The "D" day pool, best guess as to when Trump is out

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Renaissance is made up of people like Mercer and Magerman — trained in computer science, physics, mathematics and statistics. Instead of poring over prospectuses and profit and loss statements, they apply their sciences to the data that affect markets. It’s called quantitative analysis, and they themselves are known as “quants.”

The truly awesome money machine at Renaissance is a private fund called Medallion, which is only open to Renaissance employees. According to a Bloomberg report, “Medallion has pumped out annualized returns of almost 80 per cent a year, before fees.” Even in a bad year, it churns out more than 20 per cent returns.

“The people I worked with were great scientists. I mean, we could have solved a lot of important and interesting problems if we’d worked on different things. Instead, we made hundreds of millions of dollars,” said Magerman. He then added with a rueful chuckle, “Whatever.”

The Medallion investing formula is secret. “Everything I learned, everything I built, I can’t talk about it, I can’t publish it. I can’t share my knowledge with other people. As a scientist, I’ve really done nothing.”

But in the course of our conversations, Magerman made a provocative observation: The problem that Renaissance Technologies faced trying to predict market behaviour is, he said, essentially the same problem that Cambridge Analytica faces in voter analysis and persuasion.

Data analysts are largely skeptical that Cambridge Analytica could have had a decisive impact on the 2016 U.S. election or the Brexit referendum, but Magerman brushes that off with a reminder that so-called experts were also skeptical that computer algorithms could predict financial markets.

“They said there is no way they can do that with the data available,” he said. And yet, there’s Medallion, with its unheard-of nearly 80 per cent annualized returns. There's Cambridge Analytica, on the winning side of two political upsets.

And there is Mercer, a brilliant scientist at the helm of both companies.

In January 2017, before Trump’s inauguration, Magerman called Mercer to chat about politics and the new administration. He wanted to persuade Mercer to withdraw support from Trump.

They talked about Obamacare and the social safety net and disagreed about Trump’s positions on those issues. Then, Magerman says Mercer made a series of comments on U.S. society:
The United States began to go in the wrong direction after the passage of the Civil Rights Act in the 1960s;

African-Americans were doing fine in the late ‘50s and early ‘60s before The Civil Rights Act;

The Civil Rights Act “infantilized” African Americans by making them dependent on government and removing any incentive to work;

The only racist people remaining in the U.S. are black; and White people have no racial animus toward African-Americans anymore, and if there is any, it’s not something the government should be concerned with.

Magerman felt he couldn’t keep that to himself.

“I really thought I was just going to let people know what I know and that would be the end of it,” Magerman said of his decision to do an interview with the Wall Street Journal, which amounted to a warning flare about Mercer to anyone paying attention.

The story quoted Magerman saying that Mercer has contempt for the social safety net and that he now wants to use the money Magerman helped him make to “shrink government to the size of a pinhead.”

But the most sensational part was what Magerman relayed that Mercer had said to him on the phone one day. “I hear you’re going around saying I’m a white supremacist. That’s ridiculous.”

Magerman, having cleared his conscience in the Wall Street Journal, expected to go back to work at Renaissance Technologies. Instead, he was suspended.

“If they hadn’t suspended me, I think the story would have kind of died quickly,” he said, but that’s probably not true. After the article appeared, Magerman continued to talk to the media.

He wrote a piece for the Philadelphia Inquirer in which he said that, during the presidential election, Mercer “was effectively buying shares in the candidate” and “now owns a sizable share of the United States presidency” and that “Mercer has surrounded our president with his people, and his people have an outsized influence over the running of our country simply because Robert Mercer paid for their seats.”

After that, Magerman’s suspension was made permanent and he sued his boss for wrongful dismissal.

Famously publicity-shy, Mercer did not welcome any of this attention, but he also began distancing himself from Steve Bannon. In November, he sent an email to staff at Renaissance Technologies to try to reassure them about the lawsuit and the scandal swirling around the company.

“Of many mischaracterizations,” Mercer wrote, “the most repugnant” have been “that I am a white supremacist or member of some other noxious group.” He said he found discrimination on the basis of race, ethnicity, gender or creed abhorrent, “but more than that, it is ignorant.”

He said he didn’t intend to impose his political views on anyone else, but that he believed ”individuals are happiest and most fulfilled when they form their own opinions, assume responsibility for their own actions, and spend the fruits of their own labor as they see fit.” That’s why he supports conservatives, he said, because they believe in smaller government.

