Sunday, December 14, 2025

Something to Know - 14 December

Pour yourself a large coffee, or orange juice, or another beverage and spend some time reading this State of the Union presented by Mary Geddry.   I won't add to the reading time with unnecessary chatter, so enjoy your read:

This short video clip will assist you in planning your next trip of a lifetime https://www.youtube.com/shorts/hOz8UVJHiEM

Geddry's Newsletter a Publication of nGenium marygeddry@substack.com 

8:08 AM (3 hours ago)
to me



Tariffs, Teleprompters, and the FIFA Peace Prize: A National Farce

Trump's unraveling press events, global leaders calling him out, Congress tightening the screws on Hegseth, and America's schadenfreude moment.



 
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Good morning! Trump's America, where the "golden age for farmers" comes with a side of potential war crimes, a collapsing labor market, and a sitting U.S. president trying to sell advanced AI hardware to China like he's cutting a deal on used golf carts.

Trump kicked off his latest performance with what was nominally a farm-aid roundtable and twisted into a three-act psychodrama: grievance, delusion, and denial. On paper, the headline was simple enough: the administration is rolling out roughly $12 billion in assistance to farmers, funded, he claims, by his miracle tariffs. In practice, even his own Agriculture Secretary couldn't keep the math straight, Brooke Rollins talks about an $11 billion "bridge payment" to go out by February 2026, with another billion held back for specialty crops, while Trump keeps boomeranging back to "12 billion, a lot of money, peanuts for you though." The whole thing is pitched as a "bridge" from Biden's allegedly wrecked farm economy to Trump's imminent "golden age" of agriculture.

So before we swallow Trump's campfire tale about inheriting a "collapsed" farm economy from Biden, it's worth grounding ourselves in what the data actually shows. Biden's presidency deserves credit for boosting exports, stabilizing market access, and introducing regulatory and institutional reforms that made U.S. agriculture, at least for a time, more resilient. U.S. agricultural exports hit record highs in 2021 and 2022, farm bankruptcies fell to their lowest point in nearly two decades, and USDA spent four years trying to pry open new markets instead of just screaming "soybeans" at Xi Jinping like it was a Vegas safe word.

But the long-term reality of American agriculture is bigger than any one administration. When you hear someone say "Biden wrecked the farms," it conflates long-term structural shifts with short-term political blame. The truth is more complicated: Biden slowed down some of the damage, but he couldn't, and didn't, reverse the broader trends. Consolidation has been swallowing small farms for decades. Commodity cycles, climate impacts, debt loads, land-price pressures, and global market shifts don't care who's in the Oval Office. The baseline trajectory of U.S. agriculture has been drifting toward fewer, larger operations for years, and that was happening long before Biden took office.

Biden didn't preside over a pastoral apocalypse. He was managing an aging, over-concentrated agricultural sector shaped by 40 years of structural forces. Trump, of course, prefers the cartoon version, Biden drove the tractor into a ditch, and only Trump's tariffs can tow it out. The real world is messier: Biden mostly kept the thing upright; Trump's pretending the ditch never existed.

The setting is pure Trumpian cult-of-personality. We get the Iowa farmer who tells a story about his two-year-old saying he doesn't want Santa to come, he wants President Trump instead. Trump, naturally, lights up at this as if it's the healthiest possible thing for a toddler to say. We're in a room full of adults nodding along as a small child replaces a mythological gift-giver with a very real, very angry 79-year-old who thinks tariffs are a personality trait.

From there, he does his usual tour of alternative reality. He claims he "inherited the worst inflation in the history of our country" from Biden and then personally brought prices "way down," despite the small problem that inflation had already dropped below 3% by the end of Biden's term and has actually ticked back up under Trump's watch. He insists gasoline is down to a "sacred" $1.99 in three states, a number that exists only in his head and on the gas-station signs of his imagination. In the real world, no state is anywhere near that price. Independent trackers like GasBuddy have recorded no stations selling regular gas below $2.00 this year, statewide averages remain in the mid-$2.60s to high-$2.90s, and the national average sits right around $2.95. So when Trump points to $1.99 gas as proof that everything is fine, he's effectively saying, "Trust my vibes, ignore your receipts." If your grocery bill and rent have not followed this mythical sub-$2.00 gasoline down the mountain, you are just being difficult.

He tells farmers there is no more estate tax, full stop, and that family farms are no longer being lost because "we have no more estate tax," which is… not how the law works, but by this point it's clear we're not here for accuracy, we're here for juice. He complains that environmental rules have made tractors so complex you now "need about 185 IQ to turn on a lawn mower," promises to strip off "that crap" from John Deere equipment, and then says he'll force the companies to lower prices because that's how capitalism works in his head.

