“Let’s do something fun,” Chris Christie said at the Republican National Convention last night. The Governor of New Jersey had spent the past day in less expansive emotional states—defending Melania Trump’s plagiarized speech on the “Today” show, expressing his own disappointment that Mike Pence was the Republican Vice-Presidential pick—and he seemed due for some pleasure. Christie told the delegates that he, a famously truculent former federal prosecutor, would present an indictment against Hillary Clinton, and they would get to judge whether she was guilty or innocent.
The crowd on the floor, gossipy and distracted when Paul Ryan spoke, a few minutes earlier, grew attentive. This was the case that Christie had been promising he would make against Clinton since early in his own Presidential campaign. “As a flawed evaluator of dictators,” Christie asked, suggesting that the former of Secretary of State had been too ready to reset relations with Russia, “is Hillary Clinton guilty or not guilty?” He asked for verdicts on Clinton’s competence (“as an inept negotiator”) and for being weak toward the Syrian regime (“as an awful judge of the character of a dictator-butcher in the Middle East”). The floor, following the California delegation’s lead, chanted, “Lock her up!” Christie said, “I’m getting there.”
If Christie was pursuing Clinton last night, he was also being pursued. Earlier in the day, Christie’s mentor and appointee David Samson, who was once the chairman of the Port Authority, had pleaded guilty to shaking down United Airlines to keep them from cancelling a direct flight that he took to his vacation home. The case against Samson grew out of the investigation into the Christie administration’s vindictive George Washington Bridge lane closures, which presses on. Even during his political ascent, Christie was a creature of grievance and emotion, an open wound, a human tumult machine. When he gave the keynote speech at the 2012 Republican Convention, Christie got three-quarters of the way through a talk about himself (eighty paragraphs into the written version) before he said the name of the candidate, Mitt Romney. This time, Christie had expected to be named Donald Trump’s running mate and when he found out that he wouldn’t be, the Governor turned “livid,” Trump’s campaign manager, Paul Manafort, reportedly told friends.
Still, Christie appeared on the “Today” show yesterday, to insist, a little humiliatingly, that “ninety-three per cent” of Melania Trump’s speech had not been plagiarized. He was also asked how he felt about being passed over by Trump. The Governor said that he didn’t want to “sugarcoat it,” and that he was disappointed. “If you compete for something like I did, you’d like to be picked. I wasn’t. So you take a deep breath, and you go to bed, and you wake up the next morning and get on with your day,” he said. The general opinion was that Christie had debased himself and had gotten nothing for it. The more specific opinion, among the New Jersey delegation on the Convention floor, was that the emoting was all very Christie. “I almost think when he does something like that, he makes himself vulnerable to the public,” Maria DiGiovanni, the mayor of Hackettstown, said.
Christie’s defining characteristic as a politician is his relentlessness. He has conducted a hundred and thirty-five town halls across his state, promising help for local problems and haranguing public-school teachers. But he also has a special sensitivity to the complex character of his state: after Hurricane Sandy, Christie was the nostalgist of the boardwalks, but he also nominated the first Muslim judge to the New Jersey Superior Court, in 2011, and heatedly defended the man’s patriotism and qualifications against an angry Islamophobic wave of resistance. Christie’s persona—that Springsteen/“Sopranos” amalgam—has always seemed a touch on the nose, as if it he had sketched himself. On the “Today” show, yesterday, Christie dealt amiably with rumors that Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, had opposed putting Christie on the ticket. (In 2005, Christie, as the U.S. Attorney for New Jersey, sent Kushner’s father to prison.) “I understand that’s a sort of Shakespearean thing that people want to write about,” Christie said. And maybe it was.
