Neo-Nazis
have risen to organisational prominence in Australia lately. If
"authorities" remain this poorly informed, they won't be doing much to
stop them.
While
some problems are ignored, politicians generally know what’s really
important: anything liable to cost them votes. I’d suggest that cost of
living, climate change and housing are all problems that we can agree
about. The solutions, of course, are a bit harder, but part of the
reason is that some of them would not only challenge vested interests,
but they might actually work! ( ROSSLEIGH
Donald Trump is not adjusting to his new political environment very well. According to friends and advisers who spoke to The Washington Post,
he’s “complaining relentlessly and asking friends about how his
campaign is performing.” He’s apparently also angry that all the
attention has been on Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris’ stunning entrance into the campaign.
“It’s unfair that I beat him and now I have to beat her, too,” Trump
reportedly whined to one ally over the weekend. He’s also mad, the Post
reports, about “the media focus on his campaign staff, suggesting to
others that his advisers get too much credit.”
It’s not helping Trump’s mood that Harris and her new running mate,
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, have taken the crowd size trophy away from him.
Wednesday’s rally in Detroit drew about 15,000 people and the campaign announced it raised $36 million in the first 24 hours after the Walz pick. Trump is definitely stewing over that.
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Friends,
Today, Trump held an hourlong news conference in the main room at
Mar-a-Lago. He insulted Kamala Harris’s intelligence, lied about the
state of the U.S. economy, and claimed the country would be in mortal
danger if he didn’t win the election.
In other words, the usual Trump torrent of lies and insults.
But what got my attention was his description of his departure from
the White House as a “peaceful” transfer of power, his insistence that
the group that mounted the assault on the Capitol was relatively small,
and his boast that attendance at his January 6 rally preceding the
assault was larger than the crowd Martin Luther King Jr. drew on the
National Mall for his “I Have a Dream” speech.
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