Because it's Trump, the farm-aid event morphs seamlessly into a war-room spin session about a strike off the coast of Venezuela that may well be a war crime.

When an ABC reporter presses him on the September 2 strike, specifically, on his previous on-camera statement that he would have "no problem" releasing the full video of the incident, Trump does what he increasingly does when confronted with his own words: he denies reality. "You said that, I didn't say that. This is ABC fake news." He then retreats into a mushy fallback line about how whatever Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth decides is fine with him.

This would already be bad in isolation: a president, clearly slipping, insisting he never said the thing everyone saw him say on tape. But now we know what was happening on the other side of that exchange. Congress is moving to withhold a quarter of Hegseth's travel budget in the new National Defense Authorization Act until the Pentagon hands over the unedited videos of all the boat strikes in the southern Caribbean and eastern Pacific, including that September 2 "double tap" where U.S. forces fired repeatedly on survivors in the water. At least 22 strikes, 87 people killed, and lawmakers in both parties are worried enough about legality and oversight that they're literally putting the defense secretary's travel perks on the line to pry loose the footage.

So when Trump snarls at the reporter, calls her obnoxious, and pretends he never committed to transparency, he's not just being thin-skinned. He's reacting like a man who can feel the walls closing in: Congress has seen the full video, analysts are openly using phrases like "possible violation of international law," and his usual trick, deny, attack, move on, is running into statutes, appropriations riders, and subpoenas. His memory is unreliable. His instinct to lie is unchanged. The combination is getting dangerous.

If that were the only front where his detachment from reality was colliding with real-world power, it would be alarming enough. Unfortunately, the rest of the world is now openly calling him out too.

In South Africa, President Cyril Ramaphosa has finally run out of diplomatic euphemisms. After Trump spent weeks insisting that South Africa is engaged in "genocide against Afrikaners" and promising to bar the country from the 2026 G20 summit over a long-debunked white-genocide conspiracy theory, Ramaphosa went on national television and said the quiet part loudly. Trump's claims, he said, are "baseless and false" and amount to "blatant misinformation" about South Africa. He reaffirmed that South Africa is a founding G20 member and "will remain a full, active and constructive member" whether or not Donald J. Trump has hurt feelings about demographics and land reform. Coming from a sitting head of state, "blatant misinformation" is the polite, diplomatic version of "this man is lying to the world."

Because quietly ignoring him is no longer safe, domestic journalists, foreign leaders, and members of Congress are all now actively correcting Trump's statements in public.

Bearing this in mind, Trump has decided that what this moment really needs is to loosen the export controls on advanced AI chips to China. In a social media post and subsequent confirmation, he announced that the U.S. will allow Nvidia to export its H200 AI chips to "approved" Chinese customers, with the U.S. government taking a 25% cut of the revenue as a kind of national-security tithe. Nvidia is thrilled, for obvious reasons, and Trump is selling the deal as a masterstroke that protects national security while "keeping America's lead in AI" and creating jobs. China hawks, including a cluster of Democratic senators and not a few Republicans, are describing it as a "colossal economic and national security failure." They're not wrong to worry: H200s are not Nvidia's very top-of-the-line Blackwell chips, but they are still plenty powerful enough to help Chinese AI labs build systems comparable to U.S. supercomputers and to supercharge military AI research.

The basic structure of the decision is very Trump: take a complicated, long-term strategic trade-off and reduce it to a quick cash skim. Years of bipartisan work to keep the most advanced chips out of PLA-linked hands get converted into, essentially, "we'll let you have last year's hardware if we get a cut of the action." That might make sense if we were dealing with souvenir t-shirts. It makes considerably less sense when we're talking about the computational substrate for autonomous weapons systems.

So on the foreign-policy front, we have a president in observable cognitive decline alienating democratic partners, amplifying white-supremacist conspiracy theories about South Africa, trying to bully a G20 founding member out of the club, and at the same time shipping advanced AI chips to China for a 25% finder's fee. Everything is fine.

Domestically, the economic picture layered under all this is, if anything, grimmer, and here Max at UNFTR really earns his coffee. His latest breakdown of the labor market is essentially an autopsy of a system being hollowed out from both ends.

On the surface, the government numbers don't look catastrophic. Initial jobless claims are lower than expected. Continuing claims are flat to slightly down. Prime-age labor force participation looks fine on a chart. That's the stuff Trump's people point to when they call the labor market "resilient." But as Max patiently walks through, the denominator has changed. The 25–54 cohort has been basically flat since the financial crisis; boomers are aging out, millennials never fully replaced them, and overall adult participation hasn't been this low since the mid-1970s. Once you factor in the non-working under-18s, students, older adults out of the labor force, and the millions stuck in gig work and precarious part-time jobs that still count as "employed" if they worked a single paid hour in four weeks, you land in a stark place: less than half the country is actually working in any meaningful sense.

