- Open Society Foundations Global grant network founded by George Soros
- Fani Willis District attorney Fulton County, Ga.
- John O. Brennan Former C.I.A. director
- Adam B. Schiff Senator Democrat of California
- Letitia James Attorney general of New York Investigations underway
- James Comey Former F.B.I. director Indicted
From the moment Donald J. Trump began his campaign to return to the White House, he has expressed a clear desire to seek vengeance against his perceived enemies. In the last few weeks, the pressure campaign has intensified with two of his foes — James Comey and Letitia James — now indicted.
Back in power, Mr. Trump has weaponized the Justice Department to his own ends, in a more direct manner than any president since the Nixon era. The department, now led by Mr. Trump’s former personal lawyers, has fired dozens of career prosecutors, many of whom had worked on cases involving Mr. Trump. And the president and his allies have targeted or pushed out several U.S. attorneys as he seeks quick movement on cases involving a number of his political adversaries.
Each of the targets Mr. Trump has pursued through the Justice Department has denied wrongdoing, in statements or through lawyers.
The military is 90% Republican, and 90% of them voted for Trump.
Which means most of those Generals and admirals in the audience voted for Trump.
But after hearing an alcoholic wife-beating white Christian nationalist worthless piece of shit former major in the Minnesota National Guard and fucker of Fox News producers tell them they’re fat and worthless, when Trump finally appeared, there was no applause.
Not one single one of them applauded.
Trump even made a lame joke about how quiet they were, and if anybody didn’t want to be there, they could leave, but they’d get fired for doing so.
More silence.
No laughter.
No applause.
No smiling.
Trump expected a standing ovation and cheers from “his” Generals, and didn’t get it.
What he got was a collective “fuck you” from every senior leader in the United States armed forces who was at that meeting..
I wouldn’t have believed it unless I saw it myself.
This is an even bigger “fuck you” than when the soldiers at Trump’s “I love me” parade purposefully marched out of step.
Judge temporarily blocks Trump National Guard deployment to Chicago area
Gov. J.B. Pritzker (D) has called an “unconstitutional invasion of Illinois by the federal government.”
“Donald Trump is not a king — and his administration is not above the law,” he said in a statement on X after Perry’s ruling from the bench Thursday. “Today, the court confirmed what we all know: there is no credible evidence of a rebellion in the state of Illinois. And no place for the National Guard in the streets of American cities like Chicago.”
US District Judge April Perry said state and local law enforcement agencies were able to maintain control during the recent protests in the Chicago area and expressed concern that the Department of Homeland Security’s assessments of the protests are “unreliable.”
She described one particular protest where there were 200 protesters and 100 state and local police at the scene.
Perry also gave an example of a protest outside the Broadview ICE facility with a dozen protesters and DHS did not have to intervene.
The federal judge said DHS has also said the Illinois State Police were the “difference maker” and that they were grateful for their presence.
Peace “Deal”
Massive questions have not been answered
There is a lot that remains unknown — much of it centered on some of the most vexing issues in the conflict.
- For a start, it’s not exactly clear what Israel and Hamas have agreed on.
- There is, so far, no publicly available document that separates out the “phase one” agreement currently being heralded from the rest of the 20-point road map for peace that Trump released Sept. 29.
- The 20-point plan included issues that do not appear close to being settled.
- Aside from the central issue of whether the cessation becomes a long-term peace, the 20-point plan requires Hamas to decommission its weapons.
- The U.S. road map also calls for the establishment of a Trump-led “board of peace” that would in turn authorize an “apolitical Palestinian committee,” including additional international experts, to run Gaza’s daily affairs.
- Hamas has said they will not decommission. And a senior official with the militant group, Osama Hamdan, reportedly told TV network al-Araby on Thursday that “no Palestinian” would accept the board of peace.
Trump is inflating this up WAY beyond what is real.
White House
Make no mistake: Antifa is a radical terrorist organization that explicitly calls for the overthrow of the U.S. Government, law enforcement authorities, and our system of law.
Under the Trump Administration, Antifa’s days are over.
Interestingly “AntiFa” is NOT an “organization”, much less a :terrorist organization”.
“Antifa” has long attracted Trump’s ire.
But experts have questioned how the president will actually target the group, which lacks a distinct leader, membership list or structure. In 2020, then-FBI Director Christopher Wray told Congress that Antifa was better defined as an ideology than as a formal organization.
How do you kill an ideology? Especially an ideology that most Americans hold, most do not want Fascist government!
Fascism exalts nation and race above the individual, that is associated with a centralized autocratic government headed by a dictatorial leader, and that is characterized by severe economic and social regimentation and by forcible suppression of opposition.
We have in our government many Fascists: white supremist and those who love a dictator for President.
The US government can designate a group as a Foreign Terror Organization (FTO) – the “legal criteria” for this states that the targeted group “must be a foreign organization”.
The State Department lists current FTOs, which include branches of ISIS and, increasingly, drug cartels from Latin America.
An FTO designation means members of a group can be banned from the US or removed from the country and gives the government the power to seize funding and target donors.
But it is unclear how these powers could be extended to Antifa. Thus Trump’s bellowing does nothing.
The Constitution Does Not Allow the President To Unilaterally Blow Suspected Drug Smugglers to Smithereens
If the Trump administration wants to use military power, it should seek authorization from Congress, says Sen. Rand Paul.

Somewhere off the coast of Venezuela, a speedboat with 11 people on board is blown to smithereens. Vice President J.D. Vance announces that “killing cartel members who poison our fellow citizens is the highest and best use of our military.”
When challenged that killing citizens without due process is a war crime, the vice president responded that he “didn’t give a shit.” Sometimes in fits of anger, loud voices will say they don’t care about niceties such as due process—they just want to kill bad guys. For a brief moment, all of us may share that anger and may even embrace revenge or retribution. But over 20,000 people are murdered in the U.S. each year, and yet somehow we find a way to a dispassionate dispensation of justice that includes legal representation for the accused and jury trial. Besides, no one really knows who the 11 people were!
TRUMP’S PATH TO THE PEACE PRIZE
Consider this.- Trump has control of billions of dollars in grift (the tariff money).
- Neither Congress nor anyone has control of the money but Trump does.
- Trump has an intense desire to get the Nobel Peace Prize.
- The leaders of Hamas are in a sad state being pursued by Israel, the CIA and the Mossad.
- They are hounded 24 hours a day trying to stay alive with bombs falling around them (supplied by the US).
- They are living like rats in a cage that is slowly shrinking.
- Trump offers each leader of Hamas $100 million to go live in a villa in Tuscany if they will abandon Palestine.
- Trump uses the grift money to buy his Peace Prize off of the hard earned dollars of the American people.
REGISTRATION
Anyone from outside the US, including Canadians who visit the US for more than 30 days will be required to register with authorities, as the Trump administration tightens migration rules amid soaring tensions between the North American neighbors.
The new requirement, effective from 11 April, 2025, will harden enforcement of an existing law, which states that all foreign nationals 14 years old or older who plan to stay in the US for 30 days or more must register with the authorities.
First they came for the Communists And I did not speak out Because I was not a Communist
Then they came for the Socialists And I did not speak out Because I was not a Socialist
Then they came for the trade unionists And I did not speak out Because I was not a trade unionist
Then they came for the Antifa And I did not speak out Because I was not a Antifa
Then they came for me And there was no one left To speak out for me.
I am the proud son of a WWII and Korean veteran and I do not want his sacrifice and the sacrifices of that generations men and women be disrespected made null and void by a draft dodging billionaire fascist and his cowardice cult.
This is illegal as all get out.
:
Op-Ed: Rep. Andy Barr: Why I’m leading legislation to put Trump on a new $250 bill
Rep. Andy Barr is one of President Trump’s staunchest defenders in Congress. Now he wants the president on America’s newest currency.
Next year, America will celebrate the 250th anniversary of our Republic. This historic milestone is an opportunity not only to reflect on the courage of our Founders but also to recognize the leaders who, in our own time, have revived the American Dream.
So, as we approach the 250th day of President Donald J. Trump’s second term, it is a fitting moment to revive our push to issue a new $250 bill featuring President Trump. That’s why I am behind my friend and colleague, Rep. Joe Wilson and his legislation, the Donald J. Trump $250 Bill Act.
A federal judge in Chicago has imposed new limitations on the ability of Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers to make arrests without warrants, siding with plaintiffs in a long-running class-action lawsuit against ICE.
The ruling, which stems from a consent decree struck by the Biden administration in 2022, is unrelated to the pending legal challenges to President Trump’s deployment of the National Guard troops in Chicago and Portland, Ore. But it signals that another judge is skeptical about the Trump administration’s willingness to adhere to legal requirements as the president ratchets up his mass deportations.
Israel and Hamas Reach Deal on Hostage and Prisoner Exchange?
President Trump said Israel would pull back troops in the first phase of the agreement, raising hopes that the two-year war in Gaza may be nearer to an end.
President Trump, who helped broker the deal, said on social media Wednesday that both sides had agreed to the first phase of his plan, including that Israel would pull back their troops to an agreed-upon line.
Specific details of the agreement remain unclear, however, including the line of the Israeli withdrawal and whether Hamas will disarm.
The hostage release is expected as soon as this weekend and preparations are already underway, an official familiar with details of the deal said.
So far as I understand it, Hamas has not agreed to any line other than the border and that they are not going anywhere.
Bipartisan measure to block Trump’s lethal strikes against alleged Venezuelan drug smugglers fails in Senate
Democrats called the administration’s strikes unconstitutional but were unable to persuade enough Republicans to vote for a restraining measure.
10-8-2025 Trump called for Jailing Democratic Leaders
President Donald Trump has called for the jailing of Illinois officials, accusing them of not doing enough to ensure the safety of federal immigration officers who are conducting raids in Chicago.
The president wrote in a social media post that Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson and Illinois Governor JB Pritzker, both Democrats, “should be in jail for failing to protect Ice Officers!”
The Chicago mayor quickly fired back at Trump, saying “this is not the first time Trump has tried to have a Black man unjustly arrested. I’m not going anywhere.”
Pritzker vowed: “I will not back down.
“Trump is now calling for the arrest of elected representatives checking his power. What else is left on the path to full-blown authoritarianism?”
U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday called for jailing Chicago’s mayor and the governor of Illinois, both Democrats, as military officials said on Wednesday 500 National Guard troops were now in place to be deployed in the third-largest U.S. city.
Trump has previously called the city a “war zone” amid protests against immigration enforcement. Pritzker has called the president’s actions “authoritarian”.
The Republican president spoke as hundreds of National Guard troops arrived in the city as part of his immigration crackdown.
10-8-2025 Trump’s jack booted troops The heavily armed agents carrying out President Donald Trump’s aggressive immigration enforcement push in Chicago are often masked. The man leading them is not.
Nearly three decades into his career with the US Border Patrol, Gregory Bovino has become the on-the-ground face of Trump’s effort to surge federal law enforcement into blue states and cities regardless of whether local officials want them there — first in Los Angeles, now in Chicago, with other possible cities on deck.
But if he and his officers are an unwelcome presence or face interference from protesters, Bovino said he is not dissuaded.
“We’re going to carry out that mission,” Bovino said in an interview with CNN in Chicago on Tuesday. “And that’s paramount, or else we shouldn’t be here. We’re going to carry that mission out.”
He added that if “someone steps in the way, then … that may not work out well for them, and if we need to effect an arrest of a US citizen or anyone else, then we’ll do that.”
Local officials have described Bovino as leading a branch of law enforcement which deploys tactics that are frighteningly authoritarian and which has been styled into Trump’s own personal police force, used by the president as a cudgel against Democrat-led localities and the people — citizens and noncitizens alike — who live in them.
“I refuse to let Trump, Noem and Bovino continue on this march toward autocracy,” Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker said Monday. “Their plan all along has been to cause chaos, and then they can use that chaos to consolidate Trump’s power.”
10-8-2025 Trump ongoing terrorism
Trump has redefined the boundaries of enforcement in numerous ways:
- by detaining people without due process, some of whom have inevitably turned out to be citizens;
- by seizing law-enforcement powers from states and localities; by employing masked agents who don’t always identify their agency, and who have frequently attacked journalists and bystanders.
- These actions have generated public pushback, and even isolated and horrifying acts of violence—but hardly an insurrection.As the ruling turning down Trump’s demand to federalize law enforcement in Oregon notes, the administration’s assertion that Portland is in a state of revolution musters a total of four episodes of threatening behavior by protesters to justify this claim.
- One of the incidents is “protesters setting up a makeshift guillotine to intimidate federal officials.”
- Another was “someone posting a photograph of an unmarked ICE vehicle online.”
- The other two involved flashlights being shone in the faces of agents driving vehicles.These incidents may be regrettable, but they do not even constitute actual violence, let alone terrorism.
Trump is the modern day fascist:
- Authoritarianism – Strong central power, he has no tolerance for opposition or dissent. Says his opposition should be in jail, initiates court cases and FBI searches of his opposition. Soliciting bribes from companies such as Intel.
- Nationalism – Extreme pride in himself, often paired with xenophobia (fear or hatred of outsiders or foreigners). He hates brown people.
- Suppression of democracy – Weakening or abolishing democratic institutions like free elections, independent courts, or a free press. Every day promoting States getting himself more votes.
- Militarism & violence – Belief in using force, war, or paramilitary groups to achieve political goals. Sending troops to LA, Chicago, etc. and taking over DC.
- Control over society – Heavy regulation or control of culture, media, and sometimes the economy to serve the state’s goals. Regulating universities and museums. Taking over the Kennedy Center, and bullying companies. Illogical hysterical reaction to Tylenol.
- Cult of leadership – Glorification of a single leader (himself) who is portrayed as the embodiment of the nation, selected by God, etc.
The most consistent theme in Trump’s career is that any word or deed that he deems contrary to his political interests is illegitimate. Any unfavorable news story is libel, any election he loses is rigged, any unflattering fact pattern is a hoax, and almost anybody who opposes him should be locked up.
Trump seized on Charlie Kirk’s assassination to depict his own political opponents as accessories to murder. “For years, those on the radical left have compared wonderful Americans like Charlie to Nazis and the world’s worst mass murderers and criminals,” he said, in remarks reportedly written by Miller. “This kind of rhetoric is directly responsible for the terrorism that we’re seeing in our country today, and it must stop right now.”
Kirk’s death became the immediate pretext for using state power to crush political opposition.
The idea that the U.S. President has “plenary authority” under Title 10 of the U.S. Code is a false and misleading legal claim. While Title 10 grants the President significant authority over the armed forces, including the ability to federalize the National Guard, this power is not absolute or without limits.
- Constitutional checks and balances: The U.S. Constitution, which establishes a separation of powers, prevents any single branch of government from having limitless authority. The President’s power is checked by Congress and the federal courts.
- Explicit restrictions: The authority granted to the President under Title 10 is tied to specific, legally defined circumstances, such as responding to an invasion, a rebellion, or the inability of states to enforce federal law.
- Judicial oversight: Courts can, and have, reviewed the President’s actions under Title 10. For instance, courts have ruled that the conditions for federalizing the National Guard were not met in cases related to protests, invalidating the executive action.
- Posse Comitatus Act: This law generally prohibits the use of the military for domestic law enforcement. Title 10 must be applied in a manner consistent with these restrictions.
- Required procedures: Certain uses of military force, such as those related to suppressing a rebellion under the Insurrection Act, require the President to issue a proclamation ordering those involved to disperse before military action is taken.
Trump’s Intel Investment Skyrockets 50 Percent in One Month
Posted on Thursday, October 2, 2025
10-7-2025
Chicago Mayor should be in jail for failing to protect Ice Officers! Governor Pritzker also!



