Tuesday, March 20, 2018

Trump news on Youtube Mar 21 2018

President Trump Is About To Destroy Robert Mueller's Career

As special counsel, Robert Mueller has taken the frivolous Russia investigation as his

crusade to take down Donald Trump.

Mueller has become a hero to Democrats who are trying to take down the President.

But with one new development, Trump is about to destroy Robert Mueller's career.

Robert Mueller has been trying to go after President Trump in any way he can.But so far,

Trump has refused to interview directly with him.

That could quickly change.

President Trump is currently speaking with his lawyers and is gaming out possible questions

that could come from Mueller.

As someone who refuses to play by the usual presidential playbook, Trump needs to be careful

talking to Mueller, who will be carefully attempting to outsmart the President.

But with his lawyers on his side, and with the tact that the President has, any investigation

will likely prove nothing more than the fact there was no collusion with Russia, and that

Mueller is nothing more than a weapon of the Democrats.

The job of President Trump's lawyer is to ensure the President is ready for the meeting.

While they have advised against having a meeting with Mueller in the past, Trump is expected

to meet with him anyway.

As reported by Politico:

President donald trump's lawyers are gaming out possible questions and answers for a potential

interview with special counsel robert mueller, according to two people familiar with the

strategy.

The preparations reflect an understanding that negotiations with the lead russia investigator,

which have been ongoing since january, will eventually culminate in a sit-down meeting

between mueller and the president.

One source said the discussions about the terms of a possible interview may soon even

reach a conclusion.

"I don't think it's months and months out.

I don't think it's in a week," said the person familiar with the negotiations.

"but I think it's moving toward closure."

But even given the high stakes of a potential meeting with mueller, trump's lawyers face

a challenge in prepping a president who resists following scripts and who has deep trust in

his own improvisational instincts.

Trump has said he is eager to meet with Mueller.

"I'm looking forward to it, actually," he told reporters in the white house on jan.

24, adding that his lawyers had informed him the interview could happen in "about two

to three weeks."

but his attorneys quickly ratcheted back his remarks, saying he was "speaking hurriedly"

before departing for a European trip, and they have since addressed the subject cautiously."

When President Trump is to meet with Robert Mueller, the President is going to have a

great opportunity to directly confront the man that has been propagating the theory he

colluded with Russia during the 2016 investigation.

Democrats have been citing Mueller as their hope to impeach the President.

A meeting between the two of them will either destroy their hopes or create more Russia

collusion speculation.

It all depends on how President Trump handles the meeting.

Do you think that President Trump should interview with Robert Mueller?

Let us know your thoughts in the comments section below.

For more infomation >> President Trump Is About To Destroy Robert Mueller's Career - Duration: 3:31.

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HARDBALL WITH CHRIS MATTHEWS: Trump hires lawyer who pushed conspiracy theories against DOJ - Duration: 13:49.

For more infomation >> HARDBALL WITH CHRIS MATTHEWS: Trump hires lawyer who pushed conspiracy theories against DOJ - Duration: 13:49.

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Liberals FREAK As Trump Calls Putin To Congratulate Him, Forget 1 Important Detail - Duration: 4:14.

Liberals FREAK As Trump Calls Putin To Congratulate Him, Forget 1 Important Detail

Liberals and the mainstream media are freaking out after President Donald Trump called Vladimir

Putin to congratulate him on his recent victory in the Russian presidential election.

There's just one important detail that they're ignoring, and you won't want to miss it.

According to Daily Caller, President Donald Trump called Vladimir Putin on Tuesday, March

20, 2018, to congratulate him on his reelection victory and said he intends to meet with Putin

to discuss important matters, including an "arms race" that is getting "out of

control."

Trump spoke about his call at a press conference in the White House as he sat next to Saudi

Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman.

Trump said he congratulated Putin during the call.

"I had a call with President Putin and congratulated him on the victory, his electoral victory,"

Trump said.

"The call also had to do with the fact that we will probably get together in the not too

distant future so that we can discuss arms.

We can discuss the arms race, as you know he made the statement that, 'Being in an

arms race is not a great thing.'

That was right after the election, one of the first statements he made," Trump continued.

"And we are spending 700 billion dollars this year on our military and a lot of it

is that we are going to remain stronger than any other nation in the world by far.

We had a very good call and I suspect that we'll probably be meeting in the not too

distant future to discuss the arms race which is getting out of control.

But we will never allow anybody to have anything even close to what we have, and also to discuss

Ukraine and Syria and North Korea and various other things.

So I think probably we'll be seeing President Putin in the not too distant future," Trump

added.

After President Donald Trump's statement in regard to his call to Vladimir Putin, the

liberal media and a Democratic congressman freaked out for no reason at all.

In fact, they all conveniently forgot that former President Barack Obama did the same

thing when he was in office.

They didn't seem to mind it when Obama did it.

One of the liberal hacks who couldn't contain himself is CNN's, Zachary Cohen, who indicated

that Trump's call to Putin represented some kind of dictatorial link.

He said, "Both Trump and Kim Jong Un have now congratulated Putin on his election win."Edward-Isaac

Dovere from The Washington Post joined in the needless hysteria with this dramatic tweet.

He said, "The Kremlin put out its summary of Putin's phone call with Trump before

the White House did, saying that Trump congratulated Putin on winning his authoritarian 'election.'"Congressman

Ruben Gallego (D-AZ) also couldn't resist jumping on board the crazy train with his

own tweet.

He said, "Putin's running an authoritarian regime.

Trump just congratulated him on his 're-election.'"During his fourth year in office, Obama called Russian

President-elect and Prime Minister Putin to congratulate him on his recent victory in

the 2012 Russian Presidential election.

I think it's a little hypocritical for the mainstream media and the liberal world to

freak out over Trump's congratulatory call to Putin.

It's so ironic how these liberal degenerates praised Obama for doing the exact same thing

when he was in office but they rush to condemn Trump.

In addition, Democrats and liberals as a whole accused Trump of not being able to act in

a "presidential" manner before he was elected.

I'd say that Trump is doing a phenomenal job of not just acting "presidential"

but of keeping his promises to millions of American patriots.

Leave it to Democrats and their friends in the mainstream media to carry the flag of

overreaction into any situation.

By acting so ridiculously, liberals only continue to discredit themselves in the eyes of the

American public.

It's about time for someone on that side of the aisle to suggest using common sense.

For more infomation >> Liberals FREAK As Trump Calls Putin To Congratulate Him, Forget 1 Important Detail - Duration: 4:14.

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Obama's Former General Busted In Outlandish Plot To Take Out Trump! - Duration: 4:54.

For more infomation >> Obama's Former General Busted In Outlandish Plot To Take Out Trump! - Duration: 4:54.

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Global disorder and distrust - Trump as a symptom - Duration: 1:28:30.

hello good morning everybody my name is Ole Jacob Sending it's a pleasure to

welcome you all here to this event I should remind everybody that the event

is streamed so my colleague Morten Bøås and I decided just before

Christmas that we wanted to have a seminar series on the issue of distrust

and global disorder and developments in in world politics Morten had an event

here on the Middle East in January today we are fortunate to have Dan Drezner

from Tufts University then we will have a series of seminars in May we'll have

an event on China in June on Russia and later on in the fall on on European

politics now first of all welcome so much Dan Drezner is professor at Tufts

the author of many many books and also regular contributed to the Washington

Post and let me before I kick up with the first question we will start with a

focus on American politics then we will scale up a little bit to talk about the

implications of political developments in the u.s. for u.s. foreign policy and

then turn to the issue of the effects of that on global governance and global

order if we could get the I have a graph that I want to show as a to segue into

the first question so this is from Pew Research that demonstrates the or shows

the the level of trust in the u.s. in in the US government and and what is

interesting here is that one may argue that it tracks basically economic

development so steady economic growth in the 1990s on the Clinton you see there

is an increase in trust we will deal with this

graph perhaps a little bit later but then you see a steady decline from Bush

jr. under Obama continues on the Trump now this raises a question of the

election of Donald Trump as a symptom rather than a course so is this a

structural phenomenon and what are the underlying factors that produces that

structural phenomenon or is it perhaps cyclical there have been debates in the

US as it has been in European countries that are quite similar to the ones that

we are experiencing today where there is a lack of trust with various populist

mobilization so the first question basically to you that is what do you see

as the structural factors and possibly also triggering factors in the political

situation that we now have in in the u.s. so a few things before I answer

that first question first thank you very much totally a cover for having me come

I would also like to thank the former Norwegian Justice Minister for stepping

down and thereby not having you all check your phones about whether or not

there was going to be a government by the end of this talk the other thing

that and I can't stress this enough this is possibly the most important thing you

need to understand about the United States right now which is that occupied

season two just dropped on Netflix last week so I haven't watched all of it so

no spoilers please if you haven't seen it now that said back to the graph I

think you can argue that on the one hand it is cyclical

but cyclical implies you know when we talk cycles we often talk about in the

form of years and really this is a kind of cycle where you're talking almost

centuries or at least many many decades which is you know if you read books like

Richard Hofstadter's anti-intellectualism in American Life

a lot of people misinterpret that book and assume that what the book is arguing

is that there's this long streak of anti-intellectualism in the United

States the United States is never embraced intellectuals or or trusted

elites and that's not what Hofstetter is in that book what Hofstadter is saying

in that book is that there is a cycle in fact that there have been periods where

in fact Americans put great trust in elites think the Progressive Era

for example indeed the Progressive Era was in many ways a reaction to the idea

that American government had gotten too corrupt and that plutocrats had too much

power and so on and so forth but on the other hand they're all are

also these counter waves of rejection of elites and I think that's what we've

seeing and in that sense I completely agree that the Donald Trump is much more

a symptom rather than a cause of the the erosion of trust in institutions in the

United States as to why that erosion of trust I think they're to be fair valid

reasons for that in some ways you can argue that that too much trust in elites

is equally problematic it's not a coincidence that the the sort of spike

in trust starts or is it the peak is in the mid-60s and then in the next decade

after that you have the wider escalation of the Vietnam War and then the

Watergate scandal so you know those twin scandals are not you know nothing and

you would expect there to be a decline of trust in the best and the brightest

as it were after shocks like that and then you know again you do see it spike

again after 9/11 and you can argue that was after a decade of relatively robust

economic growth and a situation in which it seemed like both the system was

working and there was a sort of rally around the flag effect post 9/11 and

then we go to what happened after 9/11 and again you cannot blame Americans for

suddenly not trusting elites anymore because after 9/11 you then saw war

launched in Afghanistan that has not ended you then saw another war in Iraq

that had nothing to do with the war in Afghanistan and nonetheless has not

ended and then the greatest economic crisis in a century you know at least in

the first year far worse than than the Great Depression so again it's not a

shock that you see this kind of erosion of trust and there are a few other

factors kicking which I think I won't spoil the previews I think we're going

to talk about that a little more later but but yeah they're they're valid

reasons for why Americans and and I guess the other thing I would say is

that particularly in in foreign and economic policy you can argue there has

been a gap for decades between what elites think is the sort of best set of

policies to pursue and what the public thinks so if you you know the Chicago

Council on global affairs has done polling on elites and and ordinary sort

of the mass public of Americans for quite some time and for quite some time

ever since they started doing it in the 1970s there is this gap between what

elites feel with respect to attitudes about let's say globalization or u.s.

