Wednesday Reads: Yesterdayâs Insane Trump Press Conference
Good Afternoon!!
Trump holds forth at his Mar-a-Lago press conference.
Trump isnât in office yet, but he is already dominating the news. Itâs difficult to believe, but I think he is actually getting crazier.
Trump 2.0 is going to be chaos to the nth degree. I have no doubt that it will make his first term look sane by comparison. He is aging noticeablyâheâs approaching 80âand his dementia is getting worse.
As we all know, this time there wonât be sane handlers trying to hold back his worst inclinations; he will be surrounded by MAGA loyalists who will do whatever he wants. Itâs going to be awful, and getting through whatâs coming is going to be tough.
Again, heâs not even waiting until heâs sworn in to begin causing trouble. Yesterday he held a âpress conferenceâ during which he came off as truly psychotic. In case you missed it (I couldnât bear to watch), here are some media write-ups.
David E. Sanger at The New York Times: Dripping Faucets and Seizing Greenland: Trump Is Back and Chaos Ensues.
There was talk of the rising number of beached whales in Massachusetts, the victim, the president-elect said, of those windmills that have been erected off the coast. They âare driving the whales crazy, obviously.â
There was a vow to rename the Gulf of Mexico, by presidential decree, to the âGulf of America.â And then there was Donald J. Trumpâs refusal to rule out using military force to seize the 51-mile Panama Canal on national security grounds, along with the 836,000 square miles of Greenland, the worldâs largest island.
Mr. Trumpâs family and supporters like to say âWe are so back!â and they are, without doubt. Yet as the man who will be president again spun out threats and angry denouncements of the Biden administration and personal grievances for more than an hour on Tuesday in the living room of his Mar-a-Lago club, something else was back: the chaotic stream-of-consciousness presidency.
Mr. Trump has returned to our daily national cognizance, even though one could argue he never really left. Tuesdayâs news conference was a reminder of what that was like, and what the next four years may have in store.
He waxed on about a favorite complaint during his first term: Shower heads and sink faucets that donât deliver water, a symbol of a regulatory state gone mad. âIt goes drip, drip, drip,â he said. âPeople just take longer showers, or run their dishwasher again,â and âthey end up using more water.â
Then he moved on to the prospect of a military clash with Denmark. After refusing to rule out the prospect of coercing a NATO ally with the use of force if it remained reluctant to turn over property the president-elect coveted, Mr. Trump suggested that Denmark had a dubious claim on Greenland anyway.
Don Jr. and his buddies in Greenland yesterday
âPeople really donât even know if Denmark has any legal right to it, but if they do, they should give it up, because we need it for national security,â he said.
As for Panama, he insisted the United States had to defend against an urgent national security threat from China, though the situation around the canal was little changed from the last time Mr. Trump sat in the Oval Office.
âIt might be that youâll have to do something,â he said with signature vagueness, when asked about his suggestion that the only solution to this problem may be military force.
There was a lot of dĂŠjĂ vu in Tuesdayâs news conference, recalling scenes from his first presidency. The conspiracy theories, the made-up facts, the burning grievances â all despite the fact that he has pulled off one of the most remarkable political comebacks in history. The vague references to âpeopleâ whom he never names. The flat declaration that American national security was threatened now, without defining how the strategic environment has changed in a way that could prompt him to violate the sovereignty of independent nations.
But there were also several differences in this version of Mr. Trump that are easy to overlook in a man who can move, in an instant, from the failures of American plumbing to the need to revive the territory-grabbing spirit of President William McKinley.
More on the âpress conference,â by Hunter Walker at Talking Points Memo: Off The Rails And Off To The Races.
President Trump has created a massive gulf in America.
No, I am not talking about the half baked promise âto be changing the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of Americaâ that Trump announced in his news conference on Tuesday. The gulf that our country actually is going to have is the one between our current reality and the one we will be experiencing when Trump takes office on Jan. 20.
This news conference, which was the first since Trumpâs re-election was certified by Congress, was a wild one â even by Trumpian standards. In a little over an hour behind a podium at his Mar-a-Lago beach club, the president-elect, along with promising to rename an ocean basin, threatened potential military force against Panama and Denmark. He also suggested he might use âeconomic forceâ to make Canada the 51st State.
âThey should be a state,â Trump said of one of Americaâs closest neighbors and allies.
And, if Hamas doesnât release the remaining hostages taken in the October 7th attack before Trumpâs inauguration, Trump vowed that would also result in a massive show of force.
âIf theyâre not back by the time I get into office, all hell will break out in the Middle East,â Trump said. âIt will not be good for Hamas and it will not be good frankly for anyone. All hell will break out.â
Trumpâs feverish foreign policy visions were mixed up with his other weird obsessions and blatant lies. He ranted about President Joe Bidenâs efforts to promote electric power and suggested heat generated this way will make you âitch.â As he vowed to make âmajor pardonsâ for some of his supporters who attacked the Capitol during the January 6 insurrection, Trump reiterated some of his preferred, debunked conspiracy theories about that day including that, the FBI is concealing the identity of the unknown pipe bomber and that, somehow, the Middle Eastern terrorist group Hezbollah might have played a role in the violence.
