twitter users complaining of a musky odor are now relieved since the cause has been found and prospectively eliminated
songs poems and political musings, trumpmas, dada, drumpf, the 40 days of trumpmas, trump, election
twitter users complaining of a musky odor are now relieved since the cause has been found and prospectively eliminated
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/29/trump-russia-asset-claims-former-kgb-spy-new-book
https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/us-news/donald-trump-recruited-kgb-codename-34726995
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2025/2/21/2305375/-Before-Trump-was-exposed-as-Krasnov-and-after
https://www.dailykos.com/story/2025/2/21/2305257/-Krasnov
https://www.npr.org/2025/05/09/nx-s1-5392357/republicans-medicaid-trump-reconciliation-bill
Speaker of the House Rep. Mike Johnson, R-La.,speaks to reporters following a House Republican conference meeting at the U.S. Capitol on May 6. Republicans are facing internal divisions over Medicaid as they work to enact President Trump's domestic policy agenda.
Republican divisions over changes to Medicaid — the federal health care program for poor, elderly and disabled Americans — are becoming the chief hurdle to getting President Trump's major tax, immigration and energy agenda through Congress.
GOP lawmakers who represent swing districts insist they will not vote for any proposal that strips benefits. But conservatives are demanding deep cuts in spending and say restructuring Medicaid is one of the clearest ways to achieve that goal.
Driving this discussion is a math issue. To get the bill through Congress, House Republicans are working with a budget blueprint that forces them to find $1.5 trillion in spending cuts to help offset the cost of extending President Trump's 2017 tax cuts. They are also hoping to add new tax cuts that Trump campaigned on, like exempting taxes on tips, overtime and Social Security benefits.
Republicans want to finalize their plans next week in hopes of sending the package over to the Senate by Memorial Day. But in addition to the fight over Medicaid, the party is grappling with a host of other issues, including whether all of the Trump tax cuts will be renewed, food-assistance for low-income families and a controversial deduction for state and local taxes, or SALT.
On Thursday, House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., admitted that negotiators were still sussing out the specifics. But when it comes to Medicaid, he insisted that those who depend on the program will retain their benefits.
"Our true and honest intention is to ensure that every Medicaid beneficiary who is in that traditional community of folks, you're talking about young pregnant mothers and young single mothers and the elderly and disabled, those folks are covered, and no one loses their coverage," Johnson said.
That could be a hard promise to keep, according to health policy experts, who note that nearly 82 million people in the U.S. rely on Medicaid and the related Children's Health Insurance Program for their health coverage.
"While these federal cuts, in many cases, might not directly cut Medicaid coverage and benefits, they would indirectly have that result because states would be left holding the bag," said Larry Levitt, the executive vice president for health policy at KFF, a health policy organization.
"I think there's always been this perception in Washington that Medicare and Social Security are political third rails," Levitt said. "But I think what we're discovering is [that] Medicaid might be a third rail as well."
Johnson, under pressure from his own vulnerable members, has already pulled back on one proposal to restructure how states pay for an expansion to the Medicaid program that was included as part of the Affordable Care Act. The proposal would have decreased the percentage of costs that the federal government takes on — known as the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage, or FMAP — but in doing so would have shifted more costs onto already strapped state budgets.
Moderates insisted the option was a nonstarter and a new Congressional Budget Office report found it would have forced 2.4 million people to lose health care coverage by 2034.
Protect Medicaid signs light up at a demonstration outside the Capitol on Wednesday.
But Republicans are still considering several other options, including:
Potential caps on spending. Some Republicans want to cap the amount that the government sends to states for Medicaid. Moderates have ruled this out for the full Medicaid population. However, some are entertaining caps for those who get coverage through the Medicaid expansion program. The expansion extended benefits to childless adults without disabilities — a group that some Republicans say is less in need than the program's traditional population.
Levitt says that capping spending would still shift costs to the states, albeit more slowly than other proposals, like FMAP changes.
"A per capita cap is almost more of a slow boil," Levitt said. "It would gradually reduce how much the federal government contributes for expanded Medicaid over time. So, you know, in the end they amount to the same thing. They just kind of roll out differently."
