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Reason Roundup

The Chinese Student Crackdown

Plus: Codifying DOGE, au pair crackdown, and more...

Liz Wolfe | 5.29.2025 9:30 AM

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Students in a Chinese classroom | Chen Bin/VCG/Newscom
(Chen Bin/VCG/Newscom)

No "critical fields": Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Wednesday evening that the visas of certain Chinese students would soon be revoked, especially those studying in "critical fields" and those with ties of any sort to the Chinese Communist Party, and that greater scrutiny would be applied to future visa applicants.

This isn't the first time a Trump administration has attempted a crackdown, but this one is likely to be much more widespread. "In 2020, officials in the first Trump administration canceled the visas of more than 1,000 Chinese graduate students and researchers after announcing they were banning from campuses Chinese citizens with direct ties to military universities in their country," reports The New York Times. "It was the first time the U.S. government had moved to bar a category of Chinese students from getting access to American universities, a ban the Biden administration kept in place."

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"Such a politicized and discriminatory move lays bare the US lie behind the so-called freedom and openness that the US touts," said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning. "It will only further undermine its image in the world and national reputation."

There may well be good reasons for the Trump administration to want to root out or preempt espionage, but it's not clear that such a widespread, untargeted crackdown is necessarily the best means of accomplishing that. Still, looked at as part of a whole pattern of behavior, it's a provocation: The U.S. has been souring ties with China, first through tariffs, then through negotiations over a rare earth minerals deal, and now through a crackdown on some 275,000 foreign students.

The administration is also trying to ban foreign students from enrolling at Harvard, and the State Department has halted all interviews for new student visas, saying it will focus more intensely on vetting prospective applicants' social media postings. It looks a bit like this administration simply wants most foreigners to leave, and to deter possible entrants from ever coming.

Huge tariff ruling: A three-judge panel for the U.S. Court of International Trade ruled that the president "had wrongly invoked a 1977 law in imposing his 'Liberation Day' tariffs on dozens of countries and they were therefore illegal," reports Bloomberg. That ruling also applies to the tariffs imposed before Liberation Day on China, Mexico, and Canada, purportedly over "national security" and fentanyl trafficking. Now, the Trump administration will appeal this ruling, possibly going all the way up to the Supreme Court. ("The ruling doesn't affect Trump's first-term levies on many imports from China or sectoral duties planned or already imposed on goods including steel," adds Bloomberg, "which are based on a different legal foundation that the Trump administration may now be forced to make more use of to pursue its tariff campaign.")

"It is not for unelected judges to decide how to properly address a national emergency," said White House spokesman Kush Desai in a statement. "President Trump pledged to put America First, and the Administration is committed to using every lever of executive power to address this crisis and restore American Greatness."

"The ruling is a welcome blow to the Trump administration's freewheeling use of [the International Emergency Economic Powers Act] in ways that seemingly ignored the plain text of the law—which authorizes executive action only in response to 'unusual and extraordinary' threats to the United States," writes Reason's Eric Boehm.

How to make DOGE permanent: President Donald Trump is sending suggestions for spending cuts to Congress in an effort to make the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) cuts permanent. Unfortunately, the $9.4 billion-in-cuts package falls far short of what would actually be needed to make an impact.

Two Republicans familiar with the plan told Politico that "it will target NPR and PBS, as well as foreign aid agencies that have already been gutted by the Trump administration." But let's be real: There's $1.6 trillion in discretionary spending allocated each year, and discretionary spending itself is but a small chunk of the total federal spending—less than a third. Mandatory spending—things like entitlement programs—is the area that really needs to be attacked, but it's politically much harder to make, say, substantive reforms to Social Security.

So $9.4 billion in cuts it is! A tiny drop in the bucket. What a bleak political reality: that this is what DOGE's efforts culminate in, and that this is the way lawmakers intend to codify the cuts.


Scenes from Texas: I'm back home, where Governor Greg Abbott just signed a law requiring Google and Apple to verify app store users' ages. Some "lawmakers and some social media companies argu[e] that app stores should serve as centralized clearinghouses for verifying users' ages," notes CNN, with Abbott's office adding that "Texas will empower parents to have more control over the online content their children can access."

It's similar to Utah's law, which also aims to prevent kids from being able to unilaterally download certain apps. Like Utah, Texas will now require app stores to both verify ages and obtain parents' consent before a child downloads an app or makes a purchase through an app. "But Texas' law adds an additional requirement," notes CNN. "The app stores must also confirm that the parent or guardian approving a minor's app downloads has the legal authority to make decisions for that child." On the one hand, this means parents are forced to hand over an ID (and hope these companies will protect their private data after it's been verified); on the other, it appears to be a pretty strict requirement that will be hard for kids to circumvent, so it might end up being effective.


QUICK HITS

  • It's not clear to me how cutting off the supply of au pairs is a pro-family policy that will encourage people to have more kids:

The Trump administration just shutdown all new interviews for au pairs on the J-1 visa. pic.twitter.com/JSqbphtZ2S

— The Alex Nowrasteh (@AlexNowrasteh) May 27, 2025

This could have the unfortunate effect of raising childcare costs in certain markets. But I also haven't heard a single person cogently argue why au pairs are a threat that must be suppressed; this is a form of childcare that can take the form of a nanny, or more the form of a mother's helper, and it can be very collaborative, allowing mother and au pair to tend to children side-by-side. Some mothers don't want to send their kids to daycare full-time or to have a full-time nanny, and there's a lot of gradient between "no help at all" and "totally outsourcing all domestic labor" that pro-family policy makers should consider. Au pairs, who live in the home with the family, are typically here for defined periods of time—frequently a 12-month minimum, with the option to renew for up to 12 additional months, if it's a mutually beneficial arrangement—so it's a way for parents to secure an arrangement that's neither long-term nor short-term, operating somewhat differently from typical nanny arrangements. It's just so odd to me that the administration sees a problem with this.

  • "Only Two Companies Make Parachutes for U.S. Troops," reads a Wall Street Journal headline. "Deportations Would Crush One." Good read.
  • Several folks have reached out to me concerned that I fell victim to a satire website, re: Pete Hegseth item yesterday. Let me be clear: All roasting of Pete Hegseth is intentional, for your amusement and mine.
  • "Equity" curriculums basically just lower the bar for all students to an embarrassing degree:

New SF public school plan would

- eliminate homework and weekly tests from counting toward semester grade
- allow students to take the final exam multiple times
- convert all B grades into As, and all Fs into Cs

It's hard to see the difference between this policy and what… https://t.co/1ajUs8Ay3Q pic.twitter.com/p6wMyJDHIi

— Derek Thompson (@DKThomp) May 28, 2025

  • Pretty much:

Centrists are out of touch in that we care a lot about procedural and policy stuff the voters do not and sometimes treat normal people like incomprehensible ciphers, leftists are out of touch in that they are often literally in favor of murder https://t.co/Eha9xFtGuj

— Kelsey Piper (@KelseyTuoc) May 28, 2025

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: Trump Deletes Database Containing Over 5,000 Police Misconduct Incidents

Liz Wolfe is an associate editor at Reason.

Reason RoundupPoliticsTrump AdministrationChinaForeign Policy
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  1. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    ... the visas of certain Chinese students would soon be revoked...

    They pissed on Rubio's rug.

    1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

      Yeah, man, it really tied the room together.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        This aggression will not stand, man.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

          Smokey, this is not 'Nam. This is bowling. There are rules.

    2. Spiritus Mundi   2 months ago

      You said 'wet shirt no break.' Not 'piss shirt bend bars.'

    3. Ajsloss   2 months ago

      Rug pissers did not do this, man.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

        He peed on The Dude's rug.

    4. Anomalous   2 months ago

      How nihilistic of them.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

        Nihilists! Fuck me. I mean, say what you want about the tenets of National Socialism, Dude, at least it's an ethos.

        1. Sailor1989   2 months ago

          And also, let's not forget - let's NOT forget, Dude - that keeping wildlife...uhm, an amphibious rodent, for...uhm, you know, domestic...within the city...that ain't legal either.

  2. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    It was the first time the U.S. government had moved to bar a category of Chinese students from getting access to American universities, a ban the Biden administration kept in place.

    THAT MEANS NO ONE CAN COMPLAIN.

    1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

      You know who else couldn't complain?

      1. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

        Illegal alien employees?

      2. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

        My mother never breastfed me. She told me she only liked me as a friend. Ahh but I can't complain. I was so ugly my mother used to feed me with a sling shot.

      3. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        Jimmy Hoffa?

      4. Anomalous   2 months ago

        Joe Walsh?

        1. Dillinger   2 months ago

          +1 Maserati. 185.

          1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

            I lost my license, now I don't drive

            1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

              Off topic, but I hear if you invite sarc to a party he doesn’t leave until like 4 am.

              1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

                Of course, it's hard to leave when you can't find the door.

                1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

                  And are blackout drunk, passed out in a pool of his own ironed and vomit. Which for Sarc is any day ending in ‘y’.

                  1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

                    Those lyrics aren't in the song. Calm down.

                    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fds_2qH9sBQ

          2. EISTAU Gree-Vance   2 months ago

            Meh. He’s just an ordinary average guy.

  3. Don't look at me! (Not signed with autopen)   2 months ago

    Not certain I understand the desire for cost cutting efforts to fail.

    1. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

      You have to think like an american bolshevik.

    2. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

      It helps prevent more Marxism. Hence the opposition of trash like JeffSarc.

  4. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

    It's not clear to me how cutting off the supply of au pairs is a pro-family policy that will encourage people to have more kids:

    Why do we need to import nannies?

    1. Randy Sax   2 months ago

      You don't expect American 20-something women to look after babies? They are to busy with their only fans careers.

      1. Spiritus Mundi   2 months ago

        Umm.....those two things aren't always separate.

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

          Are you a biologist?

      2. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

        I was thinking of hiring one as a bath aid.

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

      Because encouraging us citizens to work is bad

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        Requiring work for income is slavery!

    3. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

      That was going to be my question. Presumably, American au pairs don't have the threat of deportation held over them, so awful families prefer to get foreign au pairs with that leverage.

    4. Spiritus Mundi   2 months ago

      Liz is showing her coastal elites leanings. Without cheap immigrant labor who will mow our lawns, clean our houses, and watch after the kids?

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        The doorman?

      2. Diarrheality   2 months ago

        That cotton won't pick itself.

