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Higher Education

Harvard Sues Trump Admin

Plus: Democrats visit El Salvador, Taiwan invasion possibilities, Hayek on rule of law, and more...

Liz Wolfe | 4.22.2025 9:30 AM

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Matthews Hall, student dormitory at Harvard | Greger Ravik / Wikimedia Commons
Students gather at Matthews Hall, a dormitory at Harvard University. (Greger Ravik / Wikimedia Commons)

Battle heats up: Earlier this month, the Trump administration, which has declared war on elite universities and threatened to pull their funding, "sent Harvard a list of demands that included auditing professors for plagiarism, reporting to the federal government any international students accused of misconduct, and appointing an outside overseer to make sure that academic departments were 'viewpoint diverse,'" per The New York Times. The administration has repeatedly voiced that elite schools' failure to act to stamp out antisemitism on campus is part of the reason they're being targeted.

Then, last week, Harvard said it would not comply with what it says are unlawful demands by the administration, which led to the Trump administration pulling its funding.

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"The government has, in addition to the initial freeze of $2.2 billion in funding, considered taking steps to freeze an additional $1 billion in grants, initiated numerous investigations of Harvard's operations, threatened the education of international students, and announced that it is considering a revocation of Harvard's 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status," writes Harvard President Alan Garber. Now, Harvard is filing suit, in federal court in Massachusetts, saying the government's punitive actions show it's trying to wield "leverage to gain control of academic decision-making at Harvard."

"I read the Harvard lawsuit," writes journalist Kelsey Piper on X, "and it looks like they have a slam-dunk case just in that Congress gave a bunch of specific instructions about how Title VI termination of grants was required to be conducted, which the administration just totally ignored." Here's Nico Perrino, of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, on the lawsuit:

Harvard's lawsuit is straightforward because the government's actions were straightforward.

- - The government may not "interfere with private actors' speech to advance its own vision of ideological balance" (Moody v. NetChoice).

The government demanded Harvard achieve… pic.twitter.com/azvSXjGW1R

— Nico Perrino (@NicoPerrino) April 22, 2025

Look, I'm torn here. Attacks on academic freedom are very, very wrong. But perhaps I'm most frustrated because pulling federal support for universities—especially those with $53 billion dollar endowments—is something I would love to see a Republican administration do, in the proper way and from a place of principle; it's insane that taxpayers in Burlington, Iowa, or Killeen, Texas, are forced to subsidize Harvard.

This, unfortunately, is not the way. And it's not likely to succeed.

Democrats growing a backbone (but what's the point?): On Monday, U.S. Reps. Robert Garcia (D–Calif.), Maxwell Alejandro Frost (D–Fla.), Yassamin Ansari (D–Ariz.), and Maxine E. Dexter (D–Ore.) met with U.S. ambassador to El Salvador William H. Duncan, in San Salvador. The representatives, all relatively unknown on the national stage, urged Duncan to secure the release of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a man married to a U.S. citizen, who had been living in Maryland for the last 13 years, who had received protection from deportation back to his native country due to a credible threat of persecution there, but was deported anyway on March 15 and held in El Salvador's maximum-security Terrorism Confinement Center, or CECOT.

The Trump administration has claimed it can't really do anything to get Abrego Garcia back, despite being ordered by the Supreme Court to "facilitate" his return. Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele was chumming around with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office as recently as last week, so it's not plausible that there's no diplomatic means available to ensure the wrongly deported man returns to the U.S. to receive the ability to contest in court the MS-13 allegations that have led to his deportation.

The Democratic representatives also spoke with U.S. embassy officials about the case of Venezuelan makeup artist Andry Jose Hernandez Romero, who had been living in America before being deported to El Salvador (a country he's not from). Hernandez came to the U.S. because he was worried about persecution back in Venezuela for being gay, but U.S. officials deported him due to misreading his crown tattoos—a reference to Epiphany celebrations for which his hometown is famous—as evidence of Tren de Aragua gang affiliation.

Nothing is working. "We left that meeting with absolutely zero indication that this administration is going to facilitate, or wants to facilitate, the return of Abrego Garcia back to the United States so he can go through due process," Frost told reporters.

This is on the heels of Maryland Sen. Chris Van Hollen's meeting with Abrego Garcia last week. "After two days of resistance from Mr. Bukele's government, Salvadoran officials allowed Mr. Van Hollen to meet with Mr. Abrego Garcia face to face, delivering him unexpectedly to the senator's hotel for a meeting that appeared staged to emphasize how well he was being treated," reports The New York Times. Bukele had posted a photo of the meeting to X, reporting that Abrego Garcia was "miraculously risen from the 'death camps' & 'torture', now sipping margaritas with Sen. Van Hollen in the tropical paradise of El Salvador!" Margaritas never existed, claims Van Hollen; salt-rimmed glasses had been put in front of the men by a Bukele aide. "This is a lesson into the lengths that President Bukele will do to deceive people about what's going on," added Van Hollen, who also told reporters that Bukele's people had tried to get Van Hollen to meet Abrego Garcia near the hotel pool, ostensibly to make their planned photo op even better. More on that here, from The Wall Street Journal. 


Scenes from New York: "The average upfront cost of moving in the city—including a broker fee, one month's rent and security deposit—was nearly $13,000 last year, the most since 2017," reports The New York Times. Now, brokers' fees are being made illegal; will be interesting to see how landlords react and what happens to rent prices.


QUICK HITS

  • What would a Taiwan invasion actually look like? Michael Beckley has answers:

  • "When Elon Musk and President Donald Trump commanded all federal workers to submit weekly emails listing five accomplishments, they warned of harsh consequences: Failure to comply would count as a resignation," reports The Washington Post. "In a briefing for top human resources officers across government held just two days after Musk's directive went out to all federal employees on Feb. 22, the Office of Personnel Management said the initiative was voluntary and noncompliance would not be considered a resignation, according to an email obtained by The Post." This is actually a bummer: Being forced to justify one's job, when it's on the taxpayer's dime, is kind of amazing (and not difficult at all, in my opinion).
  • Classy:

Today there were major shifts in global leaderships.

Evil is being defeated by the hand of God.

— Marjorie Taylor Greene ???????? (@mtgreenee) April 21, 2025

  • More bloodbath: "US stocks tumbled as President Donald Trump called on the Federal Reserve chair to cut interest rates amid mounting signs his trade war is pushing the economy toward recession," reports Bloomberg. "The dollar fell with long-dated Treasuries, while gold rallied."
  • Expect more sloppiness like this:

1) Immigration officials tell Japanese college student they're deporting him. He has a fishing violation.

2) Media covers story

3) Immigration officials say never mindhttps://t.co/fxS4cUahNQ

— Zaid Jilani (@ZaidJilani) April 19, 2025

  • "Brazil and Argentina are emerging as early winners in the global trade war that's upending agricultural markets," reports Bloomberg. "The newest opportunity seems to be meat. US President Donald Trump's tariffs on eight of America's top 10 beef buyers have already redrawn trade flows, raising exports of Brazilian beef to halal markets including Algeria and Turkey. Japan, America's second largest beef client, is now in advanced talks to start buying cheaper meat from Brazil."
  • Excellent thread on rule of law, by Reason's Stephanie Slade:

I gather not everyone groks why I find this so troubling. So let's talk about what we mean when we say "rule of law." More specifically, let's talk about what the Nobel Prize–winning economist Friedrich Hayek wrote about it.

(A thread.)https://t.co/PM58eNAfyg

— (Stephanie) Slade (@sladesr) April 21, 2025

"The key thing about rule of law is that we all know ahead of time what is legal and what is not, so that we can act accordingly," writes Slade, riffing on Friedrich Hayek. "Laws need to be published. They need to be internally consistent. And they need to be *forward-looking* only. You can't retroactively declare something a crime and then go after people for things they already did. They also need to bind government actors just as they do members of the public. That, really, is the crucial distinction between 'rule of law' and its opposite, 'arbitrary rule,' or 'rule of man,' where the law just is whatever the guy in power says it is at any given moment."

Start your day with Reason. Get a daily brief of the most important stories and trends every weekday morning when you subscribe to Reason Roundup.

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NEXT: Are We Still Living in 1999?

Liz Wolfe is an associate editor at Reason.

Higher EducationHarvardAcademic FreedomLawsuitsCourtsTrump AdministrationImmigrationPoliticsReason Roundup
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  1. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    Earlier this month, the Trump administration, which has declared war on elite universities and threatened to pull their funding...

    WHY ARE WE FUNDING THEM.

    1. Spiritus Mundi   2 months ago

      Due process

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        Yup, giving the elites their due.

    2. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   2 months ago

      Seeing as how all of Harvard cancer research is fraudulent, and most of their faculty is guilty of plagerism, and they offer remidial high school math, why are the called an elite university?

      1. Idaho-Bob   2 months ago

        and most of their faculty is guilty of plagiarism,

        Hey, accusing certain students of plagiarism is racist.
        More recently, getting stabbed to death is also racist and the victim's fault.

      2. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

        How else will we fund MK Ultra?

        1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

          “You don't actually think they spend $20,000 on a hammer, $30,000 on a toilet seat, do you?”

    3. MollyGodiva   2 months ago

      We fun universities because they do research that the US wants to get done, and are more cost effective than other research institutions.

      1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 months ago

        “…..and are more cost effective….”

        Lol. More than what? Private funding? Not to me.

        You have to be a parody. No way anyone really believes the stupid stuff you say.

        1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

          Molly is a university employee. Because they can't do anything of substance. So they suck at the tit.

      2. Diarrheality   2 months ago

        We fun[d] universities...

        That turd in your pocket doesn't pay for anything, and neither do you.

        ...they do research that the US wants to get done...

        There are better ways to launder money.

        ...are more cost effective than other research institutions.

        LOL

  2. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    ...and appointing an outside overseer to make sure that academic departments were 'viewpoint diverse,'" per The New York Times.

    Gosh, I hope that's true. And I hope the zampolits instigate struggle sessions for the administrators and faculties.

    1. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

      You like teaching commie bullshit, a-holes? Here's an object lesson in it.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        And universities could cover their federal funding gap by selling struggle session TV rights.

  3. Ra's al Gore   2 months ago

    Harvard is suing for the Prog Constitutional right to get taxpayer money.

    1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

      Amazing Hillsdale is able to survive without graft but an institution with a 50B endowment isn't.

      1. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

        The Harvard University endowment, valued at $53.2 billion as of June 30, 2024,[1][2] is the largest academic endowment in the world.[3][4] Its value increased in fiscal year 2024, ending the year with its largest sum in history.[5]

        The scions of kings and billionaires need to spend your money so they can learn how to throw rocks at Jews.

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

          Even the Jews who manage the endowment?

          1. Moonrocks   2 months ago

            Especially the Jews that manage the endowment, for they are both Jews and Capitalists.

          2. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

            Absolutely.

            "I shall speak to you here with all frankness of a very serious subject. We shall now discuss it absolutely openly among ourselves, nevertheless we shall never speak of it in public. I mean the evacuation of the Jews, the extermination of the Jewish race.

            It is one of those things which is easy to say. 'The Jewish race is to be exterminated,' says every party member. 'That's clear, it's part of our program, elimination of the Jews, extermination, right, we'll do it.'
            And then they all come along, the eighty million good Germans, and each one has his decent Jew. Of course the others are swine, but this one is a first-class Jew. Of all those who talk like this, not one has watched, not one has stood up to it."

            Heinrich Himmler - October 4, 1943

            Liberal American Jews who are still playing footsy with the neo-fascist political elite in their leftist skin-suits are aiding the ones whose goal is to destroy them.

  4. Ra's al Gore   2 months ago

    Dem staffer can commit crimes because Dem DA won't prosecute.

    https://x.com/EricLDaugh/status/1914482549675434075
    Let that sink in. No, seriously. This is dubious.