According to the CBO, placing caps on the Medicaid expansion population would lead to 1.5 million people losing health insurance over the next decade.
Work requirements. This idea has widespread support from Republican lawmakers who argue that able-bodied adults should have to meet some requirements to receive coverage. They say Democratic policies have significantly expanded the population covered by Medicaid. They maintain too many recipients now are working-age adults who should be required to show they are working or in training or education programs to be covered. Pregnant women, elderly people and children would not face the same requirements.
By enacting work requirements, the federal government is estimated to save $109 billion over 10 years, according to a CBO report commissioned in 2023 looking at able-bodied recipients, with no children, between the ages of 19 to 55. It also found that roughly 600,000 people would lose health insurance, but that the policy would not boost employment.
Adjusting the Medicaid enrollment period. The GOP proposal would shift Medicaid from an annual enrollment process to one that requires recipients to enroll every six months. It would also undo a Biden-era policy designed to ease enrollment and renewal for eligible Americans.
Cutting "waste fraud and abuse." Republicans have made this messaging key to their discussions on Medicaid, arguing that the government needs to ensure that resources are not misused.
The exact bounds of what policies and changes may fall under the category of "waste, fraud and abuse" is unclear. Some lawmakers, including Johnson, have pledged to remove Medicaid coverage for individuals living in the U.S. without legal status, but immigrants who are undocumented are not eligible to enroll in federally funded coverage.
Edwin Park, a research professor at Georgetown University's McCourt School of Public Policy, says GOP messaging on Medicaid is not new. He notes that proposals like expanded work requirements and per capita caps were all part of the Republican fight to repeal the ACA in 2017.
"These proposals are largely targeted at reducing coverage and enrollment, not trying to combat the very rare situation where there may be ineligible people enrolled," said Park.
"This fraud, waste and abuse message is just being used as a label for all these Medicaid cuts, which are long standing priorities, particularly for more conservative members of the Republican caucus," he said.
Hard-line conservatives see the $1.5 trillion in proposed cuts in the budget framework as merely a floor. They inserted language in the plan requiring smaller tax cuts if spending cuts end up below that level.
This week more than 30 House conservatives sent a letter to the speaker noting that the budget resolution the House approved set a target that's not up for negotiation.
"The House reconciliation instructions are binding. They set a floor for savings, not a ceiling. We must hold that line on fiscal discipline to put the country back on a sustainable path," the letter states.
To reach those cuts, Republicans should press for the broadest reforms possible to Medicaid, Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, told reporters on Thursday.
"The math has to add up. Very clear that we need to actually get the transformations we need in Medicaid so that you don't have the able bodied getting greater benefits than the vulnerable."
Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, speaks on the phone before a House Republican Caucus meeting at the U.S. Capitol on April 8. Roy is among a group of fiscal conservatives pushing for changes to Medicaid to bring down federal spending.
The speaker has set a goal of getting a package through the House by Memorial Day, and top GOP leaders say they believe they can negotiate a final package with the Senate and get it to the president by July 4.
Many swing state House Republicans say they need to coordinate final details on any Medicaid changes with the Senate, because requiring them to vote for something that is a nonstarter in the upper chamber opens them up to political attacks in the midterms.
New Jersey GOP Rep. Jeff Van Drew told reporters the discussion has to center on finding a deal that the president and the Senate can pass.
"What we don't want to do — I've been clear — is pass a bill through the House of Representatives that doesn't even have a shot with the president or with the United States Senate," he said. "That would be insane. It's stupid."
Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., has already been vocal about his opposition to large changes to Medicaid.
"Everybody's got to make their own judgment and some folks are probably fine with cutting Medicaid," he told NPR last week. "They view that as a feature, not a bug, but I view it as a bug. I mean, I'm not going to vote for Medicaid cuts."
Rep. Dan Newhouse of Washington told reporters that when Republicans last tried to make significant changes to Medicaid in 2017, "it didn't work out so well." Newhouse said that in his own district, almost 40% of his constituents are on Medicaid.
"It's a huge issue. We want to make sure those people who need it have it available to them."
