Nothing but the truth. Even if against me.

Nothing but the truth. Even if against me.

Sunday, July 12, 2026

Trump is Immediate and Imminent Threat to Fair Elections















He tried to cheat on the 2024 elections by sending a violent heavily armed mob to attack Congress. Don't you think that a bottom-feeding criminal felon will try again in 2026 and 2028?
HOW MUCH LONGER ARE YOU WILLING TO SEE THIS SOURPUSS JACKASS LOSER WRECKING YOUR LIFE SO MAKES MORE BILLIONS OFF YOUR BACKS?
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Democrats warn of a Trump election takeover. What’s really happening?
Analysis by Zachary B. Wolf, CNN
Sat, July 11, 2026 


Maine residents cast their ballots at a polling station in Augusta, Maine, on June 9, 2026. - CJ Gunther/Getty Images

Democrats are reaching DEFCON 1 levels of alarm about President Donald Trump's efforts to influence the coming election.

"All the signals are flashing red," wrote Democratic strategist and CNN political analyst David Axelrod in a post on X.

"On the square, the @GOP would take a beating this fall, largely because of Trump's unpopularity," Axelrod said, "So he's setting up Plan B–do whatever you need to do to win. Anything. Anyone who says 'Well, he wouldn't do THAT' hasn't paid attention."

Use your imagination, in other words, and don't be surprised at anything Trump does in the four months until Election Day.

Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Florida Democrat, told CNN's John Berman on Friday that people in her overwhelmingly Democratic district are frightened about what might happen in November.

"For the first time in my whole career, John, I have voters telling me that they're worried that the president's going to cancel elections, that he's going to declare martial law. There are people who are actually have said to me that they're worried that they're not even going to have elections in November," Wasserman Schultz said.

She said she tries to reassure her constituents about their more alarmist fears.
Republicans already drew themselves an advantage

Wasserman Schultz is running in a congressional district redrawn as part of the GOP's larger effort to adjust maps to their benefit before November. Democrats countered with their own new maps in states including California, but Republicans were more successful in courts and could net as many as 10 seats in November from new maps drawn during the redistricting war, according to CNN's most recent assessment.

What else is the White House doing to help Republicans in November?

In the US, states are tasked with running their own elections, but Axelrod ticked off a litany of actions that the Trump administration has undertaken to influence them.

The most recent example is Trump's firing on Thursday of three of the four commissioners on the Election Assistance Commission, an agency Congress set up in 2002 as an independent bipartisan resource to dole out federal money to help states conduct secure elections. It's not the only election-related entity to be hobbled. The Federal Election Commission, which handles campaign finance issues, also lacks a quorum of commissioners to operate.

The EAC firings are just one piece of evidence Axelrod offered. I've added context to each of his points below.

… Put that together with political hack Pulte's odious appt as DNI;

(Trump temporarily installed Bill Pulte, a wealthy businessman-turned-housing official, as Director of National Intelligence. While overseeing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac he controversially targeted Trump's political opponents with accusations of mortgage fraud. Pulte lacks intelligence experience, but does have deep ties to the GOP. CNN has reported Trump wants Pulte to focus on election security issues, a nontraditional mandate for the spy chief.)

… election deniers in the most sensitive oversight positions;

(An election denier is president, after all, and he has appointed people who share his views of the 2020 election, which he refuses to admit he lost, throughout the US government.)

… Trump's exec order on mail-in voting, and potential use of the Postal Service as a weapon of subversion;

(Trump has tried to seize control over mail-in voting from states in some key ways, including by creating a national database of voter registrations. States on the right and left have fought the effort, however, and a court this month rejected his attempt to order the US Postal Service to only send mail-in ballots in states that had complied. The court battle will continue on multiple fronts before Election Day.)

… his pathological prioritization of the SAVE act, which would be the most powerful voter suppression tool in generations;

(Trump has loudly complained about Republicans' inability to pass an election security bill that voter integrity groups largely say is unnecessary. He has demanded that senators nix he filibuster to pass the bill, but Republican senators have refused. This week Trump refused to sign a bipartisan housing bill out of pique at lawmakers' failure to pass the election bill, which he calls the SAVE America Act. The election bill will continue to languish and the housing bill will become law without his signature.)

… and his persistent, unfounded claims of election fraud, which he uses to justify extraordinary federal interventions.

(There is no evidence of widespread election fraud, but there is indeed fear that Trump will use claims of fraud, perhaps aerated by Pulte at DNI, to do something extraordinary before November. Mullin was asked at his confirmation hearing about the possibility of dispatching ICE agents to polling places and did not reject it out of hand. But there is no publicly reported concrete plan to do anything like this.)

Attendees hold signs during a rally against the SAVE America Act at a rally outside the US Capitol on March 18, 2026. - Heather Diehl/Getty Images

There are other things Axelrod did not mention

Last year, CNN reported about how the Trump administration, as part of supposed government efficiency efforts, had worked to starve or dismantle election security networks by which the federal government helps states.

This latest effort — firing commissioners at the EAC — likely won't have much of an impact on the coming election, according to watchdog and good government groups. But it is alarming to some of them nonetheless.

Warnings of a slow-moving takeover

"Although the EAC doesn't play a direct role in running elections, we must view this as part of a broader pattern of efforts to centralize control over election administration and tilt the playing field," wrote Michael McNulty, director of policy at Issue One, which describes itself as a "crosspartisan political reform group."

McNulty, whose background is in working in elections overseas, has warned that Trump's efforts amount to a slow-moving election takeover playbook about which everyone should be on guard.

Trump's efforts to exert influence of the coming election have been clear, but they have also been faulty. The Supreme Court recently ruled in favor of states that count mail-in ballots postmarked on time but received after Election Day, for instance, the most high-profile election-related loss for Trump and his allies in court.

There have been multiple other obstacles put in front of Trump by lower courts.

States are taking matters into their own hands

CNN's Fredreka Schouten recently wrote about efforts in blue states to pass laws shielding their elections from federal meddling, either by barring the sharing of voter registration data or barring the presence of federal law enforcement.

Votes will be cast. Votes will be counted

For all of Trump's efforts, Americans should be confident that the coming election will be sound, according to David Becker, founder of the Center for Election Innovation and Research.

By that he means that people will be able to vote and those votes will be counted accurately.

"I'm not even sure the dismissals rank in the top 5 election-related stories this week," he said of the EAC firings. "A Trump-appointed judge quashing the DOJ's subpoena attempting to collect sensitive personal information on poll workers was far more impactful, for instance."

The EAC firings, Becker wrote, are indeed overreach, but "we shouldn't make too much about the effect this will have on the elections, this year and going forward."

Elections are still run by states, as the Constitution requires, he argued, "and they are executing that mission exceptionally well."

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account at CNN.com

Congratulations America. Lady Lindsey Has Departed



Fate must be listening to the exhausted American people. One Senator, "Lady" Lindsey Graham (a closeted gay radical republican whose White Supremacist Christian family values prevented him from coming out of the closet) of the backward and formerly slavery state of South Carolina has just died. Good riddance. May he go 9-feet under.

A radical pro-Trump right-wing extremist, Graham has plagued the country with his extremist positions. Early in the 2016 elections, he warned the country against Trump's candidacy, but then patriotic principles and America took a back stage to narrow-minded right-wing partisanship and Trump sycophancy and he submitted himself to the Trump dictatorship, but everyone knew he didn't think much of Trump. He always advocated violent militaristic policies, including on Iran for the sweet eyes of his Zionist lovers, though he admitted that Trump made a fool of himself with his yo-yo "strategic imbecilic ambiguity" in waging a reckless and poorly-thought-through war.

On a day like today when such good news graces our depressing world, I can only say that hope is always around the corner. 

Good bye, Lady Lindsey, and good riddance.

... and by the way, Trump ass-kissing right-wing senator from the terrible state of Kenfucky Mitch McConnell appears to be next on the stairway to the exclusive whites-only heaven.