Private data fills in the qualitative horror. Small businesses are shedding jobs or closing altogether, while large firms are still adding just enough positions to keep the aggregate numbers from looking like freefall. Tariffs and sticky inflation have jacked up input costs. The big guys can eat margin or use pricing power; the corner shop, the independent manufacturer, the small-town employer cannot. So the losses show up as bankruptcies, repossessions, and spiraling credit-card balances at 22% interest. This is the K-shaped economy in practice: the top climbs; the bottom drowns.

Sectorally, we're bleeding in the places you'd expect to drive real growth, business services, manufacturing, while seeing upticks in health care, education, and hospitality, which Max reads as younger people hiding in school and older folks consuming more care and leisure as they age. So much for the triumphant "reshoring" narrative: in reality, we have no coherent industrial policy beyond tariffs, and Trump has spent most of his time tearing up the renewable energy credits and climate incentives that might have generated genuine domestic investment in EVs, wind, and solar.

Layer in immigration, and the picture gets even darker. With 2025 likely to go down as a rare non-war year with negative net migration, the economy is trying to function without the usual flow of migrant labor that we quietly rely on to harvest crops, staff warehouses and hotels, and fill critical talent gaps in tech and research. On paper, that keeps unemployment from exploding. In practice, it squeezes growth, worsens demographic imbalances, and exposes the dirty little secret that our flavor of capitalism is built on the exploitation of low-wage migrant workers to suppress wage growth and "control" inflation. Take that away without reimagining the system, and you get exactly what we're seeing: a weak labor market, persistent inflation, and no meaningful wage gains at the bottom.

Trump, naturally, tells you inflation is now tamed at around 3%, down from "almost double digits under Biden." Max points out the missing context: by the time Biden left, inflation had already cooled below 3%; the Fed's preferred measure, core PCE, is still running near 3%; the cyclical components tied to food and shelter are closer to 4%; and, crucially, none of this unwinds the fact that food prices are about 36% higher than before the pandemic. Wages up 4% doesn't help the half of the country that isn't seeing raises. Retirees and low-income households still pay 36% more at the supermarket. They're bridging the gap with plastic.

On the fiscal side, the administration's story about tariffs paying for everything collapses on contact with the Treasury's own numbers. In October alone, the federal government ran a $285 billion monthly deficit. Tariffs brought in about $31 billion. Corporate income taxes kicked in around $15 billion. Even if you generously annualize the tariff take, you get a few hundred billion at best, not "trillions," not a magical fund to give every American $2,000, and certainly not enough to offset the cost of blowing up boats in the Caribbean and funding a defense budget cruising toward $1.2 trillion a year. The interest line item, $91 billion in October, is where the hangover really starts. With 30-year Treasury yields stuck around 5% and 10-years above 4%, bond markets are quietly telling us that the United States, under Trump's fiscal circus, is a riskier bet than it used to be.

So we have: structurally weak labor markets, a consolidation-driven economy where small businesses go under while the "Magnificent 7" tech stocks feast, tariff revenue that's a rounding error compared to the damage tariffs themselves inflict, and a debt profile that now requires us to keep rolling ever-larger sums at higher interest. Trump's answer? Keep the tariffs. Work around the Supreme Court if they get in the way. Promise people a $1,000 rebate "from no tax on tips and Social Security." Hope no one notices that this is roughly the same order of magnitude as the premium increases millions will face when the enhanced ACA subsidies quietly expire.

Which brings us to health care, because of course it does. Over in the Senate, Republicans are converging on a plan that does not extend those enhanced ACA premium subsidies at all. Instead, Mike Crapo and Bill Cassidy want to convert the money into $1,000–$1,500 deposits into health savings accounts for some ACA enrollees. Bernie Moreno and Susan Collins are talking about phasing the subsidies out over two years and layering on new income limits and minimum premium payments. Roger Marshall wants a one-year extension and then a pivot into HSA-style accounts. None of these ideas has anything like a governing majority behind it. Democrats will hold a doomed vote on a three-year extension. Republicans will likely resort to choreographed unanimous-consent theatrics so they don't have to go on record voting for higher premiums in an election year. The most likely outcome is that the enhanced subsidies vanish at the end of the year and millions of people discover, right on schedule, that their "affordable" plans are now very much not.

Max put it nicely: the administration's big plan is to hand you roughly $1,000 in tax goodies while you get hit with roughly $1,000 more in health insurance costs, all in an economy where food is 36% more expensive than it used to be and your two-digit credit card APR starts with a two.

