Anonymous ID: a2cdd9 Dec. 14, 2024, 12:15 p.m. No.22165078   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22164760

Do a fair trade, All middle east christians to America, All muslims deported back to their jihadi countries. Classify Islam as a death cult and political belief, not a religion.

Anonymous ID: a2cdd9 Dec. 14, 2024, 12:29 p.m. No.22165136   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22165089

>once you hold the title of Commander and Chief, you are always warranted a salute

 

Agree, warranted does not mean required. DJT has earned their respect

Anonymous ID: a2cdd9 Dec. 14, 2024, 12:56 p.m. No.22165215   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22164952

Nunes official head of POTUS Kitchen Cabinet

 

Jackson's Cronies Wielded the Real Power

The real power in Jackson's administration rested with a circle of friends and political cronies who often did not hold official office.

 

Jackson was always a controversial figure, thanks largely to his violent past and mercurial temperament. And opposition newspapers, implying there was something nefarious about the president receiving much unofficial advice, came up with the play on words, kitchen cabinet, to describe the informal group. Jackson's official cabinet was sometimes called the parlor cabinet.

 

The Kitchen Cabinet included newspaper editors, political supporters, and old friends of Jackson's. They tended to support him in such efforts as the Bank War, and the implementation of the Spoils System.

 

Jackson's informal group of advisers became more powerful as Jackson became estranged from people within his own administration. His own vice president, John C. Calhoun, for example, rebelled against Jackson's policies, resigned, and began to instigate what became the Nullification Crisis.

 

The Term Endured

In later presidential administrations, the term kitchen cabinet took on a less derisive meaning and simply came to be used to denote a president's informal advisers. For example, when Abraham Lincoln was serving as president, he was known to correspond with newspaper editors Horace Greeley (of the New York Tribune), James Gordon Bennett (of the New York Herald), and Henry J. Raymond (of the New York Times). Given the complexity of issues Lincoln was dealing with, the advice (and political support) of prominent editors was both welcome and extremely helpful.

 

In the 20th century, a good example of a kitchen cabinet would be the circle of advisers President John F. Kennedy would call upon. Kennedy respected intellectuals and former government officials such as George Kennan, one of the architects of the Cold War. And he would reach out to historians and scholars for informal advice on pressing issues of foreign affairs as well as domestic policy.

 

In modern usage, the kitchen cabinet has generally lost the suggestion of impropriety. Modern presidents are generally expected to rely on a wide range of individuals for advice, and the idea that "unofficial" persons would be advising the president is not seen as improper, as it had been in Jackson's time.

 

https://www.thoughtco.com/kitchen-cabinet-1773329