    A Minnesota man, Dylan Adams, an employee of Governor Tim Walz's administration, will face *ZERO* criminal consequences, or even CHARGES, for allegedly:
    - Vandalizing at least 6 Teslas
    - Causing $20K in damage

    Thanks to George Soros-funded Attorney Mary Moriarty.

    So
    @ElonMusk
    's company and its customers face weeks, even months, of terror attacks - many of which involve paid actors by left-wing groups.

    George Soros and other left-wing groups pay to get leftist attorneys into office.

    Those attorneys then REFUSE to charge the people engaging in the Tesla attacks.

    It's a self-enriching ecosystem of terror. Money is behind all of it.

    Because why would a Soros lackey send a message that people in Soros Zones would be held accountable for attacking Elon Musk's brand and Tesla owners?

    1. Randy Sax   2 months ago

      Did Liz mention something about rule of law this morning?

      1. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

        That’s (D)ifferent.

        1. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

          Lucky he wasn't trespassing or parading or the Sarcjeffs would've been seriously mad.

      2. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

        "Prosecutorial discretion"

        1. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

          Yeppers, court-approved when Obama refused to prosecute and deport millions of illegal immigrants because they had young children. When Trump refuses to investigate and prosecute whoever kidnapped and deported one illegal immigrant in violation of a court order, he's violating Rule of Law.

          1. Truthfulness   2 months ago

            There are no such kidnappings. You get in illegally, you get deported.

      3. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

        No. Nor the fact that Hermosillo went up to immigration officials, told them he was an illegal and Mexican citizen, and even signed a sworn statement. Despite posting about it yesterday, about arresting citizens.

    2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      Critical Theory (different legal standards for different political groups) for the win!

  5. Ra's al Gore   2 months ago

    https://x.com/TheChiefNerd/status/1914421502092697709

    “Dr. Anthony Fauci’s fortune doubled — hitting about $15 million — between early 2019 and the end of 2023 over the course of the pandemic, including ‘during the worst of the draconian COVID lockdowns,’’ according to records obtained by a watchdog group.

    Fauci’s net worth was about $7.6 million in January 2019 before COVID-19 hit and surged to about $15 million by the end of 2023, 141 pages of financial-disclosure forms obtained by watchdog group Open The Books revealed.”

    1. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

      Fauci belongs behind bars for his crimes against humanity.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        Well, behind bars in a shark cage on the way to the bottom of the sea.

        1. VinniUSMC   2 months ago

          In a cage, with a shark, on the way to the bottom of the sea.

    2. Super Scary   2 months ago

      Sounds to me like he made a killing on action figure sales and birthday card money.

      1. Ajsloss   2 months ago

        Not all superheroes wear capes.

    3. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

      Amazing how all these democrats gain millions post careers, such as Biden.

      An investigation into publishing entities and speaker engagements may be warranted.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        THEY SACRIFICED THEMSELVES FOR GOVERNMENT SERVICE!

    4. DeAnnP   2 months ago

      https://www.openthebooks.com/assets/1/6/2.18_Fauci_and_Grady_Financial_Documents_2023.pdf

      I see a lot of stocks, what in this is supposed to be nefarious that I am missing?

      1. Truthfulness   2 months ago

        Stock values alone do not explain the increase at a short time. You're being disingenuous. Stop defending Fauci, it's evil.

  6. Ra's al Gore   2 months ago

    https://x.com/Cernovich/status/1914459298526318774

    Hundreds of J6 defendants had been charged under a statue that did not apply to their conduct. Misdemeanor trespass was converted into a felony. John Roberts took 3 years to hear the cases of Americans who had been wrongfully convicted. 3 years! But he works overnight for MS-13.

    1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

      It is maddening.

      And in that case even after Roberts finally heard the case, the DoJ under Garland did their best to not fix their false please agreements or drop cases still in the system.

      Jeff and sarc cheered these acts.

      1. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

        Jeff and sarc cheered these acts

        Due process is only for foreigners in the country illegally.

    2. Moonrocks   2 months ago

      That's Rule Of Law if I've ever seen it.

  7. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    On Monday, U.S. Reps. Robert Garcia (D–Calif.), Maxwell Alejandro Frost (D–Fla.), Yassamin Ansari (D–Ariz.), and Maxine E. Dexter (D–Ore.) met with U.S. ambassador to El Salvador William H. Duncan...

    Is this even a 20% issue at this point? Do even their moonbat districts care about this fuckery?

    1. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

      Hard to say because the corporate press still loves it.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        Just like they were told/conditioned to.

  8. Ra's al Gore   2 months ago

    https://x.com/WilkowMajority/status/1914471535454069098

    Barack Obama ordered a drone strike on a wedding party in Yemen that killed 12 and wounded 15 claiming that one of the attendees was a "'most-wanted' member of Al-Qaeda", who escaped. Donald Trump sent a man home and that created a "Constitutional crisis".

    1. Ra's al Gore   2 months ago

      https://x.com/LibertyLockPod/status/1754925857137680449

      Shoutout to
      @Timcast
      for continuously reminding people of what Obama did to Abdulrahman al-Awlaki

      *extra judicial predator drone strike of a teenage American citizen on October 14th, 2011*

      Darrell Issa hinted at prosecution for it today while referencing the Trump immunity case

      1. Quicktown Brix   2 months ago

        It would be nice to see this prosecuted. I doubt it could because of presidential immunity though.

        1. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

          It would be interesting to see Obama have to make the same argument as Trump, though.

          1. Quicktown Brix   2 months ago

            I'm all for it.

    2. sarcasmic   2 months ago

      Democrats did it first so that makes it ok? There's a brand new concept.

      1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

        But a many year old strawman to hide your hypocrisy.

      2. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

        What citizens has Trump assassinated?

        1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

          He still doesn't even know what slavery means despite demanding we support slavery in China.

          1. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

            Sarc is the only evil supervillain whose backstory about his slide into evil was all about getting mad at the people he was drunkenly trolling on the internet.

            1. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

              So all the stuff with his family was just a slide into chaotic neutral?

              1. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

                Lots of people with fetal alcohol syndrome and shitty lives avoid fascism. Sarc has no excuse.

          2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

            Hey, if the WEF and Disney approve, can it be slavery?

      3. Uilleam   2 months ago

        What the hell is wrong with you?

        1. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

          He’s a broken drunk.

          1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

            And he has one blistering case of TDS with JDS on the side.

      4. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 months ago

        Wow, that really is a brand new concept that I had not considered! Kudos! Why don’t you post here more often?

    3. Use the Schwartz   2 months ago

      I've mentioned this to my liberal friends before: "Can you imagine how outrageous it would be if say a President were to assassinate a US Citizen, or like a Secretary of State were to violate OpSec?

      Blank stares...

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        Hey, it's not fair to challenge intellectual retards who can only quote scripture.

  9. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    The average upfront cost of moving in the city—including a broker fee, one month's rent and security deposit—was nearly $13,000 last year, the most since 2017...

    But, hey, you get to live in NYC.

    1. Idaho-Bob   2 months ago

      Yeah, I'm unclear why people would pay that much for rent AND be surrounded by New Yorkers?

      Gives me the creeps.

      1. Longtobefree   2 months ago

        The good news is that they are staying in NY and not polluting Florida and Texas.

        1. NoVaNick   2 months ago

          Ummm, have you been to Austin? Nothing but former NYers. Same for Charleston and Nashville.

          1. Nelson   2 months ago

            Improving the South, one retiree at a time.

            1. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

              Refugee, not retiree.

              1. CountmontyC   2 months ago

                Invader.

            2. tracerv   2 months ago

              Carpet bagging asshole. Kill yourself Nelson.

            3. DesigNate   2 months ago

              The only thing they’re improving is the amount of traffic, bigot.

              (By improving I of course mean increasing.)

      2. VinniUSMC   2 months ago

        Being in New York, and that close to Jersey? That takes a special kind of narcissistic stupidity.

    2. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

      So brokers have just been put out of business by some NYC edict? Or they have to work for free?

      1. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

        In mother Russia, brokers pay you!

  10. Randy Sax   2 months ago

    Time to re-watch the Heaton video.

    https://reason.com/video/2024/06/14/why-are-we-funding-harvard/

  11. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    When Elon Musk and President Donald Trump commanded all federal workers to submit weekly emails listing five accomplishments, they warned of harsh consequences...

    It is with a heavy heart that I must announce that HR is at it again.

    1. Randy Sax   2 months ago

      My company is relatively small ~100 people. We don't have an HR department. Might have something to do with we only have 4 female employees.

  12. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    Evil is being defeated by the hand of God.

    Evil spelled backwards is live and God spelled backwards is doG. Think about it.

    1. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

      Many evangelical denominations do think the Pope is evil. Which is ok to think, even if it's insane.

      1. Think It Through   2 months ago

        I would indeed be shocked if MTG liked the pope. Especially a liberal pope. What's the news here?

      2. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

        It wasn't insane from the 13th to 17th centuries which is why the protestant reformation happened. Some of those popes were pretty brutal and anti-Christian. There's a reason that everyone from the Lutherans to the Baptists and the Anglicans thought that the popes were antichrists.

        John Paul 2 was a heck of a guy and worked hard to change that which went a long way towards today's rapprochement.

        1. MasterThief   2 months ago

          Sinead O'Conner still shaved her head to hate him.

        2. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

          JP2 was there way too long and was as bad as Joe Biden from 1990 onward.

      3. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        Hating a guy who promoted theocratic socialism sounds pretty sane to me.

      4. Fats of Fury   2 months ago

        Alexander VI was evil. Francis was a Peronist which is a Marxist with a Swiss bank account.

        1. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

          Alexander VI was everything that the modern YouTube-tier atheist (e.g. Shrike) likes to claim that the church was actually about:
          While the explorers of Spain imposed a form of slavery called "encomienda" on the indigenous peoples they met in the New World,[57] popes had spoken out against the practice of slavery. In 1435, Pope Eugene IV had issued an attack on slavery in the Canary Islands in his papal bull Sicut dudum, which included the excommunication of all those who engaged in the slave trade with native chiefs there...
          In the wake of Columbus's landing in the New World, Pope Alexander was asked by the Spanish monarchy to confirm their ownership of these newly found lands.[58] The bulls issued by Pope Alexander VI... gave power to enslave the natives.

    2. Ajsloss   2 months ago

      And Kid Rock is the T-O-P to the D-O-G... or the P-O-T to the G-O-D.

    3. Minadin   2 months ago

      "Classy:"

      Yeah, she's not exactly known for decorum, but she also didn't say anything about the Pope there, either.

      Klaus Schwab resigned as head of the WEF at approximately the same time, for instance.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        Is Klaus running for pope?

        1. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

          This could explain a lot.

      2. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

        Good point. And Schwab/WEF probably has more sway in the world (not to mention evil) than Pope/Catholics.

        1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

          The expectation since World War II is that the Pope will put a rubber stamp on whatever the western left-liberal consensus happens to be at the time, since they don't really have any power outside of being a figurehead.

          1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

            Wait until one of those fire-breathing Africans gets elected.

    4. Its_Not_Inevitable   2 months ago

      And devil is evil with a d. Whoa.

      1. VinniUSMC   2 months ago

        Proof that the debil is a guy, not a bear?

  13. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

    New Rasmussen poll says voters have switched from favoring generic Republicans by 7 points in January, to 2 points end of February, to favoring generic Democrats by 5 points April 16.

    https://justthenews.com/government/congress/democrats-take-lead-generic-ballot

    In a sudden swing, Democrats now enjoy a four-point lead over Republicans on the generic ballot, according to a new Napolitan News survey conducted by pollster Scott Rasmussen.

    Forty-eight percent of voters say they would now vote for the Democrat from their district, while 44% would vote for the Republican.

