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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remember they switched from beef tallow to veggie/seed oil because of consumer health concerns and price. Beef tallow isn't exactly the best for your arteries (can't speak to veggie oil but remember there was a health scare in the 90s when everyone switched). As for price, while tallow and lard has always been cheaper, we heavily subside our corn and soybean production which leaves us with so much surplus it managed to be cheaper than tallow/lard.
Nah, I remember when places were saying that their fries were now vegetarian, back before veganism took off. It was a marketing tactic that allowed then to use cheaper oils.
 

The Democrats REALLY haven't gotten the memo after the election, eh?

When the enemy keeps making mistakes, don't interrupt them. Go on, put the angry black woman on TV calling the entire country racist and fascists because we don't want our taxes to pay for the fucking Ukraine and shopping sprees for the Faglenskyy family.
 
She’s legally blind in both eyes, and she’s a Moslem. This is just from scraping the surface.

They really couldn’t have chosen better.

View attachment 7054832
The Specter of Kamala Continues to Haunt (Quick Little Dossier on Our Blind "Friend")

So as it turns out, Lateefah Simon is a well known associate of Kamala Harris dating back to her days as a deputy city attorney in San Francisco. She recalls meeting Kamala in her time working as a young organizer and executive director of the nonprofit the Young Women's Freedom Center (I believe in ~2000). At the time, she was a single teenage mother. She later married Kevin Weston, who has since passed away. What really interested me, however, was what came of their relationship later down the line. In Kamala's time as District Attorney (2004-11) of San Francisco she unveiled a plan to reduce recidivism amongst young dope slingers/users, known as Back on Track (PDF praising and detailing the program attached below). Guess who was at the helm of its creation? Ms. Simon. Typical of both California and the blind, attempt apparently has missed its mark. You can refer to the PDF, and this Jacobin article/archive as to why (it's surprisingly scathing).

1741122491000.png1741122563253.png

Kamala would use the underlying framework to expand the program's reach (now to repeat offenders aged 23-53) as Attorney General--most likely failing as well, all things considered. After looking through her wiki, it becomes apparent she leveraged her disability to aide her progress in life. This much is obvious. But what I found somewhat hilarious was how she used it to get elected as a director of BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit). I found it to be ironic, of course. Not only that: she ended up getting into a residency dispute with the board. Nonetheless, she managed to keep the seat before eventually ending up where she is now.

Forgive the crude format.
 

Attachments

Newborn or fully grown?
500 lb calf. I bet you think a Ferrari shouldn't cost $500,000 "because it's just a car" and "they can't possibly pay their factory workers 20x more than Toyota does." Which they don't.

There's a reason luxury goods are expensive, and it actually isn't because they make 500% profit margins. They don't. They typically make much, much lower margins. It's expensive to run a company, and when you sell 1% as many goods as the mass-produced slop, you're going to sell your products for a lot more, because 100% of your company's expenses come from revenues.
 
I was today years old when I learned shoe constructions is US politics.

This thread should be locked again.
to be fair, really understanding how the fuck manufacturing works is important for getting how economics and tariffs can directly impact you, especially on the global scale
and pretty much everybody wears shoes of one type or another and knows the difference in price and build, so it's a pretty reasonable thing to focus on to learn the macro from the micro
 
500 lb calf. I bet you think a Ferrari shouldn't cost $500,000 "because it's just a car" and "they can't possibly pay their factory workers 20x more than Toyota does." Which they don't.

There's a reason luxury goods are expensive, and it actually isn't because they make 500% profit margins. They don't. They typically make much, much lower margins. It's expensive to run a company, and when you sell 1% as many goods as the mass-produced slop, you're going to sell your products for a lot more, because 100% of your company's expenses come from revenues.
>Luxury goods
>Shoes that don't fall apart in 6 months

hahahahahahahahaha. Our country is fucked.

Also if you guys want me to stop talking about it stop replying. 🤷‍♂️
 
to be fair, really understanding how the fuck manufacturing works is important for getting how economics and tariffs can directly impact you, especially on the global scale
and pretty much everybody wears shoes of one type or another and knows the difference in price and build, so it's a pretty reasonable thing to focus on to learn the macro from the micro
Too bad it's just one guy sperging about the price of shoes.
 
Illinois Has Virtually No Homeschooling Rules. A New Bill Aims to Change That.

Following a ProPublica and Capitol News Illinois investigation, an Illinois lawmaker has introduced legislation that would require families to tell their public school districts if they are homeschooling.

by Molly Parker and Beth Hundsdorfer, Capitol News Illinois

Co-published with Capitol News Illinois

March 3, 2025, 7 a.m. EST

A new Illinois bill aims to add some oversight of families who homeschool their children, a response to concerns that the state does little to ensure these students receive an education and are protected from harm.

