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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A kindergarten teacher in Washington posted a TikTok detailing how she flooded her students with LGBTQ propaganda, including coloring Pride flags, reading LGBTQ books, and watching a drag queen video.

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She works for a public school so keep in mind funding from state, federal and local sources keeps her employed.
Ms. Sin is proud of her skin color. Am I allowed to be proud of my skin color? Hint: It's the only color you aren't allowed to be proud of being.
 
The 9th really tried to side with California, but the attorney they sent to represent them was legit retarted and asked them not to consider old supreme court rulings on the matter becasue they are old. I think that argument spooked the 9th into giving Trump the win so the issue can be passed to the actual SC instead and the 9th can wash their hands of this shitshow.

Arguing that you shouldn't follow certain laws because they're "old" is a poor idea, especially if you're a libcuck who thinks Trump is a fascist. What if Trump says the Bill of Rights is void because it's old?

I'd argue that the best way to fix this is to have someone nut up and address the immigration issues.

The "TACO" deal is one of the lamest attacks they've cooked up with Trump because it's not as though they like whatever he's supposedly getting cold feet on and, most importantly, they never have an alternative to present. That's what killing the Democrats the most with everyone - all they've got is increasingly impotent rage and no solutions to present except "let's just keep doing the things everyone hates".

Some Dems ARE offering "alternatives" but they are horrendously shitty ones, stuff like "shut up and suck girlcock" and "amnesty all the illegals Biden let through the border"

Democrat Rep. Hank Johnson sings an Anti-Trump song on his guitar about Trump shooting down Democracy with a gun to be a king

1.mp4

Hank needs to stop playing guitar and get back to studying whether or not Guam is going to capsize
 
If he doesn't trust Gabbard, he should fire her. If this is showmanship, it is retarded and undermines her ability to do her job.
My only hypothesis if this isn't some implicit desire to take action in Iran is that he's doing everything he can to make Iran scared of a possible American intervention without actually committing to pulling the trigger. He told people to "Get out of Tehran!", "Iran cannot have a nuke!", etcetera. Iran looks at this and they're like, "He's going to start bombing us any day now, we should look for an out somehow." It doesn't stop Tulsi from doing her job, it just helps cater the image that Trump is unpredictable, openly defiant of info given by own underlings, and leaves people constantly second guessing what he's going to do. There's far too much precedent set by Trump of saying one thing and doing the other for this to mean much of anything, which is both a positive and a negative.
 
How do these people even live? Like imagaine wearing a mask in the year 2025. Like tpwhats that even supposed to accomplish anymore? The fuck does “disengage from willful ignorance of reality” supposed to mean, its an empty gauge statement that means nothing. How does one not participate in capilist gluttony then? Like you need food so you buy it from the store, wait isn't that capitalist okay so maybe a farm, but wait again in ordeer to maintain even a small farm you need land and things like tractors fertilizer and even a few others to properly maintain it. Also “engeage in direct action” bitch you are on xitter you are not contributing shit to the “good fight”.
IMG_1089.webp
 
I miss him, bro. Jeopardy started getting more and more woke after he died. It's like the fuckers were champing at the bit, waiting for him to go so they could push their progtard nonsense into yet another media franchise.
Now that you mention it, the last time I caught an episode of Jeopardy (in a dentist's waiting room) they sure asked a lot of weird questions. One referenced South American poverty. Like, fuck that - just ask questions related to stuff only nerds remember from their 10th grade Social Studies class, like the Teapot Dome Scandal.
 
A kindergarten teacher in Washington posted a TikTok detailing how she flooded her students with LGBTQ propaganda, including coloring Pride flags, reading LGBTQ books, and watching a drag queen video.


1.mp4

She works for a public school so keep in mind funding from state, federal and local sources keeps her employed.
She almost certainly exclusively has sex and relationships with "cishet" men. I can never understand some people's adherence and devotion to interests that serve them absolutely no purpose.

Similar to "Male Feminists", but at least their motivation is more transparent (sex predators masking and incels in denial)
 
Now that you mention it, the last time I caught an episode of Jeopardy (in a dentist's waiting room) they sure asked a lot of weird questions. One referenced South American poverty. Like, fuck that - just ask questions related to stuff only nerds remember from their 10th grade Social Studies class, like the Teapot Dome Scandal.
It's not only the questions - it's also the contestants. They're obviously trying to be as "diverse" as possible, which in practice means trannies, AWFLs, and an absolute goddamn flood of pajeets.
 