alliance commitments or what-have-you versus what ordinary Americans think and

the gap is is that elites are far more enthusiastic and internationalist than

ordinary Americans now ironically that gap is closing for a few interesting

reasons but if that gap persists for decades you can't blame ordinary

Americans for being somewhat skeptical about what their elites are thinking one

aspect of this is is that is the issue of economic inequality and relative

deprivation so if you consider for example the argument by Clinton's labor

secretary right so he's making the argument that from the 1970s the

economic conditions of middle-class Americans have steadily deteriorated

right well the the means by which they have been able to maintain the position

yeah I mean more and more work double work and then and debt and that on their

house and all of that right so how does that factor in you think in in the big

picture here know that factors in it I think one of the other drivers is the

widening of economic inequality in the United States and that again in some

ways is paired with the sort of great wave of globalization you can argue that

begins in 1980 because that's the moment at which at least in the United States

middle-class incomes start to stagnate now that didn't

necessarily that was you could you could see that in the data but it wasn't

necessarily immediately calamitous for a couple of reasons first Americans that

own their homes weren't necessarily worse off because even if their incomes

weren't going up their home you know the home equity prices were going up so in

some ways they were almost sitting on an ATM where they could continue to live a

you know an increasingly affluent lifestyle simply by borrowing against

their house and indeed that was one of the sources in the end of the the 2008

financial crisis that you had more and more people not just having mortgages

but taking out home equity loans to try to finance current consumption so that's

so in some ways there wasn't as much of a gap in consumption but the way that

gap was being financed was equally problematic so yeah that's that's

undeniably true and then the other thing and in some ways we're still seeing this

play out right now is that the other thing that's happened that's shift in

the United States is almost cultural in terms of the way the economy has shifted

you know you see this with debates about trade and and we just had a special

election and in the House of Representatives in Pennsylvania and was

all about steel and you know the president among other things has said if

you don't have steel you don't know the country the myth in the United States is

that we don't have a steel industry which we have a very large steel

industry we produce 70% of the steel we consume well we don't have any more

steel workers and the reason is is because the steel industry has followed

most of manufacturing and that it's become so productive that you don't need

nearly as many workers as you used to and so there's been a shift I think in

terms of workers in the United States leaving what used to be considered you

know good union jobs you know on a factory in Detroit or in Pittsburgh and

now they're working in places like Home Depot or Costco they're working on

service sector jobs they don't pay as well and are seen as not

dignity as dignified and and so in that sense it's almost a question of identity

as much as it is of economics yeah so a little pause here for this thing to go

up

so I can start with my next question which is basically a follow up on on the

issue of trust because you you wrote a book quite recently on the I DS industry

where the argument is that there is something has happened with trust not in

government per se but in other important institutions for example the idea of

expertise and knowledge producing institutions and what that has meant for

the quality of public debate you can see some of the same dynamic in in many

European countries including here in Norway so it would be very interesting I

think to hear the the core argument but also some examples of who the actors are

and how that effects actually the framing of public debate in the US so in

the book the ideas industry I make the argument that there's sort of three core

factors underlying why the marketplace of ideas has changed to where it is now

the first as you say is is the erosion of trust in not just the government it's

the erosion of trust in almost any authoritative institution in the United

States so both pew and Gallup and the General Social Survey have all of these

surveyed surveys asking Americans not just their confidence in the government

but the confidence in business in the media in labor unions and teachers in

any sort of major institution and all of these data trends showed the exact same

thing which is that with the exception of the United States military trust in

all of these institutions has trended downward significantly now part of that

is because and this goes back to the previous answer I would say it's not

just that the government has screwed up I mean you can understand why their

trust in government would be lower because of policy scopes there's also

distrust in other authoritative elites because there's been a variety of

scandals that have been revealed in which these institutions are not quite

as aboveboard as we have as a book author I hate to do this but I

need to cite another book which is I would highly recommend Chris Hayes book

twilight of the elites which is an outstanding book that talks about how if

you look at the Catholic Church or you look at universities or you look at

other institutions that you would ordinarily have thought were a beyond

reproach they're no longer beyond reproach and indeed this is reflected in

trust in what we would consider institutions that would be considered

knowledge based whether it's universities or hospitals or religious

institutions the General Social Survey which is run at the University of

Chicago asked Americans you know trust in these kinds of institutions back in

nineteen seventy two fifty percent of Americans had a great deal of trust in

these institutions and by 2012 it was down to 30% again in no small part

because there have been controversies involving things like vaccines not you

know like the swine flu one back in the 70s or again religious institutions in

terms of the Catholic Church or universities in terms of you know

corruption and athletics programs or research scandals that have you know our

plagiarism scandals that have affected the Academy or even you know so again I

want to be clear on this I I don't think the erosion of trust is a healthy thing

but I do think it's an understandable thing and I you know so in the sense

that that when you see you know people's doubting social science well if you're a

social scientist there's some valid reasons to doubt aspects of social

science research at least in terms of things like replicability so you know

we're having these debates within our field it's not surprising that that's

spreading to wider wider parts of the country the second trend and this is one

where I don't know how much it generalizes beyond the United States

because of different political systems but it does play a large role I think in

the United States is the dramatic increase in political polarization in

the United States and and this comes through if you take a look at things

like congressional voting patterns or you know general surveys that pew and

others have done in terms of party activists and what-have-you

essentially all of the data show the same thing which is since 1970 Democrats

have moved further to the left and Republicans have moved way way way

further to the right and this is particularly concentrated among people

who are politically active so there was the more likely or a party activist the

more likely you were at the extreme of either party now there are a couple of

arguments within the United States about why this is taking place one could be

that people are actually getting more ideologically extreme there's another

argument that basically explains this on something called partisan sorting which

is to say that essentially for a variety of historical quirks you had some

Democrats in the south we're much more conservative than let's

say Republicans in the Northeast for a long time but after the civil rights era

in the 1960s those Democrats realized they were actually Republicans and so

basically switched parties and similarly you had what were called Rockefeller

Republicans in the Northeast sort of the George HW Bush types realizing oh wait

I'm actually way to the left of my relative arty and so it's not that these

people became more ideologically extreme they just joined the party they probably

should have been part of for a longer period of time and that matters because

it means that if it's a partisan sorting it might be that Americans haven't

become that much more radical it's just be that the parties have become more

ideologically pure but the real problem is that even if it's due to partisan

sorting essentially you're seeing this creation and inculcation of in-group

identities which means that in essence disliking someone for their political

ideology is the last legal form of discrimination in the United States

which is to say that if you take a look at survey work Americans are more likely

to discriminate based on high rate you know hiring people based on someone's

political affiliation than on their race or gender or religious orientation or

sexual orientation and indeed if you poll party elites you know and you ask

them what is their opinion of members of the other party you know you would see

increases in the number of people who think that the other party is no longer

as intelligent you know or trustworthy or they don't

want their children to marry outside of their political persuasion and so these

are all you know these are incredibly problematic because essentially now you

have a situation where and there's been great work on this done by Elizabeth

Saunders and Alexander good singer it shows that if an issue is politically

polarized in other words if an issue becomes sort of one that that's defined

by partisanship expert consensus has no effect so there's if you take a look at

you know if you ask Americans what's your opinion on climate change climate

change is an issue that has clearly become politically polarized which is

say Democrats really think it's a real problem

Republicans insist either it's not a real problem or we doubt the science or

what have you if you then present people with well we have an expert consensus

that says this is what's going on it doesn't move anyone's opinion if you do

introduce them to an issue where let's say there hasn't been a partisan

division let's say I don't know one of them know I'm having a hard time coming

up with one let's say let's say policy in the Arctic for example actually that

that'll you know we're you know most Americans simply don't know and if you

then present them with expert consensus that will shift opinion so but the

problem is is that we're in a situation where we have the polarization of

everything essentially every issue even cultural you know issues have now become

so politically polarized that it becomes impossible to sort of believe in neutral

expertise everyone clearly must have an agenda or something and so that makes it

harder to have a productive debate and then the third trend that I talked about

and is linked is this rise of economic inequality and wealth inequality there

are obvious socio-economic issues with that but the reason it affects the

marketplace of ideas is that we now see this sort of new plutocratic class that

essentially have billions of dollars and it turns out that if you have that much

money and you have everything you could possibly want to buy in the world then

what you wind up doing is going back to college except you don't go back to

college what you do is create your own intellectual salon and you bring in

thought leaders or you know provocative thinkers too you

know and I put provocative in quotes you know to sort of tell you stuff except

that if you think that if speaking truth to power is really hard try speaking

truth to money that's even harder because essentially if you're a

billionaire you wind up becoming and this applies to the President as well if

you're a billionaire or billionaire you genuinely will tend to believe that

you've gotten to where you are in life entirely based on your own self worth

and self value and therefore you are not going to want to hear from people who

tell you that the reason you got to where you are is that you were born on

third base which is an Americanism which is say that you were born into privilege

