Trump 2.0 official thread

siegecrossbow

General
Staff member
Super Moderator
Well, Euros kind of can be arrogant to third world countries because none of them prove able to put up a challenge.

I'm too a fan of repatriating Mexico's illegally occupied territory back and also broadly deporting hostile euros back to Europe when they're in regions where they're being guests.

But none of the locals in north or Central America for example can carry out the stop US threat operation by themselves. To do so needs China.
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daifo

Major
Registered Member
It's kinda funny that they have so much beef with Mexicans when they themselves wanted the Mexicans to come over as cheap labor to begin with.

Imagine just doing what China does and focus on automation instead of trying to make shortcuts by bringing in 1000000 third worlders that will never integrate anyways.

America operated with some variation of enslavement for its society and economy since its birth. There is also another camp that wants immigration to increase population to increase consumption/inflation/competition/economy etc. America is just one huge con, you are just suppose to always be running ahead of it somehow. The president himself import foreign labor/slave at his properties rather than paying American living wages lol
 

jiajia99

Junior Member
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Must be that determined to isolate the USA that badly. Well ok but if he is willing to deport others that badly, especially with how those he deports come from nations the USA has been destroying for the last half century, maybe he shouldn’t be surprised when one day many other nations end up kicking the US out of their countries so that this utterly sickening nation cannot exploit the resources of others as though they are entitled to them. Honestly, all he is doing is showing just how entitled the nation is as a whole and also how much the world will benefit then this nation gets taken back to the dark ages, so that the world no needs to subsidize this nanny state ever again
 

vincent

Grumpy Old Man
Staff member
Moderator - World Affairs
America operated with some variation of enslavement for its society and economy since its birth. There is also another camp that wants immigration to increase population to increase consumption/inflation/competition/economy etc. America is just one huge con, you are just suppose to always be running ahead of it somehow. The president himself import foreign labor/slave at his properties rather than paying American living wages lol
The US operates a caste system. The Brahmin-equivalent shall remain unnamed. The Kshatriyas-equivalent are Anglo-Saxons, the Vaishyas-equivalent are other European "whites", the Shudras-equivalent are the subjugated people like Latinos and Indians, and the Dalit-equivalents are East Asians and blacks.
 

generalmeng

New Member
Registered Member
The US operates a caste system. The Brahmin-equivalent shall remain unnamed. The Kshatriyas-equivalent are Anglo-Saxons, the Vaishyas-equivalent are other European "whites", the Shudras-equivalent are the subjugated people like Latinos and Indians, and the Dalit-equivalents are East Asians and blacks.
Let me guess, Brahmin=Jews?

I guess ban me for antisemistism?
 

FriedButter

Colonel
Registered Member
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Schumer to support GOP funding bill, unwilling to risk government shutdown as deadline nears​

WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer relented Thursday rather than risk a government shutdown, announcing he’s ready to start the process of considering a Republican-led government funding bill that has fiercely divided Democrats under pressure to impose limits on the Trump administration.

Schumer told Democrats privately during a spirited closed-door lunch and then made public remarks ahead of voting Friday, which will be hours before the midnight deadline to keep government running. The New York senator said as bad as the GOP bill is, a shutdown would be worse, giving President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk “carte blanche” as they tear through the government.

“Trump has taken a blowtorch to our country and wielded chaos like a weapon,” Schumer said. “For Donald Trump, a shutdown would be a gift. It would be the best distraction he could ask for from his awful agenda.”

The move by Schumer brings a potential resolution to what has been a dayslong standoff. Senate Democrats have mounted a last-ditch protest over the package, which already passed the House but without slapping any limits they were demanding on Trump and billionaire Musk’s efforts to gut federal operations.

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The Democrats are under intense pressure to do whatever they can to stop the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency, which is taking a wrecking ball to long-established government agencies and purging thousands of federal workers from jobs.

Trump himself offered to wade in Thursday to negotiate: “If they need me, I’m there 100%.”

But the president also began casting blame on Democrats for any potential disruptions, saying during an Oval Office meeting, “If it shuts down, it’s not the Republicans’ fault.”

Democrats are pushing a stopgap 30-day funding bill as an alternative. But Schumer said Republicans rejected that offer. And while Democrats were split over strategy, they worried about the further chaos they say Trump and Musk could cause if government was shutdown.

Schumer told Democrats at a spirited closed-door lunch that he would be voting to proceed to the bill. His comments first reported by The New York Times, were confirmed by two people familiar with the matter and granted anonymity to discuss it.

”People have strong views on both sides,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., who is opposed to the package.

As the Senate opened Thursday, with one day to go before Friday’s midnight deadline, Republican Senate Majority Leader John Thune said, “It’s time for Democrats to fish or cut bait.”

Debates over funding the federal government routinely erupt in deadline moments, but this year it’s showing the political leverage of Republicans, newly in majority control of the White House and Congress, and the shortcomings of Democrats, who are finding themselves unable to stop the Trump administration’s march across federal operations.