    5. Zeb   2 months ago

      What we need is a terrible standard for what should be allowed. There is very little that we actually need. The question should be, what good reason is there not to allow it?

      But another good question is why are some people so determined not to take care of their own kids?

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

        Have you met the entitled kids of liberals?

        1. Quo Usque Tandem   2 months ago

          Crotch goblins, every last one of them.

      2. rbike   2 months ago

        I have had discussions with both kids with respect to moving forward with grandchildren. Including full volunteering so they are able to work. I would even consider retirement to give me time. My wife would also stay home with their kids. No movement yet but at least the boy has a date for a wedding.

  5. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    The U.S. has been souring ties with China, first through tariffs, then through negotiations over a rare earth minerals deal, and now through a crackdown on some 275,000 foreign students.

    Looks like in retaliation China is going to have to stop all those American students from attending Chinese universities.

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

      Funny I thought the souring relation started when Mao took power

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        Opium wars?

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

          That was england

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

      Rare earth metal mining is exploding due to china's actions. And they aren't as rare as the globalists like to pretend.

      https://www.wired.com/story/rare-earth-minerals-china-tariffs/

      https://legalinsurrection.com/2025/05/critical-minerals-and-rare-earths-mines-begin-popping-up-outside-china-after-trumps-eos/

    3. JFree   2 months ago

      No. They're just not gonna work for American tech companies. They'll work for Chinese tech companies. Along with all other foreign students who aren't coming to study in the US. Along with the 260,000 foreign students who are already studying in China.

      70 percent of full-time graduate students studying electrical engineering and computer and information sciences in the US are international. 25% of total STEM workers in the US are foreign-born.

      Why should China retaliate? They are going to encourage it.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

        25% of total STEM workers in the US are foreign-born.

        Cite?

        1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

          His ass?

        2. JFree   2 months ago

          The STEM labor force

          eg - Larger proportions of doctoral degree holders in S&E occupations were foreign born (43%) than either master’s degree holders (37%) or bachelor’s degree holders (19%)

          Of course - the bigot MAGAMises crowd here wants to get rid of all foreigners and always has. It won't just mean the end of cheap foreign maids undermining pay for white American maids.

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

            Your own cite disagrees with your claim...

            In 2021, 17% of all civilian workers (26,546,400 people) and 19% of STEM workers were foreign born

            So not 25%. This is at the top. Why did you ignore the actual data for your claim?

            Likewise it doesn't mean there are too few citizens. How many stories of citizens training their foreign born replacements do you want me to link to? A large subset of these numbers are IT through H1B shops.

            https://cis.org/Report/There-STEM-Worker-Shortage

            Using the most common definition of STEM jobs, total STEM employment in 2012 was 5.3 million workers (immigrant and native), but there are 12.1 million STEM degree holders (immigrant and native).
            Only one-third of native-born Americans with an undergraduate STEM degree holding a job actually work in a STEM occupation.

            So you're pushing leftist propaganda buddy.

            1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

              “Why did you ignore the actual data for your claim?”

              “So you're pushing leftist propaganda buddy.”

              You answered your own question.

            2. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

              JewFree is a slightly more articulate version of Misek, minus the ‘criminalize lying’ obsession.

  6. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    A three-judge panel for the U.S. Court of International Trade ruled that the president "had wrongly invoked a 1977 law in imposing his 'Liberation Day' tariffs on dozens of countries and they were therefore illegal...

    What kind of commie pinko judge goes against something called Liberation Day???

    1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

      An appeals court already overturned it.

      https://justthenews.com/government/courts-law/appeals-court-reinstates-trump-tariffs

      (Credit to Jesse for linking this in one of the other Reason articles today)

  7. Don't look at me! (Not signed with autopen)   2 months ago

    New SF public school plan would

    - eliminate homework and weekly tests from counting toward semester grade
    - allow students to take the final exam multiple times
    - convert all B grades into As, and all Fs into Cs

    These are the kids that will definitely succeed in life.

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

      The biggest problem is the teachers in sf are functionally illiterate. They lack the ability to comprehend basic concepts and have no critical thinking ability. So they need to lower the standards for the students to align with the teachers capabilities

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        So these kids will be qualified to be...teachers?

        1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

          And government employees.

        2. Marshal   2 months ago

          This is why they want socialism. To them that means there will never be a boss telling them they aren't getting enough done.

    2. Bubba Jones   2 months ago

      This policy is so weird. Homework grades are typically used to pad the average so that there isn't so much pressure on the final.

      Our school district lets kids with A averages (homework and midterms) skip the final entirely.

      I guess it's easier to give people a courtesy C on a single exam than to fudge the grades all year. Maybe the teachers just couldn't do the math on multiple assignments.

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

        The policy included unlimited test retakes.

    3. Ajsloss   2 months ago

      I've got to say, I'm cool with the first part of the first bullet. Huge fan of Bart Simpson's "Down with Homework" t-shirt.

      1. Dillinger   2 months ago

        up with miniskirts.

        1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

          Taking quite the risk with that one these days.

          1. Ajsloss   2 months ago

            Crocodile Dundee wasn't scared to check.

            1. Quo Usque Tandem   2 months ago

              Carry a big knife and peek softly.

    4. Jefferson Paul   2 months ago

      - convert all B grades into As, and all Fs into Cs

      So nobody can fail? If all Fs become Cs, then everyone passes. So students don't have to attend classes, do homework or classwork, or even TAKE the final exam, AND they still pass with a C?

  8. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    President Trump pledged to put America First, and the Administration is committed to using every lever of executive power...

    And then some! These judges aren't used to a president who gives 110%, goes that extra mile for America.

    1. Bubba Jones   2 months ago

      Just replace the judges with Trump's best friends.

      Avoid constitutional crises by avoiding disagreement.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        FDR approves this message.

      2. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

        These judges replaced real judges with Biden’s friends.

    2. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

      I'd prefer Slowpoke to Speedy Gonzales ; both unfortunately have been canceled and possibly deported.

      1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

        Speedy Gonzalez is Mexico’s oldest and most powerful superhero.

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

          And most culturally ironic?

          1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

            They love the character there. When WB tried to cancel Speedy Gonzalez, the biggest complaints against it were from Mexico and Latinos.

  9. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    President Donald Trump is sending suggestions for spending cuts to Congress in an effort to make the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) cuts permanent.

    Tariff Congress into submission.

    1. Dillinger   2 months ago

      they'll create a court and seek and receive immediate galactic injunction.

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

    The Chinese students and Chinese professors are loyal to the ccp. They are here to steal ip in invade the tech sector. They should be jailed for 10 years without access to technology then sent back to China.

    1. MollyGodiva   2 months ago

      Spoken like a true fascist.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

        Projecting, Molly?

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

        No it's spoken like someone that spent years in university research.

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

        No threats of dying in battery acid today?

        1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

          Did Tony threaten you? Hilarious if true. I doubt that fruity little pinko could break up a pillow fight between the Olson twins.

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

            Wasn't me. Tony was on a threat rager yesterday though.

      4. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

        Ok Tony, you stupid poof, here you go:

        https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/international/world-news/students-or-spies-how-china-infiltrated-us-universities/articleshow/121492092.cms?from=mdr

        FTA:
        In the past decade or so, a large number of cases have come up in which Chinese students, researchers and professors were found to be spying for the Chinese government or were linked to the Chinese military, the People's Liberation Army (PLA). It is now commonly known that China has done pilferage of American technology and research at a huge scale to ramp up its industry and military. The US universities have become high-value targets in China's broader campaign of intellectual property theft

        1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

          He’s not going to read this.

          1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

            I know. But it still embarrasses him. Which I always enjoy. And I hope everyone else does too. As it is always good to cheer good people up at the expense of Marxist democrats.

      5. Diarrheality   2 months ago

        Pardon? I couldn't understand you with that chicom dick in your mouth.

        1. Quo Usque Tandem   2 months ago

          Tony with a dick in his mouth?

          1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

            Well, he is like Chase Oliver.

            1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

              But actually gay. And I still maintain that Chas Oliver is only fakey gay.

              1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

                Does Sarc know?

    2. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 months ago

      “Widespread untargeted” = has ties to Chinese military.

      Mediocre Liz is slipping

      1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

        It’s getting very frustrating how completely ignorant everyone at Reason is regarding how the CCP works.

        1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

          And the CCP is highly transparent and predictable in these matters too.

  11. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

    If you censor us there, you're not welcome here.

    https://www.zerohedge.com/political/rubio-announces-visa-restrictions-foreign-nationals-involved-censoring-americans

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Wednesday announced new visa restrictions on foreign nationals involved in censoring the speech of U.S. citizens.

    "For too long, Americans have been fined, harassed, and even charged by foreign authorities for exercising their free speech rights,"Rubio announced in a post on social media platform X.

    “Today, I am announcing a new visa restriction policy that will apply to foreign officials and persons who are complicit in censoring Americans. Free speech is essential to the American way of life—a birthright over which foreign governments have no authority.”

    Rubio said foreign nationals involved in suppressing the rights of Americans shouldn’t be allowed to visit the United States.

    “Whether in Latin America, Europe, or elsewhere, the days of passive treatment for those who work to undermine the rights of Americans are over,” he said.

    1A uber alles.

    1. damikesc   2 months ago

      I'll miss Germans.
      And Brits.
      And, hell, anybody in the EU...

    2. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

      More good news……..

      https://www.breitbart.com/the-media/2025/05/29/nolte-business-insider-ceo-announces-far-left-news-outlet-laying-off-21-of-staff-embracing-ai/

      FTA:
      “After already laying off eight percent of its staff in January 2024, the far-left Business Insider has announced it’s axing an additional 21 percent of its remaining staff.”

      29% down. 71% to go.

  12. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    Unfortunately, the $9.4 billion-in-cuts package falls far short of what would actually be needed to make an impact.

    It's not the size of the package it's the motion of the ocean.

    1. Randy Sax   2 months ago

      She is right about entitlement spending though. That's a battlefront with not a lot of allies.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

        Unfortunately, it's a battle that must be fought or else we're all going under with the ridiculous amount of debt the federal government has.

        1. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

          We're at the point of no return. Resign yourselves to that fact.

          1. Don't look at me! (Not signed with autopen)   2 months ago

            If you are old, this is the time you can be happy about it.

          2. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

            What? Over? Did you say "over"? Nothing is over until we decide it is! Was it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor? Hell no!

            1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

              Road trip!

