The Trump Organization Is A National Security Nightmare For A Trump Presidency | Ivanka Trump Aborts Cosmo Interview

How the Trump Organization's Foreign Business Ties Upend U.S. National Security Newsweek

This very important article by Kurt Eichenwald is one of the first to look deeply into the Trump organization and the heap of conflicts of interest and ethical problems that would exist in a Trump presidency. The candidate replies that his kids will run the business while he devotes himself to making America great again. Trump refers to this as a 'blind trust' arrangement, which is technically incorrect. The article also touches on important info on the Clinton Foundation. It's doubtful that this article will have any impact on Trump voters, but any citizen concerned about how a Trump presidency could read it beginning to end.


"The Trump Organization is not like the Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation, the charitable enterprise that has been the subject of intense scrutiny about possible conflicts for the Democratic presidential nominee. There are allegations that Hillary Clinton bestowed benefits on contributors to the foundation in some sort of “pay to play” scandal when she was secretary of state, but that makes no sense because there was no “pay.” Money contributed to the foundation was publicly disclosed and went to charitable efforts, such as fighting neglected tropical diseases that infect as many as a billion people. The financials audited by PricewaterhouseCoopers, the global independent accounting company, and the foundation’s tax filings show that about 90 percent of the money it raised went to its charitable programs. (Trump surrogates have falsely claimed that it was only 10 percent and that the rest was used as a Clinton “slush fund.”) No member of the Clinton family received any cash from the foundation, nor did it finance any political campaigns. In fact, like the Clintons, almost the entire board of directors works for free."

The 'new liberal economics' is the key to understanding Hillary Clinton's policies VOX

VOX writes that both the Democratic primary and now the general election shows how the party is shifting on the subject of economic policy. Hillary Clinton's policy proposals and the Democratic platform reflect this new thinking.

Key planks now governing the Democratic thinking include:

Inequality is not a regrettable but inevitable byproduct of an efficient economy, nor a temporary, self-correcting trend. It’s driven by policy choices, and new choices can make a difference.
The economy will not simply bounce back from any weaknesses, as was assumed under Alan Greenspan’s Great Moderation. Rather, there are deep structural problems that include a global savings glut and unwillingness by US companies to make investments.
"Nudging" the private market is not always the best way to deliver core goods and economic security. Deploying government services directly can be more effective.

Ivanka Trump on Her Father's New Child Care and Maternity Leave Policy Cosmopolitan

On Tuesday, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump released a child care and maternity leave plan, one that offers new mothers only -- not fathers -- six weeks of paid maternity leave, tax deductions for stay-at-home parents, and dependent care savings accounts for families. America is the only industrialized country in the world that does not offer federally-mandated family leave, an idea that Republicans have lobbied against for decades. The campaign hopes that this idea, supported by a newly-launched Women Empowerment Tour, will help boost its highly-negative image among women voters — a deficit estimated at 65 percent in a late August ABC News/Washington Post poll.

Trump credits his highly-visible daughter, 34-year-old Ivanka Trump, an executive at the Trump Organization, mother of three and fashion designer, as the originator of the new policy. Ivanka joined her father in Pennsylvania on Tuesday evening and published an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal outlining the policy.  Cosmopolitan.com spoke with Ivanka over the phone Wednesday morning about her father’s new family leave and child care policy in what became a fiery interview. 

Asked to explain how his newly stated policy lined up with Donald Trump's 2004 comments lamenting the toll of maternity leave on companies, Ivanka pushed back against the question, accusing the writer of 'editorializing' and questioning her with 'hostility'. At the time, Trump said pregnancy is "a wonderful thing for the woman, it's a wonderful thing for the husband, it's certainly an inconvenience for a business. And whether people want to say that or not, the fact is it is an inconvenience for a person that is running a business."

“My father obviously has a track record of decades of employing women at every level of his company, and supporting women, and supporting them in their professional capacity, and enabling them to thrive outside of the office and within,” she said. “To imply otherwise is an unfair characterization of his track record and his support of professional women.”

“You said he made those comments,” she said. “I don't know that he said those comments.”