anyway that it doesn't matter that yes you might have you know done a few

things but really they're they're sort of these structural inequalities and so

as a result they wind up funding and/or taking much more interesting thought

leaders who will tell them what they already want to believe you know here

anyway or tell them what they already believe

which is to say disruption is good and you know founders are good and you want

to constantly shake up the system and and other buzzwords that do not come to

mind right now on that I mean there are plenty of very wealthy individuals and

groups in the United States that seems to be advancing a progressive type of

agenda so I'm just wondering about whether there are environments where so

in Europe you have you know George Soros who invested you know the Central

European University and all that an open society foundation but how does that

look in the United States given all the tech billionaires for example in

California so if you take a look at the survey there's not a lot of great survey

work of billionaires it's really hard to get them to to answer questions but that

said there is some research that's been done on this and I think the way to put

it is the following there is a fair amount of heterogeneity among the sort

of plutocratic class when it comes to views about let's say social policy

so about gay marriage for example or you know other sort of cultural issues

however when you start asking them about economics or economic policy there is

much greater degree of homogeneity among the plutocratic class now you will you

will have the occasional Tom Styer or George Soros who spends a fair amount of

money because of environmental causes or you know believing in promoting civil

society but even the Silicon Valley types are very libertarian when it comes

to attitudes about economic policy they are extremely suspicious of the role of

the state in terms of providing public goods indeed Silicon Valley is is

extremely problematic because Silicon Valley tends to look at the state not as

ironically the the very source of the internet that they have exploited

because it was originally a invention by the Defense Department to deal with

communications in the wake of nuclear war they see it as a faulty piece of

code that needs to be bypassed so indeed to be fair Silicon Valley you know

plutocrats genuinely believed in civic activism I don't mean to to to

caricature them but they also don't believe necessarily the state will they

see the statement as an outmoded 19th century institution that can't help them

now to be fair some I think some of these people are actually beginning to

move down the learning curve and realizing oh I guess the algorithm that

we thought that would solve this sort of problem is not actually going to do it

maybe we need to rethink these things but again there's a fair amount of

arrogance going on in Palo Alto when it comes to these sorts of issues and so

it's going to take a long time for that learning curve to kick in let's shift

gear a little bit to Donald Trump as president and so we talked a little bit

about economic policy etc now security and foreign policy certainly there is a

fair amount of debates about President Trump's Twitter feeds and and all of

that but then you see underneath that perhaps

more stability then then people tend to think in in foreign policy so but still

I mean it's a mixed picture right so on so there is now so there was a lot of

debate of course about the uncertainty created with regards to article 5 in

NATO an apparent withdrawal from key international organizations now with the

Terrorism on steel and aluminum but then again maybe maybe some some progress can

be made on North Korea it remains to be seen but what what's your reading of the

changes relative to actual stability on Trump's foreign policy so I think when

it comes to foreign policy you need to actually there's a nice neat divide

between the security sphere and sort of everything else on the security sphere I

tend to agree with you which is say that while Donald Trump Donald Trump has not

helped matters by let's say in his first big speech to NATO not reaffirming

article 5 he did eventually reaffirm article 5 and you know I had the good

fortune of attending the Munich Security Conference a couple of weeks ago and was

striking to me about the conference was the degree to which the American

participants there were two things that were interesting to me the first is the

American participation was a little more marginal than it apparently normally was

so the secretary defense did not give a speech which is unusual but that said

when they did speak you know HR McMaster spoke I saw kurt volker on the you know

on a side panel who's the the US special envoy for Ukraine there were you know

members of Congress really you could have taken five percent of what they

said and deleted it and it would have looked like the exact same thing that

the Obama administration would have said in 2016 which is to say that I think on

security issues there hasn't been nearly as much of a it actually has been

largely status quo if you ignore the rhetoric which is kind of a big if I

mean that's that's not nothing on the economic side of you know foreign

economic policy or attitudes towards multilateralism or what-have-you

no I actually do really think this is a big change and part of it is that and

we've even seen this in the last couple of weeks which is say that you know last

year there was this you know argument that there was an access of adults in

the Trump administration that while Trump himself might be sort of a an

unguided missile when it comes to policy that there were grown-ups in the room

whether it was Jim mattis who was Secretary of Defense or Rex Tillerson

who's the Secretary of State or John Kelly who became the chief of staff or

Gary cone or what have you and that they would prevent Trump from acting out on

his worst impulses I have some bad news for you all that's gone I don't know

really how powerful it ever was but the scary the thing that should scare you is

that Donald Trump now actually he thinks that he's got the hang of this job he's

been at it for a year and so he really in his own mind he thinks that he can

that he actually knows better than then than his advisers and to be fair I'm not

gonna defend Rex Tillerson as a Secretary of State I really do think he

was the worst Secretary of State in 150 years at least he was not a good

Secretary of State I do I was somewhat more sympathetic to his impulse to his

foreign policy impulses than I were than I was to Trump but Trump wasn't wrong

and necessarily wanting to fire him I think the way Trump thinks about this is

twofold first he has he does fundamentally reject the sort of liberal

internationalism that animated post-war president since Harry Truman which is

Donald Trump legitimately thinks that the liberal international order is

screwed over the United States if the United States has gotten a raw deal from

this and that elites on button and both sides have have embraced it and that

that needs to be changed and the other thing that he thinks is that he's been

told repeatedly as president you can't do this

impose steel tariffs or you can't do that you know announce a summit with Kim

jong-un because that will lead to really bad outcomes and the bad outcomes

haven't happened yet I don't need to say that the steel tariffs are a great idea

they're not they're a horrible idea they're gonna cost more jobs than then

then they're going to create but some ways part of what forced Trump to

hold off on this was that you had people like Gary Cohen and Steven Oken telling

him that if he imposed steel tariffs the stock market would freak out and that

would wipe out you know which he's obsessed with and sure enough you know

when he announced the steel tariffs when Gary cone stepped down the stock market

fell for a little bit but it's now fully recovered you know all of its losses and

did someone like Trump the message he gets from that is no I can actually do

all this and there won't be any serious ramifications so I think on security he

will still he still defers to Jim to Secretary of Defense mattis he still

defers to generals to some extent on the security sphere you saw that with the

Afghanistan policy as well that is still an area where I don't think he has any

confidence but on other stuff on the foreign economic policy no I think he

thinks he knows best and so I think you're going to continue to see you know

the next month there's going to be more tariffs placed on China

we'll see how the NAFTA debate plays out every time Trump does something and

there isn't an immediate and negative response he feels emboldened to do more

stuff and so I think that's the way you need to think about it on that front I

mean this brings up another issue which is if you think about u.s. hegemonic

position would last decades it has I think it could be argued rested on the

premise that the u.s. bears a large share of the costs of certain you know

goods and that what you see with Trump is this focus on so the privilege of

economics and the idea of costs and the u.s. being you know getting a bad deal

is now also affecting security cooperation so that that is what was

underneath the NATO uncertainty etc right so it's all about focusing on what

does this cost the US and not seeing the broader picture which is well if you

want that session you have to bear the cost that

is the basis on which your leading position risk so that brings up the

issue right of how that can undermine the position over time but also how this

this is now happening at the same time as you see a new type of tactics from or

strategy from Russia and also of course from China beefing up its investments

within international organizations and also building alternatives to it yeah so

a few things on this the first is is that in some ways what Donald Trump is

doing Tom shrub really is like a you know we talked in in public opinion

about the idea of rational ignorance of voters which is not meant as an epithet

it means that voters at least in the United States are very uninformed about

questions about foreign affairs and it is also incredibly rational for them to

be uninformed because for most Americans most foreign policy does not affect them

at all these are busy people they they have jobs they have mortgages they've

got season to have occupied to catch up on so you know they're not going to pay

attention to to these other you know these more arcane questions about

foreign policy which means that they're incredibly uninformed about this if you

poll Americans in this is always the standard way of representing this and

you ask Americans what percentage of the federal government's budget do you think

is devoted to foreign aid the median answer you will get from Americans is

about 20% of Americans budget when in fact it is 0.5% so it's one of these

things where you know inevitably in presidential campaigns president you

know candidates will talk about well the way we're going to balance the budget is

by cutting foreign aid which is an absurd way of thinking about it except

if enough Americans believe that that we spend a lot on foreign aid they'll buy

this - they'll believe this to be true in some ways Donald Trump has exploited

that and also might actually believe it himself but he seems to think that

somehow you know if we if you rebalance NATO contributions and or that that

countries start paying more for us for the right to base US soldiers which is a

truly odd concept that somehow that will improve America

finances and even a quick glance at the numbers shows that that that's not going

to be the case but the other thing and I agree with you on this is that what what

Donald Trump doesn't realize is that a lot of what is sustained what we would

consider American leadership or American hegemony is the note it is two things

the first is is that America has borne a disproportionate share of the burden in

terms of military spending to some extent and to be fair that also served

American interests one of the best benefits of us hegemony for a long time

was not just at the United States you know had a large military but because of

our line system it meant that countries like Japan or Germany did not have large

militaries and that was generally thought to be a good thing from the

perspective of the United States and also a good thing for because it meant

that South Korea was less worried about Japan or France was less worried about

Germany or what-have-you Trump doesn't realize that at all the

second thing and again this is gonna sound corny but but one of the reasons

that I think US leadership worked was not just because the liberal

international order served US interests it was that also the us could've Vince a

higher set of ideals that the liberal international order was supposed to

appeal to that there was a higher social purpose that it wasn't just good for

American interests it was good for American values the values being

promotion of democracy promotion of free markets promotion of human rights and so

forth and Donald Trump doesn't believe in any of that he has if there is one

thing that's and this is where the rhetoric does matter if there's been one

thing that this administration has been catastrophic ly bad at its articulating

that kind of higher set of principles and so if the United States who just

winds up looking like a different kind of China you know which is to say not

you know we're in it furred for the buck well then that's going to cause allies

to start you know looking around and or casting about for alternatives or at

least not you know looking at the relationship if Donald Trump looks at

foreign relations as a transactional arrangement then allies are going to

start looking back in the same kind of transactional way and that doesn't

necessarily bode well for u.s. foreign policy

the larger issue here I guess is is whether the liberal international order

will will be maintained re-established can we put the genie back in the bottle

or is what we will see in the coming decade or so be something significantly

different from what we have been used to living with in terms of multilateralism

a rules-based order and all these higher ideals to which many countries were

striving I think there there's sort of two known unknowns out there that will

that will answer that well I guess maybe three known unknowns it'll answer that

question the first is what does China think about the current order and we

fear it's but it's very ambivalent you know I don't think it's you know the the

current rage now is talk about China is developing those alternative

institutions and through things like the belt and road initiative or buying

Greece's largest port or what-have-you it's it's you know exercising this

malevolent influence I'm not gonna you know obviously you know if you look at

China's internal politics they're clear they're clearly going from

semi-authoritarian to really really authoritarian but to be fair China you

know and I argue this in my book this isn't work China did play a was a

responsible stakeholder in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis China at least

