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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Every one of us who attended a university since 2010 have had the same stories to tell.

-Your time at college left you wanting more, you spend loads of time in high school level courses not related to your field and at least 3 or 4 gen-eds that amount to a fat woman telling you her political views. This can be worked into geneds categorized as sociology, science, history, even spanish.
-You and most of your friends consider the degree not worth the money or time, a study just came out saying 50% of gen z consider their degree useless and that's obviously concentrated among tard majors.
-LOADS of funding given to "outreach programs" and various things that just amount to letting a crybaby throw some event.

There is an enormous amount of fat that needs to be cut out of universities, and it will never be cut if there's a constant feeding tube being given to them.

Cut all the useless majors, make admissions harder, tell athletes to go fuck themselves, cut anything that does not dramatically improve a students ability to create great things for society.
is media production a "useless major?" and I disagree on the athletes part, for what it's worth they bring in loads more revenue than most other things
 
bunch of Jewish NGOs have been facilitating the the mass immigration of 3rd worlders
Those NGOs are mostly Catholic

have used the institutions, media and porn to demoralize
Any critical look that doesn't come in with an agenda shows this is false. Pretending all the problems originate with a specific race is stupid and shows an inability to understand nuance

It pisses me off that they're only doing something about these Ivy League schools because their students started criticizing Jews. Any and all anti-White rhetoric was A-OK though.
Blatantly untrue. Trump reformed title 9 in 2019, issued an executive order protecting free speech on campus or else funding would be withdrawn. He also imposed a tax on schools with large endowments and increased surveillance of Chinese students.

There's a direct line between his executive order in 2019 and his actions today
 
I've never had any direct experience with them but every time i've had the explained to me by leftists and such this is all I can think about.
A union makes sense in a healthy manufacturing economy where you know for a fact the company is taking in a hefty margin. They have not made sense in most cases, these past few decades while factories have been fighting for their lives.

The new fight is to claw shit back from the multinational mega conglomerates

A union will never accomplish a fucking thing as long as production can shift to a sister company in a country that oppresses workers harder. Like from China to Vietnam with Foxconn, or to India as of today.. though Vietnam already had a big factory..

But it’s like, privately owned family run factories are the places I learned to look. They might sell out or fall victim to a hostile takeover type of situation, and then you’ll be back working for a conglomerate, but they take care of their people in the meanwhile and have a lot of 10, 20, 30 year guys.

If a factory has people in it that have stayed for decades, it can’t be that bad.
 
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Yeah can we get back to retards constantly replying to bad bait from John Badman, mold and other obnoxious faggots?
mold has perfectly reasonable opinions that a normal person would have, especially if they use their time on hobbies and family instead of being turbo autistic about politics. just because you don’t like her opinions doesn’t mean they’re bait

that is not true of John Badman. people should stop giving him attention

From what I've heard among prospective grad applicants we're basically set for the next cycle to be excruciatingly painful across the board.
good
 
I'm hearing that the biggest impediment for becoming a doctor these days is all the insurance and paperwork fuckery. Major hospital groups buy out a doctor's office and then dump patients onto doctors, trying to get as many patients seen as possible within a day so they can maximize profit. That's more paperwork on all the staff and leads to many doctors straight up leaving the profession, or they try opening their own private practice that does not take insurance. It also leads to medical mistakes and, obviously, burnout.

The AMA does advocate for policies to keep the number of doctors lower, but they cannot stop people from entering medical school or getting a job. Medical schools want students and hospitals want doctors. You're not wrong, but it's more complicated than "AMA says so and gets what it wants."
from what I understand basically every single group in the medical industry is bloodthirsty cutthroat bastard because everybody else is and if you're not just as bastard you'll go from "fucked" to "turbofucked and bankrupt" instantly
 
The U.S. is ceding its global education and academic superiority to China.
Haha ok
You can have the globohomo space aids, even though you’re already commies and don’t need it
This thread will say we must compete with China but they are also in favor of gutting higher education because they believe all students are Jews, Muslims or trans.
Who said that? Compete? No, we’re just not going to make you rich anymore, and your country will collapse before it converts into one with a high living standard or like, non-tofu dreg high rises

You’re one dam away from half the earthly population of Hans being swept away, and it creates its own earthquakes, lol.

