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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Milk companies have been selling milk that way for over fifty years, from personal experience.
Yeah it’s a way of telling where an American is from, just like having them identify a quarter pound of butter.

Now you are aware you are breathing, and that there is East coast and West coast butter.

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I’ve always meant to ask this political thought, about is the future, like what will post trump politics be like? 10 years from now Will discorse cool down or will people just move even more of their hate to elon? like it eclipsed trumps hate by now, but he just becomes the new trump or do they still bring him up ever 5 minutes like they did in the biden presidency. And the culture too will people say more offensive things again or will it all be permanent? Like will there still be a need for sjw movement runoffs and reactionary stuff? Or will the grifters still keep grifting? Or maybe is it more of an Idpol thing where if the dems just decided to go back to a more generic mindset how they were back in the 90s, I’d go back but would other people too?
 
Trudeau is putting in his direct handpicked subordinate to be the PM until the upcoming elections.
Hoping it will give them incumbent advantage and prevent the conservatives from winning.
Very sneaky. Snake behavior from Trudeau is common tho
Yeah, but what day is the election?
 
Pentagon Denies Report of Halt in Cyber Operations Versus Russia
Bloomberg (archive.ph)
By Anthony Capaccio
2025-03-04 01:26:31GMT
The Pentagon has denied media reports that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had ordered a halt in offensive cyber operations against Russia, according to a senior defense official.

Hegseth has neither canceled nor delayed any cyber operations directed against malicious Russian targets and there has been no stand-down order whatsoever from that priority, said the official who was granted anonymity to discuss internal decisions.

The denial came after The Record, a cybersecurity publication, reported that Hegseth had ordered the US Cyber Command to stand down from all planning against Russia, including offensive digital actions. The story was followed by the Washington Post and New York Times that added their own confirmations from unnamed officials.

The reported halt drew angry responses from Democrats including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, who said the Trump administration was giving “a free pass as Russia continues to launch cyber operations and ransomware attacks against critical American infrastructure.”

The reports about the halt said it had occurred before Trump and Zelenskiy openly clashed in the Oval Office on Friday. It was characterized as an effort to get Russia to agree to negotiations on ending the Ukraine conflict.

Asked about the earlier reports on the cessation of operations, the Pentagon declined to comment but said Hegseth has no greater priority than the safety of US troops.

The US Cyber Command oversees 135 “cyber mission force” teams, or “it’s action arm,” the command says on its website. The units involved in offensive operations are Cyber Combat Mission Teams.

Separately, Trump has ordered a pause to all military assistance to Ukraine until Trump determines the country’s leaders demonstrate a good-faith commitment to peace, according to a senior Defense Department official, who asked not to be identified discussing private deliberations.

The official said all US military equipment not currently in Ukraine would be paused, including weapons in transit on aircraft and ships or waiting in transit areas in Poland.

(Updates with more on aid pause, in final paragraph. An earlier version corrected the title of Schumer, in fourth paragraph.)
Rahm Emanuel says Democrats 'sunk' their own party as he mulls his political future
Chicago Sun-Times (archive.ph)
By Tina Sfondeles
2025-03-04 00:30:58GMT
Former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel on Monday defended his critiques of the Democratic Party as he once again signaled his political career isn’t over.

Emanuel, now a CNN political commentator, has become a vocal critic of the party after the failures of the 2024 election cycle. And he has most recently accused Democrats of focusing on issues like transgender bathrooms instead of education and crime.

At an Economic Club of Chicago event, Emanuel argued culture wars are helping Republicans win nationwide.

“I wasn’t looking to have a fight on woke culture. I was looking to have a debate about the failure of eighth graders to read,” Emanuel said. “I don’t think culturally that being not just into the generic woke debate is wrong politically. It’s also [that] the data is pretty clear that people think that’s all we care about.”

He said Democrats “can’t be a party that believes in equity and allows two-thirds of your kids who can’t read.” And when asked whether his ongoing divisions with progressives might cost him him his political future, he offered, “Don’t worry about me. I’m fine.”

Democrats “sunk” their own party, Emanuel said, by ignoring the plight of the American Dream — to be able to afford a home and an education. He described the party as “off kilter.”

“We did. We did. We sunk our party. We’re responsible for that,” Emanuel said. “And we’re also therefore responsible for rebuilding it.”

As for his own future, Emanuel said he needs more time. He would have plenty of local races to choose from, including a potential 2026 Senate race to replace Sen. Dick Durbin, should he choose to retire; a 2026 governor’s race should Gov. JB Pritzker not seek reelection; a Chicago mayoral election in 2027, or even a 2028 presidential bid. Mayor Brandon Johnson, in Washington this week to testify before the U.S. House Oversight Committee about the city’s sanctuary status, has dipped to single-digit approval numbers.

