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U.S. national security adviser John Bolton and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo listen as President Donald Trump speaks before signing a National Security Presidential Memorandum in the Oval Office February 7, 2019 in Washington, D.C. (Photo: Win McNamee/Getty Images)
Excerpts from a new book by John Bolton detailing his time in President Donald Trump's inner circle as national security advisor are drawing anger for the fact the new information is coming out long after the impeachment hearings from last fall, making the revelations more evidence that Bolton was "100% complicit" in the president's crimes.
"Bolton is a moral abomination in every way," tweeted MSNBC host Chris Hayes, referring to the former advisor's decades-long career, devoted to the U.S. declaring war on any and every perceived enemy in sight. "It's also the case that basically everyone in government who comes close to Trump comes away thinking he's even worse than they realized."
\u201cBolton is 100% complicit and every article should state this plainly and up front.\u201d— Violet Blue\u00ae (@Violet Blue\u00ae) 1592422328
The book is "bloated with self-importance," the New York Times reported, and "toggles between two discordant registers: exceedingly tedious and slightly unhinged."
The National Security advisor reveals moments from his time in the White House that raise eyebrows, such as Trump asking Chinese President Xi Jinping to help with the 2020 election and encouraged the Chinese leader to expand concentration camps for the country's Uighur minority population, promises from Trump to Turkey's President Recep Erdogan to replace U.S. attorneys investigating a Turkish firm, the president's uncertainty if Finland was a part of Russia or that the U.K. was a nuclear power, and more.
The president also endorsed killing journalists, the book claims.
\u201cAnd now for the part in Bolton's book where he says Trump suggests killing reporters: "...Trump says journalists should be jailed so they have to divulge their sources: 'These people should be executed. They are scumbags,' Trump said." https://t.co/RGxeGgp7HF\u201d— Ashley Parker (@Ashley Parker) 1592421357
But Trump's overwhelming level of corruption and ignorance did not motivate Bolton to go to Congress when the body was investigating the president, as anti-extremism advocate Melissa Ryan noted on Twitter.
"Friendly reminder that John Bolton, instead of telling Congress what he knew while they were holding impeachment proceedings, wrote a fucking book," said Ryan.
Details from the book reportedly show Bolton frequently distressed and alarmed by the president's irrational mood swings and decisions, a revelation that did not win him much sympathy from New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie.
"The thing about John Bolton's shock at Trump's ignorance and incompetence is that it takes a fair amount of brain poisoning in the first place to look at Trump and think he might be anything other than ignorant and incompetent," Bouie said.
Among the most upsetting moments for the former advisor is the president's decision in June 2019 not to launch a disproportionate missile strike against Iran for downing a U.S. drone at the last minute after Bolton convinced him to.
\u201cFor Bolton the worst presidential crimes are the decisions not to commit war crimes: Calling off the Iran attack is what Bolton deems \u201cthe most irrational thing I ever witnessed any President do.\u201d\u201d— Jeffrey St. Clair (@Jeffrey St. Clair) 1592424979
As the New York Times described the passage:
You can sense Bolton's excitement when he describes going home "at about 5:30" for a change of clothes because he expected to be at the White House "all night." It's therefore an awful shock when Trump decided to call off the strikes at the very last minute, after learning they would kill as many as 150 people.
At one point, the Washington Post reported, Trump became consumed with the need to ensure Kim Jong Un receive a CD of Elton John singing "Rocket Man," a reference to a disparaging nickname the president had given the North Korean leader that Trump now wanted to turn into a sign of affection. The president was insistent that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo hand the disk to Kim and upset when Pompeo failed to during a diplomatic trip to North Korea.
"Trump didn't seem to realize Pompeo hadn't actually seen Kim Jong Un, asking if Pompeo had handed" him the CD, Bolton wrote. "Pompeo had not. Getting this CD to Kim remained a high priority for several months."
Trump and the White House have tried to stop publication of the book, but that appears unlikely. Bolton is persona non grata in the administration today, with the president's allies referring to the former advisor as a traitor.
"I truly hope Trump throws Bolton in some kind of hellish, off the books dungeon for his treason," tweeted Will Menaker, cohost of the Chapo Trap House podcast.
"Not the book," Menaker added, "I'm talking about the Iraq war and the rest of his career."
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Excerpts from a new book by John Bolton detailing his time in President Donald Trump's inner circle as national security advisor are drawing anger for the fact the new information is coming out long after the impeachment hearings from last fall, making the revelations more evidence that Bolton was "100% complicit" in the president's crimes.