New Jersey Republican officials are a prosperous and pragmatic clan, and by now they have generally made their peace with Donald Trump, as Christie has. “If you want to be a delegate from New Jersey, you really need to be a Trump delegate,” Henry Kuhl, who was attending his eleventh convention, pointed out. The main feeling among New Jersey’s fifty-one delegates was that Christie and Trump shared certain attributes: plainspokenness, an executive talent, perhaps an allergy to ideology. “It’s not my particular style, but he’s effective,” a delegate named Mary O’Brien said of Trump. Next to her, a delegate named John Traier said that he was disappointed that the national Republican platform was so starkly opposed to gay and lesbian rights, but added that he was pleased that the New Jersey delegation had supported equality. “Baby steps,” Traier said. On the broader matter of Trump he was serene. “Every so often the Party goes through a metamorphosis,” he said.
Up on the stage, Christie was completing one of his own. During his Presidential campaign, Christie had subdued his talk of American immigrant diversity in favor of a skepticism about Syrian refugees, and now he shed the sentiment and the lugubriousness, the parts of his character that least matched Trump’s. Some act of interior whittling had taken place. On Monday, when the mood in the Convention was dark and nationalistic, Christie had been said to be polishing his speech; by Tuesday it was full of the prosecutor’s blacks and whites, the high moral tone of a man eyed by a grand jury himself. “In Libya and Nigeria—guilty,” Christie said of Clinton. “In China and Syria—guilty. In Iran and Russia and Cuba—guilty.” Christie had maneuvered into place. Already Trump has said that Christie will lead his Presidential transition team. The talk among the New Jersey delegation was that he’d also make a fine attorney general.
見識美國民眾對希拉裏文革式的大批鬥
2016-07-21 00:26:02
rocky66
rocky66
加拿大移民生活的五味俱全
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2016年7月21日創作於溫哥華
美國馬拉鬆式的總統大選已經達到高潮,川普以壓到一切的優勢正式被提名為共和黨的美國總統。
川普最近認命了印第安納州州長MIKE PENCE作為副總統,這位先生雷厲風行,工作能力非常強,將該州治理成為美國的模範,財政盈餘20億,失業率非常低,是個治國的好手。同時川普又認命了新澤西州州長CHRIS作為首席檢察官。
