viernes, 8 de marzo de 2019

‘Being Anti-Trump Means Never Having to Say You Are Sorry’

West Wing Reads

‘Being Anti-Trump Means Never Having to Say You Are Sorry’


“All during the fight over a border wall, we were told by the media and progressives commentators that the border is practically locked down,” Rich Lowry writes in Politico Magazine. But alarming new numbers from the Department of Homeland Security say otherwise: “More than 76,000 migrants were apprehended crossing the southern border last month, the highest February in more than 10 years,” Lowry explains.

“Being anti-Trump means never having to say you are sorry or you were wrong, so the latest evidence won’t make an impression on anyone who blithely dismissed the idea of border crisis. But it should . . . Every indication is that the situation is going to get worse.”

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“Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said Wednesday that young female migrants traveling north to the United States are raped with such regularity that Immigration and Customs Enforcement gives every girl age 10 and over a pregnancy test after arriving,” David Martosko reports in the Daily Mail.
“Chief executives of major companies said at a White House forum on Wednesday that they are hiring more Americans without college degrees,” David Shepardson reports for Reuters. “The White House hosted CEOs of major corporations who joined a Trump administration advisory board on workforce issues, including from Apple Inc, IBM Corp, Lockheed Martin Corp, Siemens USA and Home Depot Inc, who are part of a 25-member board co-chaired by President Donald Trump’s daughter and adviser Ivanka Trump and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.”
“Democrats seem hell-bent on impeaching Mr. Trump, and most of the media will be cheering them on,” The Wall Street Journal editorial board writes. House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler’s (D-NY) subpoena swarm is meant “to turn the President’s exercise of his normal constitutional powers into impeachable offenses.”
“Last Friday, President Trump unveiled his grand strategy for American prosperity: the 2019 Trade Policy Agenda. This forward-looking report from the US Trade Representative maps out America’s deliverance from the bad deals, weak guardrails and sluggish growth that have handicapped decades of international trade,” White House Director for Trade and Manufacturing Policy Peter Navarro writes in the New York Post.
“President Donald Trump made a wise choice in tapping Kentucky’s Kelly Craft as his new nominee for U.S. ambassador to the United Nations,” Scott Jennings writes in the Courier Journal. “Craft is more than capable of representing America on the world stage,” which will be her third diplomatic post—and second stint at the United Nations.

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