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update - Immigration Dept pushes unconstitutional policy of automatic bail denial in immigration proceedings

silentkisser

Master of Disaster
Jun 10, 2008
4,545
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Trump fires Fed Governor Lisa Cook, opening new front in fight for control over central bank


WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump fired Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook late Monday, a sharp escalation in his battle to exert greater control over what has long been considered an institution independent from day-to-day politics.

Trump said in a letter posted on his Truth Social platform that he is firing Cook because of allegations that she committed mortgage fraud. Bill Pulte, a Trump appointee to the agency that regulates mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, made the accusations last week.


FILE - Federal Reserve Board of Governors member Lisa Cook, right, talks with Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell before an open meeting of the Board of Governors at the Federal Reserve, June 25, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)

FILE - Federal Reserve Board of Governors member Lisa Cook, right, talks with Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell before an open meeting of the Board of Governors at the Federal Reserve, June 25, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)© The Associated Press
Pulte alleged that Cook had claimed two primary residences -- in Ann Arbor, Michigan and Atlanta -- in 2021 to get better mortgage terms. Mortgage rates are often higher on second homes or those purchased to rent.

The announcement came days after Cook said she wouldn’t leave her post despite Trump previously calling for her to resign. The Fed's board has seven members, meaning Trump's move could have deep economic and political ramifications.




Trump said in announcing the move that he had the constitutional authority to remove Cook, but doing so will raise questions about control of the Fed as an independent entity.

The firing is likely to touch off a legal battle and Cook could be allowed to remain in her seat while the case plays out. Cook would have to fight the legal battle herself, as the injured party, rather than the Fed.

It is the latest effort by the administration to take control over one of the few remaining independent agencies in Washington. Trump has repeatedly attacked the Fed’s chair, Jerome Powell, for not cutting its short-term interest rate, and even threatened to fire him.

Forcing Cook off the Fed’s governing board would provide Trump an opportunity to appoint a loyalist. Trump has said he would only appoint officials who would support cutting rates.
I love the fact that she ain't leaving. Trump is playing a dangerous game with this. The markets are not going to trust the Fed, which will put doubt on many aspects of the US monetary policy and hurt investments....

Also, isn't it interesting that he is attempting to fire the only black female member of the FOMC....And, over unproven allegations. Hell, she hasn't even been charged.
 

richaceg

Well-known member
Feb 11, 2009
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I love the fact that she ain't leaving. Trump is playing a dangerous game with this. The markets are not going to trust the Fed, which will put doubt on many aspects of the US monetary policy and hurt investments....

Also, isn't it interesting that he is attempting to fire the only black female member of the FOMC....And, over unproven allegations. Hell, she hasn't even been charged.
So it's about race now?
 

WyattEarp

Well-known member
May 17, 2017
8,460
2,789
113
So it's about race now?
It's always about race, dontya know?

Anyway, everyone was a mortgage fraud hawk until Trump took office. Now not so much.
 

silentkisser

Master of Disaster
Jun 10, 2008
4,545
5,828
113
So it's about race now?
Well, let me just say it is interesting how all of a sudden these allegations popped up to discredit her. I'm not saying the motivation is 100% because she's black or female, but more specifically because she was appointed by Biden. And, if anyone if going to try and rig the game, MAGA's base loves to see it happen to certain groups....
 

richaceg

Well-known member
Feb 11, 2009
17,500
8,596
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Well, let me just say it is interesting how all of a sudden these allegations popped up to discredit her. I'm not saying the motivation is 100% because she's black or female, but more specifically because she was appointed by Biden. And, if anyone if going to try and rig the game, MAGA's base loves to see it happen to certain groups....
I know you wanted to call Trump racist and bigot so hard...you just can't because he's not.
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
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MADISON, Wis. (AP) — A federal judge on Tuesday allowed the case to proceed against a Wisconsin judge accused of helping a man evade U.S. immigration agents seeking to arrest him in her courthouse.

Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Hannah Dugan was arrested at the county courthouse in April and indicted on federal charges in May. She quickly filed a motion to dismiss the charges.



