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PERRIN LOVETT

~ Deo Vindice

PERRIN LOVETT

Tag Archives: Donald Trump

Paul Craig Roberts Explains The Trump Appointment Process

04 Sunday Dec 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ Comments Off on Paul Craig Roberts Explains The Trump Appointment Process

Tags

banksters, Donald Trump, finance, Goldman Sachs, government, Paul Craig Roberts

Last week I sounded off about Trump’s choices for Treasury and another economic position. I hedged my caution on Trump’s unique relationship with the big banks. I said:

Both Trump and Hillary were and are in DEEP with the banksters. Their relationships are, however, a little different.

… Trump is (or was) a borrower, a customer to the banks. …

Many who analyze these choices seriously may come to those same conclusions. They may say that Hillary, had she been elected, would have worked for her masters, whereas Trump will master them. He may view them as enemies and want them closer than his friends, where he can keep an eye on them. Knowing his unusual associations, this may be true. If so, it could be one of the greatest political power plays in American history. If not, then it could be one of the biggest blunders.

I’m honestly hoping for the former while fearing the latter. …

The esteemed Paul Craig Roberts optimistically echoed the sentiment in a broader article on the overall scheme of the appointments. His is expert commentary about insiders as only a former insider can understand it.

Does Trump’s choice of Steve Mnuchin as Treasury Secretary mean that Goldman Sachs will again be in charge of US economic policy? Possibly, but we do not know. We will have to wait and see. Mnuchin left Goldman Sachs 14 years ago. He has been making movies in Hollywood and started his own investment firm. Many people have worked for Goldman Sachs and the New York Banks who have become devastating critics of the banks. Read Nomi Prins’ books and visit Pam Martens website, Wall Street on Parade (http://wallstreetonparade.com ). My sometimes coauthor Dave Kranzler is a former Wall Streeter.

Commentators are jumping to conclusions based on appointees past associations. Mnuchin was an early Trump supporter and chairman of Trump’s finance campaign. He has Wall Street and investment experience. He should be an easy confirmation. For a president-elect under attack, this is important.

Will Mnuchin support Trump’s goal of bringing middle-class jobs back to America? Is Trump himself sincere? We do not know.

What we do know is that Trump attacked the fake “free trade” agreements that have stripped America of middle-class jobs just as did Pat Buchanan and Ross Perot. We know that the Clintons made their fortune as agents of the One Percent, the only ones who have profited from the offshoring of American jobs. Trump’s fortune is not based on jobs offshoring.

Not every billionaire is an oligarch. Trump’s relation to the financial sector is one as a debtor. No doubt Trump and the banks have had unsatisfactory relationships. And Trump says he is a person who enjoys revenge.

goldman-screw

There is sound reason Roberts is regarded as the best commentator in America. Revenge against the financial sector. Now that would be making America great again.

PS: It has come to my attention that some few (likely very small and timid) folks find me “a little scary”. Me. The man of cigars and Christmas ties. A “little”?? I’ve got to step it up a notch, huh?

 

The Central Bankers Begin To Fall

01 Thursday Dec 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

banksters, Donald Trump, economy, Mexico

Well, Trump has ridden us of one banker now. Nice, big one too. Good riddance.

carstens_0

Zero Hedge (one them Russian sites…).

“It was shocking,” Ernesto Revilla, an economist at Banamex, said of Carstens’ departure cited by Reuters. “There were rumors of this, but no one was expecting it to happen so soon, especially with the new Trump scenario.” Revilla added that “Agustin has been a pillar of economic policy in Mexico.” He added that the peso suffered on Thursday because “there is no clear successor at the central bank … There is no one on the top of peoples’ minds of who could take his place,” he added.

According to Reuters, among possible candidates economists named were Alejandro Werner, a former deputy finance minister who holds the top post for the Western Hemisphere at the International Monetary Fund, as well as current deputy central bank governor Manuel Ramos Francia, who is less well known in global financial circles. Former Finance Minister Luis Videgaray, a close ally of President Enrique Pena Nieto, is also seen as a potential replacement, though he is a divisive figure in Mexican politics.

So why the sudden announcement? Among the theories emerging is that Carstens has had enough dealing with the unpredictabilities in the political climate, especially since the Trump election, and wanted out. During the presidential campaign, Carstens had warned that Trump’s election could hit Mexico like a hurricane; he also conducted a stress test for local banks to prepare for the “contingency” of a Trump presidency.