10-8-2025 Trump ignores ruling and sends troops anyway!
A federal judge has, for the second time in two days, blocked President Donald Trump from sending National Guard troops into Oregon, ruling that the administration appeared to defy her Saturday order that Trump lacked a legal basis for sending the military into Portland.
U.S. District Judge Karin Immergut said Sunday that the administration’s effort to circumvent her original order — in part by deploying Guard troops from California and Texas — was “in direct contravention” of her earlier decision, which prohibited Trump from federalizing 200 members of Oregon’s National Guard.
Though Trump had claimed the military was needed to combat daily violence against federal immigration officials, Immergut, a Trump appointee, concluded that Trump’s assessment was “untethered to facts” and failed to satisfy the legal basis to federalize the state’s National Guard troops.
Within hours of her ruling, however, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ordered hundreds of members of California’s National Guard to deploy to Portland and reached an agreement with Texas to send hundreds of that state’s National Guard troops to Chicago, Portland and other areas of the country.
Almost 200 California Guard troops arrived or were expected in Portland on Sunday, according to Alan Gronewold, the commander of Oregon’s National Guard. California Guard officials were told 300 of their personnel were being sent to Portland, although a Justice Department attorney said only 200 of those troops were dispatched to Oregon and the remainder would stay in California.
During an unusual Sunday night telephone hearing, Immergut said the Trump administration’s maneuvers appeared to be a deliberate attempt to circumvent her initial decision.
“I am certainly troubled by now hearing that both California and Texas National Guard are being sent into Oregon, which does appear to be in direct contravention of my order,” Immergut said, describing the latest deployments as a violation of federal law and the Tenth Amendment, which protects state sovereignty.
Immergut agreed with attorneys for California and Oregon, who said the new deployments appeared to be intended to outrun the court. She repeatedly pressed Justice Department attorney Eric Hamilton about whether he believed the administration had complied with her order.
Attorney General Pam Bondi showed up for an oversight hearing in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee today, and she brought her best Scarlett O’Hara demeanor along with her. When it was his turn, near the end of the first round of questioning, California Senator Adam Schiff listed the questions Bondi refused to answer:
- Whether she consulted ethics lawyers before Trump accepted that Qatari plane.
- Which DOJ officials ordered reviewers to flag Trump’s name whenever it was found in the Epstein files.
- The reason the investigation into the $50K bribe Tom Homan reportedly took for steering government contracts was dropped, and the current location of that money, including whether Homan reported it on his taxes if it remained in his possession.
- Why former FBI Director James Comey was indicted after earlier prosecutors determined there was not sufficient evidence to support the charges.
- Whether she approved the firing of two experienced lawyers in DOJ’s Antitrust Division. (They were fired for “insubordination,” in late July, meaning they wanted to engage in enforcing the law, not dealmaking in matters including DOJ’s decision to green-light Hewlett Packard’s $14 billion acquisition of Juniper Networks, despite the antitrust implications of the deal.)
This is DESPICABLE. Trump is planning to desecrate the White House lawn by using it to host an Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) event on June 14th for his 80th birthday. Trump is more concerned about these vanity projects than he is about benefiting the American people.

10-8-2025
I lost my consultant job in 2010 because the Federal Government did not pass a budget, but all federal employees got reimbursed for the length of the shutdown. Trump passed a law that said they would get their salaries. Now Trump is saying :
As the government shutdown hits the one-week mark with no end in sight, President Trump issued a new threat, saying that furloughed federal workers may not be reimbursed with back pay once the government reopens. It reverses what’s been a long-standing policy and possibly goes against a 2019 law that ensures back pay for federal workers.
- Coverage: It applies to both furloughed federal employees and “excepted” employees who are required to work without pay during a government shutdown.
- Payment timeline: Affected employees are to be paid as soon as possible after a lapse in appropriations ends, regardless of regular pay dates.
- Scope: The law applies to any government funding lapses that occurred after December 22, 2018, ensuring coverage for the 2018–2019 shutdown and all future shutdowns.
- The argument: The memo asserted that back pay for furloughed employees would still require a specific appropriation from Congress after the shutdown ends.
- Legal challenge: This interpretation contradicts prior guidance from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) and has been disputed by legal experts, who argue the White House claims lack legal and historical basis.
- Current status: As of October 7, 2025, the matter is contested, introducing new financial uncertainty for federal workers who are not contractors.


10-8-2025
Lawmakers voted along party lines to confirm the batch of 107 of Trump’s nominees, a move that whittled down the remaining pending nominees on the Senate’s calendar to double digits. It also came as the upper chamber was deadlocked in the midst of a government shutdown, during which floor votes have largely been dedicated to trying to reopen the government.
The slate of confirmed nominees included many of Trump’s top allies and former candidates that he hand-picked to run in previous elections.
An Office of Management and Budget FAQ document now states that only excepted employees forced to work without pay are guaranteed backpay at the conclusion of a lapse in appropriations.
The Social Security Administration evaluates disability claims by considering age, work experience and education to determine if a person can adjust to other types of work. Older applicants, typically over 50, have a better chance of qualifying because age is treated as a limitation in adapting to many jobs.
But now officials are considering eliminating age as a factor entirely or raising the threshold to age 60, according to three people familiar with the plans who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share private discussions. They also plan to modernize labor market data used to judge whether claimants can work, replacing an outdated jobs database that includes obsolete occupations such as nut sorters and telephone quotation clerks, following a Washington Post investigation in 2022.
It is unclear exactly how many Americans could lose access to disability benefits under the proposed rule changes.
10-6-2025 Trump lies
Trump keeps lying about AP case |
Twice in the past week, Trump has totally distorted the status of The AP’s press access lawsuit against the White House. “We won,” he told military leaders last Tuesday. “They lost,” he told Navy sailors yesterday, adding, “They got thrown out of court and are almost not allowed to cover me because of that.”
The AP is pointing out that those claims are incorrect: “The court ruled in AP’s favor — in a strong opinion in support of free speech — and the government is appealing,” a rep said last night. While an appeals court handed AP “an incremental loss” in June, it’s far from over, as no appeals court has ruled on the merits yet. There is an oral argument slated for Nov. 24… |