              1. MK Ultra   2 months ago

                I can speak to the fact that Dickinson girls are fast.

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

          That battle requires 7 democrats in the senate currently.

      2. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 months ago

        Well, one side said any attempt to begin to root out fraud and ineligible recipients = “drastic cuts”, so it’s gonna be a tough road

      3. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

        I expect the rset of you will arrive at the correct conclusion about what needs to happen to fix things. Hint: it isn’t elections or the courts.

    2. Bubba Jones   2 months ago

      I love that Musk is surprised that DOGE was made irrelevant by the new spending bill.

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

        No it wasn't. That's why they are sending recission packages.

        They've also permanently added audit criteria to Treasury that already has stopped around 130B in payments without declaration of which appropriation they are tied to.

    3. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

      But Vox says recent legislation backed by President Trump could lead to significant cuts in Medicaid, potentially resulting in over 7 million people losing their coverage due to new work requirements and other changes. The bill, which has passed the House, aims to reduce federal spending on the program, despite Trump's previous assurances to protect it.

      1. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

        Oh well shit, if Vox says so………..

    4. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

      $9.4 billion "rescissions package" includes $1.1 billion in cuts to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which runs PBS and NPR, and $8.3 billion in cuts to foreign aid at the U.S. Agency for International Development and the African Development Foundation.

      1. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 months ago

        Good

      2. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

        It’s a start.

    5. MT-Man   2 months ago

      I guess why they find the need to make me recycle, it's just one bottle/can/bag, I'm not going to make an impact.

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

    Why would you quote bohem? He's a Marxist fag

    1. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

      That's the only reason no one voted for him. Oh wait. You said Bohem.

  14. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    So $9.4 billion in cuts it is! A tiny drop in the bucket.

    Well if you applauded the judges stopping the stopping of the USAID graft you don't get to complain here.

    Ha! Gotcha.

    1. Mother's Lament - (Sarc's a Nazi, not even joking)   2 months ago

      It's concerning trolling from the blob. DOGE has been on the job for just four months and yet Reason's pretending like it's over.

      Reason is now about astroturfing for the deep state and nothing more.

      1. damikesc   2 months ago

        Should we replace "Reason" with "The lesser Koch"? He is their sugar daddy.

  15. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    "Such a politicized and discriminatory move lays bare the US lie behind the so-called freedom and openness that the US touts," said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning.

    Did Mao Ning manage to keep a straight face while saying that?

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      Straight or slanty?

  16. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

    The EU is the enemy of free speech.

    https://www.spiked-online.com/2025/05/29/inside-the-eus-ministry-of-truth/

    It is no secret that the EU is an enemy of free speech. But the sheer scale of its censorship activities has largely remained hidden. Earlier this month, think-tank MCC Brussels published my new report, ‘Manufacturing Misinformation: the EU-funded propaganda war against free speech’. It reveals a covert campaign by the European Commission to regulate public debate in Europe under the guise of combating ‘hate speech’ and ‘disinformation’. Indeed, hundreds of unaccountable non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and universities have been funded by Brussels to carry out nearly 350 projects to counter so-called disinformation – to the tune of almost €650million.

    Research has uncovered the staggering fact that the Commission spends 31 per cent more on policing speech than it does on transnational research and innovation projects addressing various cancer-related objectives (€494million). In other words, the EU regards stemming the ‘cancer’ of unregulated speech as more of a priority than the estimated 4.5million new cancer cases and 1.3million cancer deaths in Europe annually. Without any public accountability, taxpayers’ money is being consciously used to fund an Orwellian project that seeks to control how Europeans speak and think.

    Under the DSA, firms are obliged to remove ‘illegal content’ and manage ‘systemic risks’. What these terms mean is kept deliberately vague. This creates an environment of constant doubt, where censorship becomes the default.

    The European Commission avoids appearing to censor anything directly. Enforcement is outsourced to private actors, known as ‘trusted flaggers’, who then advise the platforms on what to censor. These are not independent, neutral organisations sworn to enforce objectivity. Often, they are unelected NGOs or organisations closely aligned with the EU’s ideological agenda.

    The EU’s deeply Orwellian crusade is unlike historical attempts to outlaw free speech. It does not burn books or squash dissent with jackboots. Populism is not outlawed directly in Europe (yet). But it is systematically degraded, rendered suspect by default, always placed on the edge of unacceptability. This is a quiet form of de-legitimisation, silently enforced through the language of civility and tolerance. When populist dissent is pathologised as hate or treated as a cybersecurity threat, it no longer needs to be engaged with. It can be monitored, fact-checked, defunded, quarantined and removed.

    The EU fears free speech because of its unpredictable energy. It enables alternative narratives to be voiced and considered. Horror of horrors, it allows European citizens to retain their moral independence – to determine what they think without the need to defer to experts or unelected technocrats who allegedly know what’s best for us. No wonder the EU elites are so determined to quash it.

    Remember, these are the same NGOs that got funding via USAID.

    1. Quo Usque Tandem   2 months ago

      And they don't need your criticism, thank you very much.

      [Segue to Claire Underwoods luxurious NGO office suite...something to do with drilling water wells in remote African villages]

  17. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    ...Governor Greg Abbott just signed a law requiring Google and Apple to verify app store users' ages.

    Good luck with that. It's just going to be two kids in a trench coat downloading trans apps left and right.

    1. Bubba Jones   2 months ago

      Apple already uses family controls for kids under 13. I guess this just requires additional age brackets.

      1. Eeyore   2 months ago

        Too fking stupid to check the features already supported.

    2. Eeyore   2 months ago

      I can install anything I want on an Android without using the Google store. Who is going to stop that? Do the Samsung, Epic, and other store apps get to skip these ID checks?

      What if I hand my kid an EU region iPhone that is now required by law in the EU to have the ability to bypass the app store due to anti competitive laws? What happens after similar law suits in the US are successful?

      1. Bubba Jones   2 months ago

        Then you will have approved access for your kid.

        Is this a trick question?

        1. Eeyore   2 months ago

          I'm the person who isn't going to bother entering my driver's license just to install a stupid fking app.

          I am curious if the law will force you to provide an ID to update pre-installed software from the app store.

        2. Jefferson Paul   2 months ago

          If parents are worried about their kids downloading apps without their permission, then don't give your kid a smart phone. I don't see why we need more nanny-state government to mandate something like this for everyone. "I don't trust my kid to be responsible after I chose to give my kid this device, so I need the government to require everyone upload their IDs to help me parent my kid," said no *libertarian ever.

          *Okay, I'm sure there have been at least a few who identify as a libertarian who's said something like that.

  18. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    The Trump administration just shutdown all new interviews for au pairs on the J-1 visa.

    Doug Emhoff hardest hit.

    1. Ajsloss   2 months ago

      I believe his mistress was hit harder.

    2. Super Scary   2 months ago

      Thankfully, his brother Jack is doing just fine.

      1. Gaear Grimsrud   2 months ago

        Ha!

  19. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    Only Two Companies Make Parachutes for U.S. Troops

    I had to bail on that story.

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

      Then it Wil be a unishoot, not a pair-a-shoots

      1. Don't look at me! (Not signed with autopen)   2 months ago

        Monopachute?

        1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

          Aren't those usually topless?

  20. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

    "Such a politicized and discriminatory move lays bare the US lie behind the so-called freedom and openness that the US touts," said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning. "It will only further undermine its image in the world and national reputation."

    Hey, Mao, fuck you and your totalitarian buddies.

    1. Dillinger   2 months ago

      lol next question ... about those Uyghurs, Mao?

    2. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

      These people aren't stupid. They know about half the US is easily manipulated with Open Society appeals. Never mind that they've frozen Soros out since Tiananmen specifically because they realized a closed society is a lot harder for people like him to subvert.

  21. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

    International Emergency Economic Powers Act] in ways that seemingly ignored the plain text of the law—which

    is unconstitutional itself, only Congress can levy taxes. No Taxation without Representation.

    1. sarcasmic   2 months ago

      No Taxation without Representation.

      So leftist of you.

    2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      Better yet, no representation without taxation.

  22. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    There's lots of emergencies that don't seem to meet this panel's criteria. It boggles the mind that when Congress writes a law that says " if the President declares a national emergency with respect to such threat..."

    Sure there's some words about "any unusual and extraordinary threat" but the determination of when something is an emergency under those conditions is the President's. Just because some judge doesn't think the situation is an "unusual and extraordinary threat", they don't get to second-guess the President's decision.

    Or maybe they do in Humpty Dumpty's "the laws mean what we say they mean" world.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_national_emergencies_in_the_United_States

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      To repeat, (D)ifferent.

  23. Fist of Etiquette   2 months ago

    "Equity" curriculums basically just lower the bar for all students to an embarrassing degree...

    To the degree our recent graduates will forget the plural of certain words.

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

      The plural of half is whole

    2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      Speaking of equity grading, I always wanted to impose grade socialism on some whiny leftist brats in elite colleges. Let the little superior fucktards taste what happens when we redistribute the wealth by giving each student a class average grade. And that will be a "C" not an "A".

      1. Jefferson Paul   2 months ago

        The experiment that I'm familiar with had the average go to a "C" after a few weeks. By the end of the semester everyone had an "F," as no one even bothered studying when it became abundantly clear how it would go.

  24. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

    What a bleak political reality: that this is what DOGE's efforts culminate in, and that this is the way lawmakers intend to codify the cuts.

    Ain't over untill we decide it's over...

    - Elon probably and hopefully

  25. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    "Unfortunately, the $9.4 billion-in-cuts package falls far short of what would actually be needed to make an impact."

    Well, fuck it then, let's not even bother...is what some here will say.

    1. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

      Well fuck it, is what Congress has said to the burning pile of money they lit on fire.

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

      The all or nothing crowd really just wants the nothing part of the plan.

  26. Randy Sax   2 months ago

    "Equity" curriculums basically just lower the bar for all students to an embarrassing degree:

    There is a more belligerent aspect as well. It leads to cutting gifted and AP programs, higher math specifically. And the students that would exceed in it no longer have that option.

    1. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

      Excelling is white supremacy.

    2. Mike Parsons   2 months ago

      Honestly that was the first step in a lot of these districts.

      Cut the AP programs so the good students cant get ahead, for equity.

      Then replace all the material with intersectional marxist slop, and you have a great formula for creating an army of useful idiots

      1. Marshal   2 months ago

        It's inevitable that once the problem is described as a "gap" the solution will be to bring the top down rather than bring the bottom up. It's hard to bring up the bottom plus this solution threatens more important priorities like teacher job security. Bringing down the top is comparatively easy, especially when the metrics can simply be eliminated like AP test successes.