He said that he did not share all of the views of Steve Bannon and that he’d passed his share in Breitbart along to his daughters. The email read as though politics were just a hobby he’d put behind him because it no longer held his interest.

Mercer's daughter Rebekah was part of the transition team that helped Trump choose his cabinet.

In fact, Mercer was the third-largest Republican donor ($25.5 million) in the 2016 presidential race. In the New Yorker profile, a “high-level Renaissance employee” is quoted as saying, “Bob thinks the less government the better. He’s happy if people don’t trust the government. And if the president’s a bozo? He’s fine with that. He wants it all to fall down.”

I asked Magerman if he was the anonymous employee behind the quote. He said he couldn’t remember saying it, but it certainly sounded like something he would say.

Of course it does. One of Magerman’s cautions about “instant billionaires” is that they really don’t understand what the government is for. They didn’t get rich by providing the goods, services and infrastructure that bring people into direct contact with their community and its interests — they got rich in financial markets, making money for the sake of it.

Often cited among the accomplishments of the Trump administration’s first year are the number of regulations that have been eliminated in the name of freeing businesses to create jobs. But the real shrinking of the role of government has been in Trump’s choice of cabinet members, whose aim seems to be to assail the policy goals of their departments.

Thus, the secretary of energy is someone who once campaigned to get rid of the Energy Department; the Secretary of Education has advocated against the public schools system; the Environmental Protection Agency director has a record of repeatedly suing the EPA; and the Attorney General has a reputation for opposing the expansion of civil rights.

Other departments are reportedly withering from neglect, as key positions are filled by unqualified people or not filled at all. The tax cut bill passed in December is forecast to add about a trillion dollars to the federal deficit, forcing further restraint on future governments.

It’s hard to imagine that Mercer would be unhappy about any of that given his thoughts about the size of government and the observation that he “wants it all to fall down” — and especially since his daughter Rebekah was part of the transition team that helped Trump choose his cabinet.

It’s the government Magerman feared Robert Mercer was angling for, the one Magerman paid a big price for trying to warn us about.

Magerman’s own future is uncertain, though not insecure. He’s got enough money to live luxuriously and not work another day in his life. Plus, he’s been experimenting in the food and beverage industry with a couple of glatt kosher eating spots, and he’s long been an active and generous philanthropist in the Jewish community.

But he misses the passion he had for the problem-solving work he did at Renaissance Technologies. It seems inevitable that speaking out against his boss will cost him significant income, but he’s proud that acting against his self-interest inevitably bolstered his credibility.

Was it all worth it?

“It’s like, was having surgery worth it?" Magerman says. “I mean, it was necessary. There was a disease that I thought, like, maybe I had a scintilla of a cure for.”
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
The Mercers are pieces of shit.

and they have trumps ear.

KARMA coming...
His daughter is in trouble over the russian shit, direct involvement. Charging her would trigger a pardon, but I think she will get it after the election and after Donald. A billion to the DNC could make things "go away"! In away that might be a better punishment, since the old man would rather cut off his own cock than give liberals money! It would almost be a cruel and unusual punishment for him.
 
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DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
A Canadian view about legalisation in Canada, I agree
Weed Set To Be LEGAL by July & The Holes in Their Logic

Weed costs home growers about 20 cents a gram, grown indoors under LED lights for material and energy costs. They figure on retailing it for $10+/gram, there's money to be made for the little guy! It's legal to grow four plants, more with a prescription (easy to get) and ya can get around a pound a plant. Almost impossible to bust unless ya sell to a cop and ya can carry an ounce.

Think ya could make low risk money on the side here!
 
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DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Scoop: FBI director threatened to resign amid Trump, Sessions pressure
Attorney General Jeff Sessions — at the public urging of President Donald Trump — has been pressuring FBI Director Christopher Wray to fire Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, but Wray threatened to resign if McCabe was removed, according to three sources with direct knowledge.

Wray's resignation under those circumstances would have created a media firestorm. The White House — understandably gun-shy after the Comey debacle — didn’t want that scene, so McCabe remains.
Sessions told White House Counsel Don McGahn about how upset Wray was about the pressure on him to fire McCabe, and McGahn told Sessions this issue wasn’t worth losing the FBI Director over, according to a source familiar with the situation.
Why it matters: Trump started his presidency by pressuring one FBI Director (before canning him), and then began pressuring another (this time wanting his deputy canned). This much meddling with the FBI for this long is not normal.

