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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why are we even discussing annexing Canada now?
Their entire economy is based on oil exports, and tariffs. They don't even retain the refining capacity to supply their own domestic needs. Canada is a petrol-nation so fucking retarded, they import gasoline.

The only major sticking point in the absorption of the provinces as States, is universal single payer healthcare.

According to 'simulation universe comedy show' theory, DOGE will make enough cuts to fund universal single payer healthcare, allowing Trump to add a Yuge number of new States. The season finale will end with a cliffhanger where the DNC is dissolved, and nudist Libertarians replace them as the second major party.
 
why are we even discussing annexing Canada now?, I did not recall this being one of his campaign promises at all, is Trump's head still stuck in the 19th century thinking of expansionist ideals?, I do not get what the hell is he trying to do here, threatening our northern neighbor militarily is what we call a giant fucking waste of everyone's time and benefits NOBODY, the only thing this is doing is further worsening relations because....???

also isn't Canada broadly more left-leaning?, because that's one way of ensuring permanent leftist victory if they were ever incorporated.
Lurk moar
 
China remembered what Great Britain did to it and thought, "You know? That isn't such a bad idea right about now. Ret's try that! How courd it possibry go wrong?" And here we are now, with a modern version of the Opiate War.
Every time I look at the actions of foreign nations, it always circles back to Britain doing some fucked up chicanery during their hay days.
 
Another is a combination of the oversocalization Uncle Ted talked about, and having no concept of second or third order knock-on effects.
Ha, oh man that's a good one.

Unless you seriously think that's only a feature of the left.

Edit: The reactions to this prove what I mean. Lmao, no introspection whatsoever.
Another thing everyone forgets is the American prison camps were the best in the world.
What an utterly fucking hideous thing to say.
 
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Blocked by a federal judge rightfully calling the ICE gestapo out for violating citizen's rights. Khalil is a green card holder (read: permanent resident) and the fact they can openly just bust down dorm doors and swipe anyone for disagreeing with Israel truly shows where this shithole is headed
At least be honest...

As the protest leader at Columbia University, he is suspected of distributing terrorist propaganda material.

If the state has enough evidence to justify revokation of a green card remains to be seen. But with non-citizens, the government has some room to remove said individual based on their immigration status.
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Remember that Palestine protest fucker who got arrested look what he reposted on his Instagram before he got arrested.

Still think he shouldn't get thrown out?
Maybe we should throw every citizen more loyal to the people of a foreign country out.
Maybe we should throw every dual-citizen out to the country they're a dual-citizen of, as well.
Maybe we could build deportation camps for the purpose.
Maybe this is something that was tried before.

Time is a flat circle.
 
downright trying to threaten the existence of Canada for what?, they tariff US products too high?
Trump rightly or wrongly wants to bring Canadian jobs and manufacturing to the United States.

This isn't India or China, but our next door neighbor that has a similar standard of living and is reasonably close to our culture.

What comparative advantage do they have vs a person from Washington, Idaho, Vermont, New Hampshire, Michigan, etc.?

Perhaps trying to encourage economic growth in those fields is a mistake but the plan previously was trying to teach a 45 year old coal miner to code so they could work under a 20 something Pajeets.
 
my question is why are we just downright trying to threaten the existence of Canada for what?, they tariff US products too high?
reciprocal tariffs. Canada has tariffs on goods coming from america, america has very low to no tariffs on goods coming in from Canada. This means that Canada can export into the US very lucratively, but punishes imports, protecting their local businesses while potentially threatening american businesses. IIRC exports a lot of petroleum and maple syrup, imports a lot of steel and aluminium.

Trump is not just doing this with Canada, it just turns out Canada is a fake country that cannot survive without the USA being unreasonably kind to them. Hence the "If you're so dependent on me, you should just be a part of my country" meme. If what Trump is doing is genuinely threatening the existence of Canada, perhaps Canada should shape up.
 
Pro-immigrant archbishop takes over D.C. church amid Trump crackdown
The Washington Post (archive.ph)
By Michelle Boorstein
2025-03-11 23:34:36GMT
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Cardinal Robert McElroy is installed as the archbishop of the Archdiocese of Washington on Tuesday at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. (Allison Robbert/For The Washington Post)
Cardinal Robert McElroy took over leadership of the D.C. archdiocese Tuesday, bringing a well-known advocate for immigrant rights to one of the most prominent posts in the U.S. Catholic Church.

