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The Biden Administration and All Things Politics

yes this is evidence #1001 that these officials don’t care about my best interests. It’s also evidence to me that the only people they are interested in holding accountable for crimes are mainly American citizens, and more specifically those that oppose them politically.
So, you're looking for for evidence that confirms your suspicions. You're a contrarian sheeple, not a skeptic. Skeptics seek out information that disconfirms their suspicions. Bring the evidence that this is a problem that is bigger than the cost of enforcing this law.
 
If these immigrants are documented, they contribute to Social Security and get benefits, the same as the rest of us. If undocumented, they contribute and don't get benefits.

Thank you for letting us know you follow sources like Zero Hedge and Stephen Miller. We know now that you are unable to discern reliable news sources. We never have to take you seriously again.
I haven't ever taken them seriously. Way ahead of you.
 
Here’s the video of it. Many of our Republican friends on this website could benefit by reading your article/listening to Larry. It might not be the info they want to hear. Many are addicted to rage porn. But they could benefit by hearing some raw truth from Larry about Bideneconomcis. The economy is surging with Democratic policies, many which are benefiting economic growth in red states that they wouldn’t have seen otherwise (and many of their representatives voted against).

Repubs, you may want to re-evaluate the Democratic Party. I get that you might find gay and trans and black people to be yucky. And we know you love the big talk of building a wall (that’ll never happen). But your portfolio might fair better under Democratic policies. And Biden will never tell you to stuff a flashlight up your *** to cure Covid. Just sayin


View: https://x.com/atrupar/status/1753603943756624044?s=46&t=QT7YFlZ_IlHq81PpZAhKgw
 
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What a great article: https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/poli...n&cvid=c8291f239caf4cd8bc5af2642eb405d3&ei=60

Back in 2020, the campaign took place right as COVID-19 was first spreading, creating a once-in-a-lifetime public health crisis. This election is unfolding amid a pair of violent international crises, the conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza.

The main economic challenge in 2020 was to prop up the economy as the pandemic threatened to shut it down. Today, the main challenge with the economy is to keep it running without letting it overheat.

Violent crime is now going down instead of up. Illegal border crossings are going up instead of down. And of course, in 2020, abortion was still a right throughout the U.S., albeit with restrictions. Now it exists only in some states, and is under threat in others.

But there’s another, less obvious difference between 2020 and 2024, and it might matter even more. Today, we know a great deal more about the two men who are likely to appear on the ballot.

What We’ve Learned About Trump​

By 2020, Trump had said enough to suggest he might not accept the results of an election he lost fairly, and might even try to contest the outcome. But it wasn’t until Jan. 6, 2021, that he showed he would actually follow through on those impulses, up to the point of provoking an armed insurrection in order to stop Congress from certifying the electoral vote.

Since then, Trump has repeatedly threatened to continue down this path of flouting democratic principles and the rule of law, whether it would be by pardoning the Jan. 6 rioters or having the Justice Department prosecute the political foes he calls “vermin.”


Meanwhile, high-profile conservative advocates, including some former Trump administration officials, have put together “Project 2025,” a 1,000-page strategic blueprint for how Trump might govern in a second term. It includes a plan to fire as many as 50,000 federal workers, as part of an effort to fight the so-called “deep state.”

In December, Sean Hannity asked Trump if he intended to act like a dictator. “Only on day one,” Trump said. In 2020, you could maybe find an excuse to dismiss such talk. In 2024, you really can’t.

The same goes for allegations of serious transgressions in Trump’s professional and personal lives, which dogged Trump long before he ran for president. It was not until 2022 that juries found the Trump Corporation guilty of tax fraud and found Trump personally liable for sexually abusing writer E. Jean Carroll in the 1990s and then defaming her by denying it publicly.


Those are some pretty important data points for voters to consider, with more to come depending on how and when the otherlegalproceedings involving Trump unfold.

But it’s Biden about whom we’ve probably learned the most, because in 2020 it was impossible to know what kind of president he’d actually be. Now we do.

What We’ve Learned About Biden, Part 1​

As a candidate, Biden embraced a sweeping, potentially historic agenda on domestic policy, a plan that included once-in-a-generation infrastructure efforts, a wholesale reimagining of child and elder care and transformational investments in clean energy. But Democratic candidates for president almost always talk big.

As a senator and then as vice president, Biden had focused much more on the judiciary and foreign policy. It was easy to assume he wasn’t fully committed to his campaign agenda, or that he wouldn’t actually try to pursue it.

