US US Politics General 2 - Discussion of President Trump and other politicians

  • 🐕 I am attempting to get the site runnning as fast as possible. If you are experiencing slow page load times, please report it.
General Trump Banner.png

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/
 
Last edited by a moderator:
These Dem judges seem to be hell bent on creating the very Constitutional Crisis they've been bleating about for the last 2 months.

Ok big judge boy Trump ignores your ruling...what are you going to do? Fine him? Charge him with contempt? Send the bailiffs after him?

I just want the SCOTUS to put an end to this one way or the other. Either the POTUS is the POTUS or any scuzzy judge can do whatever they want because it's actually the judiciary that runs the country.

After SCOTUS has it's say then we can decide where the US goes from there.
They want to be Brazil or Israel where judges were given absurd powers with very little checks or balances. It’s basically the plan leftists have in non-EU countries. Just dictate from the Judiciary, you don’t have to run for the Bench in the Federal systems of many countries.
 
1) why are so many of them crusty old ladies, isn't sitting around being obnoxious a young mans game?
2) does no one know how to make signs anymore? Half of these look like they were made by children and the other half look like you threw them together in 2 minutes

GRANNIE YOU PUT THE QUOTES AROUND THE WRONG WORD GOD DAMN IT
Screenshot 2025-04-05 203225.png
 
where will you go John Badman? Where will you go now that the US is raping all the other countries with high tariffs, where will you go that has freedom of speech to vocalize your distrust of the tranneis, of the Muslim caliphate, where you can access nutritious food and decent healthcare at a whim, where you can own a firearm

OH JOHNBADMAN, where will you gooooo
Oh, Badman. Where you gon' run to?
Oh, Badman. Where you gon' run to?
Oh, Badman. Where you gon' run to?
Cause Orange-Man bad?

He Ran to the French, said please hide me.
He ran to the French, monsewer hide me.
He ran to the French, said bon jewer please hide me.
From Orange Man's Gaze.

But the French said, Non
We can't hide you.
The French said Sacre bleu,
We won't hide you.
The Frogs said "لا"
We can't hide you.
We're Caliphate.
-Nina Simone
 
Oh, Badman. Where you gon' run to?
Oh, Badman. Where you gon' run to?
Oh, Badman. Where you gon' run to?
Cause Orange-Man bad?

He Ran to the French, said please hide me.
He ran to the French, monsewer hide me.
He ran to the French, said bon jewer please hide me.
From Orange Man's Gaze.

But the French said, Non
We can't hide you.
The French said Sacre bleu,
We won't hide you.
The Frogs said "لا"
We can't hide you.
We're Caliphate.
-Nina Simone
I'd like the UK to break from the Globohomo but yeah they'll just be a caliphate so whatever
The White House keeps dropping music videos of illegals being deported:
View attachment 7182251
View attachment 7182252
Source (Archive)
I hope they do one with the thing from B5
 
It's over for Cheeto Benito! Putin's cock holster is finished, especially after that 15 year old BROKE IT DOWN!

You Can Stop Asking Where the Mass Opposition Is. It’s Everywhere.
Mother Jones (archive.ph)
By Tim Murphy
2025-04-05 20:48:30GMT
mj01.jpg
Demonstrators pack Fifth Avenue in Manhattan.Carlos Chiossone/Zuma

It is a cliche to begin a story about a rally with a quote from a funny sign, but one small piece of floppy brown cardboard floating down 40th Street in Manhattan on Saturday seemed to capture the mood of this weekend’s “Hands Off” protests against President Donald Trump: “Where do I start?”

You could meet a dozen people and hear at least a dozen different existential threats. Hands off Social Security. Hands off public health grants. Hands off student visas. Hands off women. Hands off trans people. Hands off our tax dollars. Hands off Greenland. Hands off books. Hands off 401ks. Hands off immigrants. Hands off Mahmoud Khalil. Hands off grocery prices. Hands off unions. I even talked to a woman clutching a sign that said “Hands off Libby”—the popular e-reader for public library systems which is now in jeopardy thanks to massive cuts to the federal Institute of Museum and Library Services.

