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Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Showing posts with label North Korea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label North Korea. Show all posts

Saturday, January 11, 2020

RSN: Ronnie Dugger | The Senate Trial of Donald Trump




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10 January 20

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RSN: Ronnie Dugger | The Senate Trial of Donald Trump
Sen. Mitch McConnell. (photo: Zach Gibson/Getty)
Ronnie Dugger, Reader Supported News
Dugger writes: "The American people appear about to learn whether the 53 Republican senators together in Washington, individually and as the Senate majority, are honest, honorable, and worthy of the public trust or on balance are fearful, obedient, and mostly cowardly jurors of, by, and for the most lying president in American history."
Part 1
he American people appear about to learn whether the 53 Republican senators together in Washington, individually and as the Senate majority, are honest, honorable, and worthy of the public trust or on balance are fearful, obedient, and mostly cowardly jurors of, by, and for the most lying president in American history.
Despite the personal oath pledging impartiality as jurors, which every one of the 100 senators will be swearing their honor to in President Donald Trump’s impeachment trial, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has declared in advance of taking his oath that he is making his plans to conduct and control the Senate trial in tandem with the defendant and that all but certainly the defendant will not be convicted and removed from office. As Congress has reassembled in the new year, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has been holding back giving McConnell the House-passed two Articles of Impeachment, for Abuse of Power and Obstruction of Congress, until he gives her and the public assurance to her satisfaction that the trial will be fair and not the cover-up that Minority Leader Senator Charles Schumer warns may be coming. 
McConnell has said he is against having witnesses in the trial. Pelosi wants them, and Trump has said he does, too, including Joe Biden and his son Hunter. The rules prohibit McConnell from starting the trial without getting the two impeachment articles from the House. Trump’s leading champion in the Senate, Lindsay Graham of South Carolina, proposed on July 5th that the rule be changed in the week of January 12th to start the trial without having received them. Two of the GOP senators have publicly dissented against McConnell’s witnessless but coordinated-with-the-defendant plans. Changing the rule would take 51 votes; the Republicans have 53. 
Let’s be plain and clear about the timing now. Opening Trump’s trial next week, indeed speeding it through during this month, is in no way necessary. Trump has already been lyingly stump-speaking for his re-election a year and a half or two. After all, there will only be one Democrat running against him, and the seven to nine or so candidates still seeking that nomination have been heard in their own speeches and mostly only one-minute-allowed answers on the pluralized press conferences on national TV, falsely called “debates” by the sponsoring media companies. Even a far too long six-month presidential campaign from May to November 3rd would still leave four months open now for Trump’s Senate trial. The campaign itself can’t occur, again after all, until the Democrats’ one nominee is chosen. That probably means during the Democratic National Convention in mid-July, which limits the two-person campaign to three and a half months.
Besides, as to timing, let’s consider just one of the seldom-discussed meanings, the actual consequences, of the American president’s chronic lying. One of the two greatest daily newspapers in the country, The Washington Post, has kept and counted and keeps on counting what they see and deem to be the false or misleading statements Trump has made publicly as our president. Last month the Post reported, from its “Trump claims database,” that as of December 10th, his one thousand and 55th day in office, the president has made “125,413 false or misleading claims,” that is, more than 125 thousand of them, an everyday average of nearly 15. Nearly 600 of these untruths in the past two months, the Post reported, “relate just to the Ukraine investigation,” that is, to the basis of the Democrats’ second Article of Impeachment against Trump. With his mandatory daily prominence, often domination, in and on the national media, in six months, he can get everything true or false he wants to say read, heard, or seen and heard by the voters again and again.
Part 2
If two-thirds of the senators vote to find President Trump guilty, his Presidency ends then. The latest of the reliable private polls has 55% of the people favoring that outcome. The main press and Congressional Republicans and some of the Democrats all but foresee Trump will be cleared in the Senate trial. However the Senate trial turns out, it will be a history-being-made event that can either help prevent or help cause Trump’s re-election. Obviously this is one major reason why the principals preparing to run and participate in the trial are differing so sharply and so problematically. McConnell, Graham, of course Trump, vividly attacking the two Articles of Impeachment, charging the Democrats have not come up with anything valid, want “there’s nothing there” shown fast and shockingly. Pelosi, Schumer, Rep. Adam Schiff, etc., want a longer, fuller trial that shows Trump unfit to be president.