Prior to her ending her interview ahead of schedule, the businesswoman was also asked to explain why the family plan did not include paternity leave and how it would apply to gay male couples. A competing plan long-ago published on the Hillary Clinton website includes fathers. In response, Ivanka Trump insisted that her father’s plan was “a giant leap from where we are today,” but acknowledged the priority was on the mother.

“The plan, right now, is focusing on mothers, whether they be in same-sex marriages or not,” she said.

Related: Ivanka Trump Is Lying About Both Candidates' Records on Family Leave New York Magazine

Report: Ivanka Trump wrong about Trump Organization's Leave Policy CNN

Donald Trump's Maternity Leave Proposal Keeps the US in Dead Last Compared To Its Peers Fortune

Back on the campaign trail, Clinton speaks about helping families at NC rally The Washington Post

Hillary Clinton Headlines September 15, 2016

Clinton maintains a narrow lead over Trump YouGov.com

Poll Shows Tight Race for Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton New York Times

Clinton's doctor declares her 'fit to serve' as president Politico

Emails show Colin Powell unloading on Clinton, Rumsfeld and Trump Politico

Bill Clinton is no longer the closer Politico

 

Clinton Embraces 21st Century Economy, Broadband for All of America

Automation is making human labor more valuable than ever VOX

The modern economy was built on automation, so it's natural to assume that the future will be defined by automation as well. It seems like every week there's a new study or think piece about the job-destroying potential of robotics and artificial intelligence. We post them regularly. 

But our collective obsession with job-stealing robots can cause us to not see the forest through the trees. Perhaps we can't return to the old ways and old days, but it's easy to overestimate the impact of automation. In many service-related industries in the American economy, human labor and a human imprint on products and services is a mark of luxury.

Accompanying the loss of manufacturing jobs -- many of the tied to automation -- the demand for labor-intensive products and services is soaring.

Related: Hillary Clinton announces tech platform Tech Crunch

Connectivity, education, and entrepreneurship — these are the principles of Hillary Clinton’s technology platform, unveiled today, June 28, at a Denver startup incubator.
The decision to announce her technology imperatives outside of Silicon Valley may seem strange, but it represents one of the platform objectives: to democratize tech industry growth across the country, rather than just leaving the industry isolated on its most well-known turf.

A $12 Minimum Wage by 2020 Would Give 35 Million Workers a Much-Needed Raise EPI.org

This fact is startling but remember to keep it in perspective. In saying that 3.9% of all American workers make the federal minimum, we are ignoring the reality that 42% of all American workers earn $15 an hour or less.

A major difference between the Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders positions on minimum wage is that Hillary embraces a $12 minimum with state and local increases such as have occurred in CA and New York. Bernie has one number in his crosshairs and it's $15 for all.

The Economic Policy Institute wrote in July 2015 that a $12 minimum would life wages for a quarter of America's workers. Bernie Sanders is not the first politico to advocate for a higher minimum wage. Members of the Establishment Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) and Representative Robert “Bobby” Scott’s (D-VA) Raise the Wage Act of 2015 proposes raising the minimum wage to $12 by 2020 and gradually eliminating the subminimum wage for tipped workers.

Very little conversation has occurred around the inevitable introduction of robots or robotic technology to replace lower-paid workers in America. In a 2016 PEW Research survey, only 1 in 10 American workers were concerned that a robot could replace them. Unfortunately, this is a bad analysis and especially for lowest-wage workers and especially in the fast-food industry where robots are in the wings ready to automate the majority of positions.

The truly progressive position would be focused on how to educate and train American workers for jobs with an element of job security in the 21st century. Such an endeavor is far more Hillary's intellectual focus than Bernie's. ~ Anne

Hillary Clinton Headlines June 27, 2017

Here's what Bernie Sanders has won in the Democratic platform The Washington Post

Hardly anybody wants to speak at Trump's convention Politico

Donald Trump bad month just got worse, because Sanders backers just rallied to Clinton The Washington Post

In new poll, support for Trump has plunged, giving Clinton a double-digit lead The Washington Post

Hillary Clinton leads, but Donald Trump supporters are more certain they'll vote The Washington Post

Sanders not ready to endorse Clinton: Stand up, be bolder' The Hill