REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Do you feel like the winds of change are blowing today too?

POSTED BY: 6IXSTRINGJACK
UPDATED: Wednesday, December 3, 2025 09:09
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PAGE 81 of 81

Monday, December 1, 2025 10:20 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:

That's a message from human beings to other human beings.

We don't exactly know what you are, but you aren't a part of the group.

Go fuck yourself, you miserable little piece of dog shit.

Any group that votes for Trump more than once is a group of evil people. 6ixStringJoker, did you smoke a cigarette and watch porn this morning to launch your day?

Journalists say they know why Trump pardoned Honduran drug trafficker

“Let’s be very clear: the narco dictator Trump is pardoning was beloved by the crypto world for creating lawless, sovereign zones for tech utopias organized around crypto,” wrote journalist Ryan Grim in a social media post on X. “The current [government] moved to shut them down. The crypto class fought back and Trump is now doing their bidding.”

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/journalists-say-they-know-why-tru
mp-pardoned-honduran-drug-trafficker/ar-AA1RrlMv


---------

Trump Gives Bonkers Excuse for Pardoning Drug-Runner President

President Donald Trump thinks a former Central American leader was simply set up by the Biden administration.

By Julia Ornedo | Dec. 1 2025 6:30AM EST

https://www.thedailybeast.com/trumps-bonkers-excuse-for-pardoning-scan
dalous-honduran-ex-president
/

President Donald Trump defended his pardon of a former Honduran president who once bragged that he would “stuff the drugs up the gringos’ noses.”

Trump, 79, stood by his announcement on Friday that he would grant “a full and complete pardon” of Juan Orlando Hernandez, the 57-year-old former Honduran leader who was sentenced to 45 years in prison last year after he was convicted of drug trafficking and firearms offenses.

“Well, I was told—I was asked by Honduras, many of the people of Honduras, they said it was a Biden setup,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on Sunday. “He was the president of the country. And they basically said he was a drug dealer because he was the president of the country.”

The Justice Department, under former President Joe Biden, had said Hernandez “abused his power to support one of the largest and most violent drug trafficking conspiracies in the world,” helping heavily armed traffickers smuggle as much as 400 tons of cocaine into the U.S.—all while publicly promoting anti-narcotics policies in the Central American nation.

The prosecution of Hernandez began in Trump’s first term and concluded under Biden. Hernandez was extradited to the U.S. in 2022 and sentenced in a New York federal courtroom two years later for taking bribes from drug traffickers to move “well over approximately 4.5 billion individual doses of cocaine.”

In 2021, a witness recalled Hernandez as saying, “We are going to stuff the drugs up the gringos’ noses, and they’re never even going to know it.”

But Trump insisted Sunday that “the people of Honduras really thought he was set up, and it was a terrible thing.”

“He was the president of the country, and they basically said he was a drug dealer because he was the president of the country, and they said it was a Biden administration setup. And I looked at the facts, and I agreed with that,” he claimed.

When a reporter asked him to share any evidence showing that Hernandez was set up, Trump replied: “They could say that you take any country you want, if somebody sells drugs in that country, that doesn’t mean you arrest the president and put him in jail for the rest of his life. That includes this country.”

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Monday, December 1, 2025 10:28 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by second:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:

That's a message from human beings to other human beings.

We don't exactly know what you are, but you aren't a part of the group.

Go fuck yourself, you miserable little piece of dog shit.

Any group that votes for Trump more than once is a group of evil people.



Says the most evil person I've ever known personally.

Shut the fuck up. We're finished with you.

AMERICA is finished with you.

--------------------------------------------------

Be Nice. Don't be a dick.

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Monday, December 1, 2025 5:03 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:

Says the most evil person I've ever known personally.

Shut the fuck up. We're finished with you.

AMERICA is finished with you.

Why can't Trump remember why he had an MRI?

By Lisa Needham | Monday, December 01, 2025 at 3:30:06p CST

https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2025/12/1/2356309/-Why-can-t-Trump-re
member-why-he-had-an-MRI


President Donald Trump is pretty sure he just had the most perfect MRI of all time, but he can’t quite seem to remember what part of his most perfect body was scanned.

This, of course, raises not one, but two, health concerns: Which health condition is the president hiding that required a magnetic resonance imaging test, and which health condition is the president unwittingly revealing when he can’t seem to recall why he even had an MRI?

He did remember, however, to be a jerk to the female reporters who asked about it, personally attacking one by explaining that he does absolutely know what part of his body was not scanned. Per Trump, no one has shoved his large orange-slathered noggin into an MRI machine because his brain is perfect since he “aced” a cognitive test. He got a “perfect” score, which he told one reporter she would “be incapable of doing.”

Yes, Trump is still running around bragging about his cognitive abilities, seemingly unaware that he’s bragging about having been given the basic cognitive test to check for cognitive impairments such as dementia.

Back in his first term, Trump’s unreleased tax returns arguably represented everything we knew was bad about him, but didn’t have specifics for. Much like this mysterious MRI, Trump was forever promising those tax returns would be released at some point in the future, all the while fighting to stop them from ever seeing the light of day.