U.S. District Judge Lynne Adelman on Tuesday rejected Dugan's motion. A magistrate judge in July had recommended the case proceed. Adelman’s decision could be appealed to the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Attorneys for Dugan had no immediate comment.

Dugan has pleaded not guilty to helping the man in the country illegally try to evade authorities. No trial date has been set. She faces up to six years in prison and a $350,000 fine if convicted on both counts.

The case highlighted a clash between President Donald Trump’s administration and local authorities over the Republican’s sweeping immigration crackdown.

Democrats have accused the Trump administration of trying to make a national example of Dugan to chill judicial opposition to its deportation efforts.

Dugan filed a motion in May to dismiss the charges against her, saying she was acting in her official capacity as a judge and therefore is immune to prosecution. She argued that the federal government violated Wisconsin’s sovereignty by disrupting a state courtroom and prosecuting a state judge.




Dugan also argued that the prosecution under federal law violated the U.S. Constitution’s separation of powers because it overrides the state of Wisconsin’s ability to administer its courts.

But the judge rejected her arguments.

Dugan is charged with concealing an individual to prevent arrest, a misdemeanor, and obstruction, which is a felony. Prosecutors say she escorted Eduardo Flores-Ruiz, 31, and his lawyer out of her courtroom through a back door on April 18 after learning that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were in the courthouse seeking to arrest him for being in the country without permanent legal status.

Agents arrested Flores-Ruiz outside the courthouse after a brief foot chase.

Dugan’s case is similar to one brought during the first Trump administration against a Massachusetts judge, who was accused of helping a man sneak out a courthouse back door to evade a waiting immigration enforcement agent. That case was eventually dismissed.

Scott Bauer, The Associated Press

Federal judge allows case against Wisconsin Judge Hannah Dugan to proceed
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
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A federal judge slammed the “lawlessness” of the arrest of a Black man inside of a Trader Joe’s in Washington, D.C. amid President Donald Trump’s federal takeover of the nation’s capital.

Trump signed an August 11 executive order that federalized the Metropolitan Police Department as he declared a “crime emergency” in the nation’s capital. In the latest show of force, the local police arrested a Black man in a Trader Joe’s after finding he was carrying guns in a search that a judge has branded “illegal.”





“It is without a doubt the most illegal search I've ever seen in my life," U.S. Magistrate Judge Zia Faruqui said on Monday, according to NPR. "I'm absolutely flabbergasted at what has happened. A high school student would know this was an illegal search."

While patrolling the area near Union Market, the Metropolitan Police Department on August 18 arrested Torez Riley, a Black male wearing a gray hoodie, dark jeans, a white skull cap, and a black crossbody satchel, outside of a Trader Joe’s, according to court records.

After observing Riley grab the upper strap of his satchel and pull it closer to him as he looked at the police vehicle, officers followed him into the Trader Joe’s. There, an officer asked Riley if he had a license to carry a concealed firearm in D.C.; the man said he wasn’t carrying anything.

Riley said he was adjusting the bag because his chest hurt. Officers noticed the bag appeared to be “heavy,” as if an object was weighing it down, a court filing states. Believing his “actions were consistent with that of an individual concealing an illegal firearm,” the officers then patted down the satchel, finding two firearms inside.




After looking into Riley, officers discovered he had previously been convicted of carrying a pistol without a license. He was charged with unlawful possession of a firearm.

On Monday, Faruqui said the police had no reason to stop Riley other than the color of his skin, HuffPost reported.

“The Sixth Amendment doesn’t get thrown out the window because the government has decided to make a show of arresting people,” the judge said, seemingly referring to Trump’s federal takeover of the nation’s capital.

The local police have been under federal control for three weeks since Trump began his crime crackdown in the nation’s capital, despite a 30-year low in violent crime in the city. He’s also deployed thousands of National Guard troops, who, as of this week, began carrying firearms. As of Tuesday, there have been more than 1,000 arrests in D.C. since the federal takeover began, with 115 illegal guns seized, according to Attorney General Pam Bondi.




The judge noted that evidence in other searches have been suppressed since Trump’s federal takeover.

“Lawlessness cannot come from the government,” the judge slammed. “We’re pushing the boundaries here. We’re beyond the boundaries and something is going to have to break.”