And over all of it, we have a president whose cognitive edges are visibly fraying. He can't keep his stories straight about whether he promised to release potentially incriminating war footage. He confidently describes tariffs as generating "trillions" of dollars that don't exist. He insists South Africa is engaged in genocide based on conspiracy theories rejected by every major human rights monitoring body, and then watches as the president of that country goes on television to inform the planet that the U.S. commander-in-chief is spreading "blatant misinformation." He tells farmers there is no more estate tax, as if words alone have legislative force. He greenlights AI chip exports to China for a 25% cut while his own party's hawks scream about handing key strategic advantages to Beijing. He grows more abusive with reporters, more self-pitying about "haters," and more certain that saying something makes it true.

Trump keeps calling this a golden age, for farmers, for America, for his tariffs, for his deal-making. What it actually looks like, when you stop listening to the slogans and look at the data, is something closer to what Max described: the early stages of a managed decline into a more feudal order. Lords and serfs. Capital and precarity. The top of the K-shaped recovery pulling ever further away, while the bottom lives on Costco chicken, deferred dental work, and balances they'll never pay off.

The only real "resilience" in this story is the resilience of his lies and the willingness of an entire party to keep pretending that nothing is wrong, that the labor market is fine, that tariffs are genius, that boat strikes are patriotic, that South Africa is the problem, that advanced chips in China are "balanced," and that a thousand dollars in an HSA is a substitute for real health care.

Finally, for those who enjoy a little righteous schadenfreude with their morning coffee, the universe has gifted us a closing segment that writes itself. Pete Hegseth, Trump's favorite war-tourist, drone-footage enthusiast, and newly minted Secretary of "Whatever He's Currently Screaming About", was confronted outside church by someone who apparently mistook him for the pull-up bar he keeps insisting on installing at airports.

There he was, emerging from the house of worship and attempting to radiate piety, when a Washington resident delivered a theological correction the scriptures somehow forgot:

"You treasonous traitor! You murderer! You're going to learn how to do a pull-up in prison!"

It went on for a while, the kind of prolonged, echoing scolding normally reserved for toddlers who have just overturned a grocery cart. Hegseth attempted composure, difficult when being told, repeatedly, that even your pull-ups are disappointing, but the moment captured the national mood far better than any pollster ever could: this regime's top brass can't walk ten feet in public without being booed like they've just announced a bagpipe solo at a middle-school assembly.

And it's not just Hegseth. J.D. Vance got serenaded with "Nazis are not welcome!" at an event that was, notably, not designed as a participatory musical. MAGA officials are discovering that outside the controlled terrarium of Fox News and taxpayer-funded press rooms, actual Americans have developed opinions, loud ones, about their war crimes, their deportation schemes, their farmers-need-bridge-payments economic collapse, and their ongoing efforts to turn air travel into an episode of American Gladiators.

And as if the week weren't already rich with comic material, the late-night circuit did its civic duty by roasting Trump's latest entry in the Imaginary Achievements Hall of Fame: his "FIFA peace prize."

Stephen Colbert marveled at the sheer audacity of a man who cannot make peace with a teleprompter receiving a global honor from the world's soccer federation, an organization not exactly burdened by an excess of moral clarity or a shortage of lucrative chaos. Jimmy Kimmel added that a FIFA peace prize for Trump makes about as much sense as awarding him the Nobel Prize in Reading Comprehension or Best Actor in a Nonfiction Role. Both hosts gave it the treatment it deserved: the same seriousness one normally reserves for a ceremonial key to a city made out of cheese.

But between us? We all know the real accolade worth discussing: the inaugural FIFA Snark Award, which, based upon reader comments that have turned Trump's imaginary trophy cabinet into a recurring comedic ecosystem, and if the universe is even remotely just, you all should be in the top ten contenders.

If Trump is going to hand himself pretend awards, the least we can do is hand out real ones for real work, especially when that work keeps a weary nation laughing instead of crying.



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Juan Matute
CCRC


Saturday, December 13, 2025

Something to Know - 13 December (part 2)

Trumpism has done an excellent job of weaponizing "culture wars" to an immoral extreme.   Look around the floor of newspaper editorial rooms for discarded examples of moral decay and destruction of American Democracy forced to the floor by authoritarian power.  As if Trump is the moral leader of American ideals?   May we rejoice in having good muckraking journalism, which is still alive and willing to tell truth to power.    Simply said, there are many more trashed stories that may come to light now.

