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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Presidents do not "name successors", only Emperors do that. If they had asked Trump if he would support JD Vance if he runs for President in 2028, Trump probably would have given a different answer. Trump dodged a poisoned question by saying "no". Only the People can choose his successor.
You just know for certain if Elon decided he didn’t need the drama from DOGE the left would be running the narrative that Trump is not the real President and Vance is calling the shots. They’ve wished Trump said Vance is going to take over like Joe Biden constantly flubbed always referring to Harris as the successor. Sometimes Biden called Harris the President.

They’ve run completely out of material and are just plagiarizing the right wing talking points on Biden which they firmly believe ruined the “wildly successful” presidency. They want to be pretend Trump is no different than Biden in terms of senility (clearly false he acting better than he did in the first term) and they have the nerve to pretend Trump is fully responsible for Eggs being expensive. He’s only been the President for THREE WEEKS!

It’s pathetic. I know I’m better than DNC shills I just ignored politics for at least 6 months when Joe became President. I’d feel like a clown to pretend a President is responsible for everything bad when he just got in. Trump 47 is the exception because he’s on a revenge arc.
 
You see, Israel developed weapons and sold them back to us after we gave them the money and technical expertise to do so. Truly a great ally. I sure hope they treat Christians nicely since it was Christians that invented their entire nation.

I don't even dislike Israel from an ideological point of view, they are a nationalistic, militarized ethnostate. I am 110% ok with that. I have zero issue with them doing what they want vis a vis Palestine. I just don't want to fucking pay for it. But again this somehow makes me a Nazi simp.
Look Israel wants to form an ethnostate I as a conscious objector don't want my nations tax dollars or foreign policy being dictated by them but I can't change geopolitics.
Here’s your problem. If water costs less, it hurts the mega rich California water baron families. Can’t have that.

As a side note, the whole common law for water appropriation in the American West has never made sense to me and is super fucked up. In the east, like rational people, we say that whoever lives next to the water can use the water. But in the west it’s some Byzantine system of who appropriated a beneficial use first historically gets perennial rights to the water source. Makes zero sense and is obviously going to create a problem like California.
California should be building more reservoirs like the state of Texas is doing to increase the water supply. Instead you have large amounts of boutique environmental concerns that would try to Kickstart Indigenous fisheries in nor cal or saving the delta smelt.
Naturally you can't tell the people in charge of these big projects they're wrong because they're experts and that's that.
 
Trump MIGHT cave to the judiciary. Musk MIGHT do something with your SSN. Trump MIGHT declare himself president forever.
Except the first thing on that list is significantly more likely than the latter two. The courts are the best defense that the left has so I don't think its wrong to be worried about them effectively using them to fight the Executive's plan. I'm hopeful that Trump's team will just ignore them or successfully defeat them legally.
 
Presidents do not "name successors", only Emperors do that. If they had asked Trump if he would support JD Vance if he runs for President in 2028, Trump probably would have given a different answer. Trump dodged a poisoned question by saying "no". Only the People can choose his successor.
Everyone is thinking it though. Its hard to not avoid the comparison. For all intents and purposes Trump IS an Emperor. He has grabbed in his hand all the executive power that has over the decades since Woodrow Wilson been concentrated in the executive agencies. The desperate efforts in friendly courts to try and pry this power away is proof enough of how absolutely pants shittingly terrified his political opposition is.

Caesar never declared himself King or Emperor either when he took Rome. He simply assumed dictatorial power, which in Roman terms was actually a legal authority the Senate itself had created in order to deal with crises. In many respects, what Trump has done in these last few weeks is the same. He's not acting outside the law or the Constitution. He is exercising his legitimate power that Congress, past Judicial precedents, and their interpretation of the Constitution have allowed for.

And the absolute screech that is heard, as he commands the beaurocracy, which are all executive agencies created by Congress and given to the President is a thing to behold. I especially love the Inspectors General appointed by Biden suing because Trump fired them. Why? Well, their authority under statute is supposed to be "non partisan" (LOL), and Trump can't just fire them because he's the President and he says so. Well...about that...the President is the chief officer of the USA under Article II. Your office is an article II office. Congress may has "said" that you can't be fired at the Presidents pleasure...but...the Constitution kinda says you can! And Congress and the Judiciary really don't have a leg to stand on here even under Constitutional law. The Chief Officer of the United States has plenary power over his subordinates. ALL OF THEM.

Maybe Congress should have thought of that before creating so many different officers and offices of the United States under the Executive.
 
Some interesting things happening near Harvard University.

Steps from Harvard’s Gates, Conservative Conference Speakers Embrace Funding Cuts and ‘European Majority’ in America​

Breitbart co-founder Steve Bannon called on President Donald Trump to “cut out all the money” flowing to elite universities at the Harvard Conservative and Republican Student Conference on Saturday.

