Trump 47

This is where conspiracies fall apart for me cause after about three or four that's not getting contained although with the Epstein files maybe I'm wrong on that too
Yea, the Epstein cover-up makes the "conspiracy can't happen because too many know" idea seem a little obsolete. Hell, it is international. Obviously, if the power of the people involved and the risk to the spiller of the news is high enough, it can happen.

 
Tucker Carlson: “I’ll be tormented for a long time by the fact that I played a role in getting Donald Trump elected. And I want to say that I’m sorry for misleading people.”

 
Tucker Carlson: “I’ll be tormented for a long time by the fact that I played a role in getting Donald Trump elected. And I want to say that I’m sorry for misleading people.”


Didn't he interview Putin on Russian state tv or something like that? It's cool that he's admitting he made a mistake but he's not gonna regret anything that made him a giant pile of cash.
 

Trump invokes wartime powers "Defense Production​

(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump invoked the Defense Production Act to provide federal funds for a wide range of energy projects, as his administration faces pressure to help curb rising oil, gasoline and electricity costs.

Trump on Monday signed five presidential determinations under the law, targeting domestic coal power, liquefied natural gas, domestic petroleum and power-grid infrastructure — areas where he said insufficiencies threaten national defense.


The move allows the Energy Department to deploy funding that was secured last year in Trump’s flagship tax-and-spending package. Under the directives, the agency is authorized to use energy purchases, financial support and other tools to overcome delays, financing shortfalls, regulatory hold-ups and market barriers.

With Trump’s signature, the determinations set the stage for the federal government to release funds targeting purchases under those categories later. Projects eligible for support could include coal-fired power plants, refineries and facilities that manufacture gas turbines and transformers — electrical equipment that’s been subject to shortages.

White House spokeswoman Taylor Rogers cast the move as helping Trump fulfill his promise “to fully unleash American energy dominance to protect our economic and national security.”

The determinations allow the use of federal funding to “strengthen our grid infrastructure and unleash reliable, affordable, secure energy,” she added.

 
MAGA on MAGA happening in the House now. They are trying to expel each other from Congress

Nancy Mace launches plot to expel fellow MAGA star from Congress​


Rep. Nancy Mace has drawn the knives on a fellow MAGA diehard in the House over serious allegations of misconduct in public office.

The firebrand South Carolina congresswoman is now pushing to have Florida Rep. Cory Mills thrown out of the House over allegations he engaged in “sexual misconduct and/or dating violence” as well as violations of campaign finance rules, NBC News reported Tuesday.


Several Democratic members of the chamber have similarly called for Mills to go over the accusations, but Mace, who has previously described herself as a survivor of rape and domestic abuse, has gone further by tabling a resolution that could eventually force a vote on the matter.

“The swamp has protected Cory Mills for far too long and we are done letting it slide,” Mace wrote in a statement. “We tried to censure him and strip him from his committee assignments. Both parties blocked it, but we are not backing down.”

Mills, a military veteran turned weapons contractor who flipped a Democratic seat in 2022, has flatly denied the accusations against him and accused his detractors of engaging in a coordinated smear campaign.

The sexual misconduct allegations involve two separate women and span more than a year. Lindsey Langston, a Republican state committeewoman and Miss United States 2024, claims that after an earlier relationship with Mills ended, the congressman bombarded her with messages in which he threatened to release intimate photos of her and harm any future partners she might have.

A second woman later accused Mills of assaulting her at his home in D.C. Body camera footage and a police affidavit revealed officers came close to arresting Mills in February 2025 over the claims, which the woman later withdrew.

The finance-related accusations center on claims that Mills improperly mixed personal spending with campaign funds and potentially channeled donor money for personal benefit.

Mills has already shot back at Mace over her claims, which the House Ethics Committee is investigating.


“Rather than political fundraising theatrics by Mace ‘introduced’ ignoring due process, why not notice for a vote?” he wrote in a post on X.

He then pointed out that the same committee is, in fact, currently also investigating Mace over claims that she overbilled her congressional office for funds to maintain her home in D.C., a probe her representatives have called “fundamentally flawed.”
 

I'm not the biggest fan of Hakeem Jeffries, but he makes and EXCELLENT Point

"You voted to confirm him" — Jeffries destroys Republicans who now distance themselves from Kash Patel​


Hakeem Jeffries is expanding the target — and every Republican senator who voted to confirm Kash Patel just found themselves in his crosshairs. In a pointed and strategically significant statement, the House Democratic Leader made clear that blame for Kash Patel's FBI leadership does not rest with Trump alone.