"Bolton is a moral abomination in every way," tweeted MSNBC host Chris Hayes, referring to the former advisor's decades-long career, devoted to the U.S. declaring war on any and every perceived enemy in sight. "It's also the case that basically everyone in government who comes close to Trump comes away thinking he's even worse than they realized."
\u201cBolton is 100% complicit and every article should state this plainly and up front.\u201d— Violet Blue\u00ae (@Violet Blue\u00ae) 1592422328
The book is "bloated with self-importance," the New York Times reported, and "toggles between two discordant registers: exceedingly tedious and slightly unhinged."
The National Security advisor reveals moments from his time in the White House that raise eyebrows, such as Trump asking Chinese President Xi Jinping to help with the 2020 election and encouraged the Chinese leader to expand concentration camps for the country's Uighur minority population, promises from Trump to Turkey's President Recep Erdogan to replace U.S. attorneys investigating a Turkish firm, the president's uncertainty if Finland was a part of Russia or that the U.K. was a nuclear power, and more.
The president also endorsed killing journalists, the book claims.
\u201cAnd now for the part in Bolton's book where he says Trump suggests killing reporters: "...Trump says journalists should be jailed so they have to divulge their sources: 'These people should be executed. They are scumbags,' Trump said." https://t.co/RGxeGgp7HF\u201d— Ashley Parker (@Ashley Parker) 1592421357
But Trump's overwhelming level of corruption and ignorance did not motivate Bolton to go to Congress when the body was investigating the president, as anti-extremism advocate Melissa Ryan noted on Twitter.
"Friendly reminder that John Bolton, instead of telling Congress what he knew while they were holding impeachment proceedings, wrote a fucking book," said Ryan.
Details from the book reportedly show Bolton frequently distressed and alarmed by the president's irrational mood swings and decisions, a revelation that did not win him much sympathy from New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie.
"The thing about John Bolton's shock at Trump's ignorance and incompetence is that it takes a fair amount of brain poisoning in the first place to look at Trump and think he might be anything other than ignorant and incompetent," Bouie said.
Among the most upsetting moments for the former advisor is the president's decision in June 2019 not to launch a disproportionate missile strike against Iran for downing a U.S. drone at the last minute after Bolton convinced him to.
\u201cFor Bolton the worst presidential crimes are the decisions not to commit war crimes: Calling off the Iran attack is what Bolton deems \u201cthe most irrational thing I ever witnessed any President do.\u201d\u201d— Jeffrey St. Clair (@Jeffrey St. Clair) 1592424979
As the New York Times described the passage:
You can sense Bolton's excitement when he describes going home "at about 5:30" for a change of clothes because he expected to be at the White House "all night." It's therefore an awful shock when Trump decided to call off the strikes at the very last minute, after learning they would kill as many as 150 people.
At one point, the Washington Post reported, Trump became consumed with the need to ensure Kim Jong Un receive a CD of Elton John singing "Rocket Man," a reference to a disparaging nickname the president had given the North Korean leader that Trump now wanted to turn into a sign of affection. The president was insistent that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo hand the disk to Kim and upset when Pompeo failed to during a diplomatic trip to North Korea.
"Trump didn't seem to realize Pompeo hadn't actually seen Kim Jong Un, asking if Pompeo had handed" him the CD, Bolton wrote. "Pompeo had not. Getting this CD to Kim remained a high priority for several months."
Trump and the White House have tried to stop publication of the book, but that appears unlikely. Bolton is persona non grata in the administration today, with the president's allies referring to the former advisor as a traitor.
"I truly hope Trump throws Bolton in some kind of hellish, off the books dungeon for his treason," tweeted Will Menaker, cohost of the Chapo Trap House podcast.
"Not the book," Menaker added, "I'm talking about the Iraq war and the rest of his career."
Excerpts from a new book by John Bolton detailing his time in President Donald Trump's inner circle as national security advisor are drawing anger for the fact the new information is coming out long after the impeachment hearings from last fall, making the revelations more evidence that Bolton was "100% complicit" in the president's crimes.
"Bolton is a moral abomination in every way," tweeted MSNBC host Chris Hayes, referring to the former advisor's decades-long career, devoted to the U.S. declaring war on any and every perceived enemy in sight. "It's also the case that basically everyone in government who comes close to Trump comes away thinking he's even worse than they realized."
