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President Donald Trump's United States of America

Another classic left wing tactic: labelling anyone who doesn't want the West turned into a theocracy as racist.
OK, if you're going to keep making up fictions, can you stick to the TTC threads? I come in here because I want to read interesting discussion, not childish ad hominem attacks from someone who doesn't have an iota of understanding of what the left wing position actually involves.
 
nd you failed to address the preceding part of my post citing things that are decidedly not fictions (pre-2015 vs. post-2015 & UAE vs. UK).
The inability of western countries to look after their citizens is not something you can reasonable ascribe to leftists, since, as I noted before, most of those countries are already run by conservatives pretending to be progressive. It's institutional incompetence. And I still want to see those left wingers who are okay with the kind of violence to which you are referring.
 
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Isn't Donald Trump a "religious fanatic"?
There's been a debate on that I gather. But no, I think he's not religious in the sense of any real meaningful conviction...rather he plays the part so his religious based supporters will back him in whatever he's doing. It's all part of his game and grift really. And the gullible just lap it all up.
 
The February Jobs Report is out... and it's very bad. US lost 92,000 jobs in the month of February.


US workplaces unexpectedly cut 92,000 jobs as unemployment rate climbs to 4.4%​

The outlook for the job market – and the entire economy – is clouded by the war with Iran

American employers unexpectedly cut 92,000 jobs last month, a sign that the labor market remains under strain. The unemployment rate jumped up to 4.4%.

Hiring deteriorated from January, when companies, nonprofits and government agencies added a healthy 126,000 jobs, the Labor Department reported Friday. Economists had expected 60,000 new jobs in February.

Revisions also cut 69,000 jobs from December and January payrolls.


The surprisingly weak employment picture in February adds to the economic uncertainty over the war with Iran, which has caused oil prices to surge and saddled business and consumers with unforeseen costs.


American employers unexpectedly cut 92,000 jobs last month, a sign that the labor market remains under strain. The unemployment rate jumped up to 4.4%.

Hiring deteriorated from January, when companies, nonprofits and government agencies added a healthy 126,000 jobs, the Labor Department reported Friday. Economists had expected 60,000 new jobs in February.

Revisions also cut 69,000 jobs from December and January payrolls.


The surprisingly weak employment picture in February adds to the economic uncertainty over the war with Iran, which has caused oil prices to surge and saddled business and consumers with unforeseen costs.

“The job market is struggling in the face of so many headwinds,” said Heather Long, chief economist at Navy Federal Credit Union.

“ Companies are going to be even more reluctant to hire this spring until the war ends and they can see consumers still spending. It’s a tense time for the U.S. economy.”

The job market had been expected to rebound this year from a lackluster 2025 when the economy, buffeted by President Donald Trump's erratic tariff policies and the lingering effects of high interest rates, generated just 15,000 jobs a month. Hopes for a rebound rose after January hiring came in above expectations.


"Just when it looked like the labor market was stabilizing, this report delivers a knock-down blow to that view,'' said Olu Sonola, head of U.S. economics at Fitch Ratings. It’s bad news whichever way you look at it.''

The job losses were widespread.

Construction companies cut 11,000 jobs last month, which likely reflects reflect frigid weather. And healthcare firms shed 28,000 jobs after a four-week strike by more than 30,000 nurses and other front-line workers at Kaiser Permanente in California and Hawaii. Health care has been one of the job market's strong points.

Factories cut 12,000 jobs and have now lost jobs for 14 of the last 15 months. Restaurants and bars lost nearly 30,000 jobs. Administrative and support services firms cut nearly 19,000 jobs and courier and messenger services almost 17,000.

Financial firms added 10,000 jobs, though job cuts continue to hit that sector as well this year.

Average hourly wages rose 0.4% from January and 3.8% from a year earlier.

The outlook for the job market – and the entire economy – is clouded by the war with Iran.

Employers were reluctant to hire last year because of uncertainty over Trump’s tariffs – and the unpredictable way he rolled them out.

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The impact of Trump’s aggressive trade policies may recede in 2025. His import taxes became smaller and less erratic after he reached a trade truce last year with China and deals with leading U.S. trade partners such as Japan and the European Union. A lot of businesses have also learned how to offset the costs of the tariffs, often by passing them along to customers via higher prices.

Brian Bethune, an economist at Boston College, said that Trump’s 2025 tariffs were a shock to companies’ business plans. Now, just as they’ve adjusted to them, “Guess what! All of a sudden their 2026 business plans are upended by an increase in fuel costs’’ caused by the war with Iran.