Yes, Trump nominated him. But the United States Senate confirmed him. And every senator who cast a yes vote owns what comes next. Jeffries' message was simple, direct, and deliberately aimed at a vulnerability the Democratic Party believes it can exploit heading into the 2026 midterms

— Republican senators who supported Trump's most controversial nominees are now tied to everything those nominees do in office. The argument Jeffries is making is both constitutional and political. The Senate's advice and consent role in confirming presidential nominees is not a rubber stamp — it is a co-equal act of government that carries real accountability.

When senators confirm a nominee over bipartisan objections, over credible concerns about qualifications and fitness, and over the warnings of the opposition party, they do not get to distance themselves from the consequences when those concerns prove well-founded. Jeffries is making sure they understand that. Kash Patel's tenure at the FBI has been one of the most controversial in the bureau's modern history — with questions about politicization, loyalty tests, and the independence of federal law enforcement following him since before his confirmation was complete.

By broadening the accountability frame beyond Trump and onto the senators who enabled the appointment, Jeffries is building a political case that will outlast any single controversy and follow those senators all the way to the ballot box. In this video, we cover: Jeffries' statement holding Republican senators accountable for confirming Kash Patel The argument that confirmation votes represent co-ownership of a nominee's actions in office
 
I wouldn't get so irritated by this BS if I didn't know that my MAGA parents were just believing every word of it with no chance of realizing and accepting how much they're being lied to... I can't even talk about political topics when I'm over there because it's just so frustrating and it's just gotten worse as they've gotten older. Especially with my dad being retired and at home all day with a constant drip of Fox News going.
 
THIS is the kind of people Trump hired...THIS is the type of crap they Read.....and THIS is the type of Hate they boost to their Followers


Get it now!? This Admin has a serious Nazi Problem, and they don't care as long as they are praising Trump above all others as they Spew and Spread their Hate and Violence.

This dude oversaw the ICE KILLINGS IN MINNEAPOLIS.

Former ICE Director Gregory Bovino receives praises from and then boosted a pseudonymous neo-Nazi account that supports Adolf Hitler

President Donald Trump’s disgraced former Border Patrol enforcer, Gregory Bovino, has boosted a pseudonymous neo-Nazi account that supports Adolf Hitler.

Bovino, 56, was the face of Trump’s first-year immigration crackdowns in Los Angeles, Chicago, and Minneapolis. He was quietly shipped home to California in late January after two U.S. citizens were killed by federal agents.

He retired at the end of March, with the administration adding insult to injury by revoking his access to his government social media accounts.

But on Monday, Bovino used his personal account to repost a link to a blog post that praised him as “Comandante Greg Bovino.”

Bovino approvingly claimed that the screed was “Vindication for mass deportations.”

But the Daily Beast can reveal that it was authored by a prominent white nationalist account with a long history of using shocking racist and antisemitic slurs.

The article Bovino praised carried the byline “Federale.” The piece on the American Greatness website was first published on April 9 on Federale’s own Substack and WordPress.

Federale’s “vindication” framing is remarkably generous to Bovino, given that ICE deported just 442,637 people in fiscal year 2025 against Trump’s campaign promise of one million a year.

Federale is also listed as an author at VDARE, the anti-immigrant website that the Southern Poverty Law Center describes as a hate site that “regularly publishes articles by prominent white nationalists, race scientists and anti-Semites.”

The unknown writer—or writers—posted on X under the handle @Federale8686. A post from Monday wished Hitler a happy birthday. The header image on Federale’s WordPress is a cropped portrait of Francisco Franco, Spain’s fascist dictator. He describes himself on the site as “Generalissimo.”


An analysis of what Federale has published in just the last six weeks reveals numerous instances of unfiltered Nazi discourse. Across Federale’s 2026 output, “Lügenpresse”—the Hitler-era slur for the press—recurs as his standard label for the mainstream U.S. media.

On April 18, a piece with the headline, “Lying Jew David Bier Can’t Stop Lying,” smears the Cato Institute’s policy analyst. On April 11, another antisemitic Bier attack used two ethnic slurs in the same headline.
Bier has been an outspoken critic of Bovino's tactics, and the wider mass deportation drive, and has been abused boin return by the Nazi-loving author boosted by Bovino.

On April 14, in a third post about Bier, Federale wrote: “The jews hate all non-jews. They refer to non-jews as goyim, or cattle, they call us at best sub-human, at worst animals or slaves.”

On April 10, writing about Hispanic women, Federale made an unfounded allegation based on skin color.


A week later, he posted racist remarks about Darius Reeves, a retired Black ICE field director, and an offensive cartoon.

This is not Bovino’s first brush with Nazi imagery. In November, a DHS promo video featured him dressed in a long black SS-style trench coat, scored to a gabber version of Coldplay’s “Viva la Vida,” as the Daily Beast reported California Gov. Gavin Newsom, 58, called it “Nazi cosplay.”


