In other news, a website doxxed every single Tesla owner. :eek:
Like all of them.
Names, addresses, phone numbers.


This has apparently spawned a special forces domestic threat advisory?


Looks like the democrat's organization Indivisible is planning a monster protest March 29th by protesting at all 277 Tesla dealerships in the country simultaneously along with hundreds around the world. :eek:

Camping at Supercharger stations too.

I will mark next Saturday on my calendar.
 
It seems that the crazy magas want Trump carved into Mount Rushmore, probably would be better to throw him off Mount Rushmore.
 
Trump gives top secret war plans to Musk and there, Putin and Xi.

Musk Set to Get Access to Top-Secret U.S. Plan for Potential War With China​

Giving Elon Musk access to some of the nation’s most closely guarded military secrets is a major expansion of his role as an adviser to President Trump and highlights his conflicts of interest.

20dc-musk-pentagon-hqpg-articleLarge.jpg

President Trump with Elon Musk and Mr. Musk’s son X, at the White House this month. It is unclear what the reasoning is for providing Mr. Musk such a sensitive briefing.Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times

By Eric SchmittEric LiptonJulian E. BarnesRyan Mac and Maggie Haberman

The Pentagon is scheduled on Friday to brief Elon Musk on the U.S. military’s plan for any war that might break out with China, two U.S. officials said on Thursday.

Another official said the briefing will be China focused, without providing additional details. A fourth official confirmed Mr. Musk was to be at the Pentagon on Friday, but offered no details.

Providing Mr. Musk access to some of the nation’s most closely guarded military secrets would be a dramatic expansion of his already extensive role as an adviser to President Trump and leader of his effort to slash spending and purge the government of people and policies they oppose.

It would also bring into sharp relief the questions about Mr. Musk’s conflicts of interest as he ranges widely across the federal bureaucracy while continuing to run businesses that are major government contractors. In this case, Mr. Musk, the billionaire chief executive of both SpaceX and Tesla, is a leading supplier to the Pentagon and has extensive financial interests in China.

Pentagon war plans, known in military jargon as O-plans or operational plans, are among the military’s most closely guarded secrets. If a foreign country was to learn how the United States planned to fight a war against them, it could reinforce its defenses and address its weaknesses, making the plans far less likely to succeed.

The top-secret briefing for the China war plan has about 20 to 30 slides that lay out how the United States would fight such a conflict. It covers the plan beginning with the indications and warning of a threat from China to various options on what Chinese targets to hit, over what time period, that would be presented to Mr. Trump for decisions, according to officials with knowledge of the plan.

A White House spokesman did not respond to an email seeking comment about the purpose of the visit, how it came about, whether Mr. Trump was aware of it, and whether the visit raises questions of conflicts of interest. The White House has not said whether Mr. Trump signed a conflicts of interest waiver for Mr. Musk.

After The Times published this article, Sean Parnell, the chief Defense Department spokesman, said in a statement: “The Defense Department is excited to welcome Elon Musk to the Pentagon on Friday. He was invited by Secretary Hegseth and is just visiting.”

The meeting reflects the extraordinary dual role played by Mr. Musk, who is both the world’s wealthiest man and has been given broad authority by Mr. Trump.Mr. Musk has a security clearance, and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth can determine who has a need to know about the plan. A choice of sharing lots of technical details with Mr. Musk, however, is another matter.
 

Top Democrat-affiliated law firm offers $40m in legal services to Trump administration as part of deal to end executive order​

The Trump administration and a top, Democrat-affiliated law firm reached an agreement for the White House to drop an executive order targeting the firm in exchange for the company doing tens of millions of dollars in free legal work to support administration initiatives.

The unusual development marks a new chapter in the White House’s retribution campaign against law firms it deems to have opposed its agenda or unfairly targeted Donald Trump.

Under the agreement, Trump will drop his executive order last week aimed at the firm of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP. The order suspended the firm’s security clearances, barred it from federal buildings, and threatened government contractors that did business with the firm.