What are you supposed to be able to accomplish with all that education when nobody is allowed to do anything the CCP doesn’t tell them to?
Just one of the many hypocritical and shortsighted musings from the Farm's NEETs and incels.
You forgot the part about “with normal sized penises”
 
I disagree on the athletes part, for what it's worth they bring in loads more revenue than most other things

I'm all for college athletes, at least up to the point where they are deliberately graded far easier, are all given first dibs on a cherry-picked list of piss easy classes, or have outright academic fraud committed by signing them up for bullshit classes they are given high grades for that never even took place. I think part of the reason behind the proliferation of total bullshit majors was partially a pretext to keep athletes with zero academic inclinations enrolled in good standing.
 
They’ve already been brain drained. Universities pay their researchers less than what McDonald’s pays their burger flippers so no one with a brain goes to graduate school anymore. The only people willing to put up with being a professor’s slave are foreigners (who get the incredibly valuable benefit of an American visa) and most of them are nowhere near the “best and brightest”.
The way people talk about college now makes me glad the only time I ever spent in a college was getting my state inspection license.
 
Here is a non-comprehensive list of wins in week 14:
  • President Trump’s unrelenting commitment to revitalizing American manufacturing delivered more results, driving job creation and economic growth nationwide.
    • Roche, a Swiss drug and diagnostics company, announced a $50 billion investment in its U.S.-based manufacturing and R&D, which is expected to create more than 1,000 new full-time jobs.
    • Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. announced a $3 billion agreement with Fujifilm Diosynth Biotechnologies to produce drugs at its North Carolina manufacturing facility.
    • NorthMark Strategies, a multi-strategy investment firm, announced a $2.8 billion investment to build a supercomputing facility in South Carolina.
    • Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc., announced a $2 billion investment in U.S. manufacturing and innovation.
    • Chobani announced a $1.2 billion investment to build its third U.S. dairy processing plant in New York, which is expected to create more than 1,000 new full-time jobs.
    • Fiserv, Inc. announced a $175 million investment to open a new strategic fintech hub in Kansas, which is expected to create 2,000 new high-paying jobs.
    • Toyota Motor Corporation announced an $88 million investment to boost hybrid vehicle production at its West Virginia factory, securing employment for the factory’s 2,000 workers.
    • Hyundai Motor Group secured an equity investment and agreement from Posco Holdings, South Korea’s top steel maker, for the automaker’s planned steel plant in Louisiana.
    • Hitachi Energy announced a $22.5 million investment to expand its facilities in Virginia, which is expected to add 120 new jobs.
    • Cyclic Materials, a Canadian advanced recycling company for rare earth elements, announced a $20 million investment in its first U.S.-based commercial facility, located in Mesa, Arizona.
    • GM announced it will increase production at its Ohio transmission facility.
    • Coinbase announced plans to add more than 130 new jobs and open a new office in Charlotte, North Carolina.
  • President Trump continued to secure our border and rid our communities of illegal immigrant criminals.
    • The Swanton sector of the U.S.-Canada border — previously overrun by illegal immigrants — saw illegal border crossings decline from 1,109 in March 2024 to just 54 in March 2025.
      • New York Post: Northern border sector previously overrun by illegal migrants sees dramatic drop in crossings: ‘We haven’t seen anyone since November’
    • The Washington Times: Under Trump, border catch-and-release has dropped 99.99% from worst Biden month
    • The Wall Street Journal: Border Crossings Grind to Halt as Trump’s Tough Policies Take Hold
    • CBS: ICE partnerships with local law enforcement triple as Trump continues deportation crackdown
    • The Federal Bureau of Investigation apprehended Harpreet Singh, an alleged member of a foreign terrorist gang who was planning multiple attacks on law enforcement in the U.S. and India.
    • Five suspected Tren de Aragua gang members were arrested in Fresno County, California.
  • President Trump continued to pursue peace through strength around the world.
    • The Trump Administration has directed attacks that have killed at least 74 terrorists seeking to attack the U.S. so far.
  • The Trump Administration forged ahead on its unprecedented effort to secure American energy dominance.
    • The Department of the Interior announced a new offshore drilling policy that will boost oil production in the Gulf of America by 100,000 barrels per day.
    • The Department of the Interior announced it will accelerate the onerous permitting process for energy and critical minerals, slashing approval times from years to just 28 days, at most.