The combination of weak hiring and increasing inflationary pressures arising from the war creates a nightmare for the Federal Reserve, which must decide whether to cut interest rates to help the job market or hold off to help keep a lid on prices. "This is probably the worst scenario for monetary policy,'' said Eugenio Aleman, chief economist at Raymond James.

Hiring continues to lag far behind the hiring boom of 2021-2023 when the economy was bouncing back from pandemic lockdowns and the United States was adding nearly 400,000 jobs a month. Many economists describe today’s job market as “no-hire, no-fire’’: Companies are reluctant to add workers but don’t want to let go of the ones they have.

Companies may also be holding off on hiring as they buy, install and figure out how best to use new technologies, including artificial intelligence. AI, after all, potentially means they “can do more with less’’ and will need fewer workers, especially for entry-level positions, said Joe Brusuelas, chief economist at the tax and consulting firm RSM.

They are thinking, he said, “we’ve invested an awful lot of money in (capital expenditures), and we need to see how much we can produce with our current labor force... The last thing you want to do is hire a lot of young people and then let them go.’’

 
So funny how people thought that Trump was gonna lower gas prices.... hahahahahahaha. Time to slap some ''I DID THAT'' stickers on the gas pumps, this time with Trump's face.

 
As gas prices rise and jobs fall, Trump's distraction? To talk about his feud with Bill Maher from last month...

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'Gaudy' - Vote on Trump's White House ballroom postponed amid deluge of criticism​

A vote on President Donald Trump's proposed White House ballroom has been postponed after a commission overseeing changes received more than 32,000 comments, mostly in opposition, from the public.
They included accusations Trump is seeking a "gaudy, personalized palace", undertaking a "personal vanity project" and "a complete razing of American history".
The East Wing of the White House was demolished in October to make way for construction of the ballroom, which would be larger than the existing White House and seat 1,000.
Trump administration officials have said demolition was more economical than renovating the East Wing and noted many presidents have made changes to the White House.

Nearly 100 people were expected to speak at a public forum on Thursday hosted by the National Capital Planning Commission (NCPC). The panel had been scheduled to vote during the forum but delayed the vote given the volume of feedback.
"We're going to take the time to deliberate, and we're going to have a final vote on April 2," NCPC chairman Will Scharf said at the beginning of the meeting.
The NPCC is a government commission that oversees planning for federal buildings and land in Washington DC.
The commission's executive director had recommended approving plans for the ballroom, saying the White House was responding to changing times and the "longstanding need" for permanent space to "host diplomatic and other state events".
That recommendation will be considered by the commission, along with the comments submitted by members of the public. Everyday Americans as well is historians and preservationists weighed in, including supporters.
"The reasons I've been exposed to of why President Trump wants the East Wing changed and every reason I've read was a good and firm reason," one wrote, encouraging the commission to back the project.
Among points of frustration expressed by others are the cost and the lack of public input before the East Wing was demolished.
"This is the People's House we expect due diligence in keeping with size, scale, purpose for this historical building. Stop the outrageous tackiness," one person wrote.
"I am outraged that this monstrous ballroom was designed and the construction of the original without any approval," another said. "This is the people's house and should have been authorized by the people."

The ballroom is projected to cost $400m (£298m), which is twice the original estimate. Trump has said private donors will be paying for its construction.
Though the White House and its adjoining parks are administered by the National Park Service (NPS), the president generally has broad powers to make renovations, a point of contention for some commenters.
"As someone who works in real estate, alongside of investors and developers, the fact that Trump doesn't have to follow the rules and regulations of obtaining proper permits and permissions like the rest of us do, is absurd and unethical," one wrote.
White House officials previously told members of the NPCC that the East Wing had "chronic water intrusion, accelerated deterioration and mould contamination".
"Because of this and other factors, the cost analysis proved that demolition and reconstruction provided the lowest total cost ownership and most effective long-term strategy," Josh Fisher, director of the White House Office of Administration, said.
The White House ballroom project is also expected to add a second storey to the West Wing, which houses offices for staff as well as the president.
Ballroom architect Shalom Baranes said the building would span 22,000 sq ft and include two entry lobbies, a commercial kitchen, an office for the first lady and a movie theatre.

A nonprofit organisation tasked by the US Congress with helping preserve historic sites - the National Trust for Historic Preservation - sued the White House in December to stop construction of the ballroom.
The trust argued that the White House failed to seek necessary reviews and permissions before demolishing the East Wing and should have filed plans with the commission before starting construction.
A judge ruled last week that the preservation group raised the wrong legal claims against the president, and said that if the group brought a new challenge he would "expeditiously" reconsider. This, for now, allowed Trump to continue the construction.
 

