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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@Unpaid Emotional Labourer I'm glad you pointed out that Trump's plan didn't happen quickly. Probably more than two years, even. After his first presidency and seeing the 2020 election being stolen, I think he started work right then, finding and vetting people he could trust and who could build up their skins and fortitude for the fight ahead while also making sure they were aligned to the same goal.

Surely this will fix everything
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LOL--Trump making Canada Great Again.
The President of South Africa responded to Trump:
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While I think he's lying, I'll toss him a kudo for not sounding like a lunatic in his response.
While all your normie friends watch Trump push all these positive changes with less than a month in office, you need to be hammering home the fact that the people in power hate you and want you to suffer. Like someone mentioned a couple pages ago, all these systems and fixes were in place and ready to go for years and nobody used them. They see us as tax cattle to be milked and despise us all the while.
Also hammer home that when he was President he was trying to do the same things and he was blocked and sabotaged at every turn by Dems and Repubs. People here are don't trust Patel or Tulsi, but Mike Johnson is my biggest concern. He's playing ball right now but he was an eager participant in sending billions to Ukraine along with most Republicans. Not trusting anyone is the best policy, but never forget the Uniparty still exists.
 
My mom has fallen for this, I’ve no idea where she heard it. Is there an article or video you can recommend that debunks this? I’ve told her it’s nonsense but of course she won’t listen since I voted for Trump.
Unfortunately, that's where the "success will unite us" comes in, there are people that will only stop being retarded once they can't deny things are actually working anymore and that's fair too.

You don't need to debunk stuff, just asking them "how do you know that?" or "how do you know that's true? because the TV said so?" is enough to get them to be a bit skeptical about it. Usually trying to prove them wrong does nothing.
 
I find the image of Trump, starting Jan 21st 2021, pouring over old tomes of archaic law and seeking others to valiantly join him on his quest to save the country(and get revenge), a very satisfying one. He well knew he was stabbed in the back, even as far back as Election night 2016, and vowed, 'Never Again'. And his speed running strategy is showing the normies that yes, the government doesn't have to be a lumbering hulk that need tones of 'grease' to get moving.
 
Americans hatred of trannie and love of their children has allowed orange man to implement tarrifs that are tanking the stock market. Anyone with a retirement account should be concerned. Prices are also going to rise in the next few weeks.
I hope lefties realize they need to cut off and eliminate trannies. They are the most hated group in the world. They have to go.
 
Apparently the whole thing about Elon and the Treasury thing is going to lead to Elon blackmailing regular people for money. According to democrat shills. I managed to argue one down and he could not really explain, this apparent big brain plan.
The real reason is that that is their pay check to shill might get cut off.
Most of these shills can't even give me a straight answer over it. Other than its bad and Elon is doing a fascism.
 
While I think he's lying, I'll toss him a kudo for not sounding like a lunatic in his response.
The only foreign politicians I’ve heard make any sense are this guy and the Kenyan dude, they’re the only ones who acknowledge that the US has every right to make decisions about how taxpayer $$ are spent.

Politicians and political influencers all over social media are shrieking about how awful and dangerous it is that Elon Musk has grabbed sensitive, classified information from USAID's computers.

But these politicians can't elaborate on what any of that information relates to, because that would involve revealing the extent to which USAID is a CIA front organization.
They’re afraid the psyops and social destruction they impose on the rest of the world which mysteriously look exactly like the leftist havoc we’ve dealt with here since Obama changed the Smith-Mundt Act to allow the gov to run domestic propaganda campaigns are going to be revealed as, well, psyops and social destruction they’ve imposed in the US.
 
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Why the fuck are we providing a constant stream of aid even to our allies? What is it for? I get sending aid to an ally if there's been a big natural disaster (I generally don't have a problem with that) but why does South Africa (as much as I don't dislike the country) need a constant stream of American money?
 
Why the fuck are we providing a constant stream of aid even to our allies? What is it for? I get sending aid to an ally if there's been a big natural disaster (I generally don't have a problem with that) but why does South Africa (as much as I don't dislike the country) need a constant stream of American money?
It always... ALWAYS... goes back to (((Them)))
 
Why the fuck are we providing a constant stream of aid even to our allies? What is it for? I get sending aid to an ally if there's been a big natural disaster (I generally don't have a problem with that) but why does South Africa (as much as I don't dislike the country) need a constant stream of American money?
Historically, Cold War Strategy to keep certain counties from leaning towards the USSR. Now, inertia and grifting.
 