“I’m not done with public service, and I’m hoping public service is not done with me,” Emanuel said. He called Pritzker, also viewed as a 2028 presidential hopeful, a “great governor,” and vowed to support his reelection, should he choose to run again.

Moderator Chris Jones, Chicago Tribune Editorial Board editor, asked Emanuel if his ambitions are larger than Chicago after his stints as U.S. ambassador to Japan under former President Joe Biden, chief of staff to former President Barack Obama and adviser to former President Bill Clinton.

“Amy and I call Chicago home. And we are living here. Two, I don’t know, if you’re a global city, you should probably be happy that one of your citizens has a little global experience,” Emanuel said. “Third, Chicago is my home and it is where I feel at home.”
Democratic activists fueled anti-Trump protests at GOP town halls but also rage at their own party
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Steve Peoples, Lisa Mascaro, and Stephen Groves
2025-03-01 15:43:36GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — Furious Democrats filled Republican town halls across America last week to protest President Donald Trump’s power grab in Washington.

But in recent days, the activists behind those protests have turned their anger toward elected officials in their own party, who they believe are not fighting the Republican president and billionaire adviser Elon Musk with the urgency, aggression or creativity that the moment deserves.

“Are we in a constitutional crisis or not?” said Ezra Levin, co-founder of the anti-Trump resistance group Indivisible, which encouraged progressives to attend town halls and protest outside Tesla dealerships.

Of Democratic leaders, he added, “There’s zero tactical or innovative leadership.”

Indeed, as Trump moves to consolidate control in Washington with little regard for precedent or judges ruling against him, the nation’s most powerful Democrats are offering mixed messages while struggling to break from the rules and norms that have long governed U.S. politics.

Key Democratic governors have spoken out with varying levels of concern, but they have also promised to work with the Trump administration to ensure resources flow to their states.

House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York has taken heat for spending part of last week’s congressional recess promoting a children’s book he wrote about democracy. Asked about activists’ frustration, he pointed to his party’s united opposition to the GOP budget bill and to the more than 100 lawsuits brought against the president.

“We have to continue to push back aggressively in every way possible in defense of the American people,” Jeffries insisted, acknowledging voters’ “concern, fear, shock and anxiety.”

Carville’s strategy of standing back
Republicans have control of the House and Senate. Some Democrats think they are nearing the limit of what they can do to stop Trump, and so the party should stand back.

Veteran Democratic strategist James Carville said as much out loud earlier in the week in a New York Times opinion piece in which he encouraged his party to embrace a “strategic retreat” to let Trump and his Republican allies take the blame for the chaos they create.

“It’s time for Democrats to embark on the most daring political maneuver in the history of our party: roll over and play dead,” Carville wrote.

The piece infuriated Democratic activists. But some officials in Washington quietly welcomed Carville’s call for Democrats to get out of Trump’s way.

“The Carville point was that there’s got to be an opportunity for people to start experiencing and coming to their own conclusion,” said Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vt.

“What’s easier said than done on Carville is that people are freaked out and they do want us to do something and we want to do something,” Welch added. “That’s the dilemma.”

Democrats must be ‘more imaginative and ingenious’
In Trump’s first month in office, he and Musk have moved with extraordinary speed to cut tens of thousands of jobs from the federal workforce. The president is trying to eliminate entire agencies established by federal law. He has signed dozens of executive orders and begun to exact retribution against perceived political enemies across the government, firing independent inspectors general, federal prosecutors and FBI agents involved with his previous prosecutions.

Trump and his allies have lashed out against judges and threatened to defy court rulings.

So far, neither Jeffries nor Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York has been willing to employ perhaps the most dramatic tool at their disposal to stop Trump: their vote — and the ability to withhold their vote in protest — even if it means shutting down the government.

There are some Democrats who want their party to pursue a shutdown on March 14 when current funding expires. But historically, shutdowns have been a Republican strategy only. Democrats generally see themselves as the political grown-ups in the room.

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., said Democrats “need to be more imaginative and ingenious and aggressive in our tactics.”

“But that should not mean that we depart from basic values,” he said in an interview. “Court orders should be obeyed. We have to respect the rule of law. But we also have to be more nimble and agile in the tactics and tools we use, and be exhaustive in every legal means of fighting back.”

Governors speak out but also try to work with Trump
Democratic governors — and 2028 presidential prospects — have spoken out with varying levels of concern.

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer dined at the White House with Trump last week as part of the National Governors Association annual meeting. Afterward, she told Michigan media that she continues to look for “common ground” with the president.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who this past week announced a new podcast featuring Trump’s “Make America Great Again” allies, has softened his stance on Trump in an effort to ensure the Republican administration doesn’t block disaster funding for the state’s devastating wildfires.