âWe have to find out about Hezbollah. We have to find out about who exactly was in that whole thing because people that did some bad things were not prosecuted,â Trump saidâŚ.
The whole thing was objectively bizarre and itâs difficult to track how much of Trumpâs comments were bluster or how many of these wild ideas are even remotely feasible. Can you even effectively rename an ocean? Does he really intend to try to essentially annex Canada? Would he really consider using military force to take over Greenland or the Panama Canal? Would the military stand for that? Would Congress?
Minho Kim at The New York Times: Why Does Trump Want Greenland?
President-elect Donald J. Trumpâs attention returned Tuesday to an idea that has fascinated him for years: acquiring Greenland for the United States. In a news conference on Tuesday, he refused to rule out using military or economic force to take the territory from Denmark, a U.S. ally.
âWe need Greenland for national security purposes,â he said, arguing that Denmark should give it up to âprotect the free world.â He threatened to impose tariffs on Denmark if it did not.
Earlier in the day, Mr. Trump wrote on social media that the potential American acquisition of the Arctic territory âis a deal that must happenâ and uploaded photos of his eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., who was visiting GreenlandâŚ.
Greenland
After the news conference, Denmark sharply rebuked the proposal, saying that the worldâs largest island is not for sale, and the prime minister of Greenland, Mute B. Egede, rejected Mr. Trumpâs designs on the territory. âGreenland belongs to the people of Greenland,â Mr. Egede said. âOur future and fight for independence is our business.â [âŚ.]
Greenlandâs vast ice sheets and glaciers are quickly retreating as the Earth warms through accelerating climate change. That melting of ice could allow drilling for oil and mining for minerals such as copper, lithium, nickel and cobalt. Those mineral resources are essential to rapidly growing industries that make wind turbines, transmission lines, batteries and electric vehicles.
Because of higher temperatures, an estimated 11,000 square miles of Greenlandâs ice sheets and glaciers have already melted in the past three decades, an area roughly the size of MassachusettsâŚ.
The melting ice in the Arctic is also opening up a new strategic asset in geopolitics: shorter and more efficient shipping routes. Navigating through the Arctic Sea from Western Europe to East Asia, for example, is about 40 percent shorter compared to sailing through the Suez Canal. Ship traffic in the Arctic has already surged 37 percent over the past decade, according to a recent Arctic Council report.
Maegan Vazquez at The Washington Post: Trump says he will rename the Gulf of Mexico. Can he do that?
Donald Trump on Tuesday said the United States would change the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America, and the president-elect seemed to tie the prospective renaming to his long-standing grievances with Mexicoâs handling of immigration, drug trafficking and trade.
âWeâre going to be changing the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America,â Trump said at a news conference at his Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Florida. â ⌠What a beautiful name, and itâs appropriate.â
The president-elect subsequently decried the Mexican government for allowing migrants to âpourâ into the United States, saying Mexico âcan stop them and weâre going to put very serious tariffs on Mexico and Canada because Canada, they come through Canada, too.â
Trump provided no additional details about how he planned to implement the name change, but the comments sparked immediate questions about whether a president has the authority to rename an international body of water and prompted at least one Republican member of Congress to draft legislation.
That member of Congress was Marjorie Taylor Greene.
Hereâs what we know about what Trump can and cannot do to rename the gulfâŚ.
The Gulf of Mexico is a 218,000-square-mile oceanic basin connected to the Caribbean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean through the Florida Straits and the YucatĂĄn Channel. It spans from the eastern coast of Mexico and the southeastern coast of the United States to the western end of CubaâŚ.
The Gulf of Mexico
The body of water has been known by many names, but European explorers and mapmakers have used the name âGulf of Mexicoâ for at least 400 yearsâŚ.
There are existing mechanisms to rename places recognized by the federal government. However, if the federal name change becomes official, that does not mean that other nations will recognize it.
The U.S. Board on Geographic Names is a federal interagency organization that is responsible for maintaining uniform geographic name usage throughout the federal government. The board operates under the interior secretary. The boardâs Foreign Names Committee is responsible for standardizing foreign place names. The committee is composed of representatives from federal agencies, including several appointees specializing in geography and cartography. Members are appointed every two years.
While the BGN does not create names for geographical features, it approves or rejects names proposed by others based on its established policies. A recent example of the boardâs work includes approval of replacement names for all features that included the word âsquaw,â which is used as a derogatory slur toward NativeAmerican women. The name changes were made after an order by Interior Secretary Deb Haaland in 2021. Haaland is the first Native person to serve as a Cabinet secretary.
