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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Judge McConnell, the dude whose daughter works at many Lefty NGO's, has written a order demanding that the Trump Admin start paying out the FEMA contracts, including the ones to the so named sanctuary cities immediately.

This dude issued a TRO (shock!!) to release the funds to the states and cities immediately and end any funding pauses back on March 6th due to Trump's executive orders.

U.S. District Court Chief Judge John McConnell Jr. ruled that the Trump administration must release hundreds of millions of dollars in FEMA funds to 22 Democratic states and Washington, D.C. He found that the administration violated a court order by withholding the grant money.

"These acts of disobedience on behalf of the Trump Administration by delaying the processing of the FEMA funds for these (blue states) borders on open contempt of this courts orders and risks facing charges unless the Trump Administration immediately releases these FEMA funds"


Trump's DOJ stated they are working though the process of releasing the funds through the related process as establish by law and are moving as quickly as possible to obey the court orders but the "manual review process" takes time to fully complete. IE: The judge is pissed the money tap wasn't immediately turned back on when he said to and is angry that Trump's FEMA is dragging their feet by sticking to the letter of the law and not what the judge told them to do so now he's threatening them unless they comply now now NOW!

"This court reaffirms that the injunction on Noem from any pauses, delays, freezes, blocks, suspensions or cancellations in regards to the releasing of these FEMA grants to the defendants (the blue states) or any other similar orders or directives from the Trump Administration".

So once again a mid level judge is countermanding directives issued by the PoTUS and has even order that the manual review of grants is not allowed, FEMA must just hand over the hundreds of million of dollars now. Without review or delay just fork over the money as told within 48 hours (so Monday April 7th) or face contempt charges.

https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/5232494-judge-fema-grants-trump-blue-states/

BTW: in case people forgot this is the judge who called Trump a Dictator and Tyrant and donated 750K to the DNC in 2020 and is a director of a NGO whom will directly benefit from the FEMA money being released. But the RI appeals court ruled that of course there was no conflict of interest here.
 
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Today I saw a protest where is was just some 60 year old lady with a sign. How sad the state the Libs have become.
I just got the mental image of one of those "In the aaaarms of an angel" fundraising commericals for little starving brown kids in africa (money goes to warlords and leftist causes) or homeless pet doggos and cats...

... Only it's donating to make up for USAID slush and grift being cut to fund poor innocent antifa rent-a-mobs.

"Little Todd here hasn't been able to assault any black people and claim he was doing it to fight racism ALL year because the mean orange man stole his tax funded paycheck. Tyrone here hasn't been able to loot a walmart in days! And with the funding cut off Karen and Shaniqua have to moderate reddit for free. But with a monthly donation of just $10 dollars you can have him trying to set fire to apartment buildings with children in them or federal courthouses with people inside this evening. As a bonus, your tax dollars will be used to rebuild all the damage they cause in the name of street justice.

Won't you call now?"
 
Whenever Europeans think of America they think that
1: our country is a fraction of the size it actually is
2: that every square inch of America is picrel
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It's fine that they're ignorant. We often judge European countries by how much of a shit hole some of their cities are, but their smug elitism is starting to extend past ignorance and heading towards completely delusional territory
Even that is like a mile of land off a highway just framed to look like it's super compact and consumerist. Europeans are fucking retarded and I refuse to acknowledge them as people.
 
The Cardboard-Carrying Opposition Arrives
The Atlantic (archive.ph)
By Elaine Godfrey
2025-04-05 23:12:55GMT
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Caroline Gutman for The Atlantic

The opposition arrived in a flurry of painted cardboard.

Until this week, the 11th of Donald Trump’s second presidency, the resistance has not exactly been upper-case R. Any show of dissent by Democratic leadership has been virtually nonexistent, and protests against Trump’s policies have been small and sporadic. Citizen frustration with the new administration has registered nationally as little more than a distant rumble.

Today’s “Hands Off” protest, organized by a coalition of left-wing groups, was an attempt to raise the volume.

People carted their megaphones and rainbow flags to more than 1,200 sites across the country today—in D.C., of course, but also in Helena, Montana; Daytona Beach, Florida; and Dubuque, Iowa. The events spanned all 50 states, the organizers said, plus a few more exotic locales, such as Guadalajara, Lisbon, and Paris. Washington had expected to draw about 10,000 protesters; in the end, several times that showed up.