How do these people even live? Like imagaine wearing a mask in the year 2025. Like tpwhats that even supposed to accomplish anymore? The fuck does “disengage from willful ignorance of reality” supposed to mean, its an empty gauge statement that means nothing. How does one not participate in capilist gluttony then? Like you need food so you buy it from the store, wait isn't that capitalist okay so maybe a farm, but wait again in ordeer to maintain even a small farm you need land and things like tractors fertilizer and even a few others to properly maintain it. Also “engeage in direct action” bitch you are on xitter you are not contributing shit to the “good fight”.
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All I know is I'm happy so many genetic dead ends don't want to have babies. These people are self-selecting themselves out of existence.
 
Reminder, back in September 2017, North Korea's nuclear test site was destroyed by a localized earthquake they claimed was a nuclear test ten-fold higher in yield than any previous test. They've had no nuke tests since, and Kim invited Trump to meet a few months later.

I wonder if you could load a Falcon 9 with a few giant tungsten rods and release them just before re-entry.
 
It's not only the questions - it's also the contestants. They're obviously trying to be as "diverse" as possible, which in practice means trannies, AWFLs, and an absolute goddamn flood of pajeets.
The Pajeets are fucking terrible because I know from being on trivia teams as a high school student that if you went somewhere that Indians were writing questions you'd get a set of dumbass Hindu shit questions that no one cares about.
Now that you mention it, the last time I caught an episode of Jeopardy (in a dentist's waiting room) they sure asked a lot of weird questions. One referenced South American poverty. Like, fuck that - just ask questions related to stuff only nerds remember from their 10th grade Social Studies class, like the Teapot Dome Scandal.
Not only that but the questions are written in gobbledegook nonsense ways at times. It's a real shame because I think of Jeopardy as culturally important in television (it's honestly the only currently airing show I still bother to watch) and Ken Jennings with the writing/production crew are running it into the ground. I think Trebek would have had some stern criticisms if they made him read some of these word salad clues. Ken Jennings only seems interested in quipping how he knows an answer when someone gets it wrong.
 
President Trump: "Always a peacemaker ... Sometimes you need some toughness to make peace, but always a peacemaker."

 
"Built" implies to me that it won't be made in America, but put together here. They throw "designed" in there to throw you off more. If that's true, they're very aware of how they're manipulating people, which I already think is the case. I'm sure there's some scam with the call-centers too. At least large call center operations seem to have moved to having a few people in the US but all the supervisors and at least a good deal of the staff are in poor Central and South American countries.

'Eventually': Eric Trump admits new mobile phone isn't being made in the USA​

Archived: https://archive.ph/z9z5K

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH. He even makes sure to say "built" and touts a St. Louis call-center that I couldn't find any details on. In fact, all I could find is that St. Louis has no knowledge of any call center.

"FOX 2 has reached out to multiple sources in the City of St. Louis and the St. Louis region to determine if, where or when a Trump Mobile call center may open. Spokespeople for Greater St. Louis Inc. and the St. Louis Mayor’s Office both said it did not have any information to share over the Trump Mobile announcement or remarks."
(Archive won't archive this link for some reason)

I always think of MAGAs buying MAGA hats made in China and get a weird sense of satisfaction that it's all a giant bullshit grift.
 
Betteridge's law of headlines.

Is the Anti-Trump Opposition Getting Its #Resistance Back?
The New Yorker (archive.ph)
By Jon Allsop
2025-06-20 10:00:00GMT

How the movement might cohere—if it does at all—remains an open question.
Earlier this year, Gavin Newsom, the governor of California, launched a podcast that promised direct conversations with people he disagrees with. In reality, it featured him sucking up to figures from the MAGA Extended Universe. In the début episode, the guest was Charlie Kirk, an influential young right-wing activist and commentator; Newsom suggested that his thirteen-year-old son was so excited to meet Kirk that he wanted to skip school to attend the taping. (Newsom didn’t let him. “C’mon,” Kirk objected. “You cancelled school for like two years!” Newsom seemed to find this funny.) The following week, Steve Bannon came on the show and said that the 2020 election was stolen; Newsom let this slide. Recently, in the wake of the protests against immigration raids in Los Angeles, Kirk and Bannon have returned Newsom’s hospitality by, respectively, calling him “the fakest person I’ve ever met” and comparing him to John C. Calhoun. Newsom, for his part, has pushed back strongly against the Trump Administration’s militarized response to the protests, challenging Tom Homan, President Trump’s border czar, to arrest him (“Come and get me, tough guy”) and tweaking Trump himself in TikTok memes inspired by “Hamilton” and Taylor Swift. With enemies like these, who needs friends?