Last March Speaker Pelosi, rueing national division, thinking of helping to re-elect newly-elected moderate Democrats, and saying of Trump “he’s not worth it,” opposed impeaching him. Of course she has the enormous Speaker’s power over the House Democrats, which members go on which committees, who are the chairs, the laws the House considers or doesn’t. Despite her position, though, major House committees, principally led by Judiciary chairman Jerry Nadler, continued industriously preparing and researching many impeachable matters. In September Pelosi suddenly publicly called for impeachment hearings focused on Trump’s Ukraine scheme, saying among much else that the public would understand that scandal. Recently she also, explicitly and again publicly, approved the House maybe also passing other Articles of Impeachment additional to the one on Ukraine.
No one really knows that in the impeachment trial all the Senate Republicans will vote against Trump’s conviction and all the Democrats for it. No one can yet foretell how the trial will go. No one knows which side in the trial will turn out to be more persuasive with the public.  No one knows what the verdict will be.
Something can happen to make the trial much more revealing if three “ifs” occur now. They are: (1) if this something happens before Pelosi hands over the Articles of Impeachment to McConnell, (2) if she waits long enough for this something to be done, and (3) if some House Democrats (perhaps especially Nadler and the other Democratic House members whose work and advocacies for Articles of Impeachment were left aside by the steps Pelosi has taken) act boldly and quickly. 
House committee members can decide now to add additional grievous Trump impeachable offenses to the content of the Abuse-of-Power article and, if they wish, also add new Articles of Impeachment to the two the House has passed. Such a set of events, enabled by the present stall in the House-to-Senate process, would, I think, at the least lengthen and strengthen the open, true, and fair, but more-substantially educating effects which the trial, if the Senate clears Trump, will have on public opinion for the November election. Less likely, although quite imaginably, with a fuller trial the senators’ vote would come closer to two-thirds or could become two-thirds and more.
Under “Abuse of Power,” the House members could include Trump’s revengeful and frequently vicious public attacks on his critics in his speeches, remarks to the press, and tweets. These often ruthlessly entail cruelty, libel, and slander. Trump impeachably uses his enormous national as well as official opinion- and publicity-power as president to frighten members of Congress who anger him into their retiring or submissions to him from concern about their own re-elections. As Trump himself says, those who slam him he slams back ten to one.
Certainly the fact that the President of the United States, the commander-in-chief of our military forces that include our mass-murdering nuclear weapons, is a “pathological liar,” as Bernie Sanders says, is another abuse of his presidential power. If even with the Washington Post database at hand this arguably is not itself an Article of Impeachment, failing to include and dramatize these truths about his tens of thousands of untruths under the “Abuse of Power” article seems to me a mistake.
Twice President Trump openly threatened North Korea with a violent American military attack in words that strongly implied that he meant he would destroy them with our nuclear weapons. Only he has total and exclusive authority to launch and explode these weapons on targets including entire cities. Congress has not even considered, as far as I know, whether our presidents should be able to, as Trump did, go before the United Nations and thus the entire world to literally threaten an entire nation of 25 million people with “total destruction.” Ethically, surely, that was an inexcusable abuse of his power. This impulsive Trump also suddenly bombed Syria without Congressional approval. Despite the voted opposition of Congress he continues to order our Air Force to continue supplying and supporting Saudi Arabia’s mass-murderous bombings of civilians in Yemen. Days ago, with no known consultation with Congress, he ordered the successful murder from a drone of one of Iran’s uppermost military leaders and those with him. Iran threatened us with grave retaliation. On January 4th, three days ago as I write, he tweeted that if they attack Americans or our assets, 52 Iranian cultural sites, “and Iran itself,” [in capital letters then] “WILL BE HIT VERY FAST AND VERY HARD.” Our aspirationally dictatorial president should be impeached, too, for such ruthless and astoundingly risky abuses of his power.
Part 3
The House’s Article of Impeachment concerning Trump and Ukraine needs no discussion here. However, the Mueller Report, on Russia’s and Vladimir Putin’s pollutions and corruptions of our 2016 presidential election in Trump’s favor against Hillary Clinton, is the solid foundation for two officially researched and reported and gravely needed additional Articles of Impeachment that are totally ignored in the present climax.
Being president, Trump has said, he can do anything he wants to, and to be sure other Articles of Impeachment against him are available. He has brazenly and defiantly brushed off the Constitution’s prohibition of a president making and taking profit from foreign governments, the emoluments clause. Instead of obeying his constitutional duty to see that the laws are faithfully executed, he vigorously undermines and trashes them, concerning legislation (especially cancelling and, since he and his party can’t get that done, gutting the Affordable Care Act) and with his executive orders, often judged illegal (including those also gutting environmental protections and corporate-regulating laws and regulations). 
But both Trump’s publicly agreeing on world television with Putin’s denials of, and worse Trump’s complicity with, Russia’s powerful interference in our 2016 presidential election in favor of Trump’s victory, along with Trump’s predictable supports for Russian foreign policy despite Russia being a leading adversary and opponent of the United States, raise questions of sovereignty and blackmailable disloyalty in foreign policy, which arguably extend to the topic of treason and all but require his impeachment. He should have an Article of Impeachment against him for Complicity with Official Russia’s Interference in the U.S. 2016 election – his support for Putin’s and Russia’s huge, malicious, and secret attacks, in 2016 and ongoing, on American democracy and sovereignty.  