In exchange for dropping the order, Paul, Weiss agreed to represent clients from “the full spectrum of political viewpoints,” commit to not using diversity hiring, and offer $40 million in pro bono legal services to support administration initiatives in areas like aiding veterans, promoting fairness in the justice system, and combatting antisemitism.

The president announced the deal on social media on Thursday evening and singled out Mark Pomerantz, a former Paul, Weiss partner who later helped the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office build a criminal case against Trump.

The President is agreeing to this action in light of a meeting with Paul, Weiss Chairman Brad Karp, during which Mr. Karp acknowledged the wrongdoing of former Paul, Weiss partner Mark Pomerantz the grave dangers of Weaponization, and the vital need to restore our System of Justice,” Trump wrote.

The Independent has contacted Pomerantz for comment.

Since taking office, Trump has used executive orders to target three “BigLaw” corporate firms somehow involved in efforts he opposes, including Paul, Weiss; Covington & Burling, which aided special counsel Jack Smith as his office brought a federal case against Trump; and Perkins Coie, which represented the 2016 Hillary Clinton president campaign.

Last week, a federal judge blocked enforcement of the order against Perkins Coie, finding the order was likely unconstitutional because it was based in “retaliatory animus” and “viewpoint discrimination.”

Some legal observers expressed dismay over Thursday’s agreement between the White House and Paul, Weiss.

“It’s usually the lawyers who work at BigLaw who come to learn the truth of the maxim, ‘If you’re a tool, you’re going to be picked up and used,’” Craig Gurian of the Anti-Discrimination Center wrote on X. “This time, it’s the law firm (Paul Weiss) itself.”

“A lot of this is likely stuff Paul, Weiss was already doing, or would do anyway, or doesn't really mind. But it reads like genuflecting to the King, at a time when law firms are under attack,” added legal commentator Rich Schoenstein on X. “Law firms should not reach any agreement with anybody about how they are going to pick their clients.”


Critics of the administration warned that the Trump administration’s efforts against the firm were part of a larger crackdown on political dissent from the left.

The administration has encouraged investigations of the Democratic ActBlue fundraising platform, threatened to cut funding for universities that were the site of anti-Israel protests, and attempted to deport Columbia University pro-Palestine protest leader Mahmoud Khalil, a legal permanent resident the Secretary of State deemed was harmful to U.S. foreign policy positions.

Democratic Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut said in an X post on Thursday that the orders against the law firm are part of a “coordinated, relentless legal assault on political dissent.”

The Independent has always had a global perspective. Built on a firm foundation of superb international reporting and analysis, The Independent now enjoys a reach that was inconceivable when it was launched as an upstart player in the British news industry. For the first time since the end of the Second World War, and across the world, pluralism, reason, a progressive and humanitarian agenda, and internationalism – Independent values – are under threat. Yet we, The Independent, continue to grow.
https://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/worl...1&cvid=e919e176fc8c4d139bfc1ad29ec34a7a&ei=43
 
With Musk at the defense department, I feel like it would be the best to include a variety of false information that could be fed to the CCP, doing so in conjunction with other turned agents that would so corroborate it.

Part of the, I think it was the Abwehr, certainly the SS, to feed both true and false information to Stalin so that he could not tell which was real and which was fake.

Sewing doubt in the minds of the enemy is a valuable tactic.
 
With Musk at the defense department, I feel like it would be the best to include a variety of false information that could be fed to the CCP, doing so in conjunction with other turned agents that would so corroborate it.

Part of the, I think it was the Abwehr, certainly the SS, to feed both true and false information to Stalin so that he could not tell which was real and which was fake.

Sewing doubt in the minds of the enemy is a valuable tactic.
Trump and his enablers are not that smart. Their goal is get richer and more powerful by destroying the US.
 
Well, except when Luigi shoots the healthcare CEO :lol:
Personal interaction maybe, but the story, no.

Some stories do. This one was a little disturbing


In short, a Trump supporter saw his wife detained by ICE, returning from honeymoon, yet does not regret his vote. This bodes poorly.
 