    3. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

      In the name of ending racism, California democrats have decreed that coloreds are too dumb to meet the same standards as white students.

      The democrat party really hasn’t chanced much since its founding in 1828.

  27. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    "this means parents are forced to hand over an ID"

    Minorities and women, not to mention illegal aliens, hardest hit. Disparate impacts!

    Next some idiot might say we need IDs to be able to vote!

  28. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    "convert all B grades into As, and all Fs into Cs "

    REAL equity just hands out all As all the time to everyone.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      Sorry, but that is "equality". Equity requires As for all oppressed groups and Ds for white males. Think of this as grade reparations.

    2. Gaear Grimsrud   2 months ago

      Well C was the average back when I was a youngster so if the average student is an abject failure it kind of makes sense.

  29. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

    All roasting of Pete Hegseth is intentional, for your amusement and mine.

    I was entertained

    1. mad.casual   2 months ago

      I think the issue is/was the middling level of the satire. The Bee-style headline was good but, and I probably enjoy dark humor a little more than most, the exposure of family names, pet names, etc. as part of a "Memorial Day joke" was a little grotesque.

      1. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

        Karens complain about joke, news at eleven.

  30. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

    'Mandatory spending—things like entitlement programs—is the area that really needs to be attacked, but it's politically much harder to make, say, substantive reforms to Social Security.'

    So then, borrow we must? But it will be cool when interest on federal debt is more than half the annual budget, right?

    BTW, "entitlement programs" are not all equal. SS is about 90% self-funding and could attain 100% with minor tweaks to tax rates and/or age for full benefits (and fixing Biden's public union scam). Medicare, like all our health care funding, is a hot mess. Medicaid and other social welfare is industrial charity, and should be paid by people--with their own money--who feel the need to be compassionate.

  31. Quo Usque Tandem   2 months ago

    "Such a politicized and discriminatory move lays bare the US lie behind the so-called freedom and openness that the US touts," said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning. "It will only further undermine its image in the world and national reputation."

    How DARE THEY interfere in our "internal affairs!"

    1. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

      Well played

  32. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

    Imprisoned for trying to uphold integrity.

    https://x.com/MikkiWillis/status/1927932681892868365

    What would you do if you were responsible for overseeing your county’s general elections and discovered irregularities in the way votes were being counted? Now consider this: you begin to suspect that your own superiors — and the political interests they serve — may be behind the suspicious activity. Who would you turn to? How would you protect the evidence before it could be destroyed?

    This is exactly the situation Tina Peters found herself in.

    As a county clerk of Mesa, Colorado, Tina took the responsible step of asking a technical expert to take a secure snapshot of the county’s computerized voting system — a step intended to ensure transparency and integrity in the vote tallying process. What that snapshot revealed was deeply troubling: signs that the system had been manipulated and that vote totals were being altered.

    Tina did what any honest public servant should — she reported the irregularities.

    But instead of being praised for her integrity, she was prosecuted. Tina Peters has been sentenced to nine years in prison. She’s already served seven months behind bars. Many who have reviewed her case believe she’s being punished not for wrongdoing, but for daring to expose it — a political prisoner in a country that’s supposed to stand for justice and free speech.

    No matter your political affiliation, if you believe in transparency and accountability, now is the time to speak up.

    Help shine a light on Tina Peters’ story and demand justice.

    1. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

      This is one the more disgusting political witch hunt cases to come out of the 2020 election. Straight-up party revenge.

      1. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

        If you even LOOK at our shenanigans it's 9 years in prison, peasant!

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

          As always, heresy is a capital sin, er, crime.

    2. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

      Too local. Also, political prisoners are only bad if they’re illegal immigrants.

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

      Cleanest elections ever. If you disagree, jail. - sarc.

  33. Mike Parsons   2 months ago

    " leftists are out of touch in that they are often literally in favor of murder"

    New leftist death cult, same as all the leftist death cults that came before it.

    1. Spiritus Mundi   2 months ago

      100 million+ in the last century. Leftists have always loved murder. For a long forgotten reference, read how the leftists in Spain where portrayed during the civil war in For Whom The Bell Tolls.

      1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

        Shit, you don't even need to read Hemingway. Orwell did a fantastic overview of the "Republicans" (who were really communists) in "Homage to Catalonia."

      2. Mike Parsons   2 months ago

        "any means necessary"
        +
        "have to break a few eggs"
        +
        loyalty to the state over individuals
        =
        leftism.

        There is no way it doesnt result in mass murder and misery, its basically a playbook for it.

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

          And maybe even a personality trait for people drawn to communist revolution. Even while fighting the oppressors, these cunts seem unable to avoid literally sniping at rival revolutionaries.

        2. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

          It’s a good time to get rid of them once and for all.

  34. sarcasmic   2 months ago

    The nation's first immigration laws were against the Chinese people, a century and a half ago. Some things never change.

    1. Don't look at me! (Not signed with autopen)   2 months ago

      Yeah, why won’t those Chinese change?

    2. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

      There's a difference between bigotry and espionage, dip.

    3. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

      Actually there was a very big change in China that started around 1950. You should look into it.

  35. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    From glibertarians, now sex workers are realizing that market forces affect them, too.

    https://archive.ph/20250528104006/https://www.businessinsider.com/gen-z-sex-work-job-market-economy-strip-clubs-onlyfans-2025-5

    1. Mike Parsons   2 months ago

      I wonder if women like ENB will still find sex work brave and empowering when it becomes so common that a pretty decently attractive girl has to blow some fat disgusting slob for the price of a mcdonalds value meal.

      1. mad.casual   2 months ago

        You do?

        Repeatedly in the last several years she has openly demonstrated that she's solidly in the "If I have to defend a womens' right to choose down to the last back alley, coat hanger, and unqualified 'medical personnel' willing to perform it... so be it!" camp across pretty much every feminist issue.

    2. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

      Going to a strip club stopped making any kind of sense once high-speed internet became ubiquitous. Why spend all that money just to go somewhere and get blueballed for an hour?

      1. sarcasmic   2 months ago

        I heard the Bustop closed. That place was a dump thirty years ago. About time.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

          TMI, Sarc, TMI.

        2. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

          Most strip clubs in the Denver metro have been dives since the rebirth of the sex industry there in the 1970s. At best, you might have a higher class "gentleman's club" like the Diamond Cabaret, or a mid one like Shotgun Willie's, but typically they were really dingy shitholes.

          1. sarcasmic   2 months ago

            This was in Boulder.

        3. Otto Penn, American President 2021-2025   2 months ago

          That must cut into your ‘gay for booze money’ solicitations.

      2. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

        "Oh she has no idea. If I had a blacklight, this would look like a Jackson Pollock painting."

      3. mad.casual   2 months ago

        Now, I can be as misogynist as the next guy, and I won't disagree with you about the cost, but if your physical interactions with women are adequately replaced by a phone or a laptop, I feel sorry for you, the women in your life, or both.

        You want troon idiocy? This is how you get troon idiocy.

        1. Randy Sax   2 months ago

          I think the argument is more that a phone or laptop is better than an overpriced, over the pants, lap dance. Obviously real relationships are more ideal. As far as the misogyny part, this is more dig at the sad men who purchase these services rather than the women that provide them.

          1. mad.casual   2 months ago

            See below.

            I get the sentiment and/or inference, but the idea that "Nobody could sensibly prefer the cost of a cherry, '70 Plymouth Baracuda or a K&oouml;nigsegg over the efficiency and practicality of a Corolla or a Civic." says as much about the way he drives and the way he values the cars available to him as it does about the actual material differences or the value (or lack there of) involved.

            I don't think RRWP is necessarily one of them, but there are people out there who will say things like "There is no such thing as a 'real woman'." without realizing what an incredible slander that is to their own mothers, sisters, wives, girlfriends, daughters, other peoples' mothers, wives, daughters...

            1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

              I don't think comparing strippers to a rare high-performance muscle car is really a good analogy.

              There's several reasons a lot of men are noping out of relationships these days, and it isn't all tied to the fact that women tend to prefer older men with more financial security, leaving them with fewer options. Some of it is the ridiculous way that dating apps work, some of it is tied to feminism and not wanting the hassle of dealing with "modern women" anymore.

              And no, I'm not an incel. I have three kids.

              1. mad.casual   2 months ago

                LOL. You're not making it any better.

                I don't think comparing strippers to a rare high-performance muscle car is really a good analogy.

                [Raises hands] I *could've* meant that your relationship with your wife was more like putting in maintenance to enjoy a classic piece that operates in peak condition or that you can cruise around town in, but if driving in your Toyota Corolla is every bit as much fun for you as it would be to shop for it online, "I'm glad about that for you".

                And no, I'm not an incel. I have three kids.

                OG incel from the sound of things. 🙂

                1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

                  Look, if your only interactions with women are at the strip club, just say so.

        2. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

          Idiots...laptops?, lapdances?; there's a rub and tug is just down the road!

          - Bob Kraft, probably or not

      4. Michael Ejercito   2 months ago

        Same principle applies to watching professional baseball games at a stadium instead of at home or in a sports bar.

      5. damikesc   2 months ago

        And having known a few strippers (never been to a strip club, mind you), I could not imagine paying a cover charge to see them in any state of undress.

        1. mad.casual   2 months ago

          Bit of an eye-opening, "other side of the looking glass", ENB-genre moment here. My brother dated a girl who, AFAIK, never worked formally in a club but did take her clothes off for money. She wasn't unattractive and was fun. Not too far into the "Tiffany" part of the C-H matrix (she did burn through cash). I dated a girl in HS who went on to become a stripper for a while.

          Not sure where either one of them are now. I assume at least some of them manage to work their way into something resembling a normal, middle-upper class lifestyle. I certainly know "normal", born-and-raised, middle-upper class women that, TTBOMK haven't stripped, that I would relegate to the far corners of the C-H Matrix (Karens, ENB...).

    3. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      "If it flies, floats, or fucks, rent it."

  36. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

    All Chinese nationals in the US should be expelled, and no more should be admitted, unless they can be shown to be sincere defectors. All of them must be presumed to be operatives of the CCP until proven otherwise.