Also, some idiot republican dude by the name of Reid Rasner, from the wilderness of Wyoming, is - listen to this - BOTH OPENLY GAY AND REPUBLICAN - and is running for Wyoming's single House seat. What "family" and "Christian" values does this guy believe in? At least Lady Lindsey had the hypocritical smarts to pretend, like all the pro-Trump reverends, preachers and other religious creeps who shout these values from the roof while fornicating, adultering, and pedophiling, and keeping their gay skeleton in the closet. 

On the other hand, maybe Rasner is a closeted Democrat, like John Fetterman is a closeted Republican. (Read about him further below).

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Senator Lindsey Graham, a staunch Trump ally, dies suddenly at 71
The South Carolina lawmaker died after a "brief and sudden illness," his office said on Sunday.


Alan McGuinness
Updated Sun, July 12, 2026


Graham pictured on Saturday during a trip to Ukraine(REUTERS / REUTERS)

Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, a prominent ally of President Trump, has died at the age of 71. Graham died after a "brief and sudden illness," his office posted on X on Sunday, without providing further details.

Media reports said emergency personnel responded to a call for cardiac arrest at the South Carolina lawmaker's Capitol Hill home on Saturday night. Graham had just returned from a trip to Ukraine and was due to appear on NBC's "Meet the Press" on Sunday morning, according to the network.

President leads tributes

Graham, who turned 71 on Friday, had been a senator since 2003 and ran for the Republican presidential nomination in 2016. Shortly after news of his death emerged, President Trump hailed Graham as "one of the greatest people and senators I have ever known" in a post on his Truth Social account.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) said, "My heart is heavy this morning to learn the passing of my friend and colleague, Senator Lindsey Graham."

"He was a strong advocate for the United States and a strong ally to freedom-loving countries across the globe. He believed in the might of America to achieve good in the world and dedicated his life to advancing that cause," Thune said.

President Zelensky meets with Senator Graham in Kyiv on Saturday(via REUTERS / REUTERS)

Graham was a prominent supporter of Israel and Ukraine and an opponent of Iran.

"Lindsey Graham has earned a reputation as a conservative problem-solver and one of the strongest proponents of a robust national defense," his website said, adding that he "consistently pushed for outcomes in the War on Terror that protect our long-term national security interests."

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he was "deeply saddened" by the news, describing the senator as a "true defender of freedom and the values that make our world safer."

Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel's prime minister, also paid tribute. "Israel has lost one of its greatest friends. America has lost a great patriot. I have lost a beloved friend," he said in a statement.

Trump critic turned ally

While Graham was a staunch supporter of President Trump in recent years, that had not always been the case. During his brief run for the presidency in 2016 — Graham withdrew his candidacy before the primaries began — he said the GOP would "get destroyed" if it nominated Trump, adding: "And we will deserve it."

Graham told CNN in 2015 that Trump was "a race-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot." "He doesn't represent my party. He doesn't represent the values that the men and women who wear the uniform are fighting for," he said.

Graham also used a profanity to describe Trump following disparaging comments he made about the late former Sen. John McCain, Graham's closest ally in the Senate and a Vietnam War veteran.

Shortly afterward, Trump read out Graham's personal cellphone number during a South Carolina campaign rally.

Senator Graham and President Trump aboard Air Force on in January(AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Trump continued to criticize Graham throughout the 2016 campaign, even though Graham made it clear he would not support him, despite Trump being the Republican candidate.

But after Trump became president, Graham became a loyal supporter and frequent golf partner.

Graham explained his change of position in a 2018 interview with the Associated Press, saying McCain taught him that the country must move forward after elections and this meant "you have an obligation" to help whoever is president.

He publicly disagreed with Trump's decision upon returning to the Oval Office last year to pardon around 1,500 of his supporters who attacked the U.S. Capitol in 2021, saying it could lead to more violence.

'A powerful advocate for America'

Graham was well known on the international stage, with many of the U.S.'s NATO allies paying tribute to his commitment to the alliance and transatlantic friendship. NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte said Graham was "a powerful advocate for America who believed strongly in the NATO Alliance and was actively working to bring an end to Russia's war against Ukraine."

Graham advised Trump on foreign policy matters, including Iran and Russia. As part of his trip to Ukraine, he announced on Friday an agreement with the Trump administration to proceed with a package of sanctions against Russia.

President Zelensky said Graham, whom he met twice in the past week, had visited Ukraine 10 times since Russia's 2022 invasion and "was here with our people when it was most needed."

Graham had long supported policies aimed at isolating Iran and curtailing its missile and nuclear programs. He backed Trump's decision to strike nuclear sites last year and was a supporter of the latest conflict with Iran.

An anchor on Iranian state television announced Graham's death during a live broadcast, saying: "I congratulate the great nation of Iran on Lindsey Graham, the warmongering and anti-Iranian U.S. senator, having gone to hell."

Veteran senator was seeking fifth term

Graham was recently chair of the Senate Budget Committee and a member of the Committee on Appropriations, the Judiciary Committee and the Committee on Environment and Public Works.

A former Air Force lawyer and member of the South Carolina Air National Guard, Graham was elected to the House of Representatives in 1994 for South Carolina's 3rd congressional district before entering the Senate.

He never married and lived in Seneca, South Carolina.

Graham was set to face Democrat Annie Andrews in November's general election as he sought a fifth term in office.

Under South Carolina law, Republican Governor Henry McMaster will appoint a temporary replacement who will serve until January.

Republicans currently have a narrow 53-47 majority in the Senate ahead of the midterm elections.
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Gay Wyoming Republican sues members of his own party for ‘pedophile’ slur
David Weigel
Fri, July 10, 2026


Gay Wyoming Republican sues members of his own party for ‘pedophile’ slur

Reid Rasner, an openly gay Republican running for Wyoming’s House seat, is suing members of his own party for defamation, including an Iowa man who called him a “pedophile” on Facebook.

Reid Rasner, an openly gay Republican running for Wyoming's sole House seat, is spending the final stretch of the campaign on a project he didn't expect: suing members of his own party for defamation.

On Friday morning, Rasner will settle one case against an Iowa man who called him a "pedophile" under several of his campaign's Facebook posts. Rasner is pursuing another case against a former GOP Wyoming state senator who he alleges led a whisper campaign accusing him of sexual misconduct.

"I've never experienced anything like this in my entire life," said Rasner, 42, who came out when he was 20. "This just isn't the Wyoming I knew or thought I knew. The state needs to come to terms with the hate and ignorance that's fueled death threats and violence against me, all because of my sexuality."

Rasner, a financial adviser who ran for Senate in 2024, has spent $1.2 million of his own money on his campaigns. He's run as a loyal Trump Republican each time; in 2025, he got some national attention for publicizing a personal $47 billion bid to buy TikTok, offering a "clean break from China" on the president's terms.

The attention had downsides. Rasner said that rumors about sexual misconduct started after the TikTok bid and continued into 2026, damaging his reputation and campaign; in May, a poll for Wyoming Secretary of State Chuck Gray's campaign informed respondents that Rasner had "married his gay husband in New York."

That poll showed Rasner — who won 24% of the vote in his 2024 challenge to now-Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso — trailing Gray by single digits, but losing support after voters were informed of his sexuality. Rasner said in an interview that he was frustrated by that, but had only decided to sue over posts that spread a pedophilia rumor.

"Everyone told me: Don't file lawsuits," he said. "I should have filed them on Day One."

In an affidavit, the Iowa man whom Rasner is settling with said that he had shared the pedophilia accusation based on "multiple social media posts and news articles accusing Reid Rasner of serious sexual misconduct," without specifying what they were. As the rumor spread, Rasner put out a short video endorsing "the ultimate punishment" for "anyone convicted of pedophilia."

Ross Hemminger, the president of the LGBTQ group Log Cabin Republicans, praised Rasner for suing. The suggestion that an openly gay candidate was a pedophile, Hemminger said, struck him as the sort of discriminatory rhetoric he thought both parties had moved past.

"I am surprised, because Reid is a very, very conservative person," he said. "Policy-wise, he probably outflanks most people who hold office in Wyoming."

Rasner told Semafor that he had also been kept out of some candidate forums since the rumors started, including one organized by the Wyoming Family Alliance, which is officially opposed to same-sex marriage.

A representative for the WFA said that his exclusion occurred for another reason; forum organizers were worried that the candidate was overly litigious.