The black and white photo of Border Patrol chief Gregory Bovino in a long SS-style trenchcoat sparked 'Nazi' memes. / X


In January, The New York Times reported that Bovino had mocked the administration’s own Orthodox Jewish U.S. Attorney, Daniel Rosen, for observing Shabbat and used the phrase “chosen people” derisively.

That same month, Bovino’s Border Patrol agents threw VA ICU nurse Alex Pretti, 37, to the sidewalk and shot him dead. Bovino went on Fox News to echo then-Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s evidence-free claim that Pretti had been a would-be “terrorist.” The White House yanked him out days later.
 

Trump boasts 'I would have won Vietnam very quickly'​

Donald Trump boasted that he “would have won Vietnam very quickly” had he been president during the decades-long conflict, as the U.S.-Iran peace deal hangs in the balance.

The president joined CNBC’s Squawk Box by phone Tuesday morning where he spoke for more than 30 minutes about the Iran war, his pick for Fed chair Kevin Warsh, oil prices and the White House ballroom.


The Vietnam digression came as Trump compared the Iran conflict, which began nearly two months ago, with the length of other wars that America has been embroiled in.

“I just looked at a little chart: World War I, four years and three months. World War II, six years. Korean War, three years. Vietnam, 19 years. Iraq, eight years — I’m five months [in Iran],” Trump said.

“I would have won Vietnam very quickly. I would have, if I were president.”

Link via The Independent https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/poli...1&cvid=69e7cd3036a845d68ce03da9780bb54b&ei=26
 

Trump boasts 'I would have won Vietnam very quickly'​

Donald Trump boasted that he “would have won Vietnam very quickly” had he been president during the decades-long conflict, as the U.S.-Iran peace deal hangs in the balance.

The president joined CNBC’s Squawk Box by phone Tuesday morning where he spoke for more than 30 minutes about the Iran war, his pick for Fed chair Kevin Warsh, oil prices and the White House ballroom.


The Vietnam digression came as Trump compared the Iran conflict, which began nearly two months ago, with the length of other wars that America has been embroiled in.

“I just looked at a little chart: World War I, four years and three months. World War II, six years. Korean War, three years. Vietnam, 19 years. Iraq, eight years — I’m five months [in Iran],” Trump said.

“I would have won Vietnam very quickly. I would have, if I were president.”

Link via The Independent https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/poli...1&cvid=69e7cd3036a845d68ce03da9780bb54b&ei=26
Just like he would end the Russia Ukraine war on day one.
 
Yea, the Epstein cover-up makes the "conspiracy can't happen because too many know" idea seem a little obsolete. Hell, it is international. Obviously, if the power of the people involved and the risk to the spiller of the news is high enough, it can happen.

Don’t we know about Epstein?

While it’s true that many that should be brought to justice will never be, the Epstein conspiracy has been exposed. The bigger the conspiracy the harder to keep it secret.
 
Don’t we know about Epstein?

While it’s true that many that should be brought to justice will never be, the Epstein conspiracy has been exposed. The bigger the conspiracy the harder to keep it secret.
No, we absolutely do not know about Epstein. Epstein's crime has been exposed. The Epstein conspiracy absolutely has not been exposed.

If in the 1970s, we knew that there was a break in and that some politicians appeared to have something to do with it but none hd been speciifcally called out for their involvment and all blamed others, would you say that Watergate had been exposed?
 
The SPLC paid this money to undercover informants investigating white supremacy groups and was paying their informants to expose these groups


Now the DOJ is investigating them and claiming they were financially supporting White Supremacy groups
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No, we absolutely do not know about Epstein. Epstein's crime has been exposed. The Epstein conspiracy absolutely has not been exposed.

If in the 1970s, we knew that there was a break in and that some politicians appeared to have something to do with it but none hd been speciifcally called out for their involvment and all blamed others, would you say that Watergate had been exposed?
If the guy at the center of the ring, Nixon, was convicted and committed suicide in prison?

Exposed… no longer hidden… no longer capable of continuing…

Yes, I absolutely would say it had been exposed.

If we had incontrovertible evidence that the moon landings we fake, even if we never knew who all was in on it, that would be exposed.

If we had incontrovertible evidence that JFK was killed by the CIA and the military-industrial complex, even if we never knew who all was actually involved, that is the very definition of exposed.

We have incontrovertible evidence that Epstein ran a pedophile ring. He was convicted on state charges and later indicted on federal charges. That is exposed, uncovered, no longer able to keep it concealed.

In none of those situations would I say justice had been served, nor would I say that in the Epstein case. You are conflating exposure and justice. They are not the same thing.
 
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