Those chain link cages look a lot like the detention centers where they kept the children when they separated them from their parents back in Trump 1.0.
Since drones have been weaponized for about twenty years now, it’s safe to say they’ve thought about it. Having said that, Elon has rockets and I bet the Secret Service would have a hard time stopping one of those. Maybe that’s why he changed his mind about cancelling that one rocket!
Personally, I’m partial to Alligator Auschwitz, seems more in line with the intended purpose.
I think this is the third, possibly fourth, time I’ve alluded to the felon’s stupidity, vanity, and incompetence sending our currency chasing after the late unlamented Zimbabwe dollar. 10% is a lot of value for the buck to chuck.
Read further in that article to see how the populace of Texas fared with a similar insurance law. But, hey, it’s only poor people, poor children being harmed so no foul, right?
Don’t bother reading the comments on the article. You’ll see plenty of magaflatearthers orgiastically defending the abuse at the hands of those who were essentially agents of our government. The irony of it is they all say he deserves it because “he broke the law”. Yet they have no issue with their idol committing 34 felonies. And that’s just the number of such for which he has been convicted!
Very good! And since the felon has outsourced his concentration camps overseas, it’s even more appropriate.
No problem here. Those Black, Latino, and Indigenous former students can just fill the yard work, construction, child/elder care, food/hospitality service, and agricultural jobs that illegal migrants will no longer be around to do. Less competition overall among white people (men mostly and the occasional misfit woman) for the good jobs. Win-win! /s
I think it essentially means that rich people can pay for their precious little ones to attend some fancy private school but as a bonus they get 100% tax relief on the fees?
Maybe he is using the word “opportunity” in the same way that gigantic clusterfucks are often called “opportunities for improvement” , or when someone screws up in spectacular fashion , that is a ‘learning moment’
Hopefully what people will learn is that Ted Cruz and his ilk are deeply unpleasant people and perhaps shouldn’t be voted for.
The main opportunity (disastertunity ?) though is for low quality private education companies to flourish by marking up their prices by the voucher amount, and so people who can marginally afford the private schools still have to pay out of their own pocket to send their kids to those low quality private institutions as the public system will have been utterly destroyed. Thus continuing to transfer money out of the middle class to corporations and richer people. An added bonus is that the curriculum can indoctrinate the kids that this is a good thing.
I suppose there’s a small possibility he heard “Mr. President, is there an
expected time frame that DJT will spend here? Days, weeks, months?”
or something similar.
Still a complete bunch of bolleaux though.
I want to reject the very notion . . . but asking Trump what his vacation plans are while standing in the middle of Alligator Auschwitz is so very Fox News.
Wait! Didn’t he make America great again during the First Felonial Era? And if not, what was the holdup?
Besides the UFC stunt, what other stunt would he have? Of course! (Same link.)
Isn’t the White House a no-fly zone? Anyway, I suppose a certain result of this stunt is just too much to hope for.
More tacoing! (Still that link.)
Well, yeah. It’s not like he is in charge, right? And here’s a concept: instead of fucking over millions and then carving out an exception for those employers who bought you off contributed to your political fund, why not just, say, NOT FUCK OVER MILLIONS OF PEOPLE IN THE FIRT PLACE, YOU MORON?
The legislation includes restrictions on Medicaid, which provides government-sponsored health care for low-income and disabled Americans. The bill imposes work requirements for some able-bodied adults and more frequent eligibility checks. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the bill would result in 11.8 million Americans losing health coverage under Medicaid over the next decade.
Homeland security and immigration
The legislation includes more than $46.5 billion for border wall construction and related expenses, $45 billion to expand detention capacity for immigrants in custody and about $30 billion in funding for hiring, training and other resources for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
It also includes a minimum $100 fee for those seeking asylum, down from the $1,000 fee outlined in the initial House bill. The Senate parliamentarian ruled out the $1,000 fee for anyone applying for asylum.
Increasing the state and local tax deduction, or SALT
The package also includes an increase to the cap on the state and local tax deduction, raising it from $10,000 to $40,000. After five years, it would return to $10,000, a departure from the initial House-passed bill.
Green energy policies
The final bill passed by the Senate would largely terminate numerous tax incentives from the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act for clean energy, electric vehicles and energy efficiency programs that benefited consumers.
It would end tax credits for new and used electric vehicles, installation of home EV charging equipment and insulation or energy efficient heating and cooling systems.
The bill also ends the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, which gives funding to nonprofit organizations providing financing for projects that reduce pollution and greenhouse gas emissions in communities. Existing contracts and grants under the program are not affected.
Restrictions on food stamps
The bill still shifts the costs of SNAP, or food stamps, to some states. The program is currently fully funded by the federal government.
The federal government would continue to fully fund the benefits for states that have an error payment rate below 6%, beginning in 2028. States with error rates above 6% would be on the hook for 5% to 15% of the costs. States are also given some flexibility in calculating their share.
The package also aligns with the initial House version on age requirements for able-bodied adults to qualify for SNAP benefits. Currently, in order to qualify, able-bodied adults between 18 and 54 must meet work requirements. Both the Senate and House bills would update the age requirement to 18 and 64, with some exemptions for parents.
Addressing the debt limit
The legislation would raise the debt ceiling by $5 trillion, going beyond the $4 trillion outlined in the initial House-passed bill. Congress faces a deadline to address the debt limit later this summer.