As Trump says Cuba 'is going to fall,' his administration explores criminal charges, source says​

A multiagency effort is underway to find potential cases to bring against members of the Cuban regime or Communist Party, NBC News has learned.

As President Donald Trump suggests that Cuba could soon fall, his administration has begun exploring whether federal prosecutors could charge members of the regime or the Communist Party with crimes, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The administration is working to develop possible criminal cases tied to issues like drugs or violence, according to the person. The multiagency effort started recently, the person said.
U.S. officials charged Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife with drug conspiracy charges in the U.S., after they were captured by the military in January at a compound in Caracas. They have pleaded not guilty to the charges.

Federal charges against Cuban officials could ratchet up public pressure on the country and could be used as the basis to levy additional economic sanctions imposed by the State Department, which is been consulted as part of the effort, according to the person familiar with the matter. The U.S. already has a commercial, economic, and financial embargo on Cuba that dates back decades.

The Justice Department and State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Cuban officials did not immediately respond to request for comment.
Trump has been talking about Cuba’s government increasingly since after the raid on Maduro, one of Havana’s closest allies. The president suggested following the raid that the island could collapse on its own because its economy was so weak and the oil shipments that it depended on from Venezuela had stopped.

This week, just days after the U.S. attack Iran that killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and other top leadership, the president suggested that Cuba would be the next to fall.
“Cuba is gonna fall pretty soon,”Trump told CNN in a phone interview Friday. “Cuba is gonna fall too. They want to make a deal so badly.”
“They want to make a deal, and so I’m going to put Marco (Rubio) over there, and we’ll see how that works out. We’re really focused on this one right now. We’ve got plenty of time, but Cuba’s ready — after 50 years,” Trump said.

A day earlier, Trump said at the White House that it’s only a “question of time” before American Cubans would be able to return to their home country, as he praised Secretary of State Marco Rubio during an East Room event.

“He’s doing some job, and your next one is going to be, we want to do that special Cuba,” Trump said. He said that Rubio is waiting until the war on Iran is complete.
“We could do them all at the same time, but bad things happen,” Trump said. “If you watch countries over the years, you do them all too fast, bad things happen. We’re not going to let anything bad happen to this country.”
Rubio, the son of Cuban immigrants, has long been a Cuba hawk and as a senator for years pushed regime change on the island, as well as in Venezuela.

“Cuba’s status quo is unacceptable,” Rubio said late last month after Cuba said its military killed four Cubans from the United States who were on a boat that entered its territorial waters. “Cuba needs to change. It needs to change, and it doesn’t have to change all at once. It doesn’t have to change from one day to the next. Everyone is mature and real. Everyone is mature and realistic.”
But, Rubio insisted, the island needed to change dramatically, especially to improve quality of life for its people.

“They need to make dramatic reforms, and if they want to make those dramatic reforms that open the space for both economic and eventually political freedom for the people of Cuba, obviously the United States would love to see that would be helpful.”

After spending years railing against the lack of human rights and democracy in Cuba, Rubio has been quieter in recent weeks and has pivoted to talking about the need for economic changes on the island.

Initially Cuban government officials denied there were negotiations between the U.S. and Cuba but haven’t publicly commented on the talks in recent weeks.
Cuban American members of Congress wrote a letter to Trump in February asking the Justice Department to consider indicting former President Raul Castro over his role in the 1996 shooting of two unarmed civilian planes on missions for Brothers to the Rescue, a volunteer group.Four Cuban American pilots were killed.

The volunteer pilots routinely flew over the Florida straits looking for Cuban refugees making their way to the U.S. on makeshift boats. Castro was head of the armed forces at the time.
Florida’s attorney general said this week that a state-level case against Castro would be reopened.

Cuba’s foreign minister Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla told The Associated Press last fall that when Trump first took office, the island saw an opening for a potential thaw in relations.But Rubio’s effort is personal, and it’s led the administration to lean even harder into an anti-Havana stance.

“The current secretary of state was not born in Cuba, has never been to Cuba, and knows nothing about Cuba,” Rodríguez said at the time. “But there is a very personal and corrupt agenda that he is carrying out, which seems to be sacrificing the national interests of the U.S. in order to advance this very extremist approach.”

Any action against Cuba would be further complicated by the existence of Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, where some of America’s most high-profile detainees are held, including Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. Cuba and the U.S. entered into a lease agreement for the land the base sits on in 1903 that has no end date, and the lease can only be ended if both parties agree.

While the military detention center once held hundreds of detainees, just 15 are still held at the center, with dozens of military personnel for each remaining detainee. Former Democratic President Barack Obama signed an executive order to close the detention center, but it never happened.
 

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