on the economic side does buy into these kinds of you know principles of the

benefits of globalization I mean it's globalization with Chinese

characteristics but there is a fair amount of overlap between that and what

the West is generally promulgated the question is whether China feels

emboldened to rewrite the rules of the game even more in favor of China and I

to be fair I'm not I think that's still unclear you might think with time

they'll they'll grow more confident but I think that masks the degree to which

China's internal economy is going to be facing some significant challenges in

the next couple of years and the question is how does it navigate those

challenges the second no no no none known is what happens in American

politics so you know we've been talking about all these sort

trends about erosion of trust and so on and so forth and Trump is president and

will be probably until 2020 what this masks is the degree to which Trump

himself has wound up generating vigorous antibodies to trump and I think this

might I don't know how much outside the United States this is quite appreciated

which is you know in all likelihood Democrats are gonna do extremely well in

the midterm elections that are coming in in the fall you've already seen them you

know a Democrat won a Senate seat in Alabama

you know for non-americans this doesn't happen anymore that's not a normal thing

there was just a special election in Pennsylvania where a Democrat want to

cede the Trump won by 20 percentage points 15 months ago this all suggests

that while Republicans at this point control all three branches of government

it is not clear if that will be the case going forward so it's possible the

Democrats might take back the house in 2018 I would put better than 50/50

chances of that at this point which does not say it's a slam dunk but in Miami

and then the real big question is is Donald Trump a one-term president or not

so first if the Democrats want of controlling at least one branch of

Congress suddenly Trump will face far greater constraints in terms of

implementing some things that he that he might have thought he was going to be

able to do before and he's also going to be facing the subpoena power of Congress

in a way that he wouldn't have he hasn't had to deal with he has had to deal with

but not nearly as much as he would have if Democrats are in control and then

it's whether Donald Trump gets reelected you know Donald Trump getting elected

once as a fluke him getting elected twice as another question altogether and

you know the problem is is that Americans have been in the habit of

electing reelecting the incumbent for the last three go-around so it is

entirely possible the Trump could win in 2020 particularly if by the way you have

a Democratic Congress the ones are backing in an taken antagonistic way but

what is striking to me I guess is the degree to which you have a u.s. by any

sort of conventional metric in terms of the US economy the US economy is doing

pretty well right now you know we have pretty low unemployment we've got pretty

decent and uninterrupted economic growth for the last

almost ten years now inflation doesn't look to be that big of a problem you

know the economy seems to have be occupying the sweet spot right now and

yet Donald Trump has an approval rating of only 40 percent that shouldn't be

happening he should be at 60% with that kind of economy and so it suggests that

Trump himself is genuinely toxic enough so that you might see this sort of

political blowback to him and if you have Democrats elected they're you know

part of what's going on is they do embrace the liberal international order

a little more than and then the Trump does and indeed what's weird is that if

you take a look at polling attitudes in asking Americans about attitudes like

free trade or immigration or alliances Americans have suddenly become Donald

Trump has made liberal internationalism great again which is to say that that

he's made Americans more enthusiastic about these ideas than they were three

or four years ago and it might be that weirdly what Trump is doing is showing

what happens when the counterfactual actually gets implemented you know it's

easy to criticize the liberal international order you know by saying

well they're these problems and there are these problems I don't mean to say

it's a it's a perfect system but what Trump is done is demonstrated okay this

is what happens if you deviate from that and it looks bad America soft power has

been eviscerated you know there's a whole host of other Pro sort of ugly

aspects and so it's possible that Americans realized oh this was not we

prefer the way things used to be actually crap so we'll see how that goes

a couple of more questions and then we'll open up for questions and comments

from the audience now I want to return to this issue of trust again you made a

very good point I think which is that people have good reason not necessarily

to trust their government and in particular institutions and so on now

that brings up the question of of what groups the liberal international order

has served the most right and the other question of of the zone

for cooperation and the prospect of more international cooperation as things look

today so in the US but also in many European countries the zone for

international cooperation seems to be shrinking in the sense that state

leaders hands are much more tight there isn't all that great appetite for more

ambitious international cooperation so states don't make treaties that much

anymore for example nothing is happening on the WTO there is deadlock in in the

Security Council at Iran etc etc now the flip side of that if you like is that

there are a lot of important challenges in many countries that are not

necessarily solved by more international cooperation so many of us that study

international politics and in the context of globalization tend to think

well the solution to this is more international cooperation right but if

you take issues like well welfare distribution issues etc that is

something best addressed at the national level so there seems to be an

interesting paradox if you like that the the idea of more international

cooperation seems to be now at some inflection point so what what's your

thought on that so I would say a few things on this the first is if you're

asking who you know cui bono who benefits from from the liberal

international order the the glib answer is workers in the developing world and

owners of capital in the developed world you know I mean this is sort of a

classic stopple Shane Samuelson theorem which says and and I would stress that's

not nothing you know you've had the greatest degree of poverty reduction in

the world over the last twenty to thirty years and that's nothing to scoff at but

to be fair voters in Europe in the United States also might respond with

yes but how does that benefit us and I think that's the the valid question to

ask because the beneficiaries in you know in the developed world are

those people who already you know we're at the top of the income spectrum those

who could exploit the sort of global opportunities and so that has led to the

kind of widening inequalities that we've seen and so that's where I do think part

of the problem is is that even if the cause of some of these issues is

international as you say one of the one of the problems is that traditionally

the solution has been domestic and so there's a genuine question of to what

extent do you need to bolster social safety nets to do this except even here

in some ways even answering it that way gives the impression that the solution

is economic and I think the problem is is that we are now in a period where the

political problems are not just about the economy in fact the economy isn't

even the main culprit it's a background condition and I think that's part of it

this is about identity and that's much more problematic you know it's about

identity in the form of the refugee crisis in the European Union and in the

United States is in the form of a wave of immigration that went happened from

1986 to about 2006 and so you know if you if you take a look at things like

the brexit referendum or the 2016 election in the United States

you know most polling and sort of political science analysis that looks at

this and says well were there political science you know economic factors or

cultural factors that explain why people vote it's all culture

I mean economics play some supporting role in this and I don't mean to

belittle it but it is primarily the people who voted for Trump are people

who feel like the United States is not the way that was when they were growing

up and they don't like that and indeed what's particularly interesting is you

know hostility and immigration for example in the United States it's rooted

almost primarily in areas that don't have any immigration or it or just

beginning to experience it whereas if you're living in Florida or Texas or

California it's a it's been a multicultural society for you know

Jennifer for generations there's much far less agita there on these questions

so one of the interesting questions is whether this is literally a sort of

phase transition where once people get used to this and to be blunt the people

who don't like it die do you see this kind of shift in

attitudes that winds up not generating these kinds of things or is this going

to be a continued disruption I went off on a rant there and I can't remember if

I answer the second part of your question

that's one just one final one I mean what is what you what you say now

combined with the argument from your book godís industry and and the

marketplace of for these would suggest that it's going to be difficult to get

back or out of this cycle No so yeah the here's the the good news

part of the story which is we've been in this situation in the United States

we've been in this situation before you know the last time we had a period where

there was this degree of distrust institutions this high degree of

political polarization and this amount of economic inequality was the end of

the 19th century and the good news is is that there was then a progressive era

and you know you wound up the cycle turned you know and eventually you wind

up with a situation where elites played a larger role that's the good side of

the story the bad side of the story is that while the progressive era played a

role in that so did two world wars in a Great Depression that you had really

serious shocks to the system that caused people to realize oh okay we've we've

got to change the way we do things and what does terrify me is the notion that

we need to have that kind of that degree of shock for the situation to change and

I honestly don't you know that's a very gloomy way of ending but it's

nonetheless the reality I think on that note no let's let's get some questions

and comments from the audience and I'll ask you please to identify yourselves

and and be brief so that we can have many questions starting in the front

here thank you you Livingston I'm a senior research

fellow here I had one two quick questions first one you said that the

there's a lack of trust to all leadership apart from the military and

the generals could you explain there's trust in them then secondly I'm

interested in the relation to the liberal international order and the

return of people who believe in that and I would like you to elaborate a bit

because there are different versions of how to support this liberal

international order and I'm I'm a Russia Studies person and I would say that you

know the diversion of spreading the liberal international order through

military intervention is in a way a new a new version of it which has been

escalating in the past 15 years and it creates a lot of problems for Russia for

example the liberal international order wasn't so problematic before this trend

started so is there another camp who would promote liberal liberal

international order through more peaceful means is there any thinking on

that in this alternative camp thank you so to answer your first question on the

military part of it I think is that there were a few reasons for this the

first is just the first is simply we've been at war now for 15 years and there

are ways in which you know there's just a general respect for the troops that I

think there there wasn't necessarily in the post in some ways that was the

reaction of the post-vietnam period and the fact that the military then

responded to that by essentially you know by ending the draft and becoming an

all-volunteer military it changed the relationship between I think American

society and the military it was no longer seen as you might get conscripted

to serve but rather that you had volunteered and therefore that was a

form of service and related to that I think part of the reason the military

still has high levels of trust despite the fact that there have actually been a

fair number of scandals within the military as well is that the military

represents ideals that both liberals and conservatives can like so in terms of

conservatives conservatives like the military for all the standard reasons

you would expect conservatives to like the military it represents you know

belief in in you know patriotism and national service in a hierarchical you

know command structure all of these kinds of things but the

military in the United States has also been in some ways a trailblazer for a

variety of social you know for forms of social change that means that liberals

like it too so I mean when when the military desegregated that was that was

a head of rather than behind the civil rights movement in the United States the

treatment of gay marriage and and gays serving in the military it was

remarkable how seamless that was in some ways you know in the late 2000s an early