Tolerance of LGBTQ Americans and support for same-sex marriage have declined over the last few years, most sharply among Republicans.

According to PRRI's American Values survey, support for same-sex marriage in Wyoming — which did not enshrine it as a legal right until the 2014 Supreme Court decision that overturned state-level bans — is 58%, lower than the national average, and lower among Republicans.

Most people who look at the dip, like Hemminger, credit it to the rise of transgender rights advocacy and the conservative backlash to it. Rasner's position on trans rights is to the right of Trump's; he calls gender medicine for children "child abuse" and says that parents who allow it should "lose their parental rights."

And he got some viral attention for a gag video where he pretended to kick a man (his political rival Gray) out of a women's bathroom. The decline of pro-gay sentiment among Republicans hasn't manifested in many attacks on individual people. Yes, the party marks less celebration of Pride; Trump hasn't commemorated it since 2019, when he was running for reelection the first time. He also took gay icon Harvey Milk's name off a Navy supply ship.

But the administration has kept most commemorations of lesbian, gay, and bisexual Americans while removing commemoration of trans rights, as seen in its reboot of the Stonewall monument.

Direct antigay sentiment has generally lived online, not in Trump's White House. The worry among gay conservatives like Rasner is that it's gaining more traction.
Room for Disagreement

The explosive intraparty backlash to Tennessee GOP Rep. Andy Ogles' claim that "homosexuality has no place in America," led by blue-state Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., suggests there is still some willingness to contain antigay speech on the right.
But that political instinct has not always translated into GOP policy. The White House's anti-DEI orders, for example, have had the practical effect of hamstringing efforts to end HIV, and the administration's report last year on "eradicating anti-Christian bias" condemned Biden-era interpretations of labor law that banned workplace discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.

Saturday, July 11, 2026

Test I of the Lebanon-Israel "Framework Agreement": Imminent Ignition of Civil War II



It all looks great on paper, around the negotiations table and in the photo ops. But now commences the implementation. All the pieces are in place, except one: Hezbollah.

When you compose a giant symphony to be played by a philharmonic orchestra of 80 to 100 musicians, there are lots of preparations, rehearsals, practice, discussions, maintenance of the instruments....Except everyone seems to ignore one of the musicians - the piano player.

Then, on the night of the first performance, when everyone has fooled themselves into believing it will be the grandest of shows, the piano player refuses to play, or plays on the wrong scale and octave, or pits the strings against the brass, and sabotages the entire production.

This is what "stable genius" conductor Trump has been doing for the past several months, assembling lame Lebanese officials with criminal Zionist officials for photo ops destined to market Trump as a peacemaker, and elaborating complex choreographies involving committees and subcommittees, commissions, watchdogs, military panels, boards, delegations and such ... Except that, with the symphony metaphor above, everyone ignores the Hezbollah piano player.

As this grand production gets to its first implementation test, the grand unanswered question is: What will Hezbollah do? All of the production aims at castrating it, but will it willingly submit to its own gonadectomy? It says it won't allow anyone to take its piano away.

The Americans, who have worked assiduously to prevent any other mediator (notably the eternal French sponsors of Lebanon) from having any role in the production, want to push the weapons-destitute Lebanese state into a confrontation with the Iranian Hezbollah in order to protect their Zionist protégé against any harm: Better lose thousands of disposable Lebanese lives than waste ten Yahweh-anointed Judeo-Christian or Christian-Zionist lives or - God forbid - one Jesus-saved American life.

By the way, Lebanese State officials are dumber than Donald Dumb himself for agreeing to negotiate with Israel through a heavily biased pro-Israeli mediator.

And so we wait for the complex dance to begin. Simply put, Lebanese Armed Forces are expected to move into a limited area of the Lebanese south, somehow "peacefully" disarm Hezbollah which will "gently" move out of it (to go where? no one knows), which then convinces Israeli troops to withdraw from that area and "gallantly" return it to the sovereignty of the Lebanese State. The dance is then repeated successively in other designated areas, until such time as the South of Lebanon (which has been gang-raped by Palestinians, Saudis, Israelis, Syrians, Kuwaitis, Egyptians, Libyans and the most recent rapist, the Iranians, for some 60 years) and from which the legitimate Lebanese Armed Forces have been expelled by these brothers, friends and enemies alike, is entirely free of Hezbollah thugs and Israeli barbarians and in the complete control of the Lebanese state and its army.

It's so beautiful... a masterpiece of political masturbation, in theory. Donald Dumb is the greatest political onanist of all history. No one really understands the genius production that wants the strings group to first play alone, then the woodwinds alone, the brass section alone, and last the percussion players alone, and somehow by some magic twist, put all of it together into a coherent symphony, while no one talks to the piano player who is sulking and yelling threatening curses from his corner....

...and emphatically declaring he refuses to play. Or if he is forced by the symphony hall bouncers onto the stage, he might play out of tune, smash the string instruments and throw acid on the brass section, and ruin the whole thing. 

I am unfortunately inclined to believe this looks like one huge symPHONEY cacoPHONEY racket that will pit one orchestra section against another while the criminal conductor pretends not to be looking.
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Per AI:

Lebanon and Israel have moved to the implementation stage of a US-brokered framework agreement signed on June 26, 2026, with the first "pilot zones" in southern Lebanon set to launch within days. Under this landmark deal, the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) will withdraw from specific occupied areas, allowing the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) to assume exclusive security control and begin the process of disarming Hezbollah.

Implementation Mechanics 

A US Central Command (Centcom) delegation has arrived in Beirut to facilitate the transition, while technical teams prepare for further discussions in Rome. The agreement establishes two initial pilot zones—one south and one north of the Litani River—where Israeli troops will pull back only after areas are cleared of Hezbollah infrastructure. A trilateral Military Coordination Group led by the US will oversee the verification of disarmament and the restoration of Lebanese sovereignty.

Challenges and Opposition 

Despite the diplomatic breakthrough, Hezbollah has rejected the deal, refusing to disarm or withdraw from southern Lebanon, which creates a significant risk for the plan's success. While Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu affirmed that Israel will maintain its broader security zone until Hezbollah is fully disarmed, President Joseph Aoun hailed the framework as a critical step toward restoring state authority. Current reports indicate a deadlock on the ground regarding specific withdrawal schedules, though US officials insist the process is progressing.

The Trumpian Misfortunes of America


U.S. Treasury has borrowed $155 billion every month of this fiscal year—and is now paying $24 billion a week in interest on its debts

Despite concerns from debt hawks, the U.S. government is continuing to borrow at pace: For the fiscal year of 2026 so far, the federal deficit has totaled just under $1.4 trillion.

The first nine months of this fiscal year (beginning in October) have now surpassed the borrowing levels of 2025, when deficits totaled just over $1.3 trillion for the same period.

At the time of writing, the total U.S. national debt sits at $39.4 trillion, accumulated under administrations led by both Republicans and Democrats.

What factors are increasing Social Security and Medicare costs?

What is driving the U.S. federal deficit increase?

What solutions are experts proposing for deficit reduction?

How much does the U.S. pay in debt interest?


As such, the monthly borrowing for 2026 now sits at roughly $155 billion, or $39 billion per week. And, like any borrower, that debt carries an interest cost. The latest monthly budget review from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) confirms that net interest on public debt for the fiscal year has hit $857 billion: roughly $23.8 billion a week.

This is approximately $100 billion more (13%) than the interest paid out in the first nine months of 2025, the CBO adds, owing to a higher total debt burden than last year and higher long-term interest rates.

In fact, interest payments on the debt are now $20 billion larger than the outlays for the Departments of Defense, Commerce, Homeland Security, Education, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Small Business Administration, and the U.S. Coronavirus Refundable Credits scheme—combined.

Also contributing to the demand on government purse springs is the increasing demand for social security, Medicare and Medicaid.

Spending for Social Security benefits rose by $62 billion (or 5%) because of increases in average benefits and in the number of beneficiaries, CBO noted. In comparison, Medicare outlays increased by $58 billion (8%) due to higher enrollment and higher payment rates for services. Rising costs per enrollee meant Medicaid spending increased by $49 billion (10%).