    When leaners are included in the survey, the Democratic lead increases to five points: 50% to 45%.

    The poll was conducted April 16 and represents a seven-point swing since the end of February, when the GOP held a two-point advantage (48% to 46%).

    In January, Republicans had a seven-point advantage (51% to 44%).

    The generic ballot concerns track with negativity among voters on Trump's handling of the economy: on inflation, 41% approve of the president's performance, while 59% disapprove. In March, 45% approved and 52% disapproved. Two months ago, 48% approved and 47% disapproved.

    Gee, what happened in March? Could it be that voters don't like Presidents fucking up the economy? Is Trump repeating the Biden mistake of fucking up the economy too close to the next election? Biden's inflation peaked in June 2022 at 9.1%. In June 2023 it was down to "only" 3.0%, yet people still remembered it for the 2024 elections 16 months later. April, May, June ... three months to stop fucking around.

    Could he be reinforcing the usual midterms swing against the incumbent and be in danger of losing both the House and Senate, and face a third impeachment for violating 15 trade treaties and the 2019 court order to not deport Garcia to El Salvador?

    He's an economic moron, but I used to think he had some political smarts at least. He better act fast and stop fucking around with the economy, or he's gonna find out.

    1. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

      Billionaires know nothing about money.

      1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

        Do penguins?

        1. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

          They are the true masterminds.

          1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

            Just ask Billy Madison.

            “All the people at the zoo are real nice, Mr. Penguin. They'll treat you real respectable like.”

          2. Its_Not_Inevitable   2 months ago

            This is why we need the tariffs.

    2. Quicktown Brix   2 months ago

      Did you used to throw rocks at hornets' nests as a kid, SGT?

      Yeah, me too.

      1. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

        I believe this.

        1. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

          More than once, I bet.

          1. VinniUSMC   2 months ago

            Some people never learn.

      2. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

        Trump would use a bazooka and not care about the back blast.

    3. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 months ago

      "...Gee, what happened in March?..."

      You made a public announcement that you are indeed a slimy pile of TDS-addled shit?

      1. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

        You made a public announcement that you can't rebut facts or deal with Trump fucking around and finding out?

        TDS works both sides of the aisle.

  14. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    ...while gold rallied./

    Someone's making his bathroom fixtures appreciate in value.

  15. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    Immigration officials tell Japanese college student they're deporting him. He has a fishing violation.

    So much for Asians being counted as white. That was the last administration, buddy.

    1. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

      Lucky.

      In my province "any person who knowingly violates any provision of the act or any regulation issued under it may be assessed a civil penalty of up to $25,000 for each violation."

      1. Jefferson Paul   2 months ago

        Are you in Alberta or BC?

        1. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

          BC right now, but I was born in Alberta.

      2. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

        Yeah, I’v heard of US citizens having their boats confiscated for too many perch in Canada.

      3. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 months ago

        Pffft. Yeah, but $25k Canadian is like what, sixty bucks US$?

  16. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    Immigration officials say never...

    See? No face tattoos and you can stay.

  17. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    Japan, America's second largest beef client, is now in advanced talks to start buying cheaper meat from Brazil.

    At least the world is still allowed to eat meat. Thank you for that, Mr. President.

  18. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    "receive the ability to contest in court the MS-13 allegations that have led to his deportation."

    He already had that hearing, was order deported. An appeal judge upheld the deportation order.

    The only thing that might have warranted an additional hearing was deporting him to El Salvador, which is the one place he was supposed to not be sent. Had he been removed to Costa Rica or Panama or some other 3rd country that would accept him, he was not owed another hearing.

    1. Idaho-Bob   2 months ago

      What 3rd country would accept a MS-13 gangster who also beats his wife?

      Leftist Americans are fucking batshit.

      1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

        I still want to know the law allowing a judge to deny asylum, of which fear is a valid claim, but then issue a withholding order.

        Or do judges get to make up the law?

        1. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

          You've asked this before, and I answered before. Will you read the response this time?

          https://reason.com/2025/04/19/the-supreme-court-is-about-to-hear-2-education-cases-neither-goes-far-enough/?comments=true#comment-11011890

          1. Jefferson Paul   2 months ago

            if he or she can establish that it is more likely than not that he or she would be persecuted on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion upon removal to that country.

            I'm trying to understand how Garcia qualifies for this. If he's not a gang member, does NOT having membership in a particular social group (a gang) qualify?

            If he is a member of MS-13, then he can't be sent back to where the gang originates (El Salvador in addition to the California prison system)?

            That law seems backwards if that's correct. You don't qualify for asylum since you're in a gang and waited six years to file asylum, but because you're in a gang we can't send you back to your country where the gang operates? And if the gang is no longer in control of your home country, we still can't send you there?

            1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

              Catch-22!

          2. DesigNate   2 months ago

            What you posted says the AG gets to decide, not the presiding judge.

            And I’d also point out, again, that fear of intergang retaliation is not means for a positive asylum claim (or shouldn’t be), so even if the judge did have that power, if he denied the asylum claim there’s no reason that he couldn’t have been sent back there.

        2. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

          That's common law for you, where Men, not robots, make Laws, and then call it Rule of Law when they, who are Men, not robots, change the Law, again and again.

      2. Eeyore   2 months ago

        Los Angeles?

    2. Quicktown Brix   2 months ago

      Why is he in prison?

      1. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

        You'll have to ask El Salvador.

        1. Quicktown Brix   2 months ago

          OK then. Why was he sent to prison and was that legal?

          1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

            Sorry your third world pets are getting deported.

          2. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 months ago

            Hint, shit-for-brains: The US cannot deport someone to a prison.

          3. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

            and was that legal?

            Again, you'll have to ask El Salvador.

            If Sweden deports you for being there illegally and your Hell's Angels membership, and when you get back to the US, federal marshals grab you and put you in the clink, it's probably a safer bet that the US knows the reason why better than Sweden.

      2. Michael Ejercito   2 months ago

        Ask the government keeping him in custody.

      3. sarcasmic   2 months ago

        Last I checked it's because Trump paid El Salvador $15,000,000 to house him and the others. Unclear if it's a one time payment or an ongoing arrangement.

        1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

          Because they are housing TdA who aren't from el salvador.

          1. Nelson   2 months ago

            They’re housing people who the Trump administration *says* are gang members.

            At this point It’s pretty clear that this administration sucks at being right, so most of them probably aren’t gang members. There’s a solid chance they aren’t even illegals.

            1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

              LOL, yeah, that was the narrative about the criminal Venezuelan gang members in Aurora, too, until the camera footage got in to the wild.

            2. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

              Ahh poor dumbass Nelson.

              We get it. Without notarized government membership cards for gangs you're helpless.

    3. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

      In an ideal world, if "gang membership" is going to be a disqualifying factor for one's presence here, what do you think should be the standard of proof by the government in order to prove that a particular person is in a gang?

      1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

        Gang affiliation has been a reason to deny entry here for a long time. Try entering Canada with a DUI on your record, I triple dog dare you.

        1. Michael Ejercito   2 months ago

          What happens?

          1. Idaho-Bob   2 months ago

            You are denied at any border crossing.

            Me and a group of bikers were going to do the Selkirk Loop a few years ago. One guy had a 10-year-old DUI and was denied entry into Canada. At that time I did not know the USG shared that kind of shit with Canada.

            1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

              Drugs and felonies are shared with most countries in our automatic visa agreements.

          2. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

            You ain’t getting in.

        2. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

          It doesn't even have to be a conviction. They'll deny entry just for an arrest record for some crimes.

          1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

            But Canadia is supposed to be woke and dreamy.

      2. Michael Ejercito   2 months ago

        Whatever standard currently used in immigration coirts like the one that irdered Abrego Garcia deported, the standard set by Congress.

        1. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

          So you believe the standard that is currently set by Congress is 'the ideal standard'?

          So in the case of Garcia, an immigration judge declared that he was a member of a gang based on (1) his Chicago Bulls attire, and (2) the say-so of an anonymous informant that neither Garcia nor his lawyers had the opportunity to cross-examine or challenge.

          Do you think that this is an 'ideal standard' by which to judge a person a member of a gang?

          1. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

            NoTaRiZeD mEmBeRsHiP cArdS!

            1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

              Yet Jeff applauded the mass use of FBI resources and film sourcing to arrest even people not at J6. Didn't require membership cards for them.

              Even defended the government using phone location data and visa use information.

              Illegals just have more rights than citizens.

              1. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

                So is your argument, that because you think the Jan. 6 rioters did not receive proper justice, that *no one* should receive proper justice?

                1. Idaho-Bob   2 months ago

                  Why should citizens be required to pay for multi-appeals for illegals?

                  We should only have to pay for one hearing and one bus/plane ticket. It's cheaper than a lifetime of illegal alien subsidies.

                  1. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

                    Why should citizens be required to pay for any sort of justice system at all?

                    1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

                      False equivalency, Jeffy.

                    2. Nobartium   2 months ago

                      They shouldn't, but the battle against taxation was lost forever ago.

                    3. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

                      False equivalency, Jeffy.

                      And redirection.

                    4. rbike   2 months ago

                      Are you paying dumbass? Where is the Jeffy Defense Fund. Pay up or fuck off dumbass. I offered my 10 cents to start it. Just tell me where to send my dime.

                2. damikesc   2 months ago

                  Why should non-citizens receive better treatment than citizens?

              2. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

                Illegals just have more rights than citizens.

                A mass murdering psychopath in this country has at least the right to a trial by jury before being sent to prison. Was Garcia able to avail himself of this right before being sent to a foreign prison?

                1. Idaho-Bob   2 months ago

                  in this country has at least the right to a trial by jury,i/>

                  In this country. Your boy was an illegal from another country.

                  It's not that difficult if you try.

                  1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

                    Jeff still doesn't understand these are civil decisions, not criminal. They don't require juries. Especially given the laws that exist.

                    Jeff is hoping other people are as ignorant as he is to make his argument.

                    1. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

                      If it is all just a civil matter, then why was Garcia sent to prison?

                    2. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

                      He was sent to prison because the government of El Salvador decided to put him there.

                    3. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

                      As El Slavador has done with their gang members for years.

                    4. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

                      El Salvador put him in prison, not Tump, you bargain basement politruk.

              3. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

                Jeff wanted everyone carrying their vaccination cards.

                false

                Jeff applauded the mass use of FBI resources and film sourcing to arrest even people not at J6.

                false

                Even defended the government using phone location data and visa use information.

                false

                1. sarcasmic   2 months ago

                  What do you expect people to believe, what you say or what is said about you? I'll give you a hint. They don't care what you say.

                  1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

                    And you, you lying sack of shit, people actually have links to what you’ve said because you lie about it so fucking often.

                    1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

                      Their number one argument is lies. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

                    2. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

                      Sarc's not bright, so retarded lies are all he's got in his ammo clip.

                2. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

                  You’re big into denials, Mr. Bears-in-trunks. Tell me, do you still fuck your sister? Or do you just ejaculate on her and feel somewhat sorry afterward?

                  Dude, we know what you’ve typed here. Don’t be so obtuse.

                  1. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

                    * anal fuck

                    1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

                      Thanks. I forgot that it was fucking your sister in the ass.

          2. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

            You do realize police identify gang members all the time this way, right? You might want to get out of your mother’s basement every so often and see the real world out there, in the ghetto.

            1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

              Well Jeff wanted everyone carrying their vaccination cards. So he is used to this idea of that being the determination by government.

              Illegals have more rights than citizens. Ask him.

              1. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

                What rights, if any, do you think migrants should have in this country? Or is the government free to do whatever they wish to migrants?

                1. Idaho-Bob   2 months ago

                  The right to be sent home. We'll even pay for the ride.

