Sunday, December 9, 2018

Trump news on Youtube Dec 10 2018

Donald Trump tossed the coin at the Army-Navy football game soon after he announced the departure of his Chief of Staff John Kelly

 The commander in chief flew to Philadelphia for the 119th meeting in the storied rivalry between the service academies and officiated the coin toss at Lincoln Financial Field, home of the Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles

 Navy called 'tails'  which was the was the result when Trump's flipped coin landed on the turf

Speaking to reporters on Saturday as he was leaving to attend the game, Trump confirmed that Kelly is leaving before the start of the next legislative session

 The staff-shake up allows Trump to start fresh in anticipation of Democrats' ascension to power in the House in January and and his re-election campaign in 2020

 Trump, who saw the Army-Navy contest in 2016 as president-elect, is the 10th sitting president to go to the game

President Theodore Roosevelt was the first, in 1901.  Share this article Share POTUS was seeing shaking hands with Gen Mark Milley who he said will become his next top military advisor

 Milley is a battle-hardened commander who has served as chief of the Army for the last three years

Like previous commanders in chief, Trump was expected to switch sides at halftime in a show of impartiality

The first game between the two service academies took place in 1890. Army won by 17 to 10

   No. 22 Army (9-2) is in the AP Top 25 for the first time since 1996. The Black Knights have won seven in a row and have defeated Navy (3-9) two straight years

 He was joined by State Department secretary Mike Pompeo, Department of Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, Interior secretary Ryan Zinke, Army's Mark Esper, and the Navy's Richard Spencer

 Military members present included current Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman Gen. Joseph Dunford, set to be replaced by General Mark Milley who is also in attendance, Lieutenant General Darryl Williams, and Vice Admiral Walter Carter Jr

  Trump attended the game in 2016, shortly after his presidential election victory, but skipped 2017's rivalry, saying he would be watching it on television

The rivalry game was first played in 1890, the first year that the Army had an organized football team

 Then-President Theodore Roosevelt started the tradition of attending the game in 1901, and of the 19 other men to serve as president following Roosevelt, eight attended the game while in office

President Harry S. Truman attended the most games out of any president, making appearances at the stadium of at least six games, according to the Truman Library archives

During the matchup in 1950, Truman even conducted the coin toss.Former Presidents Woodrow Wilson and John F

Kennedy each attended the game twice during their tenure. Kennedy was shot and killed shortly before the 1963 game

 Out of the eight years President George W. Bush was in office, he watched the game from the arena three times

Former Presidents Calvin Coolidge, Gerald Ford, Bill Clinton and Obama all attended the game once

 

For more infomation >> Donald Trump tosses the coin at the start of the Army-Navy game - Daily News - Duration: 4:23.

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Leftists Attack Trump's Motorcade – He Rolls Down Window And Sets The Record Straight - Duration: 4:43.

For more infomation >> Leftists Attack Trump's Motorcade – He Rolls Down Window And Sets The Record Straight - Duration: 4:43.

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President Trump Attends Army-Navy football game - Duration: 1:41.

For more infomation >> President Trump Attends Army-Navy football game - Duration: 1:41.

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Three Anti-Trump Comedians Just Got Destroyed In One Night - Duration: 1:38.

For more infomation >> Three Anti-Trump Comedians Just Got Destroyed In One Night - Duration: 1:38.

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Huawei Arrest Shows Trump Has No Game Plan Against China - Duration: 2:47.

Huawei Arrest Shows Trump Has No Game Plan Against China

By escalating tensions over national security, the United States may be hurting its own position in trade talks.

Ms. Ford, a former Defense Department official, served as senior adviser to the assistant secretary of defense for Asian and Pacific security !-- --affairs!-- -- from 2009 to 2015. Ms. Cutler served as acting deputy United States trade representative from 2013 to 2015.

The arrest of Meng Wanzhou, a top executive at one of China's most strategically important companies, on the same day that President Trump and China's president, Xi Jinping, declared a 90-day "truce" in their trade war, is a diplomatic curveball that may fulfill some national security goals but could complicate upcoming trade talks with Beijing.

The administration is going to face many more difficult moments like this as its steps up competition with China, but its actions thus far suggest that it doesn't have a fully formed plan for how to manage the task.

