The Second Term of Donald J. Trump as President of the United States of America

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Nothing Explains Trump’s Washington Quite Like the Reflecting Pool Scandal​

David A. Fahrenthold on a controversy that’s deeper than it looks. / By Aymann Ismail

Among the approximately 1.776 billion scandals of this Trump administration, one has recently stood out to me: the ongoing boondoggle at the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool. What was supposed to be a minor maintenance project has somehow become one of the purest reflections of Trump-era governance, involving a no-bid contract, a golf-club manager from New Jersey, and the color “American Flag Blue.”

Much of this is known only because of the dogged investigative journalism from David A. Fahrenthold, who has spent years following the money around Donald Trump and his orbit for the New York Times. He has devoted a surprising amount of time and energy into relaying the minute engineering problems plaguing this shallow pool on the National Mall. Fahrenthold—famous for breaking the existence of Trump’s Access Hollywood tape, and for his Pulitzer Prize–winning reporting on Trump’s reputed charitable giving—agreed to talk to me about his slow-burn reporting on the pool and what it reveals.

from a separate source:

"I was in North Carolina last week, and over the weekend and I didn't hear anybody talking about reflecting pools. I did hear them talk about what they spend at grocery stores," said Republican strategist Doug Heye.
"When you are holding press gaggles in front of a ballroom construction site that no one asked for, you're proactively sending the signal to voters: 'I don't know what's important to you, but here's what's important to me,'" said Heye, a former spokesperson for the Republican National Committee.
"Go into any state that has targeted races, whether it's North Carolina, Maine, Ohio, Texas, … and ask them, 'Hey, do you think that we need a triumphant arch to be built on the Mall?' and they're going to look at you like you've just landed from Venus," he added.
One Republican operative agreed that the beautification projects are not being talked about outside of Washington but was largely supportive of the projects ahead of America's 250th anniversary celebrations.

It seems Trump's compulsive waffling about his War on Iran, and Trump spending $money in Washington DC instead of saving taxpayer's money at the gas pump tells a story Trump voters don't wish to hear.
 
Anne Applebaum, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and author, has drawn a documented, scholarly line between President Trump's political rhetoric and the language of the 20th century's most destructive regimes. Trump's use of phrases like "enemies within," "enemies of the people," calling migrants and opponents "vermin," and warning of migrants "poisoning the blood" of Americans traces directly not just to Hitler but also to Stalin, regimes Applebaum has studied for decades. Her warning is specific: American politics has been racist, she notes, but calling people insects or parasites is categorically different; it is the language regimes use before they strip people of their humanity entirely.

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Copying from his role models ....
 
"Anne Applebaum, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and author, has drawn a documented, scholarly line between President Trump's political rhetoric and the language of the 20th century's most destructive regimes." #3,344
AA seems to be accusing President Trump of a functional level of scholarship.
I do not doubt her own mastery of that facet of history. But her basic understanding of Trump seems insufficient.

Can she name the title of a specific book she accuses President Trump of having read, understood, learned from?
And where is that specific book now, the exact bound volume Trump gained this inspiration from? Crowded by the many other scholarly tomes Trump has been honing his political acumen from, within Trump's own executive library?

Really?

Applebaum's ostensibly plausible explanation aside, it is not the only possible explanation.
And it does not appear to be the most plausible.

More likely Trump's spectrum of talent mirrors that of the savant, a condition in which a person having a developmental disability (such as autism spectrum disorder or intellectual disability) exhibits exceptional skill or brilliance in some limited field.
Trump is exceptionally gifted at exploiting the 24 hour news cycle, making just enough outrageous assertions to remain in the news headlines, reportedly obtaining for "free" about a $Billion dollars worth of publicity for Trump's 2016 presidential campaign.

In layman's terms, it's also possible Trump simply re-invented the wheel, arrived independently at similar solutions to common problems with prior political tyrants of history.
Is it any wonder that similar problems would yield similar solutions?

Trump may be several things Madame Applebaum. A scholar?
Not so much.
 
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A flesh-eating parasite that was supposed to stay eradicated is now confirmed in Texas livestock, and you can thank the same administration that gutted the agencies built to stop it.

The New World screwworm, a parasitic fly whose larvae literally burrow through living flesh and can kill an animal if untreated, was officially detected in a three-week-old calf in Zavala County, Texas this week. This was not a surprise to anyone paying attention. The pest had been spreading northward through Central America and Mexico since at least 2022, and experts projected it would reach the U.S. by 2025.

What changed the math was the trump administration cutting roughly 15 percent of the USDA's entire workforce, around 15,000 people, including those responsible for monitoring and fighting exactly this kind of agricultural threat. The program that fights screwworms works by releasing millions of sterilized male flies to disrupt breeding, a slow, science-dependent, international cooperation kind of effort that requires, well, a functioning government.