    1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

      The main issue here is that our politicians and business leaders have been exercising this policy in cognitive dissonance for decades, where we talk about China being an adversary out of one side of our mouths, while carrying on a billion-dollar economic relationship with them that encompasses everything from manufacturing to foreign student tuition to specialist exchanges where their spies go out to places like Los Alamos to steal nuclear data, or where we go to conduct the type of gain of function research that isn't allowed here because China has fewer safety protocols.

      The whole point of the Confucius Institutes, for example, was the same type of institutional propaganda that USAID specialized in for us. And China isn't sending over their "best and brightest," these are generally the mid-IQ offspring of rich Chinese officials who can afford the tuition payments.

  37. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    What, about 15 more minutes until a judge stops this effort, too, and that loans to dead people must continue!?

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/trump-administration-announces-steps-to-fight-student-aid-fraud-after-millions-paid-to-ineligible-recipients/ar-AA1FF74R

    Trump administration announces steps to fight student aid fraud after millions paid to ineligible recipients

    The Trump administration uncovered $90 million of student aid wrongfully disbursed to ineligible recipients.

    The Education Department accused the Biden administration of neglecting its responsibilities to ensure that aid was delivered properly to administer its student loan bailout agenda.

    “As we continue to rehabilitate the student loan portfolio, we must also ensure there are accountability measures at every step of the student aid process,” Education Secretary Linda McMahon said. “From start to finish — filling out the FAFSA form to loan repayment — the American taxpayer underwrites federal student aid programs. We are committed to protecting and responsibly investing their hard-earned dollars.”

    The Education Department pledged to strengthen its oversight amid its findings that “$30 million in aid was disbursed to thousands of deceased individuals over the past three years.” In response, the department vowed that it would be “strengthening real-time data-sharing with the Social Security Administration.”

    1. Don't look at me! (Not signed with autopen)   2 months ago

      Only $30 million?
      Not worth bothering about.

  38. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

    'It's not clear to me how cutting off the supply of au pairs is a pro-family policy that will encourage people to have more kids'

    I thought blue city urban elitists had already given up on biological procreation.

    1. damikesc   2 months ago

      I did not know that insufficient nannies are why rich urbanites do not have kids. I just assumed it was because they tend to be pretentious pricks who love nothing more than themselves.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

        Well, that and their self-hatred of the species and their ethnic identity, plus guilt for over-population and fear of the climate/Covid/fascist apocalypse.

  39. mad.casual   2 months ago

    "It was the first time the U.S. government had moved to bar a category of Chinese students from getting access to American universities, a ban the Biden administration kept in place."

    The exact sort of thing that shouldn't ever have happened in order to be banned to begin with. That every *A*merican public servant involved in should've said, "The fuck? Hell no!" at every step of the way, but didn't because people like Liz Wolfe and 'Sometimes A Great Notion' said, "As long as TVs and refrigerant are cheap, what the fuck do I care if my customers' and employees' tax dollars are being spent to educate readily-identifiable Chinese military assets?"

    1. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

      I'm against the president taxing by executive order. Don't really care about university students and not sure how the two are related.

      So go fuck yourself, you communist central planner.

      1. mad.casual   2 months ago

        Don't really care about university students and not sure how the two are related.

        I know. That's what I said.

        Who cares about public universities educating foreign military assets? The really important thing is the price differential between R-32 and R-454B! Come Summer and your wife is complaining about how warm it is because the leak in your A/C meant you couldn't afford the R-454B recharge, you'll be sorry you chose the guy who cut back on spending on educating Chinese military assets rather than focusing on things more critical do democracy; like deprioritizing certain refrigerant regulations!

        1. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

          I don't care if they come or go; one way or another. Way down on my priority list. Cutting spending is number one. Low taxes and light regs being 2nd. Trump deporting Chinese doesn't register. If we fail as a nation it won't be because of Chinese spies, it will be because we have pushed policy over the last 100 years that are choking us to death.

          So fuck you and the AIMS ACT your defending, for some reason. Giving the EPA more power goes aginst my 2nd priority.

          1. mad.casual   2 months ago

            If we fail as a nation it won't be because of Chinese spies, it will be because we have pushed policy over the last 100 years that are choking us to death.

            I didn't say spies and 'Chinese' is rather overtly or explicitly a proxy for foreign/adversarial/socialist, not specifically or just 'born in China' or 'has Chinese parents'.

            You've pretty much laid out to any enemies foreign and domestic that you don't care if they bleed you, your employees, or your customers dry creating a culture that hates you, them, and everything you stand for and rolls it all back to the Stone Age, as long as it doesn't have an EPA that costs you marginally more to repair HVAC systems, you're good.

            1. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

              Fuck off you progressive, cunt. Yeah I'm a greedy capitalist who wants to keep my money instead of sending it to DC...so I can make payroll and pay vendors. Go post on Salon, you commie whore.

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

                No, Always An Asshole, you're a TDS-addled steaming pile of shit who needs to make your family proud: Fuck off and die,

    2. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

      And for the record, my refrigerant complaint has nothing to do with tarrifs. It is squarely placed on the Kenndy R, LA sponsored Aims Act signed by Donald Trump.

      Try keeping up

  40. TJJ2000   2 months ago

    Not allowing CCP members to invade the USA is ?discriminatory? !!! /s

    That line has been in the making for quite sometime at reason.

  41. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

    '"Equity" curriculums basically just lower the bar for all students to an embarrassing degree'

    Remind me to never hire anyone from SFC for jobs more critical than barista.

  42. mad.casual   2 months ago

    It's not clear to me how cutting off the supply of au pairs is a pro-family policy that will encourage people to have more kids

    Liz, if your husband told you that an au pair is required to have kids, I can show you that it's not.

    1. Randy Sax   2 months ago

      Liz would get one from a convent. Although that might make her husband even more happy.

      1. Ska   2 months ago

        I mean... from a Japanese convent?

    2. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

      The people having the most kids do not have au pairs

  43. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

    "It was the first time the U.S. government had moved to bar a category of Chinese students from getting access to American universities, a ban the Biden administration kept in place."

    Between Harvard's quotas for Asian American students and federal bans on kids from China, who will take all the hard math classes?

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

      The classes will all become remedial classes.

    2. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

      Math is white supremacy.

    3. Its_Not_Inevitable   2 months ago

      As if they'll still have math classes.

  44. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    Newsom's California allows illegal aliens to become police officers, apparently even if they have a history of domestic violence arrests.

    Felipe Gomes--who is not an American citizen but apparently has a U.S. work permit — brutally beat his wife, striking her repeatedly in the face and stomach. Gomes had allegedly done so after seeing text messages on his wife's phone from her ex-boyfriend.

    But Belmont California hired him anyway (although it seems that San Mateo County Sheriff's Office and the East Palo Alto Police Department that they had both rejected the Brazilian national on account of his 2017 domestic violence arrest).

    Now he's in jail for rape.

    https://abc7news.com/post/exclusive-belmont-police-officer-felipe-carlo-gomes-arrested-rape-us-work-permit-had-domestic-violence-arrest-2017/16280946/

    BELMONT, Calif. (KGO) -- The I-Team has learned that the Belmont police officer arrested for rape last week had an arrest for domestic violence several years ago, before he became an officer.

    That's raising questions about whether he should have been hired at the Belmont Police Department in the first place.

    We have new information on his previous arrest and his immigration status. The I-Team confirmed Felipe Gomes is not a U.S. citizen but has a work permit, so he is allowed to serve as a police officer in this state under a recent law signed by Governor Gavin Newsom.

    Last week, Redwood City police arrested Gomes at the Belmont police headquarters on penal code 261 (a) (1).

    Officers booked Gomes into the San Mateo County jail. He later was released on $100,000 bailbond.

    Gomes allegedly committed the rape while he was off duty, police said, but gave no further details.

    1. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

      JD Vance is going to annihilate this guy in 2028. He cant hide from these things on the national stage and it's not going to fly in places like Ohio and PA which he absolutely must win in order to topple Vance.

      1. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

        OAC would be a stronger challenger, since she's never actually done anything.

      2. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

        This is why I keep saying that Fetterman is positioning himself for an Bill Clinton-type run in 2028. He's pretty much the only guy the Dems have right now who doesn't talk like a condescending college professor, sassy nag, or technocratic sleazebag, and can actually connect with working class people in a way that rich politicians from one-party states like California and Illinois cannot.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

          The problem is, a certain part of the Democratic Party seems to want purity right now, the AOC/Jayapal types. I'm not so sure a person like Fetterman could get past them.

          1. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

            No, he couldn't. The Dems are going to have a hard time NOT nominating OAC. Which will hand the election to Vance.

            1. Eeyore   2 months ago

              I think she should try a campaign strategy that leverages OnlyFans. Similar to the way Trump leveraged Twitter. Just different.

          2. Marshal   2 months ago

            I'm not so sure a person like Fetterman could get past them.

            Understatement of the week there. There was a poll a month or so ago on Dems asked to select their favorite Dem politician. Fetterman received 0%. People who could charitably be described as less insane than the rest were about 6% total. This is not 6% of Americans, it's 6% of Dem respondents.

      3. Its_Not_Inevitable   2 months ago

        Wait, what? Trump's stepping down in 2028?

  45. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    ICE was mean to Harvard prof, so Judge says let her go.

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/judge-harvard-researcher-charged-with-smuggling-frog-embryos-was-unlawfully-detained-by-ice/ar-AA1FEAId

    A federal judge in Vermont on Wednesday released a Russian-born scientist and Harvard University researcher from immigration custody as she deals with a criminal charge of smuggling frog embryos into the United States.

    Petrova had been vacationing in France, where she stopped at a lab specializing in splicing superfine sections of frog embryos and obtained a package of samples to be used for research.

    As she passed through a U.S. Customs and Border Protection checkpoint in Boston Logan International Airport in February, Petrova was questioned about the samples. She told The Associated Press in an interview last month that she did not realize the items needed to be declared and was not trying to sneak anything into the country. After an interrogation, Petrova was told her visa was being canceled.

    Petrova was charged with smuggling earlier this month as U.S. District Judge Christina Reiss in Burlington set the hearing date on her petition. Reiss ruled Wednesday that the immigration officers' actions were unlawful, that Petrova didn't present a danger, and that the embryos were non-living, non-hazardous and “posed a threat to no one.”

    Romanovsky had said Customs and Border Protection officials had no legal basis for canceling Petrova's visa and detaining her.