Fast-forward eight years, and it seems quaint to care about that. Trump’s second-term corruption is so open and obvious that seeing his tax returns wouldn’t really tell us anything we don’t already know. When the House finally released six years of Trump’s returns, including those from his first term, in 2022, it wasn’t as much a revelation as a confirmation: Trump’s a tax cheat who is bought and paid for.

During Trump’s second term, the mysterious yet perfect yet still unknown MRI results serve the same function as the quest for his tax returns did: We all know there is something very bad regarding Trump’s health, but we don’t have specifics about it.

What we do have, though, is evidence of someone falling apart while insisting everything is totally fine and normal.

Is it normal for the president to take a little unscheduled wander along the White House rooftop?

Is it normal that the president keeps insisting that his creepy, heavily bruised, disintegrating hand is totally just from lots of handshaking, as if Donald J. Trump were the first president to shake a lot of hands? Or that after confirming Trump was diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency, which was glaringly obvious from his visibly swollen ankles, the White House tried to claim that it is also the reason for the creepy hand?

Is it normal that the president is using the r-word to slur a Democratic elected official—who just happened to be the vice presidential candidate in the 2024 election?

Hilariously, that attack on Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz seems to have backfired, with Walz, unruffled, responding “Release the MRI results.”

While Trump has a history of vulgar name-calling, his other recent behavior is raising eyebrows.

He’s out here pardoning people but he can’t say who they are or why he’s doing it. He falls asleep during meetings and then gets furious if people point that out. Yes, Donald, the radical left conspired to make you fall asleep on camera.

Additionally, last time we checked, neither chronic venous insufficiency nor oodles of handshaking explain Trump’s ongoing decompensation when talking to female reporters, calling one “piggy” and another “insubordinate” for daring to do their jobs and ask him questions.

Sure, it would be great to pry loose those MRI results. These days, you can assume a New York Times reporter probably already has them, but needs to keep it quiet until they secure a blockbuster second-term tell-all book deal.

And, in the end, what would those results reveal that we don’t already know?

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Monday, December 1, 2025 5:41 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by second:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:

Says the most evil person I've ever known personally.

Shut the fuck up. We're finished with you.

AMERICA is finished with you.

Why can't Trump remember why he had an MRI?



I dunno...

Why can't you remember what you post 5 minutes ago and regularly put your hypocrisy regarding every issue under the sun on full display here every single day?

Maybe you and Trump have a lot more in common with each other than you think and you're both retarded in your own special ways?

--------------------------------------------------

Be Nice. Don't be a dick.

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Monday, December 1, 2025 6:13 PM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:

I dunno...

Why can't you remember what you post 5 minutes ago and regularly put your hypocrisy regarding every issue under the sun on full display here every single day?

Maybe you and Trump have a lot more in common with each other than you think and you're both retarded in your own special ways?

Lest we forget… Trumptards claim that Democrats shut the entire world down for 2 years over a cold.

One of our biggest divides is over remembering who was president in 2020.

Hint: Trump.

On Friday, March 13, 2020, President Trump declared a national emergency under provisions of the Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act of 1988 (Stafford Act) . . .

https://balderson.house.gov/coronavirus-updates/president-trump-declar
es-national-emergency.htm


https://www.politico.com/news/2020/03/13/coronavirus-emergency-declara
tion-trump-128530


"In addition to his executive actions, Trump has pressed Congress for an economic stimulus package that could amount to hundreds of billions of dollars." Actually, $7,800 billion. Seeing all that new money, the people who set prices proceeded to raise prices in order to capture that $7.8 trillion for themselves, thanking Trump for making the wealth transfer possible.

https://www.propublica.org/article/national-debt-trump

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Tuesday, December 2, 2025 7:24 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Lock Them Up for War Crimes

Secretary of War Pete Hegseth must be prosecuted for murdering Venezuelan civilians on a speedboat

Dec 01, 2025

https://democracydefender2025.substack.com/p/pete-hegseth-war-crime-ve
nezuela


In September 2025, a U.S. military operation in the Caribbean resulted in the deaths of several Venezuelan civilians aboard speedboats. While the Secretary of War Pete Hegseth framed the incident as a counter-narcotics operation, evidence suggests that he ordered the survivors to be executed. The killings violated international humanitarian law (IHL), specifically the Geneva Conventions and the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC). Hegseth’s actions constitute war crimes including extrajudicial killings, disproportionate use of force, and violations of the principle of distinction between combatants and civilians. He must be held accountable under international law and prosecuted for these alleged crimes.

The Legal Framework: War Crimes and International Law

War crimes are defined under Article 8 of the Rome Statute as serious violations of the laws and customs of war, including:

1. Willful killing (Article 8(2)(a)(i))

2. Intentionally directing attacks against civilians (Article 8(2)(b)(i))

3. Excessive incidental death, injury, or damage (Article 8(2)(b)(iv))

4. Violations of the principles of distinction and proportionality (Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions)

Precedents for Prosecuting High-Ranking Officials

Several high-profile cases demonstrate that military and political leaders can be held accountable for war crimes:

1. Slobodan Miloševic (Yugoslavia) – Prosecuted by the ICTY for war crimes in Bosnia.

2. Charles Taylor (Liberia) – Convicted by the Special Court for Sierra Leone for aiding and abetting war crimes.

3. Omar al-Bashir (Sudan) – Indicted by the ICC for genocide and war crimes in Darfur.

4. U.S. Cases – While no U.S. official has been convicted by the ICC, former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld faced civil lawsuits in Europe for torture at Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo.