\u201cBolton is 100% complicit and every article should state this plainly and up front.\u201d— Violet Blue\u00ae (@Violet Blue\u00ae) 1592422328
The book is "bloated with self-importance," the New York Times reported, and "toggles between two discordant registers: exceedingly tedious and slightly unhinged."
The National Security advisor reveals moments from his time in the White House that raise eyebrows, such as Trump asking Chinese President Xi Jinping to help with the 2020 election and encouraged the Chinese leader to expand concentration camps for the country's Uighur minority population, promises from Trump to Turkey's President Recep Erdogan to replace U.S. attorneys investigating a Turkish firm, the president's uncertainty if Finland was a part of Russia or that the U.K. was a nuclear power, and more.
The president also endorsed killing journalists, the book claims.
\u201cAnd now for the part in Bolton's book where he says Trump suggests killing reporters: "...Trump says journalists should be jailed so they have to divulge their sources: 'These people should be executed. They are scumbags,' Trump said." https://t.co/RGxeGgp7HF\u201d— Ashley Parker (@Ashley Parker) 1592421357
But Trump's overwhelming level of corruption and ignorance did not motivate Bolton to go to Congress when the body was investigating the president, as anti-extremism advocate Melissa Ryan noted on Twitter.
"Friendly reminder that John Bolton, instead of telling Congress what he knew while they were holding impeachment proceedings, wrote a fucking book," said Ryan.
Details from the book reportedly show Bolton frequently distressed and alarmed by the president's irrational mood swings and decisions, a revelation that did not win him much sympathy from New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie.
"The thing about John Bolton's shock at Trump's ignorance and incompetence is that it takes a fair amount of brain poisoning in the first place to look at Trump and think he might be anything other than ignorant and incompetent," Bouie said.
Among the most upsetting moments for the former advisor is the president's decision in June 2019 not to launch a disproportionate missile strike against Iran for downing a U.S. drone at the last minute after Bolton convinced him to.
\u201cFor Bolton the worst presidential crimes are the decisions not to commit war crimes: Calling off the Iran attack is what Bolton deems \u201cthe most irrational thing I ever witnessed any President do.\u201d\u201d— Jeffrey St. Clair (@Jeffrey St. Clair) 1592424979
As the New York Times described the passage:
You can sense Bolton's excitement when he describes going home "at about 5:30" for a change of clothes because he expected to be at the White House "all night." It's therefore an awful shock when Trump decided to call off the strikes at the very last minute, after learning they would kill as many as 150 people.
At one point, the Washington Post reported, Trump became consumed with the need to ensure Kim Jong Un receive a CD of Elton John singing "Rocket Man," a reference to a disparaging nickname the president had given the North Korean leader that Trump now wanted to turn into a sign of affection. The president was insistent that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo hand the disk to Kim and upset when Pompeo failed to during a diplomatic trip to North Korea.
"Trump didn't seem to realize Pompeo hadn't actually seen Kim Jong Un, asking if Pompeo had handed" him the CD, Bolton wrote. "Pompeo had not. Getting this CD to Kim remained a high priority for several months."
Trump and the White House have tried to stop publication of the book, but that appears unlikely. Bolton is persona non grata in the administration today, with the president's allies referring to the former advisor as a traitor.
"I truly hope Trump throws Bolton in some kind of hellish, off the books dungeon for his treason," tweeted Will Menaker, cohost of the Chapo Trap House podcast.
"Not the book," Menaker added, "I'm talking about the Iraq war and the rest of his career."
"Our elections should belong to us, not to corporations owned or influenced by foreign governments whose interests may not align with our own," said the head of the committee behind the measure.
The Associated Press reported Monday that a federal appeals court recently blocked Maine from enforcing a ban on foreign interference in elections that the state's voters passed in 2023.
After Hydro-Quebec spent millions of dollars on a referendum, 86% of Mainers voted for Question 2, which would block foreign governments and companies with 5% or more foreign government ownership from donating to state referendums.
Then, the Maine Association of Broadcasters, Maine Press Association, Central Maine Power, and Versant Power sued to block the ballot initiative. According to the AP, last month, the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston affirmed a lower-court ruling that the measure likely violates the First Amendment to the federal Constitution.
Judge Lara Montecalvo wrote that "the prohibition is overly broad, silencing U.S. corporations based on the mere possibility that foreign shareholders might try to influence its decisions on political speech, even where those foreign shareholders may be passive owners that exercise no influence or control over the corporation's political spending."
