trump administration.
LIONEL: That's correct. I mean, that's what's even more appalling about it. But just from a basic level, we shouldn't turn people away. That's what this country was founded on. And it's not just that; it's just common human decency. You're keeping people from escaping a country that you, yourself, have destroyed.
RUHI KAPURIA: My name is Ruhi Kapuria [phon.], and I'm from Long Island, Valley Stream.
NERMEEN SHAIKH: What are your concerns for Muslims who are here already in the U.S. under a Trump administration, under this administration?
RUHI KAPURIA: Well, I would say, all my Muslim brothers and sisters, there's nothing to fear. Your actions are more important. Keep doing what you're doing, and we are not going to do anything wrong. We are going to be unapologetic Muslims.
PROTESTERS: Whose country? Our country! Whose country? Our country!
SHERRY: I heard that there was one man that was released earlier today, and I hope that with the pressure of a lot of electeds who are here tonightI was standing with a bunch of city council peoplethousands of people here, that the shame and embarrassment of doing this act and everyone seeing you will help it stop. Now, that being said, that's just today. So what happens like a month from now, when people justyou know, they're still stuck in their country, they're not here at the airport? This is the dramatic thing, when they're here at the airport. I'm worried almost more about what happens a few weeks from now, when people who are expecting to come here from refugee camps just can't come. We won't see those people. We're all very aware of the 10 or so inside. I'm worried more almost about what happens with the people we're not going to be as aware of, you know?
NERMEEN SHAIKH: Outside a very cold Terminal 4 at New York City's John F. Kennedy airport, I'm Nermeen Shaikh, with Sam Alcoff and Anna Ozbek, for Democracy Now!
PROTESTERS: [singing] From the redwood forest to the Gulf Stream waters, this land was made for you and me.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Protests spread to other airportsin Boston, Washington, D.C., Seattle, Atlanta, San Francisco. President Trump's order also drew immediate legal challenges. On Saturday, the ACLU asked a federal judge to intervene in the case of two Iraqis detained at JFK airport. At Saturday night, U.S. District Judge Ann Donnelly in Brooklyn ordered the men released as part of a nationwide stay on part of Trump's executive order. Her ruling temporarily blocked the deportation of valid visa holders, including those from countries listed in Trump's ban.
AMY GOODMAN: In Boston, Carl Williams, a lawyer from the ACLU, announced the legal victory while standing in front of hundreds of protesters at Logan International Airport.
CARL WILLIAMS: [echoed by the People's Mic] The ACLU nationally filed for a writ of habeas corpus to stop this nationally. A judge in New York just granted that. The legal premise that we've learned tonight is that when we fight, we win!
AMY GOODMAN: Judges in California, Massachusetts, Virginia and Washington quickly followed with similar rulings, and the Department of Homeland Security said Sunday it would comply with the orders. But some lawmakers report Customs and Border Protection officers are defying the courts.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Omar Jadwat of the ACLU, your takeyour organization's take on this executive order? What you did immediately?
OMAR JADWAT: Yeah, well, I mean, the take on it, maybe not too much I can add to that analysis except put some legal gloss on it. The take on it is that Donald Trump promised us a Muslim ban when he was running for president. Within a week of taking office, that's what he ordered. That's unconstitutional. It's subject to being struck down by the courts eventually, and we've won the first victory in that process with the stay that was ordered on Saturday. You know, there's more work to be done, obviously, in that process. But the degree to which this administration has been nakedly discriminatory
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And it's unconstitutional why?
OMAR JADWAT: Because the government can't discriminate against a particular religion. It can't favor one religion over another. You know, and this does both, right? Not only does it ban peopleit's an imperfect Muslim ban, right? Doesn't get every Muslim in the world, but it's a Muslim ban. And, as Donald Trump himself explained, there's a specific provision to favor Christians from among the refugees that would otherwise be banned.
AMY GOODMAN: So let's talk about exactly what happened in the courts. On Saturday, the ACLU asked a federal judge to intervene in the case of two Iraqis detained at JFK airport. On Saturday night, U.S. District Judge Ann Donnelly in Brooklyn ordered the men released as part of a nationwide stay on part of Trump's executive order, her ruling temporarily blocking the deportation of valid visa holders, including those from the countries listed in Trump's ban. Now, if you could talk about who, Omar, these two Iraqis wereone of the Iraqis, a translator, who soldiers around the country started to stand up for, said, "He saved our lives." Talk about Darweesh.
OMAR JADWAT: I mean, soI mean, and this, this is the face of who a Muslim ban hits, right? It's people like Nisrin. It's people like Mr. Darweesh, who worked for the U.S. military for 10 years in Iraq, put his life on the line for our country in a way that most Americans don't, and, because of what he did, you know, was trying to come to the United States and escape the possibility of retribution for what he had done for our country. We have a special immigrant visa process for folks who have helped the military abroad. He got one of these visas, got fully vetted for it, went all the way through the process, gets to the airport, and they saywell, they told him, you know, potentially that they were going to deport him back.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Let's go to Hameed Darweesh speaking at JFK after he was released.
HAMEED DARWEESH: This is the soul of America. Now, this is what pushed me to move, leave my country and come here. And I'm very, very thankful to all the people who come to support me. Thank you very much. And always, when we are kids 'til now, we know America is the land of freedom, the land of freedom, the land of the right.
REPORTER: What do you want to say to Donald Trump?
HAMEED DARWEESH: I like him, but I don't know. This is a policy. I don't know. He's a president, and I'm a normal person. But I have a special immigration visa in my passport, me and my family, because I worked with the U.S. government. I supported the U.S. government from the other side of the war. But when I came here, they said no. And they treat me as I break the laws or do something wrong. I'm surprised, really.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: That was Hameed Darweesh speaking at JFK after he was released from detention. But I wanted to ask you: The judicial order prevents any deportations, but not the denial of visas, right, to people coming into the country?
