Tuesday, May 22, 2018
CampBell...
In March, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross held up a can of Campbell's Soup to demonstrate how benign the effects would be of steel and aluminum tariffs.
In an earnings, a Campbell official held up the tariffs as a negative factor in the company's future profitability.
Ross made the argument during a CNBC appearance, shortly after the administration had announced it would slap a 25 percent levy on steel imports and 10 percent tariff on aluminum. Responding to fears that the duties would be inflationary, Ross said they actually would have little effect on prices, even in a worst-case scenario.
Campbell posted a $393 million first-quarter loss and said it now expects profits to decline by 5 percent to 6 percent this year, worse than earlier projections of between 1 percent and 3 percent.
Chief Financial Officer Anthony DiSilvestro pointed directly to the tariffs as a cause of the company's expected woes going forward. The tariffs did not actually take effect until March 23, near the end of the quarter.
Blackmail...
The hair stylist who claims Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens used partially nude photos of her to blackmail her into keeping quiet said, "I'm not lying." She regrets having the brief fling with Greitens.
Greitens, married, has admitted to having a consensual sexual relationship with the woman in 2015. He has adamantly rejected any criminal wrongdoing, denying his accuser's allegation that he surreptitiously took cellphone photos of her blindfolded and partially nude during a rendezvous in the basement of his home on March 21, 2015.
While the compromising photos have never surfaced, Greitens scheduled to go on trial on a felony invasion of privacy charge stemming from the allegations [Dropped].
The woman's affair with Greitens was exposed by her ex-husband, who secretly recorded her admitting to the affair.
Who is blackmailing who? And why is the Media on it 200%?
Phys Ed...
Where is the Dems and Republican Plans to safe protect the children.
Schumer, Pelosi, Warren, Ryan, McCarthy, and Scalise.....
Monday, May 21, 2018
WatchDog...
The Trump administration's revamped Afghanistan strategy has made little progress against the Taliban insurgency, leaving the country a "dangerous and volatile" place nearly 17 years after the U.S. invaded, a government watchdog report said.
The conclusion contrasts with assertions last fall by the American military that the Afghans, with U.S. support, had "turned the corner" and captured momentum against the Taliban, which it called fractured and desperate.
The report to Congress by inspectors general of the Pentagon, the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development also cast doubt on the administration's decision to send a new set of military advisers this year to work with Afghan forces closer to the front lines. It said this, combined with stepped-up Afghan offensives, "further raises the risk of civilian casualties, insider attacks, U.S. casualties, and other conflict-related violence."
Hicks...
The Republican National Committee has paid nearly half a million dollars to a law firm representing former White House communications director Hope Hicks in the ongoing Russia investigation, Federal Election Commission records show.
The two payments in April, totaling $451,779, were made to Trout
Cacheris & Janis for "legal and compliance services." Hicks is
represented by the firm’s founder, Robert Trout. Two additional
attorneys at the firm represent other witnesses in the Russia probe.
In late February, Hicks appeared before the House Intelligence Committee
for a closed-door interview related to Russia interference in the 2016
election but refused to answer questions about her time in the White
House, according to Republicans and Democrats on the panel.
Sunday, May 20, 2018
Iraq...
Following the 2003 US-led overthrow of Saddam Hussein, Mr Sadr burst onto the scene as a renegade champion of poorer Shias, leading militant fighters who carried out deadly attacks on American forces and were notorious for sectarian killings of Sunni Muslims.
In recent years, Mr Sadr has gained popularity as a nationalist voice, opposing Iranian influence and waging a public campaign against corruption.
For this election, he ran a non-sectarian campaign focused on issues of social justice, allying with secularists and Iraq's communist party, and broadening support beyond his traditional base.
While al-Sadr has continued to oppose the US military presence in Iraq, he is also openly critical of Iran. He even made a recent trip to Saudi Arabia. The US ally is Tehran’s archival.
Let us not interfere in the Iraq business again. They are different culture, religions, hopes and aspiration.
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