Ya figure Trump is guilty as sin? Think Trump is desperate?
 
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DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Papadopoulos' fiancée says he knows far more than has been reported

Simona Mangiante — fiancée of former Trump campaign national security adviser George Papadopoulos — told the Washington Post that Papadopoulos "is on the right side of history" in the Russia probe. “I believe history will remember him like John Dean,” she said, referencing Nixon's White House counsel who pleaded guilty and then became a key witness in the Watergate investigation.

The bottom line: "Without offering specifics, Mangiante said there is much more that has not yet been told publicly about Papadopoulos’ 10 months as an informal national security adviser to Trump," the Post reports.

His sentencing was delayed for 3 months today, so whatever he's gonna spill publicly will be by then.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I think Nunes is going to jail for obstruction of justice one day. He's been fucking with an FBI investigation and trying to fuck over senior FBI leadership, release the Nunes memo is the main theme of russian bots and propaganda as well as republican talking points, almost like they are working together. Yep Nunes and a few others are gonna get fucked, soon as the congress changes hands and the dems have control of oversight and investigation, the FBI is gonna take the gloves off, no politician will need to pressure them either.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Who's going to jail so far, here's a start.I expect the list will grow bigly, this is just what's known publicly so far.
Donald Trump
Don Jr.
Kushner
Manafort & his side kick
Flynn (depending on what he has to say, he got the best deal of all)
Jeff Sessions
Papadopoulos (a minimum amount of time)
 

SneekyNinja

Well-Known Member
This current cycle began when Obama was elected to be president, so, 8-9 years half-cycle to peak of right wing reactionary politics from 2009 to today.. Agree that the decline is going to be pretty sharp. Rather than a sinusoidal wave, it looks more like a sawtooth wave.

View attachment 4074621
Now you're talking my language, all this wave talk has me very aroused indeed.

Talk dirty, tell me about rectifying the sine wave...
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Every day it gets worse, there will come a point when the GOP will either dump Donald or drown carrying his water. A point where they legally have to take political action because they might be held accountable. Any republican congressman or senator from a sane region of the country must be terrified at the prospects for the midterms, even the gerrymandered ones are gonna sweat before this is over. If they do Donald the base will go nuts, so they are gonna need lot's of "fake news" cover and evidence, but they will break ranks, Donalds behavior will fucking near guarantee it, not to mention the coming trials. Either way they are fucked, the midterms are gonna be something to see.

Treason vs patriotism, who do you figure is gonna win? If patriotism doesn't win, what next? If Trump said that Jesus told him that Putin should be America's overlord, the base might buy it, and I'm sure the republicans would go along, but the rest of the citizens might have an issue with it.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Jeff Sessions questioned by Mueller in Russia investigation
Attorney General Jeff Sessions was questioned for several hours last week by special counsel Robert Mueller's office as part of the investigation into Russia's meddling in the election and whether President Donald Trump obstructed justice since taking office, a source close to Sessions.

Now we're getting closer, wonder what he said to Mueller, better not have lied, this ain't the senate yer talking to. Maybe he's wearing a wire now! Trump gotta be paranoid as Hell! I don't think ole Jeff is gonna go to prison for Donald, the last thing he wants is be the bitch of a large black man.
 
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DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
“It’s Even Worse Than You Think”: David Cay Johnston on Trump’s First Year in Office

Another book on Trump and a 12 minute video worth looking at, this guy has been tracking the beast for a bit.

 

Sour Wreck

Well-Known Member
Mueller WILL Reveal Trump CRIMES That Will 'SHOCK the Nation'.. Historian Predicts

Have a look at this and see where I'm coming from. This guy is seldom wrong, he predicted Trump would win.
lets hope he is right !!!!

party @ my house when he gets removed from office.

DABS for everyone !!!!!!!!!!
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
It would be poetic if the senate convicted Trump on the 15th of march. Maybe he would cry out, "Et tu, Jeffrey"! As sessions plunges the knife in from the witness chair on the senate floor, the assembled multitude gasps. Caesar is dead! But, I'll settle for a later date with the same metaphorical result!:lol:

History doesn't repeat, but it often echoes.
 
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