KOMMONSENTSJANE – Lack of Democratic Leadership Has Been the Main Problem – No One In Charge.

02/01/2025

The left has been too busy trying to get Trump and haven’t done their jobs is/was the problem.


For the last decade, the radical left has used every tool in their belt to demonize Donald Trump. It is time for the Democrats who voted for President Trump to remind their reps that they need to work with the new administration to help clean the swamp since they voted for him to make these changes. The Democratic reps still haven’t realized that and are holding up the train to put the new leaders in place.

Prominent leftists have called Donald Trump and his supporters every name in the book, and on a plethora of platforms. 

And now the L.A. Times’ owner is speaking out after outraging his staff with this common sense move.

This democratic move has leftists pulling their hair out 

The vast majority of the mainstream media loathes Donald Trump and the millions of people who support him.

For years, prominent publications, network news channels, and cable news channels have spewed venom at Donald Trump, calling him and his supporters a myriad of vicious insults. 

However, voters largely rejected and ignored this vitriol, handing Donald Trump a decisive victory in the Electoral College and the popular vote. 

Political experts have attributed Trump’s victory to major shifts in how Americans consume media, with many Americans turning to their preferred podcasts and social media sources for the news. 

This shift began years ago, and top media platforms and media moguls have started to change their game. 

Stop trying to put the blame on specific areas. We haven’t had any leadership since before and after President Trump. All of us know that.

It is time to fix the problem, not place blame.

ttps://www.msn.com/en-us/travel/news/the-airport-said-don-t-do-it-and-they-did-it/ar-AA1yc33X?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531&cvid=df27c733ceed4c188afa0116e48edb24&ei=13

It’s no secret in Washington — in the halls of Congress and various agencies that call the city home — that D.C.’s airspace is “incredibly congested.”

That’s what former House Transportation and Infrastructure Chair Peter DeFazio said after a U.S. Army helicopter collided with a PSA Airlines passenger plane on Wednesday, killing all 67 passengers and crew members on board the two aircraft.NVIDIA's New Silent Partner Could be the Next Superstar

For years, the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority warned Congress that the region’s airports were at capacity, DeFazio said in an interview with POLITICO Magazine. But their pleas for restraint fell short among lawmakers, who voted to add more flights to an airport already struggling with its heavy load and a shortage of air traffic controllers caused by previous government shutdowns and pandemic-era hits to its workforce.

“Every senator in particular wants a nonstop flight to and from wherever they live,” said DeFazio, an Oregon Democrat. He noted that a reauthorization of the Federal Aviation Administration passed last year added even more flights to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. “The airport said, ‘Don’t do it.’ And they did it. So they added to what DCA said is already an overly congested and over-capacity airport.”7 Ways to Retire Comfortably With $1M

DeFazio spent 36 years in the House, serving on the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee the whole time, and he played a lead role in the congressional investigation of two Boeing 737 Max crashes that killed over 300 people. So, I asked him what he thought went wrong and where the investigation should start.

(If he was in that position for 36 years, why is he complaining about the past not being changed. Was he part of the problem?)

Where were you and what was your first thought when you heard about the crash Wednesday night?

I was online on my computer at home in Oregon. It came up as a news flash. It brought back memories of the last time we had a fatal crash at Reagan, which was when a plane clipped the 14th Street Bridge and went in through the ice and a number of people died. So it’s a horrible tragedy that happened again.

POLITICO

Trump administration reacts to deadly plane crash near DCA

There has been a lot of concern in the industry over a spike in near-collisions, but most of that focus has been on collisions on the ground. Has the danger of midair collisions been under-appreciated?

This is an incredibly congested airspace. First off, if the military wants to run training missions, they could run them between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m., when Washington National has noise reductions in place and traffic is dramatically reduced. I don’t see any reason to be running training missions during peak hours. I believe that there is a lot of unnecessary military transport in that corridor. When I’m in D.C., I stay on my [house] boat, and I see all of the many, many, many helicopter flights following that same flight path. They come right down over the marina. And it’s one thing, when there’s an urgent need or a security issue, to move people by military helicopter to the White House or from one base to another in the D.C. area. It’s another to do it for convenience for generals and “very important people” who don’t want to sit in traffic. We should look at reducing the amount of traffic to flights that are necessary, not just convenient. And for training, they should be doing that in the hours when there are way fewer flights coming into National Airport.