Boy, was that assumption wrong.

Biden pushed forward with the big ideas, initially attempting to wrap them into one giant legislative package he called “Build Back Better.” He deferred heavily to Democratic leaders in Congress and was not afraid to pass legislation on party-line votes, though he simultaneously pursued bipartisan legislation where he saw an opportunity.


Not every decision worked out. There’s a strong case that narrowing the agenda even a little bit might have achieved more, or at least moved the process along more quickly.

But while Biden had to jettison some parts of the agenda and scale back others, he ended up achieving more than any reasonable analyst could have expected, affixing his signature to major initiatives that are now pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into infrastructure, semiconductor development and cleanenergy ― and bringing down prescriptiondrugprices, too.

What We’ve Learned About Biden, Part 2​


On foreign policy, the most revealing episodes of Biden’s presidency have arguably been the withdrawal of American forces from Afghanistan and his position on the wars in Ukraine and Gaza. They represent very different challenges, though it’s possible to see some patterns in Biden’s approach.

One constant has been his attention to and management of international alliances. With Ukraine, he has managed to lead a policy response that’s been relatively free of dissent from America’s top international allies. In Gaza, he has maintained a united diplomatic front with Saudi Arabia and other regional players that, he hopes, will be the foundation of a post-war reconstruction and peace arrangement (as reported weeks ago by HuffPost’s Akbar Shahid Ahmed).

The other constant is a firm conviction about right and wrong and what needs to be done, regardless of what Biden is hearing from critics, even in his own administration. It was obvious with the withdrawal from Afghanistan, which so many members of his military and diplomatic establishment resisted or tried to slow down. It is even more obvious now with his support for Israel, despite a growing outcry over what Israel’s response to the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas has meant for the people of Gaza.


In both cases, it seems clear Biden is following his own inner compass. In Afghanistan, that compass points him toward getting American soldiers out of what he believed was a hopeless endeavor ― a perspective likely informed by having a son who served in the military.

In the Middle East, the compass points him toward supporting an Israel he views primarily as an embattled refuge for the Jewish people. That view is a lot more common among older officials who formed their opinions in the era of Golda Meir and the Yom Kippur War, while the Holocaust was a fresher memory and Israel was repeatedlybattling Arab military forces.

What You Might Think About This​

How you process all of this will obviously depend on your values, sympathies and priorities, and in some cases, on how you settle your own internal conflicts.

But whatever you think about Biden ― and whatever you think of Trump, for that matter ― you have a lot more information today than you did in 2020.

It may be the same old men on the ballot. That doesn’t mean it will be the same old election.



Reading that and the choice is pretty obvious on who we should vote for.
 
What a great article: https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/poli...n&cvid=c8291f239caf4cd8bc5af2642eb405d3&ei=60

Back in 2020, the campaign took place right as COVID-19 was first spreading, creating a once-in-a-lifetime public health crisis. This election is unfolding amid a pair of violent international crises, the conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza.

The main economic challenge in 2020 was to prop up the economy as the pandemic threatened to shut it down. Today, the main challenge with the economy is to keep it running without letting it overheat.

Violent crime is now going down instead of up. Illegal border crossings are going up instead of down. And of course, in 2020, abortion was still a right throughout the U.S., albeit with restrictions. Now it exists only in some states, and is under threat in others.

But there’s another, less obvious difference between 2020 and 2024, and it might matter even more. Today, we know a great deal more about the two men who are likely to appear on the ballot.

What We’ve Learned About Trump​

By 2020, Trump had said enough to suggest he might not accept the results of an election he lost fairly, and might even try to contest the outcome. But it wasn’t until Jan. 6, 2021, that he showed he would actually follow through on those impulses, up to the point of provoking an armed insurrection in order to stop Congress from certifying the electoral vote.

Since then, Trump has repeatedly threatened to continue down this path of flouting democratic principles and the rule of law, whether it would be by pardoning the Jan. 6 rioters or having the Justice Department prosecute the political foes he calls “vermin.”


Meanwhile, high-profile conservative advocates, including some former Trump administration officials, have put together “Project 2025,” a 1,000-page strategic blueprint for how Trump might govern in a second term. It includes a plan to fire as many as 50,000 federal workers, as part of an effort to fight the so-called “deep state.”

In December, Sean Hannity asked Trump if he intended to act like a dictator. “Only on day one,” Trump said. In 2020, you could maybe find an excuse to dismiss such talk. In 2024, you really can’t.

