Tag: Donald Trump

  • Trump says U.S. could ‘conceivably’ rejoin Paris climate agreement

    The U.S. can possibly reenter the Paris climate agreement, President Donald Trump said in a joint conference with Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg.

    “We could conceivably go back in,” Trump said.

    “I feel very strongly about the environment … but we also want businesses that can compete.”

    Trump said the Paris agreement was very unfair to the United States because it imposed penalties and took away many U.S. asset values.

    Moreover, the agreement hurt US businesses overall and gave advantages to other countries such as China, Trump added.

    The president emphasised that he is not going to let the Paris agreement to deny the U.S. competitive edge.

    The Paris agreement was created within the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change and has been ratified by 170 countries out of the 197 parties to the convention.

    The agreement entered into force in November 2016.

    It aims to keep the increase in average global temperature at below two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels by reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

    In June, Trump announced his decision to withdraw the U.S. from the Paris agreement, making the country the only one that has pulled out of the accord.

     

  • If President Trump violates Privacy Policy, he’d be sanctioned – Twitter’s VP

    If President Trump violates Privacy Policy, he’d be sanctioned – Twitter’s VP

    Twitter has said if US President Donald Trump should violate privacy policy guiding the microblogging platform, he would be cautioned.

    Bruce Daisley, Twitter’s vice president (VP) of Europe, the Middle East and Africa, stated this in an interview with BBC Radio.

    “If someone tweets private information… private address, phone number — then there are no-go areas where we don’t permit that,” Daisley said.

    “Were he (Trump) to do that, just picking a hypothetical example, then those would be areas” that were grounds for discipline, the Twitter executive added.

    “We would caution him to remove that tweet for sure,” he said.

    However, the micro-blogging platform has clarified that it will not block world leaders from tweeting.

    Although it didn’t directly name Trump, in a blog post called “World Leaders on Twitter,” the company said that there has been a lot of discussion about political figures and world leaders on the platform.

    “Blocking a world leader from Twitter or removing their controversial tweets would hide important information people should be able to see and debate,” Twitter said.

    “It would also not silence that leader, but it would certainly hamper necessary discussion around their words and actions,” the blog post read.

    Twitter did not block Trump for his “nuclear button” tweet that stormed the social media which, many thought, raised prospect of nuclear war with North Korea.

    A number of users reported to the tweet, with the expectation that threatening a war one is capable of violating Twitter’s revised “Terms of Service,” given the company’s recent crackdown on violent threats.

    The company said it reviews tweets by leaders within the political context that defines them, and enforces its rules accordingly.

    “No one person’s account drives Twitter’s growth, or influences these decisions. We work hard to remain unbiased with the public interest in mind,” it added.

     

  • Trump wins Press Oppressor award

    The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), a Journalists’ and press freedom campaign organisation based in the U.S., has named President Donald Trump as the winner of its award for ‘Overall Achievement in Undermining Global Press Freedom’.

    The CPJ said Trump emerged the overall winner at the award on Monday night in New York after he also emerged ‘Runner-Up’ to President Recep Erdoğan of Turkey, winner of the ‘Most Thin-skinned’ award.

    Other awards were ‘Most Outrageous Use of Terror Laws Against the Press’ won also by Erdoğan; ‘Tightest Grip on Media’ – excluded countries with no independent media, such as North Korea and Eritrea -won by President Xi Jinping of China; and ‘Biggest Backslider in Press Freedom’ won by State Counsellor and de facto leader Aung Suu-Kyi of Myanmar.

    President AbdelFattah al-Sisi of Egypt emerged ‘Runner-Up’ to Erdoğan for ‘Most Outrageous Use of Terror Laws Against the Press’; President Vladimir Putin of Russia emerged ‘Runner-Up’ for ‘Tightest Grip on Media’ award won by Xi; while President Andrzej Duda of Poland was ‘Runner-Up’ for ‘Biggest Backslider in Press Freedom’ won by Suu-Kyi.

    The award was in response to Trump’s fake news awards, which he hinted on Tuesday last week that he would be announcing this week Monday, which he later shifted to Jan. 17.

    Trump had on Jan. 2, said: “I will be announcing THE MOST DISHONEST & CORRUPT MEDIA AWARDS OF THE YEAR on Monday at 5 p.m..

    “Subjects will cover Dishonesty & Bad Reporting in various categories from the Fake News Media. Stay tuned!”