If the U.S. fails to prosecute Hegseth domestically, the ICC could assert jurisdiction under Article 12 of the Rome Statute, especially if Venezuela (a party to the ICC) refers the case.

Much more at
https://democracydefender2025.substack.com/p/pete-hegseth-war-crime-ve
nezuela


The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Tuesday, December 2, 2025 7:57 AM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by second:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:

I dunno...

Why can't you remember what you post 5 minutes ago and regularly put your hypocrisy regarding every issue under the sun on full display here every single day?

Maybe you and Trump have a lot more in common with each other than you think and you're both retarded in your own special ways?

Lest we forget…



You forget everything.

Save your bullshit in here. Nobody is going down for any war crimes.

This is just another bullshit issue of yours to throw on the heap of bullshit issues you've posted here over the years and forgotten completely about 5 minutes later.

You suck dude. You're invisible now.

People don't even hate your kind anymore. We don't even see you anymore.

You no longer even exist in our world.

--------------------------------------------------

Be Nice. Don't be a dick.

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Tuesday, December 2, 2025 9:33 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:
Quote:

Originally posted by second:
Quote:

Originally posted by 6ixStringJack:

I dunno...

Why can't you remember what you post 5 minutes ago and regularly put your hypocrisy regarding every issue under the sun on full display here every single day?

Maybe you and Trump have a lot more in common with each other than you think and you're both retarded in your own special ways?

Lest we forget…



You forget everything.

Save your bullshit in here. Nobody is going down for any war crimes.

This is just another bullshit issue of yours to throw on the heap of bullshit issues you've posted here over the years and forgotten completely about 5 minutes later.

You suck dude. You're invisible now.

People don't even hate your kind anymore. We don't even see you anymore.

You no longer even exist in our world.

--------------------------------------------------

Be Nice. Don't be a dick.

The legal system to bring Secretary of War Pete Hegseth to justice is the same one used on Slobodan Miloševic (Yugoslavia). Slobby died of old age before justice could be done because the legal system doesn't function. There are alternative methods completely outside of the legal system. Two bullets in the back of Pete's head would be quick justice, but that requires somebody who understands how fucked up the legal system is and who cares enough to fix what is wrong with Pete.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Tuesday, December 2, 2025 9:34 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Trump Fury Erupts at NYT as Mental Decline Visibly Worsens

As Trump’s rage at the paper of record reveals too much, the author of a piece on Trump as a “lame duck dictator” explains how devastating it is for him that his carefully cultivated illusion of strength is collapsing.

President Trump is very, very angry about a New York Times piece that carefully documents his obvious physical decline. Trump raged over the piece, letting out a stream of lies about his performance in office and even attacking the reporter who wrote the piece as ugly. This may seem typical of Trump, but we think it gets at something deeper. Trump’s entire political mystique is premised on the fiction that he’s a strong, virile, formidable figure who wields absolute mastery over his enemies at all times. His defensive eruption shows that he knows that the second his aura of strength is deflated and he comes to be seen as a shriveled, floundering figure, his whole political house of cards is in danger of collapsing. David Lurie, a lawyer who writes for the Public Notice Substack, has a good new piece developing a framework that describes Trump as a “lame duck dictator.”

https://newrepublic.com/article/203765/transcript-trump-fury-erupts-ny
t-mental-decline-visibly-worsens


Sargent: So the New York Times piece is pretty devastating. It talks about how Trump has been dozing off at events, how he’s traveling a good deal less than he used to, how he’s seen in public less often. There’s this brutal video of him embedded in the piece looking exhausted and befuddled. He comes to the Oval Office for work at 11 a.m. The piece even implied that Trump is now eyeing the great beyond. David, what did you make of this piece?

Lurie: Well, Greg, on the one hand, the piece was quite gentle to Trump because it avoided the elephant in the room, which is his very evident and advancing state of dementia. But it also was devastating for the reasons that you observed, because his sheer and pervasive state of exhaustion and his ever more inescapable showing of his age is exactly what Trump cannot abide. It’s devastating precisely because it was so factual. The video was perhaps the most devastating part of it, as was the very accurate description of the truly bizarre—I think historically bizarre—moment when a pharmaceutical executive collapsed next to Trump and he—in a state of bewilderment mixed with the apparent desire to remain the center of attention—stood up from his chair and then stared into the void. So it’s a devastating piece, and it’s devastating because of its factuality, in my view.

