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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there's something i've been wondering about with the birthright citizenship anchor baby thing. how many people defending its constitutionality actually believe that using it like that is constitutionally valid vs people who just like illegal immigration and are lying about their belief that it legally holds up because they don't give a shit about the laws but have to dress up their rhetoric in a skin suit of apparent legitimacy and attempted honestly to look persuasive and reasonable.
It's the second thing. Left-wing jurisprudence is that you start out knowing what you want the law to say, and your job is to find a way to make the law say what you want. It's why they chimp out over any legal theory that involves actually knowing a single thing about the historical situation in which the law was written.
 
You just sound like a good mother, God bless

Im going to make the point very vaguely and let anyone who wants to double check the info or do their own research draw the conclusions they want to. Keep it mind not ALL infectious diseases have vaccines.
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Thank you for saying that!

Yeah the same kinda graph will show the rise of chronic conditions and neurological disorders in children since the increase in vaccines. Especially since 1986 when they passed the national child vaccine injury act so pharmaceutical companies could no longer be held liable for death or injury from vaccines. The number of shots on the schedule has quadrupled since then.
 
Psych meds calcify your pinal gland and your pet would tell you to kill the globalists unless the Clintons got to it first
I heard that was fluoride

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The Abrahamic Family House in Abu Dhabi is a tri-temple for Christians, Muslims and Jews in the same building. Only Chinese terrorists would bomb it

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They lit the Burj Khalifa in the US flag. And this guy who I’m taking shit from is like overtly excited, as if he’s twelve himself and Trump is having a sleepover at his place


Just check out this guys account if you want the details of this trip in hyper fanboy detail
 
The huge issue with immigration and illegals (before crime, drugs, poverty and rape) is that there are a bunch of ways to let huge volumes these people in, but very few ways to get them out. And if you want to get them out, suddenly the bulk savings vanish and you have to check each one individually.

It is a simple matter of inputs and outputs not making sense with the prosperity of the country on the line.

Fixing or removing birthright is just one way to slow this process down and look at the fight being put up to keep the status quo.
 
If you want to make friends with Arabs the gulf petro states are a good place to start. I'm not saying they don't also worship a filthy pedophile God but thanks to their wealth they're more interested in hedonism than Jihad.

Might as well start with the ones that don't blow up if you look at them funny.
I think the big thing here is that the Arabian peninsula has taken a big look at their situation and they totally know that oil is the only resource they have.

It’s not even about “what happens when the world runs out,” it’s like, the Saudi economy would be destroyed if oil went below $50/barrel

So you look at that and think “wouldn’t trump be the worst case scenario? Why do they love him?”

Because Trump was over there to offer them diversification.

I mean I mentioned that UAE is hyper mercantilist, and that’s their strategy, to become a tourism and commerce country. To that end, they cannot afford to be hardline Islamist. Hardline Islamist countries have neither of those things.

But Elon went with Trump, and so you’re seeing shit like the Ai cooperative project, and in addition to that, the emirates airline is looking at picking up starlink for its flights, plus UAE is going to be the location for neuralink trials to avoid the western regulatory morass.

In the context of all of this, the Arabian peninsula is aware that its best future interests in maintaining wealth are to liberalize to an extent best represented by Trump. They can be invited to integrate with the global tech sector as partners of America and they don’t need to put up with tranny shit and we won’t even push them on accepting gays
 
California's homeless crisis could be Gavin Newsom's political albatross
NBC News (archive.ph)
By Alicia Victoria Lozano
2025-05-16 09:00:41GMT
Gov. Gavin Newsom told California cities this week that there “were no more excuses” for homeless encampments, a message he has repeated often over the years with little success.

Visible signs of homelessness still line sidewalks and freeway underpasses from Sacramento to Los Angeles, an entrenched crisis rooted in a tight and unaffordable housing market that grew worse in January when more than 12,000 homes burned to the ground in Los Angeles County.

Newsom, widely considered a Democratic contender for the 2028 presidential race, appears to be toughening his stance on issues likely to follow him on the campaign trail.

His "no more excuses" message included the suggestion that municipalities ban camping on public property for more than three nights in a row, one of several perceived moves to the center the former San Francisco mayor has taken recently.

On Wednesday, Newsom unveiled a revised budget that makes significant cuts to reproductive health services and walks back his signature policy to provide free healthcare for low-income undocumented immigrants.

The rollbacks were meant to help balance California’s budget and turn around the “Trump slump,” Newsom told reporters, referring to economic fallout from the president's trade war.

Asked if his apparent move to the center is related to a possible 2028 run, he said, “I’ve been, always, a hardheaded pragmatist.”

Yet the guidelines on homelessness that he announced this week do not carry enforcement power. Local leaders can ignore them and continue to pursue their own policies.

But if the situation doesn't improve before the primaries in 2028, Newsom may be forced to explain to a national audience why his state, with the fourth-largest economy in the world, has the largest homeless population in the U.S., with about 187,000 people living on the streets, in cars and in decrepit RVs on any given night.