This barrage of grievances offered a snapshot of the new Trump administration’s multi-front war on modernity. But it also got at something essential about the current anti-Trump movement. People weren’t taking action just to protest what the president and his movement represented, but because of visceral fear—real fear—of what he had already done, and that once impossible things were now very much possible. People had lived through a Trump administration before. They were taking to the streets now, in part, because they had not lived through this.

That Saturday’s protests happened at all is notable. After Trump’s inauguration was not met with massive demonstrations, as it had been in 2017, a New York Times story declared the “Resistance” era over. But in recent weeks, as universities, law firms, big businesses, and most of the United States Congress have rolled over, rank-and-file Trump opponents have begun to make their anger heard. Hundreds of people began showing up at Tesla dealerships. Tens of thousands of people flocked to see Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. And this weekend, people flocked to rallies in all 50 states, in small towns and at massive demonstrations like the one I attended in New York, where tens of thousands of people packed Fifth Avenue for blocks, as part of a furious new popular front. You can stop asking where the mass opposition is now—it’s here.

“I’m a centrist in terms of politics in general,” Linda Brown of New York told me as she waited for the line to move. “But batshit crazy is batshit crazy.”

I spent a lot of time at anti-Trump demonstrations eight years ago, and the aesthetics now are, in a lot of ways, pretty similar to what they were back then. Saturday’s rallies were organized, in part, by Indivisible, the ur-Resistance group of the first Trump administration that grew from a Google Doc into a nationwide network. Cardboard signs displayed straight-from-social media nicknames (Cheeto, Muskrat, etc.) and droll complaints (“I’ve seen better cabinets at Ikea”). Attendees leaned white and boomer. I even saw a few pussy hats.

But if the crowd was similar, marchers I spoke with were responding to a threat they considered considerably more dangerous than the first time around. Trump 1.0 was chaotic and mean and ultimately quite destructive, but it was also—in hindsight—a shell of what it could have been. The administration was filled with a lot of weird guys with short attention spans. “Infrastructure week” became a punchline because it never really happened. But this time around, protestors were stunned by the speed of Trump and Musk’s demolition.

“They have fucked everything up in how many days, in how many months?” said Jewels Nation, a musician escaping the rain under a stretch of sidewalk scaffolding. “January, February, March—in three months, they have fucked us completely.” She was “terrified” about applying for Social Security, but her fears went deeper than just retirement savings; like other attendees, she believed that the United States had already become a “fascist state.”

The difference between then and now was “night and day,” said James Davis, president of the Professional Staff Congress, a union representing City University of New York faculty and staff. “It’s like he’s engineering a cultural revolution from the MAGA right, and now he’s working with no dissent whatsoever and expecting absolute fidelity and loyalty from everyone around him.” With one third of CUNY students being foreign born, and faculty dependent on visas and federal grants, the new administration was striking “at the heart of what we do,” he said.

The administration’s actions were affecting people who came out to the demonstration in tangible ways. Jill Pittman, a union collective-bargaining specialist from New Jersey who was marching alongside her young son, complained that Trump had gutted the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, which gets involved in labor disputes.

“I think they’re down to 12 people,” she said. “I use them every day—or used to use them every day.” What Trump was doing was severe enough that she was fearful for “the day that they make all labor unions illegal.”

Trump’s new administration was “radically more radical,” said Laurie Russell. “They’re so much more organized and focused with every single issue that is dear to our hearts, and eradicating everything.” In the first term, she said, “it was just sort of chaos and short-term difficulties.”

“Before we just hated him, we hated everything he stood for. And of course he was doing stuff,” explained Paul Demers. “But this is much broader.”

Trump’s attacks on universities, Deemers said, were a sign that the country was slipping into a Viktor Orban-style autocracy. “This is really more about democracy itself.”

This was just one protest in one place—albeit one very large protest in one very big place. Perhaps the vibes were different in Marshfield, Mass. or Salt Lake City or Bolivia, N.C. (Hopefully the weather was.) Ultimately the big story is not what the signs said, but the deep groundswell of anger and unrest that brought so many people in so many places out into the streets and other public spaces of their communities. The message is: crowd large. A lot of politicians and administrators and business leaders, in bowing to Trump, have drawn confidence and comfort from the perceived vibe shift. Events like this puncture that delusion. They are an unavoidable illustration of outrage. Trump may have gotten a lot undone in the last three months, but the opposition never went away, and it may finally be emboldened.