Sargent: Well, I think you raise a really important point in saying that it, if anything, danced around the elephant in the room, which is that he is in a state of serious mental decline, as well. We can all see it. It’s apparent to everybody at all times. He posted a long Truth Social rant, in which he said, “The creeps at the failing New York Times are at it again.” He claimed that he won in 2024 by a landslide, that he settled eight wars, that our economy is great, that he has his highest poll numbers ever. He even called the Times’ Katie Rogers ugly on the inside and out. Now, David, on the substance, all of that is bullshit. He won the narrowest victory in recent memory. He hasn’t settled anything close to eight wars. Our economy is in rough shape, and his polling has hit a new low. But there’s a real hit-dog quality to the lying here. Don’t you think, David?

Lurie: Well, on the one hand, it’s his greatest hits. But on the other hand, people are not imagining that Trump is becoming more out of control, that he’s becoming more misogynistic, that he lacks impulse control, which causes his natural meanness and bullying tendencies to come out.

Sargent: I want to bring in something Fox News did here because it’s extraordinary. There was a recent Fox poll, which had Trump’s approval on the economy at 38 percent to 61 percent disapproval, Trump’s approval on tariffs at 35 to 63, and his approval on health care at 34 to 64. Absolutely terrible numbers in the 30s stuck down there. He’s floundering. But then Media Matters documented that Fox personalities, after this poll came out, buried the poll and instead showered him with all this obsequious praise. Portraying him as this world-historical figure—one of them even described him as a king whose ring people were going to kiss, literally described Trump that way. They were almost apologetic about their own network’s poll showing him as really, really weak, so they had to make up for it. I think what that gets at, David, is that Trump’s own propagandists understand how important this aura of strength is to his political mystique.

Lurie: When the character image is punctured in any way, there’s a risk the whole balloon is going to lose its air. It’s the reason that the Fox News personalities recognize they have to engage in these obsequious and absurd, embarrassing demonstrations of praise, because otherwise the image is vulnerable. It’s ever more vulnerable. And when it goes, there’s really nothing left—nothing left at all.

Sargent: Exactly. You had this piece—you came up with the frame of the lame duck dictator, which is a good way to describe this. Now it’s common for presidents to present themselves as healthy and strong to the public. We’ve seen that over the decades. We’ve seen it for a long time. But Trump is doing something a little different here, I think. It’s more akin to those pictures of Vladimir Putin shirtless on horseback. This sort of cultishness is a hallmark of authoritarian politics, right? Do you see some of those strains in what Trump’s doing? What’s your sense of that?

Lurie: Well, first of all, I think we’re past the point of having a strain of authoritarianism. It doesn’t mean that we are Putin’s Russia. In fact, it’s because we’re not that we’re seeing the kind of displays that you pointed to. It’s because Trump—and his acolytes and, in the case of Fox News, the businesses that depend on the media-slash-political industry that he is the center of—all depend on Trump appearing to be like Vladimir Putin. Vladimir Putin—his regime depends on him appearing to be something he’s not. Well, Trump, it’s even more the case, right? Here we are in—Trump is, and his people are trying to append a dictatorship to the United States. And yes, it appeared for some time that they were going to succeed. I mean, Trump has been functioning as a dictator in many respects, but the problem is, of course, that it’s a vulnerable dictatorship. Virtually none of these abuses are popular with the American people. And unlike in Russia, where you can—the dictator can—actually kill a million Russians or send a million Russians to their death in a pointless war, in the United States, when presidents, even those who aspire like Trump to be a dictator, do things that are wildly unpopular—there is a political impact. And it’s coming home to roost for Trump, in my opinion.

Sargent: Well, I want to home in on your point about how this illusion of strength is necessary for masking the weaknesses of this presidency; the structural, deep weaknesses. You see White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt constantly talking about how energetic Trump is. You see his doctor’s reports on his glowing health becoming something almost comical. We’ve all seen these Cabinet meetings where one after another of these figures functions as a North Korea–style propagandist for him, obsequiously bowing down to him, talking about how strong he is, how powerful he is, how—and this is important—what a world-historical figure he is. This is an essential piece of a lot of it. And I think we see with Trump’s reaction to this Times piece that he and they all know how important that illusion of strength is, right? But what his crazy response reveals is that the only way to prop up that illusion is with a lot of lies, and also what’s revealed is that they know how dangerous it is for him to be perceived as weak and diminished. Hence the absurd overreaction.

Lurie: When the image of strength is the linchpin of a leader’s political success, then all it takes is a puncturing of the image for the success to start to dissipate. And then all of the tools that have been used in the past to promote Trump’s image—some of which you were just referring to, right: the praising of him in the weird Cabinet meetings—they actually end up weakening him. And that, I believe, is the dynamic.

Sargent: I want to close on what I think is a real tension in this situation. It’s between Trump’s political weakness on the one hand, his unpopularity on the one hand, and, on the other hand, his consolidation of authoritarian power. He is a lame duck, as you put it, right? He’s politically weak. He’s unpopular. He’s physically and mentally declining in pretty much every way. And it’s right out there for the country to see the emperor’s clothes have fallen off. And so, given that tension, they have another reason to try to prop up this illusion of strength, mastery, virility, et cetera. It’s so that people don’t resist—they see his triumph over them as inevitable. I thought your piece got at this. In essence, what we’ve got is people not accepting the emperor as he’s being presented to us. And that’s essential, right? It’s essential that they’re not accepting the strong-emperor fiction.