The evidence-drenched Part I of the Mueller Report, since bolstered by the outcomes and the records of the trials of Trump’s long-term ally Roger Stone and members of his teams, definitively establishes Trump’s complicity in Putin’s interference in our 2016 election in order to help elect himself. Just as many members and staff of the House impeachment committees certainly have done, I have read Mueller’s badly organized and incompetently repetitive report, marking and underlining in it, and I have since reviewed it again. Understandably most Americans have not read it. I only summarize here small parts of what most matters in it. 
I also limit to three sentences here the consensus realization that Trump’s now self-revealed de-facto personal attorney William Barr, known in advance to Trump and countless others as a self-declared believer in an autocratic U.S. president who literally cannot commit obstruction of justice, was maneuvered into the role of U.S. Attorney General, the position which legally gave Barr personally the exclusive receipt of Mueller’s report and the first control of it to censor (“redact”) it and then to summarize it to the eagerly-waiting American public. Barr dishonestly misrepresented the report and on his opinion about presidents’ powers himself found and declared Trump innocent of obstruction of justice as if he had authority to do so, which he did not. Thus he dramatically misrepresented and discredited the historically momentous report in the press and with the people.
Hillary Clinton admitted in the 2016 campaign that, when Secretary of State, she had ordered the destruction of 30,000 emails which she had received, alas, on her personal email server, giving the reason that the 30,000 messages were personal, not official ones. This caused quite a scandal. Candidate Trump knew about and welcomed, but did not report to U.S. officials, Russia’s interference to help elect him. On July 20th, speaking on national and therefore world TV, suddenly Trump said, “Russia, if you’re listening, I hope you’re able to find the 30,000 emails that are missing,” which, he added, “will probably be rewarded mightily by our press.” Undeniably, broadcasting that hope on world TV, asking Russia to further help elect him over Clinton, Trump himself was significantly complicitous in Putin’s crimes against American democracy and sovereignty. Mueller reported that five hours later, on the same day of Trump’s “Russia, if you’re listening,” Russian intelligence agents for the first time hacked Hillary Clinton’s office records.
Part 4
In just three smallish-type footnotes on pages 14 and 15 of its Part I, the almost 500-page Mueller Report revealed that in 2014 Russia began operating frequently falsifying social media accounts on U.S. social and political issues; by 2016 Russia’s covert agencies secretly began supporting, in their cyber hacking into the U.S. election, Trump’s election over Hillary Clinton; Russians were buying political ads in the names of U.S. citizens, posing as U.S. persons without revealing their Russian association, communicating with individuals in the Trump campaign and other political activists, discouraging blacks from voting, starting political rallies for Trump, making the posters for them; “the U.S. has filed criminal charges against 13 individual Russian nationals and three Russian entities for conspiracy to defraud the United States”; just one Russian agency controlled Twitter accounts with “tens of thousands of U.S. participants” and another Russian agency’s Twitter accounts had “tens of thousands of followers”; and after the election, these three footnotes informed us, Twitter notified 1,400,000 people whom it believed had been in contact, through Twitter, with Russian-controlled accounts, in which the number 3,814 accounts is cited, and Facebook estimated that a leading Russian “research agency” “reached as many as 126,000,000 persons through its Facebook accounts.”
That last figure, 126 million, is more than one third, 38%, of the total population of the United States. As, just for another short example of the Mueller Report’s content, the Public Broadcasting System summarized, per Mueller: Russia created fake hashtags, impersonated Americans, asked the Trump campaign to help them with the rallies they arranged and staged, cyber-attacked the Democratic Party and the Clinton campaign, stole passwords and got access to Democratic and Clinton’s chairman’s files, and arranged the release, well-timed for the final voting, of documents stolen from the Clinton campaign to the American people to hurt the Clinton candidacy.
In Mueller’s Part II, as perhaps some millions of Americans now realize, he and his team shockingly and powerfully presented evidence and, in brief, the stories of up to perhaps ten potential criminal obstructions of justice committed by Trump. Let’s limit the essence of all that now to two sentences: President Trump gave orders to stop, that is to kill Mueller’s investigation of him, to get Mueller fired, and to officially require the limitation of Mueller’s investigations only to events that would occur sometime in the future, and thus not, not, to any events that had occurred in the past. In every case his associates and subordinates refused to transmit those orders from Donald Trump; otherwise they could or would have happened. Thus, a fourth Article of Impeachment, for Obstruction of Justice, begs to be slipped in before Pelosi gives up to McConnell or he gives up to her.
As opening, let’s close: the American people are about to learn whether the 53 Republican senators assembled in Washington, individually and as the Senate majority, are honest, honorable, and worthy of the public trust or on balance are fearful, obedient, and mostly cowardly jurors of, by, and for the most lying president in American history.


