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allcrncthing · 3 years
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TITLE :: WHAT?
DESCRIPTION :: Flynn gets an unlikely visitor early one morning.
TIME PERIOD :: July, 2012
CHARACTER(S) :: Flynn Aspen, Nick Fury
WORD COUNT :: 1.7k
WARNINGS :: Swearing
NOTE :: This is part one of two in the DON’T RUIN HER mini-series!
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It was seven in the morning when knuckles thumped against her apartment door. Flynn shuffled out of her room, rubbing her eyes as she went. God, I hope it’s not Mrs. Baust complaining again. Mrs. Baust was Flynn’s elderly neighbor located on her right. For whatever reason, she didn’t like the redhead; always complaining about stupid shit and trying to her the landlord to kick Flynn out.
She opened the door then nearly slammed it shut. Standing before her was Nick Fury, director of SHIELD. “Can I help you?”
With his one good eye, he looked her up and down. “You know why I’m here. Get important shit and meet me on the roof.”
“Mister, you must be confused.”
Fury scoffed. “Me? Confused? Hurry up and grab your shit, I’ll see you on the roof.” He closed the door for her, leaving a dumbfounded Flynn in his wake.
She pressed her forehead against the cool wood of the door. “How the hell did he find out?” She groaned, agitated. “Christ Flynn, he’s Nick Fury, he always finds out.”
Around three months ago Flynn found out she had powers. She gained them after a chunk of alien tech fell from the sky. Crazy, right? The tech--which was a good sized piece of metal if she was being honest--slammed into the back of her neck, embedding itself in her skin. Flynn could still feel it back there, sometimes rubbing her finger over the weird bump when she was nervous or bored. It must have been from a far-off society that thrived off radiation or something, because these new powers were seemingly radiation based. It was all still very new to Flynn, so she wasn’t 100% sure of anything regarding her abilities.
She trudged back to her room, shrugged off her lavender old lady nightgown, and stepped into bleach-stained grey sweatpants and an oversized I HEART NYC shirt. It was left over from her parents’ visit a while back. Hey, she wasn’t going to get all dolled up for a stranger who told her to “pack up her shit” at seven something in the morning.
Flynn grabbed a duffle bag and filled it with the basics; toiletries, a few pairs of clothes, and chargers for her devices. She hopped whatever Fury wanted with her was quick and easy. Trying to explain her disappearance at work would be a bitch.
Minutes later she appeared on the rooftop, seeing Fury standing off at the ledge, looking off into the distance. “Seen Fallen Soldier recently?”
Her blood ran cold.
Flynn licked her lips, “No.”
“Not after your skirmish in the alley?” He pressed, turning to face her.
Flynn shook her head.
Fallen Soldier was one of HYDRA’s goons. He was a fallen World War I soldier by the name of Dennis Van Dyke. According to what Flynn had read--which may or may not have been on the dark web. . .--HYDRA recently reanimated his once frozen corpse to snuff out anyone with powers. His supposed mission was to kill his target before dragging their body to a local HYDRA lab for testing.
It just so happened that he went after Flynn. Three nights ago while walking home from her shift at work, the corpse struck. He came at her with stinking, peeling flesh and the sharpest bayonet she had ever seen. While he moved at a slow pace, every time he made contact with Flynn she would get knocked over by his force. The fight was her first real power test-run. Flynn discovered she could fly and somehow create fireballs among other things. Going against Fallen Soldier was tiring. So much so she lit him on fire then proceeded to pass out on a nearby rooftop. Flynn was lucky he didn’t find her and kill her in her sleep.
Fury turned back around, facing the sun once more. From his coat pocket he drew a remote. In the sea of buttons he pressed a white one off to the left.
Hundreds of feet in the air floated the SHIELD Helicarrier. Flynn had never seen the beast of an air ship in person before. She only saw pictures of it from the battle in New York.
“Wow,” she breathed, nearly dropping the duffle bag.
“Welcome to your new home.” Fury said, watching as a ramp came down from the helicarrier’s underbelly.
Her brows immediately furred together. “My what?”
“New home! Can’t let you stay down here with that undead bastard looking high-and-low for you.”
Fury walked towards the ramp, taking quick strides. “Hurry up so we can get started on paperwork.”
She scampered after him like a puppy. “Why?”
“You’re just full of questions.”
“Oh no, how dare I question the man who told me to pack up my stuff and follow him.” Flynn groaned.
A look flashed over his face, like she did have a point. “I watched your fight with Fallen Soldier and I liked what I saw. Had to get to you before HYDRA.” Fury pressed another button, opening a door on the carrier’s side.
“Is this a temporary thing?”
“Temporary?” He howled. “Does Tony Stark shop at Walmart?”
“No. . .”
“Well, you have your answer.”
The inside of the helicarrier was bustling with life. Scientists in crisp white lab coats drifted around while armed security members marched from corridor to corridor, looking for any threats. Standing in the middle of that mess was Maria Hill.
The brunette had her arms crossed, eyes focused on Flynn. “How the hell did you get her onboard so quickly?”
Fury chuckled, “I have my ways, Hill.”
Maria rolled her eyes. “Welcome aboard, Aspen.” She held out a hand for a quick shake. “Come with me and I’ll take you for testing. It’s just to make sure your physical health is decent. If not, we have world-class doctors on board.”
“Don’t forget about that paperwork,” hollered Fury, walking away from the two women.
The ladies made eye contact. “The paperwork isn’t much, don’t worry. Most of it’s just new stuff the council requires.” Maria explained, easing Flynn’s mind just a little.
They walked down the hall, heading towards the lab wing.
Walking through the helicarrier was just mind boggling. Each part of the air ship held a certain meaning, and all of them served it well. She passed by a holding cell of lower-level, petty villains sitting inside. Many of which were whining about calling their lawyers. Another section was dedicated to the testing out of weapons. A tall ginger dressed in precautionary armor threw a small, onyx colored orb at a rubber dummy (akin to the ones found in dojos). Upon making contact with the dummy, the circle exploded, wrapping it in two thin but sturdy pieces of white rope. The tester let out an impressed noise and went to scribble something down on the clipboard next to her.
Now, they were in the lab wing. Each scientist aboard the helicarrier had their own designated lab, Maria explained. The one they were heading to belonged to their lead medical examiner, the one they sent all of the new recruits to, Doctor Sierra Warner.
Dr. Warner was a tall black woman with thick dreads dyed light brown almost blonde, pulled into a ponytail atop her head. She greeted the two with a smile, motioning for Flynn to take a seat on the examination table. “Welcome,” she said, voice as sweet as her smile.
“Thank you,” Flynn replied as she hopped onto the table.
“Fury’s newest recruit?” She inquired, eye flitting between Maria and Flynn.
Maria nodded, “Yup.”
The following minutes were taken up by basic tests; ones where Dr. Warner would check Flynn’s reflexes and her eyesight. Pretty standard stuff. Then she kind of went off track. “Fury showed me footage of your. . .fight with David Van Dyke--”
Flynn’s eyes nearly popped out of her head. He has footage of that? “How the hell did he get footage of that?”
Dr. Warner chuckled, “SHIELD has cameras all over New York.”
“God, you guys are like big brother.”
“I like to think we have flashier stuff here,” said Warner. “But as I was saying, Fury showed me your video and I thought it would be smart to use a dosimeter on you; just to check your radiation levels.”
“But why?”
The doctor shrugged, “I just have this gut feeling. Here at SHIELD we developed our own version. Instead of having you hold it, you’ll breathe into it like a breathalyzer. The results come back much faster and more accurately. For whatever reason.” Dr. Warner reached into a desk, and pulled out the SHIELD dosimeter, which did look a lot like a breathalyzer. “You can tell that I didn’t help in the development of this.”
“Who did?” Flynn inquired, grabbing the dosimeter. She brought the tube to her lips, sending a steady stream of air into the piece of tech.
“Dr. Celeste Flores-Rivero.” Warner replied, pulling the dosimeter from her mouth after it beeped, allowing her to know it was done processing the sample it had received. “Before she dropped off the map,” she muttered, observing the data displayed on the dosimeter’s digital screen.
“I’ll tell you later,” Maria whispered, giving Flynn’s shoulder a pat.
Dr. Warner chewed on her bottom lip, eyes flitting from Flynn to the dosimeter. “Flynn, I’ve never seen numbers like this before.” She rubbed at her chin, face full of uncertainty. “You’re as radioactive as Chernobyl. Hell, I didn’t even know that was possible.”
“Me?” She pressed the tip of her finger right in the middle of her chest. “Me? Flynn Aspen me?”
She nodded, “Yes.”
Flynn’s fingers went right to the back of her neck, feeling the foreign object just below her skin. “What will happen then?” God, I should’ve just stayed in my fucking room.
Dr. Warner wheeled her chair over to Flynn, resting two gloved hands on her knee caps. “We’ll figure something out. We’ve dealt with the Hulk, we can deal with some radiation. For the moment we’ll keep doing tests and then figure out what our next steps are. Some of the most brilliant minds are here, we’ll find a way to help you cope.”
She let out a heavy sigh, deflating a little bit. “Okay, yeah, that’ll work.”