Lurie: It’s now becoming clear that actually having communities organized, particularly through churches and other community organizations, is really, really impairing the invasions on a local level. When they went into North Carolina, particularly through the Catholic Church, communities were immediately organized as soon as they got there. And what had taken a number of weeks to start to organize in Los Angeles, and a shorter period of time to organize in Chicago, took a much—even that much—shorter time to organize in North Carolina, which I believe must have surprised Bovino and Trump. I think they thought they were going into an easy target. At the same time, it’s a much longer conversation, but I think that we’re seeing that his weakness in Washington is developing in a multiplicity of ways. It’s not just the quote-unquote “crack-up of MAGA.” And it’s not just the effectiveness of the ACA strategy that the Democrats implemented well before the shutdown, through the shutdown and continued to now. It’s that when the resistance is effectuated and when it’s shown to have a base of popularity, it starts to bring to the fore that Trump’s not a populist leader—politicians start—including Republicans start—to get worried that if they go along with it, they’re going to pay a price, which is not something they for whatever reason recognized months ago. It was the perceived power of Trump that has been the key to the quote-unquote “success” that he’s realized to this point. And it is the diminishment of that appearance of power that is actually the key to the diminishment of his actual power. I think that’s really what we’re getting at.

Sargent: To sum up, David Lurie, he’s a lame duck dictator and he’s getting a lot lamer, which is going to make him get more dictatorial, but it’s going to fail for him. David Lurie, thank you so much for coming on, man. Great stuff.

Lurie: My pleasure.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Tuesday, December 2, 2025 10:19 AM

THG

Keep it real please


Quote:

Originally posted by second:

Trump Fury Erupts at NYT as Mental Decline Visibly Worsens

As Trump’s rage at the paper of record reveals too much, the author of a piece on Trump as a “lame duck dictator” explains how devastating it is for him that his carefully cultivated illusion of strength is collapsing.

President Trump is very, very angry about a New York Times piece that carefully documents his obvious physical decline. Trump raged over the piece, letting out a stream of lies about his performance in office and even attacking the reporter who wrote the piece as ugly. This may seem typical of Trump, but we think it gets at something deeper. Trump’s entire political mystique is premised on the fiction that he’s a strong, virile, formidable figure who wields absolute mastery over his enemies at all times. His defensive eruption shows that he knows that the second his aura of strength is deflated and he comes to be seen as a shriveled, floundering figure, his whole political house of cards is in danger of collapsing. David Lurie, a lawyer who writes for the Public Notice Substack, has a good new piece developing a framework that describes Trump as a “lame duck dictator.”

https://newrepublic.com/article/203765/transcript-trump-fury-erupts-ny
t-mental-decline-visibly-worsens


Sargent: So the New York Times piece is pretty devastating. It talks about how Trump has been dozing off at events, how he’s traveling a good deal less than he used to, how he’s seen in public less often. There’s this brutal video of him embedded in the piece looking exhausted and befuddled. He comes to the Oval Office for work at 11 a.m. The piece even implied that Trump is now eyeing the great beyond. David, what did you make of this piece?

Lurie: Well, Greg, on the one hand, the piece was quite gentle to Trump because it avoided the elephant in the room, which is his very evident and advancing state of dementia. But it also was devastating for the reasons that you observed, because his sheer and pervasive state of exhaustion and his ever more inescapable showing of his age is exactly what Trump cannot abide. It’s devastating precisely because it was so factual. The video was perhaps the most devastating part of it, as was the very accurate description of the truly bizarre—I think historically bizarre—moment when a pharmaceutical executive collapsed next to Trump and he—in a state of bewilderment mixed with the apparent desire to remain the center of attention—stood up from his chair and then stared into the void. So it’s a devastating piece, and it’s devastating because of its factuality, in my view.

Sargent: Well, I think you raise a really important point in saying that it, if anything, danced around the elephant in the room, which is that he is in a state of serious mental decline, as well. We can all see it. It’s apparent to everybody at all times. He posted a long Truth Social rant, in which he said, “The creeps at the failing New York Times are at it again.” He claimed that he won in 2024 by a landslide, that he settled eight wars, that our economy is great, that he has his highest poll numbers ever. He even called the Times’ Katie Rogers ugly on the inside and out. Now, David, on the substance, all of that is bullshit. He won the narrowest victory in recent memory. He hasn’t settled anything close to eight wars. Our economy is in rough shape, and his polling has hit a new low. But there’s a real hit-dog quality to the lying here. Don’t you think, David?

Lurie: Well, on the one hand, it’s his greatest hits. But on the other hand, people are not imagining that Trump is becoming more out of control, that he’s becoming more misogynistic, that he lacks impulse control, which causes his natural meanness and bullying tendencies to come out.