“It’s pure triangulation,” said Democratic strategist Max Burns, referring to Newsom's attempt to appeal to both the right and the left. “This is Gavin Newsom trying to enact this theory that the reason we lost last year was because we were just too progressive."

Newsom's call to clear encampments and roll back services for undocumented immigrants and reproductive health care have left many voters wondering where his priorities lie.

Carolyn Coleman, CEO of the League of California Cities, said the housing crisis has deep roots that "won’t be resolved without a partnership between state and local governments.”

“California cities are not the obstacle to reducing and preventing homelessness,” she said.

Newsom, 57, has attempted to tackle the homelessness crisis since entering politics more than two decades ago. In 2002, as a San Francisco supervisor, he pushed a measure to cut the budgets of general assistance programs and redirect the money toward providing more shelters and other services for unhoused people.

Fast forward to 2024 when the U.S Supreme Court ruled that banning encampments on public property does not violate the U.S. Constitution. Newsom reacted by telling cities and counties to start getting people off their streets, but to do it "with compassion.”

He suggested local leaders establish programs and systems to help unhoused residents find shelter, mental health services and drug treatment centers.

Some complied, some didn’t. In Los Angeles, which has a homeless population of 45,252, Mayor Karen Bass said she would continue to focus on pairing unhoused people with temporary or transitional housing and would not clear encampments if shelter was unavailable.

Several cities, including some in nearby Orange County, have cracked down on encampments and strengthened anti-camping laws.

Other local leaders, like the mayor of San Diego, have commended Newsom for continuing to address the crisis but said they have successfully implemented their own policies without his direction.

“It’s tempting to look at every single thing that Gavin Newsom does as part of his presidential aspirations,” said Thad Kousser, a political science professor at the University of California, San Diego.

“But this is absolutely in line with the direction that he’s been moving in on homelessness throughout his governorship, and also fits longterm parts of his political career.”

If Newsom faces voters in 2028, which coincides with the L.A. Olympics, he opens himself up to attacks from both the right and left, Burns said.

“The problem is voters aren’t sure what to believe,” he said. “They’ve seen him toss so many of these values overboard that no one can quite tell you what Gavin Newsom stands for, and that is going to be a bigger problem for him than anything.”
 
Afrikaner resettled by Jewish-affiliated group denies antisemitism claims
The Washington Post (archive.ph)
By Teo Armus
2025-05-16 02:30:32GMT
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South African refugee Charl Kleinhaus, right, arrives at Dulles International Airport in Virginia on Monday. (Craig Hudson/For The Washington Post)

Just two days after arriving in the United States as a refugee from South Africa, Charl Kleinhaus found himself at the center of a very American media firestorm.

Kleinhaus, 46, drew widespread criticism this week over his social media posts over the past two years about Jewish people and Israel — criticism that came while he and his family are being aided by a Jewish-affiliated resettlement group in Buffalo.

In one post, he responded to video of a scuffle between Israeli police and Christians by writing that “Jews are untrustworthy and a dangerous group.”

But Kleinhaus, one of the 59 Afrikaners who was welcomed under an executive order by President Donald Trump, says his posts on X were taken out of context. In an interview Thursday, he denied the allegations spreading across the internet that he is antisemitic.

“You get angry. You get irrational. You say stupid things,” Kleinhaus told The Washington Post. “It was completely misinterpreted. It’s not against everybody. I was speaking about the people there.”

“I was very, very angry with the video, and I will protect my Christian heritage and my Christian faith all the way,” he continued. “I probably should have worded it better.”

The controversy over his posts has emerged as the identities and backgrounds of the Afrikaners granted refugee status comes into clearer focus. All are members of a White minority that Trump has said faces “genocide” in South Africa stemming from a land redistribution law signed earlier this year that is meant to correct disparities caused during more than four decades of apartheid rule.

It also comes amid a broader effort by federal officials to screen immigrants for allegedly antisemitic statements, including several prominent cases of university students or researchers who were detained and had their visas revoked over their involvement in protesting the war in Gaza.

The Department of Homeland Security said last month that it would consider “antisemitic activity on social media” as grounds to deny visas and citizenship applications.

On Thursday, a DHS spokesperson said in a statement that the department “vets all refugee applicants. Any claims of misconduct are thoroughly investigated, and appropriate action will be taken as necessary.”

Kleinhaus and the others who traveled on a State Department-chartered plane Monday are the first refugees to arrive after the White House suspended admissions for all others who have been granted that humanitarian status.

Refugees are a distinct class of people who are fleeing war or political persecution in their home countries and who are allowed to enter the U.S. after a government screening process that usually takes several years. They are placed upon their arrival in the U.S. with one of about 10 resettlement agencies, most of which are religiously affiliated and work with the federal government to help refugees to find housing and jobs.

