US US Politics General 2: Hope Edition - Discussion of President Trump and other politicians

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Should be a wild four years.

Helpful links for those who need them:

Current members of the House of Representatives
https://www.house.gov/representatives

Current members of the Senate
https://www.senate.gov/senators/

Current members of the US Supreme Court
https://www.supremecourt.gov/about/biographies.aspx

Members of the Trump Administration
https://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/
 
Ostatnio edytowane przez moderatora:
I think it's their cuck nature that leads them to be attracted to leftism. Their dysgenic, low-T, badly turned out psychology interfaces perfectly with the ideology.

Normal, healthy values feel like a reproach to them because they can't live up to them. Leftist values give their failings a good conscience and even convert them into virtues. Faggoty soy cuck? Reject masculinity as a gender branch office of the eternal right wing oppressor.
They hate oppression and yet will actively go out of their way to defend some of the most oppressive regimes on earth. I still remember the Hasan china trip and which he basically tried to shill for a country, that didn’t even know he exists.
 
“We are prepared to send the money if you can send receipts”

Our guy ladies and gents. “Just send us poorly photoshopped bullshit no one is allowed to look at for 5-10 years but us. Then we will continue funding White genocide.”

SEND IN THE GODDAMN TANKS. WHY ARE WE WAITING FOR PROOF??? WHY ARE WE WAITING FOR “””RECEIPTS”””????
Because if they send in fake receipts it's easy to indict and convict them down the road. There's a reason none have been submitted.
It also helps stop any ongoing fraud, and the past fraud can be dealt with in time.
Pragmatism is important.
 
Hawaii has refused to handover Personal SNAP data, which could result in the State benefits being cut: / Archive

After declining to turn over data on residents who use food stamps to the federal government, including their immigration status, Hawaiʻi faces the threat of losing tens of millions in funding to operate the food aid program.

Brooke Rollins, secretary of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, vowed in December to withhold the federal funds used to administer the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program from states that have not complied.

The state chose not to provide the data because it “is committed to protecting the personal information of individuals applying for and receiving SNAP,” said Scott Morishige, who heads the Department of Human Services division that manages the program.

For Hawaiʻi, that could mean a loss of up to $33 million in federal funding in 2026.

“DHS is currently reviewing potential options if federal funds are withheld,” Morishige said.

Such an event would force the state to make tough decisions about hiring freezes, delays in technology upgrades and perhaps layoffs of administrative staff and eligibility workers, said Colin Moore, a political scientist at University of Hawaiʻi Mānoa.

Even if the money is not withheld, the predicament foreshadows other changes in SNAP funding the state will have to confront later this year.

“I don’t think you would see the effect necessarily on SNAP recipients immediately,” Moore said. “It’s about slow erosion of the infrastructure that supports the program.”

‘Strategic Pressure On States’

The USDA in February first demanded that states share five years of details including names, addresses and immigration status about SNAP recipients. Rollins said it was necessary to root out fraud.

She leveled her latest threat in early December at Hawaiʻi and 21 other states that sued the department in July over what they called an unprecedented and unlawful request. The states said they already verify beneficiaries’ eligibility and never share such “large swaths” of personal data with the federal government. Those states, and the District of Columbia — which also joined the legal challenge — all are led by Democrats.

Rollins targeted administrative funding, not funding that goes directly to recipients, which Moore called “a very strategic way for the federal government to put pressure on states; it’s both evil and clever.”

“It avoids the political backlash of cutting benefits that would probably be unacceptable to the vast majority of voters,” he said. “It targets the state level bureaucracies, and that means it really puts pressure on the governors of these blue states and their bureaucratic leaders, which is a far less sympathetic constituency than families who need food.”

The legal challenge to the USDA request is ongoing. In October, a federal judge in San Francisco temporarily barred the USDA from collecting the data from states that had not yet turned it over; Rollins did not address that order when she made her December statements at a Trump administration cabinet meeting. Twenty eight states have shared their SNAP recipient data with the USDA, Rollins said.

“It’s a very strategic way for the federal government to put pressure on states; it’s both evil and clever.”