Jay Caspian Kang pointed out in this column, in March, that Newsom’s podcast always seemed doomed to fail—not to mention “embarrassing”—because his conciliatory approach was out of step with polling that indicated liberals want to see Democrats fight Trump’s Republican Party, not get along with it. In a different column, Kang similarly took issue with a school of thought, advanced most explicitly by the veteran strategist James Carville, holding that Democrats should “roll over and play dead,” allowing Trump to burn himself out. As Kang put it, this strategy never seemed viable, either, and several recent developments signal that playing dead is, well, dead. Newsom’s newfound combativeness is one example. Another came last week, also in relation to the L.A. protests, when Alex Padilla, the normally mild-mannered California senator, confronted Kristi Noem, the Homeland Security Secretary, at a press conference, and was forced to the floor and handcuffed by federal agents. This week, there were similar scenes in New York City, where agents arrested Brad Lander, the comptroller and a candidate for mayor, while he was accompanying a migrant in immigration court. In between, millions of anti-Trump demonstrators protested across the country under the banner “No Kings.”

It’s possible to see all this as the dormant resistance to Trump finally awakening. But that isn’t really correct. As I wrote in the first days of the new Administration, Trump’s opponents may not have marshalled anything like the enormous Women’s March of January, 2017, but civil-society groups had started to organize their supporters, and many of Trump’s early moves were quickly challenged in court. Since then, there have been a lot of protests—even more, by one count, than in the equivalent stretch of Trump’s first term—though the media, as Kang noted, hasn’t always covered them to the same extent. Newsom may only just have found his voice, but other leading Democrats—the Illinois governor, J. B. Pritzker, for example—never lost theirs. Earlier this year, I felt sure that this sort of activity would spread and intensify, as it now has, if only because Trump’s political project ultimately requires resistance—which generates conflict—in order to thrive, and he will keep pushing until inevitably provoking his opponents. Newsom is a case in point. His grovelling may have been of some use to the likes of Kirk and Bannon, but he’s much more useful as a foil, an avatar of a woke élite that’s imperilling America. Being a foil may be useful to Newsom, too. One ally told NBC that if Newsom were to be arrested for supposedly obstructing Trump’s immigration raids, it would be his “Nelson Mandela moment”—a comparison that has surely not been made before, and hopefully won’t be again.

We are, unfortunately, at the point in this column where I must capitalize the word “Resistance,” and maybe add a hashtag for good measure. As I’ve previously noted, with these accoutrements, the word comes to signify something more than merely fighting back, becoming freighted with the cultural signifiers of the liberal opposition to Trump’s first term. (Think “Notorious R.B.G.” tote bags, Jimmy Kimmel proposing that Trump become a ceremonial king in exchange for going away as President, the cast of “Hamilton” confronting then Vice-President Mike Pence.) As Trump returned to office, this #Resistance did appear to be dead. Now Newsom is posting “Hamilton” memes, and Jimmy Kimmel has shown up at a “No Kings” protest. I do still think we’re in a different moment. (The old Twitter is gone, for starters.) But the basic animating spirit of the #Resistance has clearly survived.

Still, it remains an open question what a new Resistance might look like, how it might cohere or be channelled. In February, Kang posed precisely that question in this column. He toyed with historical precedents—Goldwater Republicanism, the Tea Party—but found them imprecise and largely unhelpful. He described the contours of a “nü-Resistance”—which he characterized as “angry, oppositional, and ideologically chaotic,” and severed from various pillars of the Democratic establishment—but wasn’t yet sure where that energy might go.

Nearly half a year later, we have some new data points. The framework of a Democratic Tea Party remains unhelpful—but something is going on inside (and, now, outside) the Democratic National Committee, which has recently been riven by threats to primary complacent incumbents (and, now, Democrats who support going to war with Iran). These tensions have been whipped up, most notably, by David Hogg, the Parkland shooting survivor turned activist turned short-serving D.N.C. vice-chair. (After other D.N.C. leaders clashed with Hogg, his election was invalidated on procedural grounds, and he ultimately declined to run again for the post.) And Newsom, Padilla, and the “No Kings” protests appear to have harnessed some of the loose energy recently.