Ronnie Dugger, recipient of the George Polk lifetime journalism award in 2011 and founding editor of the Texas Observer, has published books on Presidents Johnson and Reagan, Hiroshima, universities, and many articles in The Nation, The New Yorker, The Atlantic, Harper’s, New Republic, and other magazines. He has written essays for RSN on Donald Trump since mid-2016. He now is also continuing work on nuclear ethics and is beginning to submit his poems for consideration for publication. ronniedugger@gmail.com
Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.







Tuesday, October 8, 2019

tRUMP etc.






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Thunderous Snowflakes
President Donald Trump on Friday told Fox News that he wants American citizens to show him the same reverence that North Koreans show leader Kim Jong-un. During a surprise interview with “Fox & Friends” on Friday, Trump said he was impressed by the respect that Kim commanded from his people.

“He’s the head of the country — and he’s the strong head, don’t let anyone think anything different,” Trump said during the interview. “He speaks and his people sit up in attention. I want my people to do the same.” Kim Jong-un runs a totalitarian dictatorship in which people face imprisonment or execution if they criticize him. According to human rights watchdog Amnesty International, North Korea has imprisoned an estimated 120,000 people based on political grounds across four separate camps dedicated to imprisoning political dissidents.

The organization further says that people living in these camps are “subjected to forced labor as well as torture and other ill-treatment.” Despite this, the president has praised Kim for being a “very tough” leader who “loves” the people of his country.

When asked by Doocy why he was heaping praise upon Kim despite his country’s atrocious human rights record, Trump replied, “I don’t want to see a nuclear weapon destroy you and your family.”