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bigyack-com · 4 years
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Once affordable, Phoenix rents among fastest rising in US - real estate
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Aspen Day-Flynn and her boyfriend, Travis Tolin, were thinking of moving back to her native Washington state this fall when their Phoenix landlord helped give them the push.The monthly rent on their two-bedroom house jumped from $1,000 to $1,500 because the owner planned to renovate.“It really pushed us out the door faster,” said Day-Flynn, a 23-year-old hairstylist.She and Tolin, a 25-year-old tattoo artist, found an apartment that’s similar in size to their 986-square-foot (110-square-yard) Phoenix house for $1,600 in Ballard, outside downtown Seattle. While it’s among the priciest U.S. areas to live, the couple is earning more money there.Phoenix long has been considered an inexpensive place to live, but that may be changing. Even some middle-class people are struggling to make ends meet as the desert city experiences some of the nation’s fastest-rising rents, jumping as much as 7% over the past year.The metro areas of Miami; Knoxville, Tennessee; and Raleigh-Durham and Charlotte, North Carolina, as well as Washington, D.C.; Denver and Colorado Springs, Colorado, are among others with rapidly soaring rents.Now the fifth-largest city in the U.S., Phoenix has become a victim of its own success as Californians seek cheaper housing and snowbirds fleeing winter weather buy homes or rent apartments that sit empty during the scorching summers.Advocates say more initiatives are needed to create affordable housing, like a non-profit financial institution that provides loans to build apartments for working families along the city’s light rail.Better funding of the state’s housing trust fund also would help, said Joan Serviss of the non-profit Arizona Housing Coalition. The fund that once provided $40 million to help with housing issues was capped at $2.5 million after the recession. She said that although state lawmakers this year approved a one-time injection of $15 million, it’s far from enough.While it’s more expensive to live in Seattle, San Francisco and other cities known for a housing crisis and homelessness, Phoenix rents are outpacing salaries.A worker in Arizona’s capital must earn nearly $20 an hour to afford an average two-bedroom apartment, according to the National Low Income Housing Coalition. The non-profit says the average Arizona renter now earns about $17 an hour. The state’s minimum wage is $11.“We are one of the least affordable places in the United States” for housing, said Mark Stapp, executive director of Arizona State University’s master’s degree program in real estate development. “It’s not only a social issue, it’s an economic issue. Employees need places where they can afford to live.”Tenants have few options, with Arizona law largely favouring landlords. Rent control, like the 7% cap in annual increases that Oregon lawmakers approved this year, seems unlikely in a state largely controlled by Republicans.A new luxury apartment complex with a pool and gym facing Phoenix’s light rail asks about $1,600 a month for a one-bedroom apartment and $2,330 for three bedrooms. Older single-family homes for rent nearby include an 890-square-foot (99-square-yard) historic house with two bedrooms priced at $2,300.A $600 studio can still be found to the west or the south, but in older buildings without amenities.Metro Phoenix has hovered near the top of several commercial real estate databases for fastest-growing rents over the previous year.Yardi Matrix ranked metro Phoenix No. 4 nationally, with a 6.1% increase in apartment rents over a year. REIS by Moody’s Analytics put it at No. 2, saying monthly average rents in the Phoenix market surged 7% from the third quarter of 2018 to the third quarter of 2019. Only metro Miami saw a larger jump, at 7.5%, while the nationwide increase was just over 4%.Home prices also are rising. September figures from S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Indices showed metro Phoenix leading the way — at 5.8% — in the highest year-over-year gains for home prices among 20 markets nationwide, followed by the Las Vegas area with 4.7% and Charlotte, North Carolina, with 4.6%.Evictions are also up, with courts issuing nearly 44,000 eviction judgments last year, slightly more than 2017, an Arizona Republic study found.Carisa McAuliffe, her boyfriend and her two sons were evicted in September from a two-bedroom Phoenix apartment less than a month after withholding their $1,400 rent to protest problems like bed bugs.McAuliffe, 37, said in her native California, tenants sometimes don’t pay to persuade landlords to fix problems. She didn’t know Arizona landlords can quickly evict tenants who withhold rent for any reason. McAuliffe left her computer security job to sort things out. She and her boyfriend, who buys and sells cars, are staying with friends while the boys, ages 2 and 5, live with their grandmother.Phoenix, like many other places, faces a shortage of affordable housing going back a decade to the Great Recession. Overall, the city’s housing supply is at about 4.7% — the national average, according to REIS.Thomas Egan, president and CEO of the Phoenix housing non-profit FSL, said the state needs about 165,000 affordable units costing renters less than 30 percent of their income. Just 2,000 units were built this year, he said.Nationally, housing inventory has been tight since the recession, said Andrew Aurand of the Low Income Housing Coalition. He said there are fewer units available in coastal cities and metro areas with fast-rising rents like Phoenix, where people can spend more than a third or even half their earnings on housing.Phoenix non-profit development organizations like Chicanos Por la Causa pick up some slack, managing about 2,300 affordable and market rate units.Native American Connections just opened a 64-unit development downtown where income, unit size and number of occupants are used to calculate rents ranging from a $440 studio for a lower-earning person to a $940 three-bedroom apartment for a family earning slightly more, CEO Diana Yazzie Devine said.“It’s no secret that Phoenix is facing an affordable housing crisis,” U.S. Rep. Ruben Gallego posted on Facebook.The Arizona Democrat said the new building ensures that individuals and families who work and attend school downtown can afford to live there, too.Scott VanSoest, who manages a complex for the Foundation for Senior Living, which helps provide affordable housing for older people, said Phoenix used to be affordable “but now rents are out of control.”Linda Stanley pays $236 of her $820 monthly disability check to live there.“If I didn’t qualify to live here by being disabled, I’d be homeless now,” she said. Read the full article
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Epic Movie (Re)Watch #143 - The Librarian: Curse of the Judas Chalice
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Spoilers below
Have I seen it before: Yes
Did I like it then: Yes.
Do I remember it: Yes.
Did I see it in theaters: I don’t think it’s ever been shown in theaters, so no.
Format: DVD
1) At the time of viewing this it was the only Librarian film I had never rewatched. Not from a dislike of the film, I do enjoy it, more just because I was never in the mood before I guess.
2) The opening is very 007 while also still remaining very much Librarian. It is clear they’re going for a 007 vibe (a strong separate adventure establishing the character and tone for the film which doesn’t have too much bearing on the rest of the plot) but Flynn is still a dork (sneezing into a glass of champagne and then explaining how it’s not really champagne) and the humor is still there. It’s a lot of fun!
3) One thing I truly enjoy about this film is we get a bit more with Charlene/Jane Curtin. She is on the phone with Flynn during most of the beginning, and her reactions to the escalating purchases is incredible. Shows you that Jane Curtin is still comedy gold.
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4) The entire auction scene is awesome, actually. It relies very heavily on comedic misunderstanding on three fronts: Flynn with his girlfriend, Flynn with Charlene, and Flynn with the auctioneer. It leads to some clever gags and just good fun all around!
5) I love the duel Flynn has with this random villain at the beginning of the picture, but more than that I love how they’re both history nerds! How they talk about the artifacts they’re destroying and the history behind them and GAH! Whey couldn’t we have more of this bad guy!? I LOVE this bad guy!
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6) The large connection annex!
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I love the effort in these films to make The Library more and more wondrous and (in result) giving us a regular stream of Flynn geek out sessions! I would 100% be Flynn in the library. Just saying.
7) I totally love Flynn’s breakdown in this film, and Wyle is amazing in the scene. It is absolutely hysterical and shows Flynn at a point of pressure we haven’t seen even when his LIFE is threatened!
Flynn: “Yeah I’m fine. Yeah I’m good. What could POSSIBLY be wrong!? I mean I work in a BASEMENT! Doing a secret job I can’t even tell my mother about! AND MY BEST FRIEND IS A SWORD! What could possibly be wrong!?
Charlene: “I think he’s snapped!”
Flynn: “This place is SUCKING THE LIFE OUT OF ME! I look around, I don’t even see relics anymore. You know what I see? I see the parts of my life I have GIVEN UP finding them! Blackbeard’s chest, my mom’s sixty-fifth birthday! DaVinci’s diary, my ten year college reunion! Do you even KNOW how often those come along?”
[Beat as Judson and Charlene look at each other.]
Judson: “Um...ten...ten years?”
8) Can I just say, I could have really used more scenes between Judson and Charlene in these movies.
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(GIFs originally posted by @flynnscarnation.)
9) Bruce Davidson!
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Davidson is probably best known for his villainous role as Senator Kelly in the original X-Men film, but his role here as Professor Lazlo in this film is a nice change of pace. For most of the film he’s a little more introspective and definitely more intellectual. There’s a certain sadness and age he plays to Lazlo, but a nice twist he brings to the part when the story allows him to (more on that later).
10) One of the best things about this film is when Charlene comes to Flynn’s apartment more-than-a-little-drunk and has a heart-to-heart with him.
Charlene: “These are travel brochures for vacations I never took.”
Charlene: “You’re not the only one this job has cost.”
It’s a side to Charlene we’ve never seen before. A fun side, a regretful side, an empathetic side, and a side I really wish we’d get to see more of because Curtin plays it wonderfully.
11) Can we just all take a moment to appreciate how incredibly dorky Flynn’s New Orleans outfit is?
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He’s such a dork I love it.
12) Stana Katic as Simone.
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I love Stana Katic. Stana Katic is what kept me going through the weaker final seasons of “Castle”. The news that Stana Katic would not be on a proposed ninth season of “Castle” if it were renewed had me stop watching it. Her brief appearance in Quantum of Solace was great for me. I think Stana Katic is incredible and her performance in this film is no exception.
Simone may be the best developed of all three female leads in the Librarian film series, and considering how great Emily Davenport was that’s saying something. She is devoted to her destiny, she embraces it and celebrates it (and she tries to encourage Flynn to do the same). She has this incredible love for life and energy you see in all her scenes, a remarkable feat considering the fact that she’s dead. Her life is defined by her destiny, her need to do good, but also the pain she’s held. The loss of her lover, of her LIFE. Yet most of her scenes are defined by this love of life I mentioned before. A playfulness, a fun energy and just sincere passion that infects every scene she’s in. She messes with Flynn, she used to be an Opera singer because she LOVES music, she has this incredible smile and it’s just...GAH! I’m obviously a bit biased because I love Katic so much but I think she KILLS it as Simone.
