Visit Counter

Friday, January 24, 2025

He's out of his freaking mind




American Troops Must be Deployed to Ukraine or Russia Won’t be Deterred, Insists Zelensky




Intensifying talk in European capitals about sending peacekeepers to Ukraine’s front lines is welcome but it won’t work without American boots on the ground, President Volodymyr Zelensky says at the Davos World Economic Forum meeting.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has been at Davos this week drumming up support, but also attempting to ingratiate himself with President Donald Trump by acting as a conduit for America First messaging to European leaders. Nevertheless, Bloomberg reports the Ukrainian “bristled” at the suggestion the United States wouldn’t put boots on the ground in Ukraine to deter further Russian aggression.

The conversation follows months of talk in Europe, particularly in capitals like Paris, Warsaw, and London, about what happens when the now apparently inevitable ceasefire comes. Preventing Russia from simply using a pause as a chance to catch its breath, re-arm, and then attack anew after a short break is the main concern and European leaders have told President Zelensky they would want to consider deploying their own armies to Ukraine to prevent Russia from renewing hostilities.

But forward-deploying NATO like this and de facto welcoming Ukraine into its protective embrace wouldn’t work, President Zelensky reportedly told Bloomberg on the side-lines of Davos, without American manpower. He is reported to have said: “It can’t be without the United States… Even if some European friends think it can be, no it can’t be. Nobody will risk without the United States.”

As well as the United States, Zelensky also expressed optimism that China might be persuaded to force Russia to peace, because so much of Russia’s economy and military supply relies on Beijing. While “President Trump is the strongest”, Xi Jinping “can push Putin for peace, I’m sure”.

Perhaps the most involved Western leader in the concept of a multinational peacekeeping force sending troops to face down the Russians in Ukraine has been France’s President Emmanuel Macron, who has been discussing the idea with Zelensky for months, now. Previously, Zelensky has even branded the idea “President Macron’s initiative regarding the presence of forces in Ukraine that could contribute to stabilizing the path to peace”.

British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has already indicated he will back Macron’s idea, saying the country will play a “full part” in the peacekeeping mission”.

As previously reported, it had been stated by a ‘senior European official’ in December: “if there were a NATO security guarantee, where would the impetus on the ground come from? It would be European so our army chiefs are already preparing plans for European leaders to consider in the future”. But some have expressed doubt over whether European militaries will simply be large enough.

As stated, even a deterrent force of 100,000 troops to Ukraine would “severely stretch European land forces”. Last week, senior retired British Army officers were quick to remind PM Starmer after his peacekeeping force comments that the British military was probably too small to not struggle to play that “full part”, not least if the now barebones remains of the Royal Navy had to be called upon to patrol the Black Sea.



Share/Bookmark

Thursday, January 23, 2025

4 arrested in connection with burglary at Joe Burrow's house




Surprise... all four are illegal 

When the agent pulled the car over, Alexander Chavez, Bastian Morales, Jordan Sanchez and Sergio Cabello allegedly showed the agent fake identification. The car smelled of marijuana and it was later confirmed that the four men were in the country illegally, court records filed in Clark County, Ohio, say.




Four Chilean nationals have been arrested for their alleged involvement in the burglary of Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow’s Ohio home last month, according to WLWT in Cincinnati.


An investigator wrote in the court document that an “old LSU shirt” and Bengals hat were found in the suspects’ SUV, although Burrow — an LSU alum — is not specifically named, per the report.


One of the suspects also carried a cell phone that matched data from a Hamilton County cell phone tower from the Dec. 9 robbery in Anderson Township.

Joe Burrow’s home was burglarized in December. AP


Sergio Cabello, Jordan Sanchez, Bastian Morales and Alexander Chavez are facing charges of participating in a criminal gang, engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity, obstructing official business and possession of criminal tools, according to WLWT.


The court document said the four arrests are part of the “ongoing investigation involving burglaries of multi-million dollar homes in multiple states.”


A special agent with the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation saw “four male Chileans” exiting a La Quinta Hotel with luggage in Fairborn, Ohio on Jan. 10.


They offered false information and names after being pulled over, per the report, and three told detectives at the Clark County Sheriff’s Office that they visited Ohio to see snow while on vacation.


Burrow’s home in Ohio. Google Earth


One of them men, who had been carrying a Louis Vuitton bag, had previously been identified by the special agent as a possible suspect in the robbery.


Investigators also discovered tools wrapped in towels that are used by South American theft groups to break glass and enter houses, per the report.


