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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The White House rapid response account just put out a tweet transcribing an executive order that Trump just signed focused on the homeless crisis (T/A). Some bullet points that stood out to me from reading it:
  • Bringing back civil commitment for the mentally ill
  • Defunding "safe consumption" drug programs
  • Raising the standards for transitional housing to exclude drug addicts who make no effort to get clean
  • Higher scrutiny against homeless sex offenders, tracking their whereabouts better and not housing them with homeless women and children
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Meh… Some good, some bad.

Getting rid of funding for clean needles is fucking retarded. You’ll pay about ten thousand times that when they get HIV or Hepatitis and start showing up in ERs.

Same thing with excluding drug addicts who “make no attempt to stay clean”. What does that even mean?

Drug addicts are going to use drugs or have setbacks. That comes with you know: Being a drug addict.
Excluding them from housing because of this only creates more homeless addicts.
 
Judges Order Kilmar Abrego Garcia Released From Federal Custody
DHS already said it’s not happening.

'Lawless and insane': Trump admin readies for fight after judges block Abrego Garcia removal for now​

3 judges issued orders on Kilmar Abrego Garcia's removal — and Trump officials appear poised to fight back​

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Jerome Powell openly calling Trump wrong to his face

 
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Jerome Powell openly calling Trump wrong to his face

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Lol!

What a faggot! Getting humiliated by Trump in public is like a rite of passage now.

You shut up and take your licks and later write a whiny editorial or memoir about it.

Fighting back and going “NOOO!!! It’s not TRUE!!” Just makes him look like a salty fag.
 
Unless he resigns I think the only way you can get rid of him is waiting until 2026 when his current term of chairman of the Federal Reserve is up.
Oh ye of little faith. This marks only the 4th TIME in history a President has visited the Fed. Trump is not happy. He is getting in Powell's zone and making it clear who is the boss nigger.
 
I am very very skeptical of someone being a single issue voter on the Epstein shit.

If they do exist they can't number more than a few hundred, certainly not enough to sway polling or elections.
It's not just the Epstein shit. I don't know how Trump voters can just willfully ignore funding the Ukraine/Russia war instead of putting that money towards our own country, after Trump promised America first and that if Russia and Ukraine weren't ready for peace then they would have to fight it out themselves until they are ready. Nah fuck that, let's just send Ukraine weapons as if we're Joe Biden's autopen, the US citizens will never notice. People need to talk about Trump's administration pushing Moderna vaccines too despite them being responsible for thousands and thousands of deaths. The Epstein shit is a big deal but it really fucking sucks that it's such a hog of a subject that people just aren't willing to ever talk about any of the other examples of Trump bitching out to the Deep State's agenda happening right now.
 
Ukraine/Russia war instead of putting that money towards our own country, after Trump promised America first and that if Russia and Ukraine weren't ready for peace then they would have to fight it out themselves until they are ready.
Unfortunately, he can not outright walk away from that situation cause it'd look like hes "abandoning" and ally.You saw how the europoors screeched because he asked them to pay what they agreed to pay.His fault for over-promising though. The amount of shit he chooses to shield Israel from also does not help, i'm no groyper, but it really make me think....... maybe Epstein was mossad after all
 
Fatpacks is a Seer in denial
@Fatpacks is a goddamn treasure. His anti-Republican doomer predictions distil the most insane social-media style shit takes into pure USPG2 gold. He is satirizing the insane shitlib left, and has done so, thanklessly and without breaking character, for hundreds of posts.

I’m frankly a bit ashamed that it took me so long to catch on.
 
Regardless of its source, might be a symptom of a wider societal issue - other relatives have told me that other males my age very much have the same "what is even the point of anything" blackpilled view of the US regardless of where they live.
Anyone who says 'wider societal issue' is full of soy and needs to go to either a Catholic or Orthodox church and have the priest exorcise the gay spirits from his soul.
 
New Executive Order for NIL for College Sports:

SAVING COLLEGE SPORTS​

Executive Orders
July 24, 2025

By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, it is hereby ordered:

Section 1. Purpose and Policy. College sports are a uniquely American institution that provide life-changing educational and leadership-development opportunities to more than 500,000 student-athletes through almost $4 billion in scholarships each year. College athletics also provide substantial support to local economies and form an indelible part of family activities, pastimes, and culture in many communities.