    However, on Sunday, he said: “The Fake News Awards, those going to the most corrupt & biased of the Mainstream Media, will be presented to the losers on Wednesday, Jan. 17, rather than this coming Monday. The interest in, and importance of, these awards is far greater than anyone could have anticipated!”

    CPJ said “in response to media coverage critical of him, Trump has threatened to ‘open-up’ U.S. libel laws, sue news outlets, and subject their broadcast licenses to review.

    He regularly attacks outlets and individual journalists on Twitter and in speeches, calling them ‘sad,’ ‘failing,’ or ‘garbage.’

    Since declaring his presidential candidacy in 2015, Trump has posted about 1,000 tweets critical of the press.

    CPJ research shows that when public figures and political leaders lob insults at the media, they encourage self-censorship and expose journalists to unnecessary risk”.

    The journalists’ organisation said amid the public discourse of fake news and Trump’s announcement via Twitter about his planned “fake news” awards ceremony, CPJ was recognising world leaders who had gone out of their way to attack the press and undermine the norms that supported freedom of the media.

    “From an unparalleled fear of their critics and the truth, to a relentless commitment to censorship, these five leaders and the runner-ups in their categories have gone above and beyond to silence critical voices and weaken democracy,” CPJ said of the award winners.

    While explaining the rationale for giving Trump the award, CPJ said the U.S., with its First Amendment protection for a free press, had long stood as a beacon for independent media around the world.

    CPJ said: “while previous U.S. presidents have each criticised the press to some degree, they have also made public commitments to uphold its essential role in democracy, at home and abroad.

    “Trump, by contrast, has consistently undermined domestic news outlets and declined to publicly raise freedom of the press with repressive leaders such as Xi, Erdoğan, and Sisi.

    “Authorities in China, Syria, and Russia have adopted Trump’s “fake news” epithet, and Erdoğan has applauded at least one of his verbal attacks on journalists.

    “Under Trump’s administration, the Department of Justice has failed to commit to guidelines intended to protect journalists’ sources, and the State Department has proposed to cut funding for international organisations that help buttress international norms in support of free expression.

    “As Trump and other Western powers fail to pressure the world’s most repressive leaders into improving the climate for press freedom, the number of journalists in prison globally is at a record high”.

    On Erdoğan, CPJ said Turkish authorities had repeatedly charged journalists, news outlets, and social media users for insulting Erdoğan, insulting other Turkish leaders, and insulting “Turkishness” in general adding: “Turkey is the world’s worst jailer of journalists, with at least 73 behind bars when CPJ conducted its most recent prison census on Dec. 1, 2017.

    Of the Egyptian leader, CPJ said of at least 20 journalists jailed in Egypt at the time of CPJ’s latest prison census, 18 were charged with, or convicted of, anti-state crimes such as aiding or inciting terrorism or belonging to banned groups.

    For Xi, CPJ decried that Beijing, under his increasingly iron grip, used a combination of traditional censorship and internet controls to keep the news media in line adding China is consistently one of the world’s worst jailers of the press, being the second worst globally, with at least 41 journalists in prison in 2017.

    Under Putin, it said independent media had been all but eradicated as journalists experience threats of violence or imprisonment and other types of harassment.

    CPJ also said that in Myanmar, most of the legal structure that had long restricted the press remained in place and journalists continued to be imprisoned adding, security officials obstruct and harass journalists trying to cover what the UN has termed “a textbook example of ethnic cleansing” by authorities in the country’s northern Rakhine State.

    CPJ said under Duda, the government had taken direct control of public media and announced plans to change regulations in a way that would force foreign owners of news outlets to give up their majority stakes.

    The organisation added that government offices had cancelled subscriptions to pro-opposition news outlets, while state-owned companies redirected advertising money to friendly media.

     

  • White House bans personal electronic devices in presidential offices

    Visitors and staff are to be banned from using personal electronic devices in the West Wing presidential offices, the White House said in a statement on Thursday.

    “The security and integrity of the technology systems at the White House is a top priority for the Trump administration.

    “Therefore, starting next week, the use of all personal devices for both guests and staff will no longer be allowed in the West Wing,” White House spokesperson Sarah Sanders said.

    The statement was issued in response to questions from the White House press corps about personal use of mobile phones in the West Wing.

    Sanders said that White House staff “will be able to conduct business on their government-issued devices and continue working hard on behalf of the American people.”