Secondly, it’s unbelievable that the president of the United States and three of his minions — Secretary [Sean] Duffy, Secretary [Pete] Hegseth, and Vice President [JD] Vance — immediately blamed DEI. I mean, let’s be real here. All air traffic controllers go through the same training. They have to pass the same unbelievably rigorous test. It’s a very, very stressful job. They are overworked. We do not have enough fully trained air traffic controllers. That’s the fault of both Congress and the former president. We’ve had Congress chronically underfunding the number of air traffic controllers that we need, in addition to inspection personnel.

As far as we can read in the press, the air traffic controller gave proper instructions. He or another air traffic controller communicated with the helicopter. The helicopter did not respond. We don’t know why the helicopter didn’t respond, and that was just before the impact. So, this is really the beginning of an investigation of a very, very tragic accident. It was not due to DEI.

(You cannot dismiss DEI. It has to be in the mix when investigating. How often does the crew in the control tower have refresher courses to be sure they still know the rules of the road travelled by planes. People do sometimes get sloppy after years doing the same thing.)

Your investigation into the Boeing crashes a few years ago found serious flaws and lapses. If you were going to investigate this crash, where would you start?

There is no black box, to the best of my knowledge, on a Black Hawk helicopter, so we won’t know what was going on there. So we’ll look at the recordings and the times of the communications by air traffic control, with both the helicopter and the plane, looking at what other planes were in the air at the same time. There was a specific instruction to go behind the passenger as it was approaching the airport. Was there another plane approaching another runway that the helicopter could have seen, and, therefore, falsely thought they should go behind that? We have to go back and look at what was in the air at that moment, and get all the details and work back from there.

Secondly, certainly we’ll be looking at the air traffic controller, but the initial press accounts are that the air traffic controller acted properly.

(Actions was required at that point – not a passive answer which was given.)

But we do have long term, ongoing problems with overworked air traffic controllers, because the whole agency is understaffed. You have to be a very qualified controller to be working at DCA. You have to have long term experience. Did that person or those persons have the proper experience, etc? So, everything needs to be looked at.

Don’t planes have a collision warning system that will tell them if something’s coming into their flight path? Are there similar systems on military aircraft like the Black Hawk?

I believe they would both have ADS-B [Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast], but ADS-B is generally suppressed at a very low altitude because you’re in your final approach, and you can get false signals when you’re that close to the ground, or when you have planes coming in on adjoining runways which have proper separation. So, ADS-B works well at a higher altitude, but in a very low final approach, it probably was suppressed or didn’t trigger because of the situation.

The other thing I would reflect on is the FAA is an agency that has been lacking leadership and in need of substantial reform. Michael Whitakeris the best FAA administrator we’ve had in years, and he was in the process of implementing reforms to streamline the agency [before he resigned in December] We’re not talking about air traffic control now, but we’re talking about the agency generally and everything else that the agency does. And, of course, Whitaker upset Elon Musk because the FAA fined him for firing off a rocket improperly.

They need a very highly qualified person leading the FAA, to make the case to Congress for the funding they need to add air traffic controllers, add inspectors, and make our aviation system safe. And I fear that those things won’t happen under this administration.

People have criticized President Donald Trump, especially your Democratic colleagues in Congress, for freezing the hiring of air traffic controllers after he returned to office this month. How big of an issue is that? 

Look, let’s go back to the first Trump administration. The unnecessary government shutdown [in 2019] shut down the Aviation Academy, and a number of people did not come back after the academy closed down. Then, of course, we had Covid, where the academy was closed for, I think, over a year.

‘The Airport Said Don’t Do It. And They Did It.’© Francis Chung/POLITICO

So, we’ve had at least two major disruptions in the stream of acquiring new air traffic controllers. Plus, a number of air traffic controllers, after not being paid for a month under the Trump shutdown, left the agency. For them to freeze hiring at this point in time is idiotic. If these are people who are trained, coming out of the academy, or they’re people transferring with expertise from the military, there should not be a hiring freeze.

Congress has a special relationship to Reagan National. Our headline called it “Congress’ Airport.” Why is that?

It’s owned by the federal government. And every senator in particular wants a nonstop flight to and from wherever they live. As you saw, [Kansas Sen.] Jerry Moran said this was a flight which he had encouraged or otherwise supported. The last FAA bill, [Texas Sen.] Ted Cruz said he needed a direct flight to his hometown, so he engaged in a lengthy battle.