Following Trump’s victory, Carstens followed the crowd in changing his tune, and suggested the next U.S. government’s impact could be less severe. However, today’s announcement confirms he was less than sanguine about a Trump presidency, and the impact it would have on the Mexican currency and economy, and opted out.

Hasta la vista!

A Seemingly Random Cartoon

29 Tuesday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

banksters, Donald Trump, Federal Reserve, politics, Wall Street, Washington

A little cartoon explains so much. Sunday I posted the day’s Pearls Before Swine cartoon. I said it “accurately and easily sums up your relationship with the criminal banking industry.”

nimbus-image-1480256424377

Pastis, 11/27/16.

That was Sunday. Today, just two days later, Donald Trump started to bring the cartoon to life. Maybe. Perhaps. Just replace “your congressman” with “your president-elect” and “C.E.O.” with “Gary Cohn”.

Trump is possibly considering Cohn, chief gangster President of Goldman Sachs, for an appointment to the Federal Reserve. News also comes that Trump will appoint former Sachs huckster employee Steven Mnuchin as Treasury Secretary.

Yes, that ringing is an alarm bell.

These are two of the “banksters” that I routinely call for driving into the sea. Will we see them instead driven into Washington?

Let me play devil’s advocate here for a second. (And I’m not sure which devil I’m advocating for…) Both Trump and Hillary were and are in DEEP with the banksters. Their relationships are, however, a little different.

Hillary works(ed) for Wall Street and in particular for Goldman. She was their go-to gal in D.C. (and Libya, etc.). They paid her and she did as they said. Trump is (or was) a borrower, a customer to the banks. His business strategy was such that by using insanely large debts he controlled the lenders. They did what he said or he would threaten default and bankruptcy. It actually worked out well for both parties.

Many who analyze these choices seriously may come to those same conclusions. They may say that Hillary, had she been elected, would have worked for her masters, whereas Trump will master them. He may view them as enemies and want them closer than his friends, where he can keep an eye on them. Knowing his unusual associations, this may be true. If so, it could be one of the greatest political power plays in American history. If not, then it could be one of the biggest blunders.

I’m honestly hoping for the former while fearing the latter. I certainly support the concept of “make America great again”. However, my American allegiance is to freedom, not to any candidate or politician. I do not support the money changers.

This will develop into the new year. Time will tell.

Terrorists, Not Weak. Got It.

29 Tuesday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns, Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on Terrorists, Not Weak. Got It.

Tags

"Refugees", America, Donald Trump, immigration, ISIS, Ohio State, terrorism, The People

Three minutes before he commenced his nearly lethal attack at Ohio State University yesterday, Abdul “Allah Akbar” Artan confirmed his terrorist status on Facebook.

“I can’t take it anymore. America! Stop interfering with other countries, especially the Muslim Ummah. We are not weak. We are not weak, remember that.”

…

“If you want us Muslims to stop carrying lone wolf attacks, then make peace.”

…

“We will not let you sleep unless you give peace to the Muslims.”

The joke is on Abdul on his slimy, useless cohort. So many Americans are so deeply asleep as to border on the comatose. Still, they talk in their sleep: “that poor black boy;” “sad he was a Muslim (not that he tried to kill people); “one of us … family … don’t you dare condemn him;” etc.

However, I must admit Abdul was right about a few things. We must stop interfering in places where we don’t belong. I’ve said that again and again. Second, and more importantly, we must bring peace to the Muslims. The Muslims – like Abdul – in America on missions from ISIS. We must give them peace by immediately repatriating them back to Somalia, Syria, etc. That, or Abdul them on the sidewalk. One way or the other. Peace.

Of course, such would be a complete reversal of current policy. Since 9/11/2001, nearly 100,000 Muslims have been admitted to the U.S. (Abdul included) just from Somalia. It has been a hobby project of both the Bush and Obama administrations.

somali-refugeetable1

CNS.

Yes, they’re already booking them for next year.

And the vetting and security procedure for incoming Somalis is the most comprehensive in the world. It has to be due to the massive corruption in the region (which apparently must border on D.C.). Incredibly, even that level of scrutiny is useless. Yesterday demonstrated that … again.

20110707_somali_terrorist

Marching to a town or college near you. Family Security Matters.

If the best security isn’t good enough, then the flow must be halted. As we cannot trust existing Somali entrants, then they must all go back.