    The Department of Homeland Security had said in a statement on the social media platform X that Petrova was detained after “lying to federal officers about carrying substances into the country.” They allege that messages on her phone “revealed she planned to smuggle the materials through customs without declaring them.”

    Harvard had said in a statement that the university “continues to monitor the situation.”

  46. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    Democrats gotta steal ideas from Trump...

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/could-blue-maga-revitalize-democratic-030000127.html

    Could ‘Blue MAGA’ revitalize the Democratic Party?

    He’s coined a new phrase to describe the voters he hopes to bring back to the Democratic Party, the working and middle class voters who fled the party to vote for President Donald Trump — “Blue MAGA.”

    1. Mike Parsons   2 months ago

      What the dems are slowly starting to realize is that the people he is appealing to with 'maga' are precisely the people the democrats used to stand for and court, the previous backbone of their party.

      There is a reason for the Trump/Bernie cross over.

      They are starting to see that shitting on the working class as 'maga morons' was a really bad idea, and that abandoning them for a base that is AWFL college educated women and gay people isn't sustainable when there is a huge crowd that are just normal folks who want a good economy, good job opportunites, and their kids to learn to read and do math instead of learning intersectional queerness.

      1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

        This must be part of that stupid $20 million conference they recently did, which is really nothing more than trying to throw up rhetorical smokescreens around the Karenocracy that the party's been pushing for the last generation.

        You can't spend a generation mocking these people for being uneducated rubes, or deliberately setting them up to fail via violations of the Civil Rights Act that use marxist critical theory as the basis for your policies, and then suddenly act like you give a shit about them.

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

          Are you saying that Tim Walz and the Bros for Kamala did not convince you?

          1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

            So what, you don’t eat carburetors for breakfast? What kind of man are you?

            1. Eeyore   2 months ago

              You don't eat the carburetor. You cook the food IN the carburetor.

              If you are Tim maybe you should be eating EV batteries for breakfast?

        2. Mike Parsons   2 months ago

          "You can't spend a generation mocking these people for being uneducated rubes, or deliberately setting them up to fail via violations of the Civil Rights Act that use marxist critical theory as the basis for your policies, and then suddenly act like you give a shit about them."

          I cant tell you how many left leaning personalities between youtube and the MSM thought this would work for Kamala, and were flabbergasted that it didnt.

          "She's tough on the border and immigration now! She sounds like a republican!"

          "She isnt for sex changes for inmates, she just continued Trump's policy!"

          "She isnt soft on crime, she was a prosecutor!"

          They really believed we would all write off 4 years as VP and a her time in CA because she said a throw away one-liner on the campaign. They really thought after letting 8 million people in 4 years cross the border, that she could go to the border and talk tough for 5 minutes and everyone would forget.

          So ya, they do, unfortunately for them, think they can gaslight their way out of it, and it isnt working. Their pathetic white dudes for harris group therapy session and pathetic "manly" men ads were exactly that.

          1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

            Effectively, they thought we all have the same memory as Sarc, coming back and saying the same shit day-in and day-out without remembering a damn thing from the day before. They thought wrong, yet still haven't learned their lesson.

          2. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

            This is how communists act--even in instances where they have to concede that their argument has no merit, the very next day they act as if nothing happened. They're literally a religious movement with no moral keystone other than acquiring power by any means necessary and jawboning everyone into going along with it.

            This is why you never take the left's arguments at face value. It's all in service to the marxist revolution.

          3. Michael Ejercito   2 months ago

            Some author here at Reason tried to convince us that she changed her mind because a campaign spokesman said so.

        3. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

          Also, "Blue MAGA" has all the energy of the "Coffee Party" circa 2010.

        4. Marshal   2 months ago

          That's why they tried to keep the crazy in the closet. But those crazies don't want to be in the closet, and you told them they were the most important people in the world and shouldn't be in the closet.

      2. Michael Ejercito   2 months ago

        Why did they think appealing to awful college educated women was a good idea?

        1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

          Because these bitches have nothing better to do than nag everyone into exhaustion until they go along with it just to shut them up for five minutes. Which is not unlike most modern marriages.

    2. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

      Blue MAGA sounds oxymoronic.

    3. Eeyore   2 months ago

      Is that anything like one of those blue cocktails they serve at trashy restaurants?

  47. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    DOGE team at Treasury can move forward.

    https://www.cnn.com/2025/05/27/politics/doge-access-sensitive-treasury-payment-systems

    Back in February, Vargas blocked DOGE from accessing Treasury’s payment systems, finding that the Trump administration acted in a “chaotic and haphazard” way and failed to “adequately consider” the privacy and security risks of letting Musk’s team touch the data.

    Her order on Tuesday eliminates many of the restrictions that she initially imposed. She had already eased some of the limitations before Tuesday’s order.

    In her eight-page ruling, Vargas said the Trump administration wouldn’t need to get her permission if any additional DOGE staffers want to access the data, as long as they undergo the training, because “there is little utility in having this Court function as Treasury’s de facto human resources officer each time a new team member is onboarded.”

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

    "...writes Reason's Eric Boehm...'

    No! Really?
    Why not cite Sullum? CNN? MSNBC? The DNC?

    1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

      Hell, at that rate, cite the Bulwark, the Daily Kos, or HuffPo.

  49. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    Well, who'd have thought that lending money to people who can't afford to buy a Happy Meal would turn out this way...

    https://www.spiked-online.com/2025/05/28/could-burrito-loans-trigger-the-next-financial-crash/

    This story kicks off in October 2022, when food-delivery app Deliveroo signed a deal with ‘buy now, pay later’ company Klarna. In March this year, DoorDash, one of Deliveroo’s rivals, signed a similar deal with Klarna. Both Deliveroo and DoorDash offer instant gratification: food delivered to your door at any hour, often just a matter of minutes after clicking a few buttons on your phone.

    Klarna and similar companies, like Afterpay, fulfil the instant-gratification itch, too. They allow customers to buy things they wouldn’t otherwise be able to afford, or at least don’t want to pay for immediately, by letting them pay in installments, weeks apart, or by deferring the full payment. For those with poor impulse control, Klarna and Deliveroo might sound like a dream team, but the financial dangers ought to be obvious.

    Something else is happening, too. We now know that consumer debt accumulated through such services is being ‘securitised’, or turned into its own financial product. In October, Klarna confirmed that it had offloaded ‘most’ of its UK ‘buy now, pay later’ debt to hedge fund Elliott Investment Management. Klarna’s shifting of its debt comes after another private-equity group bought up to €40 billion in ‘buy now, pay later’ debt from PayPal. The debt being repackaged here is even trashier than the subprime mortgages swirling around Wall Street in the early 2000s. At least a house or car can be reclaimed by the lender. A burrito or pizza, once eaten, cannot.

    1. Mike Parsons   2 months ago

      "aHa! Once again the conservative sandwich-heavy portfolio pays off for the hungry investor!"

    2. mad.casual   2 months ago

      At least a house or car can be reclaimed by the lender. A burrito or pizza, once eaten, cannot.

      This is really more of a late-20th Century, early-declining Empire conception or social construct rather than any sort of physical law.

      1. damikesc   2 months ago

        I'd argue a burrito will be returned in short order no matter what you do. You, at best, briefly borrow Mexican cuisine.

        1. Zeb   2 months ago

          You need to find a better class of food trucks. Or stop eating at Chipotle.

          1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

            This. Or better yet cook it yourself. Tonight’s tacos will have fresh made mango avocado salsa on them. No quick return expected.

            1. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

              This. I loved Chipotle, etc. when I was living in the city. Now that I live in BFE, where the closest restaurant is a Waffle House 12 miles from here, I've learned to make a lot of those "copycat" recipes at home using my own fresh ingredients. It's not hard marinating some chicken thighs, then slapping them on the Blackstone while the rice cooker does its thing (squeeze some lime into the rice). Black beans, pico, cheese, sour cream, adobo chile sauce... all good.

              I even make things like a Taco Bell Breakfast Crunchwrap (substitute 7 air-fryer crispy crowns for the hashbrown cake), with some extra crispy crowns at the same time for the hash-brown side. One trick is to weigh out the sausage patties (75g) and press them into rounds and then freeze them first. Fry up the patty and an egg from our backyard girls while the crispy crowns air-fry, wrap the whole lot up in a large tortilla with some cheese, back on the griddle to brown both sides.

            2. Zeb   2 months ago

              I do cook most things myself. Why pay lots of money for something I can make better myself?

              1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

                DIY happy ending?

        2. mulched   2 months ago

          Just as spicy on the way out!

  50. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

    Mandatory spending—things like entitlement programs—is the area that really needs to be attacked,

    There's no such thing as "mandatory spending", and we will all soon find out.

    1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

      Even then, Social Security is still mostly covered even with the lower worker to payee ratio, and would probably be fine if the income cap was raised, given inflation.

      The real problem here, and Liz doesn't go in to specifics, is the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The only thing that's covered there is Medicare Part A via the Federal Hospital Insurance Trust Fund taxes. Everything else is pure deficit spending, and that totaled over $2.1 trillion last fiscal year.

      If you want to cut back defense, fine, but we're ultimately not getting anywhere unless that number gets addressed, either through massive taxes on the middle and working classes, cuts via restrictions on what gets covered, or regs on what hospitals can charge for services if they want to get the money. Because let's face it, charging a family $25K for a procedure that cost $1K, inflation adjusted, 60 years ago, is in no way connected to any kind of actual market function.

      1. sarcasmic   2 months ago

        There are several reasons why that $1K procedure costs $25K. One contributing factor that I don't see people talk about much is the AMA limiting the number of people who go to medical school and making sure that immigrant doctors work as cab drivers. This is classic cartel behavior that increases prices by decreasing supply. American doctors get paid absurd salaries not because they're so much better than doctors in Canada or Turkey, but because they are shielded by a cartel that has convinced regular Americans that it works in their interest, not that of overpaid physicians.

        1. Michael Ejercito   2 months ago

          Price controls would be a good idea.

          1. sarcasmic   2 months ago

            My point is that limiting the number of people who go to medical school is raising prices by decreasing supply, and you interpret that to mean I want price controls?

            Damn you're stupid.

            No, the solution is to stop limiting the number of people who go to medical school, and allow foreign doctors to practice medicine. As in allow the supply of medical professionals to increase and then allow market forces to put downward pressure on what they can charge.

            Fuck. You Trump defenders are lying, economically illiterate morons.

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

              Guess which party the AMA colluded with buddy. The one you support. Same with the ABA.