While it appears that the timing of Ms. Meng's arrest was coincidental, this is not the impression in Beijing, where the move is seen as a political play to create leverage on trade or cripple Chinese technology companies. If this is not the case, the administration needs to come out much more clearly with a solid message about Ms. Meng's arrest and where it fits within broader American goals toward China.

Moreover, the fact that American officials allowed the summit to play out without raising the issue — or informing Mr. Trump, apparently — sends another muddled message to Beijing. Does it suggest the administration will continue to throw curveballs regardless of what China brings to the table? Or does it simply reveal a team that is hopelessly divided between factions with competing goals? Either way, if China concludes that the United States will pursue a barrage of punitive actions no matter what steps China takes to address American concerns, this will leave Beijing with little appetite to make meaningful concessions.

It's also not clear what this arrest means for upcoming trade talks. If the administration's aim is to build pressure and create leverage against China, this approach is unlikely to work. In his comments to NPR, the public radio network, on Thursday, John R. Bolton, President Trump's national security adviser, was reluctant to directly discuss the arrest. Instead he emphasized issues like intellectual property — signaling a seriousness about tackling structural problems on trade. This is a worthy goal, but it is unlikely that Ms. Meng's arrest will, by itself, produce much leverage. Taking aim at a single company, even one as valuable as Huawei, is unlikely to shift deep-seated interests and practices in the Chinese economy.

The administration would instead be wise to more assertively send the message that the arrest is a law enforcement action separate from trade talks. Suggestions by anonymous administration officials that Ms. Meng's arrest could be used as leverage in upcoming trade discussions undermines the message about national security and, frankly, seems like an afterthought.

If Ms. Meng and Huawei violated the law, then the United States has every right to seek her arrest and bring her to trial. Suggesting that this principle is for sale would cheapen the idea that the United States cares about playing by the rules. It would also signal to American allies and to China that American concerns about technology theft or violations of sanctions against Iran can simply be traded away for other priorities. Using the arrest for political ends could also encourage China and other nations to employ more heavy-handed tactics against American businesses in the future.

The arrest also has some potential second-order effects. Although Beijing's public response to the Huawei arrest has so far been measured, Chinese social media forums are already full of suggestions for potential retaliatory moves. If tensions escalate, there could be new risks for American executives working abroad.

If that happens, how will the administration respond? What if China retaliates against not just the United States but against allies like Canada, where Ms. Meng was arrested for extradition to the United States? The administration has been pushing countries such as Canada, Britain and Australia to support not only its approach to technology theft but also Iran sanctions. They will need assurances that the United States will stand beside them if the going gets tough.

Moreover, continued moves against Chinese technology firms will have long-term implications for America's interests abroad. The administration is right to be concerned about America's technological prowess and protecting sensitive infrastructure. But if our actions lead China to accelerate its plans to achieve self-sufficiency in key technologies — a likely development — we will be creating a more formidable competitor. Are we ready?

The administration has legitimate concerns about China's commitment to playing by the rules on both trade and national security. But at multiple points this year — including the president's last-minute U-turn over sanctions on the Chinese technology firm ZTE and the deployment of tariffs against American allies on national security grounds — it has been its own worst enemy. With Ms. Meng's arrest, the administration faces perhaps its biggest test yet. It needs to show that its actions are part of a solid game plan to protect American national security interests and promote national competitiveness. That's the deal the American people deserve.

Lindsey Ford (@lindseywford) is the director of political-security affairs for the Asia Society Policy Institute in Washington. Wendy S. Cutler (@wendyscutler) is a vice president at the Asia Society Policy Institute.

For more infomation >> Huawei Arrest Shows Trump Has No Game Plan Against China - Duration: 2:47.

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President Trump On A Tirade, Calls Sitting Senator 'The Dick' - Duration: 2:16.

For more infomation >> President Trump On A Tirade, Calls Sitting Senator 'The Dick' - Duration: 2:16.

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'SNL': Robert Mueller Tells Eric Trump That Getting Elected Was Worst Thing That Ever Happened To Do - Duration: 2:42.

