Trump 47

BARTIROMO: Did you see Europe is drafting a plan to open up the Hormuz Strait without the United States?

TRUMP: It's so sad. Look at Greenland. We should have Greenland.

 
Trump: "I had the greatest year, the greatest opening year. I ended 8 wars. The greatest economy ever. But even when you have a great president, they tend to lose the midterms. It doesn't make sense to me. We've had the greatest year in the history of the presidency, first year. We should be given credit."

 
IMO this is the beginning of a strategy that mirrors what Trump started in 2015 w the media. Sure FoxNews and right wing talk radio has been talking about the liberal media but Trump 45 super charged in a way that changed how media reports. 47 has taken it to a whole new level bc of what he got away with as 45. Look at what Kegseth has done w the pentagon press corps.

Couchtabator is way different when it comes to Christianity than 47. These are trial balloons akin to Fake Media. We are steps away from “fake Christians” “false theology” coming from Government. Namely 47, Vance and Kegseth. All driven by who is behind them and each one has a different master in competition w the others.
 
Pete Hegseth quoted this Bible Verse in his Pentagon Sermon.

The only problem was it was written by Quentin Tarantino for Pulp Fiction.

This is why Christian Nationalism is just a bunch of cosplayers acting like moral authorities. They haven’t even read the foundational text.

 
Just in case you need a small glimmer of hope today. Or need to pass this along to somebody you used to know and love.

 
Just in case you need a small glimmer of hope today. Or need to pass this along to somebody you used to know and love.

Long time, no see!
 

'Tyrants.' Pope blasts those who manipulate religion as Trump feud escalates​

Pope Leo XIV said the world is "being ravaged by a handful of tyrants" and decried world leaders who "manipulate" religion and the name of God for military gain in a speech in Cameroon on April 16, as President Donald Trump has continued sparring with the pontiff.

"Woe to those who manipulate religion and the very name of God for their own military, economic and political gain, dragging that which is sacred into darkness and filth," Leo said during his four-country tour of Africa. "It is a world turned upside down, an exploitation of God’s creation that must be denounced and rejected by every honest conscience."


The pope's remarks come after Trump's attacks on social media, where the president has shared AI-generated images depicting himself as a Jesus-like figure and other religious imagery. Trump called Leo "WEAK on Crime" on April 12 and called him out in another post on April 14 with a defense of his war in Iran.

Leo XIV, the first U.S.-born head of the Catholic Church, has been highly critical of armed conflict, and repeated his stance on April 16: "The masters of war pretend not to know that it takes only a moment to destroy, yet often a lifetime is not enough to rebuild."

Earlier in the week, Leo said he had "no fear with neither the Trump administration, nor speaking out loudly about the message of the Gospel."

Trump and Vice President JD Vance, who is Catholic, have both doubled down on criticism of the pope, prompting backlash from conservative Catholics in the United States.


Internationally, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Sarah Mullally, threw her support behind the pope on April 16, urging Anglicans to follow his lead. Mullally plans to visit Rome later in April to meet with Leo.

"I stand with my brother in Christ, His Holiness Pope XIV, in his courageous call for a kingdom of peace," said Mullally, who in October was named the first woman Archbishop to lead the Church of England.

"As innocent people are killed and displaced, families torn apart, and futures destroyed, the human cost of war is incalculable. It is the calling of every Christian – and of all people of faith and goodwill – to work and pray for peace. We must also urge all those entrusted with political authority to pursue every possible peaceful and just means of resolving conflict."
 

Supreme Court's overturning of Roe v. Wade may have made the US military draft illegal​

A legal scholar argued Wednesday that the Supreme Court's own constitutional framework — the same one it used to overturn Roe v. Wade — could be used to strike down the military draft, and that President Donald Trump may have just handed activists the perfect moment to try.

Writing in Slate, attorney Steve Kennedy, organizing and network director at the People’s Parity Project, pointed out that while Trump has threatened military operations across Iran, Greenland, Cuba, Venezuela, and beyond, his administration quietly automated draft registration for all men between 18 and 26 under a rule implementing last December's National Defense Authorization Act.

That administrative move, Kennedy argued, could trigger a constitutional challenge that has never actually been decided on the merits.

The legal hook is the Roberts court's own "history and tradition" test, introduced in the Dobbs decision that overturned Roe. Under that framework, government powers must be grounded in founding-era practice. And the founding era, Kennedy noted, had no national draft, only local militias designed for community defense.

Kennedy acknowledged the current legal landscape cuts against him.

"The question is simple: Is the draft itself constitutional? Under Supreme Court precedent, the answer is yes," wrote Kennedy. "At the same time, the Roberts court has given significantly less weight to precedent than previous courts."


When Secretary of War James Monroe proposed national conscription during the War of 1812, Rep. Daniel Webster called it "not warranted by any provision of the Constitution." Chief Justice Roger Taney later wrote an unpublished opinion agreeing, but no case ever reached the Supreme Court.

"The historical record simply does not support current precedent. Rather, it points to the same conclusion that held for almost the first hundred years of the nation—that the federal government may raise an army, but it may not force anyone to serve in it. And while there is no active draft now, perhaps the transition to automatic registration will inspire some young person to bring the legal challenge that this moment begs," he concluded.
 

Franklin Graham blasted for urging Pope to praise Trump​

One of America’s most high-profile Evangelicals has sparked a backlash by suggesting Pope Leo XIV should meet with Donald Trump to thank him for advancing religious freedom.

Franklin Graham, the son of the famed evangelist Billy Graham, also took to social media on Thursday to defend Trump’s controversial post depicting himself as a Christ-like figure—and Trump’s bizarre explanation that he thought the image portrayed him as “a doctor.”

“I do not believe President Trump would knowingly depict himself as Jesus Christ—that would certainly be inappropriate,” Graham wrote.

“I’m thankful the President has made it very clear that this was not at all what he thought the AI-generated image was representing—he thought it was a doctor helping someone, and when he learned of the concerns, he immediately removed the post.”
 
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