OMAR JADWAT: Right. And that's one of the reasons I say that there's much more work to be done in terms of challenging this ban and in terms of striking it down finally. This is, you know, the first step, and it's an important victory, obviously, for the people who had been stuck in airports. But more generally, it's a demonstration of the fact that both the courts, you know, can stand up to the president on these issues and that people around the country can make a huge difference by turning out and by supporting, you know, immigrants who are being threatened by the Trump administration.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: As we continue our coverage of Donald Trump's executive order, we're joined by Nisrin Elamin, a Ph.D. student in anthropology at Stanford University and a Sudanese citizen.
AMY GOODMAN: She was detained at JFK airport Friday evening, shortly after Donald Trump's executive order banning visitors from seven countries, including Sudan, went into effect.
Welcome to Democracy Now! I'm very sorry for what you went through. Can you describe what happened to you at the airport, Nisrin?
NISRIN ELAMIN: Sure. I boarded a plane in Sudan shortly after finding out about the executive order. I was trying to get back before it came into effect, but I missed the connecting flight. When I got in, I was asked toI was escorted into a separate holding area. I was questioned extensively, in part, among other things, about my views about the political situation in Sudan, about whether or not I knew of radical groups in Sudan, whether I knew people who had radical views. I was asked to share my social media handlesnot my passwords, but my social media handles.
Then I was asked to kind of sit tight and wait as they were trying to figure out what was going on, because the order had literally just been signed, soor they were just getting notice of it, so they reallythe officers didn't really know what they were doing. And they told me, eventually, that I needed to get transferred to Terminal 4, which is a 24-hour holding area. And before doing that, I had to be patted down. And so, I was led into a room. I was patted down. It was a very uncomfortable pat-down. I was touched in my chest and groin area. And then I was handcuffed briefly. That's when I started to cry, because I felt likeat that moment, I felt like, "OK, I'm probably going to get deported." And they didn'tthey realized they hadn't handcuffed the other person who was with me, who was an Iranian green card holder, and so they took off the handcuffs, transferred us to Terminal 4. There were other people at this point that were getting led in in handcuffs who were Iranian and Iraqi citizens with valid visas.
Eventually, I got out, after five hours. And I was toldI asked the officer if I would be able to go back to Sudan, because I haven't finished my dissertation research. And he recommended that I not go back, unless I was willing to be subjected to that whole procedure again. And he said, "You know, I would stay put if I were you," because green card holders were being treated on a case-by-case basis.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And did you get any sensebecause there's been a lot of reports in terms of the lack of preparation for this order. Did you get any sense that the customs officials and the others that you dealt with, the immigration officials, were on the same wavelength or knew what they were doing, or was there a lot of confusion?
NISRIN ELAMIN: There was a lot of confusion. It was very chaotic. And they admitted it to me. It was interesting watching. I feel like when I first got into the holding area, which I was quite familiar with, because when I was an F1 and when I was on a student and work visa, I was often questioned in that roomI never expected to be in there as a green card holder. But, you know, there was a lot of confusion. They didn't know what to do with us. And in the beginning, I felt like I was being treated quite well. And as the night progressed, I feel like I watched our kind of progressive criminalization, if you will. And that was as people were trying, scrambling to get direction from higher-ups in Washington.
AMY GOODMAN: They weren't used to holding green card holders, right?
NISRIN ELAMIN: Exactly.
AMY GOODMAN: And so, do you feel you were treated differently as not only an immigrant, but as an African immigrant?
NISRIN ELAMIN: You know, it's an interesting question. I think, on the one hand, I was probably treated much better than other people, partly because of my affiliation with Stanford.
AMY GOODMAN: Had Stanford helped you come back as fast as you could
NISRIN ELAMIN: Yes.
AMY GOODMAN: once they realized what was happening?
NISRIN ELAMIN: Yes. They paid for my ticket. I also, during the interview, told them that I was a Stanford Ph.D. student.
AMY GOODMAN: And you were a Harvard undergrad?
NISRIN ELAMIN: Yes. So I think that, you know, led to me being detained for five hours, as opposed to another Sudanese person who was detained for 30 hours and is in his seventies. So, I think that that's one aspect of it. On the flip side, when I went to Terminal 4, they didn't know my background, and I did feelyou know, I guess the point that I actually want to make is, you know, I think this order is a reflection of a larger trend in this country to criminalize black people, to criminalize immigrants, to criminalize Muslims. And as a black Muslim immigrant, I'm really concerned about that. And I do think that the Somalis and Sudanese, people of African descent who are going to be affected by this, you know, I think they're going to be treated differently, frankly.
AMY GOODMAN: You've made the point that other terrorists, people like Dylann Storm Roof, who murdered a bunch of innocent civilians, terrorizing a whole populationyou've made a comparison to how communities are treated.
NISRIN ELAMIN: Yeah. You know, I thinkI guess I want people to realize thatyou know, to imagine a ban on white Christian males from schools and churches, where these kinds of terrorist acts have happened, like the one Dylann Roof committed. You know, that would be nonsensical. And I think this is very similar.


USA under presidency of a know-nothing, neo-fascist, racist, sexist, mobbed-up narcissist!! - Peter Lemkin - 30-01-2017

White House policy director Stephen Miller said Saturday the Trump administration is considering a policy requiring ALL foreign visitors to disclose all websites and social media sites they visit, and to share the contacts in their cellphones. Failure to comply would be grounds for deportation.

First for the visitors; soon for all Citizens as well!