“After the four male Chileans’ true identifications were learned all four males were identified as being illegally in the country or overstayed their permissions,” the document states, per WLWT.


WLWT reported that Burrow’s home is the only multi-million dollar home to have been burglarized in Hamilton County on said date, lending credence to the connection with Burrow’s scare.


Burglars broke into Burrow’s home during a 27-20 road win over the Cowboys on “Monday Night Football,” with WLWT reporting at the time a bedroom had been “ransacked” and one window smashed.


SI Swimsuit model Olivia Ponton was later revealed to have been in the house and called 911.


“Someone broke into my house,” Ponton told police. “It’s like completely messed up. … Can we please send more people?”


Burrow was understandably quite perturbed by the ransacking.


“So obviously everybody has heard what has happened,” Burrow said in December. “I feel like my privacy has been violated in more ways than one. And way more is already out there than I would want out there and that I care to share, so that’s all I got to say about that.” 


Before Burrow, Chiefs stars Travis Kelce and Patrick Mahomes each dealt with burglaries in October.


The incidents led to the NFL warning players about how professional athletes have been targeted by crime groups, with a South American crime ring alleged to be the perpetrators behind the two incidents.










Share/Bookmark

Pretty Impressive




Everything Trump did in the first executive orders and actions of his presidency



President Donald Trump started his second administration with a blitz of policy actions to reorient the U.S. government.

His executive orders cover issues that range from trade, immigration and U.S. foreign aid to demographic diversity, civil rights and the hiring of federal workers. Some have an immediate policy impact. Others are more symbolic. And some already are being challenged by federal lawsuits.

In total, the Republican president’s sweeping actions reflect many of his campaign promises and determination to concentrate executive branch power in the West Wing, while moving the country sharply rightward.

Here is a comprehensive look at Trump’s directives so far in his first three days:

Immigration and U.S. borders

• Designate an “invasion across the southern border of the United States,” a move that triggers certain executive branch powers so, Trump says, his Cabinet “shall take appropriate action to repel, repatriate or remove any alien engaged in the invasion.”

• Allow U.S. military service members to act as immigration and border enforcement officers as part of Trump's promised mass deportation program. Trump’s order covers the Ready Reserve and National Guard, military property that could be used as detention space, ground and air transport vehicles and “other logistics services in support of civilian-controlled law enforcement operations.” The Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 has historically limited use of military personnel in domestic law enforcement actions. Trump’s orders frame migrant flow as a national security threat, which he reasons justifies his military orders as commander in chief.

• Stop refugee arrivals and suspend the U.S. Refugee Admission Program effective Jan. 27, 2025, pending a 90-day review and recommendations from Homeland Security, the State Department and others.

• Redefine birthright citizenship under the 14th Amendment. A Trump order asserts that a child born in the U.S. is not a citizen if 1) the mother does not have legal immigration status or is in the country legally but only temporarily and 2) the father is not a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident. The order forbids U.S. agencies from issuing any document recognizing such a child as a citizen or accept any state document recognizing citizenship. This order is already being challenged in federal court.

• Prioritize continued construction of a wall and “other barriers” along the U.S.-Mexico border.

• Direct the attorney general and Homeland Security secretary to create Homeland Security Task Forces in all 50 states, comprising of state and local law enforcement charged with “ending the presence of criminal cartels, foreign gangs, and transnational criminal organizations.”

• Give the Homeland Security secretary wide latitude to establish agreements with individual state and local law enforcement agencies, “to the maximum extent permitted by law,” that empower those non-federal officials to act as federal immigration officers.

• Require collection of DNA samples and fingerprints from immigration detainees under a 2005 federal law.

• Forbid so-called “catch-and-release” – which allows some migrants to remain in the U.S. while awaiting their immigration court proceedings – in favor of detention and deportation of anyone in the U.S. illegally.

• Direct Homeland Security to immediately devote resources and secure contractors “to construct, operate, control, or use facilities to detain removable aliens.”

• End so-called “parole programs” (often referred to as “family reunification”) that allow family members of certain citizens and permanent-resident immigrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela to come to the U.S. while their visa applications are still pending.

• Require a review of all cases for all immigrants now in the U.S. under “Temporary Protected Status,” with the stated intent of “ensuring ... that such designations are appropriately limited in scope” and last the minimum amount of time “necessary to fulfill the textual requirement” of federal law.

