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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If the Soros trucks are off loading supplies and equipment, we may be in for another summer of love after all.

Joy.

All the more reason trump must crush this decisively and fast. The longer this goes on-the more time Antifa networks will be mobilizing and dispersing across the country.
 
US, China Officials Agree on Plan to Reduce Trade Tensions
Bloomberg (archive.ph)
By Daniel Flatley and Annmarie Hordern
11 Jun 2025 01:59:35 UTC
The US and China agreed to a preliminary plan to ease trade tensions, which could revive the flow of sensitive goods between the world’s two largest economies.

American and Chinese negotiators in London said both sides agreed on a framework on how to implement the consensus the two sides reached in the prior round of talks in Geneva.

The US and Chinese delegations will now take the proposal back to their respective leaders, according to China’s chief trade negotiator Li Chenggang.

While full details of the pact weren’t immediately available, US negotiators said they “absolutely expect” that issues around shipments of rare earth minerals and magnets would be resolved.

“Once the presidents approve it, we will then seek to implement it,” US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told reporters in London, after two days of discussions that spanned nearly 20 hours in a Georgian-era mansion near Buckingham Palace.

US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said there were no other meetings scheduled, but added that the American and Chinese sides talk frequently and are able to do so whenever they need.

Rare Earths​

The talks in London came at the urging of the Trump administration to cement a pledge the Chinese government made to ease shipments of rare earths made during last month’s trade talks in Geneva, which culminated in a tariff truce.

The disagreement over critical mineral exports reignited open economic conflict between the US and China and raised the prospect their nascent deal could collapse, which would pose a fresh threat for the world economy.

“We do absolutely expect that the topic of rare earth minerals and magnets with respect to the United States of America will be resolved in this framework implementation,” Lutnick said.

“Also, there were a number of measures the United States of America put on when those rare earths were not coming,” Lutnick added. “You should expect those to come off — sort of, as President Trump said, in a balanced way. When they approve the licenses, then you should expect that our export implementation will come down as well.”

The Chinese Foreign Ministry and Ministry for Commerce didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

Greer said the issue of fentanyl, which the Trump has administration cited as a rationale for imposing tariffs on China, is also a priority for the US president. “We would expect to see progress from the Chinese on that issue in a major way.”

Leverage​

The London meetings showcased the growing role of export controls in modern trade warfare, where access to rare minerals or tiny microchips can give one economy a big edge over a rival. China controls much of the world’s supplies of raw materials used to make magnets and other inputs for advanced manufacturing like electric vehicles, lasers and mobile phones.

That leverage came to bear over the past several weeks, as complaints from American companies about looming magnet shortages led US President Donald Trump to request a call with Chinese leader Xi Jinping.

The US accused Beijing of stalling on sales, although delays may have been due to long lead times in China’s permitting system. European trade officials and carmakers have also sounded the alarm on disruption of supplies from China.

In response, Washington moved last month to limit exports of chip design software, jet engine parts, chemicals and nuclear materials — restrictions the US opened the door to lifting in London in exchange for relief on rare earths.

Following the Xi-Trump call last week, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Lutnick and Greer were dispatched to the UK capital to break the deadlock with a Chinese delegation led by Vice Premier He Lifeng.

Trust​

The US and China are about a third of the way through a 90-day reprieve on the crippling tit-for-tat tariffs imposed on each other through April. The settlement announced in Geneva on May 12 brought those duties down considerably, though trade between the two largest economies remains disrupted.

“We hope that the progress we made will be conducive to building trust,” China’s Li said.

China’s exports to the US fell 34% in May, according to Bloomberg News calculations, the most since Feb. 2020, when the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic shut down the Chinese economy.

Josef Gregory Mahoney, a professor of international relations at Shanghai’s East China Normal University, said the biggest casualty of the trade war has not been lost sales but trust and that China is very cautious, aiming to avoid being drawn into the Trump “circus.”

“We’ve heard a lot about agreements on frameworks for talks. But the fundamental issue remains: chips vs. rare earths,” he said. “Everything else is a peacock dance.”

Financial markets have largely recovered from a bout of volatility that struck as Trump first introduced his tariff policies in early April, with MSCI’s all-country equity index ending Tuesday at a record high. Currency markets tell a slightly different story, with the US dollar weaker against all its major counterparts.

Initial market reaction to the announcement was minimal, with US equity futures edging lower and the offshore yuan inching higher. The yen was little changed.

“Markets will likely welcome the shift from confrontation to coordination,” said Charu Chanana, chief investment strategist at Saxo Markets. “But the absence of further scheduled meetings signals that we’re not out of the woods yet — it’s now up to Trump and Xi to approve and enforce the deal.”

With assistance from Jordan Fabian, Josh Wingrove, Winnie Hsu, Colum Murphy, James Mayger, and Bill Faries
 
My point, to reiterate again is liberals using Star Wars are not doing something abnormal or modern. They are using a known cultural narrative(Star Wars)-as a metaphor to define moral stakes, identify who is a good and bad guy, etc…
I don't get it. All I tell them is to read another book, watch another movie, suck some other duck.
 
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I don't get it. All I tell them is to read another book, watch another movie, suck some other duck.
Then you misunderstand the point. It’s not about their lack of literary palettes-it’s that they are getting their moral compass and sense of right and wrong from the stories they consume.
 
Good lore turns out antifaggots have spent years in prison thanks to streamers catching their face hahhahahahah warms my fucking heart.
 
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I don't have it handy, but there's a 4chan screenshot out there explaining this pretty well.
Basically, one of the things TPTB learned from programs like MKULTRA is that human brains suck at telling fiction from reality.
If a monkey sees another monkey get a banana for doing a trick on the TV screen, monkey thinks he will get banana for doing the same thing. Similarly, if human sees hero in Marvel film behave a certain way, they expect they will receive the same (or similar) rewards for doing the same things. Scale that up across thousands of films and other media and you can program certain "truths" into a population that don't actually have any real world equivalent.

It's pretty evil when you think about it, because like you pointed out, old stories usually serve to help teach lessons on behavior and expectations within a society.
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I want to add that when some people internalize these narratives and compare them to reality, unless you're demoralized (a la Yuri Bezmenov), it forms a cognitive dissonance that they really can't handle. When the monkey sees another monkey get a banana, and he doesn't get one, he gets really angry. Either they dig their heels in, the conditioning slips, or they reject it wholesale. When it comes to media and its programming, American culture is incestuous at the moment, with the infinite reboots and spin-offs. Even original works are made by the same 8% of the population, if that, as all the other slop, making this cognitive dissonance even worse. Eventually these rallying cries of Dumbledorlliance of Panemarvel ring really, really hollow. Even if it's kids cheering for Vader in heckin' Star Wars, to them it's different because it's something else, something closer to what they'd want in life.
 
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