Whose agenda is it anyway?

Project 2025 is the agenda.
oh well. There are WORSE agendas for the people to be subjected to. At least this one? The folks voted for it.



The one that Biden, Kamala and the DNC are pushing? No one votes on that, or, it seems, want to support it any longer.


1738012819428.webp

 
. . . and folks that watch him, know, he ain't messin' 'round this time out.

We'll miss you buddy. :113:


:lol:


9i5e3p.jpg
Your unwitting admission trump is an authoritarian trying to stifle dissent is noted.
 
Not surprising… not much room inside the echo chamber.
I live in an urban area among people who are mostly college educated. But I did see my garbage man wearing a MAGA hat and said hello to him.
 
“It is vital that I have the fullest confidence in the appointees serving as Inspectors General,” President Donald Trump wrote to congressional leaders in a letter dated May 15. “That is no longer the case with regard to this Inspector General.”
That inspector general was Steve Linick, who held that job at the State Department from 2013 until Trump dismissed him earlier this month.
Trump didn’t offer details about why he’d lost confidence in the agency’s watchdog. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo confirmed that he’d recommended that Trump fire Linick, who was, in Pompeo’s words, “undermining” the department. He did not go into specifics, but reporting suggests Linick might have been looking into Pompeo’s treatment of a staffer, and the justification for a Saudi arms deal.
Linick isn’t the first inspector general Trump says he has lost confidence in recently. Since April, Trump has fired two permanent IGs and replaced three acting inspectors general.
This has raised fears that the president — who has balked at pretty much any form of oversight during his tenure — is now targeting the watchdogs serving in his administration. Especially those who, in the course of doing their jobs, embarrass the president and his close associates or implicate them in wrongdoing.
 
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I admit to not knowing many Repubs.
Wow, you really don't get out much do you. We are right here!

McRibsAmerica.jpg


So, I do not profess to know what most Repubs think about the first week of his presidency.
You could start by reading the 12 active threads on it here right now!

But I am hard pressed to believe the marginal voters who are responsible for returning trump to the White House
What is marginal about the majority?

voted for the release of violent criminals who beat police officers in pursuit of his goal to steal the election.
Are we talking about BLM, Antifa and Floyd rioters now?
But worry not, we have not yet gotten to the real violent criminals just yet or those who stole an election.
Joe Biden, Nancy Pelosi, Adam Schiff, Les Cheney, Adam Kinzinger, and others TBA will all begin next week.
 
It’s inevitable. No sane person can be this miserable all the time.
Miserable? I get a kick out of humiliating you over your ignorance. I find it entertaining. Don't shoot the messenger.
 
I admit to not knowing many Repubs. Fewer still who voted for him to be prez (one to be exact). So, I do not profess to know what most Repubs think about the first week of his presidency. But I am hard pressed to believe the marginal voters who are responsible for returning trump to the White House voted for the release of violent criminals who beat police officers in pursuit of his goal to steal the election.

A judge sentenced a Jan. 6 defendant who assaulted a former D.C. police officer during the Capitol riot to prison, but that officer fears the sentence won’t be served.

On Jan. 6, 2021, Officer Michael Fanone was assaulted so badly at the U.S. Capitol he suffered a heart attack and a traumatic brain injury.

“I think that is the most difficult experience that I've got to live with for rest of my life is just being betrayed by your country,” he said.

Fanone said he’s attended court hearings for at least six insurrectionists, including one on Friday for 59-year-old Lewis Snoots of Virginia. Snoots pleaded guilty last year and was sentenced to almost six years in prison for pushing Fanone and helping others assault him.


Or the illegal firing of 17 Inspector's General who are protected from politically motivated dismissal by an act of Congress passed in 2022. Or the nomination, now confirmation, of a manifestly unqualified former TV anchor to run Dept. of Defense with its 3.4M employees.

The President was elected largely based on a populist agenda that promised to address the nation's problem with illegal immigration and on the idea he could bring the price of consumer goods like groceries down. Not an agenda based on retribution, grievance, and choosing many cabinet nominees for their unquestioning compliance with his wishes, not their competence.

You are screwed. What do you want to do, whine about the unfairness of it all, or get your shi* together? A Leftist getting it together! Ain't happening! That is like suggesting that Farrah Faucet was a dude, and the Left trying to convince you of it. They are BUSTED, are trying to grasp at any straw they can grab, and NEVER feel sorry for them because they are forced to!

You Conservatives, SOME of the GOP, and DJT caught them with their boxers, and panties down, much to their political chagrin, lol.

LISTEN how things have changed----------> George Stephanopoulos is paying through the proverbial nose. The View is EXIT stage Left, and AOC did EXACTLY the same thing Steph did, and now Trump can hose her too!