This is a trend that isn't going anywhere: The U.S. population is aging. According to the Census Bureau, Americans' median age—the age at which half of the population is younger, and half is older — continues to rise, climbing from 39.2 in 2024 to 39.4 in 2025.

Men's share of the older population is particularly of note, the bureau adds. In 2001, there were 70.6 males for every 100 females age 65 and older, but by 2025, the ratio had increased substantially to 81.6.

Debt trajectory

With the factors influencing Treasury spending only embedding further over the coming decades, those concerned about the U.S. fiscal trajectory are calling for action.

So far, they haven't got much response—though there is a growing sense of urgency among policymakers, according to experts.

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America’s Debt Just Hit a WWII-Era Record While the Economy Booms: The Trap Nobody’s Talking About
Omor Ibne Ehsan
Fri, July 10, 2026 at 10:50 PM GMT+3 4 min read

DeQuadros warns U.S. debt-to-GDP has hit WWII-era levels while GDP grows 2.1%, exhausting the fiscal shock absorber before any recession arrives.

The 10Y-2Y yield spread has collapsed from 0.74% to 0.36%, signaling bond investors are already pricing in slower growth despite strong payroll numbers.

With 10-year yields at 4.48% in the 91st percentile and core PCE elevated, every debt rollover compounds interest costs while the Fed has little room to cut.

Conrad DeQuadros, Head of Economics at Citi Wealth, appeared on Bloomberg Businessweek Daily this week to highlight something that gets lost in the daily grind of earnings and Fed-watching. The United States is running a fiscal deficit that would be alarming in a recession, but the economy is not in one. It is, by most measures, growing. That combination has not really existed since World War Two.

The number that anchors his argument is the debt itself. As of July 6, 2026, U.S. public debt stood at roughly $39.39 trillion. It grows by about $100,584 per second and has added $3.17 trillion over the past year alone. Real GDP grew 2.1% in the first quarter of 2026, following a 4.4% reading in the third quarter of 2025. So the debt is climbing, and so is the economy. That is the paradox.

The WWII-Era Debt Anomaly

DeQuadros framed it directly. "We have debt as a share of GDP... you'd have to go back to World War Two to see levels similar to what we're seeing now. We have very large deficits in an economy that is in good shape." The Treasury's own daily numbers back up the pressure. Fiscal year-to-date withdrawals of $30.13 trillion already exceed deposits of $30.02 trillion, and the Treasury General Account has drawn down from $919 billion on July 1 to $783 billion by July 6. Even routine cash management is tight.

Servicing that stack is the expensive part. The 10-year Treasury yield sits at 4.56%, in the 91.6th percentile of its 12-month range. Every rollover of maturing debt at these levels ratchets up interest expense, and a core PCE reading at the 90.9th percentile gives the Fed little cover to cut aggressively. You can see the full Treasury data on the Daily Treasury Statement.

The Empty Toolbox Risk

Deficit spending is the government's shock absorber. You run deficits during a downturn to soften the landing, then repair the balance sheet when growth returns. DeQuadros's worry is that step two never happened. "If we have deficits this large, when the economy is growing quite solidly... what happens when we inevitably have that downturn and spending has to go up... how do you grow yourself out of it?" 

The bond market seems to be sniffing at this. The 10Y-2Y spread has compressed from a 12-month high of 0.74% in February 2026 to 0.36% on July 7, sitting in the lower 5% of its 12-month range. No inversion yet, but the flattening suggests investors are pricing in slower growth ahead, even as GDP readings remain positive. Goldman Sachs made a similar observation in its 2026 Investment Outlook, noting the U.S. debt-to-GDP ratio approaching a post-war high against a backdrop of $100+ trillion in total global government debt.

The Near-Term Cushion And What Investors Should Watch

The setup is not immediately dire. DeQuadros pointed to employment growth averaging 100,000 per month over the last three months, a real acceleration from 2025 when payrolls barely budged. BLS data confirms it. Nonfarm payrolls stood at 158.98 million in June 2026, up from a range-bound 158.27 million to 158.55 million across all of 2025. Wage growth is supporting consumer spending, and AI-driven productivity gains could extend the expansion, though labor force growth remains very slow.

The practical question is how to sit with a fiscal cushion that has already been spent. Long-duration Treasuries look riskier than usual if the next downturn forces even larger issuance at even higher yields. Equity investors leaning on the assumption that Washington will always deliver a rescue package should read the debt clock more carefully.

DeQuadros summed up the vulnerability. "The concern... is that given that deficits are already so large... will there be that fiscal room to provide that stabilizing force the next time we have a downturn." The economy is fine today. The toolbox is what to watch.

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Deficit Nears $1.4 Trillion in Fiscal Year 2026


Michael Rainey
Fri, July 10, 2026

The federal budget deficit totaled $1.37 trillion in the first nine months of the current fiscal year, according to the latest monthly budget review from the Congressional Budget Office.

The deficit estimate for 2026 surpasses the deficit of $1.34 trillion recorded over the same time period in 2025. The deficit is now about $35 billion higher.

Receipts in the first nine months grew by $142 billion year-over-year, rising to $4.15 trillion, CBO estimates. Higher income and payroll tax revenues drove the increase, along with raised tariff rates, which helped boost customs duty collection by $55 billion, or 51%. The rise in total receipts was partially offset by a decline in corporate income taxes, which fell by $86 billion, or 24%.

Outlays grew more than receipts, rising $178 billion to $5.52 trillion. Spending on Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid rose by $169 billion, or 7%, compared to the year before. The cost of interest on the national debt rose by $98 billion, or 13%, driven by both a larger debt and higher interest rates. Outlays for defense rose $30 billion, or 5%.

There were some reductions in spending in specific areas. Outlays by the Department of Education decreased by $55 billion, or 55%, driven by a reduction in the estimated costs of outstanding student loans. Other departments seeing spending declines include the Environmental Protection Agency (down $20 billion, or 61%), the Department of Homeland Security (down $13 billion, or 15%) and the Department of Commerce (down $10 billion, or 51%).

Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, said that the deficit in 2026 will likely continue to run ahead of the 2025 numbers.

"After the deficit coming down between FY 2024 and 2025 due to the administration's tariff revenue and some one-time changes in spending, the new tax cuts and spending increases are now pushing the deficit above last year's level," MacGuineas said in a statement.

Americans: Be Proud to be Living Under the most Corrupt Administration in US History



The Most Corrupt Presidency in American History, by the Numbers (Excerpts)
Matt Welch
Thu, July 9, 2026

...You have likely never heard the name Trevor Milton, yet in a couple of key respects his 2025 pardon by President Donald Trump was worse than Bill Clinton's pardon of Marc Rich, a multiple-passport-holding, proudly amoral oil trader who specialized in sanctions-circumventing commerce with the likes of Nicolae Ceaușescu and Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. Rich fled to Switzerland in 1983 rather than face a potential life sentence and $1.6 million in fines on 65 counts of wire fraud, trading with the enemy, and tax evasion. (It was the biggest tax evasion case to date in U.S. history, at $48 million—around $150 million today.) Yet Bill Clinton, in the final minutes of his presidency, gifted Rich a midnight pardon.

The founding CEO of the electric vehicle manufacturer Nikola Corporation, Milton in 2022 was convicted on three counts of investor fraud that could have brought him four years in prison and a staggering $676 million worth of mandated restitution to shareholders. Among his more notorious stunts was a 2018 promotional video of a supposedly functional prototype Nikola truck that was not in fact operational but had instead been rolled down a desert hill. 

Milton, represented in court by the brother of then–Attorney General Pam Bondi, was still awaiting final sentencing when he got the call from Trump announcing an unconditional pardon, no restitution (or remorse) required. When asked about the clemency, the president said: "They say the thing that he did wrong was he was one of the first people that supported a gentleman named Donald Trump for president….He supported Trump. He liked Trump." Milton and his wife, The Wall Street Journal reported, had donated "at least $3.2 million to Trump's 2024 election and to political groups and people in Trump's orbit." The couple had not previously demonstrated a financial interest in politics.