Colin Moore, political scientist, University of Hawaiʻi, Mānoa
The demand for SNAP data echoes the administration’s efforts to obtain historically confidential personal information, such as taxpayer and Medicaid records. Those moves have been explicitly framed as ways to bolster Trump’s anti-immigrant campaign as well as to cut waste and fraud.

And the push has been in the works starting soon after inauguration day, if not before. The conservative Project 2025 blueprint that Trump disclaimed knowledge of during the election but has taken full pages from — co-author Russell Vought is a top administration official — outlined information sharing between federal and state agencies as a way to enhance immigration enforcement.

“It is essential to use all available legal authority to end any incentives in (USDA) benefit programs that encourage illegal immigration,” Rollins wrote in a February letter to state and local governments.

Changes On The Way

Undocumented immigrants are not eligible for SNAP, but their children are if born in the U.S. COFA citizens — those from the Federated States of Micronesia, the Marshall Islands or Palau who are in the U.S. under the Compacts of Free Association agreements — Cuban and Haitian immigrants and certain lawful permanent residents also can qualify for benefits. In Hawaiʻi, at last count, there were 13,190 people with unspecific citizenship or identified as non-citizens receiving SNAP, Morishige said.

Yet a 2025 Congressional Research Service report found fraud in the $100 billion program rare. For example, in 2021, it said, states tried to recover $54 million in benefits that were “trafficked” — sold for cash — or where fraud was committed during the application process. Errors made by state agencies, in the form of SNAP benefit payments that were too large or too small, were a greater source of financial loss – some $10.5 billion in 2023.

Hawaiʻi had an error rate of 8% in fiscal year 2024, down from about 21% the previous two years. That’s compared to a nationwide error rate of 11.7% in 2023.

Rollins said that based on information from states that have submitted the requested data, 186,000 dead people are receiving SNAP benefits nationally and 500,000 people are getting double benefits. That reflects .4% and 1.2% respectively of the 42 million people receiving the benefits monthly.

About 162,000 Hawaiʻi residents rely on SNAP and, in September, received an average of $343 each.

Even if the USDA does not follow through on Rollins’ promise to withhold funding, Hawaiʻi will face a somewhat similar scenario in late 2026. At that point, changes to SNAP outlined in the domestic budget bill Trump signed in July will take effect and states will be forced to pick up a larger share of the program’s administrative costs.

Now, the federal government pays 50% of the state’s administrative costs. Under the changes that are to take place in October, that share drops to 25%.

Other changes the bill contained included stricter eligibility requirements and work requirements that kicked in in November. Some estimates are that the changes could cause 13,000 Hawaiʻi residents to lose at least some SNAP benefits.

Civil Beat’s reporting on economic inequality is supported by the Hawaiʻi Community Foundation as part of its work to build equity for all through the CHANGE Framework; and by the Cooke Foundation.
 
There are people out there, registered voters, that refuse to acknowledge the fraud in MN, CA, NY, etc because it’s simply an inconvenient fact for the party they were baptized into at birth.

People who cannot recognize fact from fiction, the difference between a ball and a strike are intellectually lazy cretins that deserve to live in these hellholes. Frankly I find it disgusting.
Once they admit that subsidy/benefits fraud is not just happening, but at the scale of entire nations' GDPs, then it's a very short jump to recognizing that election fraud is just as rampant and large of scale.
 
Once they admit that subsidy/benefits fraud is not just happening, but at the scale of entire nations' GDPs, then it's a very short jump to recognizing that election fraud is just as rampant and large of scale.
Everything of the post 65 society was created to 1) Fraud and Loot. 2) Hide the fraud violence and looting 3) call you racist for noticing.
 
There should probably be a designated Zohran Mamdani shitting megathread.

But here's the video + images from this article. The headline + photo of the councilmembers was what got me to click:
mamdani-rave-gnews.webp
What are the first two words that come to mind?

Photojournalism is important, here's why:

NYT: Chants of ‘Tax the Rich’ Fuel a Brooklyn Rave for Mayor Mamdani (archive)



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Left: Councilmembers Alexa Avilés, left, and Tiffany Cabán.
Right: Micah Uetricht, the editor for Jacobin.