Lincoln Square lincolnsquare+articles@substack.com 

3:08 AM (4 hours ago)
to me




President Donald Trump poses for a photo with FIFA President Gianni Infantino at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. on Friday, December 5, 2025. | Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok via Flickr
By Brian Daitzman

Days after FIFA President Gianni Infantino handed Donald Trump an unprecedented "FIFA Peace Prize" at the World Cup draw in Washington, federal prosecutors in New York asked to dismiss a major soccer bribery case that was once central to the United States' campaign against FIFA corruption.

Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn moved on Wednesday, December 10 to dismiss a major soccer bribery case that grew out of the United States' long-running probe of corruption in world football, days after the head of FIFA awarded Donald J. Trump an inaugural "FIFA Peace Prize" at a World Cup draw in Washington, according to court filings and news reports.

Reuters reported that U.S. Attorney Joseph Nocella told the court that dropping the case against former Fox International Channels executive Hernan Lopez and Argentine sports marketing company Full Play Group was "in the interests of justice," even though a jury convicted them in 2023 and a federal appeals court reinstated those verdicts in July after a trial judge set them aside.




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Juan Matute
CCRC


Something to Know - 13 December

The revelation of some pictures from the Epstein estate files really hit like a bomb on Friday.   The significance of the pictures is that they prove that Trump attempted to deceive and lie his way for years.   He previously had said that he would release the files, and then he would not release them.  Bear in mind that the evidence received so far is from the Epstein estate, and the actual DOJ/FBI evidence is yet to be released.   So, there isn't much of any reaction from the media so far, probably because we all know he was involved in stuff like this, so what's the big deal?   The Big Deal is that polling has been showing a consistent 32 to 36 percent general approval by Republican voters.   This Moral Wound that has hit the airwaves will undoubtedly make a negative hit on Trump; affecting voters and Republicans in Congress.   It will not be easy to politically support a moral monster, pedofile, and liar.   Trump will be heckled and shouted down by some in public appearances.  Now, I have a theory about Trump's problems.   We have already wondered why Trump is so friendly and supportive of Putin.   Remembering back to stories when Trump went to Russia a long time ago to see about building a Trump Moscow Tower?   I will bet that the cagey ex-KGB agent has lurid evidence of Trump in compromised activities scored by what KGB agents do so well in targeting potential victims.   Trump has the goods on Trump and has been blackmailing him all along.   Putin was able to convince Trump that it was in his best interests to do what was asked.  So, Trump obeyed.  Putin controls all the oligarchs in Russia, and he takes a cut of what was stolen when Russia privatized all of its industries.   Putin is the chief mob boss and Russian Banks channel money through Cyprus where Deutsche Bank is legally authorized to deal with Russia and the European Union and the United States.   Russian Rubles roll into Cypriot banks, and roll out the other side as US Dollars.   Deutsche Bank legally operates in New York.   The whole system is a Giant Laundromat, a legal operation.   Russian Oligarchs visit New York, make cash transactions  through the bank to purchase Trump property, Trump gets his cut on an inflated price, and the oligarch now has US dollars to buy stuff.  That is the essence of the business deals.   Putin needed Trump to work the deal, Trump got richer, and the Oligarchs had dollars in hand rather than useless Rubles.   If Trump did not follow the game plans that Putin set out for the Giant Laundromat of Russian foreign policy related to Ukraine and Europe, all Putin had to do was threaten Trump with his blackmail game.

Below are three separate articles from news media concerning two such schemes by Trump.   From the New Yorker magazine that I read back in 2017, the Trump organization was involved with trying to build a Trump Tower hotel in Baku, Azerbaijan.   He also was written up when he was running scheme with a building with luxury apartments, and then selling them to the Russians, who would pay much more than the selling price so that Trump got his cut and the Russians wound up with dollars instead of Rubles.  

Say what you might about my Theory above, if it is not true or not exactly like written, it would make a good script for a screenwriter.   I foresee many accounts of Trump's behavior and his rotten morality in the future. 

Courtesy of the Artificial Intelligent app Gemini, I was able to get the articles from 2017 for you to see the synopsis of both scams.

ps - If there are any errors or grammatical mistakes, it is because I just wrote it all out on the keyboard without proofreading, and I gotta get to sleep now.   I will hit the send key tomorrow.

The article you are likely referring to is titled "Donald Trump's Worst Deal," written by Adam Davidson and published in The New Yorker on March 13, 2017.

This piece investigates the Trump Organization's partnership to build a Trump Tower in Baku, Azerbaijan (which you referred to as "Baiku"). It is widely considered one of the most significant investigative reports regarding Trump's international business dealings.

Here is a summary of the key findings from that article:

1. The Deal and the Partners

  • The Project: The plan was to build a luxury hotel and residence in Baku, a building shaped like a sail (similar to the Burj Al Arab in Dubai).