Milton had exponentially more in fines and restitutions taken off the table, and he has spent his post-clemency life not in humiliated exile but in lavish Washington excess, hobnobbing with the president and Cabinet members at investment conferences and black-tie events to gin up interest in his latest schemes. Such is the rule, not the exception: When it comes to plausibly pay-for-play pardons, Trump in his second term makes Bill Clinton and every other president look like pikers.

Paul Walczak, a nursing home executive who'd pled guilty to spending his employees' federal tax withholdings on such baubles as a $2 million yacht, was in May 2025 on the verge of commencing an 18-month sentence and paying $4.4 million in fines when Trump issued his get-out-of-jail-free card. On his pardon application, Walczak made the explicit pitch that his mother, Elizabeth Fago, had raised millions of dollars for Trump and the GOP in 2024 campaigns, and additionally assisted the president by publicizing embarrassing revelations from the diary of President Joe Biden's daughter Ashley. Less than three weeks before the pardon, Fago accepted an invitation to attend a million-dollar-per-head fundraiser at Mar-a-Lago, crowned by a one-on-one with the president.

Trump's second-term pardons and sentence commutations have wiped away more than $2 billion in fines and restitutions. The Wall Street Journal reported in December 2025 that the president's forgiveness spree "has spawned a pardon-shopping industry where lobbyists say their going rate is $1 million." The Atlantic in June 2026 set the updated price at $2 million. Whereas Bill Clinton conceded within 15 months that the Marc Rich clemency had been a mistake (even while hotly denying that political donations had anything to do with it; he claims to have been persuaded by testimony from high-profile Israelis such as Ehud Barak), the always-unapologetic Trump barely feigns interest in the process, even while his family and Cabinet members forge business deals with the ex-cons and their companies.

Queried by 60 Minutes in October 2025 as to why he had just pardoned Changpeng Zhao—the founder of the cryptocurrency exchange Binance, who had already served four months in prison and had his company pay $4.3 billion for money laundering—Trump said: "I have no idea who he is." 

The president might have asked his son Don Jr., who had recently introduced his dad to Zhao's pardon lobbyist and in the preceding months had contracted Binance to exclusively host and build the blockchain technology for the Trump family crypto trading platform World Liberty Financial. (That company's stablecoin, USD1, was used in May 2025 as the currency for a $2 billion investment into Binance by the United Arab Emirates company MGX, a transaction that, according to The Wall Street Journal, "rocketed USD1 up the rankings of largest stablecoins," thereby "pushing its market capitalization up from $127 million to over $2.1 billion.") When asked about the controversial clemency, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt issued a one-size-fits-all denial: "Neither the president nor his family have ever engaged, or will ever engage, in conflicts of interest."

Say what you will about Clinton's skeevy pardon of Marc Rich, at least it wasn't preceded by Rich forging billion-dollar partnerships with a company owned by the president and managed by his daughter. Yet here we are in Trump's second term, so overwhelmed by dodgy-sounding deals that any attempt to measure or characterize the scope of corruption can seem preemptively futile. The numbers are too big, the conflicts too brazen, the examples too numerous.

In a companion piece to this one, Senior Editor Jacob Sullum drills down into the tawdry details of the president's most audacious self-dealings, from having the federal government settle his own lawsuits to selling access to himself and his meme coin in a dinner that raised an estimated $148 million. Here, to visualize the contours of the overall problem, we work backward from whataboutism, dividing up the greatest scandals in American history by category, then checking in on Trump 2.0 to see how he compares. The results reveal a pattern: The 47th president has serially exceeded the most infamous corruptions in U.S. history while generating a fraction of the outrage.

Molehills Out of Teapot

At its heart, the otherwise complicated and multi-stage Teapot Dome affair of the 1920s, which until Watergate was considered the greatest federal government scandal of all time, was about secret bribes to an administration official that lubricated lucrative regulatory outcomes. In 1921, Interior Secretary Albert Fall clandestinely accepted $404,000 ($7.6 million in today's money) in cash and no-interest loans from two oil executives, who then became recipients of no-bid leases to exploit oil fields in California's Elk Hills and Wyoming's Teapot Dome. As part of the scheme, Fall had previously convinced the secretary of the Navy to transfer authority over those lands to the Department of the Interior. The no-bid contracts were legal (at the time, anyway); the bribes were not, and the secrecy exploded upon revelation.

Fast forward a century. Four days before Trump's second inauguration, a company called Aryam Investments 1 signed a deal with the president-elect's son Eric to buy a 49 percent stake in World Liberty Financial for a reported $500 million, half of it in cash up front. The Trump family received $187 million overnight, and the family of World Liberty Financial co-founder Steve Witkoff, who by then was already conducting sensitive Middle East diplomacy on behalf of the incoming president, received an additional $31 million, according to The Wall Street Journal. Amazingly, the transaction was made in secret, revealed only one year later.

Did Aryam Investments have any pressing regulatory business in front of the U.S. government? Quite a bit, yes. The firm is owned by Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the national security adviser for the United Arab Emirates (UAE), brother of the nation's president, and head of the country's $800 billion sovereign wealth fund. Tahnoon's artificial intelligence company G42 had been prevented by the Biden administration from acquiring advanced Nvidia AI chips over national security concerns that it might share the technology with China. That was reversed with a bang in May 2025, when Tahnoon received what The Wall Street Journal described as "a coup for the U.A.E.'s ruling family"—an agreement from Washington to send the UAE 500,000 high-powered AI chips per year, including to the previously verboten G42. "Enough to build one of the world's biggest AI data center clusters," the Journal noted.

So a foreign government official's secret $500 million deal that personally enriched the president and his family, plus a key Mideast diplomat and his family, preceded by six months a massive regulatory reversal that will further enrich said official and his country. But that's not all. In December 2024, Tahnoon's asset management firm Lunate was one of two entities to inject $1.5 billion into the investment firm owned by Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner (who has co-led Mideast diplomatic initiatives with Witkoff). And we are still not done. Remember that aforementioned $2 billion Trumpcoin-denominated investment into Binance by the UAE company MGX in May 2025, just prior to the UAE chip deal? MGX is owned by none other than Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan.

Albert Fall was found guilty of bribery and served a year in prison. The Supreme Court nullified the no-bid oil leases on the grounds that they had been corruptly obtained. President Warren G. Harding had been oblivious to the Teapot Dome scheme, yet he nonetheless was tarred from his 1923 death onward as an enabler of corruption. The Trump family net worth increased by more than $1 billion as a direct result of Sheikh Tahnoon's frenetic and sometimes secret investments in the six-month run-up to producing a long-sought diplomatic and economic victory for his country. Will school children 100 years hence know the name World Liberty Financial?
From Billy Beer to Burisma to Billions

In 1938, The Saturday Evening Post published an exposé of James Roosevelt, son of President Franklin Delano, under the headline "Jimmy's Got it." What Jimmy had was a family name and connections he could leverage by selling insurance policies to prominent individuals (such as oil magnate Harry Sinclair) and corporations (such as CBS), even while holding a number of key positions in the White House. "My name got me into a lot of places I might not have got into if my father hadn't been President," he acknowledged in response, while releasing tax returns showing annual compensation from 1933 to 1937 that averaged an inflation-adjusted $850,000 per year. "And that's all right, too….If you want to do business with a man you get in to see him by whatever legitimate means you can." Defiance notwithstanding, Roosevelt resigned from government by the end of 1938.

Billy Beer was more punchline than scandal, but it was still seen as unseemly that the shambolic brother of the rectitudinous Jimmy Carter lent his name in 1977 to a low-rent lager that quickly went bankrupt.

Hunter Biden was shambolic too, but also brazen enough to serially cash in on his father's name and office, including $4 million in compensation (around $5.5 million in 2026 money) to work for the Ukrainian oil company Burisma from 2014 to 2019, and another $4.8 million ($6.5 million) from a Chinese energy tycoon seeking to expand U.S. operations. These malodorous foreign dealings, which would not have been imaginable had Joe Biden not served as vice president, then leading presidential candidate, then president, became the subject of congressional hearings and Justice Department investigations that started under Trump's first presidency and continued under Hunter's father. Until the moment that a lame-duck Joe Biden issued a blanket pardon of all his son's activities from 2014 through 2024, Hunter faced prison time, further prosecutions, and a seemingly permanent stink of scandal.

