US US Politics General 2 - Discussion of President Trump and other politicians

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Should be a wild four years.

Helpful links for those who need them:

Current members of the House of Representatives
https://www.house.gov/representatives

Current members of the Senate
https://www.senate.gov/senators/

Current members of the US Supreme Court
https://www.supremecourt.gov/about/biographies.aspx

Members of the Trump Administration
https://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/
 
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If they got rid of Blackrock and other buying up single family homes then rent would go down.
I remember reading that BlackRock only owns 60k homes in America, which is like less than 1 percent of homes. I could be wrong, though, but the main problem is illegal immigration and the federal reserve printing money.
You sound like someone trying to set up a post history so they're not as easy to mark as a GlowNigger. But you're not like that. Are you? You're not a fed right?

Are you?
I worked in the CIA DEI department, but Trump laid me off.
 
Trump established a new advisory council.

PRESIDENT’S COUNCIL OF ADVISORS ON SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY​

By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, and in order to establish an advisory council on science and technology, it is hereby ordered as follows:

Section 1. Purpose. The American story is one of boundless creativity and bold ambition, driven by an indomitable pioneering spirit that propels exploration and discovery. It is this spirit that illuminated the world with Edison’s lightbulb, carried the Wright brothers into the skies, and sent Armstrong to the moon. Today, a new frontier of scientific discovery lies before us, defined by transformative technologies such as artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and advanced biotechnology. Breakthroughs in these fields have the potential to reshape the global balance of power, spark entirely new industries, and revolutionize the way we live and work. As our global competitors race to exploit these technologies, it is a national security imperative for the United States to achieve and maintain unquestioned and unchallenged global technological dominance. To secure our future, we must harness the full power of American innovation by empowering entrepreneurs, unleashing private-sector creativity, and reinvigorating our research institutions.

At the heart of scientific progress lies the pursuit of truth. But this foundational principle, which has driven every major breakthrough in our history, is increasingly under threat. Today, across science, medicine, and technology, ideological dogmas have surfaced that elevate group identity above individual achievement, enforce conformity at the expense of innovative ideas, and inject politics into the heart of the scientific method. These agendas have not only distorted truth but have eroded public trust, undermined the integrity of research, stifled innovation, and weakened America’s competitive edge.

This order establishes the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology to unite the brightest minds from academia, industry, and government to guide our Nation through this critical moment by charting a path forward for American leadership in science and technology.


Sec. 2. Establishment. (a) There is hereby established the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST).
(b) The PCAST shall be composed of not more than 24 members. The Assistant to the President for Science and Technology (APST) and the Special Advisor for AI & Crypto shall be members of the PCAST. If also serving as the Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy, the APST may designate the U.S. Chief Technology Officer as a member. The remaining members shall be distinguished individuals and representatives from sectors outside of the Federal Government appointed by the President. These non-Federal members shall have diverse perspectives and expertise in science, technology, education, and innovation.
(c) The APST and the Special Advisor for AI & Crypto shall serve as Co-Chairs of the PCAST. The Co-Chairs may designate up to two Vice Chairs of the PCAST from among the non-Federal members of the PCAST, to support the Co-Chairs in the leadership and organization of the PCAST.

Sec. 3. Functions. (a) The PCAST shall advise the President on matters involving science, technology, education, and innovation policy. The Council shall also provide the President with scientific and technical information that is needed to inform public policy relating to the American economy, the American worker, national and homeland security, and other topics.
(b) The PCAST shall meet regularly and shall:
(i) respond to requests from the President or the Co-Chairs for information, analysis, evaluation, or advice;
(ii) solicit information and ideas from a broad range of stakeholders, including the research community; the private sector; universities; national laboratories; State, local, and Tribal governments; foundations; and nonprofit organizations;
(iii) serve as the advisory committee identified in section 101(b) of the High-Performance Computing Act of 1991 (Public Law 102-194), as amended (15 U.S.C. 5511(b)), in which capacity the PCAST shall be known as the President’s Innovation and Technology Advisory Committee; and
(iv) serve as the advisory panel identified in section 4 of the 21st Century Nanotechnology Research and Development Act (Public Law 108-153), as amended (15 U.S.C. 7503), in which capacity the PCAST shall be known as the National Nanotechnology Advisory Panel.

(c) The PCAST shall provide advice from the non-Federal sector to the National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) in response to requests from the NSTC.


Sec. 4. Administration. (a) The heads of executive departments and agencies shall, to the extent permitted by law, provide the PCAST with information concerning scientific and technological matters when requested by the PCAST Co-Chairs and as required for the purpose of carrying out the PCAST’s functions.

(b) In consultation with the Co-Chairs, the PCAST is authorized to create standing subcommittees and ad hoc groups, including technical advisory groups, to assist the PCAST and provide preliminary information directly to the PCAST.

(c) In order to allow the PCAST to provide advice and analysis regarding classified matters, the Co-Chairs may request that members of the PCAST, its standing subcommittees, or ad hoc groups who do not hold a current clearance for access to classified information receive security clearance and access determinations pursuant to Executive Order 12968 of August 2, 1995 (Access to Classified Information), as amended, or any successor order.

(d) The Department of Energy shall provide such funding and administrative and technical support as the PCAST may require, to the extent permitted by law and as authorized by existing appropriations.