Trump probably doesnât know that Mexico and Canada, along with the U.S., are each parts of âAmerica.ââthat is, the continent of North America. Of course changing the name is ridiculous and idiotic, but so is Trump.
During the âpress conference,â Trump also said that the changes Mark Zuckerberg is making to his social media platforms are in response to his (Trumpâs) threats to imprison the the billionaire social media owner.
NBC News: Meta is ending its fact-checking program in favor of a âcommunity notesâ system similar to Xâs.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced a series of major changes to the companyâs moderation policies and practices Tuesday, citing a shifting political and social landscape and a desire to embrace free speech.
Zuckerberg said Meta will end its fact-checking program with trusted partners and replace it with a community-driven system similar to Xâs Community Notes.
The company is also changing its content moderation policies around political topics and undoing changes that reduced the amount of political content in user feeds, Zuckerberg said.
The changes will affect Facebook and Instagram, two of the largest social media platforms in the world, each boasting billions of users, as well as Threads.
âWeâre going to get back to our roots and focus on reducing mistakes, simplifying our policies and restoring free expression on our platforms,â Zuckerberg said in a video. âMore specifically, hereâs what weâre going to do. First, weâre going to get rid of fact-checkers and replace them with community notes similar to X, starting in the U.S.â
Zuckerberg pointed to the election as a major influence on the companyâs decision and criticized âgovernments and legacy mediaâ for, he alleged, pushing âto censor more and more.â
âThe recent elections also feel like a cultural tipping point towards, once again, prioritizing speech,â he said. âSo weâre going to get back to our roots and focus on reducing mistakes, simplifying our policies and restoring free expression on our platforms.â
So what is this going to look like?
Cath Virginia at The Verge: Here are some of the horrible things that you can now say on Facebook.
Meta overhauled its approach to US moderation on Tuesday, ditching fact-checking, announcing a plan to move its trust and safety teams, and perhaps most impactfully, updating its Hateful Conduct policy. As reported by Wired, a lot of text has been updated, added, or removed, but here are some of the changes that jumped out at us.
These two sections outlining speech (written or visual) are new additions:
We do allow allegations of mental illness or abnormality when based on gender or sexual orientation, given political and religious discourse about transgenderism and homosexuality and common non-serious usage of words like âweird.â
We do allow content arguing for gender-based limitations of military, law enforcement, and teaching jobs. We also allow the same content based on sexual orientation, when the content is based on religious beliefs.
Another section that specifically banned making dehumanizing references to transgender or non-binary people as âitâ or referring to women âas household objects or property or objects in generalâ has been removed entirely.
The opening statement about what the policies are âdesigned to allow room forâ that previously listed only health or positive support groups has changed too (new additions marked in bold):
People sometimes use sex- or gender-exclusive language when discussing access to spaces often limited by sex or gender, such as access to bathrooms, specific schools, specific military, law enforcement, or teaching roles, and health or support groups. Other times, they call for exclusion or use insulting language in the context of discussing political or religious topics, such as when discussing transgender rights, immigration, or homosexuality. Finally, sometimes people curse at a gender in the context of a romantic break-up. Our policies are designed to allow room for these types of speech.
The section that specifically banned targeting people or groups âwith claims that they have or spread the novel coronavirusâ has also been removed.
Read the rest at The Verge.
One more from Claire Duffy at CNN: Calling women âhousehold objectsâ now permitted on Facebook after Meta updated its guidelines.
Meta on Tuesday announced sweeping changes to how it moderates content that will roll out in the coming months, including doing away with professional fact checking. But the company also quietly updated its hateful conduct policy, adding new types of content users can post on the platform, effective immediately.
Users are now allowed to, for example, refer to âwomen as household objects or propertyâ or âtransgender or non-binary people as âit,ââ according to a section of the policy prohibiting such speech that was crossed out. A new section of the policy notes Meta will allow âallegations of mental illness or abnormality when based on gender or sexual orientation, given political and religious discourse about transgenderism and homosexuality.â
Previously, such comments would have been subject to removal under the policy. The changes to Metaâs hateful conduct policy were first reported by Wired.
Meta had hinted in its announcement about its content moderation policy changes Tuesday morning that it would get rid of restrictions on certain topics, such as immigration and gender identity, and allow more political discussions. But the updated policy shows just how quickly Meta is moving to enact CEO Mark Zuckerbergâs vision for âfree expression.â
Meta on Tuesday also announced it would do away with its network of independent fact checkers in the United States and will instead rely on user-generated âcommunity notesâ to add context to posts. It also said it would adjust its automated systems that scan for policy violations, which it says have resulted in âtoo much content being censored that shouldnât have been.â The systems will now be focused only on extreme violations such as child sexual exploitation and terrorism.
Basically, itâs open season on women and LBGTQ+ people.
Please take care of yourselves today and every day for the next 4 years.
#Canada #Denmark #Greenland #GulfOfMexico #MarkZuckerberg #Meta #PanamaCanal #socialMediaModeration #TrumpPressConference