    • Chevron announced a massive oil and natural gas project in the Gulf of America, with 75,000 gross barrels of oil expected to be produced daily.
    • The Washington Free Beacon: “Trump Admin Accelerates Mining Projects as China Curbs Critical Mineral Exports”
  • The Department of Health and Human Services and the Food and Drug Administration announced a series of new measures to phase out all petroleum-based synthetic dyes from medications and the nation’s food supply by the end of 2026.
  • President Trump took a series of executive actions to enhance educational and workforce opportunities for the American people.
    • President Trump signed an executive order modernizing American workforce programs to prepare citizens for the high-paying skilled trade jobs of the future.
      • Association of Equipment Manufacturers: “Our industry faces a persistent and growing shortage of skilled workers, and this action reflects the leadership needed to build a strong pipeline of talent for the jobs of the future. By aligning workforce programs with the realities of today’s labor market, the administration is taking a smart, strategic step to bolster U.S. manufacturing. We support the President’s continued focus on reshoring American manufacturing and ensuring our workforce is filled with the brightest and best talent in the world.”
    • President Trump signed an executive order creating new educational and workforce development opportunities in artificial intelligence technology for America’s youth.
    • President Trump signed an executive order revoking flawed Obama-Biden guidance that pressured schools to impose discipline based on “racial equity” and gives teachers the ability to ensure order in their classrooms.
  • President Trump took action to further reform and enhance higher education in America.
    • President Trump signed an executive order overhauling the nation’s higher education accreditation system to ensure colleges and universities deliver high-quality, high-value education free from unlawful discrimination and ideological bias.
    • President Trump signed an executive order enhancing the capacity of the nation’s Historically Black Colleges and Universities to deliver high-quality education and innovation.
    • President Trump signed an executive order requiring higher education institutions to promptly disclose foreign gifts and funding.
  • President Trump signed a landmark executive order eliminating the use of so-called “disparate-impact liability,” which undermines civil rights by mandating discrimination to achieve predetermined, race-oriented outcomes.
  • President Trump ordered an investigation into illegal “straw donor” and foreign contributions in American elections.
  • President Trump signed an executive order strengthening probationary periods in the federal service — ensuring a merit-based federal workforce that serves the American people.
  • President Trump signed an executive order to develop domestic capabilities for exploration, characterization, collection, and processing of critical deep seabed minerals.
  • President Trump announced he will personally fund the installation of two beautiful 100-foot flagpoles flying the American flag on the North Lawn of the White House.
  • Small business sentiment remained near its historic high in March, according to a new survey from the Job Creators Network Foundation.
  • The Department of State launched an unprecedented reorganization to reverse decades of bloat and bureaucracy that rendered it unable to perform its essential diplomatic mission.
  • The Department of Justice launched the Task Force to Eradicate Anti-Christian Bias as part of President Trump’s directive to end unlawful anti-Christian discrimination by the federal government.
  • The Department of Education announced it will resume collections on defaulted federal student loans after a five-year pause, ending the Biden-era practice of zero-interest, zero-accountability student borrowing.
  • The Department of the Interior officially unveiled the Jocelyn Nungaray National Wildlife Refuge, honoring the memory of 12-year-old Jocelyn Nungaray, who was savagely murdered by illegal immigrants in Texas.
  • Secretary of the Navy John Phelan rescinded the Biden-era Navy Climate Action 2030 program, which prioritized ideologically motivated regulations over the Navy’s core mission of warfighting.
  • The Department of Education returned oversight of higher education foreign funding disclosures to the Office of General Counsel, making clear that the Trump Administration will prioritize enforcement of federal law.
  • The Department of Education initiated an investigation and records request into University of California, Berkeley, after a review of the university’s foreign funding disclosures found they may be incomplete or inaccurate.
  • The Department of the Treasury sanctioned an Iranian liquefied petroleum gas magnate and his network as part of President Trump’s maximum pressure campaign.
  • The Department of Agriculture announced $340.6 million in disaster assistance for farmers, ranchers, and rural communities impacted by natural disasters across the country.
  • The Department of the Interior disbursed $13 million to revitalize coal communities.
 
