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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Being in South Africa without secret service protection sounds like a recipe for getting Minecrafted
Too bad he doesn't have hundreds of millions of dollars in illicit funds and decades of connections with the intel agencies through his board seat with the National Democratic Institute, a branch of the CIA cutout, the National Endowment for Democracy.

He's just a babe in the woods of Niggertown..




In other news, Trump just needs his own lower court judge to issue orders telling him to ignore the other judge's orders and keep doing what he's doing. Treat it like Stratego. My lower court judge counters your lower court judge.
 
Parent at a Three Rivers School District meeting in Oregon reads an excerpt from an extremely graphic pornographic book that is available to students in school. Her challenge to have the book removed by the district was denied.

View attachment 7104181
Pro-tip: If a kid takes the book home, she can destroy it and the school can't do shit about it.

why not destroy property?
when it's used against you or me
is that violence
or self defense?
you. tell. me.


There is no logical reason why the right hasn't been taking these books home from every faggot-infested school library in the country and just destroying them, or having their kids go in with a bottle of india ink and pour it over the book in the library, if they're not allowed to take it home. They'd have to make the absurd claim that destroying homosexual indoctrination pornography they were showing children is a hate crime, and they would much rather not talk about that, thanks.
When did they change micro aggressions to microinequities? Is this a fed specific term?View attachment 7104327
People started making fun of microagressions, and it reached being mocked on TV before word got out to shut it down, so they had to make a new word up.

They change the word-weapons every so often when the former word-weapons are "found" by the enemies of the revolution, or when they stop being effective. DEI becomes JEDI or BRIDGE. Nazi becomes Fascist. Global Warming becomes Climate Change. Marxism becomes Social Justice. yadda yadda yadda. Remember, these are post-modernists. Definitions do not matter. Logic does not matter. Reason does not matter. The only thing that matters is power. Word-weapons give them power over you, that's why they use them, that's why they redefine them at will, that's why they demand the right to dictate what word-weapons you're allowed to use.

Once you realize the only thing these types ultimately respect is a swift punch to the throat and throwing them outside of polite society, autistic screeching about how you aren't allowed to do that because they used word-weapons on you, the better.

Regarding the Autopen thing, what if you could look at the timestamps where the autopen was used and then check and them against Secret Service records to see if Joe Biden was present at the time? That would be wild.

It would be, like, definitive proof that Biden didn't sign those documents, making them invalid.
@Gehenna pointed out this was one likely way to prove the fraudulent use of the autopen. And given how dead fucking silent the media and activists (outside of tard rage in this thread) are being on this, I'd again, wager that Trump has proof and he's just waiting to see if they try and incriminate themselves worse in response. I bet every Biden staffer is being watched 24x7 right this very moment to see who they contact and what they say.

But the important thing is that the Obama/Biden autopen was basically a plotter device that recorded his signature movement and recreated it on demand. It wasn't a telepresence device like previous ones, one that moved a second pen in the same way the first pen was being moved.

For those not getting the difference, it literally is an analogue version of copy and paste. We would never, EVER, allow Presidential powers to be confirmed by bidenlegitsignature_rev5_final.png being attached to the email, and we should never accept an autopen that isn't telepresence based.
 
Being in South Africa without secret service protection sounds like a recipe for getting Minecrafted
oh yeah lmao I forgot about that, what the hell shady shit was he there for? like, scheme against Elon or something?
 
Supreme Court has to be pissing themselves at this point. All their little District Court flunkies have really stepped in it. On the one hand, its quite likely the retards HAVE overstepped their authority with such broad and sweeping TRO's. Yet now with the chief executive going full Andrew Jackson and telling the judges they can use the paper their orders are written on to wipe their ass, its a real conundrum. They can't just ignore that.
Sean from Potentially Criminally said it perfectly in one of his streams from around a month ago. Something along the lines of that these judges are burning their political capital just so they can be pissing and screaming that orange man bad. I believe this will have long lasting effects on courts
 
Trump's tariff on Canadian oil makes sense now. It is to support the growth of American shale oil production.

Canadian oil producers dump their heavy tar oil sands under market value.