• Revert to vetting and screening standards used during Trump’s first term for any person seeking a visa or “immigration benefit of any kind” and apply the standard visa vetting procedures to “any refugee or stateless individual” seeking admission.

• Repeal a Biden order requiring planning for the effects of climate change on world migration patterns.

• Direct the secretary of state and U.S. diplomats effectively to threaten sanctions against any nation seen as reluctant to accept and facilitate the return of its citizens the U.S. deports.

• Direct the State Department, Homeland Security and others to review and recommend changes to vetting for visas and produce a report to the president within 60 days. The order calls for identifying countries “for which vetting and screening information is so deficient as to warrant a partial or full suspension” of admission to the U.S. for their citizens.

• Direct the attorney general and others to deny federal money to “so-called ‘sanctuary’” cities the administration sees as interfering with federal immigration enforcement, with the caveat that the Trump administration pursues action “to the maximum extent possible under the law.”

• Pause distribution of federal money to non-governmental organizations “supporting or providing services, either directly or indirectly, to removable or illegal aliens” pending reviews and audits to identify any operations that may “promote or facilitate violations of our immigration laws.”

• Designate international cartels as “Foreign Terrorist Organizations” or “Specially Designated Global Terrorists” under existing federal law. The order triggers the Alien Enemies Act to combat cartels and their members.

• Require, within 30 days, the attorney general, secretary of state and others to “evaluate the adequacy of programs designed to ensure the proper assimilation of lawful immigrants into the United States, and recommend any additional measures ... that promote a unified American identity.”

International trade, business and the economy

• Broadly direct all executive agencies to tailor their policies to reduce consumer prices. Trump wants a progress report from a top White House economic adviser every 30 days.

• Direct the treasury and commerce secretaries, U.S trade representative and others to examine causes of U.S. trade deficits, identify unfair trade practices and make recommendations, potentially including “a global supplemental tariff.”

• Begin review of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, Trump’s first-administration rewrite of NAFTA, with an eye to a renegotiation in 2026 or sooner. Trump said he plans 25% tariffs on Canadian and Mexican goods as of Feb. 1, but he has not signed such executive actions so far.

• Begin establishment of an “External Revenue Service to collect tariffs, duties and other foreign trade-related revenues.”

• Begin review of U.S. trade dealings with China to consider new or increased tariffs. As a candidate, Trump threatened Chinese tariffs as high as 60%.

• Order review of fentanyl flows into the U.S., specifically from Canada, Mexico and China, and make recommendations, including potential tariffs and sanctions.

• Direct the commerce and trade secretaries and the U.S. trade representative to consolidate multiple reviews and assessments. Trump ordered consolidated reports by April 1.

• Suspend U.S. participation in the Global Tax Deal, an international agreement intended to set a minimum corporate tax globally to prevent multinational corporations from avoiding taxation altogether.

• Pause the U.S. ban on TikTok for 75 days, specifically barring the attorney general from enforcing the law Congress passed in 2024 to allow the new administration to assess national security concerns and seek a potential American buyer for the popular digital platform.

• Bar U.S. government officials from pushing social media companies to combat misinformation and disinformation. Trump’s order states that such previous efforts “infringed on the constitutionally protected speech rights of American citizens” and “advanced the Government’s preferred narrative about significant matters of public debate.”

Climate, energy and the environment

Withdraw the U.S. from the Paris climate agreement, which committed nations to pursue policies limiting carbon emissions that cause climate change. The order blocks transfer of U.S. funds previously obligated to the International Climate Finance Plan.

• Declare a “national energy emergency.” This is both a symbolic measure reflecting Trump’s promise of energy expansion but also specifically urges federal use of eminent domain and the Defense Production Act, measures that allow the government to commandeer private land and resources to produce goods deemed to be a national necessity.

• Compel the Army Corps of Engineers to use “to the fullest extent possible” its emergency permitting provisions to speed energy projects and urge all agencies to use similar emergency procedures that expedite or bypass permitting processes under the Endangered Species Act or other federal laws that protect wildlife.

• Eliminate Biden policies intended to encourage electrical vehicle development and purchases — part of Trump’s effort to limit non-fossil fuel energy sectors.

• Require all agencies within 30 days to submit to the White House Office of Management and Budget their plans to eliminate regulations and rules deemed “burdensome” to domestic energy production and consumption, “with particular attention to oil, natural gas, coal, hydropower, biofuels, critical mineral, and nuclear energy.”

• Repeal multiple Biden orders and memoranda regarding climate change, including guidelines for implementing climate-related provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022; an effort to assess financial risks of not combating climate change; and establishment of a President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology.