Sargent: I want to bring in something Fox News did here because it’s extraordinary. There was a recent Fox poll, which had Trump’s approval on the economy at 38 percent to 61 percent disapproval, Trump’s approval on tariffs at 35 to 63, and his approval on health care at 34 to 64. Absolutely terrible numbers in the 30s stuck down there. He’s floundering. But then Media Matters documented that Fox personalities, after this poll came out, buried the poll and instead showered him with all this obsequious praise. Portraying him as this world-historical figure—one of them even described him as a king whose ring people were going to kiss, literally described Trump that way. They were almost apologetic about their own network’s poll showing him as really, really weak, so they had to make up for it. I think what that gets at, David, is that Trump’s own propagandists understand how important this aura of strength is to his political mystique.

Lurie: When the character image is punctured in any way, there’s a risk the whole balloon is going to lose its air. It’s the reason that the Fox News personalities recognize they have to engage in these obsequious and absurd, embarrassing demonstrations of praise, because otherwise the image is vulnerable. It’s ever more vulnerable. And when it goes, there’s really nothing left—nothing left at all.

Sargent: Exactly. You had this piece—you came up with the frame of the lame duck dictator, which is a good way to describe this. Now it’s common for presidents to present themselves as healthy and strong to the public. We’ve seen that over the decades. We’ve seen it for a long time. But Trump is doing something a little different here, I think. It’s more akin to those pictures of Vladimir Putin shirtless on horseback. This sort of cultishness is a hallmark of authoritarian politics, right? Do you see some of those strains in what Trump’s doing? What’s your sense of that?

Lurie: Well, first of all, I think we’re past the point of having a strain of authoritarianism. It doesn’t mean that we are Putin’s Russia. In fact, it’s because we’re not that we’re seeing the kind of displays that you pointed to. It’s because Trump—and his acolytes and, in the case of Fox News, the businesses that depend on the media-slash-political industry that he is the center of—all depend on Trump appearing to be like Vladimir Putin. Vladimir Putin—his regime depends on him appearing to be something he’s not. Well, Trump, it’s even more the case, right? Here we are in—Trump is, and his people are trying to append a dictatorship to the United States. And yes, it appeared for some time that they were going to succeed. I mean, Trump has been functioning as a dictator in many respects, but the problem is, of course, that it’s a vulnerable dictatorship. Virtually none of these abuses are popular with the American people. And unlike in Russia, where you can—the dictator can—actually kill a million Russians or send a million Russians to their death in a pointless war, in the United States, when presidents, even those who aspire like Trump to be a dictator, do things that are wildly unpopular—there is a political impact. And it’s coming home to roost for Trump, in my opinion.

Sargent: Well, I want to home in on your point about how this illusion of strength is necessary for masking the weaknesses of this presidency; the structural, deep weaknesses. You see White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt constantly talking about how energetic Trump is. You see his doctor’s reports on his glowing health becoming something almost comical. We’ve all seen these Cabinet meetings where one after another of these figures functions as a North Korea–style propagandist for him, obsequiously bowing down to him, talking about how strong he is, how powerful he is, how—and this is important—what a world-historical figure he is. This is an essential piece of a lot of it. And I think we see with Trump’s reaction to this Times piece that he and they all know how important that illusion of strength is, right? But what his crazy response reveals is that the only way to prop up that illusion is with a lot of lies, and also what’s revealed is that they know how dangerous it is for him to be perceived as weak and diminished. Hence the absurd overreaction.

Lurie: When the image of strength is the linchpin of a leader’s political success, then all it takes is a puncturing of the image for the success to start to dissipate. And then all of the tools that have been used in the past to promote Trump’s image—some of which you were just referring to, right: the praising of him in the weird Cabinet meetings—they actually end up weakening him. And that, I believe, is the dynamic.

Sargent: I want to close on what I think is a real tension in this situation. It’s between Trump’s political weakness on the one hand, his unpopularity on the one hand, and, on the other hand, his consolidation of authoritarian power. He is a lame duck, as you put it, right? He’s politically weak. He’s unpopular. He’s physically and mentally declining in pretty much every way. And it’s right out there for the country to see the emperor’s clothes have fallen off. And so, given that tension, they have another reason to try to prop up this illusion of strength, mastery, virility, et cetera. It’s so that people don’t resist—they see his triumph over them as inevitable. I thought your piece got at this. In essence, what we’ve got is people not accepting the emperor as he’s being presented to us. And that’s essential, right? It’s essential that they’re not accepting the strong-emperor fiction.

Lurie: It’s now becoming clear that actually having communities organized, particularly through churches and other community organizations, is really, really impairing the invasions on a local level. When they went into North Carolina, particularly through the Catholic Church, communities were immediately organized as soon as they got there. And what had taken a number of weeks to start to organize in Los Angeles, and a shorter period of time to organize in Chicago, took a much—even that much—shorter time to organize in North Carolina, which I believe must have surprised Bovino and Trump. I think they thought they were going into an easy target. At the same time, it’s a much longer conversation, but I think that we’re seeing that his weakness in Washington is developing in a multiplicity of ways. It’s not just the quote-unquote “crack-up of MAGA.” And it’s not just the effectiveness of the ACA strategy that the Democrats implemented well before the shutdown, through the shutdown and continued to now. It’s that when the resistance is effectuated and when it’s shown to have a base of popularity, it starts to bring to the fore that Trump’s not a populist leader—politicians start—including Republicans start—to get worried that if they go along with it, they’re going to pay a price, which is not something they for whatever reason recognized months ago. It was the perceived power of Trump that has been the key to the quote-unquote “success” that he’s realized to this point. And it is the diminishment of that appearance of power that is actually the key to the diminishment of his actual power. I think that’s really what we’re getting at.