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13) Obligatory Jonathan Frakes (the director of this film and the previous Librarian film) cameo!
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14) It is also worth noting that Wyle and Katic have some incredible chemistry. Maybe even more so than Flynn did with Emily in the last film, and THAT is saying something.
15) So I’m pretty familiar with most fictional movie logic, but I have to say the idea that Judas (the disciple who betrayed Christ in most Christian religions) is a new idea I kinda like. It gives the vampire an interesting origin and provides a lot of explanations (why silver harms them because of Judas’ thirty pieces of silver, their fear of the crucifix, how a wooden stake from an Aspen tree can kill them because that was the kind of tree Judas hung himself from, etc.).
16) I love this line.
Andrew [after Flynn is surprised he doesn’t believe in Voodoo]: “What? I’m a black man living in New Orleans, I have to believe in Voodoo? It’s the twenty-first century.”
17) I have said time and time again that I would probably be Flynn in these situations. Like Flynn, my tongue can be too sharp for its own good.
Flynn [after being asked why he wants the Judas Chalice]: “I already have the Judas plate and the Judas knife and fork, so if I want the complete set...”
Flynn [after the bad guy monologues]: “Wow. I’ve actually never sat this close to a psychopath before.”
18) This random thug has known Flynn for MAYBE an hour (TOPS!) and already has made a great observation about him.
Thug: “You always talk in like whole paragraphs, you ever notice that?”
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19) The deepened mythology of The Library - how it holds the Tree of Knowledge and is pitched in a bigger war between good and evil - doesn’t ever really get to play out in a film. However, you can see THAT story in the TV show followup “The Librarians” on TNT!
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Now that I’m done with the commercial segment of my post...
20) The twist of having Bruce Davidson’s Lazlo end up being Count Dracula who needed the titular chalice to recover his strength is actually really great. I did NOT see that coming the first time I saw this film, and I think it continues the trend started in Return to King Solomon’s Mines of having a nice final act twist to keep the audience on its toes. They work better than one might initially expect.
21) Okay, I have so many questions...
Flynn [after saying he’s fought evil in many forms]: “Approximately thirty-five forms. Give or take.”
So we have the bad guy from the first Librarian, the time traveling ninjas from the end of the first film, the Crystal Skull dude from the beginning of Return to King Solomon’s Mines, the main bad guys from that film, and the evil historian guy from the beginning of this film. That’s five forms of evil. What are the other thirty?
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22) So after Flynn kills Dracula Simone decides to move on, to let herself die so her soul can be at rest because she protected the Chalice and now the vampire who turned her is dead. And you know how she goes out?
Simone: “I’ve always wanted to see the sunrise again. Will you watch with me?”
She watches the sunrise with Flynn...
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And they confess their love to each other right before she dies.
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(GIF originally posted by @queerseth)
You hear that? That sound in the distance? Oh it’s nothing. Just my heart breaking.
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I really enjoy this film and I think it’s a fitting end to what has become The Librarian trilogy. I think it may be as good as Return to King Solomon’s Mines if not for different reasons. The handling of vampires in the film gives it a distinct taste, Wyle and Newhart are great as always, Curtin gets some more fun things to do, and the addition of Stana Katic to the cast is just 100% spectacularly! I think it’s just great and if you like any of the other Librarian stuff, Stana Katic, or just adventure films in general, you should give this a watch.
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aspenhouserentals · 6 years
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The Ultimate Deal Into A Aspen ski House Lease
Aspen Home Rentals Winter, Spring, and All Yearround You Can locate aspen house rentals summertime , winter, spring, and even fall. But, identifying the very best time for you will revolve around those activities which you wish available. If you are an enthusiastic ski fan, you have to come across aspen ski house rental in ski season during December through March. You may even indulge in ski during the summer, but temperatures could reach the top 70s. Of course, some vacationers like that! You'll find annual festivals, so too, so there's definitely a reason to visit aspen vacation house rentals. There are also lots of biking, biking, and horse riding trails accessible the summer , also. Just what time old best suits your lifestyle and schedule? That's the first question to answer when considering an aspen ski house rental or getaway in Aspen.
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Aspen Luxury Property Rentals and Vacation Priorities, Another Part of this"Goldilocks Test" relates from what you really need to complete on your holiday season. Choosing the Aspen vacation property which is"just right" for you is dependent upon your own priorities. Luxurious rental homes in Aspen, Colorado arrive in all kinds of shapes, sizes, and fashions. However, they also come in a variety of areas. If you are interested in being close one of those four excellent mountains for ski at Aspen, we can find the Aspen ski property rental that you need within your own life. But if you would prefer to be someplace relaxing, we will get Aspen holiday rentals for that purpose, also. It all comes down to exactly what you wish to do most on your family vacation in Aspen. Whether you are buying, selling, or looking for a luxury aspen vacation house rentals, the relationship you will develop realtors in Aspen needs to and must be quite a positive one.
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What Makes Our Associates Specialist Realestate Agents? Expert Real estate agents are produced exclusively by frequent interaction with customer care services, real estate knowledge, and loyal business methods. Negotiation capabilities are vital, too. Our spouses and also Aspen realestate agents need every home or lease to maneuver your personal"Goldilocks Test". That suggests we desire your house as well as your practical experience to become"just right". If you don't have the very best bargain on your own order, sale, or lease, then we aren't doing our tasks. That is why our esteemed partners come out of the diverse collection of wallpapers to provide the most adaptable, lively, and detailed service Aspen has to offer. We're the realtor in Aspen who is able to come across homes before they're listed. How can people do this? It is all thanks to our gifted staff. Let us learn slightly bit more about our partners and our aspen ski house rental brokers.
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oldguardaudio · 7 years
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Need a Tad of Media Bias -> John Kelly was so upset with how Trump handled the firing of FBI Director James Comey that he called Comey to say he was considering resigning
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Listen to The Big Idea
John Kelly proves he can manage up on his first day as chief of staff
Anthony Scaramucci talks on his cell phone in the rain as he boards Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base last Friday. He got forced out as White House communications director after just 10 days. (Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images)
BY JAMES HOHMANN with Breanne Deppisch and Joanie Greve
THE BIG IDEA: John F. Kelly’s first move as White House chief of staff — firing communications director Anthony Scaramucci — validated President Trump’s decision to elevate him. The 67-year-old retired Marine general showed that he’s no nonsense, and the alpha male in the Oval Office surely appreciated the early show of strength.
“Trump’s willingness to dismiss Scaramucci — whom he hired just 10 days ago — was viewed by many in the West Wing as an indication that he is eager to impose order and is giving Kelly the tools to do so,” Abby Phillip, John Wagner and Damian Paletta report. “Removing him from the communications post is part of an effort to change the culture of the White House.”
It makes sense that Kelly axing someone as colorful as The Mooch would get the lion’s share of attention, but three other stories that came out in the past 24 hours also foreshadow what kind of chief he’ll be:
1. “A hint of Kelly’s potential influence on Trump emerged two weeks ago, in Aspen, Colorado, when Kelly made a startling revelation,” writes the New Yorker’s Ryan Lizza, the reporter who found himself on the receiving end of one of Scaramucci’s profanity-laced tirades last week: “According to several sources who attended a private briefing that included some of the nation’s most senior current and former national-security officials, Kelly sought to ease their minds about one of the most controversial and famous Trump proposals: the border wall with Mexico. Kelly explained that he had spent a great deal of time talking through the issue with Trump, and he believed he had convinced the President that he didn’t actually need to build a physical wall … To the officials in the room, it was a fascinating admission. Kelly seemed to be suggesting that he was one of the few people who might be able to tame Trump and get him to back off some of his most cartoonish policy ideas, even the ones that were core campaign promises.”
2. Kelly was so upset with how Trump handled the firing of FBI Director James Comey that he called Comey to say he was considering resigning, CNN reports: “Comey, who took Kelly’s call while traveling back from Los Angeles to Washington, responded to Kelly by telling him not to resign … (Two) sources said Comey and Kelly are not close friends but that they had a professional relationship and a deep mutual respect for each other. … ‘John was angry and hurt by what he saw and the way (Comey) was treated,’ one of the sources said.”
3. Kelly is already making overtures to Democrats, per the Daily Beast: “Even before he formally started the job, Kelly was reaching out to top Capitol Hill Democrats in hopes of regaining political capital ahead of what is expected to be a bruising fight over tax reform and other administration priorities. ‘Tax reform is gonna be a heavy lift,’ a senior White House official [said]. ‘No reason to write off/alienate [Democrats] any more than we already have.’ A spokeswoman for … Nancy Pelosi [said] that Kelly reached out her over the weekend with the two holding a phone conversation on Sunday. A spokesman for … Chuck Schumer … confirmed that Kelly reached out to him as well.”
Trump says White House has ‘tremendous’ support and ‘fantastic leader’ in Kelly
UNDERSTANDING KELLY’S WORLD VIEW:
— The new chief of staff gave a fascinating 90-minute interview last July to Foreign Policy’s Molly O’Toole, in which he decried “the cesspool of domestic politics.” At a moment when Michael Flynn was being mentioned as a possible running mate for Trump, the recently retired general warned former brass to avoid wading into the 2016 campaign. “To join in the political fray, I don’t think it convinces anyone,” he said. “It just becomes a talking point on CNN.”