          2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

            Said no libertarian ever.

        2. Don't look at me! (Not signed with autopen)   2 months ago

          How much money is too much money for someone to make?

          1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

            Asked no libertarian ever.

        3. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

          There are several reasons why that $1K procedure costs $25K.

          That type of massive disparity was for the birth of our kids, so in that instance it can't be attributed to supply and demand. We had, for the most part, the same basic thing that parents 60 years ago did--the birthing procedure and two nights in a private room. The only thing that was different was the hearing tests they do now. Each of the three births even used midwives, not an actual doctor.

          I don't disagree that it's cartel behavior, but these hospitals are badly in need of audits and some pointed explanations of why the same fucking thing costs 25 times, inflation-adjusted, what it did 60 years ago (I believe the real cost back then, from various receipts and cost pamphlets that have been posted online, was about $100 total).

          1. Don't look at me! (Not signed with autopen)   2 months ago

            Multi million dollar malpractice lawsuits might have something to do with it.

            1. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

              Came to say this.

            2. See.More   2 months ago

              And regulatory bloat.

              And subsidies; it's the same reason college tuition follows a similar trajectory.

            3. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

              I'm sure it's a factor, but it doesn't explain all of it. Throw in medical care for illegals in the emergency room that never gets paid for but is required under EMTALA (another good old "small government" law that Reagan signed), throw in outright fraud because the amounts are never questioned, throw in the need to cover for advanced medical technologies that didn't exist 60 years ago, etc.

              Regardless, I doubt in an actual free market economy that we'd see that much of a disparity. The US wasn't a Third World shithole in 1965. It was arguably at the peak of its economic power at the time, with relatively little debt and a robust mixed economy that was a net exporter of goods.

              1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

                1965? Didn't we still have slavery and literal hand maids then?

        4. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

          “One contributing factor that I don't see people talk about much is the AMA limiting the number of people who go to medical school…”

          Go on…

          “and making sure that immigrant doctors work as cab drivers.”

          Aaaannndd, you lost me. Poor sarcbot, just can’t help himself.

  51. Mother's Lament - (Sarc's a Nazi, not even joking)   2 months ago

    So $9.4 billion in cuts it is! A tiny drop in the bucket. What a bleak political reality: that this is what DOGE's efforts culminate in, and that this is the way lawmakers intend to codify the cuts.

    This is what DOGE's efforts culminate in after the first four months, you fucking frauds. They still have three and a half years to go.

    Absolutely insane defeatist rhetoric from the concern trolls at Reason.

    1. Mike Parsons   2 months ago

      shining a light on USAID was worth a ton, imo

      1. Dillinger   2 months ago

        this. it can never be rebottled.

    2. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

      It's because they secretly root for a Leviathan victory. I dont know how they ended up in an ostensible 'libertarian' mag but they love Leviathan deep down inside.

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

    Analysis of the ITC ruling.

    The Trade Act of 1974 couldn't be clearer. It allows the President to impose tariffs if a foreign country doesn't play fair.

    19 U.S.C. § 2411(a)(1): "If the United States Trade Representative determines that—
    (A) an act, policy, or practice of a foreign country is unreasonable or discriminatory and burdens or restricts United States commerce, and
    (B) action by the United States is appropriate, the Trade Representative shall take all appropriate and feasible action authorized under subsection (c) to obtain the elimination of that act, policy, or practice."

    19 U.S.C. § 2411(c)(1): "For purposes of carrying out the provisions of subsection (a) or (b), the Trade Representative is authorized to—
    (A) suspend, withdraw, or prevent the application of, benefits of trade agreement concessions to carry out a trade agreement with the foreign country subjected to the action under this section, and
    (B) impose duties or other import restrictions on the goods of, and, notwithstanding any other provision of law, fees or restrictions on the services of, such foreign country for such time as the Trade Representative determines appropriate."

    Long thread here:

    https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1927890545893924871.html

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

      The big one is the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which gives him more tariff authority for purposes of economic security.

      50 U.S.C. § 1701(a): "Any authority granted to the President by section 1702 of this title may be exercised to deal with any unusual and extraordinary threat, which has its source in whole or substantial part outside the United States, to the national security, foreign policy, or economy of the United States, if the President declares a national emergency with respect to such threat."

      This is the authority Trump cited. Again the law states presidential declaration, not judicial belief.

      You may not like congressional delegation, but these acts have been upheld by courts for 60+ years. Even SCOTUS has allowed them to continue.

      1. Dillinger   2 months ago

        one of my favorite things about this place is watching them cheer a third-inning two-run homer like it's Katie bar the door.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic (Sarcs Kampf mit der Realität)   2 months ago

          What they fail to realize is that a home run like that is a rally killer.

          1. Gaear Grimsrud   2 months ago

            Already stayed by the circuit court.

      2. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

        Jesse, don’t you understand? The Judiciary is the highest authority in this country.

        1. Zeb   2 months ago

          Obviously that should not be the case. But balance of powers still should give the judiciary some way to check the executive. I don't know how that should work exactly, and what is going on now with random low-level courts blocking executive actions is ridiculous. But there is a legitimate debate to be had here.

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

            The debate has been had in courts multiple times. It has been upheld. Congress has deferred their power. I even posted a congressional paper yesterday in the Boehm thread showing this to be intentional.and Congress themselves asking the president to use the power.

            Congress can always take back their delegation if they should choose to do so. It is not for lower level courts to make that choice.

          2. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

            The judiciary can be a check on questions of dubious constitutional actions.

            It cannot have any role in plain Article 2 powers, which is what is happening now.

            It would be like an official of the executive going into courtrooms and overturning judges decisions until a higher court (or higher level executive official, even) could appeal it.

            1. Zeb   2 months ago

              When powers are delegated to the executive by congress, do the courts have no role in determining if the executive has exceeded the limits of what has been delegated? Or whether the powers being claimed were even delegated in the first place? Or is that entirely up to congress?

              I think the real problem is that pretty much everyone in government thinks in terms of what they can get away with rather than what is in accord with both the letter and spirit of the law and constitution. Once that becomes the norm, even the illusion of rule of law and constitutional government is hard to maintain.

              1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

                They have a role if there is a legitimate question. Maybe I’ve missed one of these cases where there’s a legitimate question, I haven’t read them all. But everyone one I’ve looked into have been pretty clear.

            2. Incunabulum   2 months ago

              These things are going to the courts because there's a question of whether they're plain Art2 powers or unconstitutional.

              It may be a bullshit question as the power may *clearly* be art 2 from a straight plain reading but courts have always bent over backwards to hear bullshit cases to ensure there isn't a perception that someone 'can't access justice' because courts are throwing their cases out on first reading.

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

                As pointed out prior, the delegation question has already gone through the courts. The ITC admitted the delegation costed. Their argument is they dont believe the presidential declaration.

                It even got challenged under Carter who used it.

          3. Incunabulum   2 months ago

            Honestly, I think we're fine as we are.

            Yes, it would be better if the lower court was actually disciplined and knowledgeable and not just blatantly partisan, but we're seeing these issues sorted out in the appellate courts and the USSC, grudgingly, has been acknowledging where the President actually has the authority to act while slapping down the areas where mistakes are made.

            And this is still often only taking days or weeks rather than months or years to work through.

            The judiciary isn't yet ideologically homogenous and there are enough reasonably non-partisan judges in the appellates to sort these issues out properly.

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

              The issue is now the tariff amounts are going to go back to prior levels for the interim as the courts work things out.

              For months the ekft and Eric's of the world have been screaming uncertainty. This court added just another impetus of uncertainty after things had stabilized.

              1. Gaear Grimsrud   2 months ago

                Already stayed by the circuit court. The tariffs remain for the time being at least. Poor Eric.

            2. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

              I’m not fine with leftist activist judges usurping executive powers for any amount of time.

              See my example above about members of the executive going into courtrooms. Nobody would stand for that nonsense.

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

          Federalist Paper 78 disagrees.

          It proves incontestably, that the judiciary is beyond comparison the weakest of the three departments of power1; that it can never attack with success either of the other two; and that all possible care is requisite to enable it to defend itself against their attacks.

          Likewise John Marshall himself recognized this.

          https://mustreadalaska.com/ralph-cushman-john-marshall-would-say-trump-is-right/

          1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

            Was being sarcastic.

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

              I know. Was more for others.

      3. Zeb   2 months ago

        I don't like the delegation and I don't like the loose (or absent) definition of emergency. If that is completely at the president's discretion, then it's basically an enabling act. This is the kind of shit that allowed all the covid madness to happen and gave it legal cover. We need reform of emergency laws.
        Then there is the "unusual AND extraordinary threat" (my emphasis). Given that other countries' protectionism and other unfair trade practices have been going on for ages, I'd still argue that they cannot be both unusual and extraordinary, pretty much by definition.

        1. MT-Man   2 months ago

          100% there's an emergency property tax over here for the last 5 years on covid to fund a bum/homeless shelter. A no vote already was given by the county yet the emergency use overrode and took the monies anyways. Where's the judge stepping in for that...

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

          It was intentional on Congress' part. They even ask the president to do the work for them. From yesterday.

          https://www.congress.gov/crs-product/R45618

        3. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

          I agree it should all be overturned.

          The people fighting this don’t agree with us though, they just don’t want Trump to have this power.

        4. Minadin   2 months ago

          Missouri reformed / limited emergency laws in the state in early 2021, after a bunch of Covid-abuses in the St. Louis and Kansas City areas (mostly). Now a local executive (Mayor, County Executive, etc.) cannot unilaterally declare or continue an emergency longer than 2 weeks, without corresponding legislation from their representative legislative body (County Council, Board of Aldermen).

          1. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

            During COVID, one mayor, in Champaign IL, issued a set of emergency orders that basically gave her unlimited power. I'll just list the first and last of her 30 self-proclaimed emergency powers:

            The mayor shall be permitted to:

            (1) Issue such other orders as are imminently necessary for the protection of life and property.

            (30) Issue any and all such other orders or undertake such other functions and activities as the Mayor reasonably believes is required to protect the health, safety, and welfare of persons or property within the City or otherwise preserve the public peace or abate, clean up, or mitigate the effects of any emergency or disaster.

            The only check on her "powers" was that the City Council could vote to override her orders. But we have one additional emergency power she claimed

            (11) Temporarily suspend, limit, cancel, convene, reschedule, postpone, continue, or relocate all meetings of the City Council, and any City committee, commission, board, authority, or other City body as deemed appropriate by the Mayor.