To make American shale oil competitive with the cheaper but dirtier alternative, 10% tariff makes the field more even for the American producers.

I expect the tariff to go as high as 20-30% once crude falls below 50 dollars per barrel.
 
I wanted to see all the signatures of the pardons Biden has signed, these are the ones I found on a .gov website. DOJ list of Biden pardons

April 26, 2022, Three pardons.

Abraham W. Bolden Sr..pngBetty Jo Bogans.pngDexter Eugene Jackson.png

December 30, 2022. Six pardons

Beverly Ann Ibn-Tamas.pngCharlie Byrnes Jackson.pngEdward Lincoln De Coito III.pngGary Parks Davis.pngJohn Dix Nock III.pngVincente Ray Flores.png

September 14, 2023, Three pardons

Amin Hasanzadeh.pngKaveh Lotfolah Afrasiabi .pngReza Sarhangpour Kafrani.png

December 20, 2023. One pardon. (The DOJ site list this as December 20, though the pardon says 15th.)

Alex Nain Saab Moran.png

April 24, 2024. Eleven people in one pardon.

Signature of April 24th, 2024.png

July 26, 2024. One pardon.

Vadim Konoshchenok.png

December 1, 2024. One Pardon, our boy Hunter.

Robert Hunter Biden.png

December 12, 2024. This is a large group of like 40 people. All under one pardon.

Signature of December 12th, 2024.png

January 19, 2025. These are the "auto pen" signatures. There are seven different pardons, some are for groups, some are for individual people.

Pardon_Warrant_1-January 19th, 2025(Signature).pngPardon_Warrant_2-January 19th, 2025(Signature).pngPardon_Warrant_3-January 19th, 2025(Signature).pngPardon_Warrant_4-January 19th, 2025(Signature).pngPardon_Warrant_5-January 19th, 2025(Signature).pngPardon_Warrant_6-January 19th, 2025(Signature).pngPardon_Warrant_7-January 19th, 2025(Signature).png
 
Egg drop.png
I am financially ruined! The egg line was supposed to go up forever. I hope all those Trump voters are happy now.
“You see what happens when you find a stranger in the Alps!”
“This is what happens when you feed a stoner scrambled eggs!”
“This is what happens when you fool a stranger...”

R.jpeg
hold eggs.jpg
 
“When the economy slows, gasoline demand drops — along with demand for other refined products like diesel and jet fuel,” he said. “We’ve already seen some signals that the months ahead could be challenging.”
TLDR We measure the economy's performance by a CEO's ability to buy another private jet and not your average family's ability to pay its bills.
 
Judge in Alien Enemies Act case chides DOJ lawyer over refusal to answer key questions about deportations
NBC News (archive.ph)
By Ryan J. Reilly, Chloe Atkins, and Dareh Gregorian
2025-03-17 23:14:51GMT
WASHINGTON — A federal judge pressed a Justice Department lawyer Monday over why the Trump administration did not comply with his order to temporarily halt deportations under an 18th century law and asked why key information about the flights over the weekend was being withheld.

In a tense hearing, U.S. District Judge James Boasberg summarized the administration's position on his court order Saturday as “we don’t care, we’ll do what we want.” Boasberg had directed any planes in the air carrying deportees to return to the United States.

The Justice Department attorney, Abhishek Kambli, said the administration had complied with the judge's written order, which came hours after Boasberg's oral ruling at an emergency hearing Saturday. Kambli argued the written ruling took precedence over the one issued from the bench, adding, "We believe that we’ve complied with the order.”

Boasberg said an order is an order.

“You’re saying that you felt that you could disregard it because it wasn’t a written order,” Boasberg said, calling the Justice Department's argument "a stretch."

He asked Kambli numerous questions about the flights — including how many there were and how many were in the air at the time — and Kambli refused to provide any details, citing national security concerns.

“I am only authorized to say what we have said” in the court filings, Kambli said.

The filing in question said the plaintiffs “cannot use these proceedings to interfere with the President’s national-security and foreign-affairs authority, and the Court lacks jurisdiction to do so.”