Earlier in his campaign, Trump said he got all of this. That was a large part of what got him elected. Now he must act. And act fast and thoroughly. If not, then he will (soon) become #notmypresident. Abdication of the obvious and the imperative by government leaves only We, the people.

No, the terrorists are definitely not weak. Neither are we.

Faithful Execution: Trump, The Presidency, And The Constitution

25 Friday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ Comments Off on Faithful Execution: Trump, The Presidency, And The Constitution

Tags

America, Constitution, Donald Trump, law, Natural Law, President, Saint Thomas Aquinas

Barring a fluke in next month’s presidential election (the real one), Donald Trump will assume office in January. Many are still upset following the show election this month. I’d be upset if I were Trump. The man is walking into a 240-year-old mess.

Lawrence Vance offered a little advice to Donald on what NOT to do once he’s in office. He begins with the Constitutional duties and powers of a president:

Section 2.

The President shall be commander in chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the militia of the several states, when called into the actual service of the United States; he may require the opinion, in writing, of the principal officer in each of the executive departments, upon any subject relating to the duties of their respective offices, and he shall have power to grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States, except in cases of impeachment.

He shall have power, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, to make treaties, provided two thirds of the Senators present concur; and he shall nominate, and by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, shall appoint ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, judges of the Supreme Court, and all other officers of the United States, whose appointments are not herein otherwise provided for, and which shall be established by law: but the Congress may by law vest the appointment of such inferior officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the courts of law, or in the heads of departments.

The President shall have power to fill up all vacancies that may happen during the recess of the Senate, by granting commissions which shall expire at the end of their next session.

Section 3.

He shall from time to time give to the Congress information of the state of the union, and recommend to their consideration such measures as he shall judge necessary and expedient; he may, on extraordinary occasions, convene both Houses, or either of them, and in case of disagreement between them, with respect to the time of adjournment, he may adjourn them to such time as he shall think proper; he shall receive ambassadors and other public ministers; he shall take care that the laws be faithfully executed, and shall commission all the officers of the United States.

That’s from Article II of the Constitution. That’s all the president has to do. Really, if we had honest government, that would be all he could do. We do not, so the executive has expanded its reach far and wide.

I’ll pay attention to the second to last part of the foregoing, faithfully executing the laws. That’s one of the areas where real Constitutional law and general governance that gets murky. To begin with, there are way too many federal laws to consider executing. Most have no fidelity to or grounding it the Constitution (see Article I). People have either forgotten the place of the laws or they have accepted dictatorial rule from Washington. The result is the same either way.

Trump could begin to turn things around, to reverse a little of the statism, to “make America great again”. He could do this, partially, by ignoring (not executing) illegal laws, laws not based on explicit Constitutional authority.

article2

Foundation Truths.

Vance alludes to that concept in his second to last “don’t”: “Don’t enforce unjust federal laws.” Saint Thomas Aquinas reminded us that an unjust law is no law at all. Federal laws, to be positively just, must accord with the limits of the Constitution. The Constitution, in turn, is just to the extent it is in harmony with Natural Law.

There hasn’t been a lot of harmony of late – natural, positive, or otherwise. Trump can change that if he faithfully executes the laws, if he executes the laws that are faithful to the Constitution.

This is asking or hoping for a lot. Praying for an impossibility perhaps. Time will tell.

Aiding, Abetting, And Harboring: A Coming Education?

21 Monday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

America, college, crime, Donald Trump, education, Georgia, immigration, law

Donald Trump was elected, partly, to avert a civil war. And part of his appeal was securing America’s borders and repatriating illegal aliens and terrorists. People it seems tire of criminals entering the country to compete for scarce jobs and to loot the welfare office. They are incensed by hoards of “refugees” of a totally alien culture bent on turning Omaha into Paris or, worse, Damascus. “Build the wall!,” they chanted at rally after rally.

Now that Trump is headed for the highest office, it remains to be seen if he will follow through. One sign that he might do so is his pick for Attorney General: Alabama Senator Jeff Sessions. Under existing law Trump and Sessions will have great power to tame immigration.

The other side refuses to lie down, even after their electoral beating this month. Their tenacity is to be commended. Like their criminal friends and constituents, their leaders have vowed to evade the law. The mayors of “sanctuary cities” across the nation declare they will allow illegal immigrants to stay in spite of the coming crackdown. Sessions may have a harsh answer for them.