            So if she indefinitely suspends all City Council meetings, the City Council cannot vote to override her orders, such orders can be ANYTHING THE MAYOR WANTS, all she has to do is say "public health". And P.S., she claimed her powers extended 2 miles beyond the city limits. How is this anything but a dictatorship?

            1. Zeb   2 months ago

              I think I remember that one. Reminds me of all the terms of use contracts we all agree to all the time that say that they can change the terms of the agreement at any time if they feel like it.

          2. Zeb   2 months ago

            Yeah, that's the sort of thing we need more of. I might go a little further and say that if the legislature has time to meet to continue the emergency, they have time to do what needs to be done legislatively and not by giving the executive extra powers to do whatever they want.

  53. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>The ruling is a welcome blow to the Trump administration ... writes Reason's Eric Boehm.

    libertarians for protecting democracy through judicial tyranny!

  54. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>Unfortunately, the $9.4 billion-in-cuts package falls far short of what would actually be needed to make an impact.

    hey while you're in Texas touch some grass you've become an utter fucking scold. akshually.

  55. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>"Equity" curriculums basically just lower the bar for all students to an embarrassing degree

    Malcolm X was correct about some things.

  56. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>Let me be clear: All roasting of Pete Hegseth is intentional, for your amusement and mine.

    ya but chicks only roast him because they want him it's a defense mechanism.

  57. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>"Only Two Companies Make Parachutes for U.S. Troops," ... "Deportations Would Crush One."

    et?

    1. Minadin   2 months ago

      I'm not sure that the big concern here is what they think it is. Some of mine:
      1) Why do they only have 2 suppliers?
      2) Why does 1 of them have such a workforce makeup where so many of them have an immigration status is such that deportation is even a possibility?
      3) Do we really want, as the government typically phrases it, 'Non-US-Persons' involved in the manufacturing of military supplies? I know personally it's not allowed in many situations.

      1. mad.casual   2 months ago

        4) Aren't we already paying *over* top-dollar for this? Isn't this evidence that no matter how much or little we paid for any of it, the market would slide right back to company towns, chattel slavery, and royal decree as long as it was profitable and/or saved money?

        5) Isn't the whole point that, economics aside, we specifically *shouldn't* be rewriting immigration policy to accommodate such a situation *without* explicit safeguards against No. 4?

    2. mad.casual   2 months ago

      Obviously, we should continue to manufacture unprecedentedly expensive, life-saving military gear using the lowest bidder who relies on illegal labor that owes allegiance to no people, nation, or ideal... rewrite immigration policy to support this *S*N*A*F*U*.... and not worry about *any* of the potential consequences.

  58. Michael Ejercito   2 months ago

    This could have the unfortunate effect of raising childcare costs in certain markets. But I also haven't heard a single person cogently argue why au pairs are a threat that must be suppressed; this is a form of childcare that can take the form of a nanny, or more the form of a mother's helper, and it can be very collaborative, allowing mother and au pair to tend to children side-by-side.
    They can just hire American.

  59. sarcasmic   2 months ago

    Protectionist Angst Is ‘Made in America’ — So Are Lots of Other Things

    https://thedailyeconomy.org/article/like-many-things-protectionist-angst-is-made-in-america/

    Over the years, I — like all defenders of free trade — have had countless conversations with protectionists who are tenacious in searching for weaknesses in the case for free trade. What follows is a composite of some key exchanges in many of those conversations. Every point below that “Protectionist” makes is one that real people have served up to me on several occasions. Except for the composite nature of this conversation between “Protectionist” and “Boudreaux,” nothing is fictional.

    Protectionist: Over the past half-century, American industry has been hollowed out by international trade. We don’t make things anymore. That’s why we need protective tariffs.

    Boudreaux: You’re factually incorrect. US industrial output hit its all-time peak in February of this year, higher by 155 percent than it was in 1975, when America last ran an annual trade surplus and 19 percent higher than in 2001, when China joined the WTO. Also, US industrial capacity is at an all-time high, and 147 larger than in 1975 and 12 percent larger than in 2001. Tariffs only —

    Protectionist: Sorry for interrupting, but I don’t believe those government statistics. Bureaucrats are politically biased, with no incentive to get things right.

    Boudreaux: Do you hear yourself? You don’t trust government officials to competently gather and report economic statistics, yet you do trust government officials with the power to coercively obstruct your and other Americans’ peaceful commerce with foreigners. How does that make sense?

    It continues. Pretty good slap-down of Protectionist illogic.

    1. Mother's Lament - (Sarc's a Nazi, not even joking)   2 months ago

      Every single one of Trump's tariffs so far have been reciprocal for tariffs and unfair trade practices against America that have been going on in many cases for longer than fifty years, but you don't give a fuck about those.

      Why does CNN want you to hate America so much, Sarckles?

  60. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>It's not clear to me how cutting off the supply of au pairs is a pro-family policy that will encourage people to have more kids:

    it encourages discussions about vacuums both economic and between ears.

  61. Alan Vanneman   2 months ago

    "It's just so odd to me that the administration sees a problem with this."

    Maybe it's because "foreigners" are, you know, STEALING OUR JOBS!

    Or maybe it's because xenophobia is the fuel on which the Trump train runs. Remember when J. D. Vance said he didn't care if Haitians weren't eating cats, anything that made Americans hate foreigners was a good thing!

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

      ^ Lying pile of TDS-addled shit right here. Fuck off and die, ass wipe.

    2. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

      the Haitians were eating cats.

    3. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

      Old Boomers still think they can lie about shit and not having everyone know they’re lying. It’s becoming quite entertaining.

      Btw, have you heard about all the interesting new information investigative journalist Jake Tapper has uncovered about the Biden administration? It’s shocking!

    4. Mother's Lament - (Sarc's a Nazi, not even joking)   2 months ago

      "Or maybe it's because xenophobia is the fuel on which the Trump train runs."

      That's right. The president with the foreign wife and the vice president with a brown Hindu wife and immigrant in-laws are "xeNoPhOBiC".

      That stupid smear is all you have left, and yet it's so easily disproved if your target thinks about it for even just one second.

      1. mad.casual   2 months ago

        Remember when Shikha was explaining how racist American immigration officials are and that's why her (white) husband had to drive her into Canada?

        Good times.

  62. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

    Why do I, as an American, have to pay for chinese college students?

    1. Zeb   2 months ago

      Do you? I thought a big reason why colleges like foreign students is that they pay full rate.

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

        If you realize money is fungible, they provide scholarships to many of the foreign countries.

        https://worldwide.harvard.edu/harvard-china-fellowships

        Then again China has also given Harvard 1B which Harvard failed to properly declare.

      2. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

        The universities are granted billions from the feds and those billions are spent across the board at the facility for grants, research, post doc positions, student work programs, the whole gamut. Foreign students come in and benefit from those billions.

        1. Zeb   2 months ago

          Yeah, OK. Federal funding of universities should go. It's silly to focus only on the certain ones that Trump (and lots of other people including me) think have gone off the deep end. Especially when most have gone off the deep end.

          1. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

            It's a start.

      3. mad.casual   2 months ago

        they pay full rate

        LOL. Do you think your favorite stripper's name is Tatiana and she really was born in the Ukraine too?

        Asylum holders, Refugees, and Conditional Entrants all qualify for Federal Loans *and* minority status.

        1. Zeb   2 months ago

          I'm talking about foreign exchange students who come specifically to attend school on student visas. And maybe I'm behind the times. It's been a long time since college.

  63. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

    https://www.zerohedge.com/political/whistleblower-biden-admin-used-racist-loan-policy-against-white-farmers

    Why is the federal government taking money from me and using it to forgive loans to farmers of any color?

    1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

      Another local story. Move along.

    2. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

      "The former official responded “Essentially, yes, that’s correct. And that your loan would be forgiven up to 120% of the loan value.”"

      Wtf. Not just forgiven but handed an extra 20% on top? Regular US taxpayers are the biggest suckers on the planet.

  64. Incunabulum   2 months ago

    >"It's not clear to me how cutting off the supply of au pairs is a pro-family policy that will encourage people to have more kids:

    *sigh*

    Liz, not all of us are wealthy enough to afford to fire some foreigner to raise our kids so we don't have to interact with them.

  65. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    Trump tariffs live updates: Appeals court allows tariffs to stay in effect after trade court rebuke

    https://www.cnn.com/2025/05/29/business/appeals-court-pauses-trump-tariff-ruling

    CNN
    —
    A federal appeals court has paused Wednesday night’s ruling from the Court of International Trade that blocked President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

    The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit’s ruling restores Trump’s ability to levy tariffs using the emergency powers he declared earlier this year. The appeals court also ordered that both sides provide written arguments on the question of the blocking of Trump’s tariffs, to be filed by early next month.

    The two rulings – halting the tariffs, then staying that decision – came in under 24 hours, a whirlwind that adds to the chaos around Trump’s economic policy.

    On Wednesday evening, the USCIT judges blocked all tariffs invoked under IEEPA – the “Liberation Day” tariffs Trump announced on April 2 and also the tariffs placed earlier this year against China, Mexico and Canada, designed to combat fentanyl coming into the United States. Notably, the order does not include the 25% tariffs on autos, auto parts, steel or aluminum, which were under a different law, Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act.

    USCIT unanimously came to a summary judgement on two separate cases in one opinion. One was a lawsuit was filed in April by the Liberty Justice Center, a libertarian legal advocacy group representing wine-seller VOS Selections and four other small businesses. The other was filed by twelve Democratic states brought against the government over tariffs.

    The Trump administration appealed that same day, just hours after the decision. On Thursday, the administration threatened to take the case to the Supreme Court if it was not granted a stay by either the appeals court or the USCIT.

    The appeals court then granted the stay early Thursday afternoon, setting a deadline of June 5 for the plaintiffs to respond and June 9 for the government to reply.

    1. Gaear Grimsrud   2 months ago

      I imagine Boehm and SGT in a dim speakeasy buying each other doubles before staggering into the street to scream at the sky.

  66. Medulla Oblongata   2 months ago

    Update: SFUSD kills controversial grading proposal after backlash

    https://x.com/jilltucker/status/1927840372358529219

  67. charliehall   2 months ago

    Making China Great Again. Most Chinese students want to remain in the US because they realize that the US has freedom and they identify with American ideals rather than Chinese Communist Party ideals.

    At least they did prior to Trump.

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