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Deleted member 541
^^^^^^^^^^. @scout86 Loved it, all of it!!!!!
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Mods, the quote is from a copy left sourceRunning foreign policy during the Eisenhower administration was the Dulles family, led by Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, who had also concluded the US peace treaty with Japan under Harry Truman. Dulles had for three decades been a senior partner of the top Wall Street corporate-law firm of Sullivan & Cromwell, whose most important client was Rockefeller's Standard Oil Company of New Jersey. Dulles had been for 15 years a member of the board of the Rockefeller Foundation, and before assuming the post of Secretary of State was chairman of the board of that institution.
[But]Most important is the little-known fact that Dulles's wife was Janet Pomeroy Avery, a first cousin of John D. Rockefeller Jr.[/b] Heading the supersecret Central Intelligence Agency during the Eisenhower years was Dulles's brother, Allen Welsh Dulles, also a partner in Sullivan & Cromwell. Allen Dulles had long been a trustee of the CFR and had served as its president from 1947 to 1951. Their sister, Eleanor Lansing Dulles, was head of the Berlin desk of the State Department during that decade.
Undersecretary of State, and the man who succeeded John Foster Dulles in the spring 1959, was former Massachusetts governor Christian A. Herter. Herter's wife, like Nitze's, was a member of the Pratt family. Indeed, his wife's uncle, Herbert L. Pratt, had been for many years president or chairman of the board of Standard Oil Company of New York. One of Mrs. Herter's cousins, Richardson Pratt, had served as assistant treasurer of Standard Oil of New Jersey up to 1945. Furthermore, one of Herter's own uncles, a physician, had been for many years treasurer of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research.
Herter was succeeded as Undersecretary of State by Eisenhower's ambassador to France, C. Douglas Dillon, son of Clarence, and himself chairman of the Board of Dillon, Read & Co. Dillon was soon to become a trustee of the Rockefeller Foundation...
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That is me. I try not to take sides. At each election I look at each candidate and look into their actual policies, and those policies positions in real economic status -- can they sustain their hype? or are they just hype?I vote for who I think will do the best job.
Once again, I don't align with a lot of things trump says, however what is interesting is that he IS following through with his campaign promises whether it be a wall or his temporary ban on travel from certain countries. Although some things seem a bit over the top, it is refreshing that he didn't just get elected and not do any of the things he campaigned on like previous administrations. I believe him when he says Mexico will pay for the wall too bc I think he will tax any product coming out of Mexico so heavily it will pay for the wall. We have to be careful though bc we buy a few products, like fly ash a key component in concrete and gypsum which makes Sheetrock, in such large bulk it could have staggering effects on the building industry in this country. However, now he has figured out that he can put solar panels on the wall and the revenues from that would pay for the wall in total. The guy isn't dumb. He is a terrible personality, but he isn't dumb. Although over the top, his take on media reporting fake news is really spot on. CNN has even busted recently for reporting unsubstantiated news. The media has no scruples. They are all guilty of reporting things in a light that meets their agenda. It's upsetting. However, he promised to add more jobs and we are in yet another month where more jobs have been added and it appears as if GDP numbers are climbing for the first time in a decade. Oh well, each day brings something new with this guy. I just wish they could take his twitter account away!I'm not one side or the other -- I'm for the person who I think can bring the most to the table at that election, and actually believe they can follow through on half of it, minimum.
Eh I kind of disagree... what made the difference in added jobs here was his commitment to lowering corporate taxes. We had several companies who were committed to leaving the US for Mexico, Carrier and GMC were two biggies. We have one of the highest corporate tax rates in the world. I know for a fact that both companies pulled back on shifting those jobs out of the country based on his election. They absolutely will not play politics and be involved with making a public statement saying that. Companies cannot afford to become enmeshed in politics these days. As well, he soaring stock market had nothing to do with Obama. Those sectors have added jobs. The construction market is booming again. In that sector there aren't enough employees to meet demands. That definitely isn't an obama driven market. We had 10 years of a 0% fed rate basically and no growth in that sector. People were too afraid to invest in the building industry bc there were no assurances on long term risk models. Obviously, my opinion based on what my experiences are in the American job market. Being here and talking with actual CEO's and board members of these companies is drastically different than what you may read on the internet or what the media reports. Most large corporations are pro-trump based on his capitalistic views therefore they have made longer term investments into the American job growth sectors vs taking those jobs overseas.I wouldn't put much stock in Trump being responsible for new jobs, not this early in. Jobs take years of pl...
I think you're confusing a bit of your own bias here. Presidents don't rule taxes... just like our prime minister does not. They can say what they want, but its the parliament (congress / senate for you) who rules such things. Heads of state have limited powers, to be honest. Nothing they do has immediate, long standing, impact. Think back... Trump got elected, stock markets plummeted at a global level.what made the difference in added jobs here was his commitment to lowering corporate taxes.