It’s called the Trump Effect. After 4 years of FJB, young black people and young Hispanic people see what young white people see in him — a leader who cares about them. FJB only cares about the bribes.
On Monday, the Washington Post (owned Jeff Bezos) said, “Democrats spar over registration as worries over young and minority voters grow.
“The rise in Trump support among nonregistered voters has run up against a long-held Democratic policy priority of growing the voter rolls.”
It’s called the Trump Effect. After 4 years of FJB, young black people and young Hispanic people see what young white people see in him — a leader who cares about them. FJB only cares about the bribes.
The story said, “Aaron Strauss, an influential data scientist who helps direct progressive spending at the firm OpenLabs, sparked private disagreements over this issue in January when he sent about a dozen major Democratic donors a confidential memo that…READ MORE…
Richard Czechowski: The United States is at a Precipice
I confess that for the first time in my life, I am really worried about the future of the United States.
We have always had political differences since our first administration where Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton led opposing factions within the cabinet of George Washington, but not since the Civil War have we been in a more dangerous time in which those differences can turn the US into a post constitutional nation, united only by a common currency, economic system and, to some degree, a shared foreign policy. We survived that by the fact that Abraham Lincoln defeated his former military leader George McLellan in 1864. We may not be so lucky this time if the Democrat Party were to win control of both houses of Congress as well as retain control of the Presidency…READ MORE…
From Telegraph Cables to Centrifuges: A Brief History of Electronic and Cyber Warfare Evolution
Electronic warfare has a surprisingly long history, dating back to the early days of telegraph wires. today it is considered its own domain.
Electronic warfare has a surprisingly long history, dating back to the early days of telegraph wires. Even then, disruptive tactics were employed, such as cutting cables to hinder communication. An early glimpse into the potential of electronic disruption occurred during the Russo-Japanese War in 1905 when the Russian Pacific Fleet “overpowered” signals to jam Japanese wireless transmissions.
World War Two marked a significant advancement in electronic warfare…READ MORE…
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