The Senator has indicated he may well use his coming authority to strip said cities of federal funding. He also has a more drastic option at his disposal (or, he will).

8 U.S.C. § 1324 makes aiding, abetting, and harboring illegal aliens a felony:

Any person who …

knowing or in reckless disregard of the fact that an alien has come to, entered, or remains in the United States in violation of law, conceals, harbors, or shields from detection, or attempts to conceal, harbor, or shield from detection, such alien in any place, including any building or any means of transportation …

[Or who] aids or abets the commission of any of the preceding acts,
shall be punished…

in the case of a violation of subparagraph (A)(ii), (iii), (iv), or (v)(II), be fined under title 18, imprisoned not more than 5 years, or both…

Being a mayor or city official is not an exemption to “any person” as contemplated by the law. And certain circumstances elevate some violations to 20-year felony status.

This law is currently used as infrequently as the general prohibition against illegal entries (probably much less – if at all). That may change.

The change might also affect colleges and universities, many of which allow illegal aliens not only to attend classes, but to do so at discounted tuition rates. This is a slap in the face to legal immigrants, native citizens, taxpayers, and the rule of law.

Two schools in Georgia recently contemplated caving to criminal protesters and to allowing illegals cheap access to what passes for education (not a guarantee for anyone). Numerous administrators and faculty members at the schools support the idea – probably because they stand to gain financially from the enrollments (the law and the taxpayers tossed aside).

25a24b66-4178-4fa5-b212-336e173be39e

And our money? And our laws? And our civilization? Townhall.

Perhaps they will reconsider their positions in the face of possible “harboring” prosecutions. If not, they could have five good years during which to reflect.

Fed Up With The Fed

16 Wednesday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ Comments Off on Fed Up With The Fed

Tags

banksters, Donald Trump, economy, Federal Reserve

Rumors circulate that Janet Yellen’s days as chairman of the Federal Reserve cartel are numbered. Bloomberg and Narayana Kocherlakota ran an article yesterday about central bank uncertainty under the Trump administration. It’s worth noting that the author is an insider, being a former Fed branch president.

Research has documented that central banks around the world have been better able to control inflation if they enjoy independence from elected officials. The election of Donald Trump seems like a good time to remind ourselves that, historically, the executive branch has presented the greatest threat to the independence of the U.S. Federal Reserve.

Since its founding in 1913, the Fed has experienced two big failures of independence…

Failures of independence. Since 1913 the Fed has been a colossal and constant failure for us though a smashing success for itself and its owners. We’d be much better off without it.

One hopes Trump will dramatically shake things up. Short of abolishing the syndicate and driving its stakeholders into the sea, that might be the best that could happen. The worst case is another bout of interference with independence. Yes, that might mean some bad things. Different bad things, rather – different from the usual badness.

20140919_sta1

Zero Hedge.

With all the potential for “bad” one wonders how on Earth we made it to 1913 without this system. That’s what I’m yellen ’bout.

Burn it down!

Good For The Goose, Good For The Slander

12 Saturday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in News and Notes

≈ Comments Off on Good For The Goose, Good For The Slander

Tags

Donald Trump, honesty, New York Times, taxes

All this week I’ve been waiting on someone to rehash the issue of Trump’s taxes. The left it seems is too busy hating white people, crying wolf, and just crying. So I’ll bring it up again.

On October 1st the New York Times ran a story about Trump’s 1995 tax-deferring loss of $916 Million.

The provision, known as net operating loss, or N.O.L., allows a dizzying array of deductions, business expenses, real estate depreciation, losses from the sale of business assets and even operating losses to flow from the balance sheets of those partnerships, limited liability companies and S corporations onto the personal tax returns of men like Mr. Trump. In turn, those losses can be used to cancel out an equivalent amount of taxable income from, say, book royalties or branding deals.

Disappointed no New York lawyers or accountants would tell them anything except Trump followed the law, the Times went so far as to track down Trump’s 80 year old former accountant in Florida.

Now, thanks to Mr. Trump’s 1995 tax records, the degree to which he spun all those years of red ink into tax write-off gold may finally be apparent.

Mr. Mitnick, the lawyer and accountant, was the person Mr. Trump leaned on most to do the spinning. Mr. Mitnick worked for a small Long Island accounting firm that specialized in handling tax issues for wealthy New York real estate families. He had long handled tax matters for Mr. Trump’s father, Fred C. Trump, and he said he began doing Donald Trump’s taxes after Mr. Trump turned 18.