(e) Members of the PCAST shall serve without any compensation for their work on the PCAST, but may receive travel expenses, including per diem in lieu of subsistence, as authorized by law for persons serving intermittently in the government service (5 U.S.C. 5701–5707).

(f) Insofar as the Federal Advisory Committee Act, as amended (5 U.S.C. App.), may apply to the PCAST, any functions of the President under that Act, except that of reporting to the Congress, shall be performed by the Secretary of Energy, in accordance with the guidelines and procedures established by the Administrator of General Services.

Sec. 5. Termination. The PCAST shall terminate 2 years from the date of this order unless extended by the President

Sec. 6. Revocation. Executive Order 14007 of January 27, 2021 (President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology), as amended by Executive Order 14109 of September 29, 2023 (Continuance of Certain Federal Advisory Committees and Amendments to Other Executive Orders), is hereby revoked.

Sec. 7. General Provisions. (a) Nothing in this order shall be construed to impair or otherwise affect:
(i) the authority granted by law to an executive department or agency, or the head thereof; or
(ii) the functions of the Director of the Office of Management and Budget relating to budgetary, administrative, or legislative proposals.
(b) This order shall be implemented consistent with applicable law and subject to the availability of appropriations.
(c) This order is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.

THE WHITE HOUSE
January 23, 2025.

Document Link
 
I remember reading that BlackRock only owns like 60k homes in America, which is like less than 1 percent of homes. I could be wrong, though, but the main problem is illegal immigration and the federal reserve printing money.

I worked in the CIA DEI department, but Trump laid me off.
60K is still 60K. Fractional reserve banking is another major problem.
 
When the agencies inevitably give Trump bunk I hope he goes, "that's ok. I have a backup from when I asked for these during the first term".


Before Blair turns, he shows a simulation of how he thinks the Thing works. It goes cell by cell, bit by bit. Sure the Thing can choose to do it fast and dirty, but the simulation implies it could also take a much more subtle route. And the horror is way better if you assume there's a point where someone could know they're infected, but not do anything to warn the others.

https://clarkesworldmagazine.com/watts_01_10/
My last The Thing sperg to stop shitting thread. Glad to see so many autists here love the film as much as I do. Here's a gift for you. It's a short story written from the perspective of The Thing, and it is cool.
 
These people are the highest form of LARPers possible, they genuinely think they're "the oppressed minority", "the revolution" and that any gesture they do will "own the nazis".

They have no clue what fascism even means, any situation that involves children should always be substituted by a free pass, and think buying pepsi instead of coke is gonna revolutionize the world.

You cannot hate these people enough.
 
Sorry to shit up the thread and veer off topic but the threat of Chinese manufacturing backdooring nearly every single device isn't sensible. I agree anything of importance shouldn't be made by the Chinese but it's more a strategic industry problem and industry in general should be moved away.

It's definitely a problem that most places lack the knowledge and manufacturing resources to even build half the tech shit China does. TSMC in Taiwan makes a significant chunk of the processors used the world over for a similar reason, China can't even compete, but it doesn't mean Taiwan has backdoored your CPU. Before someone brings up Spectre/Meltdown, that was on Intel... a US company. It was their code.

One thing Trump is good about is wanting more tech made here and incidentally the AI focus might help with that. I wish we didn't spend gorillions of tax dollars on AI funneled into the richest companies in the country (seriously look at Oracle!!!) but I understand why we're doing it. I wonder how many tax dollars go to quantum computing which is a proven strategic issue we should focus on beating China on.
Quantum computing is starting to look like fission reactors. Billions to trillions will be spent on it and it will always be just a few years away from functional. Graphene just hit drinking age and we still aren't using it for commercial chips or batteries. I don't know if this is the tech industry making promises it can't keep or roadblocks resulting from the manufactured decline of the West over the last 15+ years. My high school teachers were telling me that room temperature superconductors were just around the corner.
 
I'm just saying BlackRock is far from the sole contributor to the problem of housing being unaffordable. You could fix the problem without breaking up BlackRock.
My user name is fuck bankers. I think Private usury should be either illegal or regulated to no more than $100 billion dollars in investments total. Renaissance Technologies LLC (a hedge fund with nearly 100% returns year over year) founder Jim Simons said in the clip you shouldn't have too much because you start to move the whole market.
 
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Before Blair turns, he shows a simulation of how he thinks the Thing works. It goes cell by cell, bit by bit. Sure the Thing can choose to do it fast and dirty, but the simulation implies it could also take a much more subtle route. And the horror is way better if you assume there's a point where someone could know they're infected, but not do anything to warn the others.
Blair’s simulation is on an individual-cell basis, and it still shows that the thing cell has to finish consuming the prey cell before it can mimic its victim. Bennings and the dogs show that the process only takes a handful of minutes at best, and those are the only two where it had to replace a victim under time restraint.

It’s more insidious when characters are a thing, but you don’t know when rather than someone suddenly becoming one like a zombie virus.
 
https://clarkesworldmagazine.com/watts_01_10/
My last The Thing sperg to stop shitting thread. Glad to see so many autists here love the film as much as I do. Here's a gift for you. It's a short story written from the perspective of The Thing, and it is cool.
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At the end, I got confused and was wondering if I had stumbled back onto Kiwi Farms again by accident.

Very spooky.
 
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