  • The Trump Role: The Trump Organization did not own the building or invest money in it. Instead, they signed a lucrative licensing deal to lend the "Trump" name and manage the property in exchange for fees. Ivanka Trump was reportedly the key executive overseeing the project, visiting Baku to inspect the site.

  • The Local Partners: The partners were the Mammadov family, led by Ziya Mammadov, then the Transportation Minister of Azerbaijan. The article describes the Mammadovs as "notoriously corrupt," with wealth that far exceeded their official government salaries.

2. The IRGC Connection

  • The most explosive finding in the article was the connection to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

  • The Mammadovs allegedly awarded multimillion-dollar contracts to build the tower to an Iranian construction firm controlled by the Darvishi family. The Darvishis were closely linked to the IRGC.

  • Davidson reported that the project likely served as a money-laundering operation for the IRGC. While there was no evidence the Trump Organization knowingly participated in money laundering, the article argued they ignored blindingly obvious "red flags" about where the money was coming from.

3. Legal and Ethical Concerns

  • Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA): The article suggested the Trump Organization might have violated the FCPA, a US law that makes it a crime for American companies to benefit from a partner's corruption if they should have known about it (willful blindness).

  • Failure of Due Diligence: Despite the Mammadovs' reputation for corruption being public knowledge (even appearing in WikiLeaks cables), the Trump Organization proceeded with the deal.

4. Outcome

  • The hotel never opened.

  • The Trump Organization canceled the deal in December 2016, shortly before Donald Trump's inauguration, citing delays by the developer.

  • The building stands empty in Baku today.


***************

Based on your request, you are likely looking for one of the investigative pieces by staff writer Adam Davidson, who covered this topic extensively for The New Yorker.

While several magazines covered this beat, The New Yorker focused heavily on the business model behind these deals rather than just a list of apartment sales.

Here are the most likely articles you are looking for:

1. "Trump's Business of Corruption" (August 21, 2017)

  • Author: Adam Davidson

  • The Gist: This is the most comprehensive New Yorker piece on the subject. Davidson argues that Trump's business model—licensing his name to developers in foreign countries with little due diligence—made his organization a magnet for money laundering.

  • Key Details: The article details how the Trump Organization often partnered with "famously corrupt" figures. While it discusses the general flow of foreign money into Trump properties, it focuses on the pattern of behavior that allowed oligarchs (Russian and otherwise) to move money through his real estate.

2. "Donald Trump's Worst Deal" (March 13, 2017)

  • Author: Adam Davidson

  • The Gist: This article is a deep dive into a specific luxury hotel deal in Baku, Azerbaijan.

  • Key Details: It investigates Trump's partnership with the Mammadovs, a family of oligarchs with ties to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard. While these are Azerbaijani oligarchs rather than Russian, this story is frequently cited as the definitive "Trump and corrupt oligarchs" piece in The New Yorker.


Are you thinking of The New Republic?

If you are specifically remembering a story about Russian mobsters buying individual apartments in Trump Tower (Manhattan), you might be thinking of a very famous viral article from The New Republic (a different magazine) that came out around the same time:

  • Article: "Married to the Mob" (July 2017)

  • Author: Craig Unger

  • The Gist: This piece specifically chronicles the history of Russian mafia figures buying Trump condos. It details stories like that of David Bogatin, a Russian mobster who bought five condos in Trump Tower for $6 million in cash (in 1984), and discusses how Trump properties became a "laundromat" for Russian money.

Summary of the Distinction

  • The New Yorker (Adam Davidson): Focuses on the business structure, foreign licensing deals (like Baku and Batumi), and the "willful ignorance" of the Trump Organization regarding their partners' sources of wealth.

  • The New Republic (Craig Unger): Focuses specifically on Russian mobsters buying individual condo units in New York and Florida.

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Juan Matute
CCRC


Friday, December 12, 2025

PBS News Release of Pictures Related to the Epstein Files

If ever there was a release of muckraking evidence on famous public figures, this could be right up there at the top.    This is not the run-of-the-mill sensational papers at store checkout counters, it is some of the stuff that Trump has been suppressing all along.   If his Golden Goose is not cooked by now, it will certainly peel a lot of fake stable genius off of a lying sack of ......    Anyway here is the PBS link:



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Juan Matute
CCRC


Something to Know 12 December (part 2)

Meanwhile......Nothing of benefit to the American Taxpayers is happening in Washington D.C.   Pickleball on the subject of health care is still going on, with time running out.  Republicans are beginning to feel something more ominous, than a pinch, that a decision on sticking with Trump or working for their own constituents is best for their political tenure or future.   At this same time, an ailing and desperate (in fear of the Epstein Files release), is throwing every attention grabbing hunk of mung at the walls, and finding that nothing is sticking.  Yes, he is putting sand in the transmission and sugar in the tank, which will make the next administration's work a big mess to flush out.   His delusional rant, which you will read in HCR this today, is intended by him to grab attention .....and he is succeeding, but only to demonstrate that we have one sick maniac at the helm of a drifting ship.   The United States of America has lost its luster, its sense of humanity, and greatness.   Wake up America!