…

Mr. Mitnick, though, said there were times when even he, for all his years helping wealthy New Yorkers navigate the tax code, found it difficult to face the incongruity of his work for Mr. Trump. He felt keenly aware that Mr. Trump was living a life of unimaginable luxury thanks in part to Mr. Mitnick’s ability to relieve him of the burden of paying taxes like everyone else.

“Here the guy was building incredible net worth and not paying tax on it,” he said.

The incongruity of it all. He spun red ink into write-off gold. Like Rumpelstiltskin. But unlike old Rumpel, Trump got to keep the baby – he got a life of luxury, building wealth without paying taxes.

6a00d8357f3f2969e2015435c8b0e8970c

Rescue Post.

One suspects the Times crew would love to call this activity a felon if they could. Well, at least as far as Trump is concerned, they would. When the same provision might be used by anyone connected to the Clinton Machine, the Times is all for it. They even recommend it. Or they did, on May 10th, at the end of a story about Hillary’s son-in-law losing 90% of his investors’ money.

In letters to investors in 2014, Mr. Mezvinsky and his partners expressed confidence that Greece would soon be on the path to a “sustainable recovery.” But by the end of that year, Eaglevale’s leaders began to acknowledge that their perspective on the situation in Greece may have been wrong. The fund had earlier stopped taking in new money.

The one silver lining for the fund’s investors from all of this is that they will have a somewhat larger tax loss on investments to claim next year.

Unbelievable. No, wait, it’s the Times. Completely believable. What was a silver lining for the Clinton set in May became a mortal sin for Trump just five months later.

This sort of blind inconsistency is part of the reason why they never saw Trump coming. Arthur O. Sulzberger Jr. says the Old Grey Hag will now rededicate itself to reporting honestly. How? More importantly, who cares?

Why Trump Won

12 Saturday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

"Civil" War, America, Donald Trump, economy, election, politics

Facebook SJWs and campus protesters have spent the latter half of this week wringing their hands and wondering how half the country can be so racist, sexist, homophobic, and anti-everything that is anti-American as to elect Trump over the chosen Globalist Queen, Hillary Clinton. Karl Denninger masterfully answered the collective concern in an article today at Market Ticker. One, even one aware of the problems in the system, wonders how he was able to pack so much truth into one column:

Ever drive through small town America?

Hell, how about “not-so-small-town” America?

Many of these towns look like something out of a WWI or WWII European war movie. There was one factory or maybe two, but now it sits empty, weeds growing out of the parking lot as high as your head, all the windows are broken out and the roof has caved in. Over on the outskirts there’s a Walmart that pays $9/hour, but only offers 20 hours/week. The factory paid $30/hour, full-time, plus benefits and food, power, medicine and beer cost half of what it does now. 90% of what formerly were little diners and shops in the “center” of the town, which might have one actual traffic light, are gone — boarded up and often literally falling apart. There might be one bank left, a branch of a big national chain, and maybe an antique store. Maybe. All the factory jobs left for China and Mexico and everything else died when the middle-class incomes to support them disappeared. We did that as a nation with our “progressive” and “global” agenda driven by the 50%+1 that live in the closest big city 200 miles away.

The locals who used to work in the fields within 10 or 20 miles from that town are all unemployed too. Why? Because the illegal Mexicans came and we refused to throw them out. They work for a few bucks a day in cash, no taxes, no unemployment, no nothing. No American can live on that; the embedded cost of just trying to stay alive would leave you with zero. But the Mexicans work hard and then sleep 10 to a single-room apartment, which incidentally is a total ****hole as you’d expect given that density of occupation. They don’t care; it’s better than what they had in Mexico, you see, and they can Western Union home some of the money. This is the face of “immigration”, mostly illegal, that really exists in this country. They brought their third-world ****hole here and while it’s a little bit better than what they had in the process of doing it they dragged us into the gutter with them.