Oklahoma GOP Rep. Tom Cole says he supports proposals to increase the share that states pay for Medicaid. He says while he won't agree with every decision about every piece of the bill, the central question Republicans will have to answer is will they vote no and "trigger the largest [tax] increase in American history."
He says the way it's worked since President Trump took office in January is that the speaker "adroitly gets us to about the 10 yard line, and then you turn the ball over to Donald Trump" to lock up the votes to get over the goal line."
https://newrepublic.com/article/194710/press-trump-pepfar-atrocity-africa
A recently published study in the prestigious British medical journal The Lancet reports that the Trump administration’s evisceration of the landmark President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR, program that has long been a bulwark in the fight to combat global HIV/AIDS has already sentenced tens of thousands of people in Africa to death, and with each week that passes with the program stuck in limbo, many thousands of needless deaths will follow.
PEPFAR is, by far, the most successful U.S. foreign aid program in history. Since George W. Bush launched it in 2003, it has provided life-giving anti-retroviral, or ARV, medications that have already saved an estimated 26 million lives, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa. That 26 million figure is no exaggeration or guesstimate—it has been confirmed in multiple scientific reports. PEPFAR has also prevented some 5.5 million mother-to-child transmissions of the deadly virus.
For these reasons, it’s shocking that the U.S. mainstream media is barely reporting on the PEPFAR crisis. This media malpractice contrasts decisively with the American press’s blanket coverage some decades ago, when HIV/AIDS was scything its way across Africa, killing more than two million people a year. The lack of attention now raises the uncomfortable suspicion that people in the global south are interesting to the American media only when they are dying in large numbers.
Beyond the millions of lives saved, PEPFAR is also a wildly successful extension of U.S. soft power, the absence of which will only create a vacuum for others to fill. As a former U.S. ambassador to Zambia warns, ending PEPFAR is, in this way, a substantial blow to American national security because it opens up space to both China and Russia to expand their already growing influence on the African continent.
The Lancet study offers up some grim details of the near future. Its 23 co-authors looked at nine countries in sub-Saharan Africa—which is only about half the nations that are most affected by the gutting of the program. Still, it concluded that Trump’s January 27 suspension of PEPFAR in those countries alone would eventually cause 60,000 additional deaths, even if the program were restarted after only 90 days. Those 90 days passed on April 27, and there are no signs that PEPFAR is about to be revived.
Those of us with firsthand experience in Africa, who witnessed both the scourge of AIDS and then the miraculous recovery though PEPFAR, are terrified at what we are seeing.
The program’s current status is not at all clear. First, the Trump administration canceled it entirely; then there was talk of a “waiver,” which was then apparently rescinded. This is where the mainstream U.S. media failure is particularly damaging, because firsthand reporting could answer these questions about what is actually happening in nations like Kenya, Zambia, and Tanzania. The New York Times has five correspondents in Africa; The Washington Post has two; the American cable news networks seem to have no problem sending their reporters to Ukraine or Israel-Palestine, but somehow Africa’s dire health emergency is passing unnoticed.
It was not always so. A quick search of The New York Times’ website for 1999 and 2000, back when HIV/AIDS was sweeping across the continent, revealed roughly 88 reports and opinion pieces over that two-year period. But now, since January 1, 2024, the grand total of articles is around 11.
It’s maddening that PEPFAR should find itself in political peril. The program was established by a Republican president, and has typically enjoyed overwhelming bipartisan support in Congress until recently. Among its most enthusiastic backers are evangelical Christians, both in America and Africa; evangelicals have long been deeply involved in health care in Africa and actually run a number of the hospitals there that help dispense the life-giving medications. They, and others, point out that the program has been a tremendous success, untouched by significant corruption scandals, despite its huge size.
Today, Shepherd Smith is part of a vigorous evangelical effort to persuade the U.S. Congress to revive PEPFAR. He and his wife, Anita Moreland Smith, started doing HIV/AIDS relief work in Africa back in the mid-1980s; they’ve been there more than 60 times. They head an organization based in Washington, D.C., called Children’s AIDS Fund International.