In a rare turn of events, House Republicans stuck together to pass their bill, with many conservatives cheering the DOGE cuts leaving Democrats sidelined as they stood opposed. The House then left town, sending it to the Senate for final action.

Options for Schumer have been limited, and final passage before the deadline is not guaranteed.

Republicans hold a 53-47 majority and would need Democrats to support the package to reach the 60-vote threshold, which is required to overcome a filibuster.

“I’m in the camp of like, don’t ever, ever shut the government down,” said Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa.

Over the next 24 hours, Democrats face this choice: Provide the votes needed to advance the package, which funds government operations through the end of September, or risk a shutdown when money expires midnight Friday.

“They’ll cave,” predicted Texas GOP Sen. John Cornyn.

Cornyn said the Democrats “have been railing against Elon Musk and the Trump administration over reductions in force of the federal employees, and now they basically want to put all of them out of work by shutting down the government.” He added, “I don’t know how you reconcile those two positions.”

But progressive Democrats, including allies in the House, are pushing Democrats to draw the line against Trump — even if it courts a federal shutdown.

Rep. Greg Casar, D-Texas, the chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said on social media that the House GOP bill will “supercharge Musk’s theft from working people to pay for billionaire tax cuts. Senate Democrats must stop it.”

In an highly unusual turn, the House package also required the District of Columbia, which already approved its own balanced budget, to revert back to 2024 levels, drawing outcry from the mayor and city leaders. They warn of steep reductions to city services.

Schumer said he would “work with them to fix it.”

Democratic senators are assessing next steps as they prepare for voting.

“Both choices that we are being offered are full of despair,” said Sen. John Hickenlooper, D-Colo.

The Democrats put up a good DEI clown show. They immediately bent the knee before the first vote to surge the national debt via tax cuts. No GOP compromises needed. And the Democrat supporters wonder why no one likes they anymore. Politically spineless and lack any fortitude.

Here comes almost $1 trillion in Medicare and Children Health Program cuts.
 

siegecrossbow

General
Staff member
Super Moderator
The US operates a caste system. The Brahmin-equivalent shall remain unnamed. The Kshatriyas-equivalent are Anglo-Saxons, the Vaishyas-equivalent are other European "whites", the Shudras-equivalent are the subjugated people like Latinos and Indians, and the Dalit-equivalents are East Asians and blacks.

Pretty sure blacks are higher than East Asians. Can you imagine a music video equivalent of this that targets African Americans racking up 10 million views on YouTube?

 

FriedButter

Colonel
Registered Member
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U.S. Postal Service will cut workforce by 10,000 after signing deal with Elon Musk’s DOGE​

U.S. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy told Congress he signed an agreement with Elon Musk’s DOGE government reform team to provide assistance to the money-losing agency as it works to address “big problems.”

USPS, an independent government agency with 635,000 employees that lost $9.5 billion last year, has been exempt from DOGE-directed federal employee reductions. DeJoy told Congress in a letter seen by Reuters that USPS plans to reduce its workforce by 10,000 workers in the next month through a voluntary early retirement program.

DeJoy said the agreement with DOGE and the General Services Administration will allow the government reform team to “assist us in identifying and achieving further efficiencies.... The DOGE team was gracious enough to ask for big problems they can help us with.”

DeJoy cited a number of issues including mismanagement of retirement assets and its workers’ compensation program by other government agencies, unfunded mandates and burdensome regulatory requirements.

DeJoy has led a dramatic effort to restructure the post office over the last five years that has used similar tactics to the DOGE team including shrinking the workforce and cancelling or renegotiating contracts.

He said the Postal Regulatory Commission “is an unnecessary agency that has inflicted over $50 billion in damage to the Postal Service by administering defective pricing models and decades old bureaucratic processes.”

Last month, two media outlets reported President Donald Trump was preparing to issue an executive order to fire the Postal Service board of governors. The White House denied the plan but Trump said he was considering merging the Postal Service with the U.S. Commerce Department, a move Democrats said would violate federal law.

Musk, a billionaire top adviser to Trump, said last week he thought the Postal Service should be privatized.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick has said the Postal Service could help shrink the department’s costs by providing workers to conduct the U.S. census, which takes place every 10 years and handle tasks performed by 20,000 Social Security employees.

The Postal Service said last month it is adopting new service standards that will save the money-losing agency at least $36 billion over 10 years.

The Postal Service has lost more than $100 billion since 2007, including $9.5 billion in the 12 months ending September 30. Last month, it reported a fourth-quarter profit of $144 million.

As electronic communications have proliferated, the agency has been hurt by an 80% decline in first-class mail volume since 1997. Volumes are now at the lowest level since 1968.

DeJoy announced last month he plans to leave after about five years on the job.

Now they are signing deals with Elon.
 
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