In interviews with some of those gathered today on the National Mall, demonstrators told me that they were under no illusion that Trump or Elon Musk would be much swayed by their anger or creative signage. The point, they said, was to show the rest of America that the opposition exists—and is widespread. “This is not for them,” Gina King, a retired teacher from New York City, told me. “This is for us.”

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Caroline Gutman for The Atlantic

The first mass protest of this administration was well timed. The week began with Cory Booker’s record-breaking 25-hour tirade against Trump from the Senate floor. The monologue accomplished nothing tangible—though it threw Booker’s Oura-ring readings out of whack—but it was a welcome stunt for voters who have been craving louder public rage against the administration’s actions. (What says outrage more than a man willing to hold it for 25 hours?) Then, on Tuesday night, Democrats in Wisconsin won the first electoral test of Trump’s second presidency, by defeating a state-supreme-court candidate backed by Trump and $20 million from Musk. Also on Tuesday, one of the largest mass layoffs of federal workers to date began, when employees at the CDC and the FDA were dismissed. Finally, on Thursday, Trump’s tariffs sent Americans’ retirement savings plunging, triggered manufacturer layoffs, and forced CNBC to bring its bear-market graphic out of hibernation.

King, the retired teacher, carried a sign thanking Booker and Wisconsinites for their efforts in the fight against Trump. She protested the president during the Women’s March in early 2017, but this political moment is different, she told me. “It feels more desperate,” she said. “We should all be standing in front of the Supreme Court every day, in front of the National Institutes of Health every day.”

Half a dozen federal employees spoke with me at the protest, but none wanted to share their full name for fear of retribution from the Trump administration. “I’m here because I feel powerless,” said a man named Edward, who had just been forced out of his longtime government job. He carried a sign mocking the “five bullet points” that federal employees are now required to submit weekly to Musk’s DOGE.

“In the original Women’s March, we were very concerned with women’s rights, but now he’s touching all areas,” Tracie, an employee in the Department of Veterans Affairs, told me. She was willing to risk her job to show up at the protest, together with her daughter and granddaughter, she told me, because she wants America to see her anger. “The administration is completely discounting us. They’re saying we’re bought, we’re paid for, we’re bused in.” But the opposition to Trump is real, she said. “We are out here.”

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Caroline Gutman for The Atlantic

On the Mall, it was difficult to pinpoint a chief complaint or singular demand. Hands off what, exactly? I asked.

There were so many things to be furious about. No single piece of cardstock could contain it all. People carried posters about the administration’s deportation of immigrants and dissident students; Laura Loomer’s Oval Office influence; Musk’s taking a chain saw to the federal government; the return of preventable diseases; the technological ineptitude of Trump’s defense officials; and attacks on abortion rights.

Many of those I spoke with cited creeping fascism. “There’s been a total disregard of habeas corpus,” Larry Bostian, a retiree from Silver Spring, Maryland, told me. “Democracy is in a death spiral.” Paul Singleton, an Air Force veteran from Stafford, Virginia, agreed. “I used to wonder, how did Hitler do what he did?” he said. “When Trump got into office and started appointing all these people, I stopped.”

Given the stakes, people wanted to know, where was Democratic Party leadership? Katrin Hinrichsen, a retired computer engineer from Connecticut, had brought a few signage options, including one that read Time to CHUCK Schumer. “I want some effective leadership of the Democratic minority,” she told me.

A few Democratic lawmakers addressed the rally in D.C., including Representatives Jamie Raskin of Maryland and Ilhan Omar of Minnesota. They were speaking on a stage somewhere amid the dense crowd gathered at the base of the Washington Monument. But most people couldn’t hear them; some had no idea there was a stage at all. Instead, parts of the rally devolved into a kind of hippie picnic, where sign carriers chatted in circles or plopped on the grass to eat sandwiches. One woman handed out nuts and dried fruit: “Cashews, anyone?” Another laughed with her friends—“The last time I felt safe in a crowd this big was at a Taylor Swift concert!”

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Caroline Gutman for The Atlantic

“We’ve been scattered; we’ve been demoralized,” Bostian, the retiree from Silver Spring, told me, looking at the sea of people around him. “But this is awesome.”

The 2017 Women’s March connected protesters who kept in touch, established “Resistance” groups in their hometowns, and eventually helped elect a wave of new Democrats during the 2018 midterms. Today’s protesters think that they can do it again. They just need the rest of America to hear them.