Sargent: To sum up, David Lurie, he’s a lame duck dictator and he’s getting a lot lamer, which is going to make him get more dictatorial, but it’s going to fail for him. David Lurie, thank you so much for coming on, man. Great stuff.

Lurie: My pleasure.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two





The thing about Trump as I see it, is that it shows those here who support Trump to be hypocrites of the umpteenth degree. All their negative posts over the years about politicians and political parties acting badly according to their moral standards, is/was bullshit. Their moral standards align with Trump’s, and he has no morals.

All the shit they claimed to be true about Biden that was false, Trump is doing, again, to the umpteenth degree with impunity.

We can post many different sources for what we post, only to have them call it fake, lies, or they agree with Trump’s path of immorally deconstructing America.

Two words that comes to mind describing their behavior is; ignorant troll.

T


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Tuesday, December 2, 2025 1:14 PM

6IXSTRINGJACK


Quote:

Originally posted by THG:
The thing about Trump as I see it, is that it shows those here who support Trump to be hypocrites of the umpteenth degree.



You look like the dumbest person in the world saying shit like this.

This is why you need to look at threads of shit you've said in the past when I repost them.

You are a hypocrite to the core, buddy.

Nobody gives a single fuck what you think about them. Take your opinions and shove them up your ass before I do it for you again.

--------------------------------------------------

Be Nice. Don't be a dick.

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Wednesday, December 3, 2025 6:30 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Trump Claims MRI on His Brain Found Nothing

Andy Borowitz | Dec 01, 2025

WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report) — Boasting about his cognitive health, on Monday Donald J. Trump asserted that an MRI performed on his brain found nothing.

"I had a perfect MRI," he told reporters. "The greatest doctors in the country looked at my brain and came up empty."

Trump said there was no point in releasing his MRI because "there's nothing to see," adding, "It's like the East Wing."

___________________

Governor Newsom Press Office @GovPressOffice

Summary of Governor Gavin C. Newsom’s Advanced Imaging Results

Physician to the Governor
State of California

Memorandum
December 1, 2025
To The Media
From Dr. Dolittle, MD., PhD., Governor’s Physician, Chief of Peak Human Performance

For Immediate Release

As part of Governor Gavin Newsom’s annual physical, we conducted advanced imaging of his cardiovascular, musculoskeletal, and neurological health. I’m pleased to report that nothing about the Governor’s health is merely normal. Governor Newsom remains the healthiest human currently alive or recorded in medical history.

His cardiovascular scans are the best we’ve ever recorded. His arteries were described as shimmering, and his resting heart rate was so steady the EKG machine asked if he was meditating or just naturally enlightened.

His bone density is exceptional. A radiologist briefly wondered if we’d scanned a redwood, and his brain imaging showed no issues other than an unusually active region associated with intelligence, multitasking, and being wildly productive before sunrise.

While we do not typically comment on the health of other elected officials, we are aware of a letter released today from the White House claiming that President Trump is in excellent health. We simply note that Governor Newsom completes full workdays without falling asleep in meetings, does not require executive time to lie down and watch TV during work hours, and is able to stand upright without looking like the leaning Tower of Pisa.

If a side by side health chart were released, we recommend redacting it for the President’s emotional well being.

Governor Newsom remains the healthiest person alive and ever to live. Please direct follow up questions to my office.

Respectfully,
Dr. Dolittle

Physician to the Governor
California Department of Peak Excellence

Help this information get to more voters. A well-informed electorate is a prerequisite to Democracy.—Thomas Jefferson

https://www.facebook.com/voteinorout/posts/governor-newsom-press-offic
egovpressofficesummary-of-governor-gavin-c-newsoms-ad/1485572413570927
/

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Wednesday, December 3, 2025 7:06 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Trump to Disaster Victims: Drop Dead

Sorry, but we don’t help the little people

By Paul Krugman | Dec 03, 2025

https://paulkrugman.substack.com/p/trump-to-disaster-victims-drop-dead

The Mississippi flood of 1927 was one of America’s greatest natural disasters. Some 27,000 square miles were inundated, in some cases by 30 feet of water. Hundreds, maybe thousands, died — many of the victims were poor and Black, and their deaths went unrecorded. Around 700,000 people were displaced — equivalent to about 2 million people today, adjusting for population growth.

How did America respond? Initially, President Calvin Coolidge was adamantly opposed to any federal role in disaster relief, declaring that “The Government is not an insurer of its citizens against the hazard of the elements.” His refusal to provide aid was, however, deeply unpopular, and he eventually gave in to demands from Congress to deliver government aid.

