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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Where the fuck do people live (and how obnoxious is their community) that you can't paint a shed or do something otherwise mundane?
Practically any HOA-encumbered property in the country (about 30% of all housing, 75.5 million homeowners) generally has to beg permission from their faggot neighborhood overlords to paint their sheds.

HOAs should be banned and their proponents hanged in the streets.
 
Practically any HOA-encumbered property in the country (about 30% of all housing, 75.5 million homeowners) generally has to beg permission from their faggot neighborhood overlords to paint their sheds.

HOAs should be banned and their proponents hanged in the streets.
They're like unions but beloved by the polar opposite people.
 
This faggot is trying to get in on the attention, but I hope the Secret Service uses it as a pretext to just raid his computer or find all the child sex slaves in his home:

View attachment 7367866

This is where Elon needs to learn some mafia style systems where he has people he pays decently for some no-show job but who actually just travel when necessary to beat the shit out of faggots. Boeing seems to have people on hand for this all the time, come on Tesla.
Seems the Secret Service actually did pay him a visit because of this.
 
EXCLUSIVE: Nancy Mace unloads after arrest of trans activist who allegedly threatened to 'assassinate' her
FOX News (archive.ph)
By Jasmine Baehr
2025-05-15 22:11:36GMT
Mace delivers blistering impact statement, shakes hand of trans threat suspect’s father after bond is denied
FOX News (archive.ph)
By Jasmine Baehr
2025-05-16 21:07:46GMT
Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., praised a South Carolina judge Friday after bond was denied for the 19-year-old transgender activist accused of threatening to assassinate her. She also shook the hand of the suspect’s father.

Samuel Theodore Cain, who identifies as transgender and uses the name "Roxie Wolfe" online, was arrested May 15 by state agents for allegedly posting graphic threats targeting Mace and her children. Cain remains in custody, and a trial date has not been set.

The judge cited the seriousness of the threats during a hearing.

"Mr. Cain, I do believe that you are a credible threat, and I'm going to put you in on a no bond," the judge said. "The only condition bond I'm going to put on you right now is no contact with the victim."

mace01.webp
Samuel Theodore Cain is escorted by a prison guard at the Greenville County Detention Center in Greenville, S.C., Friday, May 16, 2025. (WHNS)

Mace flew in from Washington, D.C., to deliver a victim impact statement in court Friday morning and speak to reporters afterward.

"I come before you today not just as a victim, but as a sitting member of the United States House of Representatives who has been the target of a direct and credible threat on her life," she told the judge.

She described how the threats forced her to change her routine, seek shelter and request increased law enforcement patrols for her home and congressional offices.

"This meant I was vulnerable. My staff was vulnerable. And my children were vulnerable," she said. "Threats like these are acts of terror meant to shake the foundations of democracy."

mace02.webp
U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., right, thanks the father of Samuel Cain after he apologized to her for Samuel's actions before a bond hearing at the Greenville County Magistrate's Court in Greenville, S.C., May 16, 2025. (Ken Ruinard/USA Today Network via Imagn Images)

Outside the courthouse, Mace reflected on Friday's bond hearing and finally seeing Cain in person.

"My first thought was, he's huge," she said. "This guy was well over 6 feet, over 200 pounds. I'm 5-foot-6, 115 pounds. He’s twice my size. It was scary.

"As a mom, this was heartbreaking. All I could think about was his family. And my kids. My kids live in fear about being murdered."

She said she was surprised but thankful for the judge’s ruling.

"I’ve seen how women are treated in this state. I hope this gives women hope," she said. "If there’s a mentally ill man coming after us, we need to stand up for our rights. That’s what I saw the judge do today."

After the hearing, Mace approached Cain’s family and shook the hand of his father.

"I shook the hand of a father whose son threatened to kill me, not out of forgiveness, but out of grace," she later posted on X. "Strength is about standing your ground and we can be humble with humanity."

"I want to thank Samuel Cain’s family," she said during her remarks for the media. "Their humility meant a lot to me. As a mom, it meant something to see them show up. We’re all human. But threats like this have to come with consequences."