part of this decade and so in some ways the the the military represents an

aspect of society that which is disturbing in some ways but but in some

ways the military represents a way in which society functions that I think a

lot of Americans would wish that the rest of the country operate alone now

the problem of course is that that then leads to some disturbing implications

which is do you really want the rest of the country to function like the

military but that said there are Admiral you know they're all they're extremely

Admiral ways in which the military is handled a variety of sort of social

changes in the country which you can argue the rest of the country has had

more difficulty dealing with on the liberal international order so it's

funny when I think liberal international order I don't necessarily think about

the security side of things as much partly is because I'm I do globe you

know I'm my original training is in global political economy so when I think

liberal international order I think the economic rules of the game or the

environmental rules of the game or you know to some extent this sort of ideals

about human rights and democracy that that are being promoted but you're right

eventually there's a security fear of it do I think that the liberal

international order can be divorced from that completely no but is it possible to

talk about defending the liberal international order in a way that

focuses primarily on non-military means as opposed to military means yeah I

think absolutely and in some ways this goes back to the thing I'd forgotten to

talk to you about when we talk about the liberal in our international order and

the sort of institutions that make it up I think there's a danger in confusing

stock with flow by which I mean that the stock of international institutions that

we have now is far thicker than it was even

years ago and certainly 40 years ago or during the Cold War the problem is is

that the flow is stopped what what you haven't seen is the creation of really

sort of vigorous new multilateral institutions instead they're much more

informal things like the g20 or the p5 plus one or so on and so forth and it's

interesting to ask whether that's a whether that's a problem or or a

solution and I think the jury is still out on that it might be that it's it's

concerning because we don't have the sort of hard treaty organizations that

you know that the demonstrated degree of durability that presumably a contact

group like the p5 plus one doesn't on the other hand the reason you're seeing

a shift to those groups is because they're less rigid they're a little more

flexible I think you ideally in terms of global governance want a mix of those

kinds of you know hard law institutions but you also want the kind of soft law

ones and in some ways much as in the United States what we're concerned about

is not the erosion of the rule of law but rather the erosion of norms that we

previously didn't realize we had taken for granted that now are suddenly

becoming much more important because we have administration that doesn't

necessarily adhere to them I think that's also true at the international

level that the problem is in you know just the WTO is collapsing or anything

like that it's that some of the norms are more informal regimes that we took

for granted no longer seem to be operable and so in some ways is the

question is how do we cope with that hey um Hilda rested Bjerknes University

College thank you for being here professor Dresner this is really fun and

depressing at the same time I'm glad you you addressed identity at the end

because I think what political science is finding about the what what Trump was

the symptom of was much more identity than economics and I have two questions

one is about you mentioned the effect of immigration in the US which is related

to the demographic change in the US right so in many ways

can you reduce what Trump is a symptom of to the reaction to the fact that in

2045 the US will be a minority majority society where white people will no

longer be the menu are talking about identity what you're talking about is

also status and this feeling that white males once they are no longer the master

race let's say of the u.s. these I don't like using these words that I understand

what you're trying to yeah no it's Trump brings out the worst in all of I'm sure

that makes me a little uncomfortable it makes everyone uncomfortable yeah and

the second question is about the partisan makeup of distrust because you

guys are talking about the gen the general levels of distrust in American

society but I would argue that one party has been more active and telling its

voters to not trust elites even as President Ronald Reagan you know said

that the the problem is the government it's not the solution and the scariest

words and English languages I'm the government I'm here to help you and

since then it's sort of been downhill in terms of the Republican Party telling

its voters not to trust elites or the government so I'm also wondering about

the the partisan makeup may I suggest that we group them a little bit so that

we have time for for everybody there and then I'll just make this yeah my name is

Jim Frasure I have a just a short question when you show the chart you

showed with the ups and downs of trusts in government or in elites it seemed to

me that they tend to be on the low when it's Democrats in power in the White

House is this a correct observation or what is the reason behind it if so it or

is it just coincidence okay I'll answer that question first no

I don't think that's correct which is to say if you take a look at the chart

you actually saw rising levels of trust when Clinton was president when Obama

was president you saw low levels of trust but to be fair I don't think that

that it's something to do with Obama and a hell of a lot to do with the 2008

financial crisis so I don't think it's linked to that's

not linked to party what you generally see happen is that when what it might be

is that when a Democrat takes you know the power of the presidency it's

remarkable how suddenly Democrats have much greater faith in the government and

Republicans heav'nly have much greater distrust of the government or and then

their occasional moments where you know like for example there was a lot of talk

about how in 2017 Americans had never felt better about the economy

well that was truly a partisan effect because basically Democrats had been

pretty had been feeling pretty good about the economy for a while because it

had been doing reasonably well into the Obama period and so there was no reason

for them to change their minds what happened was that Republicans had been

down on the economy for a long period of time and then once Trump got elected

they suddenly felt much better so that's that's that's a artifact of partisanship

but I don't think it's it's it's not the case that when Democrats are in power

trust in government has gone down period I don't it's there's something more

complicated going on there okay with respect to Hilda's questions so the

first on on the sort of my joy you know what happens when America no longer

becomes a majority white country first of all this is gonna sound weird I'm

going to question your premise I know the demographic trends but the

demographic trends are driven extremely heavily by Hispanics and this is going

to be a fascinating question of the identity of Hispanics of second

generation and third generation Hispanics which is I can easily conceive

of a scenario where third-generation Hispanics don't think of themselves as

Hispanic they think of themselves as white and indeed the very category of

white belies the fact that if we were talking about this a hundred years ago

we'd be talking about all the dirty Irish and Jews and and you know Eastern

Europeans that are coming into the United States and you know ruining the

the master race in that level which I'm not be able to be clear don't endorse

any of that but I'm but I'm saying you would have had that kind of debate

happen then so in some ways the categories are almost defined in some

ways by the other and the question is to be blunt do you still see darker skinned

Americans as the other in twenty four five and I I want to say no but I'm this

is one area where I've grown more and more depressed over time one of the one

of the best books that I've read over the last couple of weeks has been how

democracies die by livets ginza blood I don't know if that's gotten here yet but

one of the the one of the things I will give them credit for is they point out

very plainly that part of the reason there were higher levels of trust in the

country in previous areas was that they didn't pull black people and because

African Americans did not have any political voice and so in the 1950s you

could talk about there being a sort of you know much more constrained degree of

political difference because you know you were only talking about white people

and so as you start widening that that aperture it's not surprising that you

have you know much higher degrees of distrust and there was a second part of

your Co the the whether the GOP is particularly responsible for this I mean

obviously the GOP has campaigned more heavily on distrust of government but to

be fair there have been periods where Demick Democrats start distrust in

government to george w bush being behind the 9/11 attacks or for that matter the

trump administration or Donald Trump being a puppet of Russian you know

plutocrats one of the things I can't stand about this administration is the

degree to which it forces a conspiratorial mindset I can't stand

conspiracy theories period but I've talked to a lot of experts who you know

normally study the Middle East the sort of Gulf shakedowns and what they keep

telling me now is that what bothers them is that they have to apply that kind of

mindset to explain what's going on in the United States right now so that's

not good so over here yep my name is Phaedra thank you so much I have one

just remark and then to choose more question the first is I think that what

you described as a trust crisis in the u.s. it's not only a u.s. crisis a lot

of the things that you say is also related to what's going on in Europe so

so that's and I think that the stressing on important policy failures

but also an identity politics I think is really important now two questions very

simple one first one how to restore trust and how to restore trust in

foreign policy in economic policy how to overcome political polarization and how

to address the identity challenge it's not the easy one but they do be

interesting so if it is worth preserving how to restore it and that's the and

then the second comment relates to distrust in their leads and Trust in

knowledge because currently there's a big discussion in the US about

misinformation and fake news and basically a lot of that discussion is

based on the premise that somebody else is somehow misinforming otherwise we

will be in we'd be be in harmony and we might make enlightened decisions so and

and then there's this academic literature on motivated beliefs

basically saying that people tend to believe what they believe and they

ignore the rest so how do you view this misinformation and this discussion into

this highly polarized political space that you described and how does it fit

in somehow thank you so these are very easy

questions that I can answer and just probably oh yeah sure well first I'm

gonna agree with you and say the polarization is on this side of the pond

as well we have a tweet that almost took down a duly elected government here in

the last few days that's and another quick calm the way

I'm sorry this is where I'm uninformed did the Justice Minister get in trouble

by something she tweeted it was a Facebook post okay all right good so

it's pretty extreme here and another quick comment on the the military I said

and beam former military in the US and and maybe globally it's thought of -

it's probably one institution in the US that is still probably without you know

here and they're highly regarded and trusted I mean once the political people

send them somewhere I think the military itself is very trusted

to do a job and do it you know a political and that sort of thing

I would say the shock to the system as far as the election was the reason for

Trump being there and through a lot of things that you said and because

institutions and a lot of things structurally in the country have just

deteriorated to a lot of people's perceptions and you know we'll see you

over the next couple of years how Trump does and straightening that out but as

some what the occur to comment and I want you to comment on this comment the

other day were a politician who was saying a lot of very interesting things

he said one issue of misunderstanding a lot of people are having with with Trump

and the way he's doing things is they said Trump is not a diplomat not a

politician he deals with things on a business man kind of level and he's

using his policy tweets and his rhetoric to start debates on things and to push

the bar on these debates to try to accomplish you know his his agenda and

this is just a sort of way of doing things

disruptive or not the question is if these things are achieving results do

you think that's still going to be a bad or a good thing or still he will just be

