This isn’t going to be a very adult post, so apologies for that, and it also isn’t going to be very polite about the President, whoever out of these two it is, but…
(whispers)
Has Donald Trump got a little penis on his neck? Look at it.
Atomic Energy Lab from 1950 with actual U-238 pellets!
#GiftsThatShouldNeverBeGifted
#HashTagGames
#12DaysOfChristmas
Just released an update for my YouTube Copy Clean URL extension! 🛠️ Removes tracking from links for cleaner sharing. v2.3.1 includes a new settings UI for an improved experience. Check it out and download here: github.com/RaspberryKitty1/You…
#YouTube #Extension #Tech #CleanURLs #Privacy #YouTubeTools #OpenSource #BrowserExtension #Update #WebTools #Coding #DevLife #TechUpdate #FOSS #Productivity #Firefox #Chrome #Chromium
bsky.app/profile/harrylitman.bsky.social/post/3lducub2khs2p
“Loudermilk’s referral is only the potential first step in a full-feature Orwellian nightmare that Trump and company likely have in store for those they consider disloyal.” open.substack.com/pub/harrylit…
bsky.app/profile/monsterologist.bsky.social/post/3lducaizzvk2w
Today was big cookie day. Got to break out my weird cookie cutters for the pepparkakor. None of these cookies are going to make it home with me. My family are locusts.
Chuck Darwin
in reply to Chuck Darwin • • •Even before taking office, Trump has caused disruption by threatening to impose tariffs on the country’s closest neighbours,
Mexico and Canada,
where his rhetoric has provoked shockwaves.
The prime minister of Canada, Justin Trudeau, has faced calls to resign after being accused of failing to take a tough enough line,
as Trump has taunted him by calling the country “a state” and Trudeau its “governor”.
Strikingly, Trump has chosen relatively experienced figures as ambassadors to both countries.
Pete Hoekstra, who served as ambassador to the Netherlands in his first presidency
– and a former chair of the House of Representatives’ intelligence committee
– has been tapped as ambassador to Ottawa.
For Mexico, the president-elect has nominated Ron Johnson,
a former CIA officer who was previously ambassador to El Salvador.
Indeed, not every Trump ambassadorial nominee stands out as a potential embarrassment.
George Glass, an investment banker who was formerly ambassador to Portugal and
... show moreEven before taking office, Trump has caused disruption by threatening to impose tariffs on the country’s closest neighbours,
Mexico and Canada,
where his rhetoric has provoked shockwaves.
The prime minister of Canada, Justin Trudeau, has faced calls to resign after being accused of failing to take a tough enough line,
as Trump has taunted him by calling the country “a state” and Trudeau its “governor”.
Strikingly, Trump has chosen relatively experienced figures as ambassadors to both countries.
Pete Hoekstra, who served as ambassador to the Netherlands in his first presidency
– and a former chair of the House of Representatives’ intelligence committee
– has been tapped as ambassador to Ottawa.
For Mexico, the president-elect has nominated Ron Johnson,
a former CIA officer who was previously ambassador to El Salvador.
Indeed, not every Trump ambassadorial nominee stands out as a potential embarrassment.
George Glass, an investment banker who was formerly ambassador to Portugal and known for his anti-China stance,
has been nominated as ambassador to Japan.
For China, the president-elect has chosen David Perdue, a former Republican senator for Georgia.
Yet, the overall quality is the worst ever, according to Jett
– who singled out Mike Huckabee, the nominee for ambassador to Israel as the poorest pick.
Huckabee, an avowed Christian Zionist, has denied that the West Bank is under military occupation
– a status broadly recognised by the international community
– and seems an unlikely interlocutor for peace between the Israelis and Palestinians.
“These outrageously bad appointments are a feature of every president,” said Jett,
a former ambassador to Mozambique and Peru.
“But what’s amazing about Trump is that it’s almost like,
‘OK, who are the worst people we can come up with?’
We seem to be going out of our way to prove we are not a serious country.”
Compounding the problem, he said, is the US practice of, in effect,
selling the most prestigious ambassadorships in return for campaign contributions
– a custom that appears open to flagrant abuse given Trump’s transactional nature.
Chuck Darwin
in reply to Chuck Darwin • • •Under a long-running but often flouted convention
– supposedly enshrined under a 1980 act of Congress
– 70% of US ambassadorial posts should go to career diplomats,
with no more than 30% reserved for “political” appointees from outside the diplomatic corps.
The percentage of “political” ambassadors in Trump’s first administration soared to 46%
– a figure Jett predicted would be surpassed in his forthcoming term.
Laura Kennedy, a former career ambassador who served under both Republican and Democratic administrations,
said the onus is on the Senate to scrutinise nominees and reject those who are obviously unfit.
“What’s really crucial and has always been part of this business, is the Senate gives advice and consent,” she said.
“My one real ask is that the Senate take its responsibility seriously, evaluate each candidate on its merits, and not be shy about withholding consent.”
Yet the Senate has not formally rejected an ambassadorial candidate since the 19th ce
... show moreUnder a long-running but often flouted convention
– supposedly enshrined under a 1980 act of Congress
– 70% of US ambassadorial posts should go to career diplomats,
with no more than 30% reserved for “political” appointees from outside the diplomatic corps.
The percentage of “political” ambassadors in Trump’s first administration soared to 46%
– a figure Jett predicted would be surpassed in his forthcoming term.
Laura Kennedy, a former career ambassador who served under both Republican and Democratic administrations,
said the onus is on the Senate to scrutinise nominees and reject those who are obviously unfit.
“What’s really crucial and has always been part of this business, is the Senate gives advice and consent,” she said.
“My one real ask is that the Senate take its responsibility seriously, evaluate each candidate on its merits, and not be shy about withholding consent.”
Yet the Senate has not formally rejected an ambassadorial candidate since the 19th century,
although senators commonly deploy informal delaying tactics to thwart nominees
- as has happened with several of Biden’s choices.
But Joe Cirincione, a veteran Washington foreign policy analyst, dismissed the chances of a Senate pushback
and instead condemned the Democrats
– and particularly Biden
– for failing to raise the alarm.
“We have a diplomatic clown car that’s about to be rolling up at the Capitol with all these idiots waiting to be confirmed
– but where’s the outrage?” he said.
“Democrats have just rolled on their belly for the alpha dog
– and Biden has disappeared.
He should be issuing a warning.
Every single one of these should be met with a firm critique that this is not acceptable.
“Both Republicans and Democrats are abandoning their traditional oversight role.
They’re consenting in advance without any rigorous review of Trump’s nominees.”
theguardian.com/us-news/2024/d…
Chuck Darwin reshared this.
Heretical_i
in reply to Chuck Darwin • • •Yeah well the US diplo scum got us in the mess ... Like Gaza Syria Libya Iraq Afghanistan... and most of the career diplos were evicted long before trump.. H Clinton even got one career diplo killed when he found out the benghazi libya facility was an islamist training hq. Now her scumbag islamists are lording over syria and ethnically cleansing alewhites (first... Kurds will die shortly)
You seem to have an ahistoric pov and trumpderangementsyndrome dude. Get over urself.
George Baily
in reply to Chuck Darwin • • •