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Friday, September 27, 2019

James Risen | Donald Trump’s Call With Ukrainian Leader, One Day After Robert Mueller’s Congressional Testimony, Shows the President Is a Brazen Criminal






Reader Supported News
27 September 19

A powerful antidote for victimization is self-determination. A simple manifestation of self-determination is thinking for yourself.
Right now the Main-Stream-Media is laying the groundwork for global warfare for years to come. They blame “terrorism.”
RSN will be more honest, you can be sure. Honesty requires financial independence. That’s easily achieved through public funding. Or not easily, depending.
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26 September 19
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James Risen | Donald Trump’s Call With Ukrainian Leader, One Day After Robert Mueller’s Congressional Testimony, Shows the President Is a Brazen Criminal
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy. (photo: Gleb Garanich/Reuters)
James Risen, The Intercept
Risen writes: "Most people who survive that kind of legal threat would lie low, at least for a while, and try to get back to some level of normalcy. But Trump is a habitual criminal, and his reaction to escaping Mueller’s investigation was to go on yet another crime spree."
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Acting Director of National Intelligence. (photo: Marcus Tappan)
Acting Director of National Intelligence. (photo: Marcus Tappan)


Trump's Spy Chief Joseph Maguire: 'The Whistleblower Did The Right Thing'
Scott Bixby, The Daily Beast
Bixby writes: "Less than two months after taking the reins as the top official within the nation's intelligence community, Joseph Maguire on Thursday faced the grilling of his career, defending the actions of a whistleblower whose newly declassified complaint has prompted an impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump."
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Speaker Nancy Pelosi. (photo: Jim Lo Scalzo/Getty)
Speaker Nancy Pelosi. (photo: Jim Lo Scalzo/Getty)

The Case for Trump's Impeachment: He's Betrayed America With Seven Countries
William Saletan, Slate
Saletan writes: "President Donald Trump should be impeached. Not just for his manipulation of Ukraine, but for his overwhelming pattern of treachery against the United States."
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Protesters call for the impeachment of President Trump during a demonstration in New York City on June 15, 2019. (photo: David Dee Delgado/Getty)
Protesters call for the impeachment of President Trump during a demonstration in New York City on June 15, 2019. (photo: David Dee Delgado/Getty)

Progressive Groups Are Urging Democratic Leaders Not to Take a Vacation Until The President's Impeached
Addy Baird, BuzzFeed News
Baird writes: "Progressive activists are pushing Democrats to cancel an upcoming congressional break after the House began a formalized impeachment inquiry this week."
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Official figures show more than 9,000 clandestine abortions occur in Oaxaca every year. (photo: Jose Luis Plata/Reuters)
Official figures show more than 9,000 clandestine abortions occur in Oaxaca every year. (photo: Jose Luis Plata/Reuters)

When It Comes to Acknowledging Humans’ Role in Climate Change, Oil and Gas Industry Lawyer Says 'That Ship Has Sailed'
Juliet Eilperin, The Washington Post
Eilperin writes: "In a closed-door meeting of oil and gas executives this summer in Colorado Springs, industry lawyer Mark Barron offered a bold proposal: Energy companies must accept that fossil fuels are helping to drive climate change."
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A gas flare from the Shell Chemical LP petroleum refinery illuminates the sky in August in Norco, La. (photo: Drew Angerer/Getty)
A gas flare from the Shell Chemical LP petroleum refinery illuminates the sky in August in Norco, La. (photo: Drew Angerer/Getty)

Mexico's Oaxaca Becomes First State to Decriminalize Abortion
Al Jazeera
Excerpt: "The southern Mexican state of Oaxaca has decriminalized abortion, making it the second jurisdiction in the country to allow terminations for women who are up to 12 weeks pregnant."
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Polar Bear. (photo: iStock)
Polar Bear. (photo: iStock)

Alaska Residents Are Watching Climate Change Warm the Arctic Before Their Very Eyes
Joel Clement, NBC News
Clement writes: "Scientists tell us we have 10 or 11 years to turn around greenhouse gas emissions before we lock in truly catastrophic changes in the subsequent decades, and the Arctic is providing early indications of just how disruptive those changes will be."
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Monday, September 16, 2019

FOCUS: Christopher Dickey | As Saudi Arabia Burns, Trump and Pompeo Are Tested by the World They Have Created





