Seth Meyers Uses Trump's Words Against Him In Fiery Takedown

President Donald Trump may be proud of the fact that he’s signed 30 executive orders in his first 100 days in office, but Seth Meyers isn’t having any of it.

The “Late Night” host presented multiple examples of Trump previously criticizing President Barack Obama for signing executive orders during his two terms as president.

Trump has signed more executive orders in his first 100 days in office than any other president since World War II. Obama, on the other hand, had signed 19 during the same time period. According to the American Presidency Project at the University of California, Santa Barbara, Trump is on track to sign an average of 96 executive orders a year, which is about three times as much as Obama.

“It is at this point like a law of physics: For every Trump action, there’s an equal and opposite Trump clip,” Meyers said on his Wednesday show. 

Check out the takedown in the clip above.

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Holy Crap, David Fincher Is Directing the World War Z Sequel

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Obama's $400,000 Wall Street Speech Is Completely In Character

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The rumors are true: Former President Barack Obama will receive $400,000 to speak at a health care conference organized by the Wall Street firm Cantor Fitzgerald.

It should not be a surprise. This unseemly and unnecessary cash-in fits a pattern of bad behavior involving the financial sector, one that spans Obama’s entire presidency. That governing failure convinced millions of his onetime supporters that the president and his party were not, in fact, playing for their team, and helped pave the way for President Donald Trump. Obama’s Wall Street payday will confirm for many what they have long suspected: that the Democratic Party is managed by out-of-touch elites who do not understand or care about the concerns of ordinary Americans. It’s hard to fault those who come to this conclusion.

Obama refused to prosecute the rampant fraud behind the 2008 Wall Street collapse, despite inking multibillion-dollar settlement after multibillion-dollar settlement with major firms over misconduct ranging from foreclosure fraud to rigging energy markets to tax evasion. In some cases, big banks even pleaded guilty to felonies, but Obama’s Justice Department allowed actual human bankers to ride into the sunset. Early in his presidency, Obama vowed to spend up to $100 billion to help struggling families avert foreclosure. Instead, the administration converted the relief plan into a slush fund for big banks, as top traders at bailed-out firms were allowed to collect six-figure bonuses on the taxpayers’ dime.

Nothing forced Obama to govern this way. Had he truly believed that prosecuting bankers for obvious criminal fraud would cause an economic collapse, Obama would, presumably, have tried to radically reshape the financial sector. He did not. His administration’s finance-friendly policies damaged the economic recovery and generated a new cohort of Trump voters. As Nate Cohn of The New York Times has demonstrated, nearly one-fourth of Obama’s white working-class supporters in 2012 flipped for Trump in 2016. Racism and misogyny were surely part of Trump’s appeal, but not all two-time Obama voters turned to Trump out of bigotry alone.

It’s easier for Democrats to denounce Trump supporters as morally unworthy individuals than to consider whether governing failures in the Obama era contributed to Trump’s popularity. In the final years of his presidency, Obama made clear that he wanted to be remembered as a great Democratic reformer — a leader who expanded access to health care and embodied the humane, egalitarian side of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Lyndon B. Johnson. But the disconnect between this progressive vision and his Wall Street record is not trivial. The Obama foreclosure plan hurt families. Refusing to punish financial crime has encouraged more of it. Workers are still digging out from the economic wreckage caused by too-big-to-fail banks in 2008, and those banks are bigger today than they were during the meltdown. Wealth accrues to a tiny population of bank executives and shareholders instead of flowing to households. Society is more unequal, and the prospects for progress depend on a financial sector fraught with unnecessary systemic risk.

This risk is not confined to the Trump presidency. Obama once called economic inequality “the defining challenge of our time,” but Democratic leaders have been steadfastly aligning their own personal fortunes with the very elites the system is rigged to favor. Throughout her 2016 presidential campaign, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was dogged by the millions of dollars in speaking fees she courted from major financial institutions after leaving the State Department. Her primary opponent, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), mocked a Clinton speech to Goldman Sachs, saying it must have been a “world-shattering” talk “probably written in Shakespearean prose.” She never had a good answer to questions about these talks during debates, and eventually she resorted to invoking the twisted logic of the Supreme Court’s infamous Citizens United decision in an effort to deflect accusations of corruption.