These three most famous examples of familial influence-peddling are dwarfed to the point of miniaturization by the business Donald Trump's heirs conduct on a daily basis, right out in the open.

Jared Kushner, as Jacob Sullum recounts, has amassed north of $6 billion in his Affinity Partners private equity firm since launching in 2021, the bulk of which has come from the leadership of the same Middle Eastern countries he has been a senior negotiator with during both of his father-in-law's presidencies. Companies owned by Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. have forged deals with Dad's government in the hundreds of millions. Eyebrows barely get raised anymore when the president, during official overseas trips, cuts ribbons on his latest golf course.

A financial disclosure report released June 30 showed just how good it is to be the president: "Trump's revenue in 2025 jumped to at least $2.2 billion, compared with a minimum of $622 million in 2024 before he returned to office," The New York Times noted. "It is," All the Presidents' Money author Megan Gorman told the Times, "completely unprecedented."

Richard Nixon Wasn't That Bad

"I'm actually fascinated by [Richard] Nixon as a character in history," Vice President J.D. Vance said at the Nixon Library in June. "His historical legacy is enjoying a bit of a renaissance, but I think deservedly so….[I]f Watergate happened tomorrow, it would be like a 12-hour news story. Like, the idea that it would have taken down a presidency is crazy. And, by the way, if you look at the story of how the Deep State took down Richard Nixon, it's not all that different from what the same groups of people, the same institutions tried to do to Donald Trump in the first Trump administration."

Watergate, the only Washington scandal that impelled a president to resign and the English language to add a suffix, was a 26-month news story, stretching from the break-in at the Democratic National Committee by Nixon loyalists through President Gerald Ford's pardon of his predecessor. One of the reasons the saga lasted so long is that the perpetrators, employers, and intended beneficiaries of the burglary—very much including Richard Nixon, beginning immediately after the initial arrest—could not stop lying their faces off about it, destroying evidence, concocting schemes to quash the resulting investigations, and (if they had the power) just straight-up firing the most nettlesome investigator. Nixon attempted to use the Deep State to make it all go away, ordering the CIA to tell the nosy FBI that its inquiry would jeopardize national security. In the end, 48 people were convicted or pleaded guilty, including Nixon's attorney general, chief domestic adviser, and chief of staff.

Still, you could see why Vance might want to minimize Nixon's transgressions. Each of the 37th president's most notorious Watergate-related infractions have analogue comparisons unflattering to Vance's boss.

In the "Saturday Night Massacre" of October 20, 1973, Nixon ordered Attorney General Elliot Richardson to fire Watergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox over the latter's court-backed insistence that the president hand over tapes from a secret White House recording system. Richardson refused, then resigned; his deputy, William Ruckelshaus, also refused, then resigned. Only third-in-command Robert Bork was willing to carry out the defenestration. Trump's obvious first-term comp was when he fired FBI Director James Comey for investigating links between Russia and the Trump 2016 election campaign.

But there have been massacres aplenty during Trump's second term, albeit without the added frisson of a president fighting for his political life. Not one, not two, but 10 federal prosecutors resigned in 2025 rather than carry out an order from acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove to dismiss federal corruption charges against then–New York City Mayor Eric Adams, in part because the "prosecution has unduly restricted Mayor Adams' ability to devote full attention and resources to illegal immigration and violent crime." The first resignation, from Danielle Sassoon, the Trump-appointed acting U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York and a longstanding member of the Federalist Society, was withering: "The reasons advanced by Mr. Bove for dismissing the indictment are not ones I can in good faith defend as in the public interest and as consistent with the principles of impartiality and fairness that guide my decision-making," Sassoon wrote. The mayor's lawyers, she added, "repeatedly urged what amounted to a quid pro quo, indicating that Adams would be in a position to assist with the Department's enforcement priorities only if the indictment were dismissed."

One of the bombshell moments in the Watergate hearings was the revelation of a Nixon administration "enemies list," upon whom (in the contemporaneous words of then–White House counsel John Dean) "we can use the available federal machinery to screw our political enemies." Suggested punishments included Internal Revenue Service audits and the manipulation of "grant availability, federal contracts, litigation, prosecution, etc." The very concept and name was shocking enough to those who expect presidents to faithfully and impartially execute federal law, even if no corresponding audit activity was ever detected.

Trump, on the other hand, nominated as FBI director a man who vowed in 2023 that a second MAGA administration "will go out and find the conspirators—not just in government, but in the media. Yes, we're gonna come after the people in the media who lied about American citizens, who helped Joe Biden rig presidential elections. We're gonna come after you." Jacob Sullum details the results of the president going after his enemies; one new wrinkle this time is how open he is about it. Trump in September 2025 mistakenly posted on Truth Social what was intended to be a private excoriation of then–Attorney General Pam Bondi for not going hard enough after his enemies: "all talk, no action. Nothing is being done. What about Comey, Adam 'Shifty' Schiff, Leticia??? They're all guilty as hell, but nothing is going to be done," he wrote. "We can't delay any longer, it's killing our reputation and credibility. They impeached me twice, and indicted me (5 times!), OVER NOTHING. JUSTICE MUST BE SERVED, NOW!!!"

Nixon incurred a generation's outrage and mockery for insisting to interviewer David Frost that, "When the president does it, that means that it is not illegal." Trump, within the first month of his second term, asserted on social media that, "He who saves his Country does not violate any Law," a formulation frequently attributed to Napoleon. When asked the previous month by The New York Times whether there were any constraints on his power, he said: "Yeah, there is one thing. My own morality. My own mind. It's the only thing that can stop me." These statements are much closer to reality than they were during his first term, thanks to a 2024 Supreme Court decision, Trump v. United States, granting presidents absolute immunity from criminal prosecutions for the exercise of "core constitutional powers," plus lesser forms of immunity for "official acts."

Greenwater All the Way Down

John J. Cafaro looks like a mafia don from a bad TV movie. Hefty frame crammed into a double-breasted suit, thick shock of black hair with matching mustache, giant cigar as often as not. Cafaro, a longtime Republican and friend of Trump (who calls him a "fantastic man"), lives next door to Mar-a-Lago and was previously best known for pleading guilty to bribing the former Ohio congressman James Traficant. Until now: Cafaro's company, Greenwater Services, received a $1.7 million no-bid contract from the Department of the Interior this spring, at the suggestion of the general manager of Trump's Bedminster, New Jersey, golf club, to renovate the water purification system of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool. Twinned with another no-bid contract for $14.7 million to paint the bottom of the pool a fetching "American-flag blue," Cafaro's rush job was touted by the president as a historic fix to a longstanding eyesore on the National Mall, just in time for America's 250th birthday.

Things did not turn out that way. Within days, the blue water bloomed with greenish-brown algae, clumps of new sealant splintered off, and a furious Trump blamed antifa vandals and other ne'er-do-wells for a construction project gone horribly wrong. Some political metaphors are a bit too perfect to ignore.

Americans have cycled in and out of corrupt eras: the blatant patronage of Tammany Hall, the lobbying Christmas trees of President William McKinley's tariffs, the '60s–'70s outrages from the security/surveillance state. These rotted systems never self-corrected with a collective national shrug.

Donald Trump and his family are executing corruption at a scale never previously contemplated in the American experiment. If we are to ever graduate from this era of brazen graft, the first step is to notice.

The post The Most Corrupt Presidency in American History, by the Numbers appeared first on Reason.com.

Trump's White Trash Traitor and Seditious Thugs Are Walking Out Free

Trump continues his rape of the justice system in the US. Pardoning criminals like him and forcing Department of Justice prosecutors to drop their cases against White Supremacist terrorists and insurrectionists (Proud Boys, Oath Keepers, etc.) are only two recent examples of how the senile idiot is allowed by his coterie of submissive republicans to get away with serious crimes against longstanding  institutions of the country. 

Letting criminals and violent thugs get away with murder is only one facet of this rape. Persecuting innocent people for their opinions and threatening and blackmailing people and institutions, and occasionally killing them on the streets by an enraged Gestapo-like police is the other side of this sinister conspiracy to "bleach" America artificially "white". 