perceived as disruptive in the long term even if this policy gets enacted okay

I'll answer them in reverse order so Trump is a so first on Trump Trump is a

businessman but let's be clear he's a particular kind of businessman Trump is

a real-estate guy so not even businessmen normally do business the way

Trump does it and so in that sense I want to stress that to argue this is

certainly a Trump person would make that case but I think he's a particularly

unique kind of businessman someone who thinks that the way that you get ahead

in bargaining is to take an extreme position with the idea that you know if

it forces others to make you know to accommodate you then if you only get

like half of what you originally asked for then the incentive is to always ask

for the most extreme in that way you get what you want how to put this that's a

bargaining 101 sort of approach to the world and the problem is is the world

politics is more like bargaining a 301 and bargaining 301 says if you start

with an extreme negotiating position you are equally likely to piss off so many

of your bargaining partners that they will conclude that you're not serious

you're not actually bargaining in good faith and therefore there is no point in

having serious negotiations and so I think to some extent Trump has done this

whether it's a question of the tariffs or whether it's a question of

renegotiating NAFTA or what have you now you're asking if he gets significant

concessions will that cause a rethink I think the answer would be yes if he does

gets any of the concessions I think it would cause a lot of people to think oh

well maybe he actually knows something maybe he really you know as an

instinctive bargain or is getting what he wants to put it generously he hasn't

gotten anything yet I haven't seen any evidence that that

you know he's gotten any of these kind of fabulous deals you know you see the

the Saudi Arabia you know trip I mean he got a great orb out of that don't get me

wrong and and we all got great pictures of that orb but for all the announcement

of like all these these actual deals that were made if you actually look

under the hood there was no actual new money committed by Saudi Arabia in any

of these kinds of arrangements similarly you know he apparently had

this great summit at mar-a-lago with Xi Jinping I haven't seen any concessions

whatsoever from the Chinese after that summit I don't think the Europeans are

gonna make any concessions when it comes to steel I don't think either Canada or

Mexico are gonna make any concessions when it comes to NAFTA so I'm not

convinced that we're gonna get you know the question becomes what is the

deliverable and I don't think he's delivered anything on that point on the

so on the on the question of elites and Trust and how to restore that but with

the 30 second answer so the quick answer is oh sorry wait I did want to say one

last thing on this point I'm sorry on the first point which is on on Trump

winning as sort of representing a rebuke of elites in some ways this gets to your

point I do think there is a danger of over interpreting Trump's victory as

sort of this general rebuke of all elites for a few reasons first again I

hate to you know beat a dead horse on this Trump got three million fewer

voters than then Hillary Clinton did so

the idea that this was some popular

groundswell in favor of Donald Trump is crap it's just wrong the second thing is

that and again I can't stress this enough there has been one time since

1945 that a political party has won the presidency three times in a row and that

was you know Ronald Reagan and George HW Bush you know at the end of the 1990s

Bill Clinton oversaw what would look like a really robust and great economy

and Al Gore loses that election in 2000 it is not shocking that a Republican won

in 2016 what's shocking is that Donald Trump

became the Republican nominee and you can argue that Donald Trump became the

Republican nominee in part because of this sort of populism but also because

he was running against fourteen other Republicans and with a diverse field if

you got you know a loyal 130 we're gonna vote for you no matter what you could

run the table so you know in that sense I think there's a tendency to over

interpret what Trump's victory meant that said how do we restore trust one

way is weirdly Trump being president as I said we now get to see what the

counterfactual looks like very often you know elites have have often said if we

go down this wrong policy choice bad things will happen and so you know but

the problem is if you avert the counterfactual you don't know if that's

actually true well we now have a genuine populist you

know nationalist in the White House so to some extent the degree to which we'll

actually see what we get in terms of the economy and in terms of foreign policy

will be a way in which you can realize okay maybe we don't trust the old elites

but we know we don't like this so maybe we'll have to go back to that but that

said how do you you know build trust in elites and knowledge that qualifies that

I'm gonna give it a slightly glib answer that qualifies under what I call a yacht

question which is to say if I had the answer to that question I wouldn't be

talking to you I'd be on my yacht somewhere because I would have made

billions of dollars from it that that said I do think there are two things

that can you know potentially contribute steps forward the first is transparency

which is not something we normally talk about but it trans

in the sense of the acknowledgement by elites that mistakes have been made that

one of the things that you occasionally need to do is to traffic some candor in

terms of saying we screwed up in the past and therefore you know and and

furthermore we have been somewhat humbled by those mistakes one of the one

of the concerns that legitimate concerns that I do have about Trump is that Trump

hasn't just made liberal internationalism great again he's also

made elites like me arrogant again because you look at his administration

you can think yeah I can do better than that you know despite all of the the

various you know policy music use that have happened in the past so I I do

think that while let's say Democrats are out in the wilderness or while even sort

of it's mainstream Republicans are out in the wilderness some some

introspection would be a good thing and some acknowledgement going forward the

second thing we clearly need to get a grip on although here this is again more

of a symptom than a cause is the question of social media and what role

it's played in all this now I honestly think that what social media has done is

make visible what had always been invisible

you know the idea the conspiracy theories you are unique to the 21st

century is absurd you know this has always existed in the

past what is different is that we can now all observe it in a way that we

couldn't before and so partly I think elites need to get used to the fact that

in some ways it's not that the distrust has gone up and in some ways the factors

that play into that are not new they've always been there we just didn't really

pay attention to it before so the idea that we're gonna suddenly have this

massive shift back in trust I don't think that's possible but really we

don't need that what we need is a moderate shift towards more trust and

that's fine you know that actually would would in and of itself make a large

difference and as I said before there is such a thing as healthy distrust or

healthy skepticism I don't think that the conclusion to draw from all this is

oh we were wrong we should you know totally trust what what elites say cuz

we don't know everything and we're arrogant enough sometimes to think we do

let's face it if you're in this room you're an elite so in the back there and

then the in the back over there Daniel my name is Luke owed me I'm over here in

away for two little Norwegian Americans and I'd like to place my question is a

white anglo-saxon Protestant American male not necessarily supreme

insignificant part we America's elected Trump to stop the neoconservatives kick

the amount of power get out of the Mideast

get out of this dangerous nuclear confrontation with Russia Trump

appointed Mike Flynn Tillerson he had Steve O'Bannon he had that portrait of

Andy by got Jackson above his desk now you support Tillerson being kicked out

of power but and you've supported Mike Pompeo saying he could actually moderate

Trump but Senator Rand Paul says Mike Pompeo is pro war and so I'm concerned

about that I've got another question about distrust of intellectuals like

Bernard re Levy who you appeared to defend but I'll save that for later so

is Mike Pompeo going to lead us to help lead us to World War 3

my name is Jung Revell first of all thank you for an excellent discussion

early on you brought up that a lot of people a lot of very safe industrial

jobs with a high degree of unionization and relatively high status and wages

simply disappeared that there are no longer there and that they can't

possibly be there and a lot of those people would have moved into retail jobs

so just like but and I'm not sure to the extent which is it is true but you keep

seeing headlines about retail more or less disappearing and dying and also

becoming ottoman eyes and I would like to hear if you have some comments on

what the consequences of that are and what potentially can be a political

solution to overcoming that problem thank you

so again I'll do the reverse order thing so your question is a really good one

yeah I mean obviously there you know there's there's a new phenomenon the

United States about retail deserts and you know sort of abandoned malls and

really in some ways with what this is coping with is that for the longest time

there had been you know there's always been a protectionist element within the

United States because trade was thought of as a policy choice you know and if

you opened up to trade it would create new winners and losers it would

redistribute things and while there's certainly a good economics argument for

the the you know that on the hold there will be a net gain you can understand

why there were there was political resistance to that in some ways what

we're beginning to see now is this question of what is what should be

government policies towards innovation because that's what you're talking about

and you know this goes back to this Schumpeter concept of creative

destruction the notion of innovation is that it always creates creative

destruction it destroys you know certain sectors as well as creating many now one

of the ways in which America has I would argue been exceptional in the past is

that Americans are far more enthusiastic about techno

logical innovation I think in most other countries even most developed countries

and the general norm in the United States has been yes even if you you know

have a technological innovation that destroys some old sectors it doesn't

matter because you create all these new ones as a result so it's ok if for

example upstate New York is devastated because Kodak and Polaroid go out of

business because you've created this whole new digital photography thing and

and the consumer benefits are obvious I think it's going to be very interesting

going forward whether things like automation of let's say long-haul

trucking or you know which is by the way the largest source of blue-collar jobs

in the United States or as you say retail jobs I don't have a great answer

to this I honestly don't the the only thing I will say is that in some ways

again this gets bound up in identity questions because it's this notion that

what made the United States great was we were a manufacturing powerhouse then we

made things and the truth is that was never completely true but it's really

not true now because America's you know comparative advantage is actually in

services we're really good at that we're also really good at consuming but that's

a whole separate conversation and the in some ways and this goes back in some in

some ways to the the last question I think one of the ways that you can

actually change the debate in the United States is if weirdly you start

valorising services more in other words you don't just lionize the factory

worker you lionize the nurse or the teacher or the other sort of service

professional that actually you know that if you add dignity to those kinds of

jobs and those jobs do have a fair amount of dignity already I would say

but you know if you actually add dignity to those things that actually does

change the conversation a little bit but that's a hard thing to do and it takes

time on Mike Pompeo so let me be clear what I was trying to say about that Rex

Tillerson had as I said foreign policy instincts that I was probably more

simpatico with I didn't think the United States should pull out of Paris I don't

think we should pull out of the Iranian nuclear deal I don't think we should

necessarily trigger a war in North Korea I'm pretty sure Rex Tillerson believed

in all of those things but it didn't matter because Rex Tillerson was the

least competent Secretary of State in history it doesn't matter if you believe

those things if no one listening to you and again what I was

genuinely impressed by was the fact that Tillerson managed to alienate every

major power center in the United States that you would care about if you're a

secretary of state the only person who was on his side by the end of it was the

Secretary of Defense which is not a significant thing but the president

didn't trust him the building didn't trust him Congress didn't trust him and

if that's your situation it doesn't matter what you believe because no one's

gonna listen to you anyway Pompeyo on the other hand is undeniably

more hawkish and I am concerned to some extent about whether or not that means

the United States will pursue a more hawkish course of action but that said

Trump trusts him in a way that he doesn't trust Tillerson or never trusted

Tillerson which means that if Trump were to support you know propose something

like let's say I don't know a bloody nose strike on North Korea that someone

even as hawkish as Mike Pompeo might stop for a moment and think well I'm not

sure I like where that's gonna go and if someone like Pompeo says I don't think

that's the right course of action Trump will listen to him in a way that he

would not have listened to Tillerson so live for this way I don't know what's

going to happen if Pompeo gets confirmed as Secretary of State for that matter I

don't know if Pompey was gonna get confirmed to Secretary of State because

among other things as you point out Rand Paul opposes him and him plus 49

Democrats equals a real serious problem now it might not go that way that said

there are moments where a hawk if there a responsible Hawk can actually stop

even worse impulses and at this point all I'm concerned about with the Trump

administration is preventing the worst case scenario thank you so much I don't

see any more questions so oh here's one all that I don't from from New P here

thanks for coming one question we haven't really talked that much about as

international trust and the question is really goes back to United States though

to what extent do you believe the elites in America have realized that for at

least for Europeans and for many others as well Donald Trump is not a bug he's a

feature over the last five elections three times you elected two times you

elected George Bush jr. and one time you elected Trump and

so did you to what extent have American foreign policy elites or lay leads more

generally acknowledged not to outsiders I mean the u.s. is not just not

trustworthy I mean I mean parties tend to change and they're if the Republican

Party tends to nominate people like this you move from a position where the

United States could lead and have a sort of well I don't like the word soft power

