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Schumer even introduced legislation to fight DOGE, titled (I’m not making this up) “Stop the Steal Act” — choosing the very phrase Trump used leading up to January 6 to express the false view that the 2020 election had been stolen.
The crowd spontaneously began chanting, “Lock him up! Lock him up! Lock him up!” — another Trump flashback from his 2016 campaign against Hillary Clinton.
Yesterday, Trump posted one of his most electrifying missives yet, which the New York Times querulously headlined, “In revoking Biden’s security clearance, Trump makes clear his motivation is payback.” The article was written by our old friend David Sanger, the Times’ sneering, Deep-State mouthpiece.
Late in the article, it finally, grudgingly admitted that Joe Biden originally broke the long-standing DC tradition of extending security courtesy to former presidents. The Cabbage made political history by revoking Trump’s security clearance, allegedly over January 6th and a basic need-to-know argument. “What value is giving him an intelligence briefing?” Mr. Biden rhetorically asked CBS’s Norah O’Donnell in 2021, who came up just as empty-handed as Biden.
Here is Trump’s glorious truth, perfectly capturing the spirit of The Apprentice, reprinted here in its entirety for your enjoyment:
Sanger’s article seethed with barely concealed resentment. Revenge! The truth is that it was Biden who left the rake out in the yard in 2021, when Biden did it first, making Trump’s cancelation of Biden’s security clearance practically routine.
The Swamp is going to need a bigger unemployment database. CNBC ran a story yesterday headlined, “Unemployment spikes in Washington, D.C., as Trump and Musk begin efforts to shrink the government.” The sub-headline added, “Jobless filings in Washington, D.C., surged to 1,780 for the week ending Feb. 8, a +36% increase from the prior week.” Pro tip: get out of Washington.
During the disastrous Obama-era economy, as jobs for people outside government crashed and burned, Nancy Pelosi infamously coined the term “funemployment.” The fossilized Speaker urged people collecting generous government unemployment benefits to spend time traveling, writing poetry, painting landscapes, and starting up NGO’s to teach transgender basket-weaving techniques to Namibian kindergartners.
It’s fun!
During the first two years of the pandemic, as ordinary Americans lost our jobs and small businesses by the millions, we were constantly assured by our federal betters that we were sacrificing for the common good. Meanwhile, the federal workforce metastasized, swelling like a taxpayer-funded tumor. Government workers got paid to ‘work from home’—which meant collecting full salaries, grant payments, and dead grandmothers’ Social Security checks between Netflix binges.
Maybe now it’s federal workers’ turn to sacrifice something for the common good.
Prepare for corporate media to circulate their perennial “hardest hit” sob stories, interviewing scores of bizarrely named ex-federal workers on food stamps who used to work on critically important projects like measuring the immeasurable land speed of treadmilled tortoises, mapping the astonishing diversity of prairie dog dialects, or making sure dead people kept getting their Social Security checks.
But remember: Trump gave them a chance. He offered eight month’s severance to any federal worker that wanted to take the deal. They didn’t take the deal.
There’s an old saying about making your own bed. It goes something like, if you make your own bed, you have to clean out the cheeto crumbs by yourself. Or words to that effect. They made their own beds. Don’t fall for media guilt manipulation.
Trump promised to drain the Swamp, and he meant it, this time. I’d only ask that he turn the draining machine up to 11.
"Trump promised to drain the Swamp, and he meant it, this time. I’d only
ask that he turn the draining machine up to 11."
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