Ever since that catastrophic flood, providing government aid to the victims of natural disasters has been an integral part of the American Way: federal aid to disaster victims became the norm after the Mississippi flood. Yet it was often a haphazard, uncoordinated process until 1979, when the federal response to natural disasters was consolidated under the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

Since then FEMA has become a well-established part of the American social safety net, especially in the face of worsening climate catastrophes. Americans have come to rely on FEMA as a first line of support after disasters. And when FEMA was seen to be falling down on the job, as it did after Hurricane Katrina virtually destroyed New Orleans in 2005, Americans were angry. The fact is, they want FEMA to be better, not smaller. In a July poll, only 9 percent of Americans wanted to see FEMA eliminated, and only another 10 percent wanted to see its budget cut.

Donald Trump, however, believes that he knows better than the majority of Americans. In June he announced his intention to dismantle FEMA and force the states to assume responsibility for disaster relief. While Trump publicly backed down after an intense public backlash, in practice he is gutting FEMA nonetheless. He is drastically scaling back federal emergency aid, even for communities in which the need for federal assistance is overwhelming.

The latest example of Trump’s stiffing those in need is in rural northern Michigan, where the power grid suffered severe damage from an ice storm last March. Rebuilding the power lines will cost thousands of dollars for each household served by the region’s power cooperatives. Without outside help, that cost will have to be paid by the cooperatives’ customers, a huge burden on a relatively poor part of the state. Yet FEMA has turned down the state’s request for aid, in an unprecedented break with past policies.

Adding further injury to Michiganders, who – by the way – voted to deliver the presidency to Donald Trump in 2024, the Trump administration has ordered another Michigan utility to keep an aging, unneeded, highly polluting coal-fired power plant operating, at a cost to ratepayers of $113 million so far, and ongoing at $615,000 per day.

Trump tried, unsuccessfully, to withhold wildfire aid from California unless it adopted voter ID. He has also tried to divert aid away from states that, in his view, aren’t cooperating with his immigration policies, although the courts stopped him. But the storm-hit areas that he is currently refusing to help are, or plausibly “were”, Trump country. The map on the left shows the areas covered by different Michigan electricity utilities; #3 and #7 are the utilities seeking FEMA aid. The map on the right shows the 2024 presidential vote by county, with deeper red corresponding to a higher Trump share:


Since this is not another case of Trump’s political retribution, what lies behind the denial of aid? I believe that it is a knee-jerk dominance display on Trump’s part. Whenever someone comes to him in need, whether its Volodomyr Zelensky, helpless African children dependent on USAID, or rural Michiganers, his cruelty is activated. And he likes surrounding himself with those of the same ilk: Stephen Miller, Pete Hegseth, and Kristi Noem, the secretary of homeland security, who impeded and slow-walked the emergency response to deadly Texas flooding back in July.

But that’s not all: there’s also an ideological component.
The pre-Trump typical conservative argument against government aid restricted itself to programs like food stamps. The usual suspects fulminate against those who need help putting food on the table, asserting that it’s because they have chosen to be poor. In the conservative ideology of Ronald Reagan, helping the poor relieves them of individual responsibility and only makes them lazy.

But those old-time conservatives also recognized a difference between being the victim of a natural disaster and being impoverished. In their view, nobody chooses to have an ice storm or a hurricane. And helping to re-build entire communities didn’t, in their view, encourage sloth.

But that was conservatism then and this is Trumpism now. The fact is that disaster relief runs counter to the libertarian ideology embraced by tech bros like Peter Thiel. In the world of the libertarian tech broligarchy, who believe that they should be running things rather than be constrained by democracy, selfishness is a virtue. Hence they don’t believe that their tax dollars should be used to help others, even when those others are victims of circumstances beyond their control. Oh, that is, unless you are a wealthy Silicon Valley type with deposits at the failed Silicon Valley Bank. They apparently had no problem with a federal bailout of SVB.

In fact, the libertarian tech broligarchy is opposed to the very impulse to care about other people. “The fundamental weakness of Western civilization,” declared Elon Musk last March, “is empathy.”

And let’s not forget — because conservatives never do — that there’s a deeper strategy at play: if you want people to despise and hate government, you don’t want them to see the government doing anything that clearly helps people.

So American victims of natural disasters are being abandoned by Trump. That abandonment reflects his personal cruelty and that of those around him, as well as the ideological allegiance to cruelty among the libertarian tech broligarchy. And the resulting message is clear. Trump to disaster victims, wherever they live and whoever they voted for: Drop dead.

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two

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Wednesday, December 3, 2025 9:09 AM

THG

Keep it real please


Quote:

Originally posted by second:

Trump Claims MRI on His Brain Found Nothing

Andy Borowitz | Dec 01, 2025

WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report) — Boasting about his cognitive health, on Monday Donald J. Trump asserted that an MRI performed on his brain found nothing.

"I had a perfect MRI," he told reporters. "The greatest doctors in the country looked at my brain and came up empty."

Trump said there was no point in releasing his MRI because "there's nothing to see," adding, "It's like the East Wing."

___________________






Wow, where did it go? Did they eventually find his brain?

too funny...

T


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