Mace said the threats were discovered by Capitol Police and were serious enough that her staff and law enforcement begged her to get to a safe location.

"This was serious. Nobody knew where he was," she said. "Law enforcement told me to go inside immediately. That’s how real it was."

She described the toll the threats have taken on her daily life.

"I face threats every day. This is the second person this year. But I receive death threats from trans activists and trans people every single day. And not a single U.S. attorney in the state of South Carolina or anywhere in the country has taken them seriously."

She warned that continued inaction could be deadly.

"One day, someone’s going to pull the trigger. Someone’s going to get a bullet. Someone’s going to die."

She also highlighted a broader pattern of violence and called out what she sees as a lack of accountability from Democrats.

"This case isn’t just about one man’s threats. It’s about a culture that tolerates violence against elected officials, especially women who speak up," Mace said. "We do not accept terror. The normalization of threats against public servants corrodes democracy from within.

"Not one Democrat has spoken up to say it’s wrong," she added. "Only Democrats blame the victim."

On social media, Mace shared a photo of Cain in an orange jumpsuit.

"This is not Roxie Wolfe, this is not a woman, and threatening my life is not a joke. Look at his smirk," she posted.

Mace ended her statement in court with a final plea for justice.

"I pray this young man finds God, who alone can change hearts of stone into hearts of flesh," she said. "Letting him walk away sends the message that threatening to kill a member of Congress is just another day without consequence. It is not. It is criminal. And it must be treated as such."

Rep. Mace's office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment.
 
I've heard some HOAs keep niggers out, though.
Not really. The fences and gates do that.

If you're referring to niggers avoiding buying homes in neighborhoods with HOAs, that doesn't really pan out much either. HOAs do their best to only target soft targets -- owners they figure will just bend the knee, obey the demands they mail out, and avoid confrontation, and absentee owners renting out their homes who they know will just bark at their tenants to avoid problems. The average white family will just adjust the lawn mower to comply with a "lol your lawn's too tall" demand or rent a machine for a "you need to pressure wash your house" order.

On the other hand, niggers will show up at the board members' homes to threaten to fuck them up and they'll bring the whole gang (er, sorry, "family") to help.

They also occasionally run into people like me who's all too happy to lawyer up to tell them to fuck off when they complain about fucking garbage cans and try to bill me for their lawyer's time. They haven't played with me very much since then. Guess they figured out I wasn't a pushover. Bolsters my argument though ... when there's plenty of subservient neighbors to hassle, I'm not worth their trouble.
 
Means nothing. If supply is lower (it is) than demand prices are never coming down. The market will continue to pay what it wills.
Old people dying and their 2+ homes each going onto the market will bring prices down. The boomer death wave is the incoming market correction. They're sitting on so much real estate it's not funny. It isn't vanguard or blackrock who bought up the housing supply. It's boomer trying to play landlord. Funniest part of it all is that welfare pays for these decrepit demons to keep housing out of the hands of the working people who pay for the welfare.

The day of the pillow can't come fast enough.
 
Forgive me, but as an outsider looking in (regarding US politics) it feels that Trump has been ruling solely by EOs since he came into power, but surely laws need to be drafted and enacted by Congress to be made to stick? I just hope the GOP will make the most of their control over both houses before the midterms...
 
Forgive me, but as an outsider looking in (regarding US politics) it feels that Trump has been ruling solely by EOs since he came into power, but surely laws need to be drafted and enacted by Congress to be made to stick? I just hope the GOP will make the most of their control over both houses before the midterms...
This is the US. Passing anything through congress is nigh impossible. This country has been running via judicial dictatorship and executive overreach since the 70's. Roe vs. Wade was a court case, not a law. For decades, liberals trotted out a court case to justify federal legalization of abortion without a law ever being signed.
 