    The announcement follows a public row between President Donald Trump and former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, who was quoted extensively for an upcoming book, “Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House” by author Michael Wolff.

    Wolff claims that Trump himself allowed him “something like a semi-permanent seat on a couch in the West Wing.”

    The book portrays an unprepared candidate who had not really meant to win the presidency.

    Trump’s Wednesday statement blasting Bannon accused the man who was chief executive of his winning campaign of helping journalists write “phony books.”

     

  • Twitter 2017 most engaging tweet: “President Trump, you made a big mistake”

    Bernie Sanders’ ‘President Trump, you made a big mistake’ tweet has topped a list of most engaging tweets published by international social media analytics firm, Talkwalker.

    According to Internet Live Stats, “Every second, on average, around 6,000 tweets are tweeted on Twitter, which corresponds to over 350,000 tweets sent per minute, 500 million tweets per day and around 200 billion tweets per year”.

    The results are surprising. U.S. President Donald Trump’s Twitter feed did not make the list. Former U.S. President Barack Obama had more than one tweet that could have appeared, but Talkwalker included only his most popular tweet, Forbes surmised.

    Talkwalker listed the top ten tweets that received the most engagement in terms of replies, likes, and retweets, throughout 2017.

    Of the 200 billion tweets peddled on Twitter in 2017, here are the most engaging of them:

    Bernie Sanders’ tweet following the Women’s March

    Malala’s tweet marking the beginning of her time at Oxford, five years after her attack

    Tweet from JK Rowling on the 20th anniversary of the publishing of the first Harry Potter novel

    Michelle Obama’s tweet celebrating 25 years of marriage

    Blake Lively’s joke tweet saying happy birthday to her husband, Ryan Reynolds, with a photo of Ryan Gosling

    Tweet from LeBron James reacting to a controversy created by Donald Trump

    Tweet from Linkin Park following the death of their singer, Chester Bennington

    Tweet from Ariana Grande following the attack at her concert in Manchester

    https://twitter.com/ArianaGrande/status/866849021519966208

    A Wendy’s Twitter bet to see if a fan could win a lifetime supply of chicken nuggets

    Tweet from Barack Obama following the white supremacist rally and violence in Charlottesville

     

     

    What will Twitter bring in 2018?

     

  • Apple to acquire Netflix, analysts predict

    Premium smartphones maker, Apple Inc. has been predicted to possibly buy Netflix contrary to reports of the iPhone maker launching its video subscription product in 2018.

    Analysts from Citi said the smartphones giant could possibly take advantage of US President Donald Trump’s corporate tax cut to acquire the entertainment company.

    According to Citi analysts, Jim Suva and Asiya Merchant, there is a 40 percent likelihood that Apple will acquire Netflix.

    They posit that under the new taxing rules, Apple will be able to repatriate about $220 billion in cash to the US.

    “The firm has too much cash – nearly $250 billion – growing at $50 billion a year. This is a good problem to have,” Suva and Merchant were quoted as saying.

    “Historically, Apple has avoided repatriating cash to the US to avoid high taxation. As such, tax reform may allow Apple to put this cash to use.

    “With over 90 percent of its cash sitting overseas, a one-time 10 percent repatriation tax would give Apple $220 billion for mergers and acquisitions (M&A) or buybacks,” they added.

    A report in Business Insider Australia said that iTunes has been a huge hit for the company, but viewers have migrated increasingly to services like Netflix, Amazon or Hulu to watch their favourite shows leaving Apple struggling to offer a compelling TV or movie offering.

     

  • Anti-Trump protesters turned off Bethlehem Christmas lights

    Palestinians switched off Christmas lights at Jesus’ traditional birthplace in Bethlehem on Wednesday night in protest at U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

    A Christmas tree adorned with lights outside Bethlehem’s Church of the Nativity, where Christians believe Jesus was born, and another in Ramallah, next to the burial site of former Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, were plunged into darkness.

    “The Christmas tree was switched off on the order of the mayor today in protest at Trump’s decision,” said Fady Ghattas, Bethlehem’s municipal media officer.

    He said it was unclear whether the illuminations would be turned on again before the main Christmas festivities.

    In a speech in Washington, Trump said he had decided to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and move the U.S. embassy to the city.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Trump’s move marked the beginning of a new approach to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and said it was an “historic landmark”.

    Arabs and Muslims across the Middle East condemned the U.S. decision, calling it an incendiary move in a volatile region and the European Union and United Nations also voiced alarm at the possible repercussions for any chances of reviving Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking.