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Caroline Gutman for The Atlantic
A Letter to Columbia
Columbia Spectator (archive.ph)
By Mahmoud Khalil
2025-04-05 01:52:20GMT
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By Gabriella Gregor Splaver / Columbia Daily Spectator

Editor's Note: This op-ed was dictated by Mahmoud Khalil, SIPA
’24. Spectator verified this with his Attorney Amy Greer and conducted its regular editing process. Khalil is currently detained at the Central Louisiana ICE Processing Center.

To Columbia—an institution that laid the groundwork for my abduction—and to its student body, who must not abdicate their responsibility to resist repression,

Since my abduction on March 8, the intimidation and kidnapping of international students who stand for Palestine has only accelerated. On March 9, Yunseo Chung had to file a lawsuit and eventually seek a court order barring U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement from detaining her for her protest activity. On March 11, Ranjani Srinivasan chose to cross the border to Canada upon the belief that this university was ready to hand her over to ICE. Beyond the gates of Columbia, Leqaa Kordia, Dr. Badar Khan Suri, and Rümeysa Öztürk have all been snatched by the state. The situation is oddly reminiscent of when I fled the brutality of Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Syria and sought refuge in Lebanon.

The logic used by the federal government to target myself and my peers is a direct extension of Columbia’s repression playbook concerning Palestine.

In the 18 months since the genocidal campaign in Gaza began, Columbia has not only refused to acknowledge the lives of Palestinians sacrificed for Zionist settler colonialism, but it has actively reproduced the language used to justify this killing. You received countless emails from former University President Minouche Shafik, former interim University President Katrina Armstrong, and the deans of your schools that manufactured public hysteria about antisemitism without once mentioning the tens of thousands of Palestinians murdered under bombs made of your dollars.

Columbia has suppressed student dissent under the auspices of combating antisemitism. Last year, Columbia turned over student disciplinary records to Congress and created the Task Force on Antisemitism that broadly categorized anti-Israel sentiment as hate speech to condemn protests. Around the beginning of Armstrong’s tenure, Columbia created the Office of Institutional Equity, providing senior administration members with unilateral control over the “review and arbitration of all reports of discrimination and discriminatory harassment at Columbia,” effectively diminishing the power of the University Judicial Board, an appointed panel of students, faculty, and staff, whose role it is to hear “all charges of violations of” the Rules of University Conduct. Supposedly responsible for overseeing cases of Title VI, VII, and IX violations, OIE instead became a mechanism to persecute pro-Palestinian students with no due process. Even the contents of this letter, absurdly, could be presented as sufficient to be reported to OIE.

The movement for Palestinian freedom and justice at Columbia and across the United States has always centered community care. Hundreds of you joined the encampment last spring. Since then, many of you have stayed involved in the movement. Together, you organized mutual aid for families in Gaza through bake sales and funding campaigns. You created study spaces, reading circles, and cross-movement solidarity. This movement has always been grassroots. It was led by students—many younger than me—who risked their careers, their degrees, and their futures to demand divestment. Anyone who has truly engaged with the movement knows that claims that its goals and purpose are rooted in antisemitism are mere fabrication.

In a cruel irony, the students who publicize manufactured safety concerns regarding antisemitism are the same ones who repeatedly show up at your events looking for provocation, leaving only disappointed. Some of your classmates work with faculty to run doxxing platforms, submit our names to websites and groups like Canary Mission and Betar, and turn our lives into targets. While they sit comfortably behind their screens, their actions have very real consequences for the rest of us. If I am deprived of my child in the first moments of his life, the people responsible will have been, among others, these students.

Especially in light of the dual degree program with Tel Aviv University, I can’t help but think that if I were in Palestine, some of these students would be the ones stopping me at checkpoints, raiding my university, piloting the drones surveilling my community, or killing my neighbors in their homes. While students were building solidarity at Columbia, some pro-Israel students were participating in the genocide as military personnel during their school breaks, only to return to campus and claim victimhood in the classroom.

These students who have smeared and attacked us have also benefited from the mutual backing of this institution and the federal government. Unable to build a movement supported by their peers, these students met instead with right-wing members of Congress to pressure a University crackdown. Abandoning all pretenses of neutrality, University Provost Angela Olinto and Armstrong also convened with the Israeli minister of education. Together, both coalitions pushed the weight of the federal government down on students.

I ask you, who is truly at risk here?

