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August 01, 2018 09:39 AM UTC

Get More Smarter on Wednesday (August 1)

  • 11 Comments
  • by: Colorado Pols

Welcome to August. It’s time to Get More Smarter. If you think we missed something important, please include the link in the comments below (here’s a good example). If you are more of a visual learner, check out The Get More Smarter Show.

 

TOP OF MIND TODAY… 

► President Trump is growing ever bolder in his statements about the investigation into potentially-illegal coordination between the Trump campaign and the Russian government. As the Washington Post reports:

President Trump called the prosecution of his former campaign chairman Paul Manafort “a hoax” Wednesday and urged Attorney General Jeff Sessions to terminate the investigation into Russian election interference.

In several tweets, Trump escalated his attacks on the investigation, led by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III, that includes examining whether Trump’s campaign coordinated with Russia and whether Trump has obstructed the probe…

…Trump called Mueller’s probe “a terrible situation” that should be stopped “before it continues to stain our country any further.”

This is not the first time that Trump has called for an end to the Russia probe, but Wednesday’s Twitter tirade is the first time that Trump has directly called on Attorney General Jeff Sessions to put an end to special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation.

 

► It was about two years ago when Congressman Mike Coffman (R-Aurora) received national attention for running a television ad in which he promised to “stand up” to Donald Trump. Things are different now, as they always are with Coffman; the Aurora Congressman is now among the most consistent votes for Trump’s agenda on Capitol Hill, and he’s among a group of Republican candidates who will be receiving contributions from  Trump’s re-election campaign coffers.

 

► The Trump administration is considering implementing new 25% tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods. China is warning of retaliation in a trade war that has already proven incredibly costly to Coloradans.

 

► Stop the presses! (if they still exist). Congress might actually try to do something before the November election.

 

Get even more smarter after the jump…

IN CASE YOU ARE STANDING NEAR A WATER COOLER…

 

► A federal judge on Tuesday blocked the distribution of blueprints for 3D-printed guns amid concerns about a proliferation of new untraceable firearms. From Vox.com:

US District Judge Robert Lasnik’s restraining order in Seattle effectively halted a company’s plans to release the designs, arguing, “There is a possibility of irreparable harm because of the way these guns can be made.”

The order followed President Donald Trump’s comments raising concerns about 3D-printed guns. Trump had tweeted on Tuesday morning, “I am looking into 3-D Plastic Guns being sold to the public. Already spoke to NRA, doesn’t seem to make much sense!”

Since making a 3D-printed gun only requires a 3D printer, the right materials, and a blueprint, the concern is that 3D-printed guns will make it easy to bypass a host of state and federal laws. Printing a gun doesn’t require a background check or any documentation, offering a workaround for people who are legally prohibited from buying a gun now due to, say, a criminal record or history of mental illness. A 3D-printed gun can also be easily made without a serial number or anything that would make these firearms easily traceable if they’re used in a crime.

Distributing blueprints for 3D-printed guns was blocked by the Obama administration. The reason this is becoming a bigger issue today is because Trump’s Justice Department initially agreed to a settlement to allow distributor Cody Wilson the right to freely disseminate the gun blueprints.

 

► Democrat Jared Polis and Republican Walker Stapleton are going to spend a lot of time on the debate stage this fall.

 

► The Trump administration is pursuing a proposal to cut capital gains taxes and bypassing Congress in the process.

Trump is apparently unconcerned about a rapidly-rising national debt that could soon lead to trillion-dollar annual deficits.

Trillion. With a ‘T.’

 

“Deadbeat” Don Bendell. Sometimes a nickname just creates itself.

 

► Another prominent Deadbeat Republican is taking his career in a different direction. State Rep. Tim Leonard (R-Evergreen) is apparently dropping his re-election bid in HD-25.

 

 White House Chief of Staff John Kelly has reportedly agreed to remain with President Trump through the 2020 election cycle. The odds of this actually happening? Probably not good.

 

The Koch Brothers are “a total joke,” according to President Trump. As Politico reports, this is about to get ugly:

After refusing to support President Donald Trump during the 2016 election, the Kochs’ political machine in Washington worked with him to land major victories in their shared agenda on tax reform, and the conservative group was thrilled with Trump’s environmental deregulation and Supreme Court picks.

But now, the Koch behemoth looks ready to blow up the awkward stalemate. The massive political network — big enough and wealthy enough to rival the Republican Party itself — is betting that by throwing its weight around and threatening GOP candidates’ access to the group’s vaults of cash for television ads and door-to-door canvassing, it can persuade Republicans to buck Trump on his protectionist trade and restrictive immigration policies, among a range of other issues.

The Koch Brothers held their annual donor retreat in Colorado Springs last weekend. Among the topics that came up: Concerns about a return to “McCarthyism” under the current Republican administration.

 

► The Colorado Independent reports on local impacts from the Trump administration’s push to overhaul the Endangered Species Act.

 

► The new, and very expensive, VA Hospital in Aurora began taking its first patients on Tuesday.

 

9News reports on efforts to promote a GoFundMe page to raise the $10,000 needed to put a portrait of President Trump in the Colorado State Capitol. Last week a prankster placed a portrait of Russian President Vladimir Putin near an empty spot reserved for Trump’s portrait; the prank became a worldwide sensation over the weekend.

