Trump's Second Term

Apparently the new line from the White House on the (now deleted) tweet is that it was a slip by an unnamed staffer. So, I guess, an "auto-tweet" from the manufacturers of the "autopen" outrage. (And, IIRC, the White House, or maybe the DOJ, once said that Trump's tweets should be considered official governmental pronouncements)
 
Apparently the new line from the White House on the (now deleted) tweet is that it was a slip by an unnamed staffer. So, I guess, an "auto-tweet" from the manufacturers of the "autopen" outrage. (And, IIRC, the White House, or maybe the DOJ, once said that Trump's tweets should be considered official governmental pronouncements)
But that's something. Did they pull down something before ?
 
Apparently the new line from the White House on the (now deleted) tweet is that it was a slip by an unnamed staffer. So, I guess, an "auto-tweet" from the manufacturers of the "autopen" outrage. (And, IIRC, the White House, or maybe the DOJ, once said that Trump's tweets should be considered official governmental pronouncements)
Like that time some FOX reporter made a joke about the White House dog and put up a picture of Chelsea Clinton, and then insisted it was a mistake even when that made no sense at all.
 
Apparently the new line from the White House on the (now deleted) tweet is that it was a slip by an unnamed staffer. So, I guess, an "auto-tweet" from the manufacturers of the "autopen" outrage. (And, IIRC, the White House, or maybe the DOJ, once said that Trump's tweets should be considered official governmental pronouncements)
Chinny Reckon

Not you
 
This is exactly what I was talking about when I said he's going to cross the line soon. By which I mean when even his handlers will get tired his ◊◊◊◊. And he's incorrigible .. there's more to follow no doubt.
Personally, I find stuff like this to be far more concerning -

By the end of his first year, Hitler had around 50,000 people held in his roughly 70 concentration camps, facilities that were often improvised in factories, prisons, castles, and other buildings.

By comparison, today ICE is holding over 70,000 people in 225 concentration camps across America, and Trump, Homan, Miller, and Noem hope to more than double both numbers in the coming months.
Human rights organizations like the ACLU describe pervasive patterns of abuse in ICE detention: hazardous living conditions, chronic medical neglect, sexual assault, retaliation for grievances, and extensive use of solitary confinement.

Detainees who have committed no crime other than being in the United States without documentation report being shackled for long periods, packed into freezing, overcrowded cells under constant fluorescent light, and denied hygiene and timely care. Meanwhile, GOP-aligned private prison companies are making billions off the program.

Inspections and oversight are inconsistent: one recent investigation found that as detentions and deaths surged in 2025, formal inspections of facilities actually dropped by over a third. ICE regularly refuses to allow attorneys, family members, and even members of Congress to access their concentration camps; the issue is now being litigated through federal courts.

History shows us that once a nation builds a mass detention apparatus, it never remains limited to its original targets.
 
Donald reportedly wants to rename Dulles Airport and New York's Penn Station after himself.

He asked for Senator Chuck Schumer's support, offering to release the Gateway infrastructure project's funding in exchange.
I flew into Dulles last year and must say it was the worst, nastiest, least friendly airport I've ever been to. As usual, US customs and global entry were super-efficient, and then even for connecting flights, we were all lined up in a line nearly the length of the entire airport for extra screening, which went so slowly that almost everyone in the airport missed their flights. Nobody knew anything, luggage was spirited off to unknown destinations, and all the officials were discourteous. If any airport deserves be renamed Trump that's the one.
 
I flew into Dulles last year and must say it was the worst, nastiest, least friendly airport I've ever been to. As usual, US customs and global entry were super-efficient , and then even for connecting flights, we were all lined up in a line nearly the length of the entire airport for extra screening, which went so slowly that almost everyone in the airport missed their flights. Nobody knew anything, luggage was spirited off to unknown destinations, and all the officials were discourteous. If any airport deserves be renamed Trump that's the one.
I assume you are a US citizen, certainly I have never met a non-US resident who thought US customs and entry are remotely efficient, or courteous.
 
I assume you are a US citizen, certainly I have never met a non-US resident who thought US customs and entry are remotely efficient, or courteous.
To be fair my last business trip to California was efficient but that was before just COVID.
 

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