While major college football games can draw tens of millions of television viewers and attendees, they feature only a very small sample of the many athletes who benefit from the transformational opportunities that college athletics provide. Sixty-five percent of the 2024 United States Olympic Team members were current or former National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) varsity athletes, and approximately seventy-five percent were collegiate athletes. The 2024 United States Olympic Team earned 126 total medals, leading the overall medal count for the eighth consecutive Summer Olympic Games.

Beyond driving our unrivaled success in international competition, college athletes are more likely to report better outcomes in important respects during college and after graduation. A substantial majority of female executives at the largest American companies participated in sports during adolescence, many at the high school or collegiate level, and examples of business leaders and former Presidents who played college sports are legion. It is no exaggeration to say that America’s system of collegiate athletics plays an integral role in forging the leaders that drive our Nation’s success.

Yet the future of college sports is under unprecedented threat. Waves of recent litigation against collegiate athletics governing rules have eliminated limits on athlete compensation, pay-for-play recruiting inducements, and transfers between universities, unleashing a sea change that threatens the viability of college sports. While changes providing some increased benefits and flexibility to student-athletes were overdue and should be maintained, the inability to maintain reasonable rules and guardrails is a mortal threat to most college sports.

To illustrate, following a 2021 antitrust ruling from the United States Supreme Court striking down NCAA restrictions, the NCAA changed its rules to permit players to receive compensation for their name, image, and likeness (NIL) from third parties. But guardrails designed to ensure that these were legitimate, market-value NIL payments for endorsements or similar services, rather than simply pay-for-play inducements, were eliminated through litigation. Other limits on player transfers among schools were also taken down through litigation.

This has created an out-of-control, rudderless system in which competing university donors engage in bidding wars for the best players, who can change teams each season. Meanwhile, more than 30 States have passed their own NIL laws in a chaotic race to the bottom, sometimes to gain temporary competitive advantages for their major collegiate teams. As a result, players at some universities will receive more than $50 million per year, mostly for the revenue-generating sports like football. Entering the 2024 season, players on the eventual college football national champion team were being paid around $20 million annually. By the 2025 season, football players at one university will reportedly be paid $35-40 million, with revenue-sharing included.

This not only reduces competition and parity by creating an oligarchy of teams that can simply buy the best players — including the best players from less-wealthy programs at the end of each season — but the imperative that university donors must devote ever-escalating resources to compete in the revenue-generating sports like football and basketball siphons away the resources necessary to support the panoply of non-revenue sports. Absent guardrails to stop the madness and ensure a reasonable, balanced use of resources across collegiate athletic programs that preserves their educational and developmental benefits, many college sports will soon cease to exist.

A national solution is urgently needed to prevent this situation from deteriorating beyond repair and to protect non-revenue sports, including many women’s sports, that comprise the backbone of intercollegiate athletics, drive American superiority at the Olympics and other international competitions, and catalyze hundreds of thousands of student-athletes to fuel American success in myriad ways.

Attempting to create some guardrails and shelter from litigation, colleges have adopted a new regime, deciding to pay athletes directly and simultaneously limit the total number of athletes on their campuses. Given that the new roster limits, by exceeding the scholarship limits they replace, will increase the potential number of scholarships available in many sports, this opportunity must be utilized to strengthen and expand non-revenue sports. Simultaneously, the third-party market of pay-for-play inducements must be eliminated before its insatiable demand for resources dries up support for non-revenue sports. Otherwise, a crucial American asset will be lost.

It is the policy of my Administration that all college sports should be preserved and, where possible, expanded. My Administration will therefore provide the stability, fairness, and balance necessary to protect student-athletes, collegiate athletic scholarships and opportunities, and the special American institution of college sports. It is common sense that college sports are not, and should not be, professional sports, and my Administration will take action accordingly.