10-4-2025 Trump talking
[Background]
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard on Friday released a slew of documents that she said implicate members of the Obama administration for “treasonous” behavior during the 2016 election.
The claims confuse the allegation that Russia interfered in the 2016 election with the idea that Russia actively tried to change results by hacking into voting systems. CNN’s Jeremy Herb and Katie Bo Lillis went through them and talked to people who worked on a bipartisan Senate review of the 2016 election.
“Wildly misleading” is how the information was described by one source in their report.
But that didn’t stop President Donald Trump from accusing former President Barack Obama of treason, a crime punishable by death in the US, when he was asked about it in the Oval Office on Tuesday. Trump made the accusation while appearing at an event to discuss trade with Philippines leader Ferdinand Marcos Jr.
Trump’s very long, meandering answer (below in Black) is a window into how his mind works. All roads lead back to immigration and his 2020 election loss.
Obama’s office issued a rare statement in response:
“Out of respect for the office of the presidency, our office does not normally dignify the constant nonsense and misinformation flowing out of this White House with a response. But these claims are outrageous enough to merit one,” said spokesman Patrick Rodenbush. “These bizarre allegations are ridiculous and a weak attempt at distraction. Nothing in the document issued last week undercuts the widely accepted conclusion that Russia worked to influence the 2016 presidential election but did not successfully manipulate any votes. These findings were affirmed in a 2020 report by the bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee, led by then-Chairman Marco Rubio.”
Here’s a look at what Trump said, along with some context from CNN reporting.
(From CNN’s report: The new allegations from Gabbard lean on assessments before the election and statements from Obama-era intelligence officials finding that Russia did not alter the election results through cyber-attacks aimed at infiltrating voting systems. But the January 2017 intelligence community assessment never concluded that Russian cyberattacks altered the outcome of the 2016 election or compromised any election infrastructure in the first place, though state voting systems were probed.
Instead, the assessment focused on Russia’s influence campaign ordered by President Vladimir Putin and cyber operations against US and Democratic Party officials, including the hacked emails released by WikiLeaks.)
Kent Nishimura/Reuters
(Trump did win in 2024. It was far from a landslide.)
10-4-2025 GOP stalling
House Republican leaders urged unity in their shutdown fight against Democrats on a call with GOP members Saturday morning, with members on the call backing up Speaker Mike Johnson’s (R-La.) move to cancel previously-scheduled votes next week as they aim to pressure Senate Democrats into accepting their “clean” seven-week funding bill.
They also do not want to vote to release the Epstein files.
Even if a ceasefire succeeded, he said, he had no home to return to — Israel razed his neighborhood when it took over the border city, he said.
“There is no trust, and we are tired from all the agreements failing,” he said. “Oh God, we are tired.”
10-3-2025 PM Update
Israeli media reported that the country’s political echelon had instructed the military to “reduce offensive activity” in Gaza. The bombing has continued.
(not stop it or exit from Gaza, nor stop what they may refer to as “defensive”)
Hamas Situation
Notes:
Hamas Statement
1, Calls what Israel is doing genocide
2. End the war
3. Exchange prisoners
4. Immediate entry of aid.
5. No occupation.
6. No displacement of people.
7. Full Israel withdrawal.
8. Administration by Palestinians.
9. Palestinean National Framework.
10. Hamas will be Included and will contribute with full responsibility
Relative to Trump’s 20 items
1. Terror free zone not addressed.
2. Redeveloped Palestine to decide.
3. Israel to fully withdraw, not to the line which included most of Gaza..
4. 72 hours not addressed.
5. Release of hostages agreed to.
6. Hamas is not agreeing to leave. Hamas will be Included and will contribute with full responsibility
7. Humanitarian aid agreed to.
8. Aid distribution not addressed.
9. T:” technocratic, apolitical Palestinian committee” vs H: “Palestinian body of independents (technocrats) based on Palestinian national consensus “
10. “overseen by an international transitional body — the “Board of Peace”, to be chaired by President Trump..” Not Addressed
11. Trump economic plan Not Addressed
12. “Special economic zone” Not Addressed
13. No displacement of people agreed to.
14. “Hamas and other factions will have no role in governance” NOT AGREED TO
14 a. Military structure to be destroyed” Not addressed
15. Demilitarization Not Addressed
16. Regional guarantors Not Addressed
17. Us and other military stationed there Not addressed
18. Transition Not Agreed to
19. Interfaith Dialog Not addressed
20. Pathway to Palestinian self determination/statehood Required NOW
In summary, Trump wanted to get everything and stay in control, Hamas says NO, Israel to just stop and leave.
Not a path to peace so far.
Palestinian response:
Out of keenness to end the aggression and genocide being carried out against our steadfast people in the Giza Strip. And stemming from national responsibility and in defense of the constants. rights. and higher interests of our people. the Islamic Resistance Movement Hamas has conducted in-depth consultations within its leadership institutions. broad consultations with Palestinian forces and factions. and consultations with brothers. mediators, and friends. in order to reach a responsible position in dealing with U.S. President Donald Trump’s plan.
After thorough study, the movement has made its decision and conveyed the following response to the mediators:
Hamas appreciates the Arab. Islamic, and international efforts. as well as the efforts of U.S. President Donald Trump. calling for an end to the war on the Gaza Strip. the exchange of prisoners. the immediate entry of aid, the rejection of the occupation of the Strip and the rejection of the displacement of our Palestinian people from it.
Within this framework. and in a manner that achieves an end to the war and full withdrawal from the Strip, the movement announces its approval of releasing all occupation prisoners-both living and remains-according to the exchange formula contained in President Trump’s proposal with the necessary field conditions for implementing the exchange. In this context the movement affirms its readiness to immediately enter, through the mediators, into negotiations to discuss the details.
The movement also reaffirms its approval to hand over the administration of the Gaza Strip to a Palestinian body of independents (technocrats) based on Palestinian national consensus and supported by Arab and Islamic backing.
As for other issues included in President Trump’s proposal concerning the future of the Gaza Strip and the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people. this is tied to a collective national position and in accordance with relevant international laws and resolutions. to be discussed within a comprehensive Palestinian national framework, in which Hamas will be Included and will contribute with full responsibility.
Reconstructed Trump 20 points (numbered) RE: Gaza
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Gaza will be a de-radicalized, terror-free zone that does not threaten neighboring states. Al Jazeera
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Gaza will be redeveloped for the benefit of its people, prioritizing reconstruction and services. Al Jazeera
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If both sides accept, the war will end immediately: Israeli forces withdraw to an agreed line and operations are suspended while hostage release is prepared. Al Jazeera
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Within 72 hours of Israel publicly accepting the agreement, all hostages — living and deceased — will be returned. Al Jazeera
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After hostages are returned, Israel will release 250 life-sentence prisoners plus ~1,700 Gazans detained since Oct 7, 2023 (including women and children); for each Israeli remains returned, Israel will release remains of 15 deceased Gazans. Al Jazeera
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Hamas members who commit to peaceful coexistence and decommission weapons will receive amnesty; those wishing to leave Gaza will be given safe passage to receiving countries. Al Jazeera
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Immediate, scaled humanitarian aid will be sent into Gaza on acceptance, consistent with prior aid agreements, including infrastructure, hospitals, bakeries, rubble-removal equipment, and open roads. Al Jazeera
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Aid distribution will proceed through the UN, Red Crescent and other impartial international agencies without interference by either party; reopening Rafah will follow established mechanisms. Al Jazeera
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Gaza will be governed temporarily by a technocratic, apolitical Palestinian committee responsible for day-to-day public services and municipalities. Al Jazeera
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That technocratic committee will be overseen by an international transitional body — the “Board of Peace”, to be chaired by President Trump and including other senior figures (the White House named Tony Blair among potential members). This Board will set framework and funding for redevelopment. Al Jazeera+1
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A Trump economic development plan will convene expert panels (modeled on modern Middle Eastern development projects) to attract investment, create jobs and implement redevelopment ideas. Al Jazeera
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A special economic zone will be established in Gaza with negotiated tariff/access preferences to incentivize investment. Al Jazeera
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No one will be forced to leave Gaza; people may stay, leave, or return — the plan encourages rebuilding and offers opportunities to remain. Al Jazeera
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Hamas and other factions will have no role in governance, directly or indirectly; all military/terror infrastructure (tunnels, weapons production) will be destroyed and not rebuilt. Al Jazeera
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A demilitarization process will be implemented under independent monitors, including permanent decommissioning of weapons and an internationally funded buy-back and reintegration program (verified by monitors). Al Jazeera
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Regional guarantors will provide assurances that Hamas and factions comply and that “New Gaza” poses no threat to neighbors. Al Jazeera
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The United States and partners will form a temporary International Stabilization Force (ISF) to deploy in Gaza, train and support vetted Palestinian police, and coordinate with Israel, Egypt and regional actors to secure borders and prevent weapons flows. Al Jazeera
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As the ISF and transitional authority establish stability, the IDF will progressively hand territory to the ISF and withdraw according to agreed milestones and demilitarization benchmarks; a limited security perimeter may remain until fully secure. Al Jazeera
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An interfaith dialogue initiative will be established to promote tolerance and change narratives among Palestinians and Israelis. Al Jazeera
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If PA reforms succeed and conditions are met, there may be a pathway to Palestinian self-determination/statehood; the U.S. will maintain a dialogue between Israel and the Palestinians to pursue a political horizon of peaceful, prosperous coexistence. Al Jazeera+1
Project 2025
A year later, we now have confirmation that Democrats were right. Upon returning to power, the Republican president and his White House team put Project 2025’s authors in positions of power, implemented its provisions and have abandoned efforts to distance Trump from the plan he pretended to know nothing about.
10-3-2025 GOP to not negotiate
Senate Democrats and Republicans on Friday failed to pass competing bills to fund the government, extending the shutdown into next week. The measures were expected to fail. Shortly after the failed votes, the House GOP said it would extend its recess through Oct. 13. 10 days so they will not negotiate. |
10-3-2025
The Trump administration announced Wednesday it was freezing $18 billion in federal funding for infrastructure projects in New York City, citing concerns about diversity, equity and inclusion policies.
New York was also one of more than a dozen states targeted when the administration said it was canceling nearly $8 billion in funding for green energy projects.
10-3-2025 No deal
Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) failed to pick up any additional Democratic votes for the seven-week funding measure, leaving the tally at 54-44. It needed 60 votes to pass.
Three members of the Democratic caucus voted to advance the bill: Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.), John Fetterman (D-Pa.) and Sen. Angus King (Maine), an independent who caucuses with Democrats.
Cortez Masto, Fetterman and King voted twice previously for the bill, saying they wanted to avoid a shutdown that would hurt constituents and give more power to Trump to cut agencies and fire federal employees.
Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) was the only Republican vote against it.
‘Signs of psychosis’: Trump’s ‘deranged’ late-night ‘reaper’ video sparks alarm Lyrics like “Now the time has come. Here their power’s gone. Russ Vought is the reaper. He wields the pen, the funds, the brain,” accompany a dystopian walk through scenes featuring photos of Democrats hanging in a hallway. “This is what the president is doing while the government is shut down. We’re so screwed,” wrote Democratic influencer Harry Sisson on his X account. Political commentator George Conway took to X to note “Signs of psychosis. No biggie.” “This one has come from Miller. It’s out of his genre and vibe. Makes me think after the Quantico word salad, he’s had another health setback and the social media has been taken over by Project 2025,” Author Helen Allen said on her X account. “Trump’s unhinged rants and occult memes aren’t just signs of psychosis, they’re a national security nightmare, proving he’s too deranged to wield power without endangering us all,” noted political commentator Richard Angwin on X. “I don’t want to hear anything from the right about Obama being divisive (…) blah (…) blah (…) or disrespect towards Charlie Kirk anymore. Trump is the most unhinged, divisive and hateful clown of a POTUS in U.S history. Its not even close,” wrote retired Wall Street analyst Leonidas K on X.
10-3-2026
This is our President spewing lies about the shut down, and promoting the shut down as well. Who is responsible?
No “illegal alien” gets health care from Obama Care!
This is what is called a strawman argument. Trump makes up something that is not on the table and strikes at that.
The problem is the almost doubling of the cost of Obama Care because Trump wants to kill it. Not that Democrats want to change how it is delivered!! Or who it is given to!

10-3-2025
Trump posted this (as well as stupid fake videos).

10-3-2025
Government Gridlock – The Final Act in a Collapse
Trump loves a breakdown and will capitalize on it. Every standoff… every headline… every day of bickering on Capital Hill is fueling Wall Street’s growing paranoia. The political gridlock has caused market jitters and heightened anxiety over the release of critical economic data.
With stalemates in congress, a long government shutdown is a strong possibility.
We’ve seen the damage this can do to our economy. In 2018/2019, a 5-week shutdown cost taxpayers $3 billion dollars (in 2019 dollars) in permanent losses.
Factor in America’s $37.5 trillion in debt and the dollar having its worst start to a year since 1973, declining approximately 11%, all roads seem to lead to an economic collapse that we may never recover from.
And who will feel the impact first? Every American with a 401(k), IRA, TSP, or pension.
Wall Street has no patience, they panic. When the AI bubble bursts, the chaos will lead to selloffs, and losses that could wipe out a decade’s worth of your contributions in a matter of days. Many analysts compare the current AI market to the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s. This precedent is often cited to illustrate how a bubble bursts and why sell-offs occur.
Overvaluation: Many internet companies in the 90s attracted massive investments based on future potential, not current profitability. Many AI firms today are in a similar situation, raising large sums with unclear paths to revenue. However, unlike the dot-com era, many major AI players are already generating substantial revenue.
Speculative investment: The dot-com crash was fueled by speculation rather than business fundamentals. Similarly, skeptics point to signs of frothiness in the AI market, where any news related to AI can cause disproportionate stock price surges, as seen with Oracle in September 2025.
Disconnection between investment and returns: A recent MIT study found that 95% of corporate AI pilot projects fail to yield meaningful results, despite tens of billions in investment. This echoes the dot-com era, where massive infrastructure investments outpaced actual demand.
Factors that could trigger a sell-off
A number of specific triggers could spark widespread selling if investor sentiment shifts negatively:
Failed AI projects: Continued reports of AI initiatives failing to produce returns could erode investor confidence and trigger panic selling, as some investors may conclude that the technology’s benefits are overhyped.
Unexpected competition: A single event, like the emergence of a low-cost competitor, could have a ripple effect across the market. This occurred in January 2025 when the free Chinese AI model DeepSeek challenged US dominance, causing Nvidia’s stock to drop 17% in a single day and triggering broader tech sell-offs.
Market concentration: The current market is heavily concentrated in a few large tech companies, such as the “Magnificent Seven.” If one of these bellwether stocks stumbles, it could drag the entire market down with it, sparking a broader sell-off.
AI-driven trading algorithms: Many trading algorithms are designed to reduce risk when market volatility increases. A minor downturn could trigger these algorithms to sell simultaneously, creating a cascade effect that drives prices down further and faster.
Potential consequences
The impact of an AI bubble bursting and subsequent sell-off would likely extend beyond the stock market and could include:
Economic recession: A significant market downturn could have a ripple effect throughout the real economy, potentially triggering a recession and increasing unemployment.
Market volatility: The chaos would likely be accompanied by a spike in market volatility, as seen in market corrections driven by fear and uncertainty.
Shift to safer investments: Investors might become more risk-averse, moving toward more stable assets and long-term, passive strategies to weather the storm.
Increased scrutiny of AI ventures: A sell-off could lead to increased scrutiny of AI startups and business models. Financially weak companies—especially those lacking strong business plans—would likely struggle, while stronger, profitable firms might be better positioned to weather the downturn.
Everyone’s wondering if, and when, the AI bubble will pop …A recent MIT study found that 95% of AI pilot projects fail to yield meaningful results, despite more than $40 billion investments…
Yahoo Finance
Everyone’s wondering if, and when, the AI bubble will pop. … – Fortune
Sep 27, 2025 — The similarities are striking. Like the internet companies of two decades ago, AI firms today attract massive investments and yet fail…
Fortune
Is AI the cause of the market selloff? – by Jake Handy
Aug 4, 2024 — As one analyst noted, “In our assessment a lot of this (market sell-off) has been down to position capitulation.