Realize, you REALLY are in the golden age, where the GOP tries to fix things, and the Left, shoots themselves in the foot-)
 
I admit to not knowing many Repubs. Fewer still who voted for him to be prez (one to be exact). So, I do not profess to know what most Repubs think about the first week of his presidency. But I am hard pressed to believe the marginal voters who are responsible for returning trump to the White House voted for the release of violent criminals who beat police officers in pursuit of his goal to steal the election.

A judge sentenced a Jan. 6 defendant who assaulted a former D.C. police officer during the Capitol riot to prison, but that officer fears the sentence won’t be served.

On Jan. 6, 2021, Officer Michael Fanone was assaulted so badly at the U.S. Capitol he suffered a heart attack and a traumatic brain injury.

“I think that is the most difficult experience that I've got to live with for rest of my life is just being betrayed by your country,” he said.

Fanone said he’s attended court hearings for at least six insurrectionists, including one on Friday for 59-year-old Lewis Snoots of Virginia. Snoots pleaded guilty last year and was sentenced to almost six years in prison for pushing Fanone and helping others assault him.


Or the illegal firing of 17 Inspector's General who are protected from politically motivated dismissal by an act of Congress passed in 2022. Or the nomination, now confirmation, of a manifestly unqualified former TV anchor to run Dept. of Defense with its 3.4M employees.

The President was elected largely based on a populist agenda that promised to address the nation's problem with illegal immigration and on the idea he could bring the price of consumer goods like groceries down. Not an agenda based on retribution, grievance, and choosing many cabinet nominees for their unquestioning compliance with his wishes, not their competence.
Ladies and Gentlemen, I give you Berg. Back to his propaganda once again.

On the one hand, still in the corner is Berg crying about their J6ers being let free, extending his ongoing tantrum of losing any power to anything but bitch, and lie...

But, I guess this is going to be the norm of leftists on this board for the next four years....At some point posters like Berg are going to have to accept that in order for them to achieve any quarter, they are going to have to work with Trump.....Or, stay in the cold....
 
Okay, that's probably the funniest thing you ever posted. :auiqs.jpg: Berg if you knew Republicans you would be a Republican. Come towards the light.
Berg basically admitted that he lives in a liberal bubble...which explains why he thinks the way he does.
 
“It is vital that I have the fullest confidence in the appointees serving as Inspectors General,” President Donald Trump wrote to congressional leaders in a letter dated May 15. “That is no longer the case with regard to this Inspector General.”
That inspector general was Steve Linick, who held that job at the State Department from 2013 until Trump dismissed him earlier this month.
Trump didn’t offer details about why he’d lost confidence in the agency’s watchdog. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo confirmed that he’d recommended that Trump fire Linick, who was, in Pompeo’s words, “undermining” the department. He did not go into specifics, but reporting suggests Linick might have been looking into Pompeo’s treatment of a staffer, and the justification for a Saudi arms deal.
Linick isn’t the first inspector general Trump says he has lost confidence in recently. Since April, Trump has fired two permanent IGs and replaced three acting inspectors general.
This has raised fears that the president — who has balked at pretty much any form of oversight during his tenure — is now targeting the watchdogs serving in his administration. Especially those who, in the course of doing their jobs, embarrass the president and his close associates or implicate them in wrongdoing.

https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F4bb2ffe6-54da-4aa4-af96-d833ffb941d0_490x507.jpeg


My condolences on losing yoar job. Looks like Trump has had your number for some time, eh?


BTW, it is against forum rules to post unlinked, plagiarized content. This way, we would know you quoted folks from 2020.



Updated May 28, 2020, 5:20 PM EDT
1738014397277.png


In the very next paragraph?


"Trump does have the power to fire inspectors general, who, as executive branch appointees, serve at the pleasure of the president. But IGs are tasked with auditing and investigating that same executive branch — a job that could become increasingly challenging if these officials face retaliation for what they audit and investigate."
 
Is this really what you people voted for?

Trump moves to fire members of EEOC and NLRB, breaking with precedent

President Donald Trump has moved to fire Democratic members of two independent federal commissions, an extraordinary break from decades of legal precedent that promises to hand Republicans control over boards that oversee swaths of U.S. workers, employers and labor unions.

On Monday night, he dismissed two of the three Democrats on the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission — Jocelyn Samuels and Charlotte Burrows, formerly the chair, the White House confirmed Tuesday. He also fired the chair of the National Labor Relations Board, Gwynne Wilcox, a Democrat, an NLRB spokesperson confirmed Tuesday.
All three said they are exploring their legal options against the administration — cases that legal scholars say could reach as far as the Supreme Court.