Sec. 2. Protecting and Expanding Women’s and Non-Revenue Sports and Prohibiting Third-Party Pay-for-Play Payments. (a) It is the policy of the executive branch that opportunities for scholarships and collegiate athletic competition in women’s and non-revenue sports must be preserved and, where possible, expanded, including specifically as follows with respect to the 2025-2026 athletic season and future athletic seasons:

(i) collegiate athletic departments with greater than $125,000,000 in revenue during the 2024-2025 athletic season should provide more scholarship opportunities in non-revenue sports than during the 2024-2025 athletic season and should provide the maximum number of roster spots for non-revenue sports permitted under the applicable collegiate athletic rules;

(ii) college athletic departments with greater than $50,000,000 in revenue during the 2024-2025 athletic season should provide at least as many scholarship opportunities in non-revenue sports as provided during the 2024-2025 athletic season and should provide the maximum number of roster spots for non-revenue sports permitted under the applicable collegiate athletic rules; and

(iii) college athletic departments with $50,000,000 or less in revenue during the 2024-2025 athletic season or that do not have any revenue-generating sports should not disproportionately reduce scholarship opportunities or roster spots for sports based on the revenue that the sport generates.

(b) It is the policy of the executive branch that any revenue-sharing permitted between universities and collegiate athletes should be designed and implemented in a manner that preserves or expands scholarships and collegiate athletic opportunities in women’s and non-revenue sports.

(c) To preserve the critical educational and developmental benefits of collegiate athletics for our Nation, it is the policy of the executive branch that third-party, pay-for-play payments to collegiate athletes are improper and should not be permitted by universities. This policy does not apply to compensation provided to an athlete for the fair market value that the athlete provides to a third party, such as for a brand endorsement.

(d) Within 30 days of the date of this order, the Secretary of Education, in consultation with the Attorney General, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the Secretary of Education, and the Chairman of the Federal Trade Commission, shall develop a plan to advance the policies set forth in subsections (a)-(c) of this section through all available and appropriate regulatory, enforcement, and litigation mechanisms, including Federal funding decisions, enforcement of Title IX of the Education Amendments Act of 1972, prohibiting unconstitutional actions by States to regulate interstate commerce, and enforcement of other constitutional and statutory protections, and by working with the Congress and State governments, as appropriate.

Sec. 3. Student-Athlete Status. The Secretary of Labor and the National Labor Relations Board shall determine and implement the appropriate measures with respect to clarifying the status of collegiate athletes, including through guidance, rules, or other appropriate actions, that will maximize the educational benefits and opportunities provided by higher education institutions through athletics.

Sec. 4. Legal Protections for College Athletics from Lawsuits. (a) The Attorney General and the Chairman of the Federal Trade Commission shall work to stabilize and preserve college athletics through litigation, guidelines, policies, or other actions, as appropriate, by protecting the rights and interests of student-athletes and the long-term availability of collegiate athletic scholarships and opportunities when such elements are unreasonably challenged under antitrust or other legal theories.

(b) Within 60 days of the date of this order, to advance the purposes of subsection (a) of this section, the Attorney General and the Chairman of the Federal Trade Commission shall:

(i) review, and as necessary revise, litigation positions, guidelines, policies, or other actions; and

(ii) develop a plan to implement appropriate future litigation positions, guidelines, policies, or other actions.

Sec. 5. Protecting Development of the United States Olympic Team. The Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy and the Director of the White House Office of Public Liaison shall consult the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee and other appropriate organizations of American athletes about safeguarding the integral role and competitive advantage that American collegiate athletics provide in developing athletes to represent our Nation in international athletic competitions.

Sec. 6. General Provisions. (a) Nothing in this order shall be construed to impair or otherwise affect:

(i) the authority granted by law to an executive department or agency, or the head thereof; or

(ii) the functions of the Director of the Office of Management and Budget relating to budgetary, administrative, or legislative proposals.

(b) This order shall be implemented consistent with applicable law and subject to the availability of appropriations.

(c) This order is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.

(d) The costs for publication of this order shall be borne by the Department of Education.

DONALD J. TRUMP

THE WHITE HOUSE,

July 24, 2025.
Source (Archive)
 
New Executive Order for NIL for College Sports
Huh. College sports were in danger? I had no idea, definitely what trump should be focusing on right now.
Fighting back and going “NOOO!!! It’s not TRUE!!” Just makes him look like a salty fag.
To be fair trump was probably bullshitting there.I have no doubt i will see clips online from the TES lurker types with title saying: Orange Dictator DESTROYED by Logic.
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kek
What is on the paper? A print out from one of Trump's Truth Social posts? It looks like its only a few lines.
Case in point
 
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