The government asked the court to throw out the case after it “determined that dismissal of this matter is in the interests of justice,” a Monday filing states.


More than 1,000 people have been arrested after President Donald Trump federalized the Metropolitan Police Department and deployed the National Guard in the nation’s capital (REUTERS)

More than 1,000 people have been arrested after President Donald Trump federalized the Metropolitan Police Department and deployed the National Guard in the nation’s capital (REUTERS)
A Justice Department spokesperson told NPR that U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro moved to dismiss the charges after she was shown body camera footage of the arrest on Friday.

"This judge has a long history of bending over backwards to release dangerous felons in possession of firearms and on frequent occasions he has downplayed the seriousness of felons who possess illegal firearms and the danger they pose to our community," Pirro told NPR in a statement. "The comments he made today are no different than those he makes in other cases involving dangerous criminals."


The Independent has reached out to the Justice Department, Pirro’s office and Trader Joe’s for comment.

The judge warned of racial profiling, addressing Riley in court.

“The police are out there looking for everybody, and it seems they’re looking for people that look like you,” Faruqui said, according to HuffPost. “You can’t go into a grocery store without getting stopped and illegally searched. Do you understand?”

Riley’s lawyer said: “He was just walking into Trader Joe’s to get some food.”

Judge takes on Trump over DC takeover as he tosses Trader Joe’s gun stop case: ‘Lawlessness cannot come from the government’
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
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WASHINGTON (AP) — A watchdog investigation into former special counsel Jack Smith over his prosecutions of President Donald Trump is based on an “imaginary and unfounded” premise, Smith's lawyers wrote in a letter obtained by The Associated Press on Tuesday.

The letter marks the first response by Smith and his legal team to news that the Office of Special Counsel, an independent watchdog office, had launched an investigation into whether Smith engaged in improper political activity through his criminal inquiries into Trump.




The attorneys told Jamieson Greer, the acting head of the office, that his investigation into Smith was “wholly without merit.”

“Mr. Smith’s actions as Special Counsel were consistent with the decisions of a prosecutor who has devoted his career to following the facts and the law, without fear or favor and without regard for the political consequences, not because of them,” wrote Smith's lawyers, Lanny Breuer and Peter Koski.

The Office of Special Counsel, which is totally distinct from the Justice Department special counsel position that Smith held for more than two years starting in November 2022, confirmed the investigation following a request from Republican Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas, who asked it to examine Smith's activities for potential violations of the Hatch Act, a federal law that bans certain public officials from engaging in political activity.



President Donald Trump listens as he meets with South Korean President Lee Jae Myung in the Oval Office of the White House, Monday, Aug. 25, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)© The Associated Press
Cotton had alleged that Smith sought to interfere in the 2024 presidential election through his prosecutions and sought to effectively fast-track the cases toward resolution, including by asking the Supreme Court to weigh in on a key legal question before a lower court had a chance to review the issue.




But Smith's lawyers say that argument is contradicted by the facts and note that no court ruling or other authority prohibits prosecutors from investigating allegations of criminal conducts against candidates for office. Politics, they say, played no part in the decision to bring the cases.

“A review of the record and procedural history demonstrates the opposite — Mr. Smith was fiercely committed to making prosecutorial decisions based solely on the evidence, he steadfastly followed applicable Department of Justice guidelines and the Principles of Federal Prosecution, and he did not let the pending election influence his investigative or prosecutorial decision-making,” Smith's lawyers wrote.

“The predicate for this investigation,” they added, “is imaginary and unfounded.”

Smith, who was appointed special counsel under the Biden administration, brought two cases against Trump, one accusing him of conspiring to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election and the other of hoarding classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida. Both were brought in 2023, well over a year before the 2024 presidential election, and indictments in the two cases cited what Smith and his team described as clear violations of well-established federal law.


Both cases were abandoned by Smith after Trump’s November win, with the prosecutor citing longstanding Justice Department policy prohibiting the indictment of a sitting president.


Inquiry into former Trump prosecutor Jack Smith is based on 'imaginary premise,' lawyers say
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
83,547
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A federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration’s bid to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia — a Salvadoran man who has become a symbol of President Donald Trump’s mass deportation agenda — to Uganda.