Instead, DOGE took a chainsaw to the USDA so the wealthiest Americans could pocket a bigger tax cut, and now the cattle industry is staring down a potential $10.6 billion disaster.

And here is the part that hits everyone at the kitchen table: beef prices are already at a record high, with ground beef hitting $6.69 a pound in December 2025, up 72 percent since 2020. The screwworm border closures have already cut off over a million head of Mexican feeder cattle that American feedlots depend on, and the USDA is forecasting another 6.9 percent increase in wholesale beef prices in 2026. This is what happens when you gut the agencies designed to catch these problems early so billionaires can get a bigger tax cut.

The irony is almost too much: the ranchers and agricultural states that went hard for trump in 2024 are now the ones watching flesh-eating maggots show up in their herds. A Texas state Republican rep had been sounding the alarm for over a year while, as he put it, "federal regulators moved at a snail's pace."
That snail's pace had a price tag, and every American buying ground beef is paying it now.

SOURCE with comments
 
"A flesh-eating parasite ... now confirmed in Texas livestock, and you can thank the same administration that gutted the agencies built to stop it." #3,346
"In a democracy, the people get the government they deserve." author disputed

Some reports indicate a glut in Mexico's beef markets.
 
Okay Grandpa - it's time to go back to the home ....

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BREAKING: WORST MELTDOWN EVER? Trump freaks out and runs away from a Meet the Press interview after going on INSANE, demented rant about how the media is mean to him!

He is SUCH a baby…

The president of the United States has once again thrown a huge tantrum and walked out of an interview with the media, this time over being challenged on his ridiculous lies about our elections.

Lately, Trump has been alleging that the primary election playing out in California is rigged (because the Republican is losing) and Welker called him out on it…only to see him flip out and leave.

"It was a dirty election. And it's happening again right now in California. Right now it's looking, look at what's happening in California. It's four days. are doing well in California. California...they're not, they're dropping fast because it's a rigged election. Let me tell you, it's four days and they aren't even close to coming up," complained Trump.

“You know why they're doing that? Because they're cheating on the election. There's –"

“Do you have evidence to support–” breaks in Welker.

“All I have to do is look. And I listen, and I listen to people. Do you think it’s appropriate that they have an election that takes five days to count-” said Trump.

“State and local officials admit its taking time,” Welker tries to say.

“No, they’re crooked! Just like you’re crooked. Your press is crooked. Meet The Press is crooked. You’re crooked or you’re stupid. You play right into their hands with ...

CONTINUED with comments
 
Normandy resident Chantal Richard, "Hegseth must be called out for who he is and the values he represents – colonial, warmongering, racist, far-right values."

Residents joined him to blast Pete Hegseth during a D-Day commemoration, saying the values he represents have no place at an event honoring democracy.

Sylvie Lamy Thepaut: “He has very warlike remarks, and it seems to us that he does not exactly share our values of democracy and freedom.” The local group Langrune en Commun called for his visit to be canceled.

Langrune en Commun: This individual holds values contrary to democracy, human rights, and peace. This is evidenced by his numerous anti-European remarks.

The group also cited Hegseth's comments about the "parasitism of Europeans."

The criticism came as Hegseth arrived with his wife and six children and later used his speech to criticize European governments.

Showing up to honor the soldiers who fought for democracy and leaving with locals denouncing your values is a brutal indictment and clear indication that Europe blames the entire country of America the Hateful for unleashing the Trump hellscape upon the world.


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BREAKING
🚨
Stephen Miller called him transgender. Fox News said he "put the semen in seminarian." Ken Paxton called him "low-T." He's a straight man in a relationship with a woman — and this is the entire Republican strategy in Texas.

James Talarico is a 34-year-old former teacher, Presbyterian seminary student, and Texas state senator who just became the Democratic nominee for U.S. Senate in Texas. He is cisgender, heterosexual, and in a relationship with a woman.

Here's what Republicans have called him in the last two weeks.

Ken Paxton on the night he won the GOP primary called him "Tofu Talarico," "Six-Gender Jimmy," "James Tala-freako," and "Low-T Talarico" (a testosterone reference). Then released an ad: "Low-T for Texas."

White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller posted on X that Democrats had nominated "their first transgender Senate candidate." Talarico is not transgender. Miller added: "He's clearly transitioning into a female" and said "soy milk comes out" when he gets bloodwork done.

Fox News host Jesse Watters called him a "gay vegan." (He is neither.) Lisa Kennedy Montgomery called him a "baby lotion soft child" and a "beta male." Benny Johnson called him "effeminate, estrogenetic, catty" and compared him to Dylan Mulvaney. Ben Shapiro called him "the slightly more gay Pete Buttigieg." Megyn Kelly said he looked like a boy who needed to "get back to school for PE class." A Republican official posted his photo with the caption: "Hide your kids."