Heather Cox Richardson from Letters from an American heathercoxrichardson@substack.com 
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Dec 11, 2025, 10:42 PM (10 hours ago)
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On Tuesday, President Donald J. Trump kicked off his nationwide tour to assure Americans that the Republicans are focused on bringing down costs. Voters turned to Trump in 2024 in large part because he promised that his understanding of the economy would enable him to bring down the prices that had risen in the global inflation spike after the Covid-19 pandemic shut down the world economy.

Within weeks of the election, Trump began to back off on that promise, telling a reporter for Time magazine in December 2024 that "it's very hard" to bring down prices. Then in April he launched a tariff war that began to raise prices, while his on-again, off-again tariff rates discouraged businesses from investing while they waited to see what made economic sense.

Americans are not impressed with Trump's handling of the economy. A poll by AP/NORC, which stands for Associated Press/National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago—a very reputable polling collaboration—released today shows that only 31% of American adults approve of Trump's management of the economy, with 67% disapproving. Among Independents, that number breaks down to 15% approving and 80% disapproving.

Trump's overall numbers are not much better. Just 36% of American adults approve of his job performance, with 61% disapproving. Among Independents, just 20% approve, while 74% disapprove. With them, he is underwater by an astonishing 54 points.

So Trump's advisors have sent him off on a tour to convince Americans the administration shares their concerns about the economy.

On Tuesday, in Mount Pocono, Pennsylvania, Trump addressed the question of affordability by telling the crowd, "You're doing better than you've ever done." He blamed higher prices on former president Joe Biden, confirming the observation of CNN's Stephen Collinson that Trump's answer for everything is to blame Biden.

Trump defended the tariffs that have raised prices by suggesting that the tariffs are protecting major items and that if people are feeling the pinch of higher prices, they "can give up certain products. You could give up pencils. That's under the China policy, you know, every child can get 37 pencils. They only need one or two, you know, they don't need that many. But you always need, you always need steel. You don't need 37 dolls for your daughter. Two or three is nice. But you don't need 37 dolls. So, we're doing things right."

Otherwise, Trump delivered his usual rally speech. Rambling for more than an hour and a half, he attacked immigrants and confirmed that in 2018 he did, in fact, call Haiti and African nations "sh*thole countries." He attacked the board of the Federal Reserve and, while boasting of his administration's strikes on small boats in the Caribbean, said: "And now we're going to do land, because the land is much easier." Anthony Zurcher of the BBC noted that Trump told the crowd his chief of staff, Susie Wiles, had told him to focus on the economy but boasted: "I haven't read practically anything off the stupid teleprompter."

After the speech, at 9:00 on Tuesday night, Trump's social media account posted:

"There has never been a President that has worked as hard as me! My hours are the longest, and my results are among the best. I've stopped Eight Wars, saving many millions of lives in the process, created the Greatest Economy in the History of our Country, brought Business back into the United States at levels never seen before, rebuilt our Military, created the Largest Tax Cuts and Regulation Cuts, EVER, closed our open and very dangerous Southern Border, when previous Administrations were unable to do so, and created an 'aura' around the United States of America that has led every Country in the World to respect us more than ever before. In addition to all of that, I go out of my way to do long, thorough, and very boring Medical Examinations at the Great Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, seen and supervised by top doctors, all of whom have given me PERFECT Marks—Some have even said they have never seen such Strong Results. I do these Tests because I owe it to our Country. In addition to the Medical, I have done something that no other President has done, on three separate occasions, the last one being recently, by taking what is known as a Cognitive Examination, something which few people would be able to do very well, including those working at The New York Times, and I ACED all three of them in front of large numbers of doctors and experts, most of whom I do not know. I have been told that few people have been able to 'ace' this Examination and, in fact, most do very poorly, which is why many other Presidents have decided not to take it at all. Despite all of this, the time and work involved, The New York Times, and some others, like to pretend that I am 'slowing up,' am maybe not as sharp as I once was, or am in poor physical health, knowing that it is not true, and knowing that I work very hard, probably harder than I have ever worked before. I will know when I am 'slowing up,' but it's not now! After all of the work I have done with Medical Exams, Cognitive Exams, and everything else, I actually believe it's seditious, perhaps even treasonous, for The New York Times, and others, to consistently do FAKE reports in order to libel and demean 'THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES.' They are true Enemies of the People, and we should do something about it. They have inaccurately reported on all of my Election Results and, in fact, were forced to apologize on much of what they wrote. The best thing that could happen to this Country would be if The New York Times would cease publication because they are a horrible, biased, and untruthful 'source' of information. Thank you for your attention to this matter. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!"