                  1. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

                    Should the migrant have any opportunity to, say, clear up any mistakes that the government might have made, with respect to citizenship status? (Such as the case with Hermosillo in Arizona)? Should the migrant have any opportunity to provide proof of legal residency?

                    1. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

                      …mistakes that the government might have made, with respect to citizenship status? (Such as the case with Hermosillo in Arizona)?

                      That’s not what happened.

                    2. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

                      You know this to be false as you responded yo me yesterday about it. So why lie now?

                      The government didn't make a mistake with Hermosillo.

                      The activist retard went up to immigration authorities, told them he was a Mexican citizen here illegally, and even signed a sworn statement.

                      He was released after his family sent evidence he was a US citizen.

                      Hermosillo caused the entire issue BY LYING TO AN IMMIGRATION OFFICIAL.

                      You're such a dishonest fuck Jeff.

                    3. damikesc   2 months ago

                      Why is he not being charged with doing that?

                      It is illegal.

                    4. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

                      “So why lie now?”

                      It’s what he does. He’s Lying Jeffy.

                    5. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

                      Hermosillo caused the entire issue BY LYING TO AN IMMIGRATION OFFICIAL.

                      Funny how you take the government's word at face value.

                      Why would he lie about being an illegal immigrant when he is a citizen?

                    6. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

                      Why would he lie about being an illegal immigrant a woman when he is a citizen man?

                2. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

                  Illegal aliens with no sort of protected status should be detained long enough to be put on the next outbound transport to their home country. Other migrants would of course have different treatment based on their status: guest workers, student visa, permanent resident... per relevant laws. Please stop conflating all "migrants" into one category.

                  "is the government free to do whatever they wish to migrants?"

                  Nope, for illegal aliens, just detaining them (fingerprints, photos taken for future) and transporting them to their country of origin. Other types of migrants (since I'm trying to be more careful to not lump them all into one basket) would have other actions warranted, e.g., it may be that some would earn themselves a revocation of visa per statute, others might commit crimes that makes them deportable aliens, etc. The government would not be allowed to make them slaves, or summarily execute them, or torture them, or incarcerate them long-term (outside of normal criminal processes).

          3. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

            Do you believe in the Rule of Law, as written by Congress and judged by Men in Robes, or do you believe in the Rule of Jeff's Imagination?

      3. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

        Deporting an alien suspected of being a gang member should not require "proof"; only evidence. Gangs do not have official membership credentials.

        1. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

          Then what is to stop the government from arbitrarily declaring you a member of a gang?

          Furthermore, what is the level of evidence that you think should be sufficient to declare a person a member of a gang? Would the say-so of an anonymous informant be sufficient?

          1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

            How long have you spent in your mother’s basement, Jeffy? That sounds like the most naive shit I’ve ever heard. Gang members are identified all the fucking time this way by police.

          2. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

            Again with the silly fantasizing. What's to stop the government from declaring you a potato and ordering you sliced and fried?

            1. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

              Do you understand that Garcia was declared to be a member of a gang based on a very arbitrary standard?

              And you didn't answer my question. What do you think should be the level of evidence sufficient for the government to declare a person to be a member of a gang?

              1. Idaho-Bob   2 months ago

                Tattooed knuckles are a pretty good start.

                Besides, it isn't relevant. He was here illegally. Gang affiliation helps with the expedite.

                1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

                  Even the wife beating is all it takes. Even green cards can be revoked solely on an accusation of such.

                  1. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

                    You think Lying Jeffy cares that he’s a wife beater? He’s on record defending immigrants raping children.

                    1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

                      They said they were sorry.

                    2. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

                      Some of them only jacked off on the children being raped.

                2. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

                  It is relevant because his alleged gang membership is a reason why Garcia was sent to prison, instead of merely being deported.

                  Do you think the government ought to send individuals to prison based on tattooed knuckles?

                  1. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

                    Which government did that? The US, or El Salvador?

                    1. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

                      The US. They are the ones who paid El Salvador to hold Garcia at CECOT.

                    2. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

                      Are you saying El Salvador will jail anyone just for the money?

                    3. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

                      *starts a gofundme to get Lying Jeffy sent to CECOT*

                  2. Idaho-Bob   2 months ago

                    You moved the goal post. You asked about gang affiliation. I provided solid evidence. Then you pulled the okey-doke and mentioned prison.

                    He's not in America. American justice is served.

                    1. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

                      I don’t call him Lying Jeffy for nothing.

                  3. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

                    Do you think the government ought to send individuals to prison based on tattooed knuckles?

                    The government should send people who entered the US illegally back to country they're from. Doing so is especially urgent if there is clear evidence that they are involved in a criminal gang. If their home country chooses to keep them in prison, that is an internal matter for that country.

                  4. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

                    At least he's stopped referring to it as a "foreign gulag".

                    I mean, how is it a foreign gulag when it's an El Salvador government holding an El Salvadoran citizen in an El Salvadoran prison? It's not, anymore than a US-born citizen NYC-residing drug dealer on a parole violation caught in NJ and sent back home to Attica would be in a foreign gulag.

                    Also, gulags were characterized largely by forced labor of political prisoners. Are either really in play here?

              2. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

                Do you understand that Garcia was declared to be a member of a gang based on a very arbitrary standard?

                Yes, Jeff hates it when his revolutionary vanguard is deported.

                1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

                  He was with other known MS13 gang members when picked up.

                  There is a witness who gave his name and rank.

                  He was wearing the gang members clothes and had money with MS13 quotes on them.

                  He has gang tattoos.

                  But no membership card. Totally arbitrary.

                  1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

                    He technically does have a membership card. Those knuckle tattoos are the membership card. Jeffy apparently has no fucking clue how gang members identify each other and their enemies. I guess I’ve lived in far less privileged neighborhoods than he has.

                    1. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

                      Or Lying Jeffy is just lying.

                  2. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

                    There is a witness who gave his name and rank.

                    Did Garcia have the opportunity to challenge this witness?

                    He was wearing the gang members clothes

                    You mean, Chicago Bulls attire? Should Chicago Bulls attire be a marker of gang activity sufficient to send someone to prison?

                    and had money with MS13 quotes on them.

                    Did Garcia knowingly accept this money with gang quotes on it, knowing it was a part of some gang activity? Or was this a case where Garcia was spending money that had random stuff written on it?

                    He has gang tattoos.

                    You mean, the tattooed knuckles that nutters on X tried to turn into some secret code?

                    1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

                      Are you totally retarded, playing stupid, or deliberately lying, Jeffy?

                    2. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

                      It's all three.

              3. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

                What is your level of evidence?

              4. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

                There should be at least 7 grams of evidence.

                1. Dillinger   2 months ago

                  two 8-balls = ms-13!

              5. damikesc   2 months ago

                People were in jail for YEARS for being in DC on 1/6.

                Enrique Tarrio was jailed and he was not there at all.

                Fuck you.

              6. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

                And you didn't answer my question.

                You didn't answer my question. What's to stop the government from declaring you to be a potato?

              7. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 months ago

                Lol. It doesn’t matter, Jeff. Your side got way too sloppy with this shit and the pendulum is swinging back the other way now.

                Take some responsibility.

                1. DesigNate   2 months ago

                  He can’t.

          3. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

            Look at Lying Jeffy continue to pretend he doesn’t know the difference.

            People have been explaining it to him for at least a decade.

  19. Randy Sax   2 months ago

    Today there were major shifts in global leaderships.

    Evil is being defeated by the hand of God.

    I wonder if MTG plays MTG.

    1. Truthfulness   2 months ago

      If that was the case, it wouldn't be a shift now, would it?

  20. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    So let's talk about what we mean when we say "rule of law."

    Grooooooooan. Where was this hyperventilating when we were being forced to take the needle? When we were being lied to so corporations and their federal government connections could make a ton off the taxpayers they were brutalizing?

    1. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

      But that didn’t affect someone who wasn’t supposed to be here.

    2. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

      Bleach and muh private companies was more important then.

  21. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

    Look, I'm torn here. Attacks on academic freedom are very, very wrong. But perhaps I'm most frustrated because pulling federal support for universities—especially those with $53 billion dollar endowments—is something I would love to see a Republican administration do, in the proper way and from a place of principle; it's insane that taxpayers in Burlington, Iowa, or Killeen, Texas, are forced to subsidize Harvard.

    The one way ratchet theory.

    A lot of government spending and grants were done without regard to process. Thats why grant mechanisms are full of fraud and just keep increasing.

    Yet there is a demand to follow all process to end the fraud and grants. Despite rarely calling for it when it began.

    We saw the same issues with DACA. Proper procedures weren't followed. State benefits went out. Then when a president tries to end it, judges scream process. Only ever when reform is demanded. We see it with DOGE now and their audits. Never call for process at the start, only at the end.

    This is the one way ratchet of government. Easy to spend. Easy to violate laws. Difficult as all he'll for reform.

    This is also true of illegal immigration. Violate the laws. Let illegals not follow legal process. Make them pseudo legal. Then scream when reform occurs.

    This is the fundamental problem with the US. No process to create the problem, demand all process to end it. This is the institutionalized corruption we've had over decades.

    1. Chinny Chin Chin   2 months ago

      I've always had trouble deciding whether you're a gleeful hypocrite, astonishingly un-self-aware, or performance art satirizing the most obvious partisan shill tropes.

      Whatever it is, your posts are hilariously entertaining, and I'm here for it.

      1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

        I've never had trouble knowing you're a retarded leftist if it helps.

        1. Nelson   2 months ago

          To be fair, you think everyone who isn’t a full-throated supporter of Trump and the most extreme conservative positions “a retarded leftist”. Your definition is very, very broad.

          1. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

            Why don’t you tell us about Agenda 2030 again retard?

          2. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

            Isn’t your definition of a conservative someone who donates to ActBlue?

            1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

              Act Blue AND tries to kill conservatives. He has standards.

          3. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

            I'm your case it is based on your TDS, defense of socialist programs, reliance in state corporate media of the left, and being ignorant.

          4. VinniUSMC   2 months ago

            To be fair, Nelson is retarded, whether he's a Leftist or not (though, he is).

      2. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 months ago

        We wish you'd fuck off and die.

      3. damikesc   2 months ago

        Where, EXACTLY, was he wrong?

  22. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    That, really, is the crucial distinction between 'rule of law' and its opposite, 'arbitrary rule,' or 'rule of man,' where the law just is whatever the guy in power says it is at any given moment."

    I remember when we called it "prosecutorial discretion".

    1. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

      Prosecutorial discretion being the basis for DACA, as an example.

  23. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a man married to a U.S. citizen, who had been living in Maryland for the last 13 years, who had received protection from deportation back to his native country due to a credible threat of persecution there, but was deported anyway on March 15 and held in El Salvador's maximum-security Terrorism Confinement Center, or CECOT.

    A lot being left out here. Ms13 ties. Beating of his wife, an immediate deoortable offense. The only requirement missed was a CIS interview once the 18th street gang was eliminated and eliminated the threat.

    1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

      Speaking of deception...

      "This is a lesson into the lengths that President Bukele will do to deceive people about what's going on," added Van Hollen, who also told reporters that Bukele's people had tried to get Van Hollen to meet Abrego Garcia near the hotel pool, ostensibly to make their planned photo op even better. More on that here, from The Wall Street Journal.

      Lol. Media has repeated the Maryland Man meme 500 times. Just a third of reports mention his ms13 ties or final deportation orders.

      Propaganda works, even on Liz.

      1. Nelson   2 months ago

        Probably because calling him a member of MS13 is about as accurate as me calling you a pedophile.

        But I’m sure if I were to accuse you of being a pedophile you would expect to be able to question me and expect corroboration, right?

        Or can we call you Jesse Buttplug?

        1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

          You do realize he’s been documented to be MS13 and he’s got the tattoos, right?

          1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

            Nelson is quite retarded and thinks if it isn't on MSNBC it is a lie.