None of it is true. Talarico eats barbecue. He played football. He has a girlfriend. He is a straight, cisgender Christian man who happens to believe trans kids deserve compassion.

That last part that's the real offense.

Because here's what Ken Paxton can't talk about: his own party's Republican-majority Texas House impeached him for corruption, bribery, and abuse of office. His wife filed for divorce on "biblical grounds." He's been under federal investigation for years.

You can't run on that record. So you call the other guy gay until voters stop asking questions.

The attacks on Talarico's masculinity don't just hurt him. They tell every man in America that gentleness is disqualifying. That compassion is weakness. That anything soft including caring about a trans child makes you less of a man.

That's the message. And they're running it statewide.

SOURCE
 
Dementia Don is posting cartoons

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Trump tried to mock Hunter Biden's "past." Hunter's reply: "I'm 28 felonies, 6 bankruptcies, and an Epstein bromance short of his checkered past."

Donald Trump may have underestimated this fight.

Hunter Biden, now seven years sober, has returned to social media with force, doing something many Democrats have been reluctant to do: going after Trump where it stings most, while keeping a sense of humor.

It began when a reporter asked Trump in the Oval Office whether Hunter might run for president in 2028. Trump responded by saying Hunter's "past is not the greatest."

Hunter fired back quickly, and the response spread across social media: "Did he just say checkered past? I'm 28 felonies, 6 bankruptcies, and an Epstein bromance short of his checkered past."

Consider the reference. Trump was convicted on 34 felony counts. Several of his businesses went through bankruptcy proceedings six times. And his well-known past association with Jeffrey Epstein has been extensively reported. In a single sentence, Hunter managed to bring all three points back into the spotlight.

The reaction suggested the jab hit home. The following morning at 6:42 a.m., Trump posted on Truth Social an AI-generated image showing Hunter painting a portrait of him labeled "Greatest President."

The President of the United States was posting AI-generated cartoons before sunrise after being mocked by a private citizen.

That has often been the pattern. Trump has spent years attacking opponents, but when criticism comes back his way, he frequently responds publicly and at length.

Hunter Biden no longer appears interested in seeking anyone's approval. He's simply throwing punches and keeping the spotlight on the exchange.
 
From Nov 2025

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She asked a president for mercy — and refused to apologize when he demanded one. Now, she'll preach at Jane Goodall's funeral.
The Rt. Rev. Mariann Edgar Budde, the Episcopal Bishop of Washington, has been announced as the preacher for the funeral of Dr. Jane Goodall at Washington National Cathedral on Wednesday, November 12, at 11 AM EST.
But for many, Budde is already a familiar figure. In January, she stood before President Donald Trump at the inaugural prayer service and did something few in his orbit had the courage to do — she spoke directly to him, with the whole nation watching.
"Millions have put their trust in you," she said. "And as you told the nation yesterday, you have felt the providential hand of a loving God. In the name of our God, I ask you to have mercy upon the people in our country who are scared now."
She spoke of immigrant families living in fear. She spoke of gay, lesbian, and transgender children — in Democratic, Republican, and independent families — who feared for their safety. She asked for compassion. She asked for mercy.
The response was swift and severe.
Trump called Bishop Budde a "Radical Left hard line Trump hater" and said she "was nasty in tone, and not compelling or smart." He demanded an apology. Rep. Mike Collins of Georgia wrote that the New Jersey-born bishop "should be added to the deportation list." Others went further — sending death threats.
But Budde did not flinch.
In interviews following the sermon, she reflected on why she felt compelled to speak: "I was trying to say, 'The country has been entrusted to you.' And one of the qualities of a leader is mercy. Mercy. And to be mindful of the people who are scared."
Asked if she would apologize, she was clear: "I am not going to apologize for asking for mercy for others."
She acknowledged the ugliness of the backlash with characteristic grace. "People have said they do wish me dead, and that's a little heartbreaking," she reflected. "It was a pretty mild sermon."
But she refused to make it about herself.
"I think it's not about me," she said. "It's about the kind of country we are called to be. And that's what I did my best to try and speak to — to present an alternative to the culture of contempt, and to say that we can bring multiple perspectives into a common space and do so with dignity and respect. And that we need that, and the culture of contempt is threatening to destroy us."
When asked how she was holding up, her answer said everything about who she is: "I have a lot of people who are supporting me. The people we should be worrying about are not the bishop of the diocese of Washington. There are a lot of other people whose lives are in much more vulnerable and precarious states."
On November 12, Bishop Budde will stand before the nation once more — this time to honor a woman who spent her life championing compassion for every living thing. It is a fitting pairing. Because in a time when speaking with conscience carries a cost, both Jane Goodall and Mariann Budde chose to pay it.
 
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