• Streamline other fossil fuel extraction in Alaska with a command to “rescind, revoke, revise, amend, defer or grant exemptions from any and all” regulatory actions relevant in the state. Specifically, Trump is restoring any suspended fossil fuel leases within the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

• Deny a pending U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service request to create an indigenous sacred site within the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

• Restore first Trump administration rules on hunting and trapping in national preserves in Alaska. Order the Interior Department to align federal rules on hunting and fishing in Alaska with rules for state-government lands.

• Roll back other Biden era limits or regulations on fossil fuel extraction on federal lands.

• Make the Outer Continental Shelf ineligible for wind energy leases — another limitation on non-fossil fuel development.

• Reengage a legal and regulatory battle with California state government over water routes from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. Trump wants to override fish and wildlife protection efforts to route more of the water to the Central Valley and Southern California.

Diversity, transgender rights and civil rights

• Give executive branch departments and agencies 60 days to eliminatediversity, equity and inclusion programs, including all “chief diversity officer” jobs, “equity action plans” and “environmental justice” positions. Require departments and agencies to give the White House Office of Management and Budget an accounting of previous DEI efforts, including names of relevant DEI contractors and DEI grant recipients. Terminate a 60-year-old executive order setting anti-discrimination requirements for government agencies and contractors.

• A separate OMB memo effectively put all federal DEI officers on immediate leave pending their elimination.

• Repeal several Biden-era directives on racial and ethnic equity and LGBTQ rights. They included orders intending to ensure equitable distribution of federal money based on the 2020 census; preventing government discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation and specifically encouraging inclusion in school settings; White House educational initiatives for Native Americans, Hispanics and Black Americans; and an order expressly allowing transgender persons to serve in the military.

• Require that the U.S. government recognize two genders only – male and female – on passports, visas, Global Entry cards and all other forms and documents, and in all programs and communications.

• Mandate that all federal civil rights law and labor law be interpreted and enforced with the understanding that “‘sex’ is not a synonym for and does not include the concept of ‘gender identity.’”

• Dissolve the White House Gender Policy Council and repeal Department of Education guidelines on Title IX concerning transgender rights and various documents advising schools on how to support and protect LGBTQ persons.

• Forbid federal money, including grants, from being used to “promote gender ideology” and direct the attorney general and Homeland Security secretary to “ensure that males are not detained in women’s prisons or housed in women’s detention centers.”

Federal workers and government structure

• Establish the Department of Government Efficiency under the Executive Office of the President until July 4, 2026. This is the entity led by Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, and is charged with recommending cuts in federal programs and spending.

• Require each agency head to establish their own DOGE team of at least four people to work with Musk’s operation.

• Freeze federal hiring, with exceptions – notably immigration and border enforcement posts and U.S. military jobs, plus a generic exception for to “maintain essential services.” The directive also does not apply to top presidential political appointees. The action bars contracting with outside labor to circumvent the hiring freeze.

• Block new federal rules and regulations in all agencies where Trump’s appointed agency chief is not yet on the job to approve new edicts. The White House Office of Budget and Management can override the ban in emergency situations.

• Require all federal workers to return full-time to in-person work.

• Direct reviews across the Executive Branch of “career senior executive service” officials and effectively make it easier to fire, demote or reassign those federal employees — generally the highest-ranking civil service employees whose jobs historically have been protected through administration changes. “Because SES officials wield significant government authority, they must serve at the pleasure of the president,” Trump’s memoranda states.

• Make it easier to fire federal workers by reinstituting an executive order from the first Trump administration, which was later repealed under Biden. The latest Trump policy adds provisions that state that federal employees and applicants “are not required to personally or politically support the current president” but must “faithfully implement administration policies,” understanding that “failure to do so is grounds for dismissal.”

• Require a “Federal Hiring Plan” within 120 days to set new standards for hiring federal workers. The order prioritizes “recruitment of individuals ... passionate about the ideals of our American republic” and preventing “the hiring of individuals based on their race, sex or religion,” while also blocking those “who are unwilling to defend the Constitution or to faithfully serve in the Executive Branch.”

• Formally nominate Cabinet and sub-Cabinet officers and name many acting Cabinet officers, agency chiefs and commission chairs as Trump nominees await Senate confirmation.