Republicans went on holiday and would not negotiate.

10-2-2025
TrumpRx Is Obamacare in Trump’s Handwriting
Pfizer wins big in Trump’s new drug discount gimmick.
This week, President Donald Trump announced the next in a long line of vanity projects: TrumpRX, a forthcoming, federally branded website where Pfizer sells steeply discounted drugs in exchange for a three-year exemption from his proposed 100 percent tariffs on imported pharmaceuticals. Imagine a strip mall furniture store with a permanent, flashy 70-percent-off sale, masking the fact that prices were inflated in the first place. TrumpRx, slated to launch in early 2026, is no different—a government-run platform that promises savings while hiding costs.
But this isn’t just another Trump-branded vanity project like the ill-fated Trump Steaks or Trump University. It’s a wild pivot in right-leaning political thought on health care, and it’s a gut punch for those who see where this road leads.
Flash back to 2016: Trump hammering the Affordable Care Act, calling it a “disaster” and suggesting that the government’s only role should be to ensure these companies have “plenty of money.” He was channeling what economists had long warned: Government-run health care distorts markets, creates perverse incentives, and collapses under its own weight. Now, the president is embracing the very heavy-handed tactics he once trashed.
What is TrumpRx?
TrumpRx isn’t healthcare reform or even a program in any real sense. It’s a carve-out for one company. Under the agreement, Pfizer will list a large share of its primary care and select specialty drugs at deep discounts on a federal site that redirects patients to Pfizer’s direct-to-consumer checkout.
Examples of savings floated by the administration include Xeljanz (list price of $6,073/month) for arthritis and other conditions at about 40 percent off, Eucrisa (list price of $692) for eczema at $162 on TrumpRx, and newer brands like Zavzpret for migraines and Duavee for symptoms of menopause, included in the mix. In return, Pfizer receives a three-year grace period from the pharmaceutical tariffs while pledging $70 billion in U.S. manufacturing and research and development.
It’s a protection racket in reverse. The president rattles his tariff saber, Pfizer pays its tribute in the form of price cuts, and voilà, TrumpRx is born.
Who Does This Help?
The savings are shaky because that money has to come from somewhere. Part of it, certainly, is just the market advantage of being exempted from a 100 percent tax that all your competitors are forced to pay. Any savings beyond that will be carved out of something else—less research, higher prices on other drugs, or hidden costs buried elsewhere in the system.
And for most people, the ‘discounts’ aren’t really discounts. Roughly 90 percent of Americans are insured, and their co-pays are almost always cheaper than TrumpRx’s cash prices. Medicaid patients already get the steepest rebates—more than 60 percent off by law—so TrumpRx adds little there. That leaves the approximately 27 million uninsured Americans.
But even for the uninsured, the math falls apart: A $6,000 arthritis drug at “half price” is still $3,000 in cash, a stretch on any budget. Eucrisa at $162 on TrumpRx beats few insurance copays. And $499/month for Wegovy (semaglutide) on TrumpRx compares poorly to the $25 many insured patients now pay. And all of this bypasses the way Americans actually get prescriptions. CVS, Walgreens, and the rest are cut out entirely, replaced by a federally branded coupon pop-up that punts you to a manufacturer’s checkout page. TrumpRx looks like a deal, but in practice, it helps almost no one.
How much it helps Trump’s bottom line will never be known as Pfizer can purchase Trump’s bitcoin to line Trump’s pocket.
10-2-2025
Over the years, Qatar has served quietly a central role in U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East. The country has hosted a Hamas political office since 2012, a move local officials say they made at the explicit request of the U.S.
Even before Qatar was mediating the Gaza ceasefire, it was a critical bridge between the U.S. and the Taliban during peace talks on Afghanistan and during the evacuation in 2021. Qatar has also helped secure prisoner exchanges between Russia and Ukraine. And in 2023, it was Qatar that mediated a prisoner swap between the U.S. and Iran.
Qatar has also loomed over lucrative deals negotiated by some in Trump’s orbit. The son of Trump’s Middle East Envoy Steve Witkoff sought money from gulf states, including Qatar, as the elder Witkoff met with Qatari mediators on the Gaza ceasefire, the New York Times found.
“In the Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act, Congress consented to some gifts, including gifts valued up to $480, and certain ceremonial gifts, but that certainly does not include a 747 airplane,” said Richard Painter, who served as White House ethics lawyer for President George W. Bush.
But Trump has never been one to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest. Some analysts say that the questionable deals between Trump and the Qatari’s may have swayed the president toward offering the security guarantee.
The U.S. & Qatar signed defense & aviation agreements.
During the trip, there was discussion of Qatar offering (or gifting) a luxury Boeing 747-8 to the U.S., to be used as an interim Air Force One, though details are murkier.
Also, a real-estate development: Qatar (via Qatari Diar & Dar Global) introduced a Trump-branded project in Qatar – Trump International Golf Course & Villas in the Simaisma resort area.
10-2-2025
Trump To Cancel Biden-Era Green Energy Grants, but Only for Blue States
The president would be justified in wanting to rescind all state grants. Instead, he’s apparently letting states that voted for him keep the cash.
Some lawmakers and experts have said the notification is a dubious legal justification for what have been unlawful military strikes on alleged civilian criminals in the Western Hemisphere, a far cry from combatants engaged in direct battle with American forces.
“The United States has now reached a critical point where we must use force in self-defense and defense of others against the ongoing attacks by these designated terrorist organizations,” the notice reads.The administration has described recent strikes against alleged traffickers at sea as targeting Venezuelan gangs, though the notice to Congress, reported earlier by the New York Times, did not name any specific organizations.
10-2-2025
The Trump administration that has waxed loudly about horrible criminals has NO issue with breaking the law itself. Following the shutdown, many federal government websites carry the same sort of “warning” that the Justice Department’s does.
It’s a partisan message, blaming Democrats for the government shutdown (even though Republicans control the White House, the Senate, and the House). And it’s being paid for with taxpayer dollars on government websites. That’s a clear violation of the Hatch Act, which restricts civilian executive branch employees from participating in partisan political activity. And as if irony isn’t already dead, it’s also on the DOJ website page advising employees they are subject to the Hatch Act.
Imagine if a Democratic president had done this. The Hatch Act may seem like a small thing, but it isn’t. It’s how Congress has chosen to prevent the party that is in power from abusing the resources entrusted to it and government employees and using them for political advantage. Employees are prohibited from engaging in political activity while on duty. They can’t wear clothing with political slogans on it. But now, all of government is clothed in this rank and deceitful political exercise.
So when this administration talks about Democrats as though they’re at fault in all of this, the ones who are trying to divide the country with hate, remember this Hatch Act violation, which will likely go unaddressed because Trump doesn’t care about the rule of law or about what’s right. It may seem like a small thing, but it used to be a big one. Until the first Trump administration and during the Biden administration, the Hatch Act was taken seriously. But with Trump, L’état c’est moi. This is a lawless administration that wants only one thing: more power.
Education Department employees are discovering their automatic email responses during the government shutdown have been unknowingly changed to blame Democrats for the lapse in funding. |
10-2-2025
On September 25, The New York Times reported on a directive issued by a “senior Justice Department official” to “more than a half dozen U.S. attorneys’ offices,” instructing them “to draft plans to investigate a group funded by George Soros, the billionaire Democratic donor who President Trump has demanded be thrown in jail.” In multiple ways, this represents a flagrant violation of the rule of law and norms of justice, and in each of them, the situation departs markedly from Obama-era alleged malfeasance.
First and most obviously, the call to investigate Soros’ group is part of a pattern in which Trump is not just overseeing executive branch operations but personally weighing in on the substantive exercise of state power and even forcibly overruling those tasked with impartially implementing the law. At least until recently, it was widely recognized that presidents are political actors motivated by political concerns—exactly the types of concerns that are not supposed to enter into decisions about, say, whom the Department of Justice (DOJ) investigates and prosecutes.
Trump has disregarded the expectation that presidents remain at arm’s length so as to prevent partisan considerations from implicitly or even inadvertently bleeding over into tasks that must be nonpolitical if the system is to maintain its credibility. Even if he were not intentionally weaponizing the DOJ against his political opponents, his direct involvement would be a red flag. Again, nothing of the kind can be said of Obama and the IRS.
Second is the fact that Trump is weaponizing the federal bureaucracy against his political opponents—explicitly so. As I documented just before the last election, he has repeatedly called for his rivals and critics to be arrested and jailed. For what, exactly? His minions will figure that out later.
This reverses the order of operations that characterizes a legitimate system of justice. As the conservative lawyer (and DOJ alum) Gregg Nunziata pointed out, “The government investigates crimes, finds those responsible, and prosecutes them. Trump would have the government investigate his enemies, find crimes, and prosecute them. This is quite literally a mortal threat to all our liberties.”
To begin with a target—particularly one you’ve chosen for political reasons—and then go looking for misdeeds to punish is a perversion of due process. The perception that that’s what was happening is what made the IRS scandal a scandal. The Soros case, where a high-ranking official is asking his subordinates to come up with a reason to subject a major donor from the other party to law enforcement action (as opposed to observing wrongdoing and following the facts from there), is just as scandalous. That it’s happening in broad daylight, without shame or apology, makes it immeasurably more destructive to the legal and social order.
Finally, the ostensible rationale in this case is one that should be troubling to civil libertarians and anyone else who cares about free speech. The call to investigate Soros’ Open Society Foundations followed immediately on the heels of a report by Ryan Mauro of the Capital Research Center, a conservative advocacy group, which faults the foundation for having “poured over $80 million into groups tied to terrorism or extremist violence” and recommends “various accountability actions, including federal investigations and prosecutions, U.S. State Department and Treasury Department sanctions, revocations of tax-exempt statuses of Open Society and its grantees by the Internal Revenue Service, congressional investigations, and civil lawsuits.”
A closer examination shows that those supposed ties to terrorism include an awful lot of First Amendment–protected activity. For example, Mauro claims that Open Society has given millions of dollars to grantees “that have endorsed terrorist attacks like those on October 7, 2023, and/or are directly linked to foreign terrorist groups or their known front groups.” In many cases, grant recipients are considered to have links to terrorism merely for having downplayed (in the author’s view) the atrocities perpetrated by Hamas.
Consider this Instagram post by the progressive group 18 Million Rising, which urges “our Asian American community to join in support” for the “Palestinian people rising up against 75+ years of Israeli settler colonial violence and occupation.” It features a painting of a crying mother and child bearing the words “From the river to the sea Palestine will be free.”
That phrase is deeply offensive to many supporters of Israel, and understandably so. But it’s still a phrase—that is to say, a textbook instance of political expression. While it’s fine to criticize groups who express ideas you find abhorrent (just as it was fine to criticize people who celebrated the assassination of Charlie Kirk), using the coercive power of the state to punish such speech is another matter. And punishing someone for having a financial relationship with someone else who has expressed unsavory views is even less defensible.
In some cases, the supposed terrorist sympathizer is multiple steps removed from the grantmaking institution: According to the Capital Research Center, some grant recipients do not themselves support terrorism and may even have condemned Hamas’ attack on Israel, but mere association with activists who have sided with the Palestinians is presented as reason enough to turn the U.S. government against the Open Society Foundations.
A related claim is that Soros has funded groups such as the Movement for Black Lives that “engage in or materially assist violence, property destruction, economic sabotage, harassment, and other criminality” here in the U.S. Yet few of the report’s examples of objectionable behavior involve actual violence, and a considerable number amount to petty infractions and mild civil disobedience. To treat things like “using false IDs” and “revealing the identities of government agents” as “acts of domestic terrorism,” as Mauro seems to do, is dubious in the extreme. To further include legal actions, such as posting bail and providing legal defenses to arrested protestors, or saying nice things about the Chinese Communist Party, ought to set off alarm bells for all those concerned with preserving a free society.
When laws are broken, perpetrators need to be brought to justice. It’s fair to think that prosecutors should be doing more to respond to genuine violence, property destruction, and actions that egregiously interfere with the normal functioning of society, such as shutting down roads and bridges. But stretching the definition of “domestic terrorism” and allowing it to become an all-purpose pretextual weapon for ideologues in positions of power to use against their enemies is a massive strategic misstep in addition to being unjust.
Imagine if Democrats went after a think tank that gave a prize to Tucker Carlson because Carlson has sided with Russia over Ukraine and platformed Holocaust revisionism. Or if donors to an international pro-life organization were accused of funding the criminal activities of foreign elements because some of the group’s members have been arrested for praying outside U.K. abortion clinics. Is this really a path conservatives want to go down? How does the right think things will play out next time left-wing activists—the kind who like to accuse Christian traditionalists of perpetuating a genocide against LGBT bodies—have the ear of White House senior staff?
The Capital Research Center accuses Soros of “a systemic pattern of empowering groups that glorify violence and destabilize societies.” This is exactly the kind of language that might be turned against any movement protesting entrenched injustices, from the civil rights demonstrations of the 1960s to the March for Life today.
Conservatives once understood all of this. In the wake of the IRS scandal, Bradley A. Smith, a Republican former chairman of the Federal Election Commission, reflected in an op-ed on the “lesson on abuse of power” to be learned from that experience. “The real problems are first, the president and leaders in Congress should not use their power to pressure the bureaucracy to do their partisan bidding,” he wrote, “and second, if you give government the tools to regulate political speech, the government will weaponize them for partisan gain by the party in power. No ‘criminal’ behavior is necessary.”
10-2-2025
The Food and Drug Administration this week approved a generic version of the abortion pill mifepristone, expanding the supply of the medication at a time when the Trump administration is under pressure from abortion opponents to sharply restrict access to abortion pills.
The approval, issued on Tuesday, means that three American companies can now produce mifepristone for abortion. The F.D.A. approved the original pill 25 years ago and gave approval in 2019 for another company to produce a generic version.
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9-30-2025 Trump grift
A Forbes article (June 2025) estimates that over the prior ~9 months, Trump’s involvement in crypto (various ventures) has “made” him roughly $1 billion (i.e. net gains) in that time horizon. Forbes
Trump executed a pump and dump with Trump Media, netting him billions. Media outlets have noted that Trump’s stake in DJT “helped lift his overall net worth” in public estimates. For example, CBS reported that “Trump’s stake in the social network has helped lift his overall net worth to $5.5 billion, more than double his $2.4 billion in wealth at the start of 2024.”
A “pump and dump” is a type of securities fraud in which the price of a stock is artificially inflated (the “pump”)—often via misleading positive statements, hype, or coordinated buying—so that insiders or early holders can sell at a high price (the “dump”), leaving later buyers with losses.
Key signs often include:
- Heavy promotional / hype activity (especially on social media) not matched by fundamentals
- Sudden bursts of trading volume and price without clear catalyst
- Insider selling after price run-up
- Weak business fundamentals to justify the high valuation
- Rapid decline after insiders unwind positions
The stock was $50 when he pumped it and people bought it on Trump being president, now it is $16, people lost, Trump profited.
Trump — strongest public evidence & legal status
Pay-for-access via private club memberships / dining. Reporting shows Trump raised Mar-a-Lago membership prices substantially and hosted high-price donor dinners that critics say give wealthy guests enhanced proximity to the president — a classic pay-for-access concern. Journalistic lists of who paid to dine with Trump have been published. The Guardian+1
Opaque financing for Trump Media & foreign loans. Investigations (e.g., Guardian reporting and subsequent probes) documented bridge loans and investments (ES Family Trust, etc.) into Trump Media that were structured through opaque entities and raised questions about foreign money and influence. Those financing flows are central to questions about outside influence on Trump projects. The Guardian+1
Other ethics concerns / appointments. Journalists and watchdogs have documented links between donors, members, and appointments or favors; congressional groups and watchdogs have flagged “pay-to-play” patterns as ethically problematic though not always criminally prosecuted. NewsTRACS
Main limits / open questions: direct proof that Trump traded specific official acts for payments in a criminal sense; whether the financing arrangements rose to criminal bribery or racketeering; and disentangling legitimate business revenue from improper influence. Some Trump-related entities have faced legal penalties in other contexts (tax, corporate practice), but not a judicial finding that Trump ran a coordinated influence-peddling racket.