U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis on Monday ordered the administration to keep Abrego in a detention facility in Virginia while she weighs his renewed effort to prevent immigration officials from abruptly casting him out of the country for a second time in five months.


The administration illegally deported Abrego to El Salvador in March and then brought him back to the U.S. in June to face criminal charges. Abrego now contends that the administration’s new plan to deport him to Uganda is an illegal effort to punish him for refusing to plead guilty to those charges.




His lawyers say the administration offered to deport him to Costa Rica — but only if he pleaded guilty to the human smuggling charges he faces in Tennessee. Costa Rica has agreed to accept him and give him refugee status, and Abrego has consented to being sent there.
His first deportation was deemed illegal because it violated a 2019 order from an immigration judge that barred him from being sent to El Salvador over concerns that he could be targeted for persecution by a local gang that had extorted his family. After initially resisting court orders to “facilitate” his return to the U.S., the administration brought him back in June and charged him in the human smuggling case.
Last week, he was released from jail in Tennessee and allowed to return to Maryland to rejoin his family.
Early Monday morning, surrounded by a crowd of supporters and

accompanied by his wife, Abrego showed up at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in Baltimore for a scheduled “check-in.” ICE officers detained Abrego on the spot, his attorney Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg said at a press conference outside the building where his client was arrested.

The Department of Homeland Security said he would be “processed for removal to Uganda.”

In a last-ditch legal maneuver on Monday morning, Abrego asked Xinis to block his quick deportation and instead ensure he receives another full immigration trial and a chance to contest the circumstances of his removal from the country.


“That’s what we are going to be asking the district court to ensure, that he is not put on any flight to any country whatsoever, whether it’s Uganda, South Sudan, what have you,” Sandoval-Moshenberg said, as several Abrego backers punctuated the press conference with cries of “Free Kilmar!”

A Homeland Security spokesperson called Abrego’s latest legal action “a desperate Hail Mary attempt.”

At a hearing Monday afternoon, Xinis said she had several concerns about the rapid-fire deportation proceedings, noting that Abrego might be entitled to go to his designated country of choice — Costa Rica — rather than Uganda. She also said that if the Justice Department used his deportation as a cudgel to coerce a guilty plea, it would be a violation of his constitutional rights.

“You can’t condition the relinquishment of constitutional rights in that regard,” Xinis said.

Justice Department attorney Drew Ensign said Abrego’s deportation was not “imminent” and that the government would abide by court orders not to deport him while legal proceedings are underway.


Abrego, who entered the U.S. illegally over a decade ago, has lived in Maryland with his wife and children, who are U.S. citizens. To his supporters, his saga represents the most extreme excesses and abuses of Trump’s mass deportation policy. After erroneously deporting Abrego to El Salvador in March, the administration mobilized to defend the mistake and embarked on a campaign to portray Abrego — who has no criminal convictions — as a terrorist, criminal mastermind and violent gang leader. Judge after judge rejected the administration’s assertions as flimsy, at best, and concluded Abrego had been deprived of his constitutional right to due process.

Abrego was abruptly arrested and sent to El Salvador in mid-March on one of three planes that also carried more than 100 people subject to Trump’s invocation of the Alien Enemies Act.

Upon his arrival in El Salvador, Abrego was held for several weeks in the notorious anti-terrorism prison known as CECOT. He said in court papers that he suffered beatings, sleep deprivation and psychological torture there. In early June, two weeks after the Justice Department secretly secured a grand jury indictment against him for human smuggling, the administration brought him back to the United States.


Abrego’s detention Monday took place despite a July order from Xinis in an earlier case, mandating that officials “restore Abrego Garcia to his ICE Order of Supervision,” a type of release for individuals facing deportation proceedings.
The new lawsuit was also assigned to Xinis, an Obama appointee. Under a standing Maryland federal court order the Trump administration is challenging, the filing of the case resulted in an automatic order blocking Abrego’s deportation through Wednesday afternoon. But Xinis’ order on Monday adds another, indefinite layer of protection for Abrego while his legal fight continues.
Sandoval-Moshenberg said Abrego was heartened by the crowd that turned out to support him Monday and by those who drew attention to his situation while he was jailed in El Salvador.
“This is a person who didn’t even know that he had anyone looking out for him, much less the entire nation for the three months that he was detained in El Salvador,” the attorney said. “This is a person who, you know, feared that the world had forgotten about him.”

