US US Politics General 2: Hope Edition - 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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@Potentially Criminal is live now, allegedly to talk about SCOTUS taking up that mail-in ballots thing, but there will probably also be sidebars about a mysterious echo in the stream, Clyde the dog refusing to appear on camera, and other assorted technical difficulties.
 
I wish I shared your optimism. The government tried their best to criminalize going outside for 2 years. They succeeded in many states. Zero public lynchings of politicians occurred in response, and half the country was actually livid that they weren't being more heavy handed. Not to mention state-enforced genital mutilation for brainwashed children or government-approved and funded race riots. As long as there isn't mass starvation, the niggerpuppet underlings will go along to get along, myself included :(
i mean, if rent is $4700 a month for a house right now that's less than $2000 with minimum pay increase there would be tons of people either without food and or houses because it will be impossible to afford.

this isn't me being optimistic, I am firmly of the opinion that the world is on a knifes edge

We are living under a system that was designed for a world that doesn't exist anymore, we are like the people alive just before the outbreak of ww1 where you can feel the energy and Temperature rising as everyone realizes this is unsustainable, even if no one does anything it'll collapse on it's own due to some combination of economic and demographic factors.

that's why the most popular politicians all over the world are people promising to fight and destroy the system regardless of their actual policies.
 
Looking at that Georgia plant he mentioned, it's estimated to create 8.5k jobs once it's fully up and running. The 600 Korean battery engineers will also likely mostly leave once it's done to set up another factory elsewhere.

its not a pajeet who learned how to program at durgasoft or doing entry level work
 
Well the R did cave that all the federal fired get to come back.
Did they? Cause that's still going through the courts. If the shutdown ends, but the RIFs were still pending, I could absolutely see them going "well, we're not shut down anymore... but your position was already removed via RIF. Goodbye Shaniqua."

Why did this take so long? It should have been done day one.

The constitution explicitly says the day of, IIRC. All of those laws that say "we can count until we get the result we want" (in effect) are against the constitution, and for good reason. The founding fathers knew "let me just keep counting" meant.
 
Looking at that Georgia plant he mentioned, it's estimated to create 8.5k jobs once it's fully up and running. The 600 Korean battery engineers will also likely mostly leave once it's done to set up another factory elsewhere.

its not a pajeet who learned how to program at durgasoft or doing entry level work
Those are not H1B workers.
 
Looking at that Georgia plant he mentioned, it's estimated to create 8.5k jobs once it's fully up and running. The 600 Korean battery engineers will also likely mostly leave once it's done to set up another factory elsewhere.

its not a pajeet who learned how to program at durgasoft or doing entry level work
Am I missing something here? Is it really that hard to put a battery together?
I'm seriously asking because I have no idea how batteries are made. Is there some reason that people who take a dump in the street can do it but the average American can't be trained to do it?
 
Looking at that Georgia plant he mentioned, it's estimated to create 8.5k jobs once it's fully up and running. The 600 Korean battery engineers will also likely mostly leave once it's done to set up another factory elsewhere.

its not a pajeet who learned how to program at durgasoft or doing entry level work
Oh wow so it’s actually a good thing? Thanks dual citizen you really cleared the air
 
here

ssstwitter.com_1762911568665.mp4

My suspicion is that he doesn't know about the tech h1b crisis the way that he is instantly thinking about factories/industrialization.
If he is truthful then he should at least have a modicule of sense of what the talent missing in the US is, it makes him look completely fucking dishonest and just another "I need cheap labour for my pension" boomer.

Nobody ever fucking explains the talent that we are missing but they always seem to get it from 3rd world shitholes, go figure.

I would welcome H1B immigrants if we actually got something out of it. All we've gotten so far is shit.
 
Those are not H1B workers.
trump thinks they are

reading more about it, they abused B1 visas because it was too hard to get an H1B/L1 visa


More than 300 South Koreans were among the 475 people swept up and detained by U.S. federal authorities at Hyundai Motor's (005380.KS), opens new tab car battery plant near Savannah, Georgia, on Thursday, in the largest single-site enforcement operation in the history of the Department of Homeland Security's investigative operations.
Many of the people arrested were skilled workers who were sent to the U.S. to install equipment at the near-complete factory on a visa waver programme, or B-1 business traveller visas, which largely did not allow work, three people said.
"It's extremely difficult to get an H-1B visa, which is needed for the battery engineers. That's why some people got B-1 visas or ESTA," said Park Tae-sung, vice chairman of Korea Battery Industry Association, referring to the Electronic System for Travel Authorization.

Am I missing something here? Is it really that hard to put a battery together?
I'm seriously asking because I have no idea how batteries are made. Is there some reason that people who take a dump in the street can do it but the average American can't be trained to do it?
batteries are extremely hard to put together without making them a bomb, they need specialized training

Oh wow so it’s actually a good thing? Thanks dual citizen you really cleared the air
why is it that retards don't understand the difference between realistically explaining a situation and endorsing it
 
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