Maybe that burger is for his MAGA neighbor?China wrote: Thu Mar 13, 2025 7:59 pmYeah, Schumer is a coward. But what else would you expect from somebody who doesn't even know how to grill a burger.
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Living under Trump 2 aka Musk!!!
The essence of fascism is to make laws forbidding everything and then enforce them selectively against your enemies. -John LesCroart
- The Evil Genius
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Rep. Chuck Edwards is getting torn apart at a town hall in Asheville, NC.
“I’m a veteran & you don’t give a fuck about me. You don’t get to do this to us!”
Edwards orders veteran to be thrown out.
We’re approaching a tipping point now. Anger across the country is going to boil over soon.
Click on the link for the video
“I’m a veteran & you don’t give a fuck about me. You don’t get to do this to us!”
Edwards orders veteran to be thrown out.
We’re approaching a tipping point now. Anger across the country is going to boil over soon.
Click on the link for the video

‘Seriously misapprehended’: Trump DOJ insists it’s not shredding and burning ‘essential’ USAID documents, claims the docs are meaningless copies
The Trump administration insists that it is not shredding and burning “classified” employee documents at the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) with personnel info that would be “essential” to rehiring unlawfully fired federal workers, as alleged by labor groups suing the president — saying in a new court filing Wednesday that the facts have been “seriously misapprehended.”
Instead, USAID officials allege they have “sorted and removed” copies of important documents from the Ronald Reagan Building in Washington, D.C., to make room for a new tenant that it’s moving in as part of the “recent restructuring of USAID,” the agency says.
“The removed classified documents had nothing to do with this litigation,” Justice Department lawyers said Wednesday in response to an emergency motion filed by the labor groups suing Trump for a temporary restraining order (TRO) to stop the alleged shredding. “They were copies of documents from other agencies or derivatively classified documents, where the originally classified document is retained by another government agency and for which there is no need for USAID to retain a copy.”
Click on the link for the full article
The Trump administration insists that it is not shredding and burning “classified” employee documents at the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) with personnel info that would be “essential” to rehiring unlawfully fired federal workers, as alleged by labor groups suing the president — saying in a new court filing Wednesday that the facts have been “seriously misapprehended.”
Instead, USAID officials allege they have “sorted and removed” copies of important documents from the Ronald Reagan Building in Washington, D.C., to make room for a new tenant that it’s moving in as part of the “recent restructuring of USAID,” the agency says.
“The removed classified documents had nothing to do with this litigation,” Justice Department lawyers said Wednesday in response to an emergency motion filed by the labor groups suing Trump for a temporary restraining order (TRO) to stop the alleged shredding. “They were copies of documents from other agencies or derivatively classified documents, where the originally classified document is retained by another government agency and for which there is no need for USAID to retain a copy.”
Click on the link for the full article

The nonstop chaos that President Donald Trump is delivering with his erratic tariff policies and spending cuts is already hurting many farmers who voted for him in the 2024 presidential election.
In an interview with NBC News, West Virginia farmer Jennifer Gilkerson revealed that cuts to a key United States Department of Agriculture program have left her with a large stash of unsold freeze-dried fruits that she had spent thousands of dollars producing under the assumption that they would be bought by local schools.
“We’re just in such a state of shock," she told NBC. "We just don’t really even know how to respond to all this. We thought that this was sacred and really untouchable. So it’s just quite a shock and very devastating. Everyone thinks all farmers voted for this, but we did not vote for this."
Iowa farmer Bob Hemesath, meanwhile, told NBC that he cannot handle a long-term trade war with America's top trading partners.
"I know that this is the way President Trump believes he’s going to create better markets long term," he said. "I hope he’s correct. But my fear is that once you lose those markets to other suppliers, it’s very hard to get them back."
Chuck Conner, head of the National Council of Farmer Cooperatives, told NBC that the nations being targeted by Trump with tariffs have responded by targeting "our soft underbelly," which he said were "our food exports."
"That has always been the case, and that is the case this time around on steroids," he warned.

In an interview with NBC News, West Virginia farmer Jennifer Gilkerson revealed that cuts to a key United States Department of Agriculture program have left her with a large stash of unsold freeze-dried fruits that she had spent thousands of dollars producing under the assumption that they would be bought by local schools.
“We’re just in such a state of shock," she told NBC. "We just don’t really even know how to respond to all this. We thought that this was sacred and really untouchable. So it’s just quite a shock and very devastating. Everyone thinks all farmers voted for this, but we did not vote for this."
Iowa farmer Bob Hemesath, meanwhile, told NBC that he cannot handle a long-term trade war with America's top trading partners.
"I know that this is the way President Trump believes he’s going to create better markets long term," he said. "I hope he’s correct. But my fear is that once you lose those markets to other suppliers, it’s very hard to get them back."
Chuck Conner, head of the National Council of Farmer Cooperatives, told NBC that the nations being targeted by Trump with tariffs have responded by targeting "our soft underbelly," which he said were "our food exports."
"That has always been the case, and that is the case this time around on steroids," he warned.

- The Evil Genius
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Yep, looks like we're going the violent route. I wonder why the GOP thinks its such a good idea to piss off the veterans? If anyone is going to pop off, it'll probably be a vet.China wrote: Fri Mar 14, 2025 9:16 amRep. Chuck Edwards is getting torn apart at a town hall in Asheville, NC.
“I’m a veteran & you don’t give a fuck about me. You don’t get to do this to us!”
Edwards orders veteran to be thrown out.
We’re approaching a tipping point now. Anger across the country is going to boil over soon.
Click on the link for the video
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