I'm a junior in college right now who was planning on applying to grad school programs next cycle and is basically receiving nothing but nihilism over this. I don't think funding cuts will address the fact we have very little merit within our college system, and if anything this will just discourage the smarter ones (who are also smarter with their money) from going to school and actually making an impact. College shouldn't just be for rich tards that can pay the sticker price, or Chinese/Indians that basically pay 100k+ for a student visa. I'dve hoped he'd discourage foreign students in return for favoring our own but it seems that he's just draining everything simultaneously.
fwiw, I'll graduate with about 10-12k in loans that my mom has offered to pay off for me so I'm not looking forward to debt, but just a gruesome job and career market. I'm better than some Redditors who are leaving undergrad with 160k in loans (why???)
I may try to pivot towards something more industry-based as Bravo said, but that'll depend on getting into a fellowship program or something of that sort. It's not like the professional job market will be a piece of cake come fall
I agree with your post, but don't seek genuine insight from the other overly emotional Americans on the Farms. They are too nationalistic and nihilistic and spend most of their free time posting about and slandering their compatriots.

It sounds like you are doing the correct thing, and I hope Trump reneges on his attacks on higher education (something America does really well).
 
is media production a "useless major?" and I disagree on the athletes part, for what it's worth they bring in loads more revenue than most other things
I'm actually quite qualified to comment on this since it was my major.

I would say in my case yes it was, but not because the skills are useless. I've actually made very good money. It was useless because they didn't teach me anything i didn't already know. i was a hobbyist from middle school and I could have literally taught the 500 level courses at my uni better than any of the teachers did. And no i didn't get any good contacts out of it, my first job was a connection from high school and that was my in. I would have been better off just starting my career right out of high school.

I did enjoy the social life of college though.
 
Oh no, how terrible. I sure hope no harm befalls any of them.

Judges Worry Trump Could Tell U.S. Marshals to Stop Protecting Them
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Mattathias Schwartz and Emily Bazelon
2025-04-25 15:21:51GMT

The marshals are in an increasingly bitter conflict between two branches of government, even as funding for judges’ security has failed to keep pace with a steady rise in threats.
On March 11, about 50 judges gathered in Washington for the biannual meeting of the Judicial Conference, which oversees the administration of the federal courts. It was the first time the conference met since President Trump retook the White House.

In the midst of discussions of staffing levels and long-range planning, the judges’ conversations were focused, to an unusual degree, on rising threats against judges and their security, said several people who attended the gathering.

Behind closed doors at one session, Judge Richard J. Sullivan, the chairman of the conference’s Committee on Judicial Security, raised a scenario that weeks before would have sounded like dystopian fiction, according to three officials familiar with the remarks, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations: What if the White House were to withdraw the protections it provides to judges?

The U.S. Marshals Service, which by law oversees security for the judiciary, is part of the Justice Department, which Mr. Trump is directly controlling in a way that no president has since the Watergate scandal.

Judge Sullivan noted that Mr. Trump had stripped security protections from Mike Pompeo, his former secretary of state, and John Bolton, his former national security adviser. Could the federal judiciary, also a recent target of Mr. Trump’s ire, be next?

Judge Sullivan, who was nominated by President George W. Bush and then elevated to an appellate judgeship by Mr. Trump, referred questions about his closed-door remarks to the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, which stated its “complete confidence in those responsible for judicial security.”

There is no evidence that Mr. Trump has contemplated revoking security from judges. But Judge Sullivan’s remarks were an extraordinary sign of the extent of judges’ anxiety over the threats facing the federal bench. And they highlight a growing discomfort from judges that their security is handled by an agency that, through the attorney general, ultimately answers to the president, and whose funding, in their view, has not kept pace with rising threats.

“Cutting all the security from one judge or one courthouse — stuff like that hasn’t happened, and I don’t expect it to,” said Jeremy Fogel, a retired federal judge who directs the Berkeley Judicial Institute at the University of California, Berkeley, and is in frequent contact with current judges. “But, you never know. Because it’s fair to say that limits are being tested everywhere. Judges worry that it could happen.”

The Marshals Service said in a statement that it acted “at the direction of the federal courts” and “effectuate all lawful orders of the federal court.” The integrity of the judicial process, the statement read, depends on “protecting judges, jurors and witnesses.”

Harrison Fields, a White House spokesman, said Mr. Trump’s decision to strip security from Mr. Pompeo and Mr. Bolton, two former officials, had no bearing on his approach to sitting judges. He called worries that the president would deprive judges of their security “speculation” that was “dangerous and irresponsible.”

Founded in 1789, the U.S. Marshals Service has a wide range of law-enforcement duties, in addition to its central function of supporting the judiciary. There are now 94 presidentially appointed and Senate-confirmed U.S. marshal positions, one for each judicial district. The agency’s director reports to the deputy attorney general.

The concerns about who oversees the marshals come as threats against judges have been on the rise, expanding the burdens on the service.

Statistics released by the agency show that the number of judges targeted by threats more than doubled from 2019 to 2024, before Mr. Trump returned to office. In those years, he disputed the result of the 2020 election in court, and the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, the ruling that made access to abortion a constitutional right. In June 2022, after the Supreme Court’s ruling on Roe leaked, an armed man made an attempt to assassinate Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh at his home.

In his end-of-year report for 2024, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. noted “a significant uptick in identified threats at all levels of the judiciary.”

