Today in Fascism

Nice pivot on Trump's part.

Has to do something about the enriched uranium, then get the F out. I think there was hope that there would be an internal uprising, but radical islam is just too dominant of a force and it has strong appeal to muslim men. aka "Yo bitch, do exactly as I say or I can legally kill you, and send your sister over".
The citizens aren’t armed. They have no way to defend themselves from a radical authoritarian regime that kills its own citizens, rounds people up without due process, uses state funds for the military instead of infrastructure and to help the people, limits voting rights, imposes undue taxes, covers up fraud and crimes committed by the friends of the regime and starts foreign wars of choice. Oh wait, that’s the USA now . . . where’s all the 2A people ready to defend against a tyrannical government?
 
TGIFF🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

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The citizens aren’t armed. They have no way to defend themselves from a radical authoritarian regime that kills its own citizens, rounds people up without due process, uses state funds for the military instead of infrastructure and to help the people, limits voting rights, imposes undue taxes, covers up fraud and crimes committed by the friends of the regime and starts foreign wars of choice. Oh wait, that’s the USA now . . . where’s all the 2A people ready to defend against a tyrannical government?
Thanks, Joy Reid.


When did our elections get cancelled? The self-loathing American act is so tiresome.
 
OBAMA'S SS CODE NAME‼️

RENEGADE

Renegade: A person who deserts and betrays an organization, country, or set of principles.

Synonyms: Traitor, Defector, Deserter, Turncoat, Rebel, Mutineer.

Did Barry actually choose this name, or was it chosen for him?

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There was a time in this country when fame required something resembling substance. You wrote a symphony, discovered a comet, cured a disease, or at the very least you could sing, act, or throw a baseball farther than the next guy. Now the conveyor belt of American celebrity has been hijacked by the loudest, dumbest carnival barkers the algorithm can find. Enter Jake Paul, YouTube’s favorite professional attention addict, stomping onto the national stage like another inflatable mascot for the Trump circus. Of course he fits right in. A perfect example of how low the bar can sink. The current administration is a museum of television rejects, failed pundits, grifting influencers, and assorted wannabe celebrities who would happily sell their souls, their neighbors, and the family dog to Donald Trump if it meant another minute of camera time and a chance to fleece hardworking Americans waving flags and believing they’re watching patriotism instead of performance art.

This is what happens when politics stops being governance and becomes reality television. Rupert Murdoch and the FOX “entertainment” propaganda coven figured it out years ago: if you keep people angry, scared, and entertained long enough, they stop asking questions. They stop demanding competence. They stop caring about truth. What they get instead is a steady diet of outrage theater, a 24-hour carnival of grievance where every loudmouth with a microphone gets promoted to prophet and every con man gets rebranded as a patriot. Minds that might have been capable of compassion, creativity, and genuine civic spirit are slowly warped into something smaller, meaner, and easier to manipulate. In another universe, some of these people might have been teachers, musicians, inventors, or neighbors you’d actually want to sit next to at a barbecue. In this one, they’re drafted as co-conspirators in Trump’s cult of personality, cheering while the country gets strip-mined for ratings.

America, has been taken over by the lowest common denominator, and we’ve marketed the hell out of it. Ignorance is no longer a liability; it’s a brand. Hillbilly chic is in fashion. The redneck is now a cultural icon. The trailer park is practically prime real estate in the national imagination. Television channels that once showed documentaries about the oceans, the cosmos, and the fragile miracle of life on this planet now compete to showcase the most spectacular parade of human flotsam imaginable: toothless gator hunters screaming into the swamp, greasy pawnbrokers haggling over junk, deranged families weaponizing dysfunction for ratings, freakish children turned into viral commodities, and the eternal procession of vacant, IQ-deprived “celebrities” whose only talent is being famous for being famous. Somewhere along the way, curiosity lost to spectacle, wisdom lost to noise, and character lost to the camera.

The terrifying part is not that these people exist. Every society has its clowns and charlatans. The terrifying part is that we have elevated them, polished them, amplified them, handed them microphones and government offices and millions of viewers who mistake volume for authority. We’ve built a culture that rewards shamelessness and punishes thoughtfulness. A culture where expertise is mocked, cruelty is applauded, and the loudest fool in the room is crowned king. When a YouTube provocateur can slide seamlessly into the orbit of American power, it’s not a glitch. It’s the logical endpoint of a system that has spent thirty years confusing entertainment with leadership.

So the real question isn’t how low we’ve sunk. That part is obvious every time another influencer, conspiracy peddler, or TV carnival act gets paraded through the political arena as if they belong there. The real question is how we claw our way back. How we rediscover the parts of ourselves that valued intelligence, kindness, humility, and actual accomplishment. Because somewhere beneath all the noise and the propaganda and the reality-show politics, those parts of America still exist. They’re just buried under a mountain of cheap spectacle. And if we ever want to rise from the ashes of this era, it’s going to require something far more radical than another election cycle. It’s going to require remembering who the fuck we were before we started mistaking the circus for the country.

—Michael Jochum, Not Just a Drummer: Reflections on Art, Politics, Dogs, and the Human Condition.
 
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