A ‘big show’ in Portland |
That’s what Portland, Oregon mayor Keith Wilson called it when residents noticed an uptick in federal agents on Friday night. “This may be a show of force, but that’s all it is. It’s a big show, and after the big show, everyone goes home,” he remarked. Trump confirmed the “show” on Saturday, writing that he told Pete Hegseth to “provide all necessary troops” to the “war ravaged” city.
Trump’s rhetoric has pushed many Portlanders to post photos of what life is really like in the city. “The war will not be televised. Mainly because it doesn’t exist ” Rolling Stone senior politics writer Tim Dickinson wrote on Bluesky from outside the ICE facility that has drawn many protests. CNN’s Andy Rose has more on the local reactions here…
|

Trump indeed was laughed at during his 2017 UN speech — but in September 2025 things got worse.
It’s definitely not a laughing matter when the most powerful country in the world is totally at whims of a deranged old man set on personal vendettas.
“Your countries are going to hell!” told Trump to the stunned world leaders at the U.N. general assembly on Sep.24, 2025.
- 46% of Trump’s 56-minute speech was dedicated to referencing himself and his administration.
- Only 17% of Trump’s speech was actually about foreign policy: wars, NATO, and trade.
- 11% was dedicated to illegal immigration.
- 8% was dedicated to criticism of the U.N.
- 7% was about the climate/green energy hoax.
- 6% was about the U.S. domestic issues.
- 3% was dedicated to Trump’s whining that he didn’t get the real estate deal to renovate the U.N. building in New York decades ago.
- 1.7% was Trump’s complaints about the teleprompter not working (it was operated by Trump’s team) and escalator coming to a halt (i.e. turning into stairs) as one of his entourage accidentally tripped the safety switch, as Trump stepped on it.
I think loud laughing would be totally appropriate — but the leaders gave Trump a polite round of applause, when he finished.
UK’s “Mirror” gave its verdict on the front page.
9/28/2025 TikTok
Trump wants to control what you see, he wants to turn TikTok into a Republican only platform where he can not allow anything he does not like. The prize everyone is fighting over is the algorithm itself—the secret engine that decides what billions of people see every day.Many users now fear a future where their voices are surveilled or quietly silenced. The concern isn’t just about Beijing. A U.S. takeover could place that same megaphone in the grip of American tech giants and media moguls, swapping one gatekeeper for another. We’ve already watched how Elon Musk’s purchase of Twitter turned it into a volatile, hyper-partisan space. A “U.S. TikTok” could suffer the same fate, only with even greater reach.
- Designated ANTIFA as a terrorist organization in an executive order on Monday,
- Issued a memorandum on Thursday titled “Countering Domestic Terrorism and Organized Political Violence,” a one-sided recitation of political violence in this country, referring, for instance, to Charlie Kirk’s murder but not the attacks on Minnesota legislators and their families, before concluding that recent political violence, “is a culmination of sophisticated, organized campaigns of targeted intimidation … and violence” and apparently designating anyone who actively opposes Trump as potentially part of a domestic terror group and subject to criminal investigation (there is no legal mechanism for designating domestic terror organizations in the U.S. and any attempt to do so would surely face First Amendment challenges for violating free speech, association, and assembly rights),
- Indicted former FBI Director Jim Comey,
- Directed his appointees at the Justice Department to “instruct more than a half dozen U.S. attorney’s offices to draft plans to investigate a group funded by George Soros, the billionaire Democratic donor whom President Trump has demanded be thrown in jail.”
9/28/2025 Trump tweet:
“This appears to be yet another targeted attack on Christians in the United States of America.”
Nope it is an attack BY A CHRISTIAN!
Many Christian denominations do not consider Mormons to be “Christians” in the theological sense because LDS doctrines about God and Jesus differ so sharply from historic creeds like the Nicene Creed.
Some evangelicals see Mormonism as a “false gospel” and actively oppose its teachings.
Enough so a Christian killed Mormons and burned down their church with them in it!