“He said Clinton and Trump ‘are not serious yet about the issues’ and speak only in generalities when it comes to complex topics ranging from combating the Islamic State to handling the Syrian refugee crisis. The campaigns ‘don’t reflect reality.’ Kelly said he’d be willing to serve in either a Trump or Clinton White House but didn’t endorse either.Whomever wins, he added, ‘will be in desperate need — and I mean desperate need — of military and foreign policy advice, because the world out there is just getting crazier and crazier.’ …
“The retired general said the anti-Islamic State fight will continue long after Obama — and probably his successor — leaves office, a grim reality that neither Clinton nor Trump seems eager to openly discuss. ‘You’re not going to win this thing by dropping bombs on these people,’ he said, adding that neither presidential candidate was willing to acknowledge that the sustained ‘victory’ they promise would likely require a large number of U.S. and coalition troops deployed to Iraq for decades to come.”
John Kelly listens as Trump speaks during a cabinet meeting yesterday. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
SPEAKING TRUTH TO POWER:
— Republican consultant Blain Rethmeier recalls a quote from Kelly during his confirmation hearing to run DHS: “I have never had a problem speaking truth to power, and I firmly believe that those in power deserve full candor and my honest assessment and recommendations.”
“One reason the general’s success can be expected to be repeated at the White House is his understanding of Sun Tzu’s observation that ‘a leader leads by example — not by force,’” Rethmeier, who helped prepare Kelly for his hearing as a so-called sherpa, writes in an op-ed for the Washington Examiner. “He didn’t mince words at his confirmation hearings in questioning the viability of the border wall or the wisdom of a complete Muslim ban, or in stressing the important role good relationships with Muslim clerics played in Iraq. I am convinced that Kelly will patiently explain to the president that he cannot go on undermining his own most loyal supporters in tweets (a la Attorney General Jeff Sessions), leaving the heavy lifting to others in achieving policy goals (Obamacare repeal), or allow open feuding among members of his leadership team. And he will insist on the power to ensure appropriate procedures are put in place to rein in the madness.”
— “As a former White House chief of staff, the best advice I could have given [Kelly] has been overtaken by events: Don’t take the job,” quips John Podesta, who held top positions in the Bill Clinton and Barack Obama administrations, in an op-ed for today’s paper. “Kelly, who has rendered extraordinary service and sacrifice to the nation, just signed up for what may truly be an impossible mission … To have any chance of succeeding, he will have to accomplish three extraordinary tasks, all at odds with President Trump’s instincts. First, discipline. … Kelly’s second task will be to restore strategic direction to Trump’s haphazard policy-making process. … Kelly’s third task might be the hardest. He has to protect the integrity and independence of the Justice Department and special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s investigation from constant interference by the president and the White House …
“The truth is that the president needs Kelly more than Kelly needs him,” argues Podesta, who was chairman of Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign. “Trump simply cannot afford to have Kelly walk without disastrous consequences. The new chief of staff should use that power to restore discipline and dignity to a White House sorely in need of both.”
— “In his 40 years in the military, Kelly developed a reputation for bluntness that won him the respect of his fellow Marines and sometimes grated on senior officials in the Obama administration,” Greg Jaffe and Andrew deGrandpre wrote in a profile over the weekend. “He is best known in Washington as an experienced battlefield commander who led U.S. troops in Iraq and lost a son in Afghanistan in 2010 to a Taliban bomb. But the most relevant experience he will bring to the chief of staff job is a tour as senior military adviser to Defense Secretaries Robert M. Gates and Leon E. Panetta in the Pentagon. The job demanded Kelly act as a disciplinarian, pressing to make sure the military service chiefs and the sprawling Pentagon bureaucracy were executing the defense secretary’s agenda …
“As a four-star general, Kelly was frequently at odds with the Obama White House.He spoke out forcefully on issues including Obama’s plan to shutter the prison complex in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and the perceived vulnerability of America’s borders. At a time when the Obama administration was trying to wind down America’s wars and calm fears of a terrorist attack, Kelly often spoke of the threat posed by groups like the Taliban in dire terms. … In charge of U.S. Southern Command, Kelly oversaw the military detention center at (Gitmo). His weekly updates on the prison, which were blasted out to dozens of White House and Pentagon officials, became well known for their candor. ‘His vernacular wasn’t the typical government prose,’ said one former White House official. ‘He would call out some of the military commission judges, saying that they had no idea what they were doing.’”
— At DHS, Kelly has demonstrated that he can be combative with lawmakers: Speaking in April at George Washington University, he said that congressional critics of the Department of Homeland Security should “shut up’’ and assume the agency is acting appropriately and following the law. “If lawmakers do not like the laws they’ve passed and we are charged to enforce, then they should have the courage and skill to change the laws,” Kelly said. “Otherwise they should shut up and support the men and women on the front lines.” Watch:
Kelly tells DHS critics to change the laws or ‘shut up’
HOW LONG WILL KELLY’S HONEYMOON LAST?
— “General Kelly has the full authority to operate within the White House, and all staff will report to him,” said White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders.
— It seems inevitable, though, that palace intrigue will continue, and that Trump’s kids will balk sooner than later at going through an intermediary to get to their dad. From Abby Phillip, John Wagner and Damian Paletta: “In one of the strongest indications that Kelly will have greater authority than his predecessor, Trump’s daughter Ivanka Trump and son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner — both of whom advocated for Kelly to be hired — have expressed their willingness to support any structural changes Kelly might make … Sanders confirmed that they, too, will report to Kelly, as will all other officials. But Kelly is planning to bring at least one senior adviser from the Department of Homeland Security with him to the White House. There are signs that these new hires may be met with a chilly reception, two people familiar with the matter said, raising questions about who will hold influence in a White House overloaded with aides competing for influence. … Ivanka Trump and Kushner were instrumental in bringing Scaramucci into the White House in large part to oust (Reince) Priebus, who led the establishment wing. After Scaramucci’s explosive interview with the New Yorker … they soured on him and were supportive of Kelly’s efforts to oust him.”
— “The president gave Mr. Priebus many of the same assurances of control, and then proceeded to undercut and ignore him — to the point where Mr. Priebus often positioned himself at the door of the Oval Office to find out whom the president was talking to,” Michael Shear, Glenn Thrush and Maggie Haberman note on the front page of today’s New York Times. “Mr. Scaramucci’s fall and Mr. Kelly’s rise highlighted the diminished but still important role in shaping the West Wing played by (Ivanka and Jared) … Ms. Trump and Mr. Kushner had hoped to persuade Mr. Trump to appoint Dina Powell, the deputy national security adviser, as chief of staff. Mr. Trump, who likes Ms. Powell, considered doing so…
“For the time being, the White House may leave the communications director post open … though Mr. Kelly has the latitude from Mr. Trump to fill the post with someone from the Department of Homeland Security. Two perennial candidates to fill the post are Kellyanne Conway, a White House senior adviser and the president’s former campaign manager, and Jason Miller, who held the communications post during the campaign. Mr. Trump has long wanted to bring Mr. Miller, who serves as an informal adviser, into the administration.”
— Given the origins of the role under Dwight D. Eisenhower, does a military background make one more likely to be a successful chief of staff? Chris Whipple spent five years interviewing 17 former White House chiefs of staff for his book about the history of the position (“The Gatekeepers”): “I’ve spoken to a few former White House chiefs who have not heard from him, interestingly, which is not a good sign,” he told Amy B Wang. “Most incoming White House chiefs would be working the phones to their predecessors and it doesn’t sound like he’s doing that. The last time we had a general as chief of staff, it didn’t end well. Al Haig [who served as chief of staff under presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford] lasted little more than a month under Ford. The history here of generals as White House chiefs is not very encouraging.” (Read an extended Q&A with Whipple here.)
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Anthony Scaramucci walks down the steps of Air Force One after arriving in Long Island on Friday. (Evan Vucci/AP)
MORE ON THE FALL OF THE MOOCH:
— Post columnist Dana Milbank describes Scaramucci’s termination as a “fall of biblical proportions.” He said the day he was hired that Priebus was like a brother to him. Then he clarified that they might be more like the brothers Cain and Abel. “Scaramucci’s retelling of Genesis had a twist: It was a murder-suicide,” Dana writes.“Priebus’s Abel was indeed slain by Scaramucci’s Cain … But Cain met the same fate Monday afternoon. … He wasn’t officially supposed to start until Aug. 15, so his tenure, technically, was minus 16 days. … The Mooch’s tenure was such a whirlwind that it’s tempting to describe them as Ten Days That Changed the World. But the Mooch didn’t really change anything. He just made everything wildly entertaining.”
— “With the benefit of a few more days, it’s now clear that the better analogy comes not from the Bible but from Sophocles’ Antigone, and the cases of Eteocles and Polyneices—mutual fratricides, killed on the battlefield of a civil war,” the Atlantic’s David A. Graham writes.
— Fun fact: Scaramucci is actually not the shortest serving White House communications director ever. In 1987, Ronald Reagan’s communications director John O. Koehler offered his resignation six days after beginning in the role due to revelations that he had been a member of a Nazi youth group as a child. (Alex Horton on Retropolis)
— Insult to injury: Scaramucci is listed as deceased in a new Harvard Law School alumni directory, which arrived in mailboxes last week. “An asterisk by the 1989 graduate’s name indicates that he was reported dead since the last directory, which was published in 2011,” the Reliable Source’s Emily Heil reports.
