
To quote Peter Navarro, like Bannon now a former Trump official under indictment, “nepotism and excrement roll downhill”. Haberman catches Kushner gleefully asking a White House visitor: “Did you see I cut Bannon’s balls off?” For his part, Kushner is shown trashing Steve Bannon, the far-right ideologue who was campaign chair and chief White House strategist but was forced out within months.

In Haberman’s telling, he is the kid who was born on third base and mistakes his good fortune with hitting a triple. The reader, however, should not weep for Jared. According to Haberman, at one 2020 campaign strategy meeting Trump implied Kushner might be brutally attacked, even raped, if he ever went camping: “Can you imagine Jared and his skinny ass camping? It’d be like something out of Deliverance.” The abuse gets absurd – even a kind of baroque. If only Ivanka had not converted to Judaism.

If only he looked like Tom Brady and spoke in a deeper register. Haberman also describes Trump repeatedly dumping on his son-in-law, Jared Kushner. Haberman reports how, after the 2016 election, Melania Trump won a renegotiated pre-nuptial agreement.
#Applause new york tv
Trumpworld presents a reptilian tableau – reality TV does Lord of the Flies.įor just one example, Mark Meadows, Trump’s last White House chief of staff, is depicted as erratic and detestable. Confidence Man informs and entertains but is simultaneously absolutely not funny. Head of the Concordia Residence where Msiska is a resident, Noel Bekkers, congratulated him on his achievement and praised him for his commitment to his PhD studies and passion for accepting challenging assignments as an academic and entrepreneur.īekkers credited various staff members for their efforts to enable Msiska and Terblanche to attend Camp 2030, especially Michelle Pietersen, programme manager at the division of social impact, for making last-minute arrangements.Haberman gives Trump and those close to him plenty of voice – and rope. I also learnt about the different issues that different people face regarding gender-based discrimination in the workplace, women’s health rights, trans-healthcare issues and more,” she said. “It was so interesting learning about other cultures and countries on such a scale, and hearing what people are doing within their communities and the world. Overwhelmed by her amazing experience at Camp 2030 and her group that focused on finding solutions for gender-based violence and gender inequality, Terblanche said it was interesting to learn about other cultures. I will now be actively involved with stakeholders in implementing Maji,” he said, adding he needed more support as implementation would require resources. “The digital platform will create jobs because community members will be employed for data collection about water and systems. He said the innovation could also address the challenge of unemployment. However, he was willing to reveal that the Maji app will operate on smartphones, computers and even through text messages if there is no internet. Msiska did not disclose more details about how Maji works as the patent has not been registered yet. “What captivates me even more, is looking at how people and institutions are excited about the innovation and support its implementation,” he said. The team and Unite 2030 are backing him to get the innovation implemented.

Msiska’s team members were Ashley Wunsch and Muskaan Waraich from Canada, Felipe Contreras from Mexico, and Inbar Erez from Israel. The process will start with its first implementation in the capital of Malawi, Lilongwe. “I thank the Lord even more because this is the kind of success that is going to transform the lives of millions of people who live in despair and suffering,” he said. This is the news that I worked very hard for and hoped for,” said Msiska from SU's faculty of engineering. “I’m overwhelmed that my innovation was selected by the judges as a winning solution.

The gathering was attended by more than 250 young leaders from 61 countries, pitching solutions for sustainable development. A digital application by a PhD student at Stellenbosch University (SU) that provides information about water quality in water supply systems has taken third place at an international gathering in New York seeking solutions to global challenges.Įngineering student and lecturer Stanley Chindikani Msiska said he was overwhelmed that the judges had selected his innovation at Camp 2030, a project of Unite 2030, a non-profitable global youth community striving to achieve the UN's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by the year 2030.