And what is the secret mechanism that keeps people from electing stupid people ?

In the “old days,” when good news was reported, the Stock Market would go up. Today, when good news is reported, the Stock Market goes down. Big mistake, and we have so much good (great) news about the economy!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) February 7, 2018
 
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I don’t think you get elected president being stupid. Amoral and wrong, sure, but not stupid.
The "wrong" bit is the one where stupid gets indistinguishable.

The problem the US has with these rich people, is that rich people are shielded from reality, and mostly the consequences of their own actions. It's similar elsewhere, but the US is particularly set up to allow this. So now it's full-bore "politics of irreality" on display with Trump.

But it will be interesting to see how, when and to what extent, reality catches up with all this.
 
Trump managed to snatch the title of “Worst President of the US” away from Bush. A feat I’d never thought would be possible.
Dang, Dubya looking like a dignified, wise statesman in retrospect. Who would have thought it possible... 😵‍💫
 
Dang, Dubya looking like a dignified, wise statesman in retrospect. Who would have thought it possible... 😵‍💫
GWB was dead wrong, and prone to auto-suggestion, about some specific things inte international politics, in the end criminally so. But Trump is straight up delusional – with a hefty side-order of demands of loyalty that require not questioning his delusions.

So now everyone in world politics is working around Trump's delusions, to try to position themselves favourably regardless, and possibly looking for the opportunities that might arise from Trump still ending up confronted by reality, and being forced to change his mind. (If that is possible – it might just break him to have to...)
 
This has apparently spawned a special forces domestic threat advisory?


Looks like the democrat's organization Indivisible is planning a monster protest March 29th by protesting at all 277 Tesla dealerships in the country simultaneously along with hundreds around the world. :eek:

Camping at Supercharger stations too.

I will mark next Saturday on my calendar.
The text of that substack (of course it's substack) post is in many ways more scary than the existence of the alert. This is democracy-killing paranoia writ large.
 
I never thought I would say this in a million years, I miss George W. Bush. Hell, this is coming from a person who loathed him and his administration back in the day. While he has done his misadventures in Iraq has garnered criticisms from the world (and other things that warrant criticisms that I don’t remember off the top of my head), at least Bush didint turn the US into a pariah state.

Trump managed to snatch the title of “Worst President of the US” away from Bush. A feat I’d never thought would be possible.
The thing is, Trump is simply the ugly consequence and, in some way, heir of Bush. Trump is basically Bush pushed farther : more stupid, more anti-intellectual, more chauvinist, more unilateral, more pro-wealth, etc.
In many ways, Putin and Trump are simply following on the big break in the world order that Bush created in 2001. He, himself, was certainly less terrible than Trump, but he's one of the big enablers by being directly responsible of the global state that made Trumpism strong.
 
The thing is, Trump is simply the ugly consequence and, in some way, heir of Bush. Trump is basically Bush pushed farther : more stupid, more anti-intellectual, more chauvinist, more unilateral, more pro-wealth, etc.
In many ways, Putin and Trump are simply following on the big break in the world order that Bush created in 2001. He, himself, was certainly less terrible than Trump, but he's one of the big enablers by being directly responsible of the global state that made Trumpism strong.

Yeah, I mean, it's important to remember that by declaring the War on Terror and pursuing novel theories of Presidential power, Bush really paved the road that Trump is walking down.
 
The text of that substack (of course it's substack) post is in many ways more scary than the existence of the alert. This is democracy-killing paranoia writ large.

Luigi murdered that healthcare CEO and people cheered.

An Infowars reporter was also murdered recently.

Swatting has skyrocketed lately.

Is it really paranoia if Nazi keeps being broadened to include more and more?


At least this masked man was only furious at her Nazi car, but it might lead to a tragic misunderstanding if people on the spot can't parse the difference.

Peoples' anger is exploding.

Check out what Trump just did. :eek:

 
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So...two murders and one person road raging is "an unprecedented level of violence" in America? Something you would expect to see in "bad" countries?

Yeah. Thoughts and prayers.
 
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