The people who lived in that town did and those who are still there do go to church every weekend, and some go again during the week, usually on Wednesday. There’s usually one, sometimes two churches. Every one of them has the word “God” or “Christ” in the name on the front. They mean it when it comes to their faith and in addition that’s where all the local people shake hands, exchange chit-chat on the last week and, for younger people, it’s where they meet one another. You know, girls and boys. Yeah. Faith is real there, you see, and it’s Christian. But from your point of view that’s deplorable and that “those people” don’t like the idea of making a wedding cake for a gay marriage is deserving of a federal lawsuit and loss of the bakery (which is, as a result, now closed — putting yet more people out of work.) The people who live in these towns don’t see it as a civil rights matter but rather as attacking God.

What was left after the factory was displaced isn’t enough to run a “service economy”, which is why it never showed up there and the old business buildings are all boarded up. Nobody can afford $8 lattes on a $9/hour wage for 20 hours a week and nobody would want them if they could. There’s probably a McDonalds on the outskirts, and a couple of self-serve gas stations with a convenience store. It sells cheap beer and lots of it to the locals who have nothing to do but drink and then go to church and pray for forgiveness for last night’s 12 pack. None of the jobs at any of these places, except maybe the store manager, makes more than $9/hour and Obamacare has forced all the regular workers down to 20 hours a week on top of it. Try living on $180/week gross sometime — before FICA and Medicare is taken out, never mind gas for the car and the rapidly-escalating car insurance bill — and you might understand. Yes, I know the car is 15 years old and runs like crap. What do you expect on under $1,000/month of income?

This is what 40 years of sending jobs overseas with “trade deals” did. It’s what Amazon did. It’s what Walmart and its Chinese supply line did. It’s what “progressive America” did, and then to add insult to injury the teachers in the public schools tell all the kids that Mommy and Daddy are bad people and hate both the planet and their own kids because they don’t drive a $30,000 Prius or a $60,000 Tesla.

This is everywhere in rural America. Get in your car and out of your comfort zone some time and you’ll see it. It’s not far from wherever you are. I’ve driven through dozens of these formerly-alive places in the last six months — every one of them dead today, but full of real people. I never met one such person that was a racist, xenophobic *******, but they’re not very happy, and the people they’re unhappy with are those very same folks you wanted to keep in office in Washington DC.

Karl also points out that the “red” folks out in real America still produce all of the food and power for their betters, the “blue” bed-wetters on the coasts and in the cities. Seeing as how nobody cares about them, what if they suddenly shut off the flow? Answer: the blueies would eat each other. Then, the survivors would try to come rampaging into the countryside to loot and pillage. But, and I love this, Karl points out: “Mr. Gang Banger against Mr. Deer Hunter isn’t a very fair fight, when you get down to it.”

4dfd714525ccd79c58b08f4bbef3a629.jpg

Wall St. and K St. have waged near-total war on Main St. Pinterest.

The snowflakes don’t want to consider any of this. The thugs either can’t consider it or they don’t care. Real Americans do care – even about the welfare of those who hate them – and they do not like the prospects. Funny.

It was that caring, that desire to avert civil war, coupled with self-preservation, that drove their electoral choice. And Trump must remember who elected him and why. Others might also want to figure this out. Fortunately if isn’t very hard.

A Frankly Embarrassing Protest

10 Thursday Nov 2016

Posted by perrinlovett in News and Notes

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Athens, college, Donald Trump, protests, students, UGA

Peaceful protest is part of the American political fabric. I saw some pro-Trump folks protesting Hillary near my home last weekend. Last night anti-Trump protesters gathered on 5th Avenue in New York. Sometimes people get a little carried away but overall it’s a positive action regardless of cause.

Last night several students gathered for a anti-Trump protest at the UGA Arch.

58240f41c31bb-image

Henry Taylor / The Red & Black.

I applaud these young people for bravely making their voices heard while others around the country demanded a day off to cry. Wisdom, Justice, and Moderation, that. Fortitude too.

The anti-Trump demonstrators got ahold of a plastic Trump flag or sign and lit fire to it. The police were nearby and as the flame got smaller they put it out with a cup of water.

They put the protest down with a coffee cup full of water…

Whaaa? Come on, Athens! make us proud. No arrests. No property damage. A cup of water? What kind of weakness is this? Back when UGA used to win football games, fans made considerably more forceful statements at hotels and condos all while drunk and dead tired.

pl11111271-16oz_450ml_disposable_paper_coffee_cups_single_wall_recyclable

Disposable Paper Coffee Cups.

The students of the University of Georgia can do better than this. I hope. I haven’t had boots on campus in a while so things may have changed. I’ll say no more lest I hurt some feelings. Go Dawgs!

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