Tag: America’s

  • Unpacking America’s urban-rural divide

    Unpacking America’s urban-rural divide

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    Politics tamfitronics Unpacking America's urban-rural divide

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    The divide between urban and rural voters is a key indicator in U.S. electoral politics. Cities favoring Democrats and rural areas favoring Republicans isn’t new. But since 2000, the gap has grown dramatically. What is behind this trend, and why is it so important? The answer is partly economic — but there are also complex cultural factors involved. Produced by Yass Monem and Nicky Woolf.

  • America’s Car-Mart Names Jamie Fischer COO

    America’s Car-Mart Names Jamie Fischer COO

    Top Stories Tamfitronics

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    September 24, 2024 08:19 am EDT

    Written by RTTNews.com for RTTNews->

    (RTTNews) – America’s Car-Mart (CRMT) announced the appointment of Jamie Fischer as Chief Operating Officer, effective October 7, 2024. She will oversee dealership operations and related support functions including inventory management and marketing. Jamie joins the company from DriveTime. Most recently, she served as Head of Operations.

    Douglas Campbell, CEO of Car-Mart, said: “On our lastearnings callI spoke about the importance of talent and rounding out the executive team. Jamie’s achievements in her career are impressive, and her breadth of experience in operations and inventory management will accelerate our progress on current and future initiatives.”

    The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.

    Top Stories Tamfitronics RTTNews logo

    Founded in the late 1990s by Andrew Mariathasan in New York, with the goal of covering Wall Street for a new generation of investors, RTTNews has expanded steadily over the years to become a trusted provider of content for a wide array of subjects across several platforms. RTT’s Financial Newswire is relied upon by some of the world’s largest financial institutions, including banks, brokerages, trading platforms and financial exchanges.

  • America’s fragile democracy

    America’s fragile democracy

    Politics tamfitronics

    Saturday’s assassination attempt on Donald Trump must be unequivocally condemned. It was an attack on democracy in the United States and elsewhere.

    Yet, the act by 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks in Bethel Park, Pennsylvania, was emblematic of the divisiveness and toxicity in US politics that Mr Trump has exploited and fanned, first to gain the American presidency, and now in an attempt to return to the job. It is to be recalled that Mr Trump launched his political career with a racist dog whistle about the authenticity of the US citizenship of the country’s first black president, Barack Obama.

    In office, Mr Trump not only kept that whistle between his lips, but systematically undermined America’s institutions of democracy, up to the point of orchestrating an insurrection in a vain bid to stay in power.

    Apart from the big questions of how the United States now sustains its democracy, faced with the Hobson’s choice of two differently flawed candidates in November’s presidential election, hopefully Saturday’s incident will ignite, finally, a rational debate on the easy availability of guns in America.

    Having become a victim of gun violence, Mr Trump might be less inclined to an unmindful bullishness on gun ownership, in attempting to satisfy his base.

    Little is known about Mr Crooks, or what inspired him to attempt to kill Donald Trump, the putative Republican Party nominee for president, in an attack at an election rally that cost at least two lives, including Mr Crooks’.

    It is nonetheless safe to presume that he channelled the feelings of millions of Americans, and many more people around the world, who believe that a second Trump presidency holds an existential threat to US democracy and global stability.

    This concern has been exacerbated by the emotiveness, and general absence of deep thoughtfulness in America’s political discourse, especially by Mr Trump and his captured Republican Party. They have ensconced themselves in an ethnocentric and illiberal ideology, under the banner of Make America Great Again (MAGA).

    It is in the context of the MAGA ideology that Mr Trump once referred to states with people like Jamaicans as “sh** countries” and pined for emigrations from places like the Nordic region, rather than Latin America, the Caribbean and Arab Middle East nations.

    It is this ideology, too, and Mr Trump’s authoritarian impulses that caused him to reject his loss in the 2020 presidential election and to gee up crowds to attack the US Capitol to prevent the certification of Joe Biden’s victory.

    But as Mr Biden (himself facing questions about his physical and cognitive fitness for a second term in office) said of the assassination attempt against Mr Trump, that there ought be “no place in America for this kind of violence”.

    “It’s sick. It’s sick,” Mr Biden said.

    This newspaper would add, or any country. That, unfortunately, is not the case.

    The United States is not unaccustomed to the assassination or attempted assassination of presidents, or the injuring of members of Congress in such attempts. Abraham Lincoln, John F Kennedy, Ronald Regan, Robert Kennedy and others are testament to this.

    Abroad, only in May, Slovakia’s populist Prime Minister Robert Fico survived an assassination attempt, after he was shot in the stomach by a disgruntled 71-year-old former security guard and poet.

    Even in perceived staid Britain, politicians have not been immune from violence. In 2016, the Labour MP Jo Cox was stabbed to death while out greeting constituents; and five years later, a long-standing Tory parliamentarian, Sir David Amess was stabbed and killed in his constituency office.

    While Jamaica has had few direct assaults against a top political leader, the country has in the past endured more than its fair share of political violence, especially in 1980 when hundreds were killed, including Roy McGann, a junior minister and parliamentary election candidate.

    The workability of democratic politics, as the Jamaican intellectual Rex Nettleford used to say, is of each player agreeing to the same game, abiding by common rules. One side cannot kick the ball while the other attempts to run with it in hand. Which is what, largely, has become the norm of America’s politics.

    On that score, Mr Biden was right in his statement that the assassination attempt against Mr Trump was one example of the reason “ why we have to unite this country”.

    That, however, will not happen by presidential decree. It has to be the result of political parties and political leaders having a shared vision of the United States, even when they disagree on strategy and tactics.

    In the short term, preventing the United States from descending into tit-for-tat violence, or the placing of further stress on its institutions, will depend on how the country’s leadership, especially the Republicans, responds to the shooting.