Forgive me, but as an outsider looking in (regarding US politics) it feels that Trump has been ruling solely by EOs since he came into power, but surely laws need to be drafted and enacted by Congress to be made to stick? I just hope the GOP will make the most of their control over both houses before the midterms...
As someone from the us let me break it down for you executive orders are effectively laws until they are either challenged or the next guy decides to remove it…. In theory someone could just never remove it or challenge it and maybe if that happens long enough or if it defeats any challenge to it legally then it basically is law. Would it be better if Congress made laws that back any of these orders, yes because then it makes the Supreme Court have to pound sand when they get cold feet also harder to remove in general but even Obama couldn’t tard wrangle Congress to pass an agenda that would be in the best interest of their party. Still not completely immune to Supreme Court fuckery if they chose to say it’s unconstitutional, unless you change the constitution with an amendment but that is extremely hard to do.
The entire constitution was written by paleo libertarians and/or Roman larpers who were addicted to enlightenment philosophy so the government is extremely redundant and takes forever to change except when something goes horribly wrong like a war. Otherwise it’s maximized for allowing retards to derail the process at any moment something happens they don’t like.
 
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As someone from the us let me break it down for you executive orders are effectively laws until they are either challenged or the next guy decides to remove it…. In theory someone could just never remove it or challenge it and maybe if that happens long enough or if it defeats any challenge to it legally then it basically is law. Would it be better if Congress made laws that back any of these orders, yes because then it makes the Supreme Court have to pound sand when they get cold feet also harder to remove in general but even Obama couldn’t tard wrangle Congress to pass an agenda that would be in the best interest of their party. Still not completely immune to Supreme Court fuckery if they chose to say it’s unconstitutional, unless you change the constitution with an amendment but that is extremely hard to do.
The entire constitution was written by paleo libertarians and/or Roman larpers who were addicted to enlightenment philosophy so the government is extremely redundant and takes forever to change except when something goes horribly wrong like a war. Otherwise it’s maximized for allowing retards to derail the process at any moment something happens they don’t like.
Congress quarreling is something that has always happened but the Supreme Court and the modern judicial system ridiculousness is not something meant to happen by design. The almighty Marbury vs. Madison saw the Court go against the "Father of Constitution" to get the power of judicial review and nationwide injunctions are a relatively new tactic for partisan (primarily liberal activist) judges to stop the executive branch from doing something.
 
It's probably trump just being air headed, but I want to believe it's a very subtle power move. The very same kind the left has used constantly for the past decade to redefine terms.
He might or might not've been as subtle and detailed as you lay out, but he's delving deeper than just being air headed because he says to Bret Baier:

Trump: The N-Word...you know what the N-Word is, right?
Bret Baier: Nuclear
Trump: Yeah...heh heh, I figured you'd want to clean that up.

He definitely knows.
 
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For decades, liberals trotted out a court case to justify federal legalization of abortion without a law ever being signed.
I did wonder about that at the time Roe v Wade was overturned. Why did the Dems never make it an actual law? Kinda horrifying that the legislature of the world's most powerful country is seemingly incapable of passing legislation. If Trump wants to leave a lasting legacy surely that'll need reform in some way.

unless you change the constitution with an amendment but that is extremely hard to do.
Yeah. That's a document long overdue for anything to happen/change/update to it at this point. Is there a chance the 14th will ever be legit overturned and discarded?
 
Yeah. That's a document long overdue for anything to happen/change/update to it at this point. Is there a chance the 14th will ever be legit overturned and discarded?
It took a civil war to put into the Constitution and it would probably take another one to take it out.

Here's the Congress that passed that to get an idea of what I mean:
1.webp
 
It's probably trump just being air headed, but I want to believe it's a very subtle power move. The very same kind the left has used constantly for the past decade to redefine terms.

"the n word is a horrible word, you know what i'm talking about right?"
99% of westerners think of nigger
"nuclear. It's a horrible word"

It really communicates so much so subtly.
"Hey faggots, bad words that hurt people's feelings are so insignificant compared to the actual threats the world faces, for example nuclear threats"

When people hear "horrifying word that begins with N" they really should think "nuclear", and this is a subtle nod in that direction or at least that's how i choose to interpret it.
I've seen Hiroshima and I've seen Detroit. Niggers are more dangerous than Nukes.
 
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