There are hundreds of local, state, and national organizations representing veterans, but there are only four that really matter: the American Legion, Disabled American Veterans, the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW), and the newest, the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA). These organizations are the 400-pound gorillas of the veterans movement: they have the numbers, power, and money, and they know how to throw their weight around. So it is that candidates scramble for the veterans’ vote by targeting this quartet, meeting with their local chapters, state conferences, and national conventions—like the VFW’s recent confab in Kansas City where last Tuesday Donald Trump appeared to what he thought would be a raucous welcome.
It wasn’t.
While the cameras focused on a crowd that seemed composed of over-the-top Trumpinistas, a number of those attending the speech say there was a more tepid response to his message than the cameras captured—and a much more uneven reception to his patented call-out of the assembled media. Trump’s press attack came in the midst of a defense of his trade policies, which had recently been blamed for costing jobs and dampening farm profits. Trump is nothing if not a counter-puncher, so halfway into his speech he turned to the subject of international trade.
“Oh, folks,†he intoned, “stick with us, stick with us,†and then pointed to the back of the room and the members of the media. “And don’t believe the crap that these people, the fake news…†and he left it at that. There were boos in the room, and some in attendance turned to the cameras. This was red meat for Trump: “I mean, I saw a piece on NBC today. NBC—not just CNN,†he said, continuing: “CNN is the worst…but I saw a piece on NBC—it was heart-throbbing. They were interviewing people—they probably go through 20, and then they pick the one that sounds like the worst. But they went through a group of people. In fact, I wanted to say, ‘I got to do something about this Trump,’†the president joked. The crowd laughed and the boos persisted.
Robert Wilkie took the oath of office Monday to become the new Secretary of Veterans Affairs and take over a department riddled by poor morale among employees and political infighting at the top.
At a White House ceremony, President Donald Trump looked on as Vice President Mike Pence swore in Wilkie, 55, of North Carolina, who served as an intelligence officer in the Navy and holds the rank of colonel in the Air Force reserves.
Wilkie was taking on "a very, very tough and important position," Trump said. "Since day one, my administration has been focused on serving the men and women who make freedom possible, our great veterans. These heroes deserve on the best and they will have it under Robert Wilkie."
Wilkie was coming to the VA from a post at the Pentagon, and Trump joked that Defense Secretary Jim Mattis was the only one upset by the move.
"General Mattis is here someplace? He's the only one unhappy about this because I took him away from General Mattis, right? And General Mattis, I'm sorry to have done that, we have no choice," Trump said. "The vets are calling, right?"
Trump said Wilkie had the task of implementing key legislation passed in his administration -- the VA Mission Act expanding private health care options and the VA Accountability and Whistleblower Protection Act aimed at speeding up the process of firing poor performers.
Pence also swore in Wilkie's predecessor, Dr. David Shulkin, who was fired by Trump in March. Wilkie became the 10th VA Secretary since the department was made a Cabinet post in 1989.
As was the case with Shulkin, the only holdover from the Obama administration in Trump's Cabinet, Wilkie was not the president's first pick.
Trump nominated Rear Adm. Ronny Jackson, his personal physician and head of the White House medical unit to head the VA, but Jackson withdrew his name amid questions about his lack of experience in top management post and never-proven allegations of misconduct involving his job performance at the White House.
Wilkie, who had been serving as undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness, was brought over to the VA in early April to serve on an interim basis as VA acting secretary.
Trump appeared to surprise him at an unrelated White House ceremony in May when he announced that Wilkie was his nominee for the permanent post.
As acting secretary, Wilkie indicated he was well aware of the poor morale at the VA and backbiting at the top over the expansion of private health care option for veterans.
"If we don't listen to each other, we won't be able to listen to our veterans and their families," said Wilkie, a Republican who previously served in a number of Capitol Hill and White House staff positions.
"We must have a bottom-up organization," he said when he was named to become acting secretary. "The energy must flow from you who are closest to those we are sworn to serve. It is from you that the ideas we carry to the Congress, the VSOs [veterans service organizations], and to America's veterans will come."
He stressed that he would listen to the rank-and-file. "Anyone who sits in this chair and tells you he has the answers is in the wrong business," he said.
Quote by Scoopster:
Mornin' all!![]()
So it seems Senator Jeff Flake is putting his words into action in his own unique way.
BTW the guy quoted by this diary is a RW think tank idiot that I blocked long ago, which is why I didn't just include his own tweets.
Quote by wickedpam:
MorningRunning through on my way to more Gish Items
![]()
Quote by Raine:I know I should know the answer to this, but is Manching on Judiciary?Quote by Scoopster:
Mornin' all!![]()
So it seems Senator Jeff Flake is putting his words into action in his own unique way.
BTW the guy quoted by this diary is a RW think tank idiot that I blocked long ago, which is why I didn't just include his own tweets.
Quote by trojanrabbit:Quote by Raine:I know I should know the answer to this, but is Manching on Judiciary?Quote by Scoopster:
Mornin' all!![]()
So it seems Senator Jeff Flake is putting his words into action in his own unique way.
BTW the guy quoted by this diary is a RW think tank idiot that I blocked long ago, which is why I didn't just include his own tweets.
Fortunately, no. I don’t see any other potential turncoats there either.
the recently detected campaign included coordinated activity around divisive issues like a sequel to last year’s deadly “Unite the Right†white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, VA and around #AbolishICE, a left-wing campaign on social mediahttps://t.co/xtf7HyMyNt pic.twitter.com/u8qkGVhSlB
— Wendy Siegelman (@WendySiegelman) July 31, 2018
Quote by Scoopster:
Erm, so yeah about the whole Abolish ICE thing.. it's being deliberately pushed by bots.the recently detected campaign included coordinated activity around divisive issues like a sequel to last year’s deadly “Unite the Right†white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, VA and around #AbolishICE, a left-wing campaign on social mediahttps://t.co/xtf7HyMyNt pic.twitter.com/u8qkGVhSlB
— Wendy Siegelman (@WendySiegelman) July 31, 2018
Quote by Scoopster:
So heh.. prepare yourselves for a real shock!
A few weeks ago I was so beat up by a bout of caffeine withdrawl that, for the third time, caused me to have extreme nausea. And of course there was the insane migraine too.
Since then, I took a major step to lower my daily levels - slowly mixing in decaf over a period of weeks to lower the strength of the espresso grinds. At this point, it's probably a 70/30 mix in favor of decaf.