Trump is exactly the type of leader the Founding Fathers tried so hard to keep out of the White House, wrote the Constitution and created institutional checks and balances to avoid.
Sadly, it has failed. This generation has failed; firstly, by voting him into power. Secondly, by not reading the absolutely HUGE red flags since January this year. Granted, we all make mistakes. But please: how on Earth anyone would vote into power a liar, a corrupt, failed business man with clear Russian ties (documented), saved from bankrupcy 6x by them, with a personal vendetta agenda, a felon with over 4,000 court cases and deranged man with clear, stated dictatorial tendencies (admitted by him during the campaign), and admitted admirer of all other dictactors is beyond me.
Finally, sure, we can all make mistakes. But NOW, given it is obvious the US is unquestionably heading for a dictatorship WHY people (especially Republicans) are not motivated enough to do something about it is really beyond my and any logical, sane person´s level of comprehension.
God help America because it doesn´t seem anyone else is willing to do so.
9-26-2025
It was an extraordinary week. The slumbering giant of America is awakening.
Americans forced Disney and its affiliates to put Jimmy Kimmel back on the air. Over 6 million people watched Kimmel’s Tuesday monologue assailing Trump’s attempt to censor him. Another 26 million watched it on social media, including YouTube. (Kimmel’s usual television audience is about 1.42 million.)
Trump’s dictatorial narcissism revealed itself nearly as dramatically in the criminal indictment of former FBI director James Comey, coming immediately after Trump fired the U.S. attorney who refused to indict him.
As did Trump’s demand that prosecutors go after philanthropist George Soros, Senator Adam Schiff, New York Attorney General Letitia James, and other perceived enemies.
As did Trump’s order yesterday, directing the “Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth” to use “full force, if necessary” to “protect War ravaged Portland” Oregon and any “ICE Facilities under siege from attack by Antifa, and other domestic terrorists.” He is escalating his use of the U.S. military against Americans.
There was also his bonkers speech to the United Nations telling delegates that their nations are “going to hell.” His attribution of autism to Tylenol, even though doctors say it is safe for pregnant women in moderation. His unilateral imposition of tariffs as high as 100 percent on imports of pharmaceuticals and kitchen cabinets.
Friends, his neofascism and his dementia are both in plain sight.
Americans — including independents and many Republicans — are appalled by what we’re seeing
His polls continue to drop.
Voters are turning against him and his Republican party. On Tuesday, Democrat Adelita Grijalva won Arizona’s 7th Congressional District in a special election — leaving House Republicans with a majority of just five.
Grijalva’s victory comes on the heels of another Democratic win: James Walkinshaw’s in Virginia.
Two more special elections are coming, in Texas and Tennessee.
Speaker Mike Johnson is struggling to hold House Republicans together, facing rebellion on issues such as the release of files relating to disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. Johnson is also refusing to seat Congresswoman-elect Adelita Grijalva (D-AZ), who won a special election in Arizona on September 23, 2025. This delay is a procedural tactic that blocks Grijalva from providing the deciding signature on a discharge petition to release files related to Jeffrey Epstein.
Democrats are refusing to go along with Republicans to fund the government beyond Tuesday unless Republicans agree to extending Affordable Care Act subsidies — now set to expire at the end of the year and cause 24 million people to lose coverage or pay skyrocketing premiums.
Friends, I can’t tell you exactly when the tipping point will occur — when elected Republicans will rebel against him, or when his dementia becomes so apparent he’s forced to resign, or when so much of the nation rises up against his dictatorship that he’s impeached and convicted of high crimes — but we’re getting closer.
As I said a few days ago, I’ve been in and around politics for 60 years and have developed a sixth sense about the slumbering giant of America. That giant is now stirring. He about to stand. He’s angry. Soon he will roar.
Nearly nine years later, Obama is apparently seeing our core values in jeopardy with increasing frequency. Take this week, for example. Politico reported:
Barack Obama has accused President Donald Trump of ‘violence against the truth’ for linking autism to the use of Tylenol by pregnant women. The former president made a direct attack on his successor that was as rare for its forcefulness as for its setting — an arena stage on foreign soil in London on Wednesday — as he warned that the Trump administration’s claims undermine public health. Speaking to a large crowd at London’s O2 Arena, the former president said, “We have the spectacle of my successor in the Oval Office, making broad claims around certain drugs and autism that have been continuously disproved.”He added, “The degree to which that undermines public health, the degree to which that can do harm to women who are pregnant, the degree to which that creates anxiety for parents who do have children who are autistic — which, by the way, itself is subject to a spectrum, and a lot of what is being trumpeted as these massive increases actually have to do with a broadening of the criteria across that spectrum so that people can actually get services and help. All of that is violence against the truth.”
And while it’s true that Obama was speaking at the time to a foreign audience, it’s also true that he wanted a domestic audience to be aware of his comments: The Democrat promoted excerpts from his appearance, including his Trump criticisms, via social media.
This was notable in its own right, especially given how dangerous Trump’s misguided claims about medicine, vaccines and public health have been. But circling back to our recent coverage, it’s also worth emphasizing the recent pattern involving the former president.
In April, Obama spoke at Hamilton College, where he took aim at Trump’s trade tariffs, condemned the White House’s offensive against higher education, expressed his concerns that the values of the United States have “eroded” and said the incumbent president’s efforts to extort law firms were “contrary to the basic compact we have as Americans.”
In June, Obama spoke at The Connecticut Forum in Hartford, warning that the country was “dangerously close” to normalizing behavior “consistent with autocracies.”
In July, after the White House started falsely accusing him of “treason,” Obama’s patience wore thin, and he issued a statement about how “ridiculous” Team Trump’s claims had become.In August, Obama publicly condemned the GOP’s mid-decade gerrymandering schemes — they represent “an existential threat to our democracy,” he said in a video — while having private chats with rising Democratic stars such as Zohran Mamdani and touting his party’s recent victories in special elections.
In September, Obama slammed Trump for politicizing the Charlie Kirk shooting and not doing more to unite the country, before taking rhetorical aim at the right’s recent efforts to undermine the First Amendment.
A week later, the former president also shared a few thoughts about his successor’s anti-Tylenol rant.
When thinking about Trump’s most prominent and most vocal Democratic critics, Obama does not spring immediately to mind. That, however, is starting to change.
The rapid rise and sudden fall of the United Nations escalator ‘controversy’
“All I got from the United Nations was an escalator that, on the way up, stopped right in the middle,” the president said, before twice more repeating the same complaint. He stressed the same issue soon after in a social media item.
While his remarks included a dizzying amount of lies, this part was largely true: The president and first lady Melania Trump were on an escalator on Tuesday, which came to an abrupt halt. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote online that this might’ve been intentional. Hours later, Leavitt appeared on Fox News and suggested that United Nations staffers might have been trying to injure Trump. “When you put all of this together, it doesn’t look like a coincidence to me,” she said.Evidently, the truth was more benign.
The United Nations has concluded its one-day investigation into the mysterious halting of President Donald Trump’s escalator Tuesday as he arrived at the U.N. General Assembly. The accidental culprit? A White House videographer who most likely tripped a safety mechanism.A U.N. spokesperson explained: “The escalator had stopped after a built-in safety mechanism on the comb step was triggered at the top of the escalator. The safety mechanism is designed to prevent people or objects accidentally being caught and stuck in or pulled into the gearing. The [White House] videographer may have inadvertently triggered the safety function described above.”
As incidents go, this will likely soon be forgotten, but it’s worth noting that some Republicans seized on this “controversy” in rather outlandish ways — before the facts were available.
Sen. Mike Lee of Utah, for example, who has a deeply unfortunate record when it comes to peddling misinformation online, published a message that said: “The UN deep state tried to embarrass Trump and make him less safe.”The Utah Republican, in related items, said that the U.N. might’ve been “trying to give us a hint” by “orchestrating” the escalator malfunction, adding that he wants to “defund” and withdraw from the international institution.
All of this, of course, came before the public learned that it was a White House videographer that apparently triggered the escalator’s safety measures.
Kevin Kruse, a historian at Princeton University, noted soon after: “This is the perfect encapsulation of Trumpism — because of its obsession with imagery, the White House crew caused a problem but blamed it on other people, leading to MAGA making threats against the United Nations for their own screw up.”
‘Biden portrait was Trump’s idea’: New White House exhibit slammed as ‘tacky and stupid’
LONDON — Health officials across the globe on Tuesday rejected President Donald Trump’s warning that pregnant women should limit the use of acetaminophen over unsubstantiated claims of a link to autism.
Authorities from Australia to Europe moved swiftly to respond to the U.S. announcement, which Trump made with great fanfare while flanked by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
“Don’t take Tylenol. Don’t take it. Fight like hell not to take it,” Trump said.
The EMA said it would not be making changes to the region’s current recommendations, maintaining that pregnant women should take the lowest effective dose of the drug for the shortest possible time and as infrequently as possible.
“A large amount of data from pregnant women who used paracetamol during pregnancy indicates no risk of malformations on the developing fetus or on newborns,” the EMA said in a statement to NBC News.
The World Health Organization said that “the evidence remains inconsistent” regarding any link between the use of Tylenol during pregnancy and autism.
WHO spokesperson Tarik Jašarević cited unspecified studies that pointed to a possible link but said that this was not confirmed by subsequent research. “This lack of replicability really calls for caution in drawing casual conclusions,” he said.
Trump on Monday also suggested that additives in vaccines may cause autism, which the WHO was similarly quick to dispute.
“We know that vaccines do not cause autism. Vaccines, as I said, save countless lives. So, this is something that science has proven, and these things should not be really questioned,” Jašarević told a Geneva press briefing.
Australian health officials were among the first to reject the claims, labeling them “a misrepresentation of the science.”
Australia’s medicines regulator, the Therapeutic Goods Administration, together with the country’s Chief Medical Officer, said Tuesday that it was joining other global medicines regulators in repudiating Trump’s claims.
“Robust scientific evidence shows no causal link between the use of paracetamol in pregnancy and autism or ADHD, with several large and reliable studies directly contradicting these claims,” they said in a statement.
A number of other countries restated their existing guidance, which differs from the new warning issued by the Trump administration.
New Zealand’s Ministry of Health reiterated that its guidance had not changed, describing paracetamol as “the safest medicine to take in pregnancy” for treatment of pain or fever.
A spokesperson for the German Health Ministry told NBC News that there was no link between taking paracetamol during pregnancy and developmental abnormalities. “In certain situations, taking medication is necessary to avoid endangering the mother and unborn child, for example in the case of high fever,” they said in an emailed statement.
The U.K.’s health regulator, MHRA, issued a similar statement, stressing that “paracetamol remains the recommended pain relief option for pregnant women when used as directed.”
“Untreated pain and fever can pose risks to the unborn baby, so it is important to manage these symptoms with the recommended treatment,” Dr Alison Cave, chief safety officer at the MHRA, said in a statement on the agency’s website.
Health Secretary Wes Streeting told ITV early Tuesday: “I would just say to people watching, don’t pay any attention whatsoever to what Donald Trump says about medicine.”
Spain’s health minister, Mónica García Gómez, also called out Trump by name, accusing him of “ignoring all medical studies.”
“Denialism not only destroys trust in science: it puts lives at risk,” she wrote on X on Monday.
Scott White, chair of the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists Women’s Health Committee, said he was “worried” about the messaging from the U.S.
“Paracetamol is safe and actually important to use because pain and fever are associated with adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes themselves,” White told NBC News in a phone interview.
“I’m really worried about the messaging that says pregnant women should just tough it out, that pregnant women should be denied access to pain relief, which is a fundamental human right. It’s every woman’s right,” White said.
“To suggest that women can’t access a medication that we feel has been shown to be safe simply because they’re pregnant women, is misogynistic.”
White cited a study published last year in the Journal of the American Medical Association that studied 2.5 million children in Sweden. It compared siblings and found no association between acetaminophen use during pregnancy and the risk of autism, ADHD or intellectual disability.
While other studies have suggested some kind of link, including research published last month that Trump administration officials are citing, White argues many struggled to exclude factors like genetics or environment.
Outside autism researchers have said that literature review, by researchers from Harvard and the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, wasn’t rigorously conducted and that it cherry-picked studies that supported its conclusion.
White also said the reason a woman is taking paracetamol, such as to treat a fever or infection, could be what affects the mental development of the child.
“We know that women who’ve got complicated pregnancies in some way are more likely to go on to have babies that are neurodevelopmentally impacted,” he added, citing fever as a prime example.
9/23/2025
Escalator and teleprompter (Trump’s team hit the stop button, and the teleprompter was Trump’s, not the UN)
What happened (according to media reports)
As Trump and First Lady Melania entered the UN building, an escalator (some reports say “elevator,” but most say escalator) abruptly stopped while they were on it. Reuters+2AP News+2
When Trump began his address, the teleprompter (which typically displays the speech text) initially failed to show his remarks. He paused and made jokes about it, saying “whoever’s operating this teleprompter is in big trouble.” PBS+4People.com+4EW.com+4
After a short delay (about 15 seconds, per some reports), the teleprompter resumed and he proceeded. PBS+3People.com+3EW.com+3
He summarized the glitches with a quip:
“These are the two things I got from the United Nations — a bad escalator and a bad teleprompter.” Reuters+2People.com+2
Disputes / clarifications
The UN has pushed back on the implication that their equipment was at fault. They say the teleprompter was run by the White House team, not the UN itself. EW.com
On the escalator incident, UN officials said the stoppage was likely triggered by a safety mechanism (to prevent entrapment) which may have been accidentally activated — possibly by someone from Trump’s entourage filming their entrance. Reuters+2AP News+2
After his speech, the President of the UN General Assembly affirmed that the UN’s internal teleprompters were working correctly. Reuters+2EW.com+2
2025
Key Alleged / Established Trump Violations
Hatch Act violations
A report from the U.S. Office of Special Counsel found that at least 13 senior Trump administration officials improperly mixed government work with campaign activity. They violated the Hatch Act, which prohibits certain federal employees from engaging in political campaigning while performing their official duties. The report also criticized Trump for allowing these violations and not disciplining those responsible. The Washington PostIgnoring or defying court orders
An analysis by The Washington Post found that in about one-third of more than 160 lawsuits where substantive rulings were issued against the Trump administration, the administration was accused of not complying with those rulings. The Washington Post
In particular, there are cases where federal judges have blocked executive orders or directives issued by Trump, but the administration has allegedly worked around or delayed compliance. The Washington Post+1
Misuse of charitable foundation funds
The Trump Foundation was found to have violated laws governing charitable organizations: misusing tax-exempt funds for political and business purposes, making improper payments (e.g. a portrait of Trump), etc. A judge ordered Trump to pay damages. The GuardianGag order violations / contempt of court
In New York hush-money trials, Trump was fined for violating court gag orders that barred him from making public statements about witnesses and jurors. AP News
Also, in civil fraud proceedings, he was fined for violating gag orders regarding personal attacks on court staffers. AP NewsElectoral / election-law / constitutional violations alleged around Jan. 6, 2020 election
The House Jan. 6 select committee alleged (from its investigations) that Trump and some of his allies may have violated several laws in attempting to obstruct Congress’s certification of the election result, and engaged in a criminal conspiracy to defraud the United States. PoliticoHandling of classified / presidential records
There is a federal case concerning Trump’s holding onto classified documents after his presidency (at Mar-a-Lago etc.), allegedly contrary to requirements under the Presidential Records Act and other laws. WikipediaForeign Emoluments Clause / “emoluments” lawsuits
Lawsuits (like Blumenthal v. Trump) have alleged that Trump violated the Foreign Emoluments Clause of the U.S. Constitution by accepting payments, gifts, or benefits from foreign governments without Congressional approval. WikipediaImpoundment Control Act / Congressional power of the purse
According to some scholarly commentary, an example is the Trump administration’s attempt to freeze or withhold large amounts in federal spending without following required procedures. Experts say that may have violated the Impoundment Control Act (which restricts the president’s ability to withhold funds appropriated by Congress). The Guardian+1But try to imagine the current situation. Try to taste it. Blatant nepotism; a poisonous mix of stupidity, corruption and shameless self-interest, eating away at America’s civil society, supported and cheered on by one of the major parties. If you love and respect American values, the taste may be physical: it’ll bring bile into your mouth.