  • Twitter says Trump’s anti-Muslim videos remain undeleted for a reason

    Twitter says Trump’s anti-Muslim videos remain undeleted for a reason

    Twitter has explained why they failed to remove offensive and unverified anti-Muslim tweets shared by President Donald Trump.

    The site has claimed its decision not to remove violent far-right Britain First videos retweeted by the US president had nothing to do with the episode making global headlines.

    A row erupted between Theresa May and the US president when he retweeted three anti-Muslim videos posted by the deputy leader of fringe political group, Britain First.

    Two featured violent scenes, including someone being pushed off a roof and another person being assaulted, leading Twitter users to suggest they breached the site’s guidelines.

    One of the videos, which suggested the attacker was a Muslim migrant, was quickly identified as fake news.

    A previous statement from Twitter indicated the content was allowed to remain online as it stoked debate.

    It pointed to guidance in its help centre which said: “There may be the rare occasion when we allow controversial content or behaviour which may otherwise violate our rules to remain on our service because we believe there is a legitimate public interest in its availability.”

    On Friday, Twitter co-founder, Jack Dorsey, rowed back on the suggestion, saying: “We mistakenly pointed to the wrong reason we didn’t take action on the videos from earlier this week.”

    In a series of posts shared from the Twitter Safety account, the social media giant appeared to set out why Mr. Trump’s tweets remained on the site.

    It wrote: “Earlier this week, Tweets were sent that contained graphic and violent videos. We pointed people to our Help Centre to explain why they remained up, and this caused some confusion.

    “To clarify: these videos are not being kept up because they are newsworthy or for public interest. Rather, these videos are permitted on Twitter based on our current media policy.

    “We will continue to re-evaluate and examine our policies as the world around us evolves. We appreciate the feedback and will continue to listen.”

    One user replied to Mr Dorsey’s post, asking him if he thought the reason the posts stayed up was due to Twitter needing Mr Trump to drive traffic to the website, to which the tech chief replied: “No, I don’t.”

    According to Twitter’s media policy, a post breaches guidelines if it contains “gory media related to death, serious injury, violence or surgical procedures.”

    It lists examples, including the moment someone dies, a gruesome crime scene or bodily harm, torture, dismemberment or mutilation.

    British PM Theresa May previously said Mr. Trump was ‘wrong’ to retweet videos posted by Britain First’s deputy leader, Jayda Fransen, which she condemned as a “hateful organisation” dedicated to spreading division and mistrust.

    The extraordinary flare-up between the two key allies came after Mr. Trump responded directly to her assertion – originally made through her official spokesman – that his re-postings had been wrong.

    In his usually petulant approach, Trump wrote: “@Theresa-May, don’t focus on me, focus on the destructive Radical Islamic Terrorism that is taking place within the United Kingdom. We are doing just fine!”

     

  • Trump prefers white people than black people- Trevor Noah

    South-African entertainer and comedian, Trevor Noah has said US President Donald Trump “prefers white people over black people”

     

    Noah said this during an interview with the BBC’s Nick Bryant.

     

    According to him: “I don’t know if Donald Trump is a White Supremacist. I do know that he prefers white people over black people,” Noah said.

     

    “I do know that he has said on multiple occasions that he doesn’t want black people involved in the counting of his money or involved in the running of his world.

     

    “I do know that he has specifically gone out of his way with his companies to oppress black people. I do know that he hasn’t been as quick to react to the aid of black people as he has been with others.

     

    “I do know that he continues to retweet white supremacist on his Twitter account.

     

    “America is a kind of place where someone can get offended at you calling them a racist than at the fact that they are a racist.”

     

  • Meet rapper who desires to have sex with Trump

    Princess Vitarah is a Nigerian born American rapper, who has been making waves through her explicit style of rap.

    Vitarah returns with another raunchy song, with focus on making love to Donald Trump, President of United States of America.

    In the music video released, the sexy rapper is seen in the video whining and grinding against a man masked as Trump.

    The man mirroring Donald Trump in the video can be seen in diverse raunchy positions with the rapper. He is also seen in captivity with a rope keeping him bound to a chair as Vitarah acts like she is trying to strangle and stab him.

     

    READ ALSO:I masturbate 10 times in a week- Princess Vitarah

     

    https://youtu.be/hgxyZBvleX4