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Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Americans are in fear of a Tumpzi administration

Honestly, I wish there were a way I could wave a political wand and erase the Donald Trump regime that will lead America backwards into Trumpzism. All Americans are fearful, even those who voted for Donald Trump. But, those who opposed this horrific election are fearful of what drove Donald Trump to claim a position where he didn't win the popular vote and Hillary Clinton won. We're also fearful of Trump keeping the terrible campaign promises he made, because he wanted his alt right wing supporters to vote. 

We don't want an expensive and wasteful and hateful border wall with Mexico. In fact, we want to keep Obamacare, especially to help those who have "pre-existing health conditions".  Moreover, we want to accept legal immigrants and make them feel welcome in America.  
Image result for New York Mayor De Blasio
New York City Mayor Bill DiBlasio is articulating this fear:
Trump told by New York mayor that city is 'fearful' of him
New York City's mayor says he has told US President-elect Donald Trump that the people in the city are "fearful" of what his White House administration will bring.

During a meeting at Trump Tower, Bill de Blasio said he warned the Republican he would aim to shield undocumented immigrants from deportation.

He said Mr Trump's plans would not work in "the ultimate city of immigrants".  (Thank you Mayor DeBlasio)
Mr Trump has vowed to deport or jail three million undocumented immigrants who he says have criminal records.

Mr de Blasio is not the only city leader to oppose the incoming US president's immigration policies.


Meanwhile, the mayors of Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Boston, Philadelphia and Washington DC have also vowed to protect their immigrant residents from deportation.

In other developments:

House Democrats sent a letter to Mr Trump calling on him to rescind the appointment of Breitbart News executive Steve Bannon as his chief strategist, after critics accused him of peddling white nationalist hate. (Breitbart News is alt right, white supremacist and antisemitic.)

The president of the Czech Republic said he hopes Mr Trump's ex-wife, Ivana, will become the new US ambassador after the socialite expressed interest in taking up the post in her Eastern European motherland

Mr De Blasio vowed after Mr Trump's election victory to delete the names of undocumented workers from a city database to prevent them from being rounded up.

The New York mayor, a liberal Democrat, told reporters his hour-long meeting with Mr Trump had been "respectful" and "candid".

DiBlasio: "I reiterated to him that this city and so many cities around the country will do all we can to protect our residents and to make sure that families are not torn apart," he told reporters.
He added that New York - home to nearly three times the national average of foreign born citizens - "has succeeded because it was open for everyone, the place built of generation after generation of immigrants".

But Mr de Blasio also said Mr Trump "loves" his hometown, which voted by a large margin for the Democratic candidate, Hillary Clinton.

As they met, Mr Trump's name was being removed from three buildings in New York City following a petition by residents who opposed his election.

Workers on an elevated platform took down his moniker, one gold letter at a time, from the apartment blocks on the west side.

But his flagship Manhattan tower, where the Republican has been holed up preparing for his January inauguration as the nation's 45th president, was not affected.

On Wednesday, he criticised claims of disarray in his transition, singling out the New York Times for reporting that world leaders have had trouble contacting him.

The property mogul tweeted that took calls from many foreign leaders, adding: "@nytimes is just upset that they looked like fools in their coverage of me."

Mr Trump and Vice President-elect Mike Pence spoke with 29 world leaders since the election, according to a statement from the transition team.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will be the first foreign leader to meet the new US president-elect, in New York on Thursday.

Meanwhile, current US President Barack Obama continued his farewell foreign trip, acknowledging in Greece that he and Mr Trump "could not be more different".

As he toured Athens, birthplace of democracy, Mr Obama added: "As long as we retain our faith in the people, as long as we don't waver from those central principles that ensure a lively, open debate, then our future will be ok."

Nevertheless, considering how parallel the Trumpzi campaign has been with the rise of radical nationalism in Europe prior to World War II, those of us who fear the specter of the past are fearful of the future. 

Unfortunately, the hire of "slob" Steve Bannon fuels our fears. 

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