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WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING:
President Trump personally intervened to write Donald Trump Jr. statement
— President Trump personally dictated his son’s misleading statement about his meeting with a Russian lawyer during the campaign. Ashley Parker, Carol D. Leonnig, Philip Rucker and Tom Hamburger scoop: “On the sidelines of the Group of 20 summit in Germany last month, President Trump’s advisers discussed how to respond to a new revelation that Trump’s oldest son had met with a Russian lawyer during the 2016 campaign — a disclosure the advisers knew carried political and potentially legal peril. The strategy, the advisers agreed, should be for Donald Trump Jr. to release a statement to get ahead of the story. They wanted to be truthful, so their account couldn’t be repudiated later if the full details emerged. But within hours, at the president’s direction, the plan changed.Flying home from Germany on July 8 aboard Air Force One, Trump personally dictated a statement in which Trump Jr. said that he and the Russian lawyer had ‘primarily discussed a program about the adoption of Russian children’ when they met in June 2016, according to multiple people with knowledge of the deliberations.…
“Air Force One took off from Germany shortly after 6 p.m. — about noon in Washington. In a forward cabin, Trump was busy working on his son’s statement, according to people with knowledge of events. The president dictated the statement to (Hope) Hicks, who served as a go-between with Trump Jr., who was not on the plane, sharing edits between the two men, according to people with knowledge of the discussions …
“As special counsel Robert S. Mueller III looks into potential obstruction of justice as part of his broader investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 election, these advisers worry that the president’s direct involvement leaves him needlessly vulnerable to allegations of a coverup. ‘This was … unnecessary,’ said one of the president’s advisers. ‘Now someone can claim he’s the one who attempted to mislead. Somebody can argue the president is saying he doesn’t want you to say the whole truth.’
“Trump, they say, is increasingly acting as his own lawyer, strategist and publicist, often disregarding the recommendations of the professionals he has hired. ‘He refuses to sit still,’ the presidential adviser said. ‘He doesn’t think he’s in any legal jeopardy, so he really views this as a political problem he is going to solve by himself.’”
“Peter Zeidenberg, the deputy special prosecutor who investigated the George W. Bush administration’s leak of [Valerie Plame’s] identity, said Mueller will have to dig into the crafting of Trump Jr.’s statement aboard Air Force One. Prosecutors typically assume that any misleading statement is an effort to throw investigators off the track, Zeidenberg said. ‘The thing that really strikes me about this is the stupidity of involving the president,’ Zeidenberg said. ‘They are still treating this like a family-run business and they have a PR problem. … What they don’t seem to understand is this is a criminal investigation involving all of them.‘” (Read the full story.)
— The news presents a major problem for Trump’s lawyer Jay Sekulow, who repeatedly denied that the president played any role in crafting the statement. (Aaron Blake)
Jared Kushner arrives yesterday to address congressional interns at the Capitol Visitors Center. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
— Jared Kushner told a group of congressional interns Monday that Trump’s team could not have colluded with Russia because they were too disorganized to do so. “They thought we colluded, but we couldn’t even collude with our local offices,” the president’s son-in-law and senior adviser said during a private talk. He also downplayed his failure to report more than 100 instances of foreign travel and contacts with foreign officials on his security clearance forms. “Make sure you guys keep track of where you travel,” he advised the interns. (Foreign Policy)
— Kushner may have a point: “A self-described ’email prankster’ in the UK fooled a number of White House officials into thinking he was other officials, including an episode where he convinced the White House official tasked with cyber security that he was [Kushner] and received that official’s private email address unsolicited,” reports CNN’s Jake Tapper. “White House officials acknowledged the incidents and said they were taking the matter seriously. ‘We take all cyber related issues very seriously and are looking into these incidents further,’ White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told CNN.”
— “Another conservative House lawmaker is calling for special counsel Robert S. Mueller III to resign,” Karoun Demirjian reports. “Rep. Trent Franks (R-Ariz.), a staunch conservative and one of the more senior members of the House Judiciary Committee, argued that Mueller and former FBI director James Comey have ‘a close friendship’ and that thus, Mueller ‘appears to be a partisan arbiter of justice.’ Franks also criticized Mueller for bringing individuals to his team who donated to Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign, which he called ‘obviously deliberate partisan hirings’ that ‘do not help convey impartiality.’ ‘Until Mueller resigns, he will be in clear violation of the law,’ Franks concluded.”
— RNC employees have been instructed to preserve all documents related to the 2016 campaign. A memo delivered to employees said the committee “has not been contacted regarding any of the ongoing investigations, and there is no specific reason to believe we will be:” “Nonetheless, we have an obligation to keep potentially relevant documents … Serious consequences will result for anyone who fails to comply with this obligation.” (BuzzFeed)
Former sheriff Joe Arpaio convicted of criminal contempt
GET SMART FAST:​​
Joe Arpaio, the former sheriff of Maricopa County, was convicted of criminal contempt. U.S. District Judge Susan Bolton ruled that the 85-year-old had shown “flagrant disregard” for a judge who ordered him to halt his signature immigration roundups. Arpaio’s sentencing is scheduled for Oct. 5, and he could face up to six months in prison. (The Arizona Republic)
Corey Lewandowski has been fired from the pro-Trump cable channel One America News Network. Trump’s former campaign manager reportedly angered OANN’s management by frequently appearing on other networks. (The Daily Beast)
U.S. Capitol Police are investigating why their elite tactical team responded to the wrong location last month after a gunman opened fire at Republicans’ congressional baseball practice. Rather than being directed to Alexandria, Va., the team was first sent to Nancy Pelosi’s house in Georgetown. (Bloomberg)
Trump awarded his first Medal of Honor to former combat medic James McCloughan for his service during the Vietnam War. McCloughan was credited with saving the lives of 10 fellow soldiers during a vicious 48-hour battle in Tam Ky — running repeatedly into kill zones during close combat fighting, and refusing medical evacuation after suffering wounds from shrapnel and small-arms fire. (Andrew deGrandpre)
Los Angeles reached a deal to host the 2028 Summer Olympics. The deal also paves the way for Paris to host the 2024 Games. (LA Times)
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro mocked Trump after the administration placed sanctions on Maduro for his questionable election. “I don’t take orders from the empire,” the Venezuelan leader said. “Keep up your sanctions, Donald Trump!” He also criticized Trump for not winning the popular vote in November. (Reuters)
WikiLeaks released over 70,000 emails related to French President Emmanuel Macron’s recent campaign. Although the emails contained no immediate bombshells, they once again raised fears of cyberattacks in upcoming European elections. (James McAuley)
The mayor of Nashville’s son has died of an apparent overdose. Megan Barry announced that her 22-year-old son, Max, died while in Denver. (Fred Barbash)
A U.S. appeals court in Washington ordered the FAA to investigate shrinking airline seats, upbraiding the agency for dismissing complaints that smaller seat sizes could pose a problem — or even a danger — to passengers. (Avi Selk)
The airline easyJet is in damage control mode, after an infant-carrying man went to complain about a 13-hour flight delay — and was punched in the face by an airport employee. (Cleve R. Wootson Jr.)
Amazon said it is under federal investigation for possibly violating U.S. sanctions on Iran. In an SEC filing, the online giant said it delivered products to an Iranian embassy, as well as to others with links to the Iranian government, between 2012 and 2017. Amazon said it has “voluntarily reported” those transactions, and that the review could lead to “the imposition of penalties.” (Abha Bhattarai)
A manhunt is underway in Alabama for an inmate who escaped with 12 other men in a mass jailbreak this weekend. Authorities said the 24-year-old and his fellow detainees escaped the facility using peanut butter. (Kristine Phillips)
Sam Shepherd died at age 73. Shepherd wrote nearly 50 plays and starred in a wide range of films over the course of his prolific career. (Peter Marks)
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell talks about working through part of the recess as Republican Sens. John Barrasso, John Thune and John Cornyn wait to speak. (Katherine Frey/The Washington Post)
OBAMACARE OVERHAUL = STILL DEAD:
— Despite the president’s public insistence that Senate Republicans pass a health-care revamp, Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is eager to move on to other things. Sean Sullivan reports: “One after another on Monday, top GOP senators said that with no evidence of a plan that could get 50 votes, they were looking for other victories. ‘We’ve had our vote, and we’re moving on to tax reform,’ said Sen. John Thune (S.D.), one of [McConnell’s] top lieutenants … McConnell did not address health care in his remarks opening Senate business on Monday afternoon. … Some rank-and-file Republican lawmakers have used the collapse of repeal-and-replace to offer new fixes and improvements to health care, but there was no sign their leaders were engaged. A growing number of Republican lawmakers have raised the prospect of working with Democrats on health care.”
A bipartisan group of House centrists released a plan Monday that they argued would help to stabilize the insurance markets: “[But] House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) did not champion the plan. … After Friday’s vote, some Democrats have felt more empowered to talk about changes to the Affordable Care Act. … Getting health-care legislation backed only by Republicans to Trump’s desk by the end of August is all but impossible, even if they suddenly put aside their disagreements.”
— Meanwhile, the Senate’s top Democrat Chuck Schumer (N.Y.) said yesterday that he has heard from ten of his Republican colleagues interested  in a bipartisan solution. Politico’s Jimmy Vielkind reports: “Schumer said he was ‘all for’ the concept of [the bill proposed by House centrists] that would mandate roughly $7 billion in federal cost-sharing subsidies that reduce out-of-pocket costs for poor consumers. Schumer, the Senate’s minority leader, said he wasn’t sure whether legislation would emerge in a big bill or take several steps.”
— One of the Senate’s top Republicans publicly doubted the party is capable of revisiting an overhaul. Susan Cornwell, of Reuters, reports: “Finance Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch said on Monday that senators for now are too divided to keep working on healthcare overhaul legislation and that he and other senior Republicans will take that message to the White House. … ‘There’s just too much animosity and we’re too divided on healthcare,’ Hatch said[.] … The senator said he saw no real desire on the part of Democrats to work together on the healthcare issue ‘and I have to say some Republicans are at fault there, too.’ … Hatch said lawmakers would need to appropriate the cost-sharing subsidy payments that the administration has been making.”