Health care

• Repeal Biden directives intended to make it easier to enroll in Medicaid services, secure insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act and lower prescription drug costs. The Trump action, however, does not actually repeal the Biden-era $35 monthly cap on insulin, Medicare's $2,000 annual out-of-pocket cap on prescription drugs or Medicare's ability to negotiate drug pricing. Those policies remain enforced by federal statutes passed by Congress.

• Repeal multiple Biden orders and directives on COVID-19.

• Withdraw the U.S. from the World Health Organization, direct the White House Office of Management and Budget to stop future transfers of U.S. money to WHO and order the secretary of state to end negotiations on the WHO Pandemic Agreement.

• Order the secretary of state and OMB director to identify “credible and transparent United States and international partners” to replace the U.S. relationship with WHO.

Foreign policy, national security and ‘America First’

• Cancel Biden-era sanctions on far-right Israeli groups and individuals accused of violence against Palestinians in the West Bank. Biden’s order had frozen U.S. assets and barred Americans from dealing with Israelis covered by his order.

• Direct Secretary of State Marco Rubio to issue guidance to put all State Department “politics, programs, personnel and operations in line with an America First foreign policy, which puts America and its interests first.”

• Re-designate Yemen's Houthis as a terrorist organization. Trump’s administration designated the Houthis as global terrorists and a foreign terrorist organization in one of his last acts in office in 2021. But Biden reversed courseearly on, at the time citing the humanitarian threat that the sanctions posed to ordinary Yemenis.

• Define the membership and establish operating procedures for the National Security Council.

• Pause all U.S. foreign development aid pending reviews of “efficiencies and consistency” with administration aims, to be conducted within 90 days by relevant agency heads “under guidelines” from Rubio the White House Office of Management and Budget. Rubio can lift the freeze for any program.

• Immediately grant six-month security clearances to certain administration officials whose background checks are pending. The White House counsel determines which aides get the temporary clearance.

• Repeal Biden’s executive order on artificial intelligence that aimed to set guardrails on the development of AI.

Nationalism

Restore the name of Mount McKinley in Alaska. The change for North America’s tallest peak recognizes William McKinley, the 25th U.S. president, whom Trump has praised for economic leadership and expanding U.S. territory through the Spanish-American War. President Barack Obama had in 2015 renamed the mountain Denali — what native tribes called it historically. Trump’s order did not change the name of the surrounding Denali National Park and Reserve.

• Require Trump’s personal approval of new architectural and design standards for federal buildings so the president can ensure federal structures “respect regional, traditional, and classical architectural heritage in order to uplift and beautify public spaces and ennoble the United States.”

• Order that U.S. flags always be flown at full-staff on Inauguration Day. The immediate effect was to countermand Biden’s traditional 30-day order lowering flags as a mourning tribute to former President Jimmy Carter, who died Dec. 29, 2024. Trump’s order returned flags on federal installations to half-staff on Jan. 21, through the end of the Carter mourning period.

Death penalty and crime

• Direct the attorney general to explore whether 37 federal prisoners who had death sentences commuted to life imprisonment by Biden can be charged and tried with capital crimes in state courts.

• Direct the attorney general to “take all necessary and lawful action” to supply states with adequate drugs to carry out lethal injection.

• Direct the attorney general to seek reversals of U.S. Supreme Court precedents that limit application of the death penalty in state and federal jurisdictions.

• In a symbolic gesture, direct the attorney general to “encourage state attorneys general and district attorneys” to pursue the death penalty in all possible cases.

The Capitol riot and 2020 campaign redux

• Commute the sentences and grant full pardons to hundreds of individuals convicted or still being prosecuted for their roles in the Jan. 6, 2021, attacks on the U.S. Capitol as Congress convened to certify Biden’s victory over Trump in the 2020 election.

• Order the attorney general and others to review all agencies’ investigative and enforcement actions during Biden’s tenure to identify what Trump describes as “weaponization of the federal government” against his supporters. The directive identifies the Justice Department, Federal Trade Commission, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the intelligence community. It requires a report to the president on the findings, with recommended “remedial actions.”

• Direct the attorney general to investigate U.S. government dealings with social media platforms during Biden’s tenure and make “recommendations for appropriate remedial actions” in response to what Trump frames as censorship efforts.

Revoke the security clearances of 50 people Trump accuses of aiding Biden’s 2020 campaign via their collective public statement about a laptop that belonged to Biden’s son, Hunter Biden. The list includes former top intelligence officials James Clapper, Michael Hayden and Leon Panetta, along with Trump’s onetime National Security Adviser John Bolton.

