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Trump Dictatorship and All Things Politics

Let me know when your taxes go down.

Mine didn't go down the first time around and I don't expect them to go down this time around.

If I believed all the fairy tails MAGA spews I would be just fine with Trump, but I would have to not believe my lying eyes in order to think it was anything more than BS.
Also, my morality isn't so easily bought. You can't just lower my taxes and think I will look away from all of trumps immoral behavior.

Many people are easily bought. I'm not one of them. (Im not a money driven person in the first place)

In fact I would much rather pay higher taxes and have a less horrible human for president.
 
Why is our state department wasting so much money on Elon’s crappy cars? They’re so weak and effeminate. They fall apart easily, have no range, and are always driven by those annoying hippies. What, do these cucks believe that global heating is happening? Real patriots drive real cars and trucks. Manly diesels that belch coal black fumes.

Why is this administration so woke? And it’s a mystery to me why they’re funneling so much money to Tesla. So weird.


View: https://x.com/business/status/1889892627039822287
 
Don’t forget bidens pardons span over a decade long. It’s so obvious its a corrupt criminal family. He’s brain dead now, but he’s been a criminal crime boss selling off the United States for decades. His own criminal son calls him pedo Peter and there’s also suspicion about his relationship with his own daughter.

SHMAGA is obsessed with Biden penises.


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Musk gets paid 8 million dollars PER DAY due to his government contracts. That is wasteful taxpayer money.
 
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Multiple stories in recent days have highlighted the turmoil that President Donald Trump's policies of steep tariffs and the dismantling of the United States Agency for International Development have been bringing American farmers.

"We are now living and working in an environment where the only constant is chaos," he explains. "Chaos produces uncertainty, and that leads to loss of trust. The buyers of U.S. farm products are not going to deal with nations that cannot be trusted. There are plenty of options in today’s world for those buyers to bypass the United States. Why on God’s green earth would they put up with the insanity that we have in Washington now?"

"The Climate Smart programs designed to help farmers monetize carbon reduction practices on their farms are going away," he writes. "The future of the 45Z tax credit is, well, who knows? What about export assistance programs urgently needed to help U.S. farmers counter the effects of the Trump tariffs and the rise of our global competitors, such as Brazil and India? And how about the price subsidies that featured prominently in the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s farm support programs? What happens when the NOAA is defunded?"

He concludes his column by urging farmers to put aside their political tribalism and realize that the trajectory Trump has put the nation on is unsustainable.

"My fellow farmers — you’ve been played," he writes. "This nation cannot exist as an island. But that is the path that this administration is on, and the onus is on responsible folks from all political persuasions to find common ground to stop this madness."
 

In the past week or so, the courts have begun to try to set some boundaries on the Musk–Miller–Trump administration’s early blitz of recklessness.

One judge halted the administration’s ill-conceived freeze of federal funding.

Another put a stop to the Musk team’s smash-and-grab acquisition of federal payment systems and personnel files.

Three more issued injunctions against the president’s effort to scratch birthright citizenship out of the plain text of the Constitution.

Still another pressed the pause button on the administration’s dubious “buyout” of federal employees.

This judicial review provides at least a small reprieve, hope that some of the administration’s most destructive impulses will be stopped. Or at least pared back. But even with the courts stepping up, and even with the reality of the administration’s ineptitude sinking in, this early Musk–Miller–Trump blitz remains very—maybe irreparably—damaging.

Of course, there are a lot of moles to whack: the U.S. Agency for International Development and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau are being dismantled at an alarming rate, and the court system is not known for being nimble. The administration is betting, perhaps rightly, that at least some of its thoughtless, lawless efforts will slip through the cracks.

But even if the courts caught them all—and even if every court facing each lawless escapade said, “Nope, that’s not a thing”—still the entire process would be doing serious damage to our institutions. Think of it as someone spoofing your identity and going on a shopping spree with your credit cards. Even if the goon gets caught, you still have to go store by store to argue that the fraudulent purchase wasn’t legitimate and hope the debt is forgiven. And all the while, perhaps long after all the debts are dealt with, the torrent of uncertainty kills your credit score.

This administration’s irresponsible spree has pummeled the credit—and credibility—of the federal government.

Most obviously, the hit is to the United States’ credit itself: its financial security and buying power. The headliner here is, of course, the way the administration treats international tariffs as a daily soap opera, a sad will-they-won’t-they plotline that serves no real purpose other than to drive tabloid speculation.
Never mind that that particular noise is hurting American industry, American families, and America’s international standing.

Following the administration’s sudden funding freeze, colleagues across the government are now facing contractors or sitting across the negotiating table from companies that do not trust that the U.S. will pay its bills on time, if ever. When Musk, Miller, and Trump thought it would be funny to own the liberals by stopping the flow of federal grants, the administration not only showed its ignorance of the federal funding apparatus but did so without reading any of the contracts it was unilaterally canceling. The nation’s business partners are aggrieved: Our payments are late, and we, as a client, are suddenly not as reliable as we’d seemed. And since no thought went into the administration’s first federal funding freeze, no lesson can be learned.

Government procurement officers cannot tell the people across the table from them, “Sure, some contracts might get cut, but not yours,” because the administration has already proved—very, very publicly—that it has no idea how to think before it acts. Instead, it has made clear that our checkbook is captured by partisan whim.

Worse, actually: when Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency squad pushed past security at the Treasury, it not only riffled through the drawers, but it granted some of its inexperienced team unfettered read-and-write access to the national payment system’s code. Musk handed the keys to these kids, and the government doesn’t know if they left the back door open to the Treasury’s system. So the nation’s checkbook may have been lifted—again, very, very publicly—by a 25-year-old who wears the banner of “racist” with a pride that is not nearly as shocking as he hopes. When the country next reaches out for a line of credit, expect foreign banks to text us back the blinking-eyes GIF.

For now, civil servants in every corner of the government recognize that it is going to take a long time to clear our credit history and earn back lost credibility. But we haven’t even begun to climb out of the hole we’ve found ourselves in. Though, given every opportunity, this administration refuses to put down the shovel.
 
In the past week or so, the courts have begun to try to set some boundaries on the Musk–Miller–Trump administration’s early blitz of recklessness.
...
Still another pressed the pause button on the administration’s dubious “buyout” of federal employees.
Every one of your listed bumps in the road is being appealed, and in the case of the last example, has already been thrown out. Keep up.

 
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Its sad that there were once people who were once able to be critical of trump and preferred Desantis or RFK jr and were reluctantly voting for trump due to not liking his opponent and they no longer exist. Now they lavishly praise every move trump makes and act as if he is the greatest leader the world has ever seen.
 
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