but you had sort of transactional costs were low because you were trusted I mean

a lot of people just by gut reaction trusted United States if you move to a

situation where everything is interest based from the other side as well from

the European side as well the costs for America of doing foreign policy are

going to be sort of rising all the time so do people realize this or it's just

sort of you do people actually believe that if you like someone else things are

going to be just hunky-dory and fine

question the million-dollar question my name is Ben techno Union will Trump have

the guts to fire Robert Miller okay so I'll answer the second question first

which first of all saying have the guts is the wrong way to frame it because it

would be and it would be an episode of rank stupidity if you did that I think

if Trump has any degree of introspection I don't know if he has any he would

acknowledge that his biggest mistake in his first year of office was firing

James Comey as FBI director because that move triggered the appointment of the

special counsel which is then led to where we are now if he fires Muller you

know we have pressed it partly depends on how much longer this is going to go

on when does he do it but the fact is is that you know the Muller investigation

has actually been as special prosecutors or special counsels go it's been a

remarkably productive one he's been it's worth remembering he's been in office

less than a year he's already what indicted five mean ERT

has indicted something like 20 people he's gotten plea deals for a couple of

them there's gonna be a trial of Paul manna for coming in the fall he's made a

fair amount of progress and indeed if you take a look at polling

most Americans do trust the Muller probe more than they trust the Trump

administration so if he does it's worth remembering that when Richard Nixon

tried this during what was called the Saturn at massacre when he ordered his

Attorney General to fire Archibald Cox at that point with a special prosecutor

Cox refused he and then Nixon fired him his deputy refused his deputy got fired

as well and then finally the Solicitor General fired Cox that was called the

Saturday night massacre in the United States and in some ways it was the

beginning of the end for Nixon because it indicated the degree to which he was

willing to abuse his power I suspect it would play out that way there was he

would ask rod Rosenstein to fire Muller my guess his Rosenstein would refuse at

which point he would have to fire Rosenstein and then find a subordinate

who would do it and it would be as problematic because it you know it's

been the one tripwire for congressional Republicans I mean when you saw that

over the weekend where you even had people like Marco Rubio actually

pretended like they have a spine or something

so you know that was so I don't I actually don't think in the end he's

going to do it and the other reason by the way is that he's clear he's wanted

to do it for quite some time and it's been the one area where his own staff

has said no we know that Don McGann has refused twice to you know intercede to

try to fire Muller I don't think I think this is one of the areas where his staff

would actually refuse to follow his orders on that back to the question on

on the United States more generally so let me let me act as this proud American

and and and give a response which is on the one hand look I'm not going to deny

what you're saying we're like the worst relationship Europe has ever been in

right we're like the most volatile significant other you must have ever

been involved with sometimes we're great sometimes we're

abused it's it's a real problem but that said the same country that voted Donald

Trump in george w bush president also was the first OECD country to vote in

ethnic minority to be at the president in the form of Barack Obama so you know

were we're a mixed bag that way and that said I think in some ways it goes

back to this question of Elections having consequences so for example

American or European attitudes towards the United States they weren't thrilled

with george w bush getting elected it was 2004 that was really the problem it

wasn't that we elected george w bush the first time because that was a really

close election and again george w bush lost the popular vote it was that we

reelect them so I think the answer your question is what happens in 2020 if

Donald Trump gets reelected then yeah things are gonna get really

bad and the real district the the other disturbing thing is that American

attitudes about this I went to a saw a conference on soft power where we

debated this and and part of the problem is is that the American attitudes on

this is well yes we've been in moments like this before in fact we were in this

moment in 2008 where if you looked at all like the sort of public opinion

polling and so and so forth American soft power had been eviscerated and what

did we do we elected Barack Obama and we all work it all recovered you know if

you looked at the polling data if you looked at any of it things looked much

better and so I think the belief that a lot of America you know even American

elites have is well we can recover and this is where I start to get a little

worried because Barack Obama was a unique case you know he was different in

a variety of ways he was genuinely charismatic he was a minority and so as

a result that the election because of who Barack Obama was and because of how

he acted we wound up recovering in a way that I'm not sure if we elect let's say

a Joe Biden or you know sort of garden-variety Democrat you'll have the

same effect but I think the real issue here is not the things don't look good

now the question becomes 20/20 if Donald Trump gets reelected then that I'm

actually legitimately worried about there being a permanent divorce thank

you so much than for a very interesting discussion and your analysis of US

domestic politics in u.s. foreign policy I want to say again the just mentioned

professor Shi Yinhong of Renmin University is coming May 3rd to discuss

similar issues with our colleague Hans Jørgen Gåsemyr, and Fyodor Lukyanov

who is the of the council for foreign and defense

policy. We'll talk with Lukyanov on June 14th about the similar thing but

for now thank you so much for coming Dan and thank you all for for coming thank

you

For more infomation >> Global disorder and distrust - Trump as a symptom - Duration: 1:28:30.

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Pres. Trump Adds Lawyer To Team Who Believes In Conspiracy Theory - Duration: 2:14.

For more infomation >> Pres. Trump Adds Lawyer To Team Who Believes In Conspiracy Theory - Duration: 2:14.

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Donald Trump Delivered The One Message Robert Mueller Never Wanted To Hear - Duration: 17:33.

Donald Trump Delivered The One Message Robert Mueller Never Wanted To Hear

Donald Trump and his supporters are fed up with Robert Mueller's witch hunt against

the President.

The investigation has dragged on for months without producing any evidence of collusion

with the Russians.

And now Donald Trump sent Mueller the one message he never wanted to hear.

Trump has refrained from attacking the special counsel by name on twitter.

But that all changed when Trump fired off two tweets blasting Mueller for stretching

out his investigation for months.

These tweets followed a statement by John Dowd – who is one of the President's attorneys

– demanding that the Mueller probe be shut down since the President is innocent of any

collusion and no evidence has been produced.

The Daily Beast reports:

"President Donald Trump's personal lawyer, John Dowd, told The Daily Beast on Saturday

morning that he hopes Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein will shut down special counsel

Robert Mueller's probe into Russia's election interference.

Reached for comment by email about the firing of former Deputy FBI Director Andrew McCabe,

Dowd sent The Daily Beast the text of Trump's most recent tweet on the subject, which applauded

the dismissal.

"I pray that Acting Attorney General Rosenstein will follow the brilliant and courageous example

of the FBI Office of Professional Responsibility and Attorney General Jeff Sessions and bring

an end to alleged Russia Collusion investigation manufactured by McCabe's boss James Comey

based upon a fraudulent and corrupt Dossier," Dowd then wrote.

In making the statement, a senior member of Trump's legal team joins the calls from

his base to end the probe.

As late as mid-December, another Trump lawyer, Ty Cobb, had brushed aside talk of stopped

Mueller's investigation, stressing that there was "no consideration at the White

House of terminating the special counsel."

The president himself has called the Mueller probe a "witch hunt," but has not publicly

urged Rosenstein to shutter it.

When The Daily Beast initially asked Dowd if he was speaking on behalf of the president,

he answered, "Yes as his counsel."

After publication of this story, however, Dowd emailed to say he was actually speaking

in his personal capacity, and not on the president's behalf."

Do you agree that the Mueller probe should be shut down?

Let us know your thoughts

in

the comment section.

For more infomation >> Donald Trump Delivered The One Message Robert Mueller Never Wanted To Hear - Duration: 17:33.

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BREAKING: Trump Fam's Helicopter DIES In AIR Over D.C. – NO Coincidence, Look What Was Found! - Duration: 7:19.

BREAKING: Trump Fam's Helicopter DIES In AIR Over D.C.

– NO Coincidence, Look What Was Found!

News is just now emerging regarding a helicopter flying members of President Donald Trump's

immediate family, which just narrowly escaped a fatal crash en route from Washington, D.C.

to New York.

Without warning, the engine died, forcing the skilled pilot to make an emergency landing

seconds before it was too late.

This terrifying incident could have ended far worse than it did, which may have been

the plan based on what else was found.

When you're as controversial of a leader as Trump is to the incessant left, nothing

and nobody is off limits in bringing down our incredible president.

This includes all members of his family who have been perpetually targeted in a series

of attacks.

However, after today's horrifying mid-air ordeal, it appears that sudden engine failure

may not have been a coincidence considering it was the second time it's happened to

one of Trump's Sikorsky helicopters.

Daily Mail reports:

A helicopter heading for New York that was carrying Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner had

to turn back to Washington D.C. after suffering an engine failure.

A report that was released on Sunday evening detailed how the chopper – one of the Trump

Organization's Sikorksy helicopters – turned back to Ronald Reagan National Airport shortly

after taking off on Thursday afternoon.President Trump's daughter and her husband, who also

works as a senior adviser in the White House, ended up catching a commercial flight back

to the city instead.

Apart from the pilot, the only other person on board the aircraft was a member of their

security detail.

This incident was certainly frightening and the family is likely still shaken after barely

being able to walk away after landing.

However, what's worse was that this wasn't the first potentially fatal in-flight issue

that Trump helicopters have had.

The last happened back in July and was quickly swept under the rug and never spoken of in

mainstream media until now.