• Direct the director of national intelligence and CIA director to submit a report within 90 days with recommendations for additional “disciplinary action” and how to “prevent the Intelligence Community or anyone who works for or within it from inappropriately influencing domestic elections.”

Share/Bookmark

Abraham Trump

 



Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day. Deport a man and you will never have to feed him again.






Share/Bookmark

Ultra-liberal Hollywood?





Hollywood Is Now Ready to Work With Trump: ‘You Didn’t Hear Biden Talking About How to Help Us’

(Don't get too ecstatic he still has plenty of haters)

Getty Images

The night before Donald Trump returned to the White House, one of the splashiest inauguration week bashes was kicking off at D.C. hot spot Sax Restaurant & Lounge. Atlanta rapper Waka Flocka Flame performed, while conservative VIPs Ben Shapiro, comedian Terrence K. Williams and “Am I Racist?” star Matt Walsh were honored while a crowd of 600 partied until the wee hours.

While the guest list was apropos for a Trump 2.0 celebration, some might be shocked by who sponsored and shelled out $75,000 for the event: none other than TikTok, which signed on to host in November. This marked a stark shift from 2017, when Trump was persona non grata among mainstream media companies.

“It was kind of happenstance that the party ended up being on the same day that they were scheduled to go dark,” says CJ Pearson, co-chair of the GOP Youth Advisory Council and a co-host of the party. “Obviously President Trump saved the platform. It could have been a funeral, but instead it was a very, very jubilant celebration.” 

Tech oligarchs like Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg and Tim Cook are firmly atop the guest list for another four years of Trump, having proven their fealty on the rotunda at Monday’s inauguration. Many in show business are wondering justhow close Hollywood will cozy up to Trump in this new era. 

Talent who pledged early support have been put through the social media wringer. “American Idol” star Carrie Underwood was Photoshopped into a KKK robe by one X user after she confirmed she would perform at the inauguration. Sylvester Stallone, Mel Gibson and Jon Voight were mocked and eye-rolled by showbiz insiders when Trump announced this month that they would serve as his envoys to the entertainment industry. 

For some, a return to 2020 — before COVID, strikes and devastating wildfires crippled Hollywood’s limping economy — would be welcome, even if meant enduring Trump’s drive-by attacks on the industry. Members of the industry’s most left-wing contingent — the unions — are privately expressing hope that the president’s planned tariffs on imports may cover runaway production, thus creating a greater incentive to film in hard-hit hubs like Los Angeles and Atlanta. 

One prolific indie film producer says he doesn’t care for Trump’s politics, but admits it is “refreshing to hear the office of the president focus on how we can get the movie business back on track — and back in Los Angeles.” 

The producer made a film released last year chronicling historic events in L.A. “We had to shoot the whole thing in Bulgaria because it cost half as much. I had to sleep in a stinky hotel and not the house I worked my entire life to buy,” he says. “You didn’t hear Biden talking about how to help us.” 

To numerous power players Variety spoke with, just as staggering as the town’s silence over the encroaching Trump effect is the procession of media moguls — from Amazon executive chairman Bezos to Disney CEO Bob Iger — making the pilgrimage to Mar-a-Lago or donating to Trump’s inaugural fund. After-parties for the Golden Globes were abuzz with news that Prime Video had plunked down $40 million to license a documentary about Melania Trump — to be directed by disgraced filmmaker Brett Ratner, who was accused by six women of sexual misconduct in 2017. 

“Hollywood’s lost its nerve,” said one chief executive at a media conglomerate. 

Bezos, who celebrated Joe Biden’s 2020 presidential victory over Trump by noting that “unity, empathy and decency are not characteristics of a bygone era,” is believed to have approved the deal. 

Reversing allegiances is par for the course in the industry. In 2001, Beyoncé performed at George W. Bush’s inauguration with Destiny’s Child, only to serenade Barack Obama when the 44th president took office in 2009. “The Sopranos” star Drea de Matteo says she voted for Biden in 2020 only to go full MAGA in 2024 after becoming disillusioned by the Democrats’ push for COVID vaccine mandates. 

“There is a bit of a shift,” de Matteo says of the town’s growing receptiveness toward Trump. “Hollywood is going to fall in line with whatever because at the end of the day, it’s still a huge fucking industry and they still have to make money.” 