 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
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BALTIMORE (AP) — A federal judge on Tuesday threw out the Trump administration’s lawsuit against Maryland’s entire federal bench in an emphatic ruling that underscored the extraordinary nature of the suit, slamming it as “potentially calamitous.”

U.S. District Judge Thomas Cullen, who was nominated by President Donald Trump, also criticized the administration’s attacks on the judiciary, highlighting in a footnote that White House officials in recent months had described judges as “rogue,” “unhinged” and “crooked,” among other epithets.

“Although some tension between the coordinate branches of government is a hallmark of our constitutional system, this concerted effort by the Executive to smear and impugn individual judges who rule against it is both unprecedented and unfortunate,” he wrote.


The Trump administration filed a notice of appeal.

At issue in the lawsuit is an order by the chief judge of the Maryland district court that stopped the immediate deportation of migrants challenging their removals. The Justice Department said the automatic pause impeded the president’s authority to enforce immigration laws, and it sought a court order blocking it.

Cullen said allowing the suit to continue “would run counter to overwhelming precedent, depart from longstanding constitutional tradition, and offend the rule of law.”

“In their wisdom, the Constitution’s framers joined three coordinate branches to establish a single sovereign,” Cullen wrote. “That structure may occasionally engender clashes between two branches and encroachment by one branch on another’s authority. But mediating those disputes must occur in a manner that respects the Judiciary’s constitutional role.”

Unfavorable rulings for Trump
The lawsuit, which the Justice Department filed in June, was a remarkable legal maneuver, ratcheting up the Trump administration’s fight with the federal judiciary. The department has grown increasingly frustrated by rulings blocking Trump’s agenda, repeatedly accusing federal judges of improperly impeding his powers.

“The Maryland court’s order upholds a direct assault on the President’s ability to enforce the immigration laws,” White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said in a statement Tuesday. “This will not be the final say on the matter, and the Trump Administration looks forward to ultimate victory on the issue.”

Trump has railed against unfavorable judicial rulings and in one case called for the impeachment of a federal judge in Washington who ordered planeloads of deported immigrants to be turned around. In July, the Justice Department filed a misconduct complaint against that judge.

The Maryland judges, represented by prominent conservative lawyer Paul Clement, argued the administration’s lawsuit sought to limit the power of the judiciary to review certain immigration proceedings while it pursued a mass deportation agenda.

Among the judges named in the lawsuit was Paula Xinis, who found the Trump administration in March illegally deported Kilmar Abrego Garcia to El Salvador — a case that quickly became a flashpoint in Trump’s immigration crackdown.


Cullen, who was nominated to the federal bench by Trump in 2020, serves in the Western District of Virginia but was tapped to oversee the case because all 15 of Maryland’s federal judges were named as defendants along with the court clerk and the court itself, a highly unusual circumstance he noted in his ruling.

“In casting its wide net, the Executive ensnared an entire judicial body — a vital part of this coordinate branch of government — and its principal officers in novel and potentially calamitous litigation,” he wrote.

Cullen found the administration lacked the legal authority to bring the suit, but he said even if it could, the judges were immune. Instead of the “more confrontational” approach of a lawsuit, the administration should have appealed the chief judge’s order, he wrote, calling that the “tried-and-true recourse available to all federal litigants.”

“One branch’s alleged infringement on another’s exclusive power does not license a constitutional free-for-all,” he wrote.

What the Maryland judge’s order said
Signed by Chief Maryland District Judge George L. Russell III, the order at issue in this case prevents the Trump administration from immediately deporting any immigrants seeking review of their detention in Maryland district court. It blocks their removal until 4 p.m. on the second business day after the filing of their habeas corpus petitions, which allow people to challenge their detention by the government.

The order says it aims to maintain existing conditions and the potential jurisdiction of the court, ensure immigrant petitioners are able to participate in court proceedings and access attorneys and give the government “fulsome opportunity to brief and present arguments in its defense.”