The same goes for allegations of serious transgressions in Trump’s professional and personal lives, which dogged Trump long before he ran for president. It was not until 2022 that juries found the Trump Corporation guilty of tax fraud and found Trump personally liable for sexually abusing writer E. Jean Carroll in the 1990s and then defaming her by denying it publicly.


Those are some pretty important data points for voters to consider, with more to come depending on how and when the otherlegalproceedings involving Trump unfold.

But it’s Biden about whom we’ve probably learned the most, because in 2020 it was impossible to know what kind of president he’d actually be. Now we do.

What We’ve Learned About Biden, Part 1​

As a candidate, Biden embraced a sweeping, potentially historic agenda on domestic policy, a plan that included once-in-a-generation infrastructure efforts, a wholesale reimagining of child and elder care and transformational investments in clean energy. But Democratic candidates for president almost always talk big.

As a senator and then as vice president, Biden had focused much more on the judiciary and foreign policy. It was easy to assume he wasn’t fully committed to his campaign agenda, or that he wouldn’t actually try to pursue it.

Boy, was that assumption wrong.

Biden pushed forward with the big ideas, initially attempting to wrap them into one giant legislative package he called “Build Back Better.” He deferred heavily to Democratic leaders in Congress and was not afraid to pass legislation on party-line votes, though he simultaneously pursued bipartisan legislation where he saw an opportunity.


Not every decision worked out. There’s a strong case that narrowing the agenda even a little bit might have achieved more, or at least moved the process along more quickly.

But while Biden had to jettison some parts of the agenda and scale back others, he ended up achieving more than any reasonable analyst could have expected, affixing his signature to major initiatives that are now pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into infrastructure, semiconductor development and cleanenergy ― and bringing down prescriptiondrugprices, too.

What We’ve Learned About Biden, Part 2​


On foreign policy, the most revealing episodes of Biden’s presidency have arguably been the withdrawal of American forces from Afghanistan and his position on the wars in Ukraine and Gaza. They represent very different challenges, though it’s possible to see some patterns in Biden’s approach.

One constant has been his attention to and management of international alliances. With Ukraine, he has managed to lead a policy response that’s been relatively free of dissent from America’s top international allies. In Gaza, he has maintained a united diplomatic front with Saudi Arabia and other regional players that, he hopes, will be the foundation of a post-war reconstruction and peace arrangement (as reported weeks ago by HuffPost’s Akbar Shahid Ahmed).

The other constant is a firm conviction about right and wrong and what needs to be done, regardless of what Biden is hearing from critics, even in his own administration. It was obvious with the withdrawal from Afghanistan, which so many members of his military and diplomatic establishment resisted or tried to slow down. It is even more obvious now with his support for Israel, despite a growing outcry over what Israel’s response to the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas has meant for the people of Gaza.


In both cases, it seems clear Biden is following his own inner compass. In Afghanistan, that compass points him toward getting American soldiers out of what he believed was a hopeless endeavor ― a perspective likely informed by having a son who served in the military.

In the Middle East, the compass points him toward supporting an Israel he views primarily as an embattled refuge for the Jewish people. That view is a lot more common among older officials who formed their opinions in the era of Golda Meir and the Yom Kippur War, while the Holocaust was a fresher memory and Israel was repeatedlybattling Arab military forces.

What You Might Think About This​

How you process all of this will obviously depend on your values, sympathies and priorities, and in some cases, on how you settle your own internal conflicts.

But whatever you think about Biden ― and whatever you think of Trump, for that matter ― you have a lot more information today than you did in 2020.

It may be the same old men on the ballot. That doesn’t mean it will be the same old election.



Reading that and the choice is pretty obvious on who we should vote for.
Great find. Thank you for sharing.

Again, it would be beneficial for our good friends on here to read and contemplate articles like this. They’ve lost touch with real America. It would be helpful to read something outside of their Fox News/Newsmax/weirdo blog info silo
 
Does a bill exist when it is unwritten? I can see both sides of that.
How do we know if it was unwritten?
Can something be written but unannounced? Can it be written but not yet finalized? Can it be partially written? Can it be written but not voted on?

What we do know is people in Congress as well as trump have been talking about the bill for a while now.

Sent from my CPH2451 using Tapatalk
 
How do we know if it was unwritten?
Can something be written but unannounced? Can it be written but not yet finalized? Can it be partially written? Can it be written but not voted on?