On Saturday, it showed that it is everywhere.
This 15-Year-Old Just Scorched Team Trump in a Frankly Amazing Interview
Mother Jones (archive.ph)
By Arianna Coghill and Michael Mechanic
2025-04-05 18:46:25GMT
mj02.jpg
James West/ Mother Jones

On Saturday, thousands of people all across the globe took to the streets to protest President Donald Trump’s administration. Out of the dozens of great people our reporters spoke to, one young interviewee stood out.

Senior Editor Michael Mechanic bumped into Grant, a 15-year-old student, while covering the feisty “Hands Off” protest in Princeton, New Jersey. Grant, who attended with his father and sister, eloquently (and modestly) broke down how Trump’s administration is tearing the country apart.

As one Bluesky commenter put it, “His parents deserve some respect. What an intelligent and caring kid.”

3lm3vvakezc2d.png

full res
https://bsky.app/profile/did:plc:qobvnkudcv3zlaklxxjduqoi/post/3lm3vvakezc2d (archive.ph)

Why are you here?

Everything. Doge destroying the government, cutting international aid to everyone, tariffs that help nobody, getting rid of all the DEI programs.

How old are you?

Fifteen.

Fifteen?

Yeah, I just turned 15.

And you feel like you’re politically engaged?

Not much, but more than I want to be. I just feel like it’s not ‘do you want right wing or left wing?’ It’s ‘do you want a good government or a or a country that’s in ruins?’ It’s not about your ideals anymore.

It’s about. Do you care about yourself? Do you care about the government? Do you care about people?

Is there anything that this government is doing that particularly gets under your skin?

I think firing all of the government workers because the government can’t do its job. And I bet some of those government workers aren’t coming back, so it’d be it’d be really hard to rebuild the government.

Do you think this is something that will affect your family directly?

No, but it will affect lots of people and it will be harder to do things in the future. I’m personally more worried about the country as a whole than my family, and I’m lucky to be in that position. Lots of people are worried about themselves.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
 
I just utterly love European arrogance. It amuses me so! They truly believe they could stop us from doing whatever we wanted, be it take greenland Canada, etc.

They fail to realize, we own them. We could destroy them. And no,we don't need nukes.

At ANY TIME, America could activate some old ass law, do a patriot act, whatever, declare Europe an enemy or whatever, and force us companies to block and stop engaging with European... anything.
Y'know what happens then?

Total collapse. Without a single boot. No Google, no YouTube, no play store, no app store, no iCloud, , no iPhones because no Apple ID.

No social media and that causes riots,

no cloud sevices or advertising infrastructure like AdSense or whatever, which that ALONE collapses the european economy

If we go hard enough, we can force companies to have the default os browsers like edge block European up address, so no computers that do much either unless you're using outdated ones that most don't even work with alot of modern shit.

We don't ever have to launch a single boot on ground, to murder Europe. They are so bound to our homegrown services that we could kill them with one swipe of a pen
 
I can't wait till we get past the moral fagging over AI art. People clutch their pearls over it but they're fine using it when it's to make fun of someone they hate.

Also, did Vance ever do anything weird? First they called him "weird", then they accuse him of fucking couches, now the AI art. Has he actually done anything malevolent or they just hope something sticks? People say they're afraid of a Vance presidency but he's one of the few I've seen in Trump's den of snakes who's willing to speak his mind against Trump's policy.
Vance is every Chad big brother who beat the shit out of the hipster bully that tormented his nerdy brother and every 10/10 guy to tell a femcel to fuck off when the femcel demanded sex on the spot.

They can't stand that he's popular and successful and Trump's heir so they dehumanize him as "weird" and try to make hin out as a sexual loser that fucks couches.
 
Really nigga you think half of all Chinese factors will close in a year ?

Don't be scared. I'm friends with Trump; he said he'll give you honorary American citizenship and a entry-level position at the Panda Express of your choice, but only if you post this to your Red Book Red Note "whatever commie shit you fags use" account.

anti ching element 2.png
 
Last edited:
Back