— “Rand Paul said he spoke to [Trump] by phone about healthcare reform on Monday and told the president he thought Trump had the authority to create associations that would allow organizations to offer group health insurance plans,” Reuters adds. Paul “told reporters that Trump was considering taking some form of executive action to address problems with the healthcare system[.] … Allowing groups like AARP, which represents retirees, to form health associations could enable individuals and small businesses to form larger groups to negotiate with health insurance companies for lower rates.”
— Despite Trump’s warnings that Obamacare is collapsing, the system seems to be showing signs of improvement. The Toledo Blade’s Lauren Lindstrom reports: “Five health-insurance companies have stepped in to offer plans on the federal exchange in 19 of the 20 Ohio counties that otherwise would have had no marketplace options for 2018, state officials announced Monday. Paulding County in northwest Ohio is now the only county in the state without at least one insurer offering plans through the insurance marketplace created by the Affordable Care Act[.] … The move by the insurance companies affects an estimated 11,000 Ohioans in the 19 counties who purchase a plan through the exchange … ”
— A leading pro-Trump super PACs has been eerily silent on health care. Henry J. Gomez, of BuzzFeed, reports: “Making America Great, the political nonprofit formed by Republican mega-donor Rebekah Mercer to promote [Trump’s] agenda, isn’t making any noise. … The group has been absent from television airwaves and Twitter. … [Earlier this year,] [t]he new Mercer-backed group quickly spent more than $1 million on ads, including a digital spot that urged senators to back Neil Gorsuch’s Supreme Court confirmation, which nearly four months later stands as Trump’s biggest achievement. Since then, the group hasn’t provided noticeable backup to Trump.”
Pence condemns Russia for trying to ‘divide the free nations of Europe’
THERE IS A BEAR IN THE WOODS:
— Mike Pence twice delivered a stern rebuke of Russia during his first full day in Eastern Europe, warning in a speech and a news conference alongside Baltic leaders that the United States will not tolerate Russian force or intimidation. Ashley Parker reports: “Under [Trump], the United States of America rejects any attempt to use force, threats, intimidation, or malign influence in the Baltic States or against any of our treaty allies,” Pence said. “To be clear, we hope for better days, for better relations with Russia, but recent diplomatic action taken by Moscow will not deter the commitment of the United States of America to our security, the security of our allies, and the security of freedom loving nations around the world.”
“Though Pence said he was delivering a message directly from Trump, his stern remarks at times were far more forceful than those of his [boss],” Parker notes. “The vice president also — and perhaps optimistically, in the face of Russia’s retaliatory gesture — held out the prospect of what he called ‘a constructive relationship with Russia, based on cooperation on common interests.’ ‘Trump has made it clear: America is open to a better relationship,’ Pence said. ‘But the president and our Congress are unified in our message to Russia — a better relationship, and the lifting of sanctions, will require Russia to reverse the actions that caused the sanctions to be imposed in the first place.’”
— “President Trump said nothing Monday in response to Russia’s planned expulsion of hundreds of American diplomats,” Karen DeYoung reports. “‘Right now we’re reviewing our options, and when we have something to say on it, we’ll let you know,’ White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Monday … Whatever Trump decides to do in response, the fast-moving series of events appeared to leave the administration with no substantive Russia policy and without a clear idea of what direction to take. … Putin’s spokesman indicated that Trump was irrelevant to the Kremlin’s decision to retaliate before the new sanctions bill took effect.”
— NYT’s Neil MacFarquhar explains how the U.S. Embassy in Moscow will be affected: “Given the continuing deterioration in relations between the two countries, core functions like political and military analysis will be preserved, along with espionage, experts said, while programs that involve cooperation on everything from trade to culture to science are likely to be reduced or eliminated. … The other area expected to take a heavy hit will be public services, like issuing visas to Russian travelers to the United States, which is likely to slow to a glacial pace.”
— PUTIN RAMPING UP IN BELARUS: “Russia is preparing to send as many as 100,000 troops to the eastern edge of NATO territory at the end of the summer, one of the biggest steps yet in the military buildup undertaken by [Vladimir Putin], and an exercise in intimidation that recalls the most ominous days of the Cold War,” the NYT’s Michael R. Gordon and Eric Schmitt report: “The troops are conducting military maneuvers known as Zapad, [in] Belarus, the Baltic Sea, western Russia and the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad. The military exercise, planned for many months … is part of a larger effort by Mr. Putin to shore up Russia’s military prowess, and comes against the backdrop of an increasingly assertive Russia. Even more worrying, top American military officers say, is that the maneuvers could be used as a pretext to increase Russia’s military presence in Belarus, a central European nation that borders three critical NATO allies: Poland, Lithuania and Latvia.”
— As Ukraine faces off against Russia-backed separatists, “[the] Pentagon and State Department have devised plans to supply it with antitank missiles and other weaponry and are seeking White House approval,” the Wall Street Journal’s Julian E. Barnes, Laurence Norman and Felicia Schwartz report. “American military officials and diplomats say the arms, which they characterized as defensive, are meant to deter aggressive actions by Moscow, which the U.S. and others say has provided tanks and other sophisticated armaments as well as military advisers to rebels fighting the Kiev government. … Some U.S. and Ukrainian officials said they expect it could be months before the White House makes a final determination.”
Trump stands with Kris Kobach in Bedminster, N.J. (Mike Segar/Reuters)
TRUMP’S AGENDA:
— The State Department may be moving away from the promotion of democracy as a part of its mission. Josh Rogin writes: “Rex Tillerson has ordered his department to redefine its mission and issue a new statement of purpose to the world. … The State Department’s draft statement on its mission is: ‘Lead America’s foreign policy through global advocacy, action and assistance to shape a safer, more prosperous world.’ … Compare that to the State Department Mission Statement that is currently on the books[:] ‘The Department’s mission is to shape and sustain a peaceful, prosperous, just, and democratic world and foster conditions for stability and progress for the benefit of the American people and people everywhere.’ … Former senior State Department officials from both parties told me that eliminating ‘just’ and ‘democratic’ from the State Department’s list of desired outcomes is neither accidental nor inconsequential.”
— White House officials are counting on an aggressive timetable to enact tax reform. Politico’s Aaron Lorenzo reports: “The White House expects tax reform legislation to move quickly through Congress this fall, advancing through the House in October and clearing the Senate in November, legislative director Marc Short said Monday. Markups will begin in September, Short said at an event hosted by a pair of conservative political groups backed by the billionaire Koch brothers[.] … Republicans are planning to use special instructions in the budget to pass tax reform with a simple majority in the Senate to short circuit a Democratic filibuster. But Short also suggested a Republican-only pathway isn’t completely necessary. Some Democrats might get on board, particularly those up for reelection next year in states Trump carried, he said.”
— A U.S. judge is slated to hear a challenge to Trump’s voter commission today to determine whether a Watergate-era law bars the group from accessing voter records. The court could ask for a temporary restraining order as early as Tuesday. Spencer S. Hsu reports: “The action marks the latest attempt by opponents to block the commission’s request for the voting information of more than 150 million registered voters. State leaders from both parties have voiced objections to the effort’s potential to reveal personal information, suppress voter participation and encroach on states’ oversight of voting laws.”
But the commission continues to hit roadblocks, even among its own members. Portland Press Herald’s Scott Thistle reports: “Maine Secretary of State Matt Dunlap said Monday that he is unlikely to release any state voter registration data to the federal voter fraud commission to which he was appointed by President Trump.Dunlap said he will reject a second request for the data from the commission’s vice chairman … “
— An inaugural report from the White House opioid commission is urging Trump to “declare a national emergency” on drug overdoses in the United States. Christopher Ingraham reports: “’With approximately 142 Americans dying every day,’ the report notes, ‘America is enduring a death toll equal to September 11th every three weeks.’ The commission, led by New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, states that the goals of such a declaration would be to ‘force Congress to focus on funding’ and to ‘awaken every American to this simple fact: if this scourge has not found you or your family yet, without bold action by everyone, it soon will.’” The commission’s report also includes a number of recommendations to deal with the ballooning opioid epidemic, such as expanding capacity for drug treatment under Medicaid, increasing use of medication-assisted treatments for opioid disorders, and mandating that local law enforcement officers carry naloxone.
— The Trump administration is now reportedly considering a decrease in Afghanistan troop levels even as Pentagon officials push for a surge. The Wall Street Journal’s Dion Nissenbaum reports: “Unable to agree on a plan to send up to 3,900 more American forces to help turn back Taliban advances in Afghanistan, the White House is taking a new look at what would happen if the U.S. decided to scale back its military presence instead, according to current and former Trump administration officials. … The exploration is an outgrowth of a deep divide at the White House, where the president and his top advisers are reluctant to send more American troops to Afghanistan without a clear strategy. … But the idea is anathema to American military leaders who have argued that the U.S. needs to send more troops to halt Taliban gains on the battlefield.”
— “Law enforcement officials continue to sharply criticize President Trump for his comments last week suggesting that officers should not ‘be too nice’ with suspects in police custody,” reports Mark Berman. “The sustained criticism ballooned over the weekend as major department after major department weighed in against Trump’s remarks, a remarkable expression of disapproval for a president who has repeatedly proclaimed himself to be a champion of law enforcement. Even as the White House has argued that Trump was not being serious, police officials publicly and privately expressed dismay about his comments, saying that his remarks were dangerous, given the current climate of distrust between communities and the officers patrolling them.”