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Left: Matt Multari, a labor organizer.
Right: New York State Senator Julia Salazar, left, and New York Assembly Member Claire Valdez.

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Left: The crowd chanted messages like “Tax the Rich.”
Right: Hundreds of young New York City leftists gathered at the Bushwick club Paragon to celebrate the inauguration of Zohran Mamdani.

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Left: Partygoer Michael Rosch.
Right: Margaret Vail Palmquist highlights one of the messages of the night.

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Left: Ash Croce, represents one of Mr. Mamdani’s constituencies.
Right: New York State Senator Jabari Brisport, left, and Eon Huntley, right.

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Left: Ryan Brennan, left, and former U.S. representative Jamaal Bowman.
Right: Conrad Blackburn, center, with Gustavo Gordillo, left, and Grace Mausser, right, co-chairs of New York City’s D.S.A. chapter.

Toward the end of the speech section of the evening, Grace Mausser, a co-chair of D.S.A.’s New York City chapter, also reminded partygoers to volunteer for the group’s campaigns, “before you get too drunk” or “too tired from dancing.”

Ms. Mauser’s fellow chair, Gustavo Gordillo, echoed that, leading the assembled masses in a type of call-and-response oath-taking, with promises to “fight for our freedom” and “love and support one another.”

“We have nothing to lose but our chains,” he said, as the crowd repeated him. “All right! Let’s celebrate a year of class struggle.”

Bonus: Mamdani’s inauguration – through the eyes of five New Yorkers (archive)

Curtis Sliwa - Peter Sterne.jpeg
Curtis Sliwa waited in line to watch the inauguration with the masses.

In his trademark red beret, former Republican mayoral candidate Curtis Sliwa stood out in the crowd of Mamdani supporters.

“You know that guy? That’s Curtis Sliwa,” a couple New Yorkers whispered to each other as they spotted him. “I think that’s literally him!”

The “Zohranistas,” as Sliwa called them, kept coming up to pay their respects and ask for selfies. Sliwa was in his element, glad-handing and making small talk with the well-wishers. “Oh, they didn’t vote for me,” he told City & State. “Some may have lied, like ‘Oh, I voted for you.’ Please. Don’t insult me. If you had voted for me, I’d be the one giving the inaugural address!”

Although the pro-Mamdani crowd certainly disapproved of Sliwa’s conservative politics – “My dad says he at least used to be pretty racist,” one Mamdani supporter remarked to a friend after spotting Sliwa – they still seemed to respect him.

“I’m a socialist and whatnot, but it’s a real honor because you care so much about animals,” one person told Sliwa.

“They don’t see me as a Trumper, you know, MAGA,” Sliwa said. Sliwa said he was rooting for the new mayor to succeed.

“He got a mandate, and more importantly, if he does well, the city does well, everybody does well … Anybody who wants him to fail, that’s pretty selfish,” he said.

Sliwa had arrived in Lower Manhattan for the inauguration shortly before noon, after spending the morning at the Polar Bear Plunge in Coney Island, alongside members of the Guardian Angels doing security.

He did not have a ticket for the inauguration ceremony at City Hall. Instead, like thousands of other New Yorkers, he planned to watch it live on Jumbotrons on Broadway.

But those hoping to gain access to the Canyon of Heroes had to go through a security screening and the line to get in was backed up for more than 10 blocks – which led to hundreds of Mamdani supporters missing the inauguration entirely because they were stuck standing on Church St, where there were no Jumbotrons, instead of being able to stand on Broadway, where there were.

Around 2:30 pm, Sliwa and the rest finally made it into the Canyon of Heroes. Sliwa headed up Broadway, toward City Hall. On the way, he was constantly stopped by people on the street – not just Mamdani supporters, but the cops and street cleaners working the event, too.

Just before 4 pm, Sliwa finally made it to the City Hall plaza. The inauguration was long over and Mayor Mamdani was gone, having headed to Brooklyn for a press conference. And the gates to City Hall were closed.
 
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