More than 3,500 people filled the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, the country’s largest Catholic Church, for McElroy’s installation as archbishop. As is custom, Cardinal Christophe Pierre, the pope’s ambassador in D.C., started the ceremony by asking McElroy if he would accept the position and “devote yourself to the people of God” in the D.C. archdiocese. McElroy said he accepted the position and then ascended to an elevated chair, where he was handed the archbishop’s crosier, a symbol of his new position.

McElroy gave a brief homily focused on the power of hope. “All of us are wounded, in pain, sinners,” he said. “Mercy and compassion must be our first instinct.” God’s vision of every human equal in dignity “deeply contrasts with our world.”

During the ceremony, a handful of advocates stood on the sidewalk outside the basilica with signs calling for more transparency in the Church.

The San Franciscan native is seen by many church-watchers as a counterbalance to the Trump administration, which has called for mass deportation of immigrants and slashing funding for programs for the needy.

McElroy, 71, takes leadership of the archdiocese, which includes D.C. and suburban and rural parts of Southern Maryland, at a time when it is facing a budget crunch and potential fallout from Trump administration efforts to cut funding for some church priorities.

It also comes as high-level members of the Trump administration and allies of the president have leveled attacks on religious groups, including Catholics. Earlier this year, Vice President JD Vance — who converted to Catholicism in 2019 — criticized the U.S. Catholic Church’s efforts to help immigrants and refugees, suggesting the Church is motivated by money, and alleged without evidence that it works with millions of “illegal immigrants.”

Because about 40 percent of the budget for Catholic Charities, the social welfare arm of the archdiocese, comes from government funding, potential Trump administration cuts to federal social programs could impact the kinds of service the archdiocese will be able to provide, said Monsignor John Enzler, former head of Catholic Charities and a longtime leader in the archdiocese. An archdiocesan spokeswoman declined comment, saying the staff was “busy."

McElroy, appointed in early January, is one of the country’s leading Catholic clerics to espouse Pope Francis’s vision of a welcoming church focused on the poor and marginalized. In his previous post as head of the diocese of San Diego, which shares a border with Mexico, he was known for his pastoral approach to migrants and outreach to the LGBTQ+ community.

Catholic teaching, McElroy said last month, says nations have the right to control their border — “as long as it’s done with dignity to people.”

“What’s going on now is a wider cultural attack upon all of those who are undocumented … many fleeing persecution and violence,” he said.

More than one-third of the D.C. archdiocese, which includes about 667,000 Catholics, are Latino.

While McElroy speaks out regularly for Catholic teachings that may clash with the new administration, he will not seek a confrontation with the White House, Catholic leaders have said.

“Pope Francis is sending a pastor, not a message to Washington,” said John Carr, a former longtime lobbyist for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops on peace and justice issues. “Cardinal McElroy will be principled, not political. His priorities will be moral, not ideological. He will be civil, but not silent in challenging the administration when their policies threaten the poor and vulnerable.”

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The procession for the ceremony on Tuesday. (Allison Robbert/For The Washington Post)

McElroy is taking over leadership of an archdiocese that needs to get on solid financial and spiritual footing. Some younger priests, who tend to be more theologically conservative, have said they are wary of McElroy welcoming LGBTQ people without reiterating traditional teaching, which prohibits sexual relationships outside heterosexual marriage.

And two Catholic outlets, the Pillar and National Catholic Reporter, reported over the last year that the archdiocese is running a deficit as high as $10 million. The financial issues are related to multiple factors, the outlets reported, including a major sexual misconduct scandal that erupted in 2018, as well as the pandemic shutdowns and a failure to adapt fast enough to a period when many weren’t coming to church to put money in the basket. The church is also receiving about $5 million less a year from congregants, said Enzler, the former head of Catholic Charities.

Correction
A previous version of this article incorrectly said about 35 percent of the Washington archdiocese’s budget comes from government funding. About 40 percent of the budget for Catholic Charities, the social welfare arm of the Washington archdiocese, comes from government funding. The article has been corrected.
Because about 40 percent of the budget for Catholic Charities, the social welfare arm of the archdiocese, comes from government funding,
Should be zero percent.
 
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