Clinton and her husband were worth over $100 million at the time. But a few million dollars between elites is not considered that big a deal in the Washington social scene. The money is an instrument of influence, rather than wealth ― a way of maintaining status, of exercising informal, unofficial, but very real power. It is a relationship incompatible with small-d democratic principles.

Sanders was not able to derail Clinton’s primary campaign with this critique. And die-hard Democrats will doubtless find ways to excuse or overlook Obama’s decision to follow in Clinton’s buckraking footsteps. Professional Democrats have admired Obama for many reasons despite his financial policy failures, and a few hundred grand will not make them reconsider this judgment. But the Goldman Sachs issue was a serious problem for Clinton during the general election, feeding right-wing narratives that she and her husband were fundamentally corrupt (not to be confused with the fairy tales about her killing Vince Foster and four Americans in Benghazi).

Obama isn’t running for office again, but his sellout sends even uglier signals to the electorate. Clinton had very limited policy power over the financial sector during her time at the State Department. Obama, on the other hand, had plenty. Voters could be forgiven for seeing a president cash out to Wall Street at the end of his term and concluding that maybe he wasn’t immune to those considerations when he was making policy in office.

“Regardless of venue or sponsor, President Obama will be true to his values, his vision, and his record,” Obama spokesman Eric Schultz told HuffPost in a written statement. “He recently accepted an invitation to speak at a health care conference in September, because, as a president who successfully passed health insurance reform, it’s an issue of great importance to him. With regard to this or any speech involving Wall Street sponsors, I’d just point out that in 2008, Barack Obama raised more money from Wall Street than any candidate in history ― and still went on to successfully pass and implement the toughest reforms on Wall Street since FDR.”

It is impossible to know what the 2010 Wall Street reform law would have looked like had Obama not received loads of campaign money from the financial sector. Maybe he would have broken up the banks. Maybe he would have reinstated Glass-Steagall. Campaign finance regulations — which the vast majority of Democratic voters support — would be unnecessary if political leaders were not influenced by campaign contributions. 

What’s most baffling about Obama’s $400,000 payday is the fact that he doesn’t need the money. He and his wife, former first lady Michelle Obama, reportedly received $65 million from Penguin Random House for their memoirs. He is an excellent writer who has already written two best-selling books, and he’ll receive a handsome $200,000 pension from the federal government every year for the rest of his life. Several generations of Obamas will be financially secure. His legacy is not nearly as safe.

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Criminal Charges For Georgia Police Officers In Beating Video

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Two Georgia police offers involved in an ugly incident caught on video earlier this month are being criminally charged. 

The Gwinnett County Police Department said in a news release Wednesday that Michael Bongiovanni, 42, and Robert McDonald, 25, have each been charged with violating their oath of office, a felony, and with misdemeanor battery. 

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that under Georgia law the felony charge carries a sentence of no less than one year in prison if convicted.

Both officers were also fired after the April 12 incident. 

Footage shared on Facebook by Black Lives Matter of Greater Atlanta shows 21-year-old Demetrius Hollins, who is handcuffed and on the ground, being pushed into the street by Bongiovanni. 

Hollins is on his stomach and showing no signs of resisting when a second officer, identified as McDonald, runs to the scene and appears to stomp on Hollins’ head. 

A second video appears to show Bongiovanni punch Hollins in the head as he steps out of his car with his hands up. 

“I don’t think I’ve ever seen a situation where both officers appeared to act without justification,” District Attorney Danny Porter told Atlanta ABC station WSB-TV.

Porter told the station more charges could follow. 

Attorney Mike Puglise, who is representing Bongiovanni, told Atlanta NPR station WABE that his client maintains his innocence and plans to vigorously defend himself.

