The Trump administration has orphaned thousands and thousands of children and babies.
They took them from their parents, locked them in cages, and then intentionally lost them.
We still do not know where these children are.
And now they want to deport parents and relatives trying to claim children, which will scare these people from getting children. This is evil.
Also
"With flu season in full swing, the immigration crisis at the U.S-Mexico border has become even more dire for migrant children. Three children in U.S. custody have recently died of easily preventable flu-related illnesses."
and of course because they are assholes:
“Border Control has reportedly refused to let a group of physicians administer flu shots to migrant children in custody, even though some doctors have been passionately campaigning to provide this potentially lifesaving medical care.”
Saturday, December 21, 2019
After Being Impeached, Trump Attacks Dead Democrat
On Thursday night, shortly after the House voted to impeach him, President Trump proved that point, revealing once again that a black hole exists where his own character should be. In a rage-fueled rally in Dingell’s home state, the president waged an attack on the dead congressman and the grieving widow who now holds his seat in Congress. Trump even joked that Dingell might be watching them from hell. As appalling as the comment itself was the laughter it got from Trump’s fawning supporters. The president’s statement was so vile that — for once — even Republican members of Congress condemned it and said he should apologize (which, of course, he didn’t).
Thursday, December 12, 2019
Trump Is An Anti-Semite Supporting a Rightwing Religious Asshole
President Donald Trump signed an executive order aimed at tackling anti-Semitism on college campuses on Wednesday ― but one of the speakers at the event has said that Jews are going to hell.
Trump signed the order at a White House Hanukkah reception, with several prominent Jewish Americans in attendance, including New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft and Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz.
But the president also called upon evangelical Christian leader Robert Jeffress to speak, claiming he’s a “tremendous faith leader.”
Jeffress, in turn, called Trump “the most pro-faith president in history.” But Jeffress has a long history of hateful comments toward other faiths.
In 2010, he called both Islam and Mormonism “a heresy from the pit of hell,” then issued a warning to Jews. “Judaism ― you can’t be saved being a Jew,” he declared on the Trinity Broadcasting Network.
"Jewish Groups Accuse Trump of Anti-Semitism Over 'Horrifying' Plan to Define Judaism As a Nationality"
Monday, December 9, 2019
Trump's Vile and Bigoted Comments About Jews
Jewish groups denounced President Donald Trump Sunday for anti-Semitic tropes after he referred to some Jewish voters in the real estate business as “brutal killers” who will vote for him to dodge a wealth tax.
Trump also complained that some Jews “don’t love Israel enough” in a speech Saturday at the Israeli American Council National Summit in Florida before a supportive crowd that chanted “four more years.”
Halie Soifer, the executive director of the Jewish Democratic Council of America, called Trump’s comments “vile and bigoted” in a statement. Trump’s “deeply offensive remarks ... including his unconscionable repeating of negative stereotypes that have been used historically to target Jews, only reinforce our belief ... that Donald Trump is the biggest threat to American Jews,” Soifer added.
Author Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg tweeted: “It’s not even coded anti-semitism. It’s not a dog whistle. He’s saying this. Out loud. To a room full of Jews.”
The president also resurrected his own version of a Native American slur by again calling Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) “Pocahontas,” who he falsely claimed wants to take “100% of your wealth away.”
Trump told the crowd: “A lot of you are in the real estate business because I know you very well. You’re brutal killers. Not nice people at all.” Some in the crowd laughed. “But you have to vote for me; you have no choice. You’re not going to vote for Pocahontas, I can tell you that ... You’re not going to vote for the wealth tax.”
AG Barr debases himself for Trump by contradicting the new DOJ IG report on Russia probe
What an asshole.
On Monday, as Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee continued to flail about with their claims that the impeachment process is tainted, a long-awaited report by the Department of Justice’s Inspector General was released concluding that the FBI’s investigations into Russian interference in the election–and its probe into the activities of Carter Page, Michael Flynn, George Papadopoulos and Paul Manafort–were proper, grounded in fact and that there is no “documentary or testimonial evidence that political bias or improper motivation influenced the decisions” to pursue them.
For months, conservatives have been promising that the report–and a parallel investigation launched by Attorney General William Barr–would blow “Spygate” wide open, leading ultimately to the convictions of various law enforcement officials whom they claimed had hatched the investigation as part of a coup d’état by the Deep State.
The finding should come as no surprise. The entire narrative began with a typically incoherent tweet from Donald Trump shortly after he took office. At the time, Trump’s claim that the Obama administration had spied on his campaign was too ludicrous even for Republicans to embrace. The House Intelligence Committee, then chaired by Rep. Devin Nunes (R-CA)–who would later become one of “SpyGate’s” most prominent advocates–sent a letter to the Justice Department demanding that they provide evidence to support Trump’s tweet. Kellyanne Conway, then a senior advisor to Trump, admitted that there was zero evidence to support Trump’s claim, but argued that it was possible that the CIA spied on the campaign through microwave ovens.
When Trump resurfaced the conspiracy theory, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) said, “it appears that there was an investigation not of the campaign but of certain individuals who have a history that we should be suspicious of.” His colleague, Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-SC), who had pushed hard on equally dubious charges related to Benghazi, told Fox News that, having been briefed on the intelligence, he was “even more convinced that the FBI did exactly what my fellow citizens would want them to do.”
And yet, moments after the report was released, William Barr released a statement contradicting his agency’s own Inspector General. “The Inspector General’s report now makes clear that the FBI launched an intrusive investigation of a U.S. presidential campaign on the thinnest of suspicions that, in my view, were insufficient to justify the steps taken,” it reads in part.
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