Robert De Niro returned as the ever-watchful Robert Mueller who scarily hid in Eric Trump's closet! Watch the Dec

8 cold open of 'SNL' here!    Robert Mueller (portrayed once again by Robert De Niro) returned to SNL for this week's cold open to literally hide in Eric Trump's closet

At first, Eric gets comforted by Donald Trump Jr. that he won't get indicted (although Eric thinks it means something to the effect that "there's no sugar indict coke

" After trying to read "Twas The Night Before Christmas", Don Jr. and Eric hears a creak that Donald attributes to the "cheap steel dad uses to build these towers

" After Don Jr. leaves the room on what seems to be a very heated legal phone call, Robert Mueller (AKA Eric's "dad's friend from work") appears next to Eric and eventually tells him that he's not the worst thing to happen to Donald Trump

No, Robert tells him "getting elected president was the worst thing that ever happened to your dad

" Watch the whole sketch go down here!    Last week's cold open had Alec Baldwin returning as Donald Trump

In addition to a vampyric Rudy Giuliani, the sketch played on Trump's jealousy over Vladimir Putin and Saudi Prince Mohammed bin Salman, with Putin trying to convince Trump that his handshake with Salman "meant nothing

" The whole sketch ended with Trump and the rest of the cast singing, "Don't Cry For Me Argentina

"  And in terms of cold opens, SNL's season premiere started off with the most hilarious opening sketch of all season

Featuring Matt Damon as Brett Kavanaugh during his confirmation hearing, the now-justice flew off the handle and at one point, chugged a beer

At one point, Kavanaugh screamed, "I lifted weights every day . . . am I angry? You're damn right! But if you think I'm angry now you just wait until I get on that Supreme Court and then you're all going to pay!" "It's just me, Robert Mueller

Your dad's friend from work." #SNL pic.twitter.com/xsLhnSg1oe  — Saturday Night Live – SNL (@nbcsnl) December 9, 2018    We'll keep you posted with all of the latest SNL sketches

In the meantime, check out all of the latest photos from this season in our gallery above

For more infomation >> 'SNL': Robert Mueller Tells Eric Trump That Getting Elected Was Worst Thing That Ever Happened To Do - Duration: 2:42.

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Battle Looms For Trump's Picks For UN Ambassador And Attorney General | NBC Nightly News - Duration: 2:13.

For more infomation >> Battle Looms For Trump's Picks For UN Ambassador And Attorney General | NBC Nightly News - Duration: 2:13.

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Donald Trump throws his support behind Paris 'yellow vest' protests - Duration: 4:30.

 Donald Trump appeared to back the yellow vest protesters in a provocative message to Emmanuel Macron, the French president, claiming that the Paris climate change agreement had triggered the unrest

 The US president also claimed protesters were chanting his name on the streets of the French capital, as his rift with Mr Macron continued to deepen

 As demonstrators were clashing with police in Paris and protests were being held across France on Saturday, Mr Trump said: "The Paris Agreement isn't working out so well for Paris

Protests and riots all over France. People do not want to pay large sums of money, much to third world countries (that are questionably run), in order to maybe protect the environment

Chanting 'We Want Trump!' Love France."  Sunday Telegraph reporters, placed across the city, heard no such chants

 He later tweeted that the protests were "very sad" and reiterated his call for Mr Macron to pull out of the Paris climate change deal, and agree to lower taxes

 He did not specify how he believed the agreement and taxes were linked. Very sad day & night in Paris

Maybe it's time to end the ridiculous and extremely expensive Paris Agreement and return money back to the people in the form of lower taxes? The U

S. was way ahead of the curve on that and the only major country where emissions went down last year!— Donald J

Trump (@realDonaldTrump) December 8, 2018  The provocative intervention comes at a difficult moment for Mr Macron, who has taken pride in his ability to "manage" Mr Trump

 Last year he invited him to Paris for the Bastille Day celebrations, rolling out the red carpet and leaving the US leader so impressed he wanted his own military parade in Washington DC

 Mr Trump then returned the honour, inviting Mr Macron and his wife Brigitte in April to the one and only state dinner he has held so far

 The two men cemented their friendship by planting a tree on the White House lawn

Donald Trump and Emmanuel Macron plant a tree, as a symbol of their friendship, in April  But in recent months the relationship has soured

 Mr Macron used his Armistice Day speech to deliver a pointed rebuke to Mr Trump's nationalism, and Mr Trump hit back, mocking his French counterpart and saying he should try to "make France great again"

 Mr Macron responded by saying that France would not be pushed around by the United States

For more infomation >> Donald Trump throws his support behind Paris 'yellow vest' protests - Duration: 4:30.