Trump also removed the EEOC’s general counsel, Karla Gilbride, who oversaw civil actions against employers on a range of issues, including discrimination claims from LGBTQ+ and pregnant workers. And he terminated Jennifer Abruzzo, the NLRB’s general counsel. Their departures throw into question the status of numerous actions underway at both agencies, including against billionaire Elon Musk’s electric car company, Tesla.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2025/01/28/trump-fire-eeoc-nlrb-board-members/

I know you know this is wrong.
 

https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F4bb2ffe6-54da-4aa4-af96-d833ffb941d0_490x507.jpeg


My condolences on losing yoar job. Looks like Trump has had your number for some time, eh?


BTW, it is against forum rules to post unlinked, plagiarized content. This way, we would know you quoted folks from 2020.



Updated May 28, 2020, 5:20 PM EDT
View attachment 1071489

In the very next paragraph?


"Trump does have the power to fire inspectors general, who, as executive branch appointees, serve at the pleasure of the president. But IGs are tasked with auditing and investigating that same executive branch — a job that could become increasingly challenging if these officials face retaliation for what they audit and investigate."
trump's claim that he lacks confidence in the IG he fired does not meet the requirement that he explain what the IG did to warrant removal.
 
I admit to not knowing many Repubs. Fewer still who voted for him to be prez (one to be exact). So, I do not profess to know what most Repubs think about the first week of his presidency. But I am hard pressed to believe the marginal voters who are responsible for returning trump to the White House voted for the release of violent criminals who beat police officers in pursuit of his goal to steal the election.

A judge sentenced a Jan. 6 defendant who assaulted a former D.C. police officer during the Capitol riot to prison, but that officer fears the sentence won’t be served.

On Jan. 6, 2021, Officer Michael Fanone was assaulted so badly at the U.S. Capitol he suffered a heart attack and a traumatic brain injury.

“I think that is the most difficult experience that I've got to live with for rest of my life is just being betrayed by your country,” he said.

Fanone said he’s attended court hearings for at least six insurrectionists, including one on Friday for 59-year-old Lewis Snoots of Virginia. Snoots pleaded guilty last year and was sentenced to almost six years in prison for pushing Fanone and helping others assault him.


Or the illegal firing of 17 Inspector's General who are protected from politically motivated dismissal by an act of Congress passed in 2022. Or the nomination, now confirmation, of a manifestly unqualified former TV anchor to run Dept. of Defense with its 3.4M employees.

The President was elected largely based on a populist agenda that promised to address the nation's problem with illegal immigration and on the idea he could bring the price of consumer goods like groceries down. Not an agenda based on retribution, grievance, and choosing many cabinet nominees for their unquestioning compliance with his wishes, not their competence.
We voted for Trump to do exactly what he is doing.
 
I admit to not knowing many Repubs. Fewer still who voted for him to be prez (one to be exact). So, I do not profess to know what most Repubs think about the first week of his presidency. But I am hard pressed to believe the marginal voters who are responsible for returning trump to the White House voted for the release of violent criminals who beat police officers in pursuit of his goal to steal the election.

A judge sentenced a Jan. 6 defendant who assaulted a former D.C. police officer during the Capitol riot to prison, but that officer fears the sentence won’t be served.

On Jan. 6, 2021, Officer Michael Fanone was assaulted so badly at the U.S. Capitol he suffered a heart attack and a traumatic brain injury.

“I think that is the most difficult experience that I've got to live with for rest of my life is just being betrayed by your country,” he said.

Fanone said he’s attended court hearings for at least six insurrectionists, including one on Friday for 59-year-old Lewis Snoots of Virginia. Snoots pleaded guilty last year and was sentenced to almost six years in prison for pushing Fanone and helping others assault him.


Or the illegal firing of 17 Inspector's General who are protected from politically motivated dismissal by an act of Congress passed in 2022. Or the nomination, now confirmation, of a manifestly unqualified former TV anchor to run Dept. of Defense with its 3.4M employees.

The President was elected largely based on a populist agenda that promised to address the nation's problem with illegal immigration and on the idea he could bring the price of consumer goods like groceries down. Not an agenda based on retribution, grievance, and choosing many cabinet nominees for their unquestioning compliance with his wishes, not their competence.

Trump voters:

  • Do you think it’s OK to attack a police officer by plunging a stun gun multiple times into his neck?
  • How about using a riot shield to smash a police officer into a metal door frame, leaving him bruised and bloodied?
  • Any problem with someone who spends more than an hour assaulting law enforcement officers with pepper spray, a metal crutch and wooden and metal poles?
  • Any problem with urinating and defecating and smearing feces all over the walls ?
 
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