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At Trump DOJ’s demand, judge reluctantly drops Jan. 6 case against Proud Boys
Kyle Cheney
Sat, July 11, 2026 


At Trump DOJ’s demand, judge reluctantly drops Jan. 6 case against Proud Boys

It's over.

The Justice Department's most significant case stemming from the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol — the seditious conspiracy convictions of high-ranking members of the far right Proud Boys — has officially been erased.

U.S. District Judge Timothy Kelly, who presided over the six-month trial that led to the jury convictions, reluctantly granted a Justice Department motion to drop the case on Friday, concluding that he had no power to second-guess prosecutors once they decided to abandon it.

"In light of fundamental separation of powers principles … the proper course here is for the Court simply to grant the motion in full," Kelly concluded, dismissing the case "with prejudice," which means a future Justice Department is barred from revisiting the charges.

"No one should mistake the Court's granting of the Government's motion for its agreement with those decisions," the judge added.

Kelly's decision ends one of the last lingering loose ends from the violent attack on the Capitol by a mob of President Donald Trump's supporters, a riot that threatened the transfer of presidential power from Trump to Joe Biden, forcing Congress to flee for safety and leaving more than 100 police officers injured.

During trial, prosecutors cast the group's leaders — including its national chair Enrique Tarrio — as a pivotal driver of the violence that day, assembling a "fighting force" that arrived at the Capitol even while Trump addressed a crowd of supporters near the White House. Members of the group were present for and involved in multiple breaches of police lines. One of them, Dominic Pezzola, ignited the breach of the Capitol building when he smashed a Senate-wing window with a stolen police riot shield. They later celebrated their roles in the breach.

On his first day back in power last year, Trump pardoned the vast majority of people who participated in the riot and ordered his Justice Department to dismiss hundreds of ongoing cases. He also pardoned Tarrio, who Kelly had sentenced to 22 years in prison — the lengthiest sentence handed down to anyone linked to the attack.

But Trump notably left convictions in place for Tarrio's alleged co-conspirators: Ethan Nordean, Joe Biggs, Zachary Rehl and Pezzola. Instead, Trump commuted their sentences, which ranged from 10 to 18 years. The four men continued to fight their convictions on appeal.

Earlier this year, just after Todd Blanche was elevated to become acting attorney general, the Justice Department moved to vacate the convictions and end the case for good. They also took similar steps to erase the convictions of the leader of the far-right Oath Keepers, a group led by Stewart Rhodes that also played a key role in the Capitol breach. U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta, who presided over the Oath Keepers trial, is still weighing DOJ's motion.

The Proud Boys quickly cast Kelly's decision as a victory for their group and a vindication.

"We took the worst they threw at us, the raids, the solitary, the lies and we stood tall. Trump dropped the pardons and now the rest is crumbling. Justice is SERVED!" Tarrio posted on X shortly after Kelly's ruling. "Proud Boys don't lose. We WIN. This is OUR victory."

Though Kelly concluded he had no power to interfere with the decision to drop the Proud Boys case, the Trump appointee made his displeasure clear, saying DOJ was simply carrying out Trump's wishes.

"President Trump's views about the prosecution of those who attacked the U.S. Capitol on January 6 — whether those views are based on fact or fiction — are well known," Kelly said. The judge also noted that the prosecution of the Proud Boys leaders began in the final days of Trump's first term, not under Biden.

"The decisions to issue the Executive Order and to abandon this prosecution — even after the Government secured convictions for serious crimes relating to the attack on the Capitol on January 6 — are solely the Executive's," Kelly wrote.

Friday, July 10, 2026

Grinch Trump Doesn't Wanna Pay Court-Ordered $5.8 Million to Woman He Sexually Abused

With the very Christian Evangelical asshole Donald Dumb, life is exclusively about money. He'll go to jail. He'll sit like a sick dog in a courtroom. He'll humiliate himself. But it is very hard for him to see money departing from his hands. 

Lower courts, appeals courts and the supreme court have, over the course of two years, concurred over and over again that Trump sexually abused and defamed E. Jean Carroll. He has been ordered to pay her $5.8 million.

But he keeps wasting taxpayers money by filing frivolous appeals in the hopeless hope that divine intervention will intercede in his favor and relieve him from his obligation to pay $5.8 million to his sexual abuse victim. His hands can't let go of money. But also, paying compensation to his victim is for him a final and definitive admission of guilt, and proves that he has lied and continues to lie, not just on this sordid affair but on all the crimes he has been convicted of. It also wouldn't look good so close to the midterms.

Trump uses his lawyers like he uses toilet paper. He keeps wiping his behind with them in the hope that it'll get clean... but alas, the stink on him is worse than stink on a monkey. It won't ever go away, despite his desperate and futile attempts at re-writing history. History will indeed record him as the dumbest, worst cheater, most criminal, most corrupt, oldest, most senile, most narcissistic, adulterous, bigoted fake Christian that ever walked into the White House (thanks to 77 million dumb Americans who voted for him).
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Trump files last-minute bid to prevent $5M payout to Carroll
Sophie Brams
Wed, July 8, 2026

President Trump's attorneys have mounted a last-minute bid to pause the payment of a more than $5 million judgment owed to writer E. Jean Carroll over two years after a jury found him liable for sexual abuse and defamation.

Trump's attorneys urged District Judge Lewis Kaplan on Tuesday to deny Caroll's motion to disburse the nearly $5.8 million award from escrow while the president's "timely petition for rehearing remains pending before the Supreme Court."

"Collection cannot begin while proceedings remain pending before the Supreme Court, which is currently the case," lawyers Josh Halpern and Michael Madaio wrote in Manhattan court filings.

The high court declined on June 29 to hear Trump's appeal, leaving intact the 2023 jury verdict that stemmed from Carroll's first successful lawsuit against Trump in which she claimed he assaulted her in a luxury department store dressing room in the mid-1990s.

The jury also found that Trump defamed the advice columnist when she first publicly came forward with the accusations during his first term. Trump has maintained Carroll fabricated her story and that he and Carroll have never met.

"Surprisingly, the Supreme Court declined to 'review' a Fake Case brought against me by a woman I never met (Decades old celebrity photo line, standing with her husband, does not count!)," Trump wrote on Truth Social in late June. "I will continue the fight against this Weaponization and Lawfare Case against me, including the ridiculous claim of Defamation, with all of my power and strength."

And while Trump's lawyers now claim a petition for rehearing is "pending" before the justices again, records show it was not accepted for filing this week.

They also argued that Trump would face "unrecoverable loss" if the money is released and then overturned on appeal, citing Carroll's stated intention to donate money she collects from her civil defamation suits.

"Plaintiff has repeatedly stated that she intends to give away all funds that she collects from him, and once those funds are distributed to third parties, they likely cannot be recovered," Halpern and Madaio wrote.

Carroll's attorneys have sought to expedite the release schedule, arguing that the president is trying to unjustly delay the payment despite the Supreme Court's appeal rejection.

"This is the end of the line," they wrote in a June 30 filing. "After four years of litigation across every level of the federal court system, it is time for this case to end."

Thursday, July 9, 2026

As Midterms Approach, Donald Dumb's Lies Surge Exponentially



 ...It worked last election. He lied and lied, invented and invented, fabricated and fabricated....whatever BS dumb Americans were willing to hear, he gave them. And he won.

Maybe he doesn't do it consciously. Maybe stress and despair cause his narcissistic brain to automatically switch to generating wishful thinking, fantasy rubbish and outright fabrications just to feel good about itself. 

Now he's trying again. As the midterm elections approach, Trump becomes stressed out at the very likely possibility that he will lose both chambers of Congress, whose consequence is that he becomes a lame duck without power but with still plenty of idiocy, dementia and senility. 

But what is different from two years ago is that Trump's got major problems to account for with the American people, many more than when he was inheriting power from Joe Biden. Trump's war with Iran is draining the treasury, so are the trillions of dollars he added to the deficit, mounting inflation caused by both the war and his tariffs, grocery prices that are far higher than what they were under Biden, an American people sickened by his verbal slips, his vulgarity, his racism and sexism, and by the sight of an old senile imbecile hurling lies every which way, making a fool of himself before foreign dignitaries, and trying to make himself look much more important than he is by latching onto the achievements of other people and former presidents, and being happy to receive fake awards from submissive sycophants. Really disgusting. 