The measure, known as the Homeschool Act, comes after an investigation by Capitol News Illinois and ProPublica last year found that Illinois is among a small number of states that place virtually no rules on parents who homeschool their children. Parents don’t have to register with any state agency or school district, and authorities cannot compel them to track attendance, demonstrate their teaching methods or show student progress.

Under the new bill, families would be required to tell their school districts when they decide to homeschool their children, and the parents or guardians would need to have a high school diploma or equivalent. If education authorities have concerns that children are receiving inadequate schooling, they could require parents to share evidence of teaching materials and student work.

Illinois Rep. Terra Costa Howard, a Democrat from a Chicago suburb who is sponsoring the legislation, said she began meeting with education and child welfare officials in response to the news organizations’ investigation, which detailed how some parents claimed to be removing their children from school to homeschool but then failed to educate them.

The investigation documented the case of L.J., a 9-year-old whose parents decided to homeschool him after he missed so much school that he faced the prospect of repeating third grade. He told child welfare authorities that he was beaten and denied food for several years while out of public school and that he received almost no education. In December 2022, on L.J.’s 11th birthday, the state took custody of him and his younger siblings; soon after, he was enrolled in public school.

“We need to know that children exist,” said Costa Howard, vice chair of the Illinois House’s child welfare committee. The legislation is more urgent because the number of homeschooled children has grown since the pandemic began, she said. “Illinois has zero regulations regarding homeschooling — we are not the norm at all.”

The most recent numbers available at the time of the news organizations’ investigation showed nearly 4,500 children were recorded as withdrawn from public school for homeschooling in 2022 — a number that had doubled over a decade. But there is no way to determine the precise number of students who are homeschooled in Illinois, because the state doesn’t require parents to register.

The bill would require the state to collect data on homeschooling families. Regional Offices of Education would gather the information, and the state board would compile an annual report with details on the number, grade level and gender of homeschooled students within each region.

Homeschool families and advocates said they will fight the measure, which they argue would infringe on parental rights. Past proposals to increase oversight also have met swift resistance. The sponsor of a 2011 bill that would have required homeschool registration withdrew it after hundreds of people protested at the Illinois State Capitol. In 2019, a different lawmaker abandoned her bill after similar opposition to rules that would have required curriculum reviews and inspections by child welfare officials.

The Home School Legal Defense Association, which describes itself as a Christian organization that advocates for homeschool freedom, said it plans to host virtual meetings to educate families on the bill and ways they can lobby against it.

Kathy Wentz of the Illinois Homeschool Association, which is against homeschool regulations, said she is concerned about the provision that would allow the state to review education materials, called a “portfolio review” in the legislation. She said visits from education officials could be disruptive to teaching.

“There is nothing in this bill to protect a family’s time so they can actually homeschool without interruptions,” Wentz said. She pointed to a 1950 Illinois Supreme Court ruling establishing that homeschooling qualified as a form of private education and that the schools were not required to register students with the state.

The bill would require all private schools to register with the state.

The Capitol News Illinois and ProPublica investigation found that it’s all but impossible for education officials to intervene when parents claim they are homeschooling. The state’s child welfare agency, the Department of Children and Family Services, doesn’t investigate schooling matters.

Under the proposed law, if the department has concerns about a family that says it is homeschooling, the agency could request that education officials conduct a more thorough investigation of the child’s schooling. The new law would then allow education officials to check whether the family notified its district about its decision to homeschool and compel parents to turn over homeschool materials for review.

The increased oversight also aims to help reduce truancy and protect homeschooled students who lose daily contact with teachers and others who are mandated to report abuse and neglect, Costa Howard said. Some truancy officials said that under existing law they have no recourse to compel attendance or review what students are learning at home when a family says they are homeschooling.

Jonah Stewart, research director for the Coalition for Responsible Home Education, a national organization of homeschool alumni that advocates for homeschooling regulation, said the lack of oversight in Illinois puts children at risk. “This bill is a commonsense measure and is critical not only to address educational neglect but also child safety,” Stewart said.
 
"I don't think a pair of shoes should cost 600 dollars, there's no way they cost nearly that much to produce if even half of that"
"BRO WHAT'RE YOU RETARDED?"
Oh, I'm the retard. Right. Hey, if you wanna be robbed it's not my decision, being happy about it is odd though.
What can I say? I just like my shell cordovan.
 
I legit almost just choked on my coffee.

A genuine, literal LOL just happened.
You would get in trouble for writing this character.
>black
>looks like a tranny
>looks like she's wearing a wig
>giant fucking teeth
>goofy smile
>giant fucking nose
>problem glasses
>cock-eyed
I almost feel bad for the cock-eyed part but holy shit.
 
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