Police say Hollins had been stopped for turning without signaling and driving without a license plate, though Hollins says the license was in the rear window. He was charged with obstruction and possession of less than 1 ounce of marijuana, both misdemeanors, and four traffic violations, including driving with a suspended license, according to the Gwinnett County Sheriff’s Office.

Jail records indicate that neither officer had turned himself in as of late Wednesday, but they had been given until the end of Thursday to do so. 

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Here’s Why National Adopt A Shelter Pet Day Should Be Celebrated

April 30th is National Adopt A Shelter Pet Day, making this a perfect time to expand your family by four furry paws! According to the ASPCA, shelter adoption rates have been steadily rising since 2011, which is great news for animals and humans alike. From more shelters embracing a streamlined open adoption process to foster programs and coverage of basic vet needs, adoption is easier than ever.

We salute animal lovers who are doing their part to move pets out of shelters and into happy forever homes. Not only does adopting save an animal’s life, but it also improves your own health and happiness in myriad ways. We’ve partnered with PEDIGREE® to celebrate the champions of shelter dog adoption, and we hope you’ll join us! Share your shelter dog adoption story using the hashtag #WhyIAdopt on Twitter and Instagram, tag @huffpostpartnerstudio and we’ll feature the best photos and posts right here in a gallery sure to inspire others to adopt.

Adopting a dog is a great way to spread the love and build a lifelong bond with your pet. At PEDIGREE® we believe that adopting a dog in need helps us just as much as it helps them—and that healthy, nutritious food can help keep that special bond strong for the long run.

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European Union Pleads For Arkansas To Stop Execution

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WASHINGTON — The European Union has called for Arkansas to cancel its scheduled execution Thursday of 38-year-old Kenneth Williams.

In a letter Wednesday to Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson (R), EU Ambassador to the United States David O’Sullivan wrote that the union “wishes to make an urgent humanitarian appeal” on Williams’ behalf.

In 1999, Williams, who was already serving a life sentence for kidnapping and murder, escaped from prison and killed a 57-year-old farmer, Cecil Boren, according to USA Today. He then fled to Missouri, where he killed another person in a traffic accident. Williams was sentenced to death in August 2000. 

“It is my understanding that evidence was introduced at trial to show that Mr. Williams was intellectually disabled,” O’Sullivan wrote. “While at the time there was no categorical exclusion for the execution of the intellectually disabled, this is now the case. I also understand that three doctors have submitted reports to the courts this week finding that Mr. Williams meets the definition of intellectual disability. I believe this evidence should be heard and that Mr. Williams should not be executed.” 

Williams is one of eight inmates that Arkansas planned to execute this month before its supply of a lethal injection drug expired. Last week the state executed Ledell Lee. On Monday, it carried out a double execution — the nation’s first since 2000, putting to death Jack Jones and Marcel Williams. Four inmates have been granted a stay of execution. 

In his letter, O’Sullivan said the state’s string of executions had “regrettably put an end to the de facto moratorium” on capital punishment in Arkansas since it executed a man in 2005. And he called the pace with which Arkansas is carrying out these executions “unprecedented.”

“The European Union is opposed to the use of capital punishment under all circumstances and accordingly aims at its universal abolition, seeking a global moratorium on the death penalty as a first step,” O’Sullivan wrote. “We believe that the elimination of the death penalty is fundamental to the protection of human dignity, and to the progressive development of human rights on a global scale.”  

He added that while the EU recognizes the “serious nature” of Kenneth Williams’ crimes and offers its “sincere sympathies” to the victims’ families and friends, it “does not believe that their loss will be mitigated by the death of Mr. Williams.”

In an essay published earlier this month by The Marshall Project, Williams addressed his looming death. 

“God has transformed me, and even the worst of us can be reformed and renewed. Revealing these truths meant more to me then being granted clemency. I’m still going to eventually die someday, but to stand up for God in front of man, that’s my victory. To the families of my victims, to whom I have brought pain, great loss, and suffering, as shallow as ‘I am sorry for robbing you of your loved one’ can sound, I would rather say it, and mean it, than not say it at all.”