Smith told me that no one seems to know with any precision about the current status of PEPFAR programs across Africa. “I do hear a lot, but there’s no good information anywhere,” he said. “It’s an absolute mess. We do know that some PEPFAR programs are still operating, while others have closed. Virtually all of the orphan and vulnerable children’s sites have been closed.”
He estimates that PEPFAR right now is functioning at no better than one-third of its former capacity. And he warns that the Trump shutdown has done tremendous damage in only three months. “Many treatment sites had to let all their workers go,” he said. “Reconstructing a supply chain that has never been the very best is going to be extremely difficult.”
Smith and his allies are concentrating on lobbying conservative Republican members of Congress to restore PEPFAR to the budget legislation that is currently under consideration. He is optimistic. “We still have a lot of support in Congress,” he said. “On international HIV issues, the faith community is the strongest voice on the Hill.”
He encourages the public to lobby their own senators and members of Congress to revive the program.
Smith is also worried about the lack of U.S. media coverage about the PEPFAR crisis. “Will it take 25 million people in Africa dying to get people’s attention again?” he asked, “when enough attention now can prevent that from happening?”
Dan Foote was the U.S. ambassador to Zambia from 2017 to 2020, and was in charge of the PEPFAR program there. He echoes Smith’s concern that the Trump administration has already done critical damage. “Part of my job was to make sure that the ARV medications got from the capital, Lusaka, into the villages,” he told me. “I spent a lot of time going out into the countryside. You need to push the drugs out to where the people need them. It took time, but we were finally at the point where the distribution was working. But as soon as you disrupt that exceptionally complex supply chain, the chain breaks.”
Foote cautions that restarting the ARV distribution will not happen overnight. He warns that Trump’s threatened tariffs could further interfere with the procurement of the ARV drugs, which are imported from around the globe. “Turning the supply chain back on, full blast, could take as much as a year,” he said.
The former envoy also warns that ending PEPFAR could revive a global HIV/AIDS epidemic. “People in Zambia and in Africa who take the ARVs regularly have reduced their viral loads to an ‘undetectable’ level,” he explains. “That means you cannot transmit AIDS to others. Cut off the medications, and millions of people can spread the illness again. We live in a time of expanding international travel. HIV/AIDS will explode globally and eventually reach the United States.”
Foote also explained that the ARV drugs are expensive. “Maybe 2 percent of the Zambian people could afford them,” he said.
One of Foote’s most passionate pro-PEPFAR arguments is that the program is actually vital to America’s national security. “In order to have strong national security, we need to have robust alliances around the globe,” he said. “We need to have access to governments to build those alliances. So we need to do something for them. As ambassador, my only job was to promote America’s national interests, and PEPFAR was vital to that.”
He continued: “Both China and Russia are expanding their influence in Africa. When China wants to see senior government officials there, they get in the door by bringing a suitcase full of $100 bills. I got in by reminding them about PEPFAR.”
Foote concluded, “I can’t even calculate how much cutting PEPFAR has damaged America’s national security over the past 105 days.”
Those of us who witnessed the before and after with PEPFAR are horrified. Back in the early 1980s, I spent years based in the southern African nation Swaziland, now called Eswatini, reporting on apartheid and war across the region. Swaziland was one of the countries hit hardest by HIV/AIDS; I’ve made several return visits over the years since the disease first ravaged the population. In 2008, before PEPFAR took full effect, the epidemic was on the verge of destroying the country. Death notices filled the newspapers every single day. One friend, a professor at the national university, told me at the time: “Sometimes I look at the students in my biggest lecture course, who are 19, 20, 21 years old. There they are—talking, giggling, full of life, just as students always have been. And I think that if nothing changes, 10 years from now, one out of three of them will be dead.”
I went back to Swaziland eight years later, after the PEPFAR program had arrived in force. Precious Dube, a 50-year-old nurse matron, told me with feeling: “People in America have saved the Swazi Nation. If you had not helped us, our people would be sleeping in the streets and dying of disease and hunger. Instead, now, we are about to contain AIDS.” Millions of people across sub-Saharan Africa would echo Precious Dube’s gratitude. When will mainstream American journalists find them, and publish or televise what they have to say?