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Trump Announces John Kelly's Departure By Year's End - Duration: 0:38.

For more infomation >> Trump Announces John Kelly's Departure By Year's End - Duration: 0:38.

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Trump Says He's Choosing Winchester Native Mark Milley To Be Joint Chiefs Of Staff Chairman - Duration: 0:37.

For more infomation >> Trump Says He's Choosing Winchester Native Mark Milley To Be Joint Chiefs Of Staff Chairman - Duration: 0:37.

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Smug Amal Clooney Now Blaming Trump for Violence Against Journalists in Other Countries - Duration: 2:53.

For more infomation >> Smug Amal Clooney Now Blaming Trump for Violence Against Journalists in Other Countries - Duration: 2:53.

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Le Drian demande à Trump de ne pas se mêler de politique intérieure française - Duration: 2:06.

POLITIQUE - Le ministre français des Affaires étrangères, Jean-Yves Le Drian, a invité le président américain Donald Trump, qui a commenté par une série de tweets critiques le mouvement des gilets jaunes en France, à ne pas se mêler de politique intérieure française, ce dimanche 9 décembre

Une déclaration qui intervient au lendemain de "l'acte IV" du mouvement de contestation

"Je dis à Donald Trump et le président de la République (Emmanuel Macron) lui a dit aussi: nous ne prenons pas partie dans les débats américains, laissez-nous vivre notre vie de nation", a-t-il déclaré dans l'émission "Le Grand Jury" RTL/Le Figaro/LCI

Selon le président américain, "les protestations et émeutes dans toute la France", sont la conséquence de l'accord sur le climat signé à Paris en 2015

Le milliardaire a même assuré que les protestataires scandaient des "Nous voulons Trump", ce qui lui fait dire "J'adore la France!"

Samedi, le député LREM des Français de l'étranger s'était aussitôt empressé de réagir

""Donald le Gâteux est atteint d'incontinence cérébrale. Comme un "gâteux" souffre d'incontinence d'urine voire de matières fécales et "gâte" ses draps", avait asséné l'élu sur Twitter

À voir également sur Le HuffPost:

For more infomation >> Le Drian demande à Trump de ne pas se mêler de politique intérieure française - Duration: 2:06.

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Trump Already Has List Of People To Blame If Recession Hits - Duration: 3:03.

According to a new report and Politico, Republican sources say that Donald Trump is putting together

a list of people he can blame if the economy goes into a recession.

Now, Politico says that they have spoken to Republican sources.

They've talked to people inside the White House.

Maybe these people are being honest.

Maybe they're not.

Maybe they exist and maybe they don't, but here's the thing.

Regardless of whether or not this actually happened, we do know 100 percent that Donald

Trump is preparing to blame the Democrats in case there is any economic downturn.

After the Democrats get sworn in, he has already blamed drops in the stock market on the fact

that Democrats got elected prior to the midterms.

He had already been throwing a, or excuse me, laying the ground work to try to say,

the Democrats will crash the economy should they take office.

He has been doing this for months.

We know this is his game plan because we know that he knows that the economy is not stable

right now and that his own policies have made it so much weaker as I have been repeatedly

saying for a very long time.

Now we have built our economy out of Straw, except we didn't just build it out of Straw.

We built it out of Straw on top of quicksand and everything is about to come tumbling down

the tariffs that Donald Trump has put in place.

The tax cuts for the wealthy elite, the stagnant wages of American workers, the growing, uh,

a difference in CEO to worker pay.

The gap between the haves and the have nots continues to get wider people losing food

stamp coverage, people losing their health insurance.

Any one of those things has the potential to wreak havoc on a fragile economy.

We've got all of them.

We have every single one of those things happening in this country right now.

All of the best economists in this country say that we are headed in a downward path

very soon.

You may not be able to see it at the moment, but the recent drops in the stock market based

solely on Donald Trump's tweets.

That tells you something.

The stock market is highly volatile right now and it's because of Donald Trump.

