
(Thanks P)

(Thanks P)
Tesla recently started adding all of the hardware required for fully autonomous driving to their new cars. They have not delivered the software for this yet, but it will probably be available within a couple of years, regulations permitting. Other car makers won’t be far behind.
We’ve already noted what self driving cars will do to the Uber and Lyft drivers. Who else will be affected?
Insurance companies will clean up. Claims expenses will go down for property damage, medical costs and life insurance payouts but premiums won’t. In fact, the insurance companies will probably charge higher premiums for self driving cars because they are ‘risky’ and ‘unproven’. After a couple of years of record profits in the insurance industry, the state legislatures will get involved and maybe some of us will get a break on our rates. But don’t count on it.
Donald Trump is justifiably proud of securing his win on a very low budget. He got top billing in the news for much of the campaign season due to his masterful manipulation of the mainstream media. As a consequence, he did not have to spend much money to get his message out.
A lot of the money that the Trump campaign spent was to pay for services provided by the Trump empire: the campaign paid him for the use of his plane, for renting office space in his buildings, etc.
In the last week before the election Trump announced that he would chip in $10 million of his personal money to his campaign, but it is not clear whether he ever did that and whether it was a contribution or a loan.
Someday, someone will run the numbers, but there is a good chance that after the loans are paid back and the amount earned by Trump’s companies is added up, it will turn out that Trump ended up earning more money from the campaign than he personally spent on it.

The election results bring to mind the famous Canadian editorial cartoon published just after the separatist party surprised everyone and won elections in Quebec in the 1970s. The party leader, cigarette in hand, spoke directly to the panicked electorate, while his vanquished rival looked on, completely stunned.
As predicted, Donald Trump is already moving to the courts to challenge the outcome of the 2016 presidential election. However, there are still a few things that are not certain:
WikiLeaks has played an important role in the US presidential campaign, timing releases of hacked emails embarrassing to Hillary Clinton with great effect.
Julian Assange, who runs WikiLeaks, has an intense personal dislike of Clinton and is directing the effort from the Ecuadorian embassy in London, where he has been holed up for four years. The blond-haired Assange was accused of sexual assault in Sweden and has been hiding out in the embassy to avoid facing charges by the Swedish authorities.
Interestingly, WikiLeaks has not published any hacked mails regarding Donald Trump. Is this simply a case of two blond-haired sexual assaulters sticking together?
If Donald Trump wins the election next week, the two words that will sum up his presidency will be “executive power”. Trump may ask Congress for approval for what he wants to do, but my guess is that he will ask for the approval after he has already done it using his executive powers.
In his career, Trump has always been the sole decision maker (at least since his Daddy stopped being involved). His campaign for the presidency has been more of the same – he says what he feels like saying when he feels like saying it. It does not matter if he does not agree with his vice presidential running mate or his campaign staff.
There is no reason to expect he will suddenly become a different kind of manager once he becomes president. He will push the limits of executive power like the country has not seen before. Before a year goes by, there will be a case in front of the Supreme Court challenging his use of these powers.
Even if the Republicans maintain control of the House and the Senate, Trump will not find it easy to get his way. Congress is going to be upset with his use of executive power, and Paul Ryan, unlike Ted Cruz, may just put principal before politics and push back on Trump’s interpretation of what the Constitution lets him do. Of course, Paul Ryan might not keep his job, but that is another story.
In 2007 there were a number of Democrats gearing up to succeed George W. Bush in the White House. The overwhelming front runner was a senator from New York named Hillary Clinton. But her campaign team got overconfident and by June of 2008 another senator, this time from Illinois, had beat her in the primaries. His name was Barack Obama.
The past few days have brought reports of Clinton’s team building a transition team and shifting their focus from the presidential election to ‘down ballot’ contests like senators and representatives. Meanwhile her opponent has doubled down on the presidential contest.
Clinton would be well advised to not make the same mistake twice. Even though the polls are not looking good for Donald Trump, nothing can be taken for a given in this election cycle. The bad polls might actually help Trump as this news tends to subdue his more inflammatory remarks. A less volatile Trump has proven to be more attractive to voters.
Meanwhile, Clinton needs to keep the pedal to the metal and herself and her campaign on message for another 12 days, otherwise she could again find herself snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.
Donald Trump must be perplexed. The techniques that made him a successful reality TV star and won him the Republican nomination are not working anymore. He doubles down on them and it makes things worse, not better.
Trump got where he is by being brash and outspoken, saying whatever he felt, even when it was politically incorrect. Even voters that didn’t support him appreciated his bluntness. Unfortunately for him, he has conditioned people – and the press – to tune out anything he says that is not outrageous.
So when he makes a serious speech about what he will do in the first 100 days of his administration, all people hear is an aside about suing his female accusers. He shouts out that the “election is rigged” and then notes that Barack Obama also spoke about election fraud in 2008, but all anyone hears is the first part.
The unfortunate truth for Donald Trump is that he has become an Alec Baldwin caricature of himself. The outlandish things he says to get his points across are all we pay attention to anymore – the points themselves fall by the wayside. He has no one to blame but himself for this, but he probably does not understand this, and even if he did it would not make him feel any better about it nor would he accept responsibility.
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