Just as a pragmatic Iger must now pay respect to Trump, so too must his former communications czar Zenia Mucha. The Disney alum, known as Iger’s secret weapon for dodging PR imbroglios, is chief brand and communications officer for TikTok and is running strategy behind the scenes. Industry observers could see her fingerprints when TikTok CEO Shou Chew thanked Trump for “his commitment to work with us to find a solution” after the Supreme Court upheld a lower court ruling that bans the China-owned app in the U.S. 

“The irony of Zenia — a former C-suite executive of one of the most progressive Fortune 500 companies in the world — now forced to lobby Donald Trump on behalf of a foreign adversary of the United States, China, is the epitome of the phrase ‘stranger than fiction,’” says Chris Fenton, a producer on “Iron Man 3” who worked closely with Rep. Mike Gallagher, former chair of the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party, on the TikTok issue. (Mucha declined comment.) 

While the billionaire class is playing nice with Trump, it is unlikely that the number of actors who publicly support the incoming president will expand beyond the small cadre that includes Zachary Levi and Rob Schneider. Roseanne Barr was one of an even smaller group who were vocal about casting their votes for Trump back in 2016. And she believes it got her canceled in Hollywood — by none other than Iger, who fired her from her top-rated show “Roseanne” for what he later called a “completely insensitive, completely disrespectful” tweet about Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett. 

“I’m extremely happy that Trump won because I need artistic freedom,” Barr tells Variety. “And I was always under the assumption that I had that being an American. So I’d like it back.”






Share/Bookmark

Tuesday, January 21, 2025

Congratulations Ohio State National Champions





BTW…Day went from... 'If he loses to Michigan one more time he's outta here’. 



To the most highly touted coach in college football right now!








Share/Bookmark

Coming from the scumbag who received a preemptive pardon


Share/Bookmark

Monday, January 20, 2025

Congratulations to the 45th and 47th President Donald J Trump

 

(The 46th also)




Share/Bookmark

This Reeks








This speaks volumes! First it was his son and his drug dealers now Bribem felt compelled to pardon Dr. Fauci who served as The Chief Medical Officer to the President, and Milley who served as The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff a 4 star general, along with the January 6 lynch mob. A doctor and a four-star general need to be pardoned??? This reeks of corruption so bad I can smell it in from here. Bribem is doing this under the guise of... he's protecting them against Trump's revenge. Everyone knows it's total bullshit! To me excepting a presidential pardon is an admission of guilt. I hope this doesn't prevent Bondi from investigating what really happened and expose the truth if for no other reason than to prevent this from happening again.


Update:



If there's no crime why does he have to pardon his family? Because they're guilty as hell!






Share/Bookmark

Sunday, January 19, 2025

Elvis...His Greatest Song

 






Share/Bookmark

Saturday, January 18, 2025

How fitting...




Out with the old in with the new.



Would pay good money to see Trump wheel out Bribem just before his Inauguration.







Share/Bookmark

Thursday, January 16, 2025

Had to laugh



This is Trump's official portrait released on Thursday, ahead of his second term as President of the United States




Trump's mug shot, which was taken in August 2023 at the Fulton County Jail in Atlanta, Georgia, on election fraud charges




Share/Bookmark

Excuse me': Bondi shuts down Dem senator’s questioning attacking another Trump nominee'






I was waiting for Bondi to say...


I'll answer all your questions after you tell me about the metals you won during your tour in the Vietnam war.






U.S. Attorney General nominee Pam Bondi clashed with a senior Democratic senator during her confirmation hearing to lead the Department of Justice (DOJ) on Wednesday.

Bondi was forced to defend President-elect Trump’s pick to lead the FBI, Kash Patel, when Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., pressed her on his past comments.

He referenced Patel’s suggestion of closing down FBI headquarters and threatening an "enemies list," among other remarks.




President-elect Trump's Attorney General nominee Pam Bondi and Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., clashed during her confirmation hearing.


"Is that a person who, appropriately, should be the FBI director? Aren't those comments inappropriate? Shouldn't you disavow them and and ask him to recant them?" Blumenthal hammered.

Bondi replied, "Senator, I am not familiar with all those comments. I have not discussed those comments with Mr. Patel."

"What I do know, is Mr. Patel…" she began before Blumenthal attempted to cut her off.

Bondi pressed forward, "Excuse me. What I do know is Mr. Patel was a career prosecutor. He was a career public defender, defending people. And he also has great experience within the intelligence community."



President-elect Trump is pushing the Senate to confirm his nominees.


"What I can sit here and tell you is, Mr. Patel, if he works with running the FBI, if he is confirmed, and if I am confirmed, he will follow the law. If I am the attorney general of the United States of America, and I don't believe he would do anything otherwise," Bondi said.