Boasberg ordered Kambli to answer several questions about the flights by noon Tuesday and to give him an official explanation about why he was not able to disclose that information in court at Monday's hearing and what forum he can answer those questions in.

"If the government takes the position that it will not provide that information to the Court under any circumstances, it must support such position, including with classified authorities if necessary," he ruled.

Boasberg said he would issue a written order with those questions after the hearing, “since apparently my oral orders don’t appear to carry much weight.”

He issued that order shortly after the hearing and said the response may, "if necessary, be sealed in part."

Boasberg scheduled another hearing for Friday.

Lee Gelernt, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union, which is helping represent the plaintiffs, said after the hearing that “there are decisions that are made all the time that people disagree with and are extremely polarizing, but that has happened for 200 years-plus in our country.”

“What changes here, what the difference is here, is the government’s apparent refusal to abide by the federal court’s power. Our country is based on the assumption that there are three equal branches and that the federal court will say what the law is and that the other two branches will adhere to those rulings. Once that ends, we’re in a very different situation in this country; we’re no longer a country based on the rule of law,” Gelernt said.

Just before the hearing, the Justice Department sent a letter to a federal appeals court seeking to remove Boasberg from the case, arguing he endangered national security by having an inquiry about the initiative the administration announced Saturday.

"The Government cannot—and will not—be forced to answer sensitive questions of national security and foreign relations in a rushed posture without orderly briefing and a showing that these questions are somehow material to a live issue. Answering them, especially on the proposed timetable, is flagrantly improper and presents grave risks to the conduct of the Government in areas wholly unsuited to micromanagement supervision by a district court judge," the letter said.

The court fight centers on the Trump administration's use of the Alien Enemies Act, a 1798 law, to deport people who it claims are part of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua.

The 18th century law gives the president the ability to quickly deport immigrants from "hostile" nations during war or when a foreign government perpetuates an "invasion." It hasn't been invoked since 1941.

Boasberg scheduled the hearing to determine the timeline of events since his order Saturday evening temporarily blocking President Donald Trump's use of the Alien Enemies Act to deport Tren de Aragua members.

On Saturday, he told a Justice Department lawyer to "immediately" inform his clients that any planes involved in deportations — and the people inside them who were subject to his order — needed to be returned to the United States. However, the government reported in a filing Sunday that "some gang members subject to removal under the Proclamation had already been removed from United States territory" before Boasberg's order was issued.

"However that’s accomplished, whether turning around a plane or not embarking anyone on the plane or those people covered by this on the plane, I leave to you," Boasberg had said Saturday. "But this is something that you need to make sure is complied with immediately.”

The Justice Department had sought to vacate the hearing Monday in the hours before it occurred, that the questions about planes' locations "implicate sensitive questions of national security, foreign relations, and coordination with foreign nations" that were "neither material nor appropriate."
Who is James Boasberg, the US judge at the center of Trump's deportation efforts?
FOX News (archive.ph)
By Breanne Deppisch
2025-03-17 14:36:06GMT
The federal judge who temporarily blocked President Donald Trump's use of a wartime law to deport Venezuelan nationals could be at the center of a larger battle after Trump's border czar vowed Monday to continue sending migrants back to Latin America.

U.S. District Court Judge James Boasberg made headlines Saturday for granting an emergency restraining order blocking the Trump administration from invoking a 1798 law to immediately deport Venezuelan nationals, including alleged members of the violent gang Tren de Aragua, for 14 days. Boasberg sided with the plaintiffs, Democracy Forward and the ACLU, in ruling that the deportations would likely pose imminent and "irreparable" harm.

"Given the exigent circumstances that [the court] has been made aware of this morning, it has determined that an immediate Order is warranted to maintain the status quo until a hearing can be set," Boasberg said in his order, which blocked Trump from invoking any deportations under the Alien Enemies Act for two weeks.

His decision drew immediate criticism from Trump's border czar, Tom Homan, who declared in an interview on "Fox & Friends" that, "We are not stopping."

"I don't care what the judges think. I don't care what the Left thinks. We're coming," Homan, said, adding, "Another fight. Another fight every day."