Whitmer and Newsom have also been sharply critical of Trump throughout their careers. At the same time, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker used his recent State of the State address to liken Trump’s power grabs to the conditions that preceded the Holocaust.

“It took the Nazis one month, three weeks, two days, eight hours and 40 minutes to dismantle a constitutional republic,” Pritzker charged. “All I’m saying is when the five-alarm fire starts to burn, every good person better be ready to man a post with a bucket of water if you want to stop it from raging out of control.”

Patience wearing thin among the Democratic base
Maine Sen. Angus King, an independent who caucuses with Democrats, took to the Senate floor last week to call on his colleagues to “wake up.” In a subsequent interview, King described what he called Trump’s “assault on the Constitution — the most serious in the history of the country.”

The senator said Democrats cannot simply assume that the courts will rein in Trump. But he also acknowledged that they had relatively few tools to push back as the minority party in both chambers of Congress.

“We’re in uncharted territory. There’s no playbook for this,” King said. “Everybody’s trying to figure out what’s effective.”

The Democratic base is not in a patient mood.

Lori Goldman, who leads the Michigan-based activist group known as Fems for Dems, was enraged when asked for her assessment of Democratic leaders.

“We need all hands on deck, and we’re not getting it,” she said. “There’s no room or time or space to act like we’re in normal times.”

Klein, of Indivisible, is growing increasingly pessimistic that Democratic leaders in Congress are listening even after his group took credit for town halls that shaped the debate on Capitol Hill.

“I was hopeful that they were coming over to our side to lead the opposition, and in the absence of that, I think you’re going to just see distance between them and their own constituents grow and grow and grow,” he said. “And that doesn’t have positive consequences.”
Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker amplifies his fight against Trump
NBC News (ghostarchive.org)
By Natasha Korecki
2025-02-28 23:26:33GMT
CHICAGO — Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker gathered most of the state’s Democratic congressional delegation at the University of Illinois at Chicago's hospital Friday to lay out in stark terms the damage that would be brought on vulnerable populations if President Donald Trump’s administration slashes Medicaid funding.

“Red alert, everybody,” Pritzker said. “It is time to wake up. Get out. Do something.”

Along the way, he called billionaire Elon Musk “President Musk,” made the case that public opinion was quickly shifting against the Trump administration’s agenda and gave out a congressional phone number, urging people to tell their representatives the impact of the president’s new policies.

Earlier in the day, Pritzker appeared on “The View” in a segment that was recorded Thursday. Host Joy Behar introduced the governor, who is widely thought to have presidential aspirations, as a “firebrand” Democrat.

“Everything that he has done has been tearing down constitutional democracy and that’s what happened in Nazi Germany,” Pritzker said of Trump on the show.

Pritzker’s ubiquitousness comes at a moment when Democrats nationally are stumbling for their footing. In an information climate dominated by President Donald Trump and Musk, Pritzker is trying to step forward as a leading oppositional voice.

This week alone, the governor traveled to Washington, D.C., to lobby for federal funding for Illinois, delivered remarks to the pro-democracy group Democracy Forward, and appeared on media including CNN, MSNBC and on multiple podcasts.

The Nazi Germany reference on “The View” echoed Pritzker’s State of the State speech last week, which garnered national attention.

“My oath is to the Constitution of our state and of our country. We don’t have kings in America — and I don’t intend to bend the knee to one. I am not speaking up in service to my ambitions — but in deference to my obligations,” Pritzker said at the state Capitol in Springfield. “If you think I’m overreacting and sounding the alarm too soon, consider this: It took the Nazis one month, three weeks, two days, eight hours and 40 minutes to dismantle a constitutional republic.”

Pritzker has long relished playing an attack-dog role against Trump. Last year, he sunk millions of dollars of his own money into battleground state efforts to protect abortion rights.

This year, he’s trolled the president in ways big and small. He’s issued warnings against authoritarianism and threats to democracy, and accused Musk and Trump of attempting to steal private data of Americans. In January, Pritzker announced a new policy barring anyone tied to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol from becoming a state employee. After Trump took office and renamed the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America, Pritzker jokingly said he would rename Lake Michigan to “Lake Illinois.”

Pritzker is seeking to fill a void in a Democratic Party that suffered a devastating blow in November, losing all of the battleground states to Trump. Meanwhile, questions churn over Pritzker’s next political steps. On Friday, he said he had not yet made a decision on whether he would seek a third term as governor next year. The billionaire already wooed the party to hold a successful Democratic National Convention in Chicago in 2024.

“JB Pritzker has shown a natural willingness to go toe to toe with the White House,” said Jaimey Sexton, a Chicago-based Democratic strategist. “It is comfortable for him to go toe to toe, with facts and without bluster.”