Fact-Checking Trump’s U.N. Speech
The president made inaccurate claims about the economy, renewable energy and the mayor of London.-
- He claimed that millions of people “from prisons, from mental institutions” all over the world had crossed the United States’ southern border. (There is no evidence for this.)
- He claimed to have “ended seven unending wars” since taking office in January. (His role in some of those conflicts is disputed.)
- He misleadingly claimed that the Biden administration “lost nearly 300,000 children” and many were trafficked or dead. (The figure is inflated and there is no evidence that many had died.)
- He falsely claimed that 300,000 Americans died last year from drug overdoses. (The number was about 80,000.)
- He falsely characterized Washington, D.C., as “the crime capital of America” (it was not). But since the federal takeover, “everyone’s going out to dinner.” (Dining reservations were level).
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He falsely claimed “Not only is the U.N. not solving the problems it should—too often, it is actually creating NEW problems…. The United Nations is FUNDING an assault on Western countries and their borders… The U.N. is supposed to STOP invasions—not CREATE them and not FINANCE them.”
No — the United Nations is not funding any assault on Western countries or their borders.
Here’s some context:
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The UN is an international organization with 193 member states. Its funding primarily supports humanitarian aid, peacekeeping, development, refugee assistance, and climate programs.
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Agencies like the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) and the International Organization for Migration (IOM, linked to the UN) work with displaced people worldwide — sometimes helping them apply for resettlement in Western countries.
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Critics sometimes interpret refugee or migration aid programs as encouraging migration to Europe or North America. But the UN does not organize or fund “assaults” on borders. Its role is usually coordinating humanitarian relief, not directing migration.
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Actual border and immigration policies are controlled by individual countries, not by the UN.
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The Latest on the Trump Administration
- Tylenol and Autism: President Trump and health officials urged pregnant women not to use acetaminophen, the active ingredient in Tylenol, claiming it could cause autism. The proclamation ignored decades of scientific research.
- Antifa: Trump signed an executive order targeting the left-wing antifascist movement, threatening “investigatory and prosecutorial action” against those who financially support it.
- Lindsey Halligan: Though she has no prosecutorial experience, the former Trump defense attorney was sworn in as the top U.S. prosecutor in eastern Virginia, where she will take over the cases of two people despised by the president.
- Border Czar: The White House denied that Tom Houman, Trump’s border chief, accepted $50,000 in cash as part of an undercover F.B.I. investigation in 2024, contradicting news reports.
- H-1B Visa Program: The visa granted to skilled professional workers lured a generation of Indians to take part in the American dream, but President Trump’s proclamation imposing a $100,000 fee has forced a rethink of the route. Here’s what to know about the program.
- Argentina: The administration pledged to support the country’s struggling economy, throwing a lifeline to President Javier Milei, a Trump ally, ahead of legislative elections there next month.
- Russia: President Trump said In the event that Russia is not ready to make a deal to end the war, then the United States is fully prepared to impose a very strong round of powerful tariffs… But for those tariffs to be effective, European nations would have to join us in adopting the exact same measures… they have to immediately cease ALL energy purchases from Russia. (Not a reality)
SEPTEMBER 22, 2025
President Donald Trump is worried that Attorney General Pam Bondi is moving too slowly to prosecute his political adversaries on fake charges. Trump has good reason to be concerned. He is carrying out his project to consolidate authoritarian power against the trend of declining public support for his administration and himself. He is like a man trying to race upward on a downward-moving escalator. If he loses the race, he will be pulled ever deeper below—and the escalator keeps moving faster against him.
Autocracies are headed by one man but require the cooperation of many others. Some collaborators may sincerely share the autocrat’s goals, but opportunists provide a crucial margin of support. In the United States, such people now have to make a difficult calculation: Do the present benefits of submitting to Trump’s will outweigh the future hazards?
As Bondi makes her daily decisions about whether to abuse her powers to please Trump, she has to begin with one big political assessment: Will Trump ultimately retain the power to reward and punish her? It’s not just about keeping her present job. On the one hand, people in Trump’s favor can make a lot of money from their proximity to power. On the other, Richard Nixon’s attorney general, John Mitchell, served 19 months in prison for his crimes during Watergate. If Trump’s hold on power loosens, Bondi could share Mitchell’s fate.
Trump’s hold on power is indeed loosening. His standing with the voting public is quickly deteriorating. Grocery prices jumped in August 2025 at the fastest speed since the peak of the post-pandemic inflation in 2022. Job growth has stalled to practically zero.
Almost two-thirds of Americans disapprove of higher tariffs, Trump’s signature economic move. His administration’s attack on vaccines for young children is even more unpopular. This year has brought the highest number of measles cases since the Clinton administration introduced free universal vaccination for young children in 1993. Parents may be rightly shocked and angry.
Shortly after MSNBC reported that Tom Homan, Trump’s border czar, had accepted $50,000 in cash from FBI agents posing as businessmen last year, allegedly in exchange for a promise to help secure government contracts, the pro-Trump podcaster Megyn Kelly posted, “We DO NOT CARE.” This kind of acquiescence to corruption has been one of Trump’s most important resources. But the American people become a lot less tolerant of corruption in their leaders when they feel themselves under economic pressure. As of early August, nearly two-thirds of Americans regarded Trump as corrupt, 45 percent as “very corrupt.” More than 60 percent think the Trump administration is covering up the Jeffrey Epstein case. Almost 60 percent regard Bondi personally responsible for the cover-up.
The MAGA project in many ways resembles one of former businessman Donald Trump’s dangerously leveraged real-estate deals. A comparatively small number of fanatics are heart-and-soul committed. Through them, Trump controls the Republican apparatus and the right-wing media world, which allows him to do things like gerrymander states where he is in trouble (50 percent of Texans now disapprove of Trump, while only 43 percent approve) or wield the enforcement powers of the Federal Communications Commission to silence on-air critics. But overleveraged structures are susceptible to external shocks and internal mistakes.
Trump in his first term mostly avoided screwing up the economy. His trade wars with China triggered a nearly 20 percent stock-market slump in the fall and early winter of 2018. Trump retreated, and no recession followed the slump until the COVID shock of 2020. But in his second term, Trump has jettisoned his former economic caution. The stock market is doing fine in 2025 on hopes of interest-rate cuts. The real economy is worsening. The percentage of Americans who think the country is on the “wrong track” rose sharply over the summer. Even self-identified Republicans are now more negative than positive.
The souring is especially bitter among younger people. More than 60 percent of Republicans younger than 45 say things are on the wrong track, a 30-point deterioration over the three summer months.
Trump has a shrewd instinct for survival. He must sense that if he does not act now to prevent free and fair elections in 2026, he will lose much of his power—and all of his impunity. That’s why he is squeezing Bondi. But for her, the thought process must be very different. Trump is hoping to offload culpability for his misconduct onto her. She’s the one most directly at risk if she gives orders later shown to be unethical or illegal.
The survival of American rights and liberties may now turn less on the question of whether Pam Bondi is a person of integrity—which we already know the dismal answer to—than whether she is willing to risk her career and maybe even her personal freedom for a president on his way to repudiation unless he can fully pervert the U.S. legal system and the 2026 elections.
I’m afraid Pam Bondi is going to have to pay for what she did to destroy the Republic. Steven Miller too. And the rest of them. They hitched their wagon to the star of a demented old man who is clearly very unhealthy. No thousand-year reich for the MAGAt kingdom.
Once Trump is gone and Democrats take power back, which one day in one way or another they will, the next Attorney General won’t be a lamb like Merrick Garland. People will demand justice. Or revenge. Call it whatever you wish.
In the case of Trump and his vile minions, it’s going to be the same.
Donald Trump is deeply unpopular with most Americans and knows that he has little chance of ever uniting us all behind his racist, fascist, kleptocratic agenda. By ensuring that we’re divided, he keeps his base energized and loyal. It’s the only thing propping him up politically at this point.
Fascism is a far-right, authoritarian political system that emphasizes:
Dictatorial power – one leader (Trump) controls the state.
Suppression of opposition – censorship, imprisonment, or violence against dissenters.
Nationalism – often extreme, sometimes tied to ideas of racial or cultural superiority.
Militarism and violence – glorification of war, order, and force as tools for national strength.
Control over society – limits on personal freedoms, control of media, education, and sometimes the economy (tariffs).
Mythic unity – portraying the nation as a single organic community, where individuality and class struggle are rejected in favor of collective identity.
Trump protecting his friends:
Trump Justice Dept. Closed Investigation Into Tom Homan (our border czar) for Accepting Bag of Cash
Trump degenerate corruption at its worst. He finds Homan in a bribery operation, gives him a $200,000 a year job he is not qualified for, then saves him from prosecution. Now Homan is indebted to Rump big time and will do anything Rump wants.
Mr. Homan came under scrutiny after he was said to be recorded last year taking $50,000 in cash from undercover F.B.I. agents.
Tom Homan, who was later named President Trump’s border czar, was recorded in September 2024 accepting a bag with $50,000 in cash in an undercover F.B.I. investigation, according to people familiar with the case, which was later shut down by Trump administration officials.
The cash payment, which was made inside a bag from the food chain Cava, grew out of a long-running counterintelligence investigation that had not been targeting Mr. Homan, according to the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the case.
Mr. Homan’s encounter with the undercover agents, recorded on audiotape, led him to be investigated for potential bribery and other crimes, after he apparently took the money and agreed to help the agents — who were posing as businessmen — secure future government contracts related to border security, the people said.
After Mr. Trump took office this year, Justice Department officials shut down the case.2
Airlines will no longer be required to compensate passengers for flight delays under Trump.
‘Couldn’t do it’: DC insider fears Trump admin no longer has the smarts to publish facts
- Headlining this year’s 80th General Assembly will be Trump, who calls for slashing U.S. funding for the U.N., stopped U.S. engagement with the U.N. Human Rights Council, extended a halt to funding for the Palestinian relief agency UNRWA and quit the U.N. cultural agency UNESCO. He has also announced plans to quit the Paris climate deal and the World Health Organization.
- The Trump administration is aiming to use any levers of power it has to respond to Charlie Kirk’s killing, in part to send a message to political opponents.
- ABC taking comedian Jimmy Kimmel off the air for his comments on Kirk this week is just one major highlight of the administration’s enormous pressure on ideological opponents it aims to punish.
- An official said the White House is “exploring a wide variety of options to put pen to paper to address left-wing political violence and the network of organizations that fuel and fund it,” adding that specifics continue to be discussed.
- Trump is steering the response through his own rhetoric over the last few days, insisting that the “radical left” is responsible. Top officials have made clear they would use Kirk’s death to target left-wing groups, with Vice President Vance at one point suggesting they would be dismantled.
- The president suggested on Thursday late-night shows in particular should not be allowed to overwhelmingly be critical of him when asked about Kimmel’s indefinite leave.
- “They’re 97 percent against; they give me only bad press….I would think maybe their license should be taken away,” Trump said, adding that the decision would ultimately be left up to Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chair Brendan Carr.
- A former aide to Trump’s first term said Kimmel being pulled off the air is “a good case study” in the “lever pulling happening with speech and censorship.”
- “There isn’t as much handwringing over what constitutes ‘hate speech’ – they are more focused on what regulatory levers they can pull to put intense pressure on liberal Hollywood media,” the former aide said. “The White House is now using the FCC against Disney in a way we haven’t seen, threatening with license risk, merger scrutiny, spectrum headaches – and suddenly now the affiliates and advertisers are doing the policing on the White House’s behalf.”
- Republicans, meanwhile, seem to have Trump’s back on any actions he makes in the aftermath of Kirk’s assassination, argued Sam Geduldig, managing partner at GOP lobbying firm CGCN.
‘Out of Stalin’s playbook’: Massive new Trump banners on DC buildings sets off concern