Since Mr. Trump took office in January, he and his supporters have insulted individual judges on social media and called for their impeachment in response to rulings they don’t like. In a message posted on Easter, Mr. Trump referred to “WEAK and INEFFECTIVE Judges” who are allowing a “sinister attack on our Nation to continue” in regard to immigration.

Judges and their family members have in recent weeks reported false threats of bombs in their mailboxes. As of mid-April, dozens of pizzas have been anonymously sent to judges and their family members at their homes, a means of signaling that your enemy knows where you live.

According to Ron Zayas, the chief executive of Ironwall, a company that contracts with district courts, state courts and some individual judges to provide data protection and security services for judges and other public officials, the number of judges using his services for emergency protection is more than four times the average number for last year. He said 40 judges also used their own money to bolster their security with Ironwall, twice as many as on Jan. 1.

In a letter to Congress dated April 10, Judge Robert J. Conrad Jr., who directs the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, complained that funding for court security remained frozen at 2023 levels through the 2025 fiscal year “at a time when threats against federal judges and courthouses are escalating.” Judges have issued similar warnings for years.

The total amount spent has remained nearly flat, rising to $1.34 billion in 2024 from $1.26 billion in 2022, according to statistics from the administrative office and the marshals, despite inflation and staff pay increases.

At the same time, burdens on the service have grown.

In recent years, the U.S. Marshals said in a statement, they have started helping to protect the homes of the Supreme Court justices, whose security is primarily handled by the separate Supreme Court Marshal’s Office. Last summer, a U.S. marshal stationed outside Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s home in Washington shot and wounded an armed man in an attempted carjacking.

In January, the Trump administration gave the marshals, along with other law enforcement agencies, the new power to enforce immigration laws. That move prompted Judge Edmond E. Chang, who chairs the Judicial Conference’s criminal law committee, to write a memo to all district-court and magistrate judges warning about the potential impact on the marshals’ ability to protect them. (Judge Chang declined to comment; his memo was reported earlier by Reuters.)

In addition to protecting judges’ lives, U.S. law states the marshals’ “primary role and mission” is “to obey, execute, and enforce all orders” from the federal courts. Enforcing court orders can entail imposing fines and imprisonment for anyone judges find to be in contempt of court, including, in theory, executive branch officials.

The Trump administration’s posture in some cases raises the possibility that the already-stretched marshals could emerge as a crucial referee between the branches. In the courtroom, Justice Department lawyers have come close to openly flouting court orders stemming from the unlawful deportation to a prison in El Salvador of a group of nearly 140 Venezuelans and Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, whose removal officials admitted was an “administrative error.” Two judges have responded by opening inquiries that could lead to administration officials being held in contempt of court.

“What happens if the marshals are ordered to deliver a contempt citation to an agency head that has defied a court order?” asked Paul W. Grimm, a retired federal judge who leads the Bolch Judicial Institute at Duke University. “Are they going to do that? The question of who the Marshals Service owes their allegiance to will be put to the test in the not-too-distant future, I suspect.”

Concern over the oversight of the Marshals Service is not new. A 1982 report by the Government Accountability Office called the marshals’ oversight arrangement “an unworkable management condition.” As a possible solution, it proposed legislation to move control of the marshals to the judiciary.

Some members of Congress have begun proposing a similar solution.

“Do you think you could better protect judges if your security was more independent?” Representative Eric Swalwell, Democrat of California, asked a federal judge testifying on behalf of the Judicial Conference at a hearing in February, a few days before Judge Sullivan’s remarks.

Representative Darrell Issa, Republican of California, responded that he considered the question of independent oversight legitimate. The judge answered that the conference would consider the matter.

In an interview, Mr. Swalwell said he was drafting legislation that would put the judiciary in charge of its own security.

Last month, Ronald Davis, who led the agency under President Joseph R. Biden Jr., issued a stark warning on LinkedIn of “a constitutional crisis if a president refuses to enforce or comply with a federal court order.” He too proposed measures to insulate the marshals from potential interference by the executive branch.

In the meantime, the administration’s immediate goal for the Marshals Service may be to shrink it.

On April 15, Mark P. Pittella, the agency’s acting director, sent a letter to more than 5,000 employees of the service as part of the staff-cutting measures associated with Elon Musk’s project, known as the Department of Government Efficiency, offering them the opportunity to resign and be eligible for more than four months of administrative leave with full pay. In the letter, obtained by The New York Times, Mr. Pittella wrote that agency leadership would review applications to ensure they did not “adversely impact U.S.M.S. mission-critical requirements.”

But a spokesman for the service said the offer was open to employees in all areas of responsibility, including marshals tasked with protecting judges.
 
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