川普真是慧眼識人,我們來看看這兩位未來的2,3號人物如何賣力出場表演的。
這位MIKE具有林彪一樣的溜須拍馬才能,在CNN電視上將川普這個昔日名聲劣跡斑斑的地產爆發戶神話成了美國的救世主。他首先嚴厲抨擊奧巴馬和希拉裏如何無能和誤國,把美國人民描述成像咱們當初曆史上到了“最危險的時刻”,隻有川普這位能人才能讓美國重新偉大起來,演講中不停的咒罵希拉裏是騙子,說謊者,吃裏扒外的美奸,當然不停地歌頌川普是如何如何的英明和偉大。
萬一競選失敗,下場很悲慘 看來美國也是“成者為王敗者為寇”
那位曾經做過檢察官的CHRIS就更神了,太有才了。今天在CNN電視上舉辦了一場模擬審判希拉裏場景。他列舉了希拉裏主導的利比亞卡紮菲被摧毀,成就了ISIS恐怖組織;伊朗核談判犧牲了盟友以色列的安全;希拉裏誇讚中國購買美國國債,自己政府大肆揮霍公款,向債主犧牲美國利益;希拉裏還讚揚敘利亞獨裁統治者亞瑟德是改革家;和古巴談判;對俄羅斯侵吞克裏米亞的失敗政策;利比亞美國大使館人員被襲擊死亡,希拉裏竟然不接電話和郵件去解救等等。每個問題都質問會場群眾,希拉裏是有罪還是無罪?所有群眾揮舞著拳頭大聲叫囂著“有罪”,“把她關起來”。
川普的一個律師竟然報紙上說希拉裏應該被送進監獄而不是白宮,她應該為她背叛美國人民的利益這一叛國罪去坐電椅。
川普和這兩位副手多次表示,一旦當選,立刻起訴希拉裏的叛國罪,將她繩之以法。我是根本不用操心她的安全,畢竟美國是法製國家,她自己就是名律師,叛國罪這種模棱兩可的罪名在很多國家確實很有效,但是在美國曆史上還沒能成功過。
川普的第三任名模太太和兒女們也個個粉墨登場,上電視為川普造勢,把他吹捧的人格魅力是如何的偉大。川普的長子演講最為出色,14歲就給其爹打工,現任集團VP,將來一定是美國政壇的一顆新星,可能會是小布什的翻版。對川普的一些桃色新聞流言蜚語,一位女支持者竟然恬大言不慚的辯護:“我們是在選一個有能力振興美國的領導者,而不是選一個好丈夫,好牧師。
國內很多憂國憂民的憤青最近為南海操碎了心,微信上還流傳著美國很快就要打到我們家門口來了,號召大家去砸IPHONE和拒絕KFC。我看這些人得去看醫生,需要吃藥治療自己的被迫害妄想症。
希拉裏這位奧巴馬政府裏主導外交的旗幟人物現在已經焦頭爛額,11月份進不了白宮肯怕就得進監獄,哪有心思要去十萬八千裏之外的南海去鬥? 再說美國現在麵臨ISIS對自己和盟國的一係列襲擊毫無招架,又冒出黑人和白人警察的嚴厲對峙,隔三差五的襲擊警察這一國家機器,將百姓對國家的信心喪失殆盡。
川普更是天天喊著“美國優先”,一切資源都要圍繞建設美國這一核心,拋棄過去一貫的世界警察的職責。這位商人不會花巨資為南亞小國做炮灰的。
和國內傳媒天天喊狼來了對比,美國和世界新聞媒體竟然沒人提這一話題也沒有政客關心,就那天仲裁結果報道了一則而已。川普今天也說美國的敵人是ISIS 和俄羅斯,他競選中絕對不會提南海這一裁決的事件,提了等於給自己上個額外枷鎖而已。
沒想到一紙仲裁在國內影響力那麽大,這種裁決本來就沒有執行力的,俄羅斯吞並了克裏米亞後,西方所有國家口誅筆伐還實施製裁,俄羅斯不一樣泰然處之嗎。我們何必那麽不淡定,敵人都絲毫沒動,自己幹嘛先亂了陣腳。
人類社會發明了競選這一政治方式取代了傳統的暴力革命方式,比愛迪生發明電都有價值。世界很多地區的政府更迭就意味著很多人的人頭落地,還要帶來民眾財產再分配。美國人民卻沒有這樣的絲毫擔心。
TJKCB 發表評論於 2016-07-21 16:14:00
Clint Eastwood's rambling RNC speech, to an empty chair beside him — in which he pretend Obama was sitting. How hilarious!
polar_bear 發表評論於 2016-07-21 16:11:06
看結果吧。克林頓大概也很希望希拉裏被關進監獄而非進白宮吧?
春妮18 發表評論於 2016-07-21 12:44:51
民眾對o8政府袒護希拉裏嚴重不滿的宣泄,人們是看了FBI公布的泄密情況,不是文革那種不明真相的被愚弄。
古龍 發表評論於 2016-07-21 11:20:23
最逗的是trump老婆一身靚麗的闊太太花瓶形象在台上說,trump不僅代表白人,也代表....和窮人,台下一幫胖子白垃圾,一看就是低收入者,站起來歡呼。蠢人在哪個社會製度下都是蠢人
warara 發表評論於 2016-07-21 09:49:15
你沒有見過文革吧?大字報鋪天蓋地,走資派掛牌遊街,紅衛兵打砸搶。學生打死老師...
ali88 發表評論於 2016-07-21 09:25:50
"這位MIKE具有林彪一樣的溜須拍馬才能"
This is exactly WenGe style.
Houstonll 發表評論於 2016-07-21 07:47:04
公平的話,也寫一篇關於“見識一下美國輿論怎樣斷章取義,抹黑川普”。
大號螞蟻 發表評論於 2016-07-21 07:30:06
法庭辯論一方發言而已。真是文革式,封喉關押肉體消滅。