The airport authority said, “We are over capacity. We cannot accommodate more flights, and we think this is going to be disruptive.” Unfortunately, Cruz ultimately won, and Congress mandated adding more flights into National Airport, so that more senators can have direct flights. I was chairman of the committee, and I always had to connect somewhere. I didn’t ask for a direct flight. So, that’s a problem. That is a problem, the political influence over the airport, as most recently exhibited in the last FAA bill. So, I think we might need to revisit the amount of traffic.

You mentioned how a lot of members of Congress have advocated for direct flights.

The Lords of Congress. That would be the senators. Although there have been a few instances of House members in powerful positions in the past getting some direct flights.

So you think Congress bears part of the blame for increasing congestion around the airport?

Well, with the last FAA bill, they certainly do. The airport said, “Don’t do it.” And they did it. They added to what DCA said is already an overly congested and over-capacity airport.

****

Everyone can’t have convenience for convenience’s sake. Maybe you need another airport.

kommonsentsjane

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KOMMONSENTSJANE – Democrat Senators Need to Woman/Man-Up and Do Their Jobs.

02/01/2025

These people might need a refresher course on how to conduct interviews. It is insulting to the viewers on TV watching the children games they are playing. You Senators are supposed to be intelligent/thinkers. Show us your wares. You lost the election because of the wares you display.

ttps://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/completely-unhinged-victor-davis-hanson-says-dems-fury-against-trump-nominees-during-hearings-is-political-misstep/ar-AA1ycESl?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531&cvid=314686a5219c4c6e85e1e941142e6421&ei=48

Time for the Democrat Senators who are also involved in interviewing the new Republicans who have been selected for the replacement Democrat jobs in the government need to WOMAN/MAN-UP. Quit making it personal. This is business you are conducting.

Victor Davis Hanson Says Dems' Blowups In Trump Nominee Hearings Are Boomeranging On Them

Victor Davis Hanson Says Dems’ Blowups In Trump Nominee Hearings Are Boomeranging On Them© The Daily Caller

Hoover Institution Senior Fellow Victor Davis Hanson explained on Friday how Democratic senators’ attacks on President Donald Trump’s nominees during confirmation hearings are backfiring politically because of conservatives’ current ability to push their messages more effectively online.

Many Democratic senators have taken adversarial approaches to Trump’s cabinet nominees, including screaming at them, interrupting them and hurling accusations against them. Hanson, on “Victor Davis Hanson Show,” said that Trump’s nominees have all excelled at their hearings as they have come under fire from Democrats.

WATCH:

“The funny thing about all these nominees that some of the RINOs [Republicans in name only] in the party deprecated: Pete Hegseth, Pam Bondi, Kash Patel, man when they go before those people— Sean Duffy — they have all of the answers,” Hanson said. “They’re really impressive people and they go head-to-head. It’s kind of they have a wink and a nod, and I think their logic, I’m just suggesting this, I don’t have any confirmation, but their attitude — they go in very confident.”

“So, their attitude is basically, ‘I have 53 senator votes and you have none to stop me. You can’t stop me. Now you think you’re going to get [Republican senators Lisa] Murkowski and [Susan] Collins and maybe Mitch [McConnel]? I can still get confirmed,’” he continued. “‘So, I’m not going to kiss up to you in any way possible. In fact, the only thing I worry about is not getting 50 senators. And the only way I would not get 50 senators is to sell out Donald Trump, and I’m not going to do that. I’m not stupid, and I don’t want to anyway.’ And that gives them a lot of confidence.”

McConnell, Murkowski and Collins all voted against Hegseth’s confirmation to be secretary of defense, but Vice President J.D. Vance broke the tie to confirm him on Jan. 24. His confirmation followed a hearing that included Democratic Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine accusing him of infidelity and Democratic New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand lecturing him for eight minutes about women serving in the military.

“And then you get these people frustrated, like [Democratic Massachusetts Sen.] Elizabeth Warren. She’s come off as completely unhinged. And then they don’t understand the media that the left — polling right now — 37% — and I guess it was the latest Emerson poll, 37% said they approve of the Democratic Party,” Hanson added. “Do they understand how they drive that down when somebody like Elizabeth Warren just cuts off [Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) nominee Robert F. Kennedy Jr.] RFK, won’t let him answer a question, screams and yells.”

Hanson referenced how Warren pressed Kennedy to “commit” to not accepting compensation for any lawsuits against drug companies during his potential tenure at HHS and for four years after, which prompted a heated exchange. He asserted that immediately after the clash, “the right-wing blogosphere” noted that Warren and Independent Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders were the two senators who raised the most money in pharmaceutical contributions.