 

► Kaiser Permanente is dropping thousands of Medicaid patients in Weld and Larimer counties.

 

► Colorado is not burning as much as it was earlier this summer.

 

 

Your Daily Dose Of ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 

 

► A Republican Congressional candidate in Virginia has a very strange obsession, as Vox.com reports:

A Republican candidate in Virginia’s Fifth Congressional District whose opponent has accused him of being “a devotee of Bigfoot erotica” has responded in perhaps the weirdest moment of a very weird month in the very strange political year that is 2018.

Retired Air Force intelligence officer and brewery owner Denver Riggleman is running for office as a Republican after being chosen at a party convention following the retirement of Republican Rep. Tom Garrett. One reason he’s running for office, he said in a video interview Monday, is to fight for “the freedom to believe in any type of Bigfoot you want.”

Riggleman is the co-author of a self-published 2006 book called Bigfoot Exterminators, Inc.: The Partially Cautionary, Mostly True Tale of Monster Hunt 2006, a work about people who look for Bigfoot.

Recently, his Democratic opponent, Leslie Cockburn, has been sharing his social media postings focused on Bigfoot and, more specifically, Bigfoot’s hypothetical genitalia.

So, uh, yeah. This is also not the first time that a race for Congress in Virginia’s 5th District has gained notoriety for “erotica.”

 

From the Washington Post:

 

ICYMI

 

This is not the best way to deal with concerns about Republican gubernatorial candidate Walker Stapleton’s family ties to the Ku Klux Klan.

 

Click here for The Get More Smarter Show. You can also Get More Smarter by liking Colorado Pols on Facebook!

 

Comments

11 thoughts on “Get More Smarter on Wednesday (August 1)

  1. From our neighbor to the east.  Good work, if you can get it.

    Kris Kobach’s Lucrative Trail of Courtroom Defeats

    Kris Kobach likes to tout his work for Valley Park, Missouri. He has boasted on cable TV about crafting and defending the town’s hardline anti-immigration ordinance. He discussed his “victory” there at length on his old radio show. He still lists it on his resume.

    But “victory” isn’t the word most Valley Park residents would use to describe the results of Kobach’s work. With his help, the town of 7,000 passed an ordinance in 2006 that punished employers for hiring illegal immigrants and landlords for renting to them. But after two years of litigation and nearly $300,000 in expenses, the ordinance was largely gutted. Now, it is illegal only to “knowingly” hire illegal immigrants there — something that was already illegal under federal law. The town’s attorney can’t recall a single case brought under the ordinance.

    “Ambulance chasing” is how Grant Young, a former mayor of Valley Park, describes Kobach’s role. Young characterized Kobach’s attitude as, “Let’s find a town that’s got some issues or pretends to have some issues, let’s drum up an immigration problem and maybe I can advance my political position, my political thinking and maybe make some money at the same time.”

    Kobach used his work in Valley Park to attract other clients, with sometimes disastrous effects on the municipalities. The towns — some with budgets in the single-digit-millions — ran up hefty legal costs after hiring him to defend similar ordinances. Farmers Branch, Texas, wound up owing $7 million in legal bills. Hazleton, Penn., took on debt to pay $1.4 million and eventually had to file for a state bailout. In Fremont, Neb., the city raised property taxes to pay for Kobach’s services. None of the towns are currently enforcing the laws he helped craft.

  2. Don’t laugh. Moddy’s fantasy of the taller Coffman swooping in to save the day may have more legs than we’ve given credit. 

    Ladies and gentleman, the Republican candidate for Colorado Governor:

    “According to a police report, the Stapletons set a trap for their nanny by placing twenty dollar bills sticking visibly out of a book in hopes that they would catch her in the act of stealing. It didn’t work, however, because Walker Stapleton forgot how much money he left as bait.”

     

  3. Republicans just lookin' out for your safety:

    Trump Administration Says Driving Would Be Riskier If Fuel Standards Tougher

    The Trump administration says people would drive more and be exposed to increased risk if their cars get better gas mileage, an argument intended to justify freezing Obama-era toughening of fuel standards.

    Oh, of course!  Using similar logic, the Trump Administration will soon announce the end of Medicare.  Why?  It is the single biggest reason people are at risk of living longer.  This has caused an unprecedented epidemic with millions of people dying of old age every year!

  4. Trump has managed 4229 false statements WITHOUT needing to work without a script in press conferences for the last 531 days (since Feb. 16, 2017).

    Imagine what he could do if he was facing the troublesome press directly.

     

  5. What the hell is the meaning of Q?

    I saw the signs in the background at the Florida campaign event and all I could think of was John de Lancie's character on Star Trek: The Next Generation.

    1. Q represents the alt rights' claim that a cabal of deep state government types including the Clintons and Obamas are conspiring to overthrow the Asshole in the White House.

      He promises to ferret out this conspiracy against him and crush it with the help of the military…

      More at PBS.org..

      1. Do they have to move to a single-letter battle cry because the dumbing down of the maroons now poses a risk that they can’t remeber two syllables? 

        1. I regret that I can even make this statement, but "Q" is the correct way to address this individual.  Let's not get into why, but it's not because (of the wholly believable conjecture that) it's as much as Q's adherents can spell.

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