Why the fuck are we providing a constant stream of aid even to our allies? What is it for? I get sending aid to an ally if there's been a big natural disaster (I generally don't have a problem with that) but why does South Africa (as much as I don't dislike the country) need a constant stream of American money?
Palm grease.
When you want to run missiles on trains to US bases. You have to grease palms. Lot deeper than that as well, bribes for shilling certain US friendly positions in your country. Making US company's have a strong monopoly in the country.
Then you have the subversive NGOs and their activity's. They need to be paid for.
It is all under the $50,000,000,000 hammer scam.
 
I don't know much about Canada. Was a 25% tariff really the best method of motivation for them to cooperate?
That's the nice way to get them to the negotiation table. He doesn't want to tariff them per se, he just wants them to get their shit together when it comes to their border.

The nasty way is to do what Russia did, Russia didn't want to invade originally, they made peace treaties that Biden forced Zelensky to reject.
 
Americans hatred of trannie and love of their children has allowed orange man to implement tarrifs that are tanking the stock market. Anyone with a retirement account should be concerned. Prices are also going to rise in the next few weeks.
I hope lefties realize they need to cut off and eliminate trannies. They are the most hated group in the world. They have to go.
How about liberals fear of death and love of blind adherence to "science" allowed them to shut down / inhibit the entire world's economies down for years and induce hyperinflation by printing insane amounts of money to compensate and sustain their retardation.

How about liberals love of pandering and hatred of Russia allowed them to pop the hyperinflation bubble they created through half-baked backfiring sanctions and printing even more insane amounts of money in a pandering attempt to prop up a tinpot country that never stood a chance of victory?

Oh, those don't matter? Ah, I see, now it's the tariffs that will ruin everything. Where the fuck were you "concerned about the economy" retards when my entire portfolio tanked in 2022 when the sanctions began and didn't hit the break-even point until 2+ years later? Fuck off.

Everything has been so monumentally fucked economically the past 4 years that this is the perfect time to clean house with strategies like this. It's the only positive of everything being so fucked: the fire burnt everything to the ground, so we might as well fix the foundation before we start building on top again.
 
orange man to implement tarrifs that are tanking the stock market. Anyone with a retirement account should be concerned.
I am YUGELY concerned. Where's the bottom so I know when to make my max contribution to my IRA? I'll continue my scheduled investments into my market index as planned however.
 
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Good morning, USPG! I bring you a little whitepill. Democrats are currently in the "fume" phase of Trump 2.0.

"Democrats fume over weak early response to Trump" (archive)
Democrats are fuming about their party leadership’s early response to President Trump.

Strategists say the reaction to Trump is inconsistent and not aggressive enough to combat Trump, who has taken a series of actions to remake the government.

In a whirlwind first two weeks in office, Trump has issued a string of executive orders, removed agency watchdogs and eliminated government diversity programs.

And while Democrats have begun to punch back, strategists say it’s not nearly enough, especially as a number of Democrats in the Senate join Republicans in confirming Trump’s Cabinet officials.

“Democratic leadership acts like it’s permanently 2006, a year when, yes, we took back the Senate, but also before the Republican Party found a cult leader and lost its collective minds,” Democratic strategist Christy Setzer said. “We don’t live in that world anymore. We have a lifelong conman and convicted felon in the Oval Office who tries every day to turn this country into a dictatorship; let’s start acting like it.

“That means you can’t be mad about Trump trying to freeze government spending in the morning, and vote for his Treasury secretary — who will destroy the economy — in the afternoon,” Setzer added. “Stop helping Trump.”

Another strategist put it this way: “Trump is eating us for lunch and for the most part, we’re letting him.”

Frustrations mounted during a tense call last week between Democratic governors and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (N.Y.). Six Democratic governors, including Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey, pressed Schumer to put up more of a fight against Trump’s agenda.

Healey specifically urged Schumer to slow down Senate votes and do more to stir up public opposition, per The New York Times, which first reported the call.