In an amended order pausing deportations, Russell said the court had received an influx of habeas petitions after hours that “resulted in hurried and frustrating hearings in that obtaining clear and concrete information about the location and status of the petitioners is elusive.”


Attorneys for the Trump administration accused the Maryland judges of prioritizing a regular schedule, writing in court documents that “a sense of frustration and a desire for greater convenience do not give Defendants license to flout the law.”

Clement, who served as solicitor general under Republican President George W. Bush, denounced the suit during a hearing earlier this month.


“The executive branch seeks to bring suit in the name of the United States against a co-equal branch of government,” he said. “There really is no precursor for this suit”

___

Thanawala reported from Atlanta.

 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
83,547
119,277
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Associated Press's master chart of Trump's humiliating legal defeats.

1756244953218.png
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
83,547
119,277
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The Trump administration has been persistent in its efforts to deport Kilmer Abrego Garcia, a migrant previously deported to El Salvador without charge due to an “administrative error,” and on Monday, defiantly violated a federal judge’s order as it pertains to the case, according to new court documents.




Now facing charges of human trafficking, Garcia was released from a Tennessee prison on Friday, only to surrender himself to an Immigrations and Customs Enforcement facility on Monday. Yet, despite an order from U.S. Magistrate Judge Barbara Holmes that Garcia be granted access to his legal counsel, ICE officials have ignored such requests, according to new filings from his legal team.

“Defense counsel called (an ICE) phone number to request a legal call, and the operator was unable to schedule a call, directing counsel to send an email,” reads the legal filing, submitted on Monday.



“Counsel then emailed the ICE email address and requested a legal call; we have yet to receive any response. This process does not comply with Magistrate Judge Holmes’s release order, which required the government to facilitate access to Mr. Abrego if he were taken into ICE custody.”


Garcia has gone on to become a flashpoint in the broader debate over immigration enforcement, with his initial arrest and deportation sparking outrage over the lack of due process afforded to the El Salvadorian native.

He was returned to the United States only after a federal judge ordered the Trump administration to do so, after which the Justice Department filed new charges against him, with Trump and Justice Department officials frequently making disparaging remarks about his character.

The DOJ reportedly offered Garcia a plea deal in an attempt to get itself “out of hot water:” agree to be deported to Costa Rica with the promise of not being incarcerated. Garcia has apparently rejected the offer, sparking the DOJ to now try to deport him to Uganda.

Trump admin immediately violates judge's orders in high-profile case: court filing
 

Valcazar

Just a bundle of fucking sunshine
Mar 27, 2014
37,016
74,450
113
I love the fact that she ain't leaving. Trump is playing a dangerous game with this. The markets are not going to trust the Fed, which will put doubt on many aspects of the US monetary policy and hurt investments....

Also, isn't it interesting that he is attempting to fire the only black female member of the FOMC....And, over unproven allegations. Hell, she hasn't even been charged.
Not so much interesting as probably strategic.
They can always yell "DEI hire!" and a lot of idiots will just immediately start barking it out like seals on a loop.
 

silentkisser

Master of Disaster
Jun 10, 2008
4,545
5,828
113
I know you wanted to call Trump racist and bigot so hard...you just can't because he's not.
I sure can. He is a racist and bigot. He has a loooooong history of saying and doing racist things. I could list them, but you'd just fall back on some bullshit like "that was in the past..."

You can pretend all you want that he isn't, but I think anyone with critical thinking skills would come to the conclusion that he is a racist and bigot. And, because you lack those skills, I see you defend him...
 

richaceg

Well-known member
Feb 11, 2009
17,500
8,596
113
I sure can. He is a racist and bigot. He has a loooooong history of saying and doing racist things. I could list them, but you'd just fall back on some bullshit like "that was in the past..."

You can pretend all you want that he isn't, but I think anyone with critical thinking skills would come to the conclusion that he is a racist and bigot. And, because you lack those skills, I see you defend him...
how is he a racist? how is he a bigot...you can make the list but i can tell it's flawed so why bother right? Anyone with critical thinking could tell one has TDS...I can tell...
 
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