    Declaration of “fight”, which came from Mr Trump, hopefully only as a reflex in the heat of the moment, and the more extremist blaming of President Biden and the Democrats, as have other Republicans, will not help.

    The Democrats, too, may be required to dial back their rhetoric for the time being. Perhaps they might have to find new language, without sacrificing clarity, to define why they believe Donald Trump is bad for America.

    Put mildly, the Americans are in need of an honest conversation about the state of their country and its democracy, but without the angst.

    —Reprinted from the Jamaica Observer

  • ‘America’s Hitler’: All the Times J.D. Vance Trashed Trump

    ‘America’s Hitler’: All the Times J.D. Vance Trashed Trump

    Politics tamfitronics

    The Ohio senator, now one of Trump’s fiercest defenders, used to beat up on him both publicly and privately, calling him “reprehensible” and “a cynical asshole like Nixon.”

    Politics tamfitronics AJ McDougall

    Politics tamfitronics Former U.S. President Donald Trump and Republican Senator JD Vance

    Drew Angerer/Getty Images

    JD Vance loves Donald J. Trump. But that hasn’t always been the case.

    The Ohio senator—and Trump’s new VP pick—has been a stalwart defender of the presumptive presidential nominee, helping to downplay the Jan. 6 Capitol attack and praising his populist approach to politics. At least he has been recently. When Trump was running for president, the message was very, very different.

    By deleting old tweets and flip-flopping on policy, the Ohioan has transformed himself from “never-Trumper” to good ol’ MAGA boy.

    But the internet never forgets, and neither do we. Here are some of the best of Vance’s attacks on Trump.

    Politics tamfitronics “America’s Hitler”

    Oof. Shortly after Vance secured Trump’s thumbs-up for his Senate campaign, an old law school roommate emerged to gum up the works, sharing a screenshot of a text conversation they’d had back in Feb. 2016.

    “I go back and forth between thinking Trump is a cynical asshole like Nixon who wouldn’t be that bad (and might even prove useful) or that he’s America’s Hitler,” Vance texted Josh McLaurin. “How’s that for discouraging?”

    In a statement to the Ohio Capital Journal at the time, Vance’s campaign manager did not deny the authenticity of the message. “It’s laughable that the media treats J.D. not liking Trump six years ago as some sort of breaking news, when they’ve already covered it to death since this race began,” Jordan Wiggins said. “Clearly, President Trump trusts that J.D. is a genuine convert.”

    Indeed, Trump had said as much in his endorsement letter, acknowledging that Vance “may have said some not so great things about me in the past, but he gets it now, and I have seen that in spades.”

    (A month after endorsing Vance, Trump forgot his name at a Nebraska rally. “We’ve endorsed J.P. — right? J.D. Mandel, and he’s doing great.”)

    Politics tamfitronics “Cultural Heroin”

    As everyone came to the realization that Trump was likely to clinch the 2016 Republican nomination for president, Vance took to the venerable pages of The Atlanticwriting in an op-ed titled Opioid of the Masses that “Trump is cultural heroin,” and his campaign promises “the needle in America’s collective vein.”

    Vance explained that Trump offered band-aid solutions to complex issues—promising to build a wall to stem the flood of illegal opioids flowing over the border, for instance.

    “He makes some feel better for a bit,” Vance wrote. “But he cannot fix what ails them, and one day they’ll realize it.”

    Politics tamfitronics “I can’t stomach Trump”

    Vance told NPR as much in Aug. 2016. Short and sweet.

    “I think that I’m going to vote third party because I can’t stomach Trump,” he told Terry Gross. “I think that he’s noxious and is leading the white working class to a very dark place.”

    If necessary, Vance added, he might even “have to hold my nose and vote for Hillary Clinton” if it appeared as though Trump would win.

    Vance later said that, while he did vote third-party in 2016, he turned around and voted for Trump in 2020.

    Politics tamfitronics “Mr. Trump is unfit for our nation’s highest office.”

    The same month as the NPR interview, Vance penned another op-ed, this one for The New York Timesin which he opined that “Mr. Trump is unfit for our nation’s highest office.”

    Politics tamfitronics The Tweets: “Reprehensible”

    In Oct. 2016, Vance went on a mini-tweet storm after the Access Hollywood tape emerged showing Trump bragging about what he could get away with around women.

    “Fellow Christians, everyone is watching us when we apologize for this man. Lord help us,” Vance tweeted.

    Two days later, he added, “Trump makes people I care about afraid. Immigrants, Muslims, etc. Because of this I find him reprehensible. God wants better of us.”

    The following March, he said in another tweet, “In 4 years, I hope people remember that it was those of us who empathized with Trump’s voters who fought him the most aggressively.”

    Unsurprisingly, these posts were all later deleted around the time he began seeking Trump’s crucial endorsement for the Senate.

    Politics tamfitronics “A Never-Trump guy”

    “I’m a Never-Trump guy,” Vance told Charlie Rose in an interview just a few short weeks before Trump was elected president. “I never liked him.”

    Vance, who penned a controversial memoir about growing up in rural poverty that was later adapted into an Oscar-losing film, had been brought onto Rose’s show to be a white working-class whisperer, explaining the demographic’s infatuation with Trump.

    “I mean, one of the things that’s really driving attraction to Donald Trump is not any special quality of Donald Trump himself, but of the fact that folks feel very resentful at the media establishment, the political establishment, the financial establishment and so forth,” Vance told Rose.

    “And so, one of the things that I really started to recognize as a teenager is that folks are very cynical, pessimistic and, because of it, sort of alienated from the broader American community… I didn’t quite expect it would take the form that it’s taken, but I’m not surprised.”

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