The trade wars have lost us billions upon billions of dollars, and that is because of

Donald Trump.

The tax cuts are screwing over American workers, and that's because of Donald Trump and the

Republicans.

There is no way to spin this to where you could actually blame it on the Democrats,

but that is exactly what Donald Trump is going to do.

We have known that from the start.

So regardless of whether or not this political story, whether they talk to actual people

and whether there's actual people, we're being honest, it doesn't matter because we already

know who Donald Trump is going to blame if the recession happens and it's literally going

to be everyone except for the actual people responsible for it.

For more infomation >> Trump Already Has List Of People To Blame If Recession Hits - Duration: 3:03.

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Trump's Attacks On Mueller Make The President Look Weak, Scared, And Crazy - Duration: 4:28.

I'm going to start by asking a really weird question here.

You ever tried to obey the cat?

If you haven't?

I. I don't recommend it at all, but let me tell you what happens when you try to give

a cat a bath.

First and foremost, most cats, most average house cats do not like the thought of water.

They do not like being approached by a big giant human being trying to snatch them either.

So when you have a cat and you're in the bathroom with the cat and you got the tub ready to

go, they will try to run.

They will try to flee, but eventually being in such a confined area, they find out they

have nowhere to go, so they backed themselves into a corner, hissing, scratching, clawing,

freaking out because they see the inevitable that is about to happen.

Eventually you get them in the tub regardless.

They can hiss and scratch and bite all they want, but it still happened.

That scenario is what we're seeing play itself out with Donald Trump's tweets this week.

On Friday morning, the president opened his day by tweeting out these asinine, absurd,

unhinged attacks on this special prosecutor.

None of these attacks, by the way, backed up by any evidence whatsoever.

He tweeted out is used well, witch hunt in all caps, followed by an exclamation point

or to talk about all the conflicts of interests from Robert Mueller, talked about the fact

that they're not investigating Hillary Clinton.

All of these attacks that made Donald Trump like a backed up cat in a corner, panicked,

freaked out, scared, and most importantly week, anyone who looks at Donald trump and

thinks, that's a strong man, that is a, that is a man I like, and as a manly man, go read

his tweets.

Seriously.

These are the tweets of a panicked, scared, weak child who sees the walls closing him

or around him.

He knows what's happening.

He knows bad things are coming.

He knows that there is nothing he can do to stop it, even if he were to fire Robert Mueller.

Mueller is covered his bases very well.

Mueller, who by the way, is a Republican.

He is not conflicted.

Why is he not investigating Hillary?

Because he wasn't given the task of investigating.

Hillary Republicans Investigated Hillary for years and years and years and years, and I'm

not even a fan of hers, but I know that she didn't break any laws.

Give it a rest.

You are that backed up, freaked out cat in a corner.

You're terrified.

You're hissing, you're scratching your biting, but none of those can do any damage and none

of them are going to stop the inevitable from happening.

So my message to conservatives out there who look at Donald trump as a good leader and

a strong human being, again, read his tweets.

Are these the tweets?

Have a strong man.

Are these the tweets?

Have a confident man or are these the tweets of a petulant, whiny narcissist who has been

able to get away with every single thing he's wanted to get away with in his entire life

until now?

Suddenly he's having to face the consequences, suddenlies having to be investigated and suddenly

he could lose it all.

The only question that remains is will these attacks on the special prosecutor resonate

with the public among dunks?

Donald Trump's base probably depends on how they view them.

If they view them as the tweets have a weak man terrified about his own future, then they

could lose support.

After all, studies have shown that Donald Trump did appeal more to men who are insecure

in their manhood and thought Donald trump was the vision of what a dude is supposed

to be.

These tweets don't reflect that.

These tweets reflect a very scared man.

So if these insecure men look at that and say, Hey, he's not what I thought he was,

maybe he could actually lose support from it.

As for the rest of the public, the independence, the Democrats and everybody in between, I

don't think they're swayed one way or another with these Donald Trump tweets.

Well, I can't say one way or the other.

They are swayed.

They see the same thing that I see the same thing that most rational people see.

They see a, a weak person who is scared of the future and possibly somebody who's gone

a little bit crazy because that is exactly what has happened with Donald trump.

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