What we do know is people in Congress as well as trump have been talking about the bill for a while now.

Sent from my CPH2451 using Tapatalk
You must wipe twice to determine if you need to wipe three times, but you must also wipe three times to know you only needed to wipe two times.

Yet there is no question that Trump is a pile of ****.
 
You must wipe twice to determine if you need to wipe three times, but you must also wipe three times to know you only needed to wipe two times.

Yet there is no question that Trump is a pile of ****.
Lol so true

Sent from my CPH2451 using Tapatalk
 
Remember this?
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-media-max-width="560"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">WATCH: Biden warning in 2020 that Trump was so dangerous he was worried he would get the US into a war with Iran.<br> <a href="https://t.co/0LzHMjiuUE">pic.twitter.com/0LzHMjiuUE</a></p>&mdash; TRACKER DEEP (@tracker_deep) <a href="
View: https://twitter.com/tracker_deep/status/1752162352202764662?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
">January 30, 2024</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
They are still doing all the things they said Trump was going to do, but as long as its this brain dead idiot leading us into war with Iran and other nuclear powers instead of Trump it's okay.
 
Remember this?
WATCH: Biden warning in 2020 that Trump was so dangerous he was worried he would get the US into a war with Iran.
pic.twitter.com/0LzHMjiuUE
— TRACKER DEEP (@tracker_deep) January 30, 2024

They are still doing all the things they said Trump was going to do, but as long as its this brain dead idiot leading us into war with Iran and other nuclear powers instead of Trump it's okay.

Wait who is Biden leading us into war with?

Also, all the things? You listed one incorrect thing.

Sent from my CPH2451 using Tapatalk
 

The “God’s Army” convoy was supposed to be a mighty force of 700,000 or more people from every corner of America. It wound up being maybe a couple hundred vehicles parked at a rural ranch in Quemado, Texas – basically a Trump rally without a Trump, but with plenty of hucksters selling MAGA merch and grifting the easily grifted.

Some actually visited the border in nearby Eagle Pass, Texas, and were surprised to not witness the invasion they had been promised.

Convoy-goer Misty Gregory told CNN: “It’s not what I expected, but then again I don’t know what I expected. I can tell you it’s not as bad as what I thought, so that’s kind of eye opening in itself.”

Abbott and about a dozen other pro-razor-wire GOP governors were in Eagle Pass on Sunday, hollering and whatnot. Some residents said the recent invasion of Trump supporters from the convoy had been downright scary.

“We are constantly being told that we’re being invaded, and that never felt true until today, when the convoy came to town in anticipation of the Governors’ event,” Jessie F. Fuentes of Eagle Pass told WOAI Channel 4. “This is political theater by outsiders. The reality is that it has brought dangerous, violent groups into our beautiful, peaceful city. Eagle Pass is safer than most cities in America if you look at crime statistics. This is just a fact. We don’t appreciate these staged events that dramatically misrepresent our reality on the border and that invite extremist groups that pose a real danger to people in our community.”

So God’s Army's foot soldiers came, in underwhelming numbers, and accomplished little beyond showing everyone how tragically gullible they are and making the locals twitchy. That’s MAGA in a nutshell: loud, threatening and, in the end, impotent.

MAGA is and always has been a con to line the pockets of Trump and others who saw a swath of Americans waiting to be fleeced. The fact that our border is not now lined with big, strong, gun-toting patriots willing to defend America at all costs is not surprising.

It’s a comically disorganized and useless parade of con artists and the conned, drifting from one apocalyptic grievance to the next.
 
Remember this?
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-media-max-width="560"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">WATCH: Biden warning in 2020 that Trump was so dangerous he was worried he would get the US into a war with Iran.<br> <a href="https://t.co/0LzHMjiuUE">pic.twitter.com/0LzHMjiuUE</a></p>&mdash; TRACKER DEEP (@tracker_deep) <a href="
View: https://twitter.com/tracker_deep/status/1752162352202764662?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
">January 30, 2024</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
They are still doing all the things they said Trump was going to do, but as long as its this brain dead idiot leading us into war with Iran and other nuclear powers instead of Trump it's okay.

I see a few conservative commentators and cartoonists calling Biden a coward or effeminate for not striking inside Iran. Trump's fragile ego might respond to this provocation, Biden will not. So, Biden may have been correct about this.
 
The Biden administrations policy of playing nice and generous with the fundamentalist Iranian regime has certainly yielded awesome results.
 
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