Kleinhaus confirmed that he was being resettled by a local affiliate of HIAS, the only Jewish-affiliated group. HIAS’s national office and its Buffalo affiliate, Jewish Family Services of Western New York, did not respond to multiple calls and messages seeking comment.

Other national resettlement agencies have said they will serve any refugees assigned to them but have also expressed concern that the Afrikaners — who were screened in about three months and bypassed some normal steps in the vetting process — are being prioritized over thousands of others from countries such as Afghanistan, Ukraine and Myanmar who have been waiting far longer.

One resettlement group run by the Episcopal Church said this week it would no longer resettle any refugees because of the Trump administration’s directive to resettle Afrikaners.

Kleinhaus acknowledged writing some other posts on X that have garnered criticism, which were first reported Wednesday by the Bulwark news outlet. Some of the posts have since been deleted.

In one, Kleinhaus said a person who was accused of beating up the driver of a Tesla “needs a beating.” He also reshared a video of Orthodox Jewish Israelis spitting on Christians.

But, he said, he has been bombarded online with accusations online of antisemitism that he claims are unfair and untrue, adding that he supports Israel in its war in Gaza. “They don’t know who they’re talking about,” he said. “I didn’t call for any harm on any Jewish person. I will never do that.”

Kleinhaus, an evangelical Protestant, said he has some Jewish ancestry. A great-great-great-grandmother on his paternal side was a German Jew, he said, and his mother’s father fought in World War II alongside the British Army and against the Nazis.

Kleinhaus said one of the comments he made was copied and pasted from a different X account while he was recovering from a surgical procedure to have kidney stones removed. He said he was angry to see footage of Orthodox Israelis spitting on Christians on the same day Hamas attacked Israel, Oct. 7, 2023.
“You must also respect my religion, and it wasn’t right,” he said. “It was a thing out of anger that I did, and I forgot about it.”

President Donald Trump issued an executive order in February to welcome the Afrikaners, a minority group descended from Dutch settlers in South Africa, in response to a newly signed land redistribution law in South Africa as well as the country’s foreign policy stance toward Israel.

South Africa, a longtime U.S. ally that is deepening its ties with Iran, last year accused Israel of committing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza at the International Court of Justice. The White House has since ordered federal agencies to suspend work with the Group of 20 conference set to be hosted by South Africa this year, though Trump and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa are set to meet next week to “reset the strategic relationship between the two countries,” Ramaphosa’s office said in a statement.

The land redistribution law, known as the Expropriation Act, seeks to correct what South African officials have labeled an imbalance in property ownership following decades of apartheid rule. No land seizures have been carried out under that law so far, and South African officials have denied Trump’s claims that a genocide is taking place in South Africa.

But Kleinhaus, who said his family had sold the vast majority of their farm in Limpopo province decades ago, pointed to what he said had been a disturbing pattern of crime on his property and violence committed against his neighbors.

Those neighbors have been beaten to death, shot or killed, he said, including one elderly farmer in his town just weeks ago. The machinery on his granite and ore mine — which he started operating on the land his family still owns — was destroyed, and one of his workers died suspiciously two years ago in a case that he claimed police linked to medical issues.

A State Department memo obtained by The Washington Post said that most of the arriving Afrikaners “have witnessed or experienced extreme violence with a racial nexus,” including murders and carjackings, and do not trust the South African police to investigate those cases.

Kleinhaus, who arrived in Buffalo with his two adult children and grandson, is currently living in a short-term-stay apartment in Buffalo while they search for jobs and more permanent housing. He said he is relieved to be able to walk around at night now without worrying about violence.

“To start over is scary, but it’s safe here,” he said. “I don’t want my children to be killed just because they’re on a farm and not to be told they stole land.”

Kleinhaus was hoping to be resettled in Arizona to find work in that field, he said. But given the local industries more common in Buffalo, he said he hopes to find a job operating similar kinds of heavy machinery or as a truck driver.

He has not received any direct cellphone numbers for federal officials, as they promised him at a news conference at Dulles International Airport on Monday. But there was no need: The family’s case workers at Jewish Family Services of Western New York had been more than helpful as they showed him how to fill out paperwork to receive work authorization and other basic necessities.

“They’re really good to me. I can’t complain about anything,” he said. “They ask if you’re okay. They ask what you need. … God bless them.”
 
California's homeless crisis could be Gavin Newsom's political albatross
NBC News (archive.ph)
By Alicia Victoria Lozano
2025-05-16 09:00:41GMT

I didn’t realize California only had one political albatross

I mean, they pay about three times as much for gas as normal people
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And here I thought the fires from earlier this year would be the political albatross. Was there ever a final death toll?
 
Man, You will never not convince me that adults who play with dolls for a living aren't fucked in the head.
Well, moreso its weird because its clear they don't actually love kids. Mr. Rodgers was of course a wonderful man, but you could also tell he really loved children, and thats what drove the show. The puppeteering of Sesame street isnt weird because of its nature, but because its clear that those who make it don't actually care about children
 
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