But other reported efforts to counter Trump’s appeal—throwing money at influencers in the hope of finding the “next Joe Rogan,” a project to study “the syntax, language and content” that appeal to young men—demonstrate the limits of top-down attempts to cultivate political energy, as well as the persistent staleness of the institutional Democratic brand. At this stage, it seems to me that “young men,” never as homogeneous a voting bloc as imagined by post-election pundits, are vastly more likely to get bored of MAGA than to be seduced by the political equivalent of Steve Buscemi with a skateboard asking them, “How do you vote, fellow-kids?” More substantively, the ideological contours of the new Resistance still feel unsettled. Uncompromising opposition to Trump’s most brazen maneuvers does increasingly look like a unifying approach. But, even there, consensus is not yet total. Some Democrats have fretted that Trump’s L.A. crackdown is bait to distract them from kitchen-table issues. Gretchen Whitmer—the governor of Michigan and, like Newsom, a leading candidate to be the Democrats’ next standard-bearer—has pursued a strategy of working with the Administration. If Newsom’s podcast supplied the most humiliating audio of the new Trump era, the most humiliating image was surely a photo of Whitmer physically hiding in the Oval Office as Trump signed orders to investigate a pair of first-term officials who went on to criticize him. This hasn’t seemed to hurt her standing—at least in Michigan—and she has been able to tout some policy victories, most notably obtaining new fighter jets for a local base.

As with Newsom, I suspect that Trump will at some point drive Whitmer past breaking point. (Already, he has suggested that he might pardon the men convicted of trying to kidnap her, in 2020; what happens if he attempts to send the Marines to Detroit?) Then again, the notion that Newsom started his podcast with the pure intention of reaching out to MAGA, only to be met with actions that he couldn’t possibly accept, may underplay his political cunning. It’s not hard to imagine Newsom embarking on the podcast—which, as Kang noted, immediately went down horribly with the Democratic base—knowing full well that he would soon be back in Resistance-leader mode, but seeing it, in the interim, as a useful way to distance himself from progressive totems that he perceives as toxic (for instance, trans athletes competing in girls’ sports, which he disavowed to Kirk), or something to point to and say, “Look, I really did try reasoning with these people!”

And this is assuming that Newsom actually has pivoted away from the podcast-conciliation strategy, which isn’t clear, even if he certainly has moved toward Resistance leadership. As recently as June 4th, he posted another cloyingly folksy conversation, this time with Dr. Phil, who described himself as “the least political person I know” before extolling family values and weighing in on “pro-Hamas” protests on college campuses; two days later, the L.A. raids began. (Dr. Phil was on the scene, having been granted special access, for some reason, to document immigration-enforcement actions.) Last week, Newsom was interviewed on “The Daily,” the New York Times’ flagship podcast, and without any prompting stressed that he has “no problem meeting with people and talking to people I disagree with,” as “some of your viewers and listeners may know.” Asked about his podcast, he indicated that he still sees it as “incredibly important” to show “a little humility” toward his adversaries, and to listen.

Back in February, Kang concluded that, when it came to the emerging opposition to Trump, “what we are seeing is not a shift in policy preferences but, rather, the dissolution of traditional political logic in this country.” I’m not sure I’d go quite this far. It’s perfectly logical, in light of how Trump is behaving, that the opposition is intensifying; it is also not surprising—or necessarily concerning—that Democrats haven’t yet articulated a coherent new policy platform less than a year on from a priors-shattering defeat. But Newsom and many of his fellow-Democrats do seem to be trying to have it both ways—to prove that you can joke around with Steve Bannon and post “Hamilton” memes about Trump without disappearing down the gaping chasm between those acts. When I last wrote about Trump resistance in this column, it was to argue that it will have to coalesce, if it does at all, within a fragmented media ecosystem; Newsom, perhaps, is trying to game the choose-your-own-adventure quality of this ecosystem by putting out different content that might seep into, and resonate within, very different filter bubbles. I think this is doomed to fail because it (and he) is palpably inauthentic, and authenticity—or, rather, the perception thereof—is king in this media environment. But someone else might manage to do it. If the new Resistance remains hard to define, that’s partly because it’s still early. There’s no inevitability of neat coherence down the line. One thing is for sure: the mass protests will continue.
 
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