The president's Sikorsky S-76B helicopter crashed in June near the Hudson River and

not a single word was released about this horrific accident until the following month

in a report that went missing shortly after.

The strange circumstance is certainly reason for a breaking report upon it falling out

of the sky with passengers on board.

There seems to be a reason why it's been kept completely quiet and now we not only

know why the summer crash happened but who was potentially involved.

In July, Page Six briefly reported on the first Trump's Sikorsky crashes:One of President

Trump's beloved personal helicopters was involved in an accident last month in Manhattan,

but the details are being kept strictly under wraps, Page Six has exclusively learned."

"On June 15, a Trump chopper was involved in a crunch in Manhattan when its tail rotor

hit a fence upon landing at the West Side Heliport alongside the Hudson River.

Photos seen by Page Six appear to show that the rotor was completely sheared off."

"Witnesses say damage to the aircraft was enough to completely ground it, and it had

to be hauled away for repairs."

It was initially suspected that Ivanka Trump and son-in-law Jared Kushner were on board

that ill-fated flight, according to Daily Mail.

However, it was later discovered to actually be Donald Trump Jr and two Secret Service

agents on that particular flight, but what helipad workers did immediately after the

crash speaks volumes as to why the incident was kept so quiet.

Immediately after escaping the aircraft, a crew was immediately there to haul the helicopter

away, but first completely disguised the word "TRUMP" on the side of the aircraft.

Page Six immediately accused the action of being a vain move to protect the president

and his family from the embarrassment.

It turns out it was something far more that his detractors surely didn't want to admit.

In the months since then, sources close to the crash investigation have suspected that

these repeat alarming helicopter malfunctions have been hushed up to prevent exposing a

potential terrorist plot.

Radar Online explains:

Government documents obtained exclusively by RadarOnline.com reveal Donald Trump Jr.

survived the incident thanks to the heroic pilot and two Secret Service agents on board.

The helicopter made a harrowing emergency landing on June 14, 2017 — yet another chilling

example of the First Family under siege — and sources now believe the incident was intentionally

kept quiet to deprive suspected saboteurs from publicizing their near-victory!

But Federal Aviation Administration records — revealed here for the first time — describe

how a tail rotor on a Sikorsky helicopter owned by the Trump Organization suddenly flew

off during a descent into NYC.

The helicopter was set to land after making a 230-mile flight from Washington, D.C.

Records show none of the passengers — Donald Jr., the agents and the pilot — suffered

any injuries.

But aviation experts told Radar the incident would have spelled certain death if the rotor

had detached at a higher altitude.

"It wouldn't surprise me that someone was trying to target the Trump family,"

said Bart Rossi, a renowned political psychologist.

Meanwhile, a Radar investigation has uncovered an alarming pattern of near-misses involving

helicopters and President Trump.

The nightmare emergency landing in 2017 was eerily similar to a 1989 incident when a main

rotor blade separated on a Trump Organization helicopter.

The aircraft crashed into a wooded area in New Jersey, killing two pilots and three Trump

executives on board.

At the time, the future president acknowledged he would have been aboard had he not decided

at the last minute not to fly!

The National Transportation Safety Board blamed the manufacturer for a scratch on the rotor

for the fatal crash.

But former Bill Clinton henchman Larry Nichols said both snafus have a sinister whiff.

"Guys who have enough money to pull off a presidential run are a threat to the establishment,"

he said.

"And that same establishment will try to murder the outsider and their families wherever

they can!"

While Trump owns these aircrafts, the First Family flies on Marine One and Air Force One.

This hasn't deterred the left from attacking his personal fleet still today, referring

to the aircrafts as "aging" and an arrogant way to display his brand.

The truth is, they don't seem to want to admit the incessant threat to his life and

his families lives because they are responsible for spreading hate that could be causing these

potentially deadly attacks to happen.

For more infomation >> BREAKING: Trump Fam's Helicopter DIES In AIR Over D.C. – NO Coincidence, Look What Was Found! - Duration: 7:19.

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Trump Just Discovered Angela Merkel's DIRTY Little Secret…Now There's Hell To Pay! - Duration: 4:38.

For more infomation >> Trump Just Discovered Angela Merkel's DIRTY Little Secret…Now There's Hell To Pay! - Duration: 4:38.

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BREAKING: Major Democrat Just Ordered Armed Citizens To Overthrow Trump – It's Happening! - Duration: 5:34.

For more infomation >> BREAKING: Major Democrat Just Ordered Armed Citizens To Overthrow Trump – It's Happening! - Duration: 5:34.

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Barack Obama Cringes As Donald Trump Eyeballs Corrupt Iran Deal & Says 7 Words - Duration: 3:53.

For more infomation >> Barack Obama Cringes As Donald Trump Eyeballs Corrupt Iran Deal & Says 7 Words - Duration: 3:53.

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HARDBALL WITH CHRIS MATTHEWS Mar.20.2018 Republicans silent in face of Trump's attacks on Mueller - Duration: 9:59.

For more infomation >> HARDBALL WITH CHRIS MATTHEWS Mar.20.2018 Republicans silent in face of Trump's attacks on Mueller - Duration: 9:59.

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Nouvelles révé­la­tions sur la vie sexuelle du fils de Donald Trump : le jour où il a failli - Duration: 2:18.

For more infomation >> Nouvelles révé­la­tions sur la vie sexuelle du fils de Donald Trump : le jour où il a failli - Duration: 2:18.

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Breaking news today⚠️ world news_World War 3 North Korea 'on ALERT' as Trump confirms_english news - Duration: 4:43.

Breaking news today⚠️ world news_World War 3 North Korea 'on ALERT' as Trump confirms_english news

For more infomation >> Breaking news today⚠️ world news_World War 3 North Korea 'on ALERT' as Trump confirms_english news - Duration: 4:43.

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Trump Blocks US Citizens From Buying Venezuela's Cryptocurrency - Duration: 1:02.

For more infomation >> Trump Blocks US Citizens From Buying Venezuela's Cryptocurrency - Duration: 1:02.

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Aubrey O'Day Song DJT on Affair With Donald Trump Jr: Did He Cheat? | Heavy.com | SML TV - Duration: 5:33.

Aubrey O'Day Song DJT on Affair With Donald Trump Jr: Did He Cheat? | Heavy.com

Aubrey O'Day is catching major heat on social media over allegations that she had an affair in 2011 with Donald John Trump Jr.

Currently, Trump is going through a divorce, so news that he reportedly cheated, would definitely add fuel to the fire, though Page Six has reported one of the reasons that Trump's wife Vanessa is divorcing him is because he is supposedly "cheap".

In O'Day's song "DJT", she reportedly details the alleged affair, according to TMZ.

Listen to the song in the above video.

The NY Post has reported that O'Day and Trump reportedly carried on an affair in 2011, when O'Day was a contestant on Donald Trump Sr.'s show The Celebrity Apprentice.

During the season, Trump was an "adviser" on the show and reportedly "fell for" O'Day.

Page Six has reported that Trump's estranged wife, Vanessa, was pregnant with their fourth child at the time of the alleged affair.

A source also said that Vanessa "was going to leave [Don Jr.] then.

That was the start of the downfall [of their marriage].".

Trump and O'Day reportedly ended their relationship at the behest of Trump Sr.

According to Page Six, an insider said that when Trump Sr.

heard about the alleged relationship, he supposedly told Trump Jr.

to "knock it off." On election night of 2016, O'Day reportedly tweeted, "my story I didn't tell is worth millions now." The tweet was later deleted.

  u only get one life, do everything you want.

@fashionnova A post shared by Aubrey ODay (@aubreyoday) on Mar 15, 2018 at 3:06pm PDT.

O'Day's song "DJT" came out in 2013, roughly one year after being on The Celebrity Apprentice and it is highly suspect, since "DJT" is Donald John Trump Jr.'s initials, according to TMZ.

In "DJT," some of the lyrics state, "You want to go back and live in the life that you had have forever? … I'll always want you and always wonder about it but it doesn't matter because I have to stay here.

What made you stop believing in our world?".

An insider told Page Six that at the time of the alleged affair between Trump and O'Day, Trump "pursued her.

It was him who chased her.

He told her that his marriage was already in the process of dissolving … I think his marriage to Vanessa was over long before Aubrey came along." According to Perez Hilton, an insider stated that O'Day had only gotten into a relationship with Trump because she was under the impression that Trump and his wife had separated.

O'Day first rose to fame when she participated on P.

Diddy's reality competition show Making the Band.

O'Day made it into the five-girl group Danity Kane and later went on to model as well.

She had several high-profile relationships as well.

She previously dated fellow Making the Band cast member Donnie Klang and most recently, she was in a relationship with Jersey Shore star Pauly D.

She and Pauly D met on the dating reality show Famously Single and the two dated from 2015 – 2017.

O'Day has also been linked to Evan Ross, Travis Garland, Donnie Wahlberg, DJ Cassidy, and Jesse McCartney.

According to Whos Dated Who, O'Day is currently single.

For more infomation >> Aubrey O'Day Song DJT on Affair With Donald Trump Jr: Did He Cheat? | Heavy.com | SML TV - Duration: 5:33.

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Trump rails against sanctuary cities during roundtable meeting - Duration: 3:29.

For more infomation >> Trump rails against sanctuary cities during roundtable meeting - Duration: 3:29.

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Ivanka Trump's helicopter forced to land after engine failure - Duration: 2:38.

For more infomation >> Ivanka Trump's helicopter forced to land after engine failure - Duration: 2:38.

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Trump Bars US Citizens From Investing In Venezuelan Cryptocurrency - Duration: 0:42.

U.S. citizens hoping to invest in Venezuela's oil-backed cryptocurrency might be out of

luck.

President Donald Trump signed an executive order barring U.S. persons and entities from

dealings with any digital currency issued by the Venezuelan government after Jan. 9,

2018.

In February, Venezuela launched a sovereign cryptocurrency called Petro to help its collapsing

economy.

The White House called the cryptocurrency an "attempt to circumvent U.S. sanctions."

The ban is part of a pressure campaign on Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his

government.

A Trump administration official told reporters investing in the currency should be seen as

directly supporting Maduro's "dictatorship."

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