The state of Arkansas is facing two federal lawsuits over this month’s parade of executions. On Wednesday, the Arkansas Supreme Court denied all requests for stays of execution for Williams, KARK 4 News in Little Rock reported. He is scheduled to be put to death at 7 p.m. CDT Thursday.

Here’s the letter from Ambassador O’Sullivan:

 

 

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'The Simpsons' Puts A Deeply Dark Twist On Trump's 1st 100 Days

The Simpsons are here to remind you that things are pretty grim over at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. 

Ahead of President Donald Trump’s first 100 days in office, the show that basically predicted Trump’s victory 16 years before he won released its deeply dark take on the past several months.

In “The Simpsons” version, the White House seems more like a haunted mansion, and poor Marge has run out of pills to cope with watching news of it all. But as one might imagine, Trump and his daughter Ivanka are doing A-OK.

Check out the clip in the video above. It’s guaranteed weeping laughs.

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Google becomes first foreign internet company to go live in Cuba

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NBA's Jeremy Lin Gets Real About 'Yellow Fever' And Asian Masculinity

Jeremy Lin, who ignited “Linsanity” on the court, may be one of today’s most recognized names in professional basketball, but it wasn’t always easy for the 28-year-old athlete.

Like many Asian-American men, stereotypes have set him back in both his NBA career and in dating.

When asked by fitness vlogger Kevin Kreider during a recent Q&A session if Lin had ever experienced negative stereotyping as an Asian man, the Brooklyn Nets point guard got surprisingly real about his own masculinity.

“Asian-American masculinity is one of the issues that I feel like should be talked about way more,” Lin said, as seen at 1:55 in the video above. “I feel like it’s very behind the eight ball.”

Lin then brought up the 2010 NBA draft, when John Wall, currently with the Washington Wizards, became the No. 1 draft pick while Lin was left undrafted.

“Me and John Wall were the fastest people in the draft, but he was ‘athletic’ and I was ‘deceptively athletic,’” Lin said. “I’ve been deceptively ‘whatever’ my whole life.”

Lin’s experience in the 2010 draft was used as an example in “The Undoing Project,” Michael Lewis’ book about how the mind processes stereotypes.

According to the book, the Houston Rockets were set to draft Lin, who would later measure as one of the fastest NBA players, but General Manager Daryl Morey backed out at the last minute because of racial bias. 

Lin “was incredibly athletic,” Morey is quoted as saying in “The Undoing Project.” “But the reality is that every fucking person, including me, thought he was unathletic. And I can’t think of any reason for it other than he was Asian.” 

When they said ‘yellow fever’ growing up, it wasn’t all these white girls going for Asian guys.
Jeremy Lin

Lin’s “deceptively athletic” identity also hurt him off the court, in the dating realm. During the recent Q&A, Lin discussed the double-edged sword of “yellow fever,” a controversial term used to describe a non-Asian person’s attraction to a person who is Asian.

“A lot of times we have Asian girls go for non-Asian guys, but you don’t see a lot of the opposite. You don’t see a lot of non-Asian girls go for Asian guys,” Lin said. “When they said ‘yellow fever’ growing up, it wasn’t all these white girls going for Asian guys. It was the Asian girls going for the white guys.”

“So I feel like it is definitely different,” Lin added. “Asian-American males are viewed differently.”

Lin’s views on dating as an Asian man were proved true in a study done by dating site OKCupid. Data collected from the app in 2014 revealed that Asian men had more difficulty locking down dates than any other racial groups, while Asian women were more successful than any other racial group. 

Despite the stereotyping Lin first encountered in the NBA and the setbacks he’s seen in dating, he believes the tide is turning for Asian men.

“I just think we need to keep being ourselves, and I think the world will come around and appreciate us Asians,” Lin told Kreider. “I think the time will come, but kill them with kindness for the time being.”

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