        2. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

          Your side is the advocates foe pedophiles buddy. See your buddy shrike and Jeff. See the normalization of child sex on the left.

          And 2 judges agree with me while you rely on MSNBC to lie to your stupid lil face.

    2. Quicktown Brix   2 months ago

      So why not get him out of prison and deport him legally?

      1. Longtobefree   2 months ago

        Maybe because he was deported legally?
        Just transfer him from El Salvador to Gitmo.
        Problem solved.

        1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

          Send CIS to interview him in El Salvador, let him know the 18th street gang is shut down. All boxes checked.

        2. Quicktown Brix   2 months ago

          Maybe because he was deported legally?

          Not according to the Supreme Court.

          To this day, the Government has cited no basis in law for Abrego Garcia’s warrantless arrest, his removal to El Salvador, or his confinement in a Salvadoran prison.

          https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/24pdf/24a949_lkhn.pdf

          1. sarcasmic   2 months ago

            Oh yeah? Well the Supreme Court has made all kinds of wrong decisions. Like Wickard for example. And you never complained about Wickard you hypocrite. That means this decision is wrong and you can't say anything about it.

          2. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

            Fact check: We rate this as partly true.

            First, that's not part of the ruling. It's part of the Justice's statements.

            Statement of JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR, with whom JUSTICE
            KAGAN and JUSTICE JACKSON join

            Second, it's only partially relevant, as the statement continues...

            "The Government remains bound by an Immigration Judge’s 2019
            order expressly prohibiting Abrego Garcia’s removal to El Salvador ..."

            That order certainly allowed for his "warrantless arrest" and a removal from the US, because it represented an undisputed removal order. The argument is only valid in so far as it references the removal to El Salvador as that was disallowed in the referenced order. The imprisonment in El Salvador is immaterial, as it was El Salvador that did that, once he was returned there.

            1. Quicktown Brix   2 months ago

              The imprisonment in El Salvador is immaterial, as it was El Salvador that did that, once he was returned there.

              This is a pathetic rationalization. Absurd. For fucks sake Kristi Noem did a PR video there. Trump’s paying to keep them there. They knew damn well what was happening to these people and they rushed to beat the court because they knew it was illegal.

              1. DesigNate   2 months ago

                Trumps paying to keep Venezuelans there (because that socialist fuck Maduro won’t accept responsibility for his citizens). I seriously doubt they’re paying El Salvador to imprison an El Salvadoran citizen.

      2. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 months ago

        I'd hope you had enough brain cells to understand the US does not decide which citizens of another sovereign nation are incarcerated,
        But then your idiocy has amazed me quite often.

      3. damikesc   2 months ago

        He is a citizen of El Salvador which is an independent country and not a vassal state to the US.

        For starters.

        1. Quicktown Brix   2 months ago

          Are you playing dumb? Or, being dumb?

          He could be here and back out by tomorrow morning if Trump wanted.

          Are you guys starting to believe your own lies?

          1. damikesc   2 months ago

            You can make Trump make a request. You cannot force him to do it to your satisfaction.

            And, again, El Salvador is a whole independent country. Our courts could not mean less to them. Bukele is free to say "no" --- which he has already done.

            You are demanding ES send a citizen to us, where we will not allow him to even enter the country (final deportation order is not overturned nor does it expire), and we will instead send him somewhere else --- less pleasant, most likely.

            1. Quicktown Brix   2 months ago

              No. I realize everything you're saying is correct. I'm saying the Trump admin committed a crime. He could bring him back, but he won't and we can't make him.

              This is what I want:

              All involved parties should be prosecuted and Trump should be impeached then tried. Repercussions would be mitigated if Garcia was removed from prison.

              1. damikesc   2 months ago

                He did make the request. Bukele said no. Such is life.

                "All involved parties should be prosecuted and Trump should be impeached then tried."

                Are you f'n serious?

                1. Quicktown Brix   2 months ago

                  He did make the request. Bukele said no. Such is life.

                  You can't be this naive.

  24. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

    Hey Liz. What is the point of the community note on MTG? Not even clear she was talking about the pope. Curious inclusion.

    1. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

      Yeah, I would have assumed she was talking about Klause.

      1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

        Same. Or the rising levels of the evil "populist" parties ruining the control of the global elite.

  25. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

    I never knew Stephanie slade was the girl from Big Bang Theory, Sheldon's girlfriend.

    1. Jefferson Paul   2 months ago

      Holy crap! She does look like Mayim Bialik.

    2. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 months ago

      That’s a dude.

  26. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    "Congress gave a bunch of specific instructions about how Title VI termination of grants was required to be conducted, which the administration just totally ignored."

    This sort of thing is bad optics and completely avoidable. I cannot understand why Trump admin continues to shoot itself in the face on this kind of stuff.

    OTOH, when he HAS done things with the proper notice, etc. someone still sues and some leftist judge makes up some reason why the action must be disallowed.

    1. chemjeff radical individualist   2 months ago

      I cannot understand why Trump admin continues to shoot itself in the face on this kind of stuff.

      Because the people in his admin now are Jesse clones - they don't give a shit about process or rules. They have the power, they can do what they want. Congress will not stop them, they are Trump's lapdogs now. And if some judge tries to stop them, then just smear the judge in public and try him in the court of public opinion until he backs down. And if SCOTUS gets in the way, just ignore them, they have no power to enforce their rulings. Just like Andrew Jackson did.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

        Project much, Democrat?

      2. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

        “Elections have consequences.”

      3. damikesc   2 months ago

        We could advocate their assassinations.

        Like the Left does to Trump and Musk.

      4. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 months ago

        Lol. Radical individualists (and Molly) for taxpayer funding of Harvard.

  27. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

    They’re getting more unhinged. Watch the video; she’s nuts.

    https://x.com/whatifalthist/status/1914541655803232274?s=46&t=qeA47-JjK6vq0pfnxg60dA

    This is a great video. She’s such a perfect Democrat it’s kinda funny. Like if I used an AI to make an ideal elite aspirant Leftist it would look like her.

    Everything I say past this point is intuition. I apologize if it’s incorrect but don’t put a high premium on the accuracy of this. This is my read on her.

    She’s probably higher range of normie IQ like 115 so enough to be able to rationalize the current moral code without asking questions. She’s basically the highest rank the left can create now as they’ve purged freethinkers. From preliminary research her partner is white and I’d guess she lives on the West Coast. From looking at her body language and eyes her life is falling apart. I’d guess at least several pillars have fallen out whether financial, romantic, mental health etc… She seems miserable.

    Her mental frame is collapsing and she wants to resort to violence since that’s the only way to keep her sense of self and identity. The thing is there are more people like this than we’d like to believe and they’re mostly looking for a casus belli for war.

    The problem is they have no genuine concept of how horrifying war or suffering can be so they have no understanding of the weight this entails. As women they know they’ll really never be expected to fight in the way men are. To them the war is just ego protection to protect their authenticity.

    All their arguments boil down that they will win since progress (their God) is on their side. There will come a point when the DNC elites, who are more cautious, realize they’ll have to pander to this demo to get reelected. From that moment it will be like the floor has fallen out of the house and rationality will be suspended. In a very short time lots of important things will happen nigh unthinkingly.

    Something unpredicted will happen and then they’ll end in up in a war in which they will have an inferiority in terrain, men, morale, resources, military, weaponry, police etc.. In effect the Left is slipping into starting a war they will be slaughtered in due to their complete lack of mental flexibility.

    1. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

      It’s always chicks in crappy little apartments who think they have all the answers.

      1. mad.casual   2 months ago

        If you use the word "succeed" instead of "secede" and have to explain how your secession is different than the Secession of The South... you don't really have what it takes for a Civil War either.

        It's like the Twits yesterday and Ra's al Gore's post about being ready for revolution below. Most of the people talking about violent revolution on Twitter think it's about nodding to each other about being ready, most of the people actually ready for violent revolution don't talk about it on Twitter because figuring out when your pets become a liability and have to be put down, which member of your family is going to walk point and/or draw fire, and who gets left behind if they get immobilized are the sorts of things you don't advertise.

        1. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

          Few people know of the Hartford Convention, where a bunch of New Englanders spent most of the three year war discussing plans to have a meeting to consider secession because they hated the War of 1812 so much. The southern states said even that much talky-talk was treason.

          What bothers me most about the Confederacy secession was doing it after they lost the election. Taking part in an election means you expect the other side to abide by the results if you win. A bunch of sore loser hypocrites.

          And they didn't wait for Lincoln to be inaugurated or even do anything official as President, nor did they engage in any negotiations over splitting up assets.

          I have no respect for Confederate secession. It was sour grapes by sore loser hypocrites.

          1. sarcasmic   2 months ago

            Taking part in an election means you expect the other side to abide by the results if you win. A bunch of sore loser hypocrites.

            Like Trump and his delusional supporters who still feel that he won in 2020?

            I have no respect for Confederate secession. It was sour grapes by sore loser hypocrites.

            What about the events of J6?

            1. Jefferson Paul   2 months ago

              What is this? Sarcasmic brining up Trump when the conversation was about something else? I don't know if I've ever seen that before.

              1. sarcasmic   2 months ago

                The subject was sour grapes you sore loser.

                1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

                  You’re delusional, retarded, and suffer from one of the worst cases of TDS I’ve ever seen. It’s like an obsession with you to bring Trump up in a conversation that isn’t about Trump.

                  1. Jefferson Paul   2 months ago

                    I've used this analogy before to describe sarcasmic:

                    He's like a jilted lover who can't get over his ex, or that she left him or cheated on him, so he makes sure to bring her up in every conversation, to the consternation of his friends. The conversation could be about cars, but he will shoehorn her into it. Every time he does mention her, he only makes himself look worse. But he's obsessed, so he'll keep talking about her until no one wants to talk to him or even be his friend. And that will only convince him he's right even more, so he doubles and triples down on it, calling up his former friends in the middle of the night to tell them what a slut she is for dating a new guy.

                    1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

                      I like it. +1

                    2. tracerv   2 months ago

                      Are you talking about Trump or JesseAZ?

                      He fantazies about both.

                    3. Jefferson Paul   2 months ago

                      tracerv

                      Sorry, I should have been more clear. The analogy is to describe his obsession with and hatred for Trump. His obsession with Trump is akin to a jilted lover's obsession with his ex: getting back at her and making sure everyone knows his ex is the worst person who ever lived, even if everyone already knows his feeling regarding her. If an article is not about Trump, or if the comment thread isn't about Trump, he's compelled to jump in and make it about Trump. Criticizing Trump is fine, but he generally doesn't make substantive points, instead posting the same tired lines like, "It's okay if the Dems did it first." I normally just ignore him, but about two weeks ago I hit my limit.

                      I can see why you asked if my analogy was designed to describe sarc's obsession with JesseAZ, though, as there are clear similarities there as well.

                    4. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

                      Lol. Love how this TDS now includes JDS.

              2. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 months ago

                I did not see that coming. If only he’d post here more often we might get a better understanding of his zany unpredictability. Wow.

            2. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

              Those who still believe 2020 was the cleanest election ever despite all known mail voter fraud since remain completely retarded.

            3. DesigNate   2 months ago

              And yet, no states seceded from the union over it and most people that believed it was stolen just bitched about it on the internet.

              But other than that, it’s totally comparable to Southern Secession.

          2. mad.casual   2 months ago

            I have no respect for Confederate secession. It was sour grapes by sore loser hypocrites.

            [tilts hand]

            Tea, cotton, divine monarch, elected monarch... the underlying premise of The Constitution and BOR is that there is some notion of reciprocal good faith. If you're just going to sit there and accept any and all abrogation, there's no point in having the rules or election in the first place.

            My point was more along the lines of the fact that if you have to go on social media and tell everyone why you're seceding or why they should join you, and preface it with "We don't have enough people for a revolution.", you don't really have much of a *c*onfederacy either.