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16 September 19

Donations are far behind for September. We are reaching out for immediate assistance on donations to finish this drive and cover expenses. RSN never wavers in its determination to keep you informed and provide you the tools you need to make a difference. Please stand with Reader Supported News now.
In Peace and Solidarity,
Marc Ash
Founder, Reader Supported News


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16 September 19
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FOCUS: Christopher Dickey | As Saudi Arabia Burns, Trump and Pompeo Are Tested by the World They Have Created
An Aramco employee walks near an oil tank at Saudi Aramco's Ras Tanura oil refinery and oil terminal in Saudi Arabia. (photo: Ahmed Jadallah/Reuters)
Christopher Dickey, The Daily Beast
Dickey writes: "From Saudi Arabia to Afghanistan and North Korea, Trump's tough guy credentials are being tested big time by the world of troubles he has helped to create."
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Wednesday, September 11, 2019

FOCUS: Requiem for a Chickenhawk





Reader Supported News
11 September 19

The Small Donors Are Trying, We Need Matching Funds
The September fundraiser is in deep trouble but the small donors are still checking in and contributing.
We currently have roughly 2K in very small donations for September. Is there someone out there who can match that.
This is important.
Marc Ash
Founder, Reader Supported News
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11 September 19
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FOCUS: Requiem for a Chickenhawk
John Bolton. (photo: Jose Luis Magana/AP)
Branko Marcetic, Jacobin
Excerpt: "John Bolton is a glassy-eyed fanatic who wants to wage war on the entire world. Miraculously and thankfully, his tenure in the Trump White House before being fired by the president was largely a failure."

EXCERPT:  

Though several new fronts did fail to open in the United States government’s ongoing war with the rest of the planet, Bolton’s tenure as Trump’s national security advisor has gone roughly as expected. From the start, he resumed the war against international law and multilateral institutions he had started during his Bush administration days, with the US pulling out of the UN Human Rights Council and Bolton announcing both its de-funding and that of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.
He then threatened to impose sanctions on the International Criminal Court (ICC), ban its judges and prosecutors from US entry, and even criminally prosecute them after the court began investigating alleged US war crimes in Afghanistan. He also closed the Palestine Liberation Organization’s office in Washington for good measure, because it called for an ICC inquiry into Israel.
On Latin American policy, Bolton looked to swing the pendulum way, way back to nineteenth century-era overt imperialism, declaring that he and the rest of the Trump administration were “not afraid to use the word Monroe Doctrine.” As the US continued fighting wars in at least seven different countries, Bolton identified Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua — countries whose total amount of foreign wars numbered zero — as a “Troika of Tyranny” and a “triangle of terror,” and vowed to take “direct action against all three regimes.”

To that end, he cozied up to just-elected Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, another ecocidal bigot who shares Bolton’s goal of collapsing any government that remotely smacks of leftism in the region, and later threatened that the Nicaraguan government’s “days are numbered. 
It was under Bolton that Trump began his attempt to depose Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in earnest, with Bolton leading the way. Bolton spearheaded the ever-tightening rounds of murderous sanctions on the Venezuelan people whose interests he solemnly claimed to be working in, as he and the Trump administration placed increasing pressure on the shambolic Maduro government, hoping to install a neoliberal replacement that would undo the Chavez reforms. At one point, he strolled out of a White House briefing with the words “5,000 troops to Colombia” visible on his notepad, sparking fear of invasion.
Unfortunately, Bolton’s exit demonstrates yet again the utter cluelessness of the liberal establishment, with figures like Rep. Ted Lieu and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer decrying the “chaos” of the White House. Even Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy, typically referred to as  leading liberal voice on foreign policy, responded to the news by confessing he was “shaken by the grave instability of American foreign policy today,” with the “revolving door of US leadership” undermining the “stable American hand” that’s needed.

Nicholas Kristof, one of the New York Times op-ed section’s few nominally liberal voices, professed that while he “often disagreed with Bolton,” he was also “well-informed and willing to push back,” and that his exit would “make it easier for Trump to make nice to Putin,” especially if his next national security advisor is “a yes man.”

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