To the students who remain apathetic to Columbia’s disregard for human life and its willingness to discard student safety: As pressure from the federal government intensifies, know that your neutrality on Palestine will not protect you. When the time comes for the federal government to target other causes, it will be your names that Columbia will offer on a silver platter, it will be your pleas that fall on deaf ears, it will be your just causes that are stonewalled.

This institution’s singular concern has always been the vitality of its financial profile, not the safety of Jewish students. This is why Columbia was all too happy to embrace a superficial progressive agenda while still disregarding Palestine, and this is why it will soon turn on you, too.

This has been made clear most recently through the deputization of Public Safety officers to arrest students, the presence of New York Police Department officers and Department of Homeland Security agents on and around campus, the increasing use of surveillance technology, and the McCarthyist and racist interventions at the Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African studies department. This institution has systematically gutted every value it claims to uphold all so that it may better function as an arm of the state.

If there was any illusion left, it shattered last week when the board of trustees executed a historic maneuver to seize direct control of the presidency. Cutting out their middleman, the board appointed fellow trustee Claire Shipman to a position reserved for academic leadership. Who can still pretend this is an educational institution and not the “Vichy on the Hudson”?

Faced with a movement for divestment they couldn’t crush, your trustees opted to set fire to the institution they’re entrusted with. It is incumbent upon each of you to reclaim the University and join the student movement to carry forward the work of the past year.

To members of Columbia’s faculty who pat themselves on the back for their progressive leanings but are content to limit their participation to performative statements: What will it take for you to resist the destruction of your University? Are your positions worth more than the lives of your students and the integrity of your work?

In his last message to a world that betrayed him, the beloved Palestinian journalist Hossam Shabat said, “I did all this because I believe in the Palestinian cause. I believe this land is ours, and it has been the highest honor of my life to die defending it and serving its people.”

So too do we believe that it is the highest honor of our lives to struggle for the cause of Palestinian liberation. The student movement will continue to carry the mantle of a free Palestine. History will redeem us, while those who were content to wait on the sidelines will be forever remembered for their silence.

Mahmoud Khalil is a recent Palestinian graduate of the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University. He has previously worked in development and international affairs at the United Nations, the British government, as well as other non-profit organizations in the Middle East. He is currently being detained by the U.S. government for his pro-Palestinian advocacy.

To respond to this op-ed, or to submit your own, contact opinion@columbiaspectator.com.
 
Obama is not really akin to Trump. Trump can enjoy parody and is capable of self-parody. He’s literally called himself a prissy richboy faggot on SNL. Trump likes to be transparent, he likes doing press events. He’s had years to develop a public image and can be very candid under the spotlight.

Obama is manufactured. Most “moments” Obama had were a production and designed to flatter him. His way of speaking is the same, it’s supposed to sound important and didactic. Worse of all is that he has a bigger ego than Trump. Trump only ran because Obama decided that the White House Correspondents Dinner was to be a Blood Eagle for Trump being a critic of him.

@MirrorNoir knows more about this than I do. I imagine the departed Gehenna as well (RIP).
 
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Can someone tell me why Russia and China are winning in the trade war yet America seems to be collapsing?
The only thing we trade with Russia is the oil that funds their adventure on the frontier. Why China would be a winner, as they import a massive amount of food & fuel, and their economy relies on the US to subsidize shipping costs to the US? Meanwhile Trump is up 6 points with Democrats.
 
Is that some common protest phrase, or was it a catchphrase distributed by the organizers?
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With the USAID money drying up, the protest organizers had to get creative. Hence why they're dipping into the "Get Autistic Shut Ins Out of the House" fund.
 
More Than 500 Law Firms Back Perkins Coie in Fight With Trump
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Ben Protess
2025-04-04 21:22:48GMT
There are conspicuously very few "big law" firms on this list. I counted around 5 national firms I knew of. I saw Freshfields, which is a UK firms with offices in the US. The biggest and most profitable firms—almost all of them—are just waiting and playing possum. At the core of it, messing around with Trump is far worse for your bottom line than being a Twitter (or LinkedIn lmao) hero. Your big litigation client doesn't care about doing justice to Trump when it's their money and lawsuits that are being screwed with.

It's no doubt unconstitutional to bar them from federal buildings. There's a good Privileges and Immunities Clause argument going back to the Slaughterhouse Cases that the ability to freely come to government buildings, like federal courthouses, is a Privilege or Immunity under the Constitution. It could be extended to these other federal buildings.
 
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