Sen. Jeff Flake stands in an elevator in the basement of the Capitol. (Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg)
THE ROAD TO 2018:
— Politico Magazine, “My Party Is in Denial About Donald Trump,” by Arizona GOP Sen. Jeff Flake: “It was we conservatives who were largely silent when the most egregious and sustained attacks on Obama’s legitimacy were leveled by marginal figures who would later be embraced and legitimized by far too many of us. … To carry on in the spring of 2017 as if what was happening was anything approaching normalcy required a determined suspension of critical faculties. And tremendous powers of denial. … If this was our Faustian bargain, then it was not worth it. If ultimately our principles were so malleable as to no longer be principles, then what was the point of political victories in the first place? … So, where should Republicans go from here? First, we shouldn’t hesitate to speak out if the president ‘plays to the base’ in ways that damage the Republican Party’s ability to grow and speak to a larger audience.”
— The Democrats’ House campaign chair said the party would not withhold funds from candidates who oppose abortion rights. The Hill’s Ben Kamisar and Reid Wilson report: “Rep. Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) said there will be no litmus tests for candidates as Democrats seek to find a winning roster to regain the House majority in 2018 … ‘As we look at candidates across the country, you need to make sure you have candidates that fit the district, that can win in these districts across America.’ … ‘Throwing weight behind anti-choice candidates is bad politics that will lead to worse policy,’ said Mitchell Stille, who oversees campaigns for NARAL Pro-Choice America. ‘The idea that jettisoning this issue wins elections for Democrats is folly contradicted by all available data.’”
— “Rep. Lou Barletta (R-Pa.) plans to challenge Democratic Sen. Bob Casey in 2018,” Politico’s Kevin Robillard reports. “Barletta, the former mayor of Hazelton and an early supporter of President Donald Trump, is an immigration hard-liner serving his fourth term in the House. Trump has publicly suggested that Barletta challenge either Casey or Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf. … With this move, he becomes the biggest name in a large Republican field that has formed to challenge Casey.”
— The ACLU is backing a campaign to end felon disenfranchisement in Florida by changing its state constitution through a 2018 ballot measure. David Weigel reports: “The voter restoration campaign is one of the most ambitious outgrowths of the ACLU’s ‘people power’ project, announced four months ago with a rally in Florida. … Florida’s felon disenfranchisement law, which first gained national attention after the 2000 presidential election, has remained in place under a series of Republican governors and state legislatures. Florida, Kentucky and Iowa are the only states where felony convictions permanently strip the offender of voting rights pending special clemency hearings.”
— Maine Gov. Paul LePage (R) appears to be trying to kill Sen. Susan Collins’s (R-Me.) possible 2018 gubernatorial bid before she’s even announced if she’s running. Bangor Daily News’s Michael Shepherd reports: “The governor railed against the moderate Republican senator at a Saturday pig roast … in Canaan, where an attendee said LePage repeatedly mentioned working to defeat Collins if she runs for governor next year. …  [Collins] has said she’d make a decision on running by the fall. Few in Maine politics are certain she’ll declare one besides LePage, who said in a Thursday radio interview that he thinks she’s planning on it. ‘If the Republican base — which is the 290,000 people that voted for me (in his 2014 re-election) — tell her, “We don’t want you; you’re not winning the primary,” she’ll back down,’ he said.”
— Democratic Sen. Jon Tester of Montana now has a formidable opponent in his reelection bid next year. The Hill’s Ben Kamisar reports: “Montana state Auditor Matt Rosendale said Monday he would challenge [Tester], giving Republicans a top recruit in their effort to win a red-state Senate seat. Rosendale will enter a crowded GOP primary field but will be the only Republican in the race to hold a statewide office. … Rosendale announced his bid on Monday with a short video blasting Washington Democrats and touting his conservative chops. The video specifically touts Rosendale as a would-be ally to President Trump and Vice President Pence, making clear he would support the administration in a state Trump won by about 20 points in November.”
Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke speaks during a May press conference with Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) in Anchorage. (Mark Thiessen/AP)
PERSONNEL IS POLICY:
— “Ryan Zinke, Trump’s Cowboy Enforcer, Is Ready for His Closeup,” by Elaina Plott in GQ: “After the election, Zinke (a Republican congressman from Montana) was hosting his office Christmas party in Washington when he got the call [that Trump] wanted to see him in New York.  [But when] Zinke and his wife, Lola, passed through the gilded doors of Trump Tower, he actually had no clue what position he was interviewing for … And by the end of a rambling conversation with the president-elect, Zinke still wasn’t entirely sure. ‘The conversation went a hundred seconds. It went from women in combat to Syria policy to the Chinese to energy independence, a little about public lands, a little about hunting access,’ Zinke [said] … At one point, Trump proposed the Veterans Affairs post, to which Zinke quipped, ‘I don’t think you hate me that much.’ He was flying back to Montana when Mike Pence called him. ‘The vice president says, ‘Well, congratulations!’ Zinke recalls, sharing the moment he was asked to join the Trump Cabinet, ‘and I asked him, ‘What job?’”
— Zinke pushed back on allegations that he tried to strong-arm Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) into voting for the health-care bill. From the Associated Press: “Zinke said Sunday in Nevada that he often speaks with Republican Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan and they get along well. ‘Ah, you know, the moon has been characterized as other things, too,’ Zinke said when asked by reporters about the calls and their characterization as threatening. ‘So, I think it’s laughable.’”
SOCIAL MEDIA SPEED READ:
The New York Post updated its “Survivor” cover:
Matt Drudge’s opinion of Trump seems to keep souring:
A National Journal editor noticed last night that White House aide Sebastian Gorka has vanity plates:
The ouster of Anthony Scaramucci inspired shock and satire:
From a Bravo host:
From an Atlantic writer:
From a CNBC Washington correspondent:
From a Bloomberg reporter:
From a New York magazine writer:
From a Mother Jones writer:
From a politics editor at the Daily Beast:
Comedian Seth Rogen responded to Stein’s tweet:
From a Buzzfeed News entertainment reporter:
From The Post’s media reporter:
From a House Democrat:
There is truly an old Trump tweet for everything. This one is from last year’s primary campaign:
But, overall, present-day Trump took a positive approach to the turnover. He posted this last night:
A former Democratic congressman replied to Trump’s observation:
Some unexpected faces were on hand to greet the new chief of staff:
Republican strategist Rory Cooper reflected on this tidbit from Reince Priebus’s time as chief of staff:
Obama’s former senior adviser took on a new venture:
Then-Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick (D) speaks during an interview at his statehouse office in Boston. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola, File)
GOOD READS FROM ELSEWHERE:
— Politico Magazine, “Obama’s Inner Circle Is Urging Deval Patrick to Run,” by Edward Isaac-Dovere: “Barack Obama is nudging him to run. His inner circle is actively encouraging it. Obamaworld’s clear and away 2020 favorite is sitting right here, on the 38th floor of the John Hancock Building, in a nicely decorated office at Bain Capital. And Deval Patrick has many thoughts on what he says is Donald Trump’s governing by fear and a dishonest pitch to economic nostalgia, while encouraging a rise in casual racism and ditching any real commitment to civil rights.”
— The New Yorker, “Bernie Sanders’s Campaign Isn’t Over,” by Benjamin Wallace-Wells: “The central illusion of a Presidential campaign is that a candidate can, through constant motion and boundless energy, meet countless people and, in the end, give voice to the experience of the country. After the election, Sanders seemed to adopt the illusion as an ethos.”
— The Atlantic, “What Steve Bannon Wants to Do to Google,” by Robinson Meyer: “Over the past year, the old idea of enforcing market competition has gained renewed life in American politics. … The loudest supporters of this idea, so far, have been from the left. But this week, a newer and more secretive voice endorsed a stronger antitrust policy. Steve Bannon, the chief strategist to President Donald Trump, believes Facebook and Google should be regulated as public utilities[.]”
HOT ON THE LEFT:
“‘Hurry up and die’: Threats, racism intensify against California officials,” from theSacramento Bee: “The letter [sent to Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León] begins with ‘Dear Corrupt Mexican’ and ends with ‘hurry up and die.’ It’s signed ‘White Power.’ The Senate leader says backlash comes with the territory as an elected official. Since November, however, he and other politicians say it’s been more frequent and hostile. … Sen. Holly Mitchell’s Los Angeles district office representatives report getting a call once a month from someone who uses the n-word … something they said didn’t happen before the election. A fervent group of Trump supporters … called de León an ‘anchor baby’ and ‘illegal alien scumbag’ at a Latino summit … ‘In my mind there’s no doubt that Donald Trump has opened up this Pandora’s box,’ de León said.”
HOT ON THE RIGHT:
“Watchdog group asks Congress to probe Rep. Wasserman Schultz over fired IT aide,” from David Weigel: “A conservative anti-corruption watchdog group is asking for an ethics investigation of Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.) after former House IT aide Imran Awan was apprehended trying the flee the country. In a complaint that will be filed Monday, the Foundation for Accountability and Civic Trust (FACT) asks if Wasserman Schultz violated the House’s rules by continuing to pay Awan after he was cut off from the House computer system. … The complaint grew out of the ongoing investigation of Awan and four other House staffers who in February came under investigation after allegedly stealing equipment from their employers.”
  DAYBOOK:
Trump has an afternoon event with small businesses.
Pence begins the day in Georgia. He and the second lady will meet with U.S. embassy staff before Pence later meets with Georgian opposition party leaders. He then has a meeting and joint press conference with Prime Minister Giorgi Kvrikashvili. He will visit the Sioni Cathedral of the Dormition and give a speech before departing for Montenegro.
QUOTE OF THE DAY: 
Trump during his Cabinet meeting yesterday: “We’ll handle North Korea…it will be handled. We handle everything.”
  NEWS YOU CAN USE IF YOU LIVE IN D.C.:
— It’s still sunny in D.C. today, but a bit hotter. The Capital Weather Gang forecasts: “Mostly sunny this morning and partly to mostly sunny this afternoon, with temperatures reaching highs near to slightly hotter than yesterday (upper 80s to low 90s).  Humidity is higher than yesterday, too.”