            "OK, we're gonna succeed, but first let me explain how this is not like 4th grade where we take our ball and go home. First, there is no ball..."

          3. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

            I have no respect for Confederate secession. It was sour grapes by sore loser hypocrites.

            Why not? The essence of democratic societies is that they eventually break apart when one group determines that they can't co-exist with others in the same group. Native American societies were intensely democratic, and were notable for having entire segments of villages break off to form their own bands, or join up with other bands that were more amenable to how they wanted to live, such as the Cheyenne or various Pueblo tribes. It's why white leaders fundamentally misunderstood how to negotiate treaties with them, because their conception of how native society was organized, with a chief who made all the decisions, was completely antithetical to how these tribes actually functioned.

            A society that offers no recourse for allowing segments to divorce themselves from the rest in a hyper-polarized environment is ultimately asking for civil war in the end anyway. The big mistake the Confederates made was initiating the conflict. If they'd left Fort Sumter alone and simply declared their independence, there wouldn't have been much the US could have done about it short of invasion, and that might have actually brought down foreign aid from Europe even with slavery being institutionalized in the South. You only mitigate something like this through a homogenous culture and dedicated national identity, something that's been increasingly deconstructed ever since the end of World War II, and particularly in the last generation, when that conflict inexplicably took the place of the Revolution as the nation's creation story, and "diversity is our strength" became the John 3:16 of the western managerial class.

    2. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

      Some Sherman quotes seem warranted.

      "War is the remedy our enemies have chosen. Other simple remedies were within their choice. You know it and they know it, but they wanted war, and I say let us give them all they want; not a word of argument, not a sign of let up, no cave in till we are whipped or they are.

      "You are rushing into war with one of the most powerful, ingeniously mechanical, and determined people on Earth — right at your doors. You are bound to fail. Only in your spirit and determination are you prepared for war. In all else you are totally unprepared, with a bad cause to start with.

    3. Super Scary   2 months ago

      You can tell how much she cares about this by the way she peppers in curses. Virtue successfully signaled.

  28. Ra's al Gore   2 months ago

    https://x.com/DerrickEvans4WV/status/1914506693972779502

    The doctors had a financial incentive to inject you with the vax. How is this ethical?

    “Blue Cross Blue Shield had an incentive program to get doctors to administer these shots — If I had vaccinated the 6,000 patients that I treated for COVID, I would have made $1.5 million”

    1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

      That’s what doctors do all the time with medications. They take money from Big Pharma and push their drugs. Ever see the first half hour of “Love and Other Drugs”?

      1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

        Ever see the first half hour of “Love and Other Drugs”?

        Does that actually happen in real life, though? I mean, it wouldn't surprise me if that was the case, but that whole thing seemed way too on the nose when I saw the movie. It reminded me of Chris Farley trying to sell brake pads for the Callahan Auto Parts company.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

          Pharmaceutical companies send sales representatives out to doctors all the time. (As a side note, most industries seem to do this to get you to buy their products.). There are kickback schemes where the rep and the doctor get paid extra for pushing these drugs. Multiple people have written about their experiences as these sales reps.

          Here’s just one: https://fherehab.com/news/book-written-by-former-pharmaceutical-sales-rep/

          Today, one of Gwen’s biggest concerns is for the millions of children taking antipsychotics, which has grown exponentially in the past 10 years. These drugs are especially being given to kids in foster care, putting them in a virtual chemical straight jacket.

          “A large number of psychiatrists are dishonest, because I see them giving people drugs that they know are brain damaging therapeutics, that they know do not have positive, long-term outcomes, that they know will not cure anything. They just take a list of symptoms and call it a mental illness or disorder.“

          The subjectivity of psychiatric diagnoses has created a money making alliance between psychiatrists, pharma reps and the pharma industry. There is no scientific data that is required to diagnose a mental illness. There are no blood tests, there are no urine tests, no PET scan, there is no medical evidence required, and so therefore, that broadens the potential patient population considerably.

          1. damikesc   2 months ago

            Also tend to hire exceptionally hot women to "market" drugs at medical practices with plenty of male doctors.

            Coincidence, I bet.

            My doctor is an unattractive woman and her drug rep is some schlub.

            1. Super Scary   2 months ago

              I remember that being a plot line (or just an episode?) in Scrubs. Heather Locklear played a pharmaceutical rep selling some sort of drug.

    2. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

      The doctors had a financial incentive to inject you with the vax. How is this ethical?

      Funny how JFree called me insane for pointing out this very salient incentive, particularly when hospitals were laying off a bunch of their medical staff for other treatment centers around the same time.

      And it wasn't just the COVID shots, they were getting money for the COVID deaths they reported, too.

  29. Ra's al Gore   2 months ago

    https://x.com/monsterhunter45/status/1912867931568152939

    Remember, the left sees political violence as a knob that can be turned up or down as they feel like, from casual beatings and looting to arson and all the way up to assassinations and bombings. Most of the right sees violence as a switch. It has two settings, Off and Kill Fucking Everything.

    These retards do not even sorta grasp the danger they are fucking with.

    1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

      Dovetails well with my post above regarding the young woman who wants war.

    2. Ra's al Gore   2 months ago

      I suspect part of this is the left's opponents have most of the actual combat experience (not all, but I'd bet most of the experience actually being shot at).

      1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

        I suspect part of this is the left's opponents have most of the actual combat experience (not all, but I'd bet most of the experience actually being shot at).

        No, most ghetto inhabitants vote Democrat.

        1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 months ago

          If they vote at all.

          1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

            Does it count when somebody else votes for them?

      2. MasterThief   2 months ago

        I don't have experience in armed conflict, but I have plenty of arms, some training, and around 100 hours putting holes in paper. I've also hunted and am familiar with taking life (though not human.) Beyond firearms I have plenty of other weapons and training. I'm one of the less dangerous cohort the left is putting themselves against. I'll call for peace and rule of law until the shtf. Once that is breached there will be no remorse. All of their gains have been because their opponents are unreasonably tolerant and patient.

    3. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

      These retards do not even sorta grasp the danger they are fucking with.

      It's why they were so shocked when Kyle Rittenhouse defended himself against a bunch of violent insurrectionists, which included a convicted child molester. The right isn't supposed to fight back, they're supposed to sit there and take it while the left destroys what they feel like.

      And the longer the left keeps doing this, the more common stuff like the Florida State shooting is going to happen in response, given that academia is the root of all this leftist mania.

  30. Ajsloss   2 months ago

    This is actually a bummer: Being forced to justify one's job, when it's on the taxpayer's dime, is kind of amazing (and not difficult at all, in my opinion).

    Wait, so now it's a bad thing that Trump's agenda isn't being carried out?

    1. Nelson   2 months ago

      You understand that policy preferences are separate from each other, right? You can agree with some things a President does and disapprove of others and it isn’t hypocrisy in the least.

      For example, I think that Remain In Mexico was a fantastic policy. Almost everything else Trump did (and is doing) is asinine and idiotic, but that one I wholeheartedly support. I would have gone even further and had all asylum cases heard remotely at embassies in other countries, not in the US, but at least it was a start.

  31. Ra's al Gore   2 months ago

    You're welcome.

    https://x.com/ThomasSowell/status/1914041853311402460
    White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt gives a look into how she stays in shape.

    1. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

      Dang.

      1. mad.casual   2 months ago

        You can practically hear Joey Swoll shouting "That's how you post a fucking workout clip!"

    2. Randy Sax   2 months ago

      The working out part is fine. The sharing it on the internet part is pure harlotry.

      1. mad.casual   2 months ago

        Look, I'm as willing to walk the borderline sexist/misogynist line as the next guy, but try to keep the implicit calls for "better heard and never seen" down, wouldja?

        "Goddamned press secretaries allowing themselves to be filmed by the media for the media to post shit up on the internet! What's this wold coming too?" - Randy Sax

        1. Randy Sax   2 months ago

          I'm speaking in jest. I assumed that my word choice "harlotry" would have made that clear.

          1. mad.casual   2 months ago

            Poe's Law, post parody.

          2. Dillinger   2 months ago

            "look at my new sports bra but think only about my hot brain!"

    3. Super Scary   2 months ago

      I've only seen pictures of her behind a podium so I had no clue she was so short.

      1. Jefferson Paul   2 months ago

        If that's what you focused on, you're doing it wrong.

        1. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

          She’s short?

    4. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      Nice, um, guns.

      1. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

        Lifting free weights really bulks up the pecs.

  32. mad.casual   2 months ago

    Look, I'm torn here. Attacks on academic freedom are very, very wrong.

    “Contradictions do not exist. Whenever you think that you are facing a contradiction, check your premises. You will find that one of them is wrong.”
    ― Ayn Rand

    Withholding taxpayer dollars is not an attack. Government funded education is not academic freedom.

  33. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   2 months ago

    Hey Liz, the former pope was a wef globalist Marxist. He was not catholic, and did not serve God or jesus

    1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

      Francis was the worst Pope since Alexander VI, which is saying something.

  34. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    Sort of local news. Aka Scenes from Butts County, GA:

    An intruder tried to gain entry to the home through a bedroom window with a child on the other side, but the child's father heard the commotion and interrupted the burglar as he was crawling inside.

    Butts County Sheriff Gary Long said the father of the child "challenged the intruder and the suspect exited the window."

    According to Long, the father then went to his room and got a gun as Aquil busted the living room window, trying to get inside.

    The father fired his gun, missing the suspect, but causing the suspect to run away.

    Long said in a Facebook post, "The shot fired by the homeowner was UNFORTUNATELY about 8 inches too high, missing the intruder, which would have resulted in his death."

    "To the criminals, listen up and pay close attention, if you decide to break into a home in Butts County, make sure you are ready to meet your maker. My staff and I will spend as much time as it takes to make sure the citizens of this County are well-trained, educated and capable of making great shots to protect their family and homes. So, unless you are prepared to die, I would highly recommend you to find a home in another County to burglarize, because this is not the one."

    1. Super Scary   2 months ago

      "Butts County, GA"

      Heh, nice.

    2. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

      HOME INVASION SUSPECT CHARGED
      Abdul Aquil
      His charges are as follows :
      Burglary
      Home Invasion
      Terroristic Threats
      Cruelty to Children 1st degree
      Cruelty to Children 1st degree
      Cruelty to Children 1st degree
      Criminal Damage to Property 2nd
      Obstruction of Law Enforcement
      Our Investigation revealed Aquil is no stranger to this type of crime, as he is currently on probation for the same type of offense. Hopefully, after this incident he will spend many years in confinement.

      During this home invasion there were two unfortunate situations that occurred:
      (1) we have small children who will be traumatized by this coward’s act for the rest of their lives.
      (2) the shot fired by the homeowner was UNFORTUNATELY about 8 inches too high, missing the intruder, which would have resulted in his death.

      Based on the events of this weekend, my staff and I will start holding monthly firearm classes for the citizens of Butts County. We will hold at least 3 advanced firearm training courses each year, filled with real life scenarios to improve skill set and shot placement, as well as multiple basic handgun classes, teaching basic skills and covering Georgia gun laws, which will assist in keeping our BUTTS safe.

      With this post, I have two messages, one to the Citizens and one to the Criminal element:

      To the Citizens, if you are legally allowed to possess a firearm, I strongly encourage each and every one of you to obtain one, attend our class and let us help you protect your family. If the homeowner last night was not a gun owner, I am afraid the outcome could have been much different.

      [criminals part already included above]

  35. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   2 months ago

    "You can't retroactively declare something a crime and then go after people for things they already did. "

    Like when the left goes through someone's social media time-line and digs something up from 20 years ago, then uses that to get them fired based on their current view?