James North has reported from Africa, Latin America, and Asia for the past 47 years. He tweets at @jamesnorth7. He lives in New York City.
if youve seen some of the commercials for carls jr burger joint - www.google.com/...
www.newsbusters.org/...
- you might feel like pounding your puzder - carls ceo and drumpf regime
labor secretary nominee puzder felt like 'pounding' 'his' - as alleged
by his ex-wife
www.riverfronttimes.com/...
thanks also to slate and maddowblog
Remember, remember! The fifth of trumpvember
the 40 days of trumpmas - a serial poem
for 40 days the trumpeter reigns,
his lies and hate on whom he disdains,
but election day will come so soon,
we'll no longer hear the orange baboon;
in 39 days full of world wide problems.
we could elect him to get rid of the muslims,
but as he'll rant on trivialities of his presidential life,
what could be worse? - you could be his wife;
in 38 days just what will you do?
the donald has said he likes lgbtq,
but as he bullies his women and all his men too,
if youre questioning, what stops him from bullying you?
in just 37 days, some people are saying,
(or pleading or hoping or some even praying)
the duke of prunes will dye his forelock purple my friend,
and thus make america grape again,
our days are down to just 36,
before our problems the don will fix,
he will on day one do what hes said - true,
he'll wall out our enemies - and fat women too!
on the 35th day of trumpmas
yes just seven weeks remain!
will the polls and tallies deliver us
donald with his golden mane?
34 days and the vice-pipers have piped,
though pence didnt say why donalds suit shouldnt be striped,
he wouldnt defend his master's string pulling,
to make america great? - who do they think they're fooling?
just 33 days till the macho tornado,
unless its blown away by hurricane machado,
with women and voters he has so much to loose.
keep your mouth shut donald (unless youre changing your shoes)
32 days and we’ve been hit by the big blowhard,
donald spoke here in fla (oh, we had a hurricane too)
this administration gives us playing the race card, a weak economy, and unemployment
but if you want a job you could be donald’s campaign manager (unless youre a jew)
31 days, just a month, remains;
will the donald say hes sorry, and his baser impulses restrain?
or keep blaming bill clinton for our moral demise;
when trump speaks to us, our NO votes must be our replies!
election comes this time (in 30 days) each 4 years,
time for praise and tears and fears;
as polls will open in many states,
vote early, please dont vote late!
down to 29, just a leap february,
and theres still the donald quite
contrary;
donald donald, how does your garden grow?
quoth the master debater, "with pretty maids groped in a row"
just 28 days - later or soon,
and the zombies will rise, led by the big goon;
unless everyone gets a reality inoculation,
i might have to move to canada for a well deserved vacation;
now just 27, less than 4 weeks,
no time for you to say 'yikes!' or 'eeeks!'
obama wants to go to mars and colonize it for man,
lets send trump tomorrow! and colonize it for orangutan!
26 days are all that remain,
will our democracy and economy go down the drain?