Trump's performance seems unlikely to reassure Americans that he is prioritizing their economic concerns.

Congressional Republicans are not helping. The Republicans' budget reconciliation bill of July—the one they call the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act"—did not extend the premium tax credits for healthcare insurance bought on the Affordable Care Act market that subsidizes that insurance. Today, Senate Republicans voted against the Democrats' measure to extend the premium tax credits for three years. The vote was 51–48, nine votes short of the 60 votes needed to avoid a filibuster. Only four Republican senators—Susan Collins of Maine, Josh Hawley of Missouri, and Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan of Alaska—voted yes.

Senate Democrats, joined by Rand Paul (R-KY), then voted against a Republican bill that would have let the credits expire but would have given adults who earn less than 700% of the federal poverty line access to $1,000 annually to put toward healthcare costs if they are under 50, and $1,500 a year if they are between 50 and 65, if they are on lower-cost ACA plans with an annual deductible of $7,500. The money could not be used for abortion or "gender transition procedures" and would require verification of immigration and citizenship status.

In the House, Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) has rejected the idea of extending the premium tax credits but is facing a revolt from some members of his conference who recognize that the American people overwhelmingly want to see the credits extended. Representative Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA) has launched a discharge petition to force Johnson to bring a bill to extend the credits to a vote. The measure would only pass with Democratic votes, making Johnson and other Republican leaders scramble to create their own plan. Ever since the Affordable Care Act became law fifteen years ago, a Republican alternative has remained elusive.

Jake Sherman, John Bresnahan, and Laura Weiss of Punchbowl News reported today that Johnson has said he will keep the fight over healthcare going into next year. They note that no Republican "thinks it's a good idea for the [Republicans] to be talking about health care—their worst issue—during an election year."

Democrats are likely to emphasize that the cost for extending the ACA premium tax credits—which benefit everyday Americans and which the Republicans did not extend in their One Big Beautiful Bill Act—would be about $350 billion over ten years. The cost for extending the 2017 tax cuts, which overwhelmingly benefit the wealthy and corporations and which they did extend, will be more than $4 trillion over the same time period.

The Punchbowl reporters note that Republican confusion over healthcare is just one more sign of trouble for Republicans in the House. "[W]e won't say that the House is in total chaos," they wrote this morning. "Total chaos is when members unleash censure resolutions against each other or a trio of House Republicans publicly claim Speaker Mike Johnson has no business running the chamber. That was last week." They note that fear of Trump kept Republicans in line earlier in the year, but with Trump's numbers falling and voters turning to Democrats, Republicans are either planning to leave the House or protecting their own political prospects.

Concerned about control of Congress after 2026, Trump and members of his administration are pressuring state legislatures to redraw their congressional districts in order to favor Republicans. In Indiana, Republican state senators have resisted their pressure, along with death threats, to pass a map that would give Republicans two districts currently dominated by Democrats, giving Republicans the entire congressional delegation.

Vice President J.D. Vance and Don Trump Jr. have jumped into the struggle, and today the lobbying arm of the right-wing Heritage Institute, Heritage Action, posted on social media that "President Trump has made it clear to Indiana leaders: if the Indiana Senate fails to pass the map, all federal funding will be stripped from the state. Roads will not be paved. Guard bases will close. Major projects will stop. These are the stakes and every NO vote will be to blame." Indiana Lieutenant Governor Micah Beckwith confirmed that "[t]he Trump admin[istration] was VERY clear about this."

Political observer John Collins commented: "Nothing shows confidence like threatening your own party." Another Hoosier seemed unconcerned with the threat that Trump would illegally withhold federal funding, posting: "We know how to roll with potholes better than any other state," with a laughing emoji.

This evening, the Indiana senate rejected the new gerrymandered congressional map by a vote of 31 to 19. The vote wasn't close: Twenty-one Republicans—that is, a majority of the Republican senators—joined the 10 Democratic senators in voting no.

This evening, Megan Messerly and Myah Ward of Politico reported that the White House is looking to send surrogates like Vance and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on the road instead of Trump to carry the message of affordability to the American people, leaving Trump to focus on "motivating his die-hard supporter who might not otherwise vote when he isn't on the ballot."

 


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Juan Matute
CCRC