    1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

      No. Like NYC writing a law so batshit crazy Carrol could lie about being assaulted. Or claiming legal expenses are a campaign expense to turn a misdemeanor into a felony. Or turn a financial reporting law into an anti protest law for J6.

      1. mad.casual   2 months ago

        Remember when they were debating whether a black guy could be a Supreme Court justice because he allegedly found a pubic hair on his Coke can?

        ... and *then* said "Perjury? Smerjury!" when the subsequent POTUS lied about getting a BJ from an intern.

        I'd say it's like Stephanie doesn't even know the meaning of the phrase 'ex post facto', but the meaning has been selectively obviated to the point that she probably actually doesn't.

  36. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

    You can't retroactively declare something a crime and then go after people for things they already did.

    Well, you can, actually, because it's what happened to Trump in New York.

    1. mad.casual   2 months ago

      At least they didn't have Emma "They made this a crime 50 yrs. ago and nobody told me?" Camp write the story.

    2. damikesc   2 months ago

      Was wondering that as well.

      Democrats just passed a law with a very small window of time to allow removal of all limits on statute of limitations.

      And they now want to lecture US about due process...

  37. Ra's al Gore   2 months ago

    CNN Just Pulled the Rug Out From Under CNN's Kaitlan Collins
    https://pjmedia.com/vodkapundit/2025/04/22/cnn-just-pulled-the-rug-out-from-under-cnns-kaitlan-collins-n4939109

    A CNN segment this week might have just pulled the rug out from under CNN's own Kaitlan Collins as the network finally gets around to reporting the truth about Joe Biden. A new report on the latest Biden tell-all book is simply devastating when seen alongside a resurfaced clip of Collins last June, lying to her audience about Biden's condition.

    "President Biden has spent days locked in intense preparation, surrounded by his closest advisors at Camp David," Collins said at the time. "And our sources are telling us tonight that full mock debates are underway — at the podium, under the lights… and as I reported while covering him at the White House, when Biden prepares, he does so incredibly intensively."

    ...I only single out Collins today for a couple of reasons. One is that her White House-approved salesmanship was among the smarmiest and most self-righteous, and the other is that her employer, CNN, effectively sold her out while flogging Chris Whipple's new tell-all, "Uncharted: How Trump Beat Biden, Harris, and the Odds in the Wildest Campaign in History."

    So here's CNN's Abby Phillip, rug-puller extraordinaire: "Just how worried were Biden aides before the former president's disastrous debate last summer?" she asked viewers. "According to Ron Klain, his chief of staff, concerns could not be overstated," Phillip revealed, citing Whipple's book.

    1. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

      “..I only single out Collins today for a couple of reasons”

      Because she’s a psychopath?

      1. Dillinger   2 months ago

        he's supercrushing on her. pigtails in the inkwell.

      2. Jefferson Paul   2 months ago

        She does have "Joker-face."

    2. Rick James   2 months ago

      I like the latest tidbits I've been getting from this sphere-- how Biden's sister was calling staffers, in tears because of "what they were doing to him". However, even I can't tell what the context was based on the quotes and the characterizations of the calls.

      I listened to everything several times, and honestly, I couldn't tell if she was mad they were making him be president, or whether she was mad that they hadn't prepared him enough and injected him with the right cocktail of drugs to get him over the finish line.

  38. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

    Yah, yah, let's all pretend the rule of law is a real thing.

    "The key thing about rule of law is that we all know ahead of time what is legal and what is not, so that we can act accordingly," writes Slade, riffing on Friedrich Hayek. "Laws need to be published. They need to be internally consistent. And they need to be *forward-looking* only. You can't retroactively declare something a crime and then go after people for things they already did. They also need to bind government actors just as they do members of the public. That, really, is the crucial distinction between 'rule of law' and its opposite, 'arbitrary rule,' or 'rule of man,' where the law just is whatever the guy in power says it is at any given moment."

    Laws are interpreted by men. The idea of objective easily understood laws is a fiction designed solely to cover up the reality that we only have Rule of Men. The only difference between men in robes and men in armor is that men in armor make their decisions faster and change their minds faster.

    Anyone decrying Trump's destruction of the Rule of Law has been asleep since the Magna Carta. Where did affirmative action come from, if racism is illegal? Where did FDR's New Deal come from? Where did the Fed come from? Why did Salughterhouse gut the 14th Amendment? Why did John Adams sign the 1798 Sedition Act and throw newspaper editors and publishers in jail just 7 years after Freedom of the press became part of the Constitution?

    Because Rule of Law is a fiction covering up Rule of Men.

    In 1980, the Supreme Court's Ohio v. Roberts established precedent regarding hearsay.

    In 2004, 24 years later, the Supreme Court's Crawford v. Washington changed that precedent.

    Apparently prior precedent had been in force since the Sixth Amendment was adopted in 1791, 189 years before. The new precedent lasted 24 years. And now, 21 years later, there are rumblings that the latest precedent is ripe for replacement again. Well, "ripe" is a bit of an exaggeration, they wouldn't want to get hasty all of a sudden.

    https://reason.com/volokh/2025/03/24/justices-alito-and-gorsuch-would-like-to-reconsider-crawford/

    The Rule of Law is fiction.

    Juries have to be unanimous in criminal trials. They have only hours or days to decide a matter, and the only assistance they are allowed is questions to a judge. Maybe a dictionary, I do not know.

    Then the criminal appeals. A year or two later, the appeals court reverses, 2-1.

    The prosecution appeals to the full court. A year or two later, the en banc court reverses again, 8-7.

    The criminal appeals to the Supreme Court. A year or two later, they reverse back to the prosecution winning, 5-4.

    Learned judges get years to decide, with the help of the brightest law clerks, the best law libraries, and tons of amicus briefs from "friends of the court" who are nothing of the sort and only trying to reframe the question to their own benefit. And after years of discussion and debate, they don't even have to be unanimous.

    The Rule of Law is fiction.

    1. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

      Stephanie Slade's X thread says all the usual nonsense about what Rule of Law is supposed to mean, that ivory tower ideal which never has existed and never will. She talks about "mere whims of the person in charge" with nary a mention of those persons being judges, always with the implicit presumption that those persons in charge are kings and President Trump.

      Specifically, she mentions his stupid tariffs, forgetting to acknowledge he followed the Rule of Law as laid down by those 535 members of Congress.

      Then she pivots to deportation, neglecting to mention that the Rule of Law as it exists says that only the 2019 court can punish someone for violating their court order, and the only proper remedy for this new court is ... nothing. It's up to the executive branch to investigate and prosecute, and guess what, the courts, those Rule of Law judges, said prosecutorial discretion allows prosecutors to choose what they investigate and how they prosecute. Not judges. Courts approved Obama waiving millions of prosecutions of illegal immigrants who had young children. They set a new precedent, a new Rule of Law. Now this judge and others are whining about Trump following that precedent and not investigating or prosecuting whoever violated that court order and deported an illegal immigrant back to his native country.

      Rule of Law is a fiction.

      1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

        Rule of Law is a fiction.

        They way they frame their arguments around the phrase makes it sound like it's holy scripture that needs to be 100 percent obeyed, even in contravention to observed reality when that doesn't happen. It's notable that only one side of the political aisle is expected to adhere to it in such an all-encompassing manner; the other side considers it to be more of a guide, to be followed unless otherwise inconvenient. Their complaints seem to revolve around the fact that the former adopted the "liberating tolerance" of the latter.

        1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 months ago

          SGT is a fucking TDS-addled pile of lying shit, ain't he?

          1. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

            And then there's Rule of Sevo, where he can't make up his mind from one minute to the next whether I hate Trump or not.

            1. sarcasmic   2 months ago

              I read his posts as if they were from Abe Simpson.

              1. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

                I read your posts as if they were from Barney Gumble.

              2. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

                I guess that makes you either Ralph Wiggum or Barney Gumble, depending on how drunk you are.

        2. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

          "The code is more what you'd call 'guidelines' than actual rules."

      2. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

        Like “Democracy”, it’s not “The Rule of Law”, it’s “Our Rule of Law”.

  39. Think It Through   2 months ago

    What is "groks" and why would you intentionally use it in a sentence?

    1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

      It's from Heinlein, "Stranger in a Strange Land." It just means that you completely immerse yourself in something.

    2. mad.casual   2 months ago

      It's highly-contextual term that actually means a highly-contextual understanding. Lots of people understand what a suicide-squeeze is in baseball, very few people have actually performed one, and even fewer have truly grokked the suicide squeeze, performing it often enough to do it well.

      I'd argue that Slade is hilariously and paradoxically misusing it as "agrees with (me)".

      1. Think It Through   2 months ago

        Lots of people understand what a suicide-squeeze is in baseball
        Yes.

        very few people have actually performed one
        Yes.

        even fewer have truly grokked the suicide squeeze, performing it often enough to do it well.
        No.

        1. Dillinger   2 months ago

          "the last time I grokked the suicide squeeze it resulted in a triple play"?

          1. mad.casual   2 months ago

            I don't understand the disagreement either.

            Adults who understand the suicide squeeze on paper or have maybe seen it on TV don't grok it. A little league player following the instruction to bunt and successfully pulling it off doesn't necessarily grok it. The coach and players that can read a defense, knows the batter and base runners' physical and mental capabilities, knows *their* ability to read the field, they *grok* the squeeze. Maybe the biggest fans sitting at the local bar *kinda* grok it, but they aren't the ones who were showing up for spring training and maybe putting their bodies and career on the line to run the risk of failing to pull it off.

            1. Dillinger   2 months ago

              one of the guys on my team was in the Braves organization and still thinks he's in the Braves organization and every time he's on 3d he wants me to lay one down and I could ... but I hate bunting I like doubles in the gap I do not grok the squeeze

              1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 months ago

                I can grok the suicide squeeze. The “safety squeeze” on the other hand….. lol.

                1. Dillinger   2 months ago

                  ya that's just an awful idea every time.

  40. mad.casual   2 months ago

    So let's talk about what we mean when we say "rule of law."

    Take your "Don't Say Gay", "Sex is just a social construct.", and "Borders are, like, a figment of imagination." stupidity and cram it up your ass sideways.

  41. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 months ago

    This outfit thinks CA is still too close to reality:

    https://calexitnow.org/
    "Empowering California’s Future
    At CALEXIT, we're united by one mission: to make California a free, independent, and prosperous nation, governed only by the people of California."

    Pretty sure this would turn the 'leavers' into a flood.

    1. Don't look at me! (Tariffs are killing the penguin industry!)   2 months ago

      It was bad when Britain did it, but it is good if we do it.

    2. Eeyore   2 months ago

      The good news is we can finally apply tarrifs to California imports.

      And immigration limits.

      1. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

        And a border wall.

        1. Eeyore   2 months ago

          That's a really long wall. Better plan to conquer part of it first.

          1. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

            Escape from LA.

          2. Dillinger   2 months ago

            bomb the San Andreas. Arizona Bay beachfront homes.

            1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

              Otisburg?

              1. Dillinger   2 months ago

                I was doing TOOL but yes, Vista Del Lex is also hilariously acceptable.

                1. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

                  Learn to swim.

              2. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

                It's a little bitty place!

    3. Super Scary   2 months ago

      Cool. Let them drop out and we can pick up Greenland to fill the 50th slot so we don't have to change our flag.

    4. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

      This is even assuming the whole state would leave, instead of just the coastal areas and places around Silicon Valley and the Imperial Valley. I suspect there are quite a few people in the hinterlands that would be glad to be rid of the faggot brigades on the coast.

      I guess the good news that we could nuke the whole Bay Area and call the Colorado River Compact null and void at that point.

  42. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>Attacks on academic freedom are very, very wrong.

    $53billiion academically free dollars in the bank they don't need my money or yours fuck that

    1. mad.casual   2 months ago

      Not funding academic freedom is an attack. Foreign actors actually forcibly occupying buildings, shouting at and harassing ethnic and minority students, and disrupting classes is just Constitutionally-protected free speech and peaceable assembly.

