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

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:
All I know is the Senate has to vote on the BBB and some psycho ambushed firefighters in Coeur D'Alene. Any other news? More info on this stuff? I just woke up.
I'm wondering that too. What were they voting on last night then if the BBB didn't pass yet, or did it?
 
Boomers think it does but I'm of the opinion an intern reads all complaints and then empties the recycle bin without even passing them on.

You could try I guess.
They do open mail. If a thousand people sent actual mail (not just form letters), it's something the recipient will know about. If you want someone in the federal government to see and read what you write them, it's far better to send mail than an email or phone call.
 

Canada Scraps Digital Service Tax On U.S. Tech Giants To Revive Trade Talks​

Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne wrote on X overnight that Canada has withdrawn its controversial Digital Services Tax (DST) on Silicon Valley tech giants, such as Alphabet and Meta, in order to restart stalled trade negotiations with the Trump administration. It's another win for President Trump, as his 'Art of the Deal' tactics continue to bring far-left progressive countries back in line with his 'America First' agenda.

"Canada is engaged in complex negotiations on a new economic and security partnership with the U.S.," Champagne wrote on X late Sunday.

He continued, "Rescinding the DST will allow the negotiations to make vital progress and reinforce our work to create jobs and build prosperity for all Canadians."

LMFAO Libs folded like a cheap suit. Never forget 👇 pic.twitter.com/zwS0Q0bvNk

— Michael (@justwannasayth2) June 30, 2025
As a fresher, Canada's DST was a 3% tax on the revenue that big tech companies earn from Canadian users, specifically from online advertising, marketplaces, and user data.

Canada's move follows President Trump's Friday afternoon announcement calling for all trade discussions with the country to be terminated. He also threatened to impose new tariffs within a week.

Also last Friday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told CNBC that U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer would investigate the tax to "determine the amount of harm to the U.S. companies and the U.S. economy in general."

The stakes are high for Canada, as three-quarters of its exports are shipped to the U.S.—including energy products, other commodities, and automobiles—so tariffs would be devastating to the local economy.

Canada has taken the common-sense approach of returning to the negotiating table with Trump to work out a trade deal that benefits everyone.

UBS analyst Jason Cheng commented overnight on the developments:

Canada has withdrawn its digital services tax on technology companies in a move to restart trade talks with the U.S. This came after the pause in talks last Friday when U.S. President Donald Trump called an end to discussions with Canada, in retaliation for the digital tax. USDCAD is trading lower post the headline.
Daniel Béland, a political science professor at McGill University in Montreal, told AP News that Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's retreat was a "clear victory" for Trump.

"President Trump forced PM Carney to do exactly what big tech wanted. U.S. tech executive will be very happy with this outcome," Béland said.

Moments ago, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick thanked Canada for removing the DST tax.

Thank you Canada for removing your Digital Services Tax which was intended to stifle American innovation and would have been a deal breaker for any trade deal with America. https://t.co/b944wQ4cyn

— Howard Lutnick (@howardlutnick) June 30, 2025

Boy, can’t wait to see the triumphant headlines on Breitbart about BBB passing.

And ignoring the whole “everything based was taken out” part.
what based parts were taken out?
 
They do open mail. If a thousand people sent actual mail (not just form letters), it's something the recipient will know about. If you want someone in the federal government to see and read what you write them, it's far better to send mail than an email or phone call.
I interned in a legislative office in college, this is totally true. A pile of fifty written letters looks like much more of a problem than five hundred emails in an inbox does. You have to remember how dumb and shallow these people are, you need a visual spectacle to get their attention.
 
From what I've seen from dipping in and out of the thread, I believe they're going after the suppressors and have crippled the remittance tax for the jeets. Lowered it to 1 fucking percent. 3.5% was already low, imo, but 1% is ridiculous. I'm not sure what else was changed.
I know they took out the federal land sale thing too. But that wasn't based.
 
From what I've seen from dipping in and out of the thread, I believe they're going after the suppressors and have crippled the remittance tax for the jeets. Lowered it to 1 fucking percent. 3.5% was already low, imo, but 1% is ridiculous. I'm not sure what else was changed.
The 1% tax is for illegals using Western Union. Jeets are completely exempt because they have accounts at American banks.
 
I know they took out the federal land sale thing too. But that wasn't based.
Yeah, I saw that. While it was a good idea, the lack of protections to prevent it from being sold to foreign entities such as the chinese or major conglomerates like black rock is a major negative. A revised version that would include stuff like that would be nice.
 
Yeah, I saw that. While it was a good idea, the lack of protections to prevent it from being sold to foreign entities such as the chinese or major conglomerates like black rock is a major negative. A revised version that would include stuff like that would be nice.
Sure it would be nice but the point was never to get land in the hands of US citizens
 
I interned in a legislative office in college, this is totally true. A pile of fifty written letters looks like much more of a problem than five hundred emails in an inbox does. You have to remember how dumb and shallow these people are, you need a visual spectacle to get their attention.
It takes time to open and look at the letters, and mentally you can't just dismiss them like you can with emails or phone calls. They don't "disappear" when you stop thinking about them—they're still sitting there on the table. At the very least, you have to take time to open, sort, and throw away mail—not just click a "delete" button or switch tabs on your browser.

And, from my own experience, getting and opening the mail can be somewhat of a break from the normal droll of office work. And important stuff comes by mail still, like bills, publications, applications, correspondence, etc. So it's usually done every day on a regular basis. When I advise students applying to internships, clerkships, etc. in the federal or state government, I tell them to send a paper application because it's far more certain they will see and read the paper copy than they will see and read an email.
 
Totes "Outsider" alt-media Zerohedge is out today carrying water for Peter Thiel of all people, where he says, and I shit you not, unironically, we need to watch out for totalitarian one world govt. We also need to watch out for climate change!

No mention of his or his buddies insanely Orwellian surveillance grid companies they've built directly at the "request" and funding of the feds. Good lesson in how the right is constantly and often subtly manipulated by "underground" "outsider" figures who are in no fucking way outsiders and who lie about their intentions.

Source: https://www.zerohedge.com/political...overnment-greater-threat-ai-or-climate-change
Archive: https://archive.ph/YMOTP
 
Back