That produced an exasperated response from Senate Democrats, who spoke on the floor late into the night Wednesday to highlight the impact the funding freeze ordered by Trump’s budget office would have on communities around the country.

“I would say to my friend [Pritzker], as you would like to have a majority of governors, we would like to have the majority of senators. There’s a limit to how much we can we do,” Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin (Ill.) said.

Senate Democrats are divided over how hard they should fight to resist Trump’s agenda, with Democrats up for reelection in battleground states looking for areas of compromise.

Seven Democrats voted last week to confirm Kristi Noem as secretary of Homeland Security, where she will have oversight of Trump’s border security and immigration policies, including plans to deport hundreds of thousands of immigrants.

Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) is calling for Democrats to put up more resistance against Trump’s nominees. He slowed the confirmation process down last month by putting a hold on John Ratcliffe, Trump’s pick to head the CIA.

“I’m not voting for a single nominee while this crisis over federal spending persists, and I don’t think we should proceed to any legislation until Republicans stand up and start helping us protect democracy,” Murphy said last week, referring to Trump’s executive orders freezing broad swaths of federal funding.

Murphy argued that voters around the country won’t fully accept the alarms Democrats have raised about Trump’s agenda until they see Democratic senators and House members deploying every tactic they can to fight it in Washington.

“I do not think that we will be able to convince people that this is a serious, grave moment if we are helping them populate a deeply corrupt government and helping them pass legislation here,” he said.

Murphy noted that Doug Burgum, Trump’s pick to lead the Interior Department, will oversee the effort to expand oil and gas drilling on federal lands. He just got “a whole bunch of Democratic votes,” the senator said.

Twenty-five Democrats and Sen. Angus King (I-Maine), who caucuses with Democrats, voted to confirm Burgum Thursday.

“We are wondering why people out there are not rising up in the way that they did in 2017, even though Trump’s conduct is worse,” Murphy said. “I think they watch us supporting his policies and his nominees and come to the conclusion it must not be that bad.”

At the same time, Senate progressives were deeply frustrated with centrists who voted last month with Republicans to pass the Laken Riley Act, which mandates the federal detention of migrants accused of theft, burglary or assaulting law enforcement.

Democratic critics warned their colleagues it would worsen the problem of “mass incarceration” and likely sweep up children in mass detentions.

Some Democratic senators said they were frustrated that Schumer didn’t keep members of his caucus in line before they voted to take up that bill on the Senate floor, putting it on a fast-track to passing and getting signed into law as one of Trump’s first major accomplishments.

One Democratic senator acknowledged that Democrats were caught flat-footed.

“Look we have a bunch of freshmen who had already voted for Laken Riley in the House and were unwilling” to change their position on the bill, said the lawmaker, who described it as a “terribly written” law with “significant unintended consequences.”

“I don’t think we had a cohesive caucus response to that,” the senator added.

After the governor’s call with Schumer on Wednesday, another Democratic senator bristled at the incoming criticism from those within their party.

“A lot of folks aren’t that familiar with the rules and they haven’t caught up to where we are. We cannot block a single nominee unless we get [four Republicans to vote no],” the senator said.

“We’ve got folks who want to vote for Republican nominees, [Sens. John] Fetterman [D-Pa.] and [Sheldon] Whitehouse [D-R.I.] and persuading them not to has been an important caucus win,” the lawmaker added. “We came close to defeating Hegseth,” referring to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

“What more do they want us to do? Handcuff ourselves to lampposts and get arrested?” the senator asked incredulously.

Democratic strategist Rodell Mollineau, who served as a senior aide to the late Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), said he is sympathetic to the frustration but noted that Democrats had a good week and found an opening to fire back at Republicans over federal funding.

“Democrats found an opening this week and exploited it,” Mollineau said, adding that Democrats “have to be ready for these kinds of moments.”

“There will be many pitches to swing at. We don’t need to swing at every one,” he said.

But Mollineau cautioned that Democrats “can’t fight with the old playbook.”

“They need to find new ways to find the audiences they need to reach and counter the administration’s moves,” he said. “We need to be smart about where we fight and when we fight and how we fight to maximize our leverage.”
The news of Adam Lanza David Hogg getting elected as DNC Vice Chair could also be excellent for True & Honest Americans. He's a one-trick pony and even the Democrats are getting tired of gun grabbers.
 
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