September 20, 2025 | 12:29PM ET
In parts of the United States where President Donald Trump’s hardcore MAGA base is especially strong — including rural areas of deep red states like Idaho, West Virginia, Montana, Alabama and Arkansas — many residents welcome images of him. But Washington, D.C. is another matter.
Like other Northeastern Corridor cities — New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Baltimore, Hartford — Washington is overwhelmingly Democratic. And according to CNN reporter Camila DeChalus, Democrats are complaining about large banners showing Trump’s face on three federal government buildings.
DeChalus, in an article published on September 20, reports, “The controversy underscores deepening tensions in Washington over the extent of Trump’s use of executive power. The banners in question have large portraits of the sitting president with the caption ‘American Workers First’…. The Department of Labor confirmed it spent roughly $6000 on the banners and noted that they were created in conjunction with Labor Day and the department’s America250 celebrations.”
DeChalus adds, “The Departments of Agriculture and Health and Human services did not immediately respond to CNN’s requests for comment.”
The banners are generating a lot of comments on X, formerly Twitter.
Schiff also wrote, “Democracy doesn’t disappear overnight — it is vanishes day by day, one lawless act after another. Oversized portraits on government buildings may look like vanity. But they are also a warning. We must take it seriously.”
X user Pramod Sharma wrote, “These grotesque Trump banners on federal buildings, like the Dept of Labor eyesore, reek of dictator vibes — straight out of Stalin’s playbook! They scream illegal under the Smith-Mundt Act, banning domestic propaganda. Trump’s wasting our tax dollars to stroke his ego while crushing workers’ rights — disgraceful! Your thread better expose this tyrant’s sham. #Trump #Propaganda.”
The L.A. Unity Project posted, “LA Unity Project – Shantel Daniels @LAUnityProject Sep 18 Why are giant Trump banners popping up across DC, the same tactic dictators use worldwide? Who’s paying? Not Trump. Not billionaires. Taxpayers. Congress banned propaganda with public money in 1951. Schiff’s new report shows Trump ignored the law, $50,000+ in banners that glorify him, not inform the public.”
- Mr. Trump has pursued retribution against political opponents in his second term. He’s used regulatory leverage against Paramount and CBS in a weak lawsuit and squeezed liberal law firms to do pro bono work, while the Justice Department is investigating prosecutors who brought cases against him. A regulator like [FCC chair Brendan] Carr who might have ignored Mr. Trump’s musings about revenge in the first term doesn’t need direct orders in the second. The squeeze on Disney looks to be a case of cancel culture on the right. Mr. Kimmel’s comments Monday associating Charlie Kirk’s killer with the “MAGA gang” were callous. But they weren’t inciting violence, and in a free society they shouldn’t be cause for the government to push someone off the airwaves.
Smith Special Counsel Investigation & Indictment (2023)
The DOJ, through Special Counsel Jack Smith, indicted Trump on August 1, 2023, on four counts related to attempts to overturn the 2020 election. Some of those charges echo what the Jan. 6 Committee had referred. Wikipedia+1Smith’s Final Report and DOJ policy
Jack Smith submitted his final report to the DOJ on January 7, 2025 and then resigned a few days later. Wikipedia+1
Volume I of the report, concerning the election-obstruction case, was publicly released on January 14, 2025. Wikipedia
Volume II (dealing with classified documents) has been subject to delays / legal limits on full release because parts of it are tied up in ongoing appeals or co-defendant cases. Wikipedia
Policy preventing prosecution of sitting president
One reason no further prosecutions arose (based on the Committee’s referrals) while Trump was in office is DOJ policy that a sitting president cannot be criminally prosecuted. After Trump was reelected and reinstalled in 2025, some of the cases or charges were dropped without prejudice. Wikipedia+1
Use of the Committee’s Materials
The first volume of Smith’s report says that DOJ used material from the Jan. 6 Committee’s December 2022 report and some materials the Committee had provided. However, those Committee materials made up “a small part” of the overall investigative record. Wikipedia+1
What hasn’t changed / What is not known
No new criminal charges have been brought solely because of the Jan. 6 Committee’s referrals beyond those already pursued by DOJ/Smith. The DOJ case largely overlapped with the referrals but wasn’t a direct result of them in all respects.
There has been no reversal yet of the policy or legal environment that blocked further proceedings while Trump was in office.
Some aspects of the referred statutes (for example incitement / insurrection under 18 U.S.C. § 2383) are not part of the charges in the indictment.
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- India and Pakistan (according to India, Trump wasn’t responsible for the cease fire easing tensions between India and Pakistan.)
- Israel and Iran (Israel and Iran stopped trading shots, that was a ceasefire.)
- Serbia and Kosovo (first term, not recent)
- Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo (there is no peace, fighting has resumed)
- Thailand and Cambodia ( When Thailand and Cambodia stopped firing at one another, that was also a ceasefire.)
- Armenia and Azerbaijan (Armenia and Azerbaijan recently reached a peace deal, it’s worth emphasizing that those diplomatic efforts were years in the making and pre-date Trump.)
- Saudi Arabia, Syria and Lebanon (Abraham Accords, first term) Right off the bat, we can put aside the Abraham Accords and the record of hostilities between Serbia and Kosovo, since these developments happened during Trump’s first term, and the president has emphasized of late that his focus is on second-term successes.
- ‘Strongman vibes’: Trump’s military parade amid market crashes and federal job slashes President Donald Trump got the military parade his “generals” blocked him from having during his first term, spending millions of taxpayer money to honor himself on his 79th birthday in June.
- In 2018, “Trump angrily and reluctantly canceled his plans after military leaders said it would cost $92 million and after District officials complained that heavy military equipment—tanks and planes included—would tear up the roadways and cost $21 million just for parade public safety,”
- Washington City Paper reports. “Now, second-term Trump apparently won’t be denied. “Citing a D.C. source, the paper reports that “Trump has commandeered Saturday, June 14—the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army and, as it happens, Trump’s 79th birthday—for his military parade.
- It stretched almost four miles from the Pentagon in Arlington to the White House, according to the source, who stressed that local officials are just learning of it.
- ”READ MORE: Markets Rally Briefly on Trump Tariff Pause Rumor—Plunge After WH Cries ‘Fake News ‘
- Critics are blasting the Commander-in-Chief’s efforts, with some noting that military parades are what fascist and authoritarian countries do, and others pointing out how Trump’s massive cuts to the federal workforce, immigration policies, and new tariffs have decimated American families. “
- So what if you go broke or your kid dies of measles?” asked NYU professor, historian, and scholar of fascism and authoritarian leaders
- Ruth Ben-Ghiat. Trump “gets to golf and have his military parade. ”Trump wanted this military parade in DC so much in his first term — even after the vice chair of the Joint Chiefs bluntly told him in the Oval Office ‘it’s what dictators do,’ per our reporting,” noted The New Yorker’s Susan Glasser.
- READ MORE: Trump Defends TikTok Delay as Proof Tariffs Boost National Security, Despite Concerns “
- When President Trump returned from the Bastille Day military parade in France in July 2017, he was enamored of the display, calling it ‘one of the most beautiful parades I have ever seen.’” The Washington Post had reported in 2019. “
- Months later, Trump made a decision: He wanted his own parade. Ideally, a bigger and better show than the one he had watched in Paris. ‘We’re going to have to try and top it,’ he said. “The Daily Beast adds that Trump “did get a scaled-down version in 2019 with his ‘Salute to America’ event, featuring tanks and military flyovers. That cost $13 million, more than double the usual July 4th celebration. “
- Political strategist Chris D. Jackson noted that Trump “craves strongman vibes. If Obama or Biden tried this, impeachment would be instant. It’s pathetic—and we’re footing the bill. ”We’re going to cap off torching $12 trillion by hosting a big military parade,” wrote Democratic strategist Max Burns, appearing to refer to the approximate amount the stock markets have lost since Trump was inaugurated.
How Trump Is Using the Justice Department to Target His Enemies

- Open Society Foundations
- Global grant network founded by George Soros
- Fani Willis
- District attorney Fulton County, Ga.
- John O. Brennan
- Former C.I.A. director
Other targets
- Adam B. Schiff
- Senator Democrat of California
- Letitia James
- Attorney general of New York
- Investigations underway
- James Comey
Former F.B.I. director
Indicted
From the moment Donald J. Trump began his campaign to return to the White House, he has expressed a clear desire to seek vengeance against his perceived enemies. In the last few weeks, the pressure campaign has intensified with two of his foes — James Comey and Letitia James — now indicted.
Back in power, Mr. Trump has weaponized the Justice Department to his own ends, critics say, in a more direct manner than any president since the Nixon era. The department, now led by Mr. Trump’s former personal lawyers, has fired dozens of career prosecutors, many of whom had worked on cases involving Mr. Trump. And the president and his allies have targeted or pushed out several U.S. attorneys as he seeks quick movement on cases involving a number of his political adversaries.
Each of the targets Mr. Trump has pursued through the Justice Department has denied wrongdoing, in statements or through lawyers. Here is a look at them:
Indicted

Letitia James
Attorney general of New York
who replaced
Erik S. Siebert
Former U.S. attorney
Indicted by
Lindsey Halligan
U.S. attorney Eastern District of Virginia
Trump’s former personal lawyer
What the government alleges: A federal grand jury in Virginia indicted Ms. James on bank fraud and false statement charges, following an investigation into whether Ms. James falsified records in a mortgage loan application in Virginia. This is a tactic the administration has used against some of Mr. Trump’s political adversaries, including Senator Adam B. Schiff. Career prosecutors at the department did not find sufficient evidence to bring charges against her and Mr. Comey, but Ms. Halligan, a former personal lawyer of Mr. Trump, filed charges in both cases.
Why Trump is targeting James: As New York’s attorney general, Ms. James opened an investigation into Mr. Trump on allegations that he inflated the value of his real estate holdings. She eventually secured a half-a-billion-dollar penalty against him, but it was later thrown out by an appeals court.

who replaced
James Comey
Former F.B.I. director
Erik S. Siebert
Former U.S. attorney
Indicted by
Lindsey Halligan
U.S. attorney Eastern District of Virginia
Trump’s former personal lawyer
What the government alleges: Ms. Halligan filed an indictment that says Mr. Comey lied before a Senate committee in September 2020 when he denied that he authorized someone at the F.B.I. to leak to the news media. He is charged with one count of making a false statement to Congress and one count of obstructing a congressional proceeding for his testimony. Mr. Comey has pleaded not guilty to the charges and a judge set a trial date of Jan. 5.
Why Trump is targeting Comey: Mr. Comey led the early stages of an investigation into ties between Russia and Mr. Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign. Mr. Trump fired Mr. Comey for his involvement, which led to a fraught two-year investigation that Mr. Trump repeatedly denounced as “a witch hunt.”
Investigations underway

Investigated by
Adam B. Schiff
Senator Democrat of California
Kelly Hayes
U.S. attorney Maryland
What the government alleges: Potential mortgage fraud related to a property in Maryland.
Why Trump is targeting Schiff: When Mr. Schiff was in the House, he helped lead the first impeachment trial of Mr. Trump in 2019.

Investigated by
John R. Bolton
Former national security adviser
Kelly Hayes
U.S. attorney Maryland
What the government alleges: During the Biden administration, an investigation into whether Mr. Bolton had mishandled classified material gained momentum. The inquiry has continued under Mr. Trump, with the scope unclear but appearing similar to past cases involving officials accused of misusing emails or private papers related to national security secrets. Over the summer, federal agents executed search warrants at Mr. Bolton’s home and office.
Why Trump is targeting Bolton: Mr. Bolton worked as a national security adviser during Mr. Trump’s first term. But the two often clashed, and since Mr. Bolton left the post, he has often criticized the president’s stances on foreign policy.
Other targets

Investigated by
John O. Brennan
Former C.I.A. director
David Metcalf
U.S. attorney Eastern District of Pennsylvania
What the government alleges: The allegations against Mr. Brennan are hazy but appear to be related to his involvement in helping to put together an intelligence community assessment of Russian influence in the 2016 election.
Why Trump is targeting Brennan: Mr. Brennan is a former C.I.A. director whose agency’s response to Russian election interference in 2016 drew Mr. Trump’s ire.

Subpoenaed by
Fani Willis
District attorney Fulton County, Ga.
Theodore Hertzberg
U.S. attorney Northern District of Georgia
What the government alleges: A federal grand jury has subpoenaed records related to travel that prosecutors believe Ms. Willis made abroad around the time of last year’s elections. But it is not clear the scope of the investigation nor why prosecutors were seeking the records.
Why Trump is targeting Willis: Ms. Willis is the Fulton County, Ga., district attorney who charged Mr. Trump in a sweeping case accusing him and others of seeking to overturn the 2020 election. An appeals court disqualified Ms. Willis from prosecuting the case, and it is unlikely to move forward soon.

Could potentially involve
Open Society Foundations
Global grant network founded by George Soros
Multiple U.S. attorney’s offices
What the government alleges: There are no specific allegations against Mr. Soros or his organization, but a memo issued to a half-dozen U.S. attorney’s offices goes as far as to list possible charges prosecutors could consider, ranging from arson to material support of terrorism.
Why Trump is targeting the Open Society Foundations: The global grant network, which has funded many liberal causes and organizations, was founded by George Soros, a billionaire Democratic donor who has long been a subject of Mr. Trump’s grievances and a boogeyman for the right. The push for U.S. attorney’s offices to investigate comes in the wake of the assassination of the conservative activist Charlie Kirk as the White House promised to crack down on liberal and progressive groups.