— The Nationals beat the Marlins 1-0. (Jorge Castillo)
— A Florida man wearing a “Make America Great Again” hat was arrested near Dupont Circe over the weekend for beating three people amid a heated political debate. Peter Hermann reports: “Police said that the 32-year-old suspect ‘straddled’ one man ‘and pounded’ him in the face 20 times with a closed fist and left and right forearms. Two others were also struck in the face when they intervened, police said.”
VIDEOS OF THE DAY:
The Daily Show commemorated the highs and lows of Anthony Scaramucci’s 10-day tenure:
Late-night hosts pulled no punches when it came to Scaramucci’s exit:
Late-night laughs: Scaramucci ousted
Veep’s Brian Huskey and the Post’s video department reenacted Scaramucci’s interview with the New Yorker:
The Insane New Yorker Interview: A dramatic reënactment
Sarah Huckabee Sanders brushed off claims that the White House is in chaos by comparing it to her own home:
Sanders jokes, ‘If you want to see chaos, come to my house’
The Post’s fact-checking team awarded Trump four Pinocchios for his claim that border crossings are down 78 percent because of his presidency:
Fact Check: Are border crossings down 78 percent because of the Trump administration?
A speedboater helped to put out a wildfire in British Columbia:
A Canadian speedboater created waves to help put out fire
And Santas from around the world celebrated Christmas (very) early in Copenhagen:
Santas celebrate Christmas in July
Need a Tad of Media Bias -> John Kelly was so upset with how Trump handled the firing of FBI Director James Comey that he called Comey to say he was considering resigning Need a Tad of Media Bias -> John Kelly was so upset with how Trump handled the firing of FBI Director James Comey that he called Comey to say he was considering resigning…
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Weekend Roundup: A New 'Nationalist International' Challenges The Old Globalization
No sooner did “the party of Davos” ― as top White House aide Stephen Bannon calls the global elite ― end its annual conclave in the Swiss Alps late last week than the “Nationalist International” was born down in the Rhine Valley city of Koblenz, Germany. All the main populist movements from across Europe gathered together there to celebrate the Brexit and Trump victories as a premonition of their own expected success in elections over the coming year. They called on their fellow Europeans to “wake up” like the Americans and British and take back control of their national destinies. 
What animates these movements for national sovereignty, and paradoxically ties them together across borders, is a double antipathy. Their revolt is against both the faceless forces of global integration represented by trade agreements or Brussels “Eurocrats” and the face-to-face presence of immigrants whom they see as despoiling their own national identities.
Scott Malcomson insightfully points out that these movements in Europe see their cultural nationalism not as intolerance of others, but as a defense of diversity in the form of their unique, familiar and cherished way of life they now see as under assault. In their conflated anxieties over Muslim immigrants and terrorism, which they share with President Donald Trump and his national security adviser, Michael Flynn, populists are demonstrating what political scientist Samuel Huntington said after the 9/11 attack by Osama bin Laden about that terrorist leader: “Just as he seeks to rally Muslims by declaring war on the West, he has given back to the West its sense of common identity in defending itself.” 
More so than in the U.S., the European nationalist’s idea of belonging bears some very worrying baggage. As novelist Elif Shafak says in an interview with The WorldPost, “I am far more concerned about the rise of populism across Europe than the rise of populism in the U.S. Here in the old continent, there is almost a visceral fear of diversity and ‘the other.’” She goes on to say that, “we need to bear in mind that this history is still alive in a fractured, fragmented and uneven continent where we do not always encounter the checks and balances that exist in the U.S. Constitution.” Mimicking the cry of the Koblenz meeting, Shafak concludes, “So, yes, it is a ‘wake up’ call. But not for the tribalists. It is a wake-up call for democrats and liberals and cosmopolitans, for anyone and everyone who holds democracy and pluralism dear. It is a wake-up call for us.”
As Nick Visser reports, German Chancellor Angela Merkel is pushing back against the nationalist upsurge. Speaking to church leaders in Germany on Monday, she declared, “We won’t get anywhere by trying to solve problems with polarization and populism. We’ve got to show that we’re committed to the basic principles of our nation.”
Former Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis says he thinks it is Germany’s insistence on Europe-wide austerity policies that are at the root of the problem. To defeat the nationalist resurgence he proposes a “New Deal” for Europe that is an alternative to those policies which he sees as a, “gift to today’s coalition of European right-wing parties called the ‘Nationalist International.’” He continues: “Europe can survive neither as a free-for-all nor as an Austerity Union in which some countries … are condemned to permanent depression.” 
President Trump this week also took the first steps toward fulfilling his campaign promise of building a wall at the U.S.-Mexico border and proposed cuts in federal funding for “sanctuary cities” across the U.S.
On Thursday, Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto insisted once again that Mexico would not pay for a border wall ― which he said undermined the “respect” of his “sovereign nation”― and cancelled his upcoming trip to Washington. The two have since spoken by phone. 
Former Mexican president and chair of the Berggruen Institute’s 21st Century Council, Ernesto Zedillo, goes further. He said to me this week that Trump’s proposals toward his country have “defied legal and economic rationality” from the start and that now, “the time has come to admit that the actions of the new administration have cancelled, at least for the foreseeable future, any agreement stemming from dialogue and negotiation that could satisfy the legitimate interests of both parties.” Labelling the American president’s actions “aggression,” Zedillo joins the rallying cry of his countrymen: “What we reject under any circumstances is any attempt to use a single inch of our territory to build such an abominable structure. It goes without saying that all Mexicans are behind President Peña Nieto when he tells President Trump that we will not pay for his extravagant, offensive and useless project.”
In addition to his directives on Mexico, the American president also delivered on his pledge to limit Muslims entering the U.S., signing a document late Friday whose full details still remain unclear at the time of this article’s publish. Charles Kurzman argues that the the proposed limits are “absurd” and counterproductive. It is the strategy of the self-proclaimed Islamic State, he writes “to take advantage of the West’s hypersensitivity to small scale Islamist attacks.” He continues: “Since 2001, there have been zero fatalities in the U.S. by extremists from the countries on Trump’s list.”
As Trump crosses off executive order after executive order and as Syria talks sideline America yet again, many wonder if the U.S. president will go easy on Russian President Vladimir Putin. The two leaders are slated to speak this weekend, but already, Ukrainians are on edge. From Kiev, just days after Trump’s inauguration, Ian Bateson reports that many there fear the special relationship between Putin and Trump could leave Ukraine in the cold. “We have seen the rhetoric. Now we are waiting for performance,” one politician says. 
Back in America, millions of demonstrators took to the streets across the U.S. and elsewhere to protest Trump’s policies even before executive orders had been signed. Turkish journalist Ilgin Yorulmaz, who participated in the Washington march, sees a correspondence with resistance in her home country and other countries across the world. “Women (and men) share the same concerns about gender inequality and sexual harassment,” she writes, “regardless of if they live middle class lives in Manhattan or face discrimination on the subways of Istanbul.” Aykan Erdemir and Merve Tahiroglu score new moves by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan to consolidate executive power. “An overly centralized polity, a weak legislature and Erdogan’s authoritarianism have brought Turkey to the brink,” they write. 
Also reflecting on the massive demonstrations, Margaret Levi reviews the experience of how social movements in American history have ultimately shifted the political agenda. These photos document the scope of demonstration that took place last weekend around the world. Hayley Miller reports that despite the Trump administration’s renewed focus on fossil fuels, a new Pew poll says two-thirds of Americans favor a path to a renewable energy future. 
Writing from Hong Kong, Li Jing reports that Chinese officials say they are prepared “to take a leadership role” in defending the Paris climate accord no matter what the new Trump administration decides to do. Following the splash of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s defense of globalization in Davos last week, Minxin Pei sees trouble for him at home as adversaries resist his anti-corruption crackdown and economic reform agenda. “2017 will be a dangerous year for Xi,” he says. In South Africa, in fact, attempts to model government off of China have already created tension among political parties, explain Eric Olander and Cobus van Staden, with one mayor taking a controversial trip to Taiwan, sparking a Trump-esque “one China” policy violation backlash. 
Looking to the far future, Deep Space advocate Mary Lynne Dittmar imagines how a full-fledged effort to settle on Mars can help us in our troubled home planet. “Why Mars?” she asks, “Why not the Moon? Simply put, Mars is the best place to develop a ‘local’ infrastructure enabling us to live on another planet, albeit one millions of miles away. In a very real sense Mars is at the far end of the infrastructure we are preparing to revitalize in this country.” 
Finally, our Singularity series looks at the moral dilemmas posed by new advances in genetic screening that further enable “designer babies” whose characteristics can be selected.
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ADVISORY COUNCIL: Members of the Berggruen Institute’s 21st Century Council and Council for the Future of Europe serve as theAdvisory Council — as well as regular contributors — to the site. These include, Jacques Attali, Shaukat Aziz, Gordon Brown, Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Juan Luis Cebrian, Jack Dorsey, Mohamed El-Erian, Francis Fukuyama, Felipe Gonzalez, John Gray, Reid Hoffman, Fred Hu, Mo Ibrahim, Alexei Kudrin, Pascal Lamy, Kishore Mahbubani, Alain Minc, Dambisa Moyo, Laura Tyson, Elon Musk, Pierre Omidyar, Raghuram Rajan, Nouriel Roubini, Nicolas Sarkozy, Eric Schmidt, Gerhard Schroeder, Peter Schwartz, Amartya Sen, Jeff Skoll, Michael Spence, Joe Stiglitz, Larry Summers, Wu Jianmin, George Yeo, Fareed Zakaria, Ernesto Zedillo, Ahmed Zewail and Zheng Bijian.
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