For example, he keeps repeating that America is more respected now and is a "hot" country, when reality is the complete opposite. Trump's chaotic America is a laughingstock now around the world, though world leaders don't come out and shout it from the roofs because they are biding their time until the idiot is out. Ever since Trump's first term, countries around the world began establishing alternatives to the dollar, alternate trading blocs that keep America out, supply chains that avoid American products, and so on. The EU has increased its trading channels with China and with South America (Mercosur). Countries are buying up military ware from new sources.... 

What Trump refuses to see is that because of him, other powers are filling the vacuum created by his isolationism. "America First" has become "America Alone" and "America Aside". New superpowers are emerging like China (1.4 billion people), India (1.5 billion people), and the EU (450 billion people). Because of Trump's hostility, traditional American monopolies in these huge markets are slowly dwindling.

With midterms approaching, Trump's desperation at losing Congress is causing him to amplify his lies of fraudulent elections. Remember: In his criminal playbook, there is fraud if he loses, but no fraud if he wins, regardless of evidence. 

[From: https://www.yahoo.com/news/politics/articles/trump-administration-threatens-states-criminal-162229885.html]: 

"He has frequently claimed without evidence that large numbers of noncitizens are swaying elections in the US. There is no proof that noncitizens are voting in large numbers in US elections. States regularly maintain voter rolls to remove people who are ineligible to vote for various reasons.

The federal government is seeking access to state voter rolls, which contain the personal data of millions of Americans. States have refused to turn the data over, resulting in lawsuits that the administration has been consistently losing.

Deidre Henderson, Republican Lieutenant Governor of Utah and the state's top elections officer, wrote on the social media site Threads that she had received a "love letter" from the federal government, "sprinkled throughout with threats of criminal prosecution". "I'm sure I'm not the only chief election officer of a state who is being targeted for following state and federal laws by resisting DOJ's demands for private voter data that have thus far been ruled illegal by at least a dozen courts," Henderson wrote. "This is truly bizarre behavior by the federal agency that is supposed to be protecting civil rights."

Adrian Fontes, Democratic secretary of state in Arizona, said it was "insulting" to insinuate that local elections officials were not properly maintaining voter lists, a key part of their jobs. "Arizona's election officials take their oath to uphold the law seriously," Fontes said in a statement. "Arizona election officials have always worked to ensure that only eligible citizens are registered to vote, and we will continue following Arizona law – not directions that come from political rhetoric or intimidation."


Trump hired a failed mafioso-type businessman friend outside the bidding process to embellish the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool. The "friend" used subpar materials to line the bottom of the pool. Very quickly, cracks appeared, the material began peeling off, and algae began growing in the pool which turned green instead of the blue that Trump wanted. Members of the Trump administration, including the jackass-in-chief himself, have lied to divert the attention from their incompetence and corruption, by saying that vandals caused damage to the by gashing the lining, though they have not provided ANY evidence to support that claim. 

It's never Trump's fault. He's infallible, like the Pope or the Supreme Ayatollah of Iran or Kim Jong Un of North Korea. He can never take responsibility for his crimes and misdemeanors. America, what have you become because of that dumbass?

As his dementia grows by the day, his Pinocchio nose keeps getting longer.

=======================================================

Fact check: Trump’s false claims at his NATO press conference
Daniel Dale, CNN
Wed, July 8, 2026


US President Donald Trump arrives [with his special LIES BINDER prepared for him by his slaves] to hold a press conference at Beştepe Presidential Compound during the NATO Summit in Ankara, Turkey, on Wednesday. - Serdar Ozsoy/Getty Images

President Donald Trump delivered another series of false claims at a press conference Wednesday at the NATO summit in Ankara.

His comments included some of the long-debunked lies he told the press while meeting with Turkey's president on Tuesday. Here is a fact check of some of his Wednesday remarks.
Investment in the US

Trump repeated his frequent false claim that "we have $19.2 trillion" invested in the US in just "one year" of his current presidency.

That figure is fiction, as we noted when he made the same claim Tuesday and on numerous previous occasions.

At the time Trump said it on Wednesday, the White House's own website claimed there had been "$10.6 trillion" in "major investment announcements" this term, not $19.2 trillion, and even the White House figure was a major exaggeration of actual investment. A detailed CNN review in October found the White House was counting trillions of dollars in vague investment pledges – pledges that were about "bilateral trade" or "economic exchange" rather than investment in the US – and vague statements that didn't even rise to the level of pledges.

The White House figure includes pledges from US-based companies as well as foreign entities. Federal data published last month shows that new foreign direct investment in the US was about $232 billion in 2025.

Factory construction

Trump claimed: "We have the largest number of plants being built for the most money ever in the history of our country – car plants, AI plants, and all other plants, pharmaceutical plants." In fact, federal data shows that spending on US manufacturing construction has steadily declined during Trump's second term after a spike that occurred during most of former president Joe Biden's term (which had abated by the final months of Biden's term). You can clearly see the 2025 and 2026 decline in this official chart [https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/TLMFGCONS]

The seasonally adjusted annual rate of manufacturing construction spending in May 2026, about $174.8 billion, was down about 28% from May 2024, the last May under Biden, and also down about 28% from December 2024, Biden's last full month in office. It was down about 26% from February 2025, Trump's first full month in office, and down about 22% from May 2025.

Trump and elections

Trump lied again about the 2020 election he lost, saying: "I've been right about everything, and I have been for a long time. It's how I got to be president three times. It's how I won three elections." He went on to repeat that he "won" the 2020 election but that it was a "rigged election."

Trump has been president twice and won two elections. He legitimately lost the 2020 election, fair and square, to Biden.

We'll leave aside his hyperbolic claim that he has "been right about everything."

Venezuela, prisons and migrants

Trump, speaking of former Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, repeated his usual claim that Maduro "had people pour into the country from prisons; they opened up their prisons, they allowed them to come in." But Trump has never provided proof that Maduro-era Venezuela opened up prisons for migration purposes.

There was large-scale emigration from Venezuela amid economic problems, violence and political turmoil during the Maduro era. But despite multiple requests for evidence from CNN and other outlets, Trump and his team have never corroborated his frequent assertions that Maduro emptied prisons to get undesirable citizens to leave for the US; Roberto Briceño-León, founder and director of the Venezuelan Observatory of Violence, said in an email to CNN in June 2024: "We have no evidence that the Venezuelan government is emptying its prisons or mental health institutions to send them outside the country, in other words, to the US or any other country."

Helen Fair, an expert on global prisons at Birkbeck, University of London, told CNN in 2024 that she had "seen absolutely no evidence" that any country had emptied prisons to send prisoners to the US.

Migration under Biden

Trump, talking about immigration, repeated his false claim that there were "25 million people, I think more than that, under Biden" crossing the border. The "25 million" figure is false; even Trump's previous "21 million" figure was a wild exaggeration. Through December 2024, the last full month of the Biden administration, the federal government had recorded under 11 million nationwide "encounters" with migrants during that administration, including millions who were rapidly expelled from the country. Even adding in the so-called "gotaways" who evaded detection, estimated by House Republicans as being roughly 2.2 million, there's no way the total was even close to what Trump has said.

Oil prices

While speaking about the war with Iran, Trump said: "And you see the oil prices are lower than they were when I started." He didn't make clear whether he was talking about when he started his second term or when he started the Iran war in late February, but if it was the latter, his claim wasn't correct. Both Brent crude (the international benchmark) and West Texas Intermediate crude (the US benchmark) were pricier Wednesday afternoon than they were just before the war, though Brent was slightly below some of its late-February levels as recently as Monday.

Oil prices fell sharply amid the ceasefire between the US and Iran that began this spring and continued into summer. But they have jumped again in the last day – though not to anywhere close to the peaks of March, April and May – amid another exchange of attacks between the two countries, the resumption of US sanctions on Iranian oil sales and a Trump declaration that he thought the ceasefire was "over."