The all-day conference — hosted by conservative and Republican student clubs at four of Harvard’s schools, as well as conservative campus publication The Harvard Salient — featured panels of right-wing think tank fellows and legal scholars, including embattled University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School professor Amy L. Wax.

Just steps from Harvard’s campus, Bannon took credit for Trump’s fusillade of orders restricting federal funding to universities. He said he had told Trump “we have to go into these elite institutions” and return them to “meritocracy.”

“Once you cut the money off, for them, that’s a bitch slap, right?” he said. “They’ll start paying attention. You have to root it out.”

Saturday’s event was sponsored by hedge fund billionaire Kenneth C. Griffin ’89, a Harvard megadonor whose name adorns the College’s financial aid office and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Other sponsors included the Heritage Foundation, the right-wing think tank that developed Project 2025, and the Job Creators Network, a conservative business group that backed hydroxychloroquine as a Covid-19 cure.

Sharply dressed conference guests sat around banquet tables in a ballroom on the third floor of the Charles Hotel. Some were graduate students. At least two attendees from Quincy, Mass., showed up after hearing the event advertised on Bannon’s War Room podcast.

At a panel on immigration policy, Wax, who has long flirted with white nationalist rhetoric, said “it’s important to have a European majority.”

Two moderators — Harvard Law School student Dean Sherman and Harvard Republican Club president Leo A. Koerner ’26 — posed questions submitted by audience members. Reading one audience question, Koerner asked Wax, “How important is maintaining America’s white majority for our cultural cohesion and further success?”

A gust of laughter swept the room.

“I think our nation needs a demographically dominant group that represents its culture,” Wax said. “That group should be numerically and otherwise dominant — not exclusive, but dominant.”

The European cultural origin of many Americans, Wax said, is “the secret sauce of our success.”

Wax, who remains a tenured professor at Penn, is currently on suspension with half pay for making offensive remarks and inviting a white supremacist to speak in her class. She has sued the university for racial discrimination, breach of contract, and violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act.

George Mason University economics professor Garett Jones, who sat on the panel with Wax, proposed a “points-based” immigration system that would prioritize migrants from countries with higher savings rates, lower corruption metrics, and higher standardized test scores.

“Immigration policy, fortunately, can be used to dilute the influence of Americans who are likely to be in that mediocre-to-negative contribution category,” Jones said. “Bringing in new Americans is a way to make America better by changing the composition of the nation through bringing in folks who have the traits that would make our nation better.”

In his keynote address and a subsequent question-and-answer period, Bannon asserted his populist bona fides and took his weeks-long feud with tech billionaire Elon Musk to the podium. Echoing what has become a favorite refrain, Bannon denounced “the apartheid state of Silicon Valley” — an implicit dig at Musk, who grew up in South Africa.

As the two men compete for ideological influence in Trump’s movement and administration, Bannon has found himself at odds with Musk over tax and immigration proposals. Musk emerged in December as a fervent defender of the H-1B visa program, which allows high-skilled immigrants, including many of his companies’ employees, to work in the U.S.

But Bannon on Saturday also praised Musk’s efforts to tear down what he described as the “administrative state.” Musk — who helms the quasi-governmental Department of Government Efficiency — has canceled diversity programs, issued mass buyout offers, and tried to dismantle the U.S. Agency for International Development.

“DOGE is a weapon. It’s an armor-piercing shell,” Bannon said. “Just like Trump, DOGE is a blunt-force instrument, and it gives blunt-force trauma.”

Bannon said Democrats had shown “they don’t care about the people.”

“The Democrats are so messed up with the donor class and the credential class. You see — over here, that’s what they’re training: the credential class,” he said. “We took the working class.”

Corrections: February 10, 2025

A previous version of this article incorrectly stated that Harvard Law School student Samuel Delmer moderated a panel on immigration law. In fact, the panel was moderated by Law School student Dean Sherman.

A previous version of this article misspelled the name of George Mason University professor Garett Jones.

Article Link
 
Maybe Congress should have thought of that before creating so many different officers and offices of the United States under the Executive.
Almost like all these career legislators are finally reaping what they've sown for decades with their weak, do-nothing management in Congress. Didn't want a President to have the ability to steamroll the entire DC bureaucratic landscape? Maybe you should have considered doing your jobs at any point in the last 60 years.
 
So who would you guys list as the 5 county's who the U.S.'s closest 'friends' ?
Well relations seem to be going smoothly with Japan. After all, trump was friends with Shinzo before he died and the Japanese gave him a golden samurai helmet. And fuck uh… Europe just spits on us so I can’t think of any other countries.
 
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