“And he’ll do it with a smile on his face because he’s the affable billionaire,” Sexton continued.

Pritzker’s attacks on Trump have also drawn Republican ire, including from the likes of Karl Rove, who called him “over the top” on Fox News after Pritzker’s comments comparing the Trump administration's actions to Nazi Germany. Trump has personally attacked Pritzker in the past as well.

Pritzker is also of Ukrainian descent, and at the close of his event in Chicago, he immediately posted a rebuke of Trump on X: "President Trump’s simpering fealty to Vladimir Putin and Russia is embarrassing and dangerous. Illinois stands with Ukraine, and so should the White House."

Asked on Friday how the governor can break through to the public when Trump has successfully dominated with messaging that ultimately won over voters in November, Pritzker pointed back to the public and noted the response to the early days of the Trump administration.

“The messaging isn’t something we’re making up and selling out there. It’s not a campaign,” Pritzker said. “There is anger out there.”

“There’s been an enormous shift. A big shift from the beginning of this administration only 39 days ago,” Pritzker continued. “A big shift in people demanding that Donald Trump carry out what he said he would do during his campaign and people understanding that he’s not doing that, and we gotta stop it.”
 
Wait, is milk in America actually more expensive then in Canada?
Great Value, 2% Reduced Fat Milk, Gallon, Refrigerated: $3.56USD
Dairyland 2% Partly Skimmed Milk, 4L: $5.84
1 gallon = 3.78 L
$1USD = $1.45CAD)
3.56*(3.78/4)*1.45: $4.88

wait no it's cheaper
Milk better be cheaper in the States, a lot of US diaries decided to work harder not smarter and get in the endless expansion rat race, scaled up to mega factor farms with 10,000 head herds and are allowed to use growth hormones to artificial boost production but turns you son queer.

Shit on Canada all you like but at least our milk is organic and natural. And our farmers dont have to work themselves to the bone just to service there mortgage that they had to take to build the new barn to stay in business.
 
That's a retarded argument and you know it, don't play bullshit games. The price of milk is almost entirely controlled by logistics costs. American dairy farms dump out close to 3 million gallons a day, that's just gone not reused or repurposed. Just emptied onto the ground or into pits. We make way more than we need, and a hell of a lot more than we can realistically move around/keep in storage. So what do you do with the milk that needs a special refrigerated truck to transport for processing and distribution? Nothing you either pour it out or start killing cows to lower daily production. The cows don't care if the truck didn't come today to pick up yesterday's milk, they still need to be milked twice a day.
Where is this milk being emptied? As a hwite man, I'll make sure it doesn't go to waste. All 3 million gallons. Daily.
I think investors know that the tariffs are going to be recessionary.
Thankfully we can just redefine the word again since it's acceptable now.
high doese of adderal and its similar like of drug produce the EXACT same effect, not saying thats what it is just adding thats what an associate has told me

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Mein Fuhrer!
It's more likely than you think. Kane is the mayor of some town in Tennesse.
Mayor Kane is in Knoxville. I don't really keep up with how he's doing, but supposedly is a non-retards libertarian. So kudos to him.
God, it's even worse. Endeavors allegedly exists to help migrant shelters scale! That makes the money they received even less justifiable. How the fuck
>open debate
Those who saved all the race statistics and genetics, your time has come.
Hehe. Uh oh
You could also ship dried milk. Properly packaged, will last a long time.
The day of the rope will come soon enough.
Apparently it has to do with Canada switching over to the metric system in the 1970s.
Another strike for the metric system, IMO.
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Idiots, you're the "scientists", not the giants.
Ironic since these people enjoy being on their knees.
It's nice.
Noted. The rope will come for you as well.
Fort Benning is back:
View attachment 7052233
Source (Archive)

It's now named after Corporal Fred G. Benning, a WWI veteran.
I'm really curious if their formerly new names ever caught on. I can't imagine anyone at Fort Bragg calling it Fort Liberty. I don't even know what faggy name they gave Benning.
Their self-awareness is off the charts, LOL.
Bag milk exists in the US in places but it isn’t cheaper enough to make it worth the extra hassle.

Sysco sells five gallon bags of milk for commercial kitchens and cafeteria dispensers. They come in boxes.
Sysco too. Noted. Day. Rope. You know the drill.
Milk companies have been selling milk that way for over fifty years, from personal experience.
They've been selling it wrong then.
 
I don't think that word means what you think it means.

Yeah this goes along with every other faggot here with the "fuck you, got mine" mentality. I'm aware you're sociopaths that literally cannot fathom why someone should care if some other Joe is going to do poorly or have their retirement wiped out, but I still have empathy for the working man.
The economy is literally up 60% from where it was 5 years ago.
 
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