      She literally did the Tony/chemjeff "not giving is violent taking, violent taking is giving" thing.

      "Doesn't openly advocate for the murder of babies at every opportunity" Liz

      1. Dillinger   2 months ago

        I'm trying real hard to be thankful for the open forum so I will only comment I misspelled billion.

      2. Rick James   2 months ago

        Not funding academic freedom is an attack.

        Not funding an attack on academic freedom is an attack.

        1. mad.casual   2 months ago

          A good Samaritan would stand up and protect the blocking and screening of not funding attacks on academic freedom.

        2. Zeb   2 months ago

          Yeah, the assumption that Harvard represents academic freedom needs some examination.

  43. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

    'Then, last week, Harvard said it would not comply with what it says are unlawful demands by the administration, which led to the Trump administration pulling its funding.'

    Do they miss Obama now?

    And do they miss getting all squishy down there when Obama issued his campus mandates?

    1. damikesc   2 months ago

      Boys losing all concept of due process on campus --- no biggie.

      Harvard loses money? CONSTITUTIONAL CRISIS!!!

    2. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

      Dear Colleagues: "As a condition of receiving Federal funds, a school agrees that it will not exclude, separate, deny benefits to, or otherwise treat differently on the basis of sex any person in its educational programs or activities unless expressly authorized to do so under Title IX or its implementing regulations.

      https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/sites/default/files/dear_colleague_sexual_violence.pdf

      Almost 20 pages detailing exactly what schools had to do to "comply" with Obama's Title IX views on harassment, etc., and why normal criminal due process for rapes and sexual assaults was not warranted on campus.

      https://www.citynewsokc.com/education/obama-administration-s-dear-colleague-letter-on-transgender-students/article_b0de8275-a0b6-58fb-95a5-0b8b730df9bd.html

      The Departments interpret Title IX to require that when a student or the student’s parent or guardian, as appropriate, notifies the school administration that the student will assert a gender identity that differs from previous representations or records, the school will begin treating the student consistent with the student’s gender identity. Under Title IX, there is no medical diagnosis or treatment requirement that students must meet as a prerequisite to being treated consistent with their gender identity. Because transgender students often are unable to obtain identification documents that reflect their gender identity (e.g., due to restrictions imposed by state or local law in their place of birth or residence), requiring students to produce such identification documents in order to treat them consistent with their gender identity may violate Title IX when doing so has the practical effect of limiting or denying students equal access to an educational program or activity.

      Followed by a list of demands like "school staff and contractors will use pronouns and names consistent with a transgender student’s gender identity" and "Restrooms and Locker Rooms. A school may provide separate facilities on the basis of sex, but must allow transgender students access to such facilities consistent with their gender identity."

  44. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>"Laws need to be published. They need to be internally consistent. And they need to be *forward-looking* only.

    lol all these things are. the immigration laws are on the books. the T admin is being internally consistent. no person has been retroactively whatever (Stephanie) is asserting.

  45. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>Democrats growing a backbone (but what's the point?):

    seriously what will you cheer about after the marylandman is forgotten?

    1. Moonrocks   2 months ago

      Egg prices?

    2. Super Scary   2 months ago

      Hitler?

      Oh wait, this isn't one of those. My bad.

      1. Dillinger   2 months ago

        the authors do white knight the campus anti-semites

  46. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

    'Look, I'm torn here. Attacks on academic freedom are very, very wrong. But perhaps I'm most frustrated because pulling federal support for universities—especially those with $53 billion dollar endowments—is something I would love to see a Republican administration do, in the proper way and from a place of principle; it's insane that taxpayers in Burlington, Iowa, or Killeen, Texas, are forced to subsidize Harvard.

    'This, unfortunately, is not the way. And it's not likely to succeed.'

    Liz, Liz, Liz. First, can we separate "attacks on academic freedom" from attacks on those who despise (and have inculcated a system that prevents) actual academic freedom?

    And sure, it would be nice to slap these woke ideologues in some "polite" way. But here's the reality: you can choose to attack their seminary rudely or you can do nothing, and let them carry on their evil mission (and it is evil). Whatcha gonna do?

    1. mad.casual   2 months ago

      We're in goddamned French Algiers and Liz is all "We shouldn't go too far across the Rubicon here."

      1. Rick James   2 months ago

        I like how attacking an attack on academic freedom is an attack on academic freedom.

        1. damikesc   2 months ago

          I like how "Treat Jewish students equally to the Muslim ones" is somehow akin to "SHUT DOWN THE FUCKING UNIVERSITIES!!!"

          Seems like a balanced take.

    2. Zeb   2 months ago

      You know what would be good for academic freedom? Not relying on government (and therefore political) funding. It's amusing to see Harvard and Columbia and their ilk being smacked now, but I'd much rather be talking about whether government should be subsidizing higher education and research at all.

  47. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

    'Expect more sloppiness like this'

    Let me know when the number of sloppy deportation cases reaches 1% of the sloppy asylum and undocumented immigrant cases.

    1. Dillinger   2 months ago

      the second week on this idiot is just ludicrous. learn something then write.

    2. sarcasmic   2 months ago

      You mean Democrats did it first so it's ok?

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        No, Sarc, I mean in a nation of 350 million people, including 10 million illegal--sorry!--undocumented status, even a hundred sloppy cases is meaningless, and not an epidemic. Kinda like the BLM hysteria.

        1. sarcasmic   2 months ago

          So it's better to have innocent people deported than to allow due process and let one illegal roam free.

          1. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

            Ok Kathy Newman.

          2. Dillinger   2 months ago

            it's better when you stop posting lies people feel the need to refute.

            1. sarcasmic   2 months ago

              That's hilarious coming from a guy who routinely defends the biggest liars in these comments. Take your self righteousness and shove it up your ass.

              1. Dillinger   2 months ago

                lol. don't violate the nap, true libertarian.

              2. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

                Poor Sarcshit.

              3. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

                Sarc’s the angry drunk today.

                1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

                  Been more than a week.

              4. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

                Why are you and Jeff obsessed with things in other people's asses?

                1. InsaneTrollLogic (Did the penguin tell you to do this?)   2 months ago

                  Either they’re gay or they want to follow Sqrlsy and eat shit.

          3. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

            One? Sure no.

            10,000,000? We might have to accept a few errors. Would you settle for 99.99 accurate? That still means a thousand sloppy cases.

      2. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

        Poor sarcbot.

  48. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

    'Being forced to justify one's job, when it's on the taxpayer's dime, is kind of amazing (and not difficult at all, in my opinion).'

    Racist!

  49. NealAppeal   2 months ago

    On Monday, U.S. Reps. Robert Garcia (D–Calif.), Maxwell Alejandro Frost (D–Fla.), Yassamin Ansari (D–Ariz.), and Maxine E. Dexter (D–Ore.) met with U.S. ambassador to El Salvador William H. Duncan, in San Salvador.

    They heard about the free drinks.

    1. Minadin   2 months ago

      Rep. Comer froze the funding for these trips after it was discovered that the Maryland Senator used taxpayer funding for his trip last week.

      As a result, their travel was no longer considered an 'official visit' and they were prohibited by the Salvadoran government from meeting with the deported guy.

      https://x.com/RepJamesComer/status/1914408972536160644

      1. Jefferson Paul   2 months ago

        Freezing the funding for their trips to El Salvador is an "attack" of democracy.

        Reason, am I doing this right?

      2. Don't get eliminated(How can you have any pudding if you don't eat yer penguin meat)   2 months ago

        Awesome. Now charge him with the Logan act, right?

        1. damikesc   2 months ago

          Jamie Raskin seems to be toeing that line well.

  50. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >> writes Slade, riffing on Friedrich Hayek.

    this will make me laugh all day, thank you.

  51. Rick James   2 months ago

    Dear Colleague...

  52. Rick James   2 months ago

    "US stocks tumbled as President Donald Trump called on the Federal Reserve chair to cut interest rates amid mounting signs his trade war is pushing the economy toward recession,"

    Towards the old definition of recession or the new definition?

    1. Moonrocks   2 months ago

      Towards an even newer, as yet unknown definition.

    2. Dillinger   2 months ago

      whichever definition cnn decides.

  53. Rick James   2 months ago

    "The government has, in addition to the initial freeze of $2.2 billion in funding, considered taking steps to freeze an additional $1 billion in grants, initiated numerous investigations of Harvard's operations, threatened the education of international students, and announced that it is considering a revocation of Harvard's 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status," writes Harvard President Alan Garber. Now, Harvard is filing suit, in federal court in Massachusetts, saying the government's punitive actions show it's trying to wield "leverage to gain control of academic decision-making at Harvard."

    Then stop taking $2 billion of my money.

  54. Uncle Jay   2 months ago

    Fuck Harvard.
    They're not entitled to our tax dollars.
    Besides, Harvard has at least one billion dollars from their alumni annually, so Harvard doesn't need our money.

  55. Eeyore   2 months ago

    As someone who believes taxation is theft - I believe Harvard could be charged with the crime of knowingly receiving stolen property.

  56. JFree   2 months ago

    early winners in the global trade war

    Everyone in the world is a winner except the US and China. Hopefully we can each go through three more years of Pyrrhic 'victory' to obliterate their aspirations of greater power abuses. Learning experiences delivered at a massive cost are the only ones that stick

  57. Moonrocks   2 months ago

    Being forced to justify one's job, when it's on the taxpayer's dime, is kind of amazing (and not difficult at all, in my opinion).

    Have you ever been a government employee?

  58. Moonrocks   2 months ago

    "The key thing about rule of law is that we all know ahead of time what is legal and what is not, so that we can act accordingly,"

    She's right. Whether or not illegally crossing the border is considered a crime depends entirely on who occupies the White House.

    1. JFree   2 months ago

      No it isn't. Improper entry is a crime but it cannot be presumed or simply declared. It must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.

      Unlawful presence is NOT a crime. It is a civil violation With deportation/removal being one of the civil penalties available. Conditions for which also require due process. Not declaration by the President.

      To give just one example that meets the latter but not the former, a visa overstayer. You people are so fucking obsessed with believing that you are the snowflake victims of a partisan tyranny that you don't even know the laws of the US that apply to different migrant status. Which is why you think arbitrary Presidential tyranny is the solution.

      1. Dillinger   2 months ago

        >>It must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.

        the standard is beyond a reasonable doubt in what court?

      2. damikesc   2 months ago

        You cross the border. You're not a citizen. Not a lot of due process needed nor justified.

        Just like a warning shot fired near somebody breaking into your house is a courtesy, not a necessity.

      3. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 months ago

        God you’re fucking boring.

  59. VinniUSMC   2 months ago

    Expect more sloppiness like this:

    Sloppiness, like citing Leftist bloggers?

  60. TJJ2000   2 months ago

    Address it for what it is.....

    Harvard sues to keep their Commie-Indoctrination camp GRIFT/THEFT SHOP alive.

  61. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

    im not sure what the strategy is behind deporting japanese grad students who just like to go fishing but I'm wholly in support of deporting every single non-citizen who has committed felonies and cutting off every dime of public support to non-citizens.

    I think a lot of americans feel this way. they've had enough. They arent viciously trying to deport every single japanese grad student but MS-13 gang members who are a risk of "persecution" get zero sympathy. none.

  62. DesigNate   2 months ago

    “sent Harvard a list of demands that included auditing professors for plagiarism, reporting to the federal government any international students accused of misconduct, and appointing an outside overseer to make sure that academic departments were 'viewpoint diverse,”

    So this is an attack on education, but the Title IX ridiculousness and then the boys on the girls teams ridiculousness was peachy keen? I don’t grok the difference between all these dear colleagues demands.

    1. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

      the difference is one team is cool and the other is not.

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