Senators on both sides of the aisle who critically questioned Kennedy at his Wednesday and Thursday hearings found their contributions from the healthcare industry and their personal investments in the pharmaceutical industry and companies that make highly processed food being highlighted on X, receiving millions of views.

The Democratic Party’s approval rating plunged to 31% among registered voters, according to Quinnipiac polling released Wednesday.

Sanders exploded at Kennedy during his Thursday confirmation hearing after the nominee accused him of corruption for accepting pharmaceutical industry donations. Hanson suggested Warren and Sanders are examples of “hypocrites that are defending big pharma against RFK,” saying “that doesn’t work” because of conservatives’ ability to push their agenda in part because of how billionaire Elon Musk has run social media platform X.

Hanson also said Democrats wrongly assumed attorney general nominee Pam Bondi was “just a blonde bimbo” and that they could “tear her apart.” He said that she instead “t[ore] them apart.” He similarly said they underestimated Hegseth.

“And then they see Pete Hegseth. And they go, ‘This guy is weird. He’s got the Jerusalem cross, you know, and he’s been married three times. And we’re just going to slice him up because I’m Senator Sanders and I’m Senator [Chuck] Schumer, I’m Senator Warren, I’m Senator Sheldon Whitehouse.’ And then he just destroys them,” Hanson said.

He also said Kennedy “destroyed” the Democratic senators while FBI Director nominee Kash Patel dealt with them “like carving a Christmas turkey.”

****

You would think these Senators would realize the voters voted against their party and tried to tell them – hey we don’t like the way you are handling our business. It is time for the Democrats to vote new Senators into office since these folks haven’t “grown up,” yet, and are still playing children games.

kommonsentsjane

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KOMMONSENTSJANE – MSNBC Willie/Willie Bang Bang Democrat Crisis Moment. Slam Bam – Thank You Ma’am.

01/31/2025

It looks like MSNBC doesn’t want – just the facts – which is what counts

The idiom “wham bam, thank you, ma’am” is often used to describe something that was done quickly and efficiently but without paying much attention to detail or quality. Whether you think that’s good or bad depends on the situation!

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Please, folks, hold on to your horses and get your pacifier out and take a deep breath.

****

White House correspondent Jonathan Lemire didn’t mince any words on Friday morning as he called out Donald Trump for purportedly face-planting following what some have said is the first real crisis of his second term

From his perch as a co-host of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” Lemire expanded upon a column he wrote for The Atlantic where he, under the headline “The Day Trump Became Un-President,” wrote of the president’s press conference about the DC plane crash tragedy, “And just like in 2020, Trump used a national calamity to try to score political points and denigrate his foes. Fourteen hours after a midair collision between an American Airlines jet and a military helicopter outside Washington last night—the first crisis of the young administration, a moment to console a stunned and grieving nation—Trump repeatedly implied that the crash was the fault of his Democratic predecessors and of DEI policies.”

Prompted by co-host Willie Geist on Friday morning, Lemire cut right to the chase.

“In a moment that should have been to console a nation, to unify a nation, he did choose divisiveness yet again,” Lemire said of the press conference. “He acted like an observer as opposed to someone who actually had, not just the opportunity and the resources, but the responsibility to get the answers.”

“And he tried to score political points and it was also about shifting blame,” he continued before strongly asserting, “This did happen under his watch.”

“Yes only ten days into his administration, no one was going to say the president of the United States was at fault for what happened, but he couldn’t handle the idea that this is a crisis suddenly he has to deal with,” he accused. “So he tried to pass the buck to others and made these wild claims without evidence that it was –– whether it was President Obama, President Biden or these DEI policies to blame.”

****

Sir, you are assuming the situation. In that case you are making an a$$ out of you, me, and the media? Didn’t you learn anything from losing the election and making adjustments?

Just the facts count.

kommonsentsjane

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KOMMONSENTSJANE – Black Hawk crew involved in DC crash made up of ‘top pilots’ with thousands of hours of experience.

01/31/2025

24/7 Liv

The helicopter flight along the Potomac was a routine qualification flight.

ByLuis Martinez 

Thursday, January 30, 2025 10:18PM

The three soldiers of the Army UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter that collided with a jetliner on Wednesday night just off of Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport were all very experienced and not only had thousands of hours of flight time between them but were very familiar with the flight patterns above the Potomac River.