Blumenthal replied, "Well, let me just submit that the response that I would have hoped to hear from you is that those comments are inappropriate, and that you will ask him to disavow or recant them when he comes before this committee, because they are indeed chilling to fair enforcement and the rule of law."

It comes after Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., similarly pressed Bondi on what Democrats have called Patel’s "enemies list."

They are referring to a list of 60 people in Patel’s book "Government Gangsters: The Deep State, the Truth, and the Battle for Our Democracy," who he branded as part of the "deep state."

Bondi defended Patel during Whitehouse’s questioning as well, while vowing there would never be an "enemies list" at the DOJ.

Share/Bookmark

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

WATCH: Pam Bondi completely DESTROYS Adam Schiff, a man who disgraces any government door he darkens.

 


Share/Bookmark

Couldn't agree more




Goodbye and good riddance, Biden. Americans like me are glad to see Joe go. | Opinion

Nicole Russell, USA TODAY
Wed, January 15, 2025 at 4:03 AM EST



President Joe Biden will give a farewell speech to the nation Wednesday night on his way out of the White House − five days before Donald Trump moves back into the Oval Office.

Biden will undoubtedly paint a picture of a robust, successful tenure. It might be tempting to see America and the world through his rose-colored glasses, but I won't be fooled. The disasters have piled up one after another these past four years while Biden was president.

And I can't say goodbye to Biden fast enough.
Millions of Americans felt left behind in Biden's economy

Biden is sure to talk about what he believes is a strong U.S. economy. In a speech Friday, Biden said that the economy had made "transformational progress" on his watch, and that he added 16.6 million jobs.

Biden did add jobs, I'll give him that. According to Forbes, employment is up 12%. Unemployment is down to 4.1% from 6.2% in early 2021.

Even so, job growth couldn't ease the pain that the high rate of inflation inflicted on Americans during Biden's presidency. Consumer prices grew at an average annual rate of 5.4%. The annual inflation rate was only 1.9% during Trump's first term.



President Joe Biden leaves the stage after his speech at the State Department in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 13, 2025.



The high cost of food, housing and even used vehicles has left many Americans frustrated and discouraged. The American dream seems more like a vapor than an attainable goal.

The Associated Press' VoteCast, a survey of Americans who cast ballots in November, found that 3 in 10 voters reported “falling behind’’ financially in recent years, and that an extraordinary 90% of voters were somewhat or very worried about the cost of groceries. About 80% were concerned about the cost of health care, housing and gasoline.

No president is entirely responsible for the success or failure of the U.S. economy. But Biden continued to pile up trillions of dollars in deficit spending even after alarms about surging inflation were clanging.

I won't miss a president who ignored inflation until it was too late, and I bet most Americans won't, either.

In his farewell speech, Biden also will likely put a positive spin on his handling of foreign relations. On Monday, the president delivered a speech at the State Department defending his foreign policy record.

"Compared to four years ago, America is stronger, our alliances are stronger, our adversaries and competitors are weaker," Biden said. "We have not gone to war to make these things happen."

The reality, however, is far more grim.

On Biden's watch, Russia invaded Ukraine, Hamas attacked Israel, the United States bungled its withdrawal from Afghanistan and military alliances binding China, Iran, North Korea and Russia grew stronger.

Americans are still being held hostage in Gaza after more than 15 months of captivity, and antisemitism has increased in the United States and around the globe.

We'll never know for certain what disasters might have been avoided if a stronger U.S. president had been in office. But we do know that the United States and the world enjoyed a period of relative peace when Trump was in the White House.

I won't miss a president who looked weak and failed to deter war around the world.

Biden refused to be honest about his health

The biggest thing I won't miss about Biden is his blatant dishonesty.

The president failed to be straight with Americans about his failing health and his ability to serve a second term. That sowed even deeper distrust among Americans at a time when the public's trust in our government is dangerously low.

He also vowed repeatedly that he would not pardon his son Hunter, who was convicted in federal court on felony gun and tax charges. But then the president broke his vow, handing Hunter a get-out-of-jail-free card that erased 11 years' of actual and potential crimes.

Despite what Biden is likely to claim in his farewell address, the truth paints a different story. From high inflation and rampant dishonesty, to standing by as wars broke out, Biden failed repeatedly in his one term in the White House. I won't miss him.

Goodbye and good riddance, Mr. President.



Share/Bookmark