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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Says the dude who supports Elon importing millions of H1Bs.

Starting random trade wars with first world countries without any strategy whatsoever isn't going to solve the structural problems America faces. Nobody's going to invest in America when Trump can just say "anudda 25% on tariffs, the best tariffs ever."

But hey, enjoy your inflation. Because those companies aren't paying the tariffs, you are. What Trump is doing now will make anything that isn't far-left globalism politically toxic for decades to come.

You don't understand, clearly this is some sort of multi-dimensional chinese checkers move which will totally save the white race and america. The key to America's future is to import millions of street shitters and call anybody who wants some level of normalcy a nigger.
 
Says the dude who supports Elon importing millions of H1Bs.

Starting random trade wars with first world countries without any strategy whatsoever isn't going to solve the structural problems America faces. Nobody's going to invest in America when Trump can just say "anudda 25% on tariffs, the best tariffs ever."

But hey, enjoy your inflation. Because those companies aren't paying the tariffs, you are. What Trump is doing now will make anything that isn't far-left globalism politically toxic for decades to come.
Says the pedophile. I'm sure the local police dept would love to scan your hard drive.
 
“While the thought of Donald Trump walking into the house chamber might make you wanna crawl into a fetal position (which I totally understand)…”

It’s so helpful she tells us exactly how to feel right off the bat.

ps dumb cunt- His name’s not Trump, it is PRESIDENT TRUMP
The media loves calling him Mr. Trump or just Trump like it's gonna hurt his feelings. They been doing that since the biden administration. Even going far as calling him former president
 
  • Lunacy
Reactions: Justin Igger
Sheboons harassing DJ Daniel
View attachment 7059627
I saw an interview he did and one of the comments under it said he looked like he matured 30 years in the time he's been fighting cancer. I can believe it too seeing how embarrassed he looks being around those women.
 
I saw an interview he did and one of the comments under it said he looked like he matured 30 years in the time he's been fighting cancer. I can believe it too seeing how embarrassed he looks being around those women.
I don't know if it's maternal instincts or what but I just want to get him away from those ladies. unfortunately as a cop dealing with those kind of citizens feels like you're two seconds away from them screeching and firing a gun at you or something
 
Internal Democratic tensions erupt after Trump speech
Axios (archive.ph)
By Andrew Solender and Hans Nichols
2025-03-06 01:08:35GMT
Congressional Democrats' internal divisions over how to combat President Trump surfaced with a fury Wednesday after the president was repeatedly heckled and disrupted during his speech to Congress.

Why it matters: The party is in a rut, stumbling on finding the most effective counterattack to Trump's full-bore assault on the federal bureaucracy. That struggle played out on primetime television Tuesday night.
  • Democrats have been bombarded by grassroots activists demanding they scrap norms and traditions in favor of bare-knuckle political brawling.
  • But many party leaders and other establishment-oriented Democrats believe that a more narrow, subdued approach remains the most effective.
  • A senior House Democrat told Axios that some moderates are angry at progressives for their outbursts, but added that "people are pissed at leadership too. … Everyone is mad at everyone."
What happened: Trump's speech was rocked by disruptions right from the start, with Rep. Al Green (D-Texas) repeatedly heckling the president until Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) ordered Green escorted out of the chamber.
  • Democrats held up signs and wore shirts with slogans blasting DOGE and Elon Musk, walked out of the chamber in protest, and heckled Trump throughout his 100-minute speech.
  • A large portion of Democrats opted for more traditional, silent forms of protest — color-coordinated outfits or refusing to stand or clap for most of the speech — without resorting to disruptive tactics.
What they're saying: Rep. George Latimer (D-N.Y.) said he felt the disruptions were "inappropriate," telling Axios, "When a president — my president, your president — is speaking, we don't interrupt, we don't pull those stunts."
  • "I didn't take that approach myself, so obviously I don't condone it," centrist Rep. Jared Golden (D-Maine) said of the disruptions.
  • Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.), in a post on X, lamented what he called a "sad cavalcade of self owns and unhinged petulance" and told Axios: "I don't think that's the way forward."
Zoom in: It's not just about decorum and norms. Some Democrats argued that the disruptive lawmakers failed on the messaging front as well.
  • Golden told Axios: "If anyone is thinking that it was an effective strategy, they're probably in an echo chamber. My take is that the average American thought the optics were pretty bad."
  • "It would be a compliment to call it a strategy," said another centrist House Democrat, pointing to online photoshops of the signs members held up.
  • The lawmaker also criticized colleagues who refused to applaud even Trump's guests: "Not standing for Trump would have been a fine strategy, but you need to separate him from the kid with cancer."
  • Several House Democrats noted that most of the disruptors were mostly progressives from safe districts — arguing that swing-district voters were turned off by their outbursts.
Yes, but: Some progressives are training their fire on leadership, arguing that a lack of top-down coordination left rank-and-file lawmakers to develop their own tactics.
  • Even before the speech, "there was definitely frustration about lack of guidance [or a] plan," said one progressive lawmaker.
  • Said another: "People are super pissed that we didn't get more direction from leadership."
  • Leadership had urged members to attend the speech, bring guests negatively impacted by DOGE and not use props: "I actually believe that what happened yesterday — the leader did not want that," said the centrist Democrat.
What to watch: Some Democrats aren't ruling out voting for Rep. Dan Newhouse's (R-Wash.) resolution to censure Green for "breach of proper conduct" when it comes up Thursday.
  • Golden and Rep. Don Davis (D-N.C.) told Axios they are undecided on the measure.
  • The centrist House Democrat who spoke on the condition of anonymity told Axios: "What [Green] did was inappropriate — and he became the story, not the price of eggs."
  • But other centrists argued there is a partisan double-standard at play: "I will vote against censure because the other side was equally or more misbehaved," said Rep. Vicente Gonzalez (D-Texas).
 
Things -will- get worse before they get better. A lot worse. The dollar -is- going to fall, our allies -will- have strained relations with us, there -will- be rises in prices and the need to tighten the belts of Americans.
Thereby setting the stage for everyone turning against Trump and voting in a Dem president in 2028 to undo whatever progress he plans to make.

Long-term plans are not viable in this era. The masses want their problems solved now.
 
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