The Army has confirmed that all three soldiers were from Bravo Company, 12th Combat Aviation Battalion, based at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, about 20 miles south of Washington, D.C. The unit primarily transports senior U.S. military officials around the Washington area and beyond.

Recovery efforts for two of the soldiers in the Black Hawk in the frigid waters of the Potomac River continued Thursday, as did the search for the missing among the 64 aboard American Airlines Flight 5342. Also being sought are the plane’s data and cockpit voice recorder and the helicopter’s integrated data and voice recorder.

The helicopter flight along the Potomac was a routine nighttime qualification flight in which an instructor pilot tests a pilot’s skills at navigating the various routes through the Washington area that are key parts of his or her mission.

“It was a very experienced group,” said Jonathan Koziol, a retired Army chief warrant officer with more than 30 years experience in flying Army helicopters. Koziol has been attached to the Unified Command Post created at Reagan National Airport to coordinate efforts following the deadly collision.

Search and rescue efforts are seen around a wreckage site in the Potomac River from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, early Thursday morning, Jan. 30, 2025, in Arlington, Va.
Search and rescue efforts are seen around a wreckage site in the Potomac River from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Thursday morning, Jan. 30, 2025, in Arlington, Va.AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster

Koziol confirmed to reporters on a conference call that the male instructor pilot had more than 1,000 hours of flight time, the female pilot who was commanding the flight at the time had more than 500 hours of flight time, and the crew chief was also said to have hundreds of hours of flight time.

Koziol said that given the short duration of most helicopter flights, the number of hours they had flown showed how experienced they were.

As part of their annual qualifications, all Army aviators are tested on their skills during daylight and nighttime, as well as instrument flying.

DC plane crash victims: What we know about those on AA Flight 5342, Army Black Hawk

From left to right: Spencer Lane, Vadim Naumov, Evgenia Shishkova and Jinna Han.
From left to right: Spencer Lane, Vadim Naumov, Evgenia Shishkova and Jinna Han.The Skating Club of Boston

An Army flight safety investigative team from the Army’s Combat Readiness Center at Fort Novosel in Alabama has arrived in Washington to support the National Transportation Safety Board’s investigation.

The evaluated pilot was in command of the flight, but if an emergency was to occur, the instructor would have taken control of the helicopter.

“Both pilots had flown this specific route before at night — this wasn’t something new to either one of them,” he said. “These are our top pilots doing this National Capital Region.”

The airspace around the nation’s capital is one of the busiest in the nation, but Koziol described the helicopter flight corridor above the Potomac as “a relatively easy corridor to fly because you’re flying down the center of the river, and it’s very easily identifiable, especially at night” because there aren’t a lot of lights.

Night vision goggles are available for Army aviators during nighttime missions, but they are not always necessary, said Koziol, who noted that he did not know if the pilots were wearing the goggles during Wednesday night’s flight.

“They are helpful at night, obviously, and in an urban environment, they’re still useful,” but he discounted the notion that the Washington’s bright lights may have affected the pilots, saying they were flying over the Potomac River, where “there are no lights, so that wouldn’t impact them.”

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“They would have the peripheral vision of the lights on both sides of the shore, which actually helps them align and know which direction they’re going,” he added. “And it would help them see other aircraft.”

Furthermore, Army aviators are required to test their ability to fly “night unaided” without night vision goggles.

Koziol said the pilots’ situational awareness would have been aided by a moving tracking screen in the cockpit pinpointing their exact location, along with visual aids within their lines of sight.

“You have the lights on either side of you and, obviously, the rotating beacon on Reagan National to point out the airfield and all the traffic on it for them to know exactly where they’re at,” he said.

Army statistics show that last year saw the biggest spike in aviation mishaps in more than a decade following years of a downward trend.

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There were 15 Class A mishaps in the Army in fiscal year 2024, the highest number since fiscal year 2014, when there were 16 mishaps. Last year’s increase came after a period of time when the number of mishaps had trended downward. For example, there were seven mishaps in fiscal year 2021, four in fiscal year 2022, nine in fiscal year 2023 and then the 15 in fiscal year 2024.

Last April, the Army held what’s called a “stand-up” where it reinforced safety training but continued flight operations — this followed a series of Apache helicopter incidents the previous month.

There had previously been a stand-down of Army aviation that followed the March 2023 collision of two Black Hawk helicopters at Fort Campbell that killed nine soldiers.

kommonsentsjane

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