This was not the first time Boasberg found himself in the crosshairs of Trump's supporters – he previously oversaw the FISA court that authorized surveillance of certain members of Trump's 2016 campaign.

Boasberg, the chief judge of the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., was appointed to the bench nearly 15 years ago by President Barack Obama.

In 2014, Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts appointed him to serve a seven-year term on the U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, or FISA Court – a court comprised of 11 federal judges hand-selected by the chief justice.

The judges undergo extensive background checks prior to their confirmation, and are tasked with approving surveillance requests and wiretap warrants sought by federal prosecutors, law enforcement and intelligence agencies. Most of their work remains classified.

Boasberg served as the presiding judge of the FISA Court from 2020 to 2021.

A graduate of Yale, Oxford University and Yale Law, Boasberg clerked for the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals before later joining the Justice Department as a federal prosecutor in Washington, D.C.

After returning full-time to the federal bench, Boasberg oversaw the sentencing of former FBI attorney Kevin Clinesmith, who pleaded guilty to doctoring a 2017 email asking to extend surveillance permissions for its wiretap of former Trump campaign advisor Carter Page.

Boasberg declined to sentence Clinesmith to prison time and instead ordered him to just 12 months of probation and 400 hours of community service – a notable decision, given his own background on the FISA court.

He said in his sentencing decision that he believed Clinesmith's role at the center of a years-long media "hurricane" had provided sufficient punishment.

"Anybody who has watched what Mr. Clinesmith has suffered is not someone who will readily act in that fashion," Boasberg said.

"Weighing all of these factors together – both in terms of the damages he caused and what he has suffered and the positives in his own life – I believe a probationary sentence is appropriate here and will therefore impose it," he continued.

Until recently, Boasberg has largely avoided making headlines, including any public broadsides that may have put him at odds with the Trump administration. That changed quickly when he granted the restraining order this weekend.

The decision was immediately appealed by lawyers for the Trump administration.

Although Boasberg's order said any plane carrying migrants removed by the law in question be "immediately" returned to the U.S., the decision apparently came too late to stop an early wave of migrants being deported to El Salvador.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told Fox News that a plane carrying hundreds of individuals – including more than 130 persons removed under the Alien Enemies Act – had already "left U.S. airspace" by the time the order was handed down.

"The order, which had no lawful basis, was issued after terrorist [Tren de Aragua] aliens had already been removed from U.S. territory," Leavitt said.

It is unclear what, if any, steps the judge could take to reverse that action.

The standoff is the latest in a wave of legal challenges seeking to block or slow the wave of sweeping executive actions or orders Trump has issued in his second White House term, a fight that has come to define Trump's first few months back in office.

Courts have struggled to slow the dizzying pace of executive orders, which have called for the gutting of government personnel from federal agencies, halted billions of dollars in U.S. foreign aid, and attempted to ban birthright citizenship, among other things.

As of this writing, Trump has signed at least 200 executive orders and actions – most of which have been met with multiple court challenges and lawsuits.

Most are in the earliest stages of legal limbo, as courts seek to clarify the intent of the ruling, the alleged harm caused to plaintiffs, and later, to discern whether it is necessary or appropriate for the courts to intervene.

The White House asserts that lower court judges like Boasberg should not have the power to prevent the president from executing what it argues is a lawful agenda – though the judges in question have disagreed that the president's actions all follow the law.

"A single judge in a single city cannot direct the movements of an aircraft carrier full of foreign alien terrorists who were physically expelled from U.S. soil," Leavitt told Fox News.

At issue is Trump's use of the 228-year-old Alien Enemies Act to quickly deport Venezuelan nationals presumed to be members of the Tren de Aragua gang.

Plaintiffs have argued that Congress originally passed the law centuries ago to give the president more power during times of war to deport noncitizens. Since its creation, it has been used just three times: during the War of 1812, World War I, and most recently, during World War II.

They argued in their filing that it would be inappropriate for Trump to use the law now as a means of deporting Venezuelan migrants, as the country "is not invading the United States" and has not launched a "predatory incursion" into U.S. territory.

Boasberg agreed, noting Saturday that the two-week freeze will give the court more time to consider the merits of the case at hand.
 
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