As the AP detailed:
The matter was sent back to the lower court, where it will proceed, and there has been no substantive movement on it in recent weeks, said Danna Hayes, a spokesperson for the Maine attorney general's office, on Monday. The law is on the state's books, but the state cannot enforce it while legal challenges are still pending, Hayes said.
Just months before voters approved Question 2, Democratic Gov. Janet Mills vetoed the ban, citing fears that it could silence "legitimate voices, including Maine-based businesses." She previously vetoed a similar measure in 2021.
Still, supporters of the ballot initiative continue to fight for it. Rick Bennett, chair of Protect Maine Elections, the committee formed to support Question 2, said in a statement that "Mainers spoke with one voice: Our elections should belong to us, not to corporations owned or influenced by foreign governments whose interests may not align with our own."
A year after Maine voters approved that foreign election interference law, they also overwhelmingly backed a ballot measure to restrict super political action committees (PACs). U.S. Magistrate Judge Karen Frink Wolf blocked that measure, Question 1, last month.
"We think ultimately the court of appeals is going to reverse this decision because it's grounded in a misunderstanding of what the Supreme Court has said," Lawrence Lessig, a Harvard professor and founder of the nonprofit Equal Citizens that helped put Question 1 on the ballot, told News Center Maine in July. "We are exhausted, all of us, especially people in Maine, with the enormous influence money has in our politics, and we want to do something about it."
"People are being starved, children are being killed, families have lost everything," said the United Nations agency for Palestinian Refugees.
The Gaza Health Ministry announced on Monday that more than 100 children in Gaza have died of severe hunger during Israel's siege of the territory.
As Al Jazeera reported, the Hamas-run Health Ministry said that a total of 222 Palestinians have died from hunger during the siege, including 101 children. The vast majority of these deaths have come in just the last three weeks when the hunger crisis in Gaza started to garner international media attention, the ministry said.
The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East on Monday emphasized the direness of the situation in a statement calling for a cease-fire to allow more aid into Gaza.
"People are being starved, children are being killed," the agency said. "Families have lost everything. Political will and leadership can stop an escalation and end the war. Every heartbeat counts."
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has claimed that there is no starvation crisis in Gaza and has said such reports are part of a "fake" propaganda campaign waged by Israel's enemies.
However, it isn't just the Gaza Health Ministry warning of a hunger crisis in the region, as international charity Save the Children last week said that 43% of pregnant and breastfeeding women who showed up to its clinics in Gaza last month were malnourished, which represented a threefold increase since March, when the Israeli military imposed a total siege on the area.
The latest numbers about starvation in Gaza come as the Israeli government is pushing forward with a plan to fully invade and occupy Gaza, which experts have warned will only exacerbate the humanitarian crisis among its people.
"If these plans are implemented, they will likely trigger another calamity in Gaza, reverberating across the region and causing further forced displacement, killings, and destruction," said Miroslav Jenca, the United Nations assistant secretary general, over the weekend.
"If you will not stand down I will be forced to lead an effort to redraw the maps in California to offset the rigging of maps in red states," said Newsom.
Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday put U.S. President Donald Trump on notice that he is not messing around when it comes to plans to ruthlessly redraw his state's congressional districts.
In a letter sent to Trump, Newsom warned that he is ready to take the gloves off should Texas go through with a mid-decade gerrymander that independent analysts have estimated could net Republicans five additional seats in the U.S. House of Representatives.
"You are playing with fire, risking the destabilization of our democracy, while knowing that California can neutralize any gains you can hope to make," he said. "This attempt to rig congressional maps to hold onto power before a single vote is cast in the 2026 election is an affront to American democracy."
Newsom—a likely presidential candidate for 2028—emphasized that he believes congressional maps "should be drawn by independent, citizen-led efforts," but he said that the actions of Texas Republicans were leaving him with little choice.
"If you will not stand down I will be forced to lead an effort to redraw the maps in California to offset the rigging of maps in red states," he said. "But if the other states call off their redistricting efforts, we will happily do the same. And American democracy will be better for it."
Newsom's office followed up this letter by sending a Trump-style all-caps post on X that reiterated the redistricting threat and finished up by writing, "THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION IN THIS MATTER."
Democratic Texas state lawmakers last week fled the state in order to deny the GOP-led Legislature quorum to vote on a new congressional map that would take a hatchet to many districts currently held by Democratic representatives. Newsom has responded by threatening to undo his state's independent redistricting process through a special ballot initiative this fall so that the California Legislature can redraw the state map with a strong partisan gerrymander.