if we all keep listening to the blustering oaf,
will he give jobs and prosperity? - or just half a loaf
25 days - will more women speak?,
of the antics of donald who the presidency seeks,
dating 14 year old girls or groping their mothers,
how did the gop pick him over the others?,
24 days - were down to two dozen,
the next woman who speaks just might be your cousin,
or mother or sister, aunt, niece, even daughter,
describing the circumstance in which donald caught her,
23 days left and trump doesnt yet have as many accusers,
as cosby, but he assures us that they are all really losers,
sent by bankers or hillary with secret agendas,
to disrupt our election of him - our defender!,
22 days and we know charity begins at home,
but donalds attention is so prone to roam,
his gift that disappeared to 911 survivors from his foundation?,
oops! maybe donald spent it on a vacation,
21 days and trump says the election may be rig-ly,
if hes not the winner and his total's not big-ly,
tremendously higher than hillary gets,
he warns his supporters may all lose their wits,
20 days left and while george zimmerman still walks free,
the man who shot at HIM got 20 years - while trayvon got eternity,
trump wants us to support our cops and maintain law and order,
he'll put all the inner city dwellers in jail, and send the immigrant criminals far across the border,
19 days left till we all go to pretend,
to elect someone to lead us, as if on it our lives depend,
but wise man, donald trump, already really knows,
who we really voted for - a wolf in president's clothes?,
18 days and we bad hombres demand a rebate,
on the ill feelings left since the comments of one candidate,
the debaters have met in their final grudge match,
but only donald can say from whose hands victory will be snatched,
17 days and our government is corrupt with quid pro quo,
did you take latin at wharton? is that how you know?,
donald wants us to fire at them all - the bureaucrats lined up in rows,
and believe me, corruption is a subject. that donald really knows,
16 days - lets set term limits on all our office holders,
and put all our women in binders - or maybe in folders,
donalds endless complaints are becoming a sour whine,
have a little cheese with that, from wisconsin, where
hillary's doing fine,
15 days and on stocking covered thighs did linger,
two miniature hands with two thumbs and eight tiny fingers,
they belonged to the donald who believed that he owned,
any thing that he wanted - or anyone he got alone,
14 days yes only two weeks,
till the duke of orange assends to the throne he seeks?,
to rule all americans, the strong and the weak?,
and dominate the globe with power that's peak?,
the 13th day to go - does that seem unlucky?,
not for donald whos lately been appearing quite plucky,
claiming media, polls, and parties are against him,
and rallying his multitudes with wit waxing dim,
on the 12th day of trumpmas donald awoke with a jerk,
promptly fired his latest campaign manager (who considered that a perk),
if youre "AAAfroAAAmurikan" and unemployed i can put you to work,
barked donald the businessman from behind his sly smirk,
it's the 11th and engineer casey trump is in the caboose,
i hear some of you saying oh no! what's the use,
our campaign will probably just go off the tracks,
but donald says its ok - cause he's got "the blacks",
just ten days left yes only one-zero,
til donald is hoping that he'll be your hero,
as new hillary emails come under investigation,
donald hopes to rename camp david to camp donald for
his vacations,
like a cat has nine lives we're left with only 9 days,
till we're subject to donald? and his old wicked ways,
on foreign affairs he says he'll save us from isis,
but his domestic affairs are misogyny and crisis,
our days are numbered - yes only eight,
till once again we make america great,
by getting rid of candidates who have nothing to add,
goodbye donald you wont make america sad,
just one week to go - its day minus seven,
till america's lifted above - to trumpty dump heaven?,
where for rich folks like donald opportunity abounds,
and we keep the working poor with a wall that surrounds,
how the time it does fly its already day 6,
till americans problems the donald will fix,
his solutions begin on trumpday number one,
dont you like them? they'll come at the barrel of a gun,
Five days to go, baby, One in five,
No one here gets out alive, now,
david dukes not opposed to all jews,
he backs trump - who are you going to choose?,
only 4 days left till the armaged-don,
he'll seize power by the horns once he has won,
and donnie will be what he longs for - a winner,
using the FBI to wreak havoc on hillary the sinner,
only three left, just a triad of days,
and the donald his supporters continues to amaze,
with hoopla and folderoll made up in his head,
his winning temperament will leave us all dead,
just a pair of days - 2 - till trump paradise,
since these words you're reading please heed my advice,
the creatures that surround us are beginning to bite,
'blacks for trump' fear the Illuminati so lets turn out their light,
just a single day left till our thanksgiving,
deliver us from donald and preserve the living,
forget sanity and disgard your misgivings,
but pray hard to your gods that they'll be forgiving,
since we've got the nukes why can't we use'em?,
on the road to 2016 why couldn't we lose HIM?,
and trumpmas now has finally come,
the tallies will count up to a winning sum,
unless the earth is struck soon by a cataclysmic comet,
to elect a candidate who just makes you want to vomit?,
we wish you a merry trumpmas at this time each 4 years,
if you have'nt voted you've lost the chance to mitigate your fears,
cause donald duck is ready to lead, forget your crocodile tears,
so you'd better get the vaseline and lubricate your rears!
dont wait for the next shoe to drop - donald's keeping them firmly in his mouth