You need to read a technical explanation of Barrett's vote. Not what it seems. On the other hand, Massie supports a balanced budget and desanctimonious.
Why keep bundling up all this grift. They got 3 days. Forget the recess make them actually work. How hard is it to pass single item spending bills? They don't know BECAUSE THEY HAVE NEVER TRIED.
"Trump is the Chairman of the federal reserve." No he isn't
" Which is to be expected, wete going to a gold backed crypto currency and US Treasury Note"..No we aren't
The right-libertarian faction of the Republican Party forms an almost miniscule percentage of the party's coaltion. And there's a big difference between Massie's ideologically pure libertariansim, and the libertarian-influenced conservatism of the larger factions of the party's coaltion. Furthermore, the dominant faction under Trump - the Populist faction - is the least libertarian-influenced faction of any within the party's coalition. Nationalist Populism is actually not "classically liberal" economically, so it's not in alignment with the right-libertarian economic view that Massie espouses. The Republicans are not in power based on a libertarian-leaning majority of the electorate, because the majority of the electorate does not care for such principles. Trump's Populist movement, similar to the analogous movements in Europe, is instead based on a principle of "solidarity", which translates as a rather classically leftist (social democratic) economic program, combined with a social/cultural traditionalism.
It is this outdated, classically leftist economic program of Nationlist Populism that is the reason for the overlap between Trump's movement and the 2016 Bernie Sanders campaign. It's important to remember that exit polls in West Virginia for the 2016 Democrat Primary had 4 in 10 Democrat voters for Bernie stating that they would vote for Trump over Hillary in the General Election. The same reason explains why a Democrat is currently in his second term as governor of Kentucky, or why Democrat Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia lasted as long as he did. If you look at the last Kentucky governor race, it was actually the eastern, "coal-country" counties that went blue. Along with West Virginia and central Appalachia, these were always historically among the most pro-worker, pro-union and "old-left" Democrat-voting parts of the country.
On March 27, 2020, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, Massie forced the return to Washington of members of the House who were "sheltering in place" in their districts by threatening a quorum call that would have required an in-person vote on the $2.2 trillion aid package that had passed the Senate by a 96–0 vote.[84] Before Massie arrived on the House floor, just two representatives were present to pass the bill by voice vote. On the House floor, Massie said he was trying to "make sure our republic doesn't die by unanimous consent in an empty chamber".[84] Massie received criticism for endangering members of Congress by requiring them to gather amid a pandemic.[85][86]
After Massie's unsuccessful push, Trump said Massie should be removed from the Republican Party, calling him a "third rate [g]randstander"; John Kerry quipped that he "tested positive for being an asshole"; Representative Sean Patrick Maloney tweeted, "@RepThomasMassie is indeed a dumbass"; Representative Dean Phillips called his actions a "principled but terribly misguided stunt".[87] In a phone interview with Betsy Woodruff Swan of Politico, Massie responded in jest to Trump's calls for his removal, stating "I take great offense to that. I'm at least second-rate."[85] Some Republicans defended Massie: Paul Gosar called him a "good man and a solid conservative" and Chip Roy said Massie was "defending the Constitution today by requiring a quorum".[87]
In an interview with Politico, Massie said that "the fact that they brought all of these congressmen here in order to get a quorum shows you that I was right. The Constitution requires a quorum to pass a bill, and they were planning to subvert the Constitution". He also questioned why people such as grocery store employees or truck drivers should be expected to work during the pandemic, but not members of Congress, who "make $174,000 a year" and have "the best health care in the world".[85]
What is going on?
A GIANT cleansing is in progress. We’ll see who makes the cut.
There is no business as usual right now. It will be interesting to see how we end up winning this one. Maybe a couple dimocrats?
https://www.yahoo.com/news/trump-defends-amy-coney-barrett-040714128.html
I'm at a loss for logic here.
What is up is down and what is down is up. Covert Intelligence Operations at its finest is the only answer. Can’t wait to see the outcome!
You need to read a technical explanation of Barrett's vote. Not what it seems. On the other hand, Massie supports a balanced budget and desanctimonious.
There is no logic...it's rediculous
https://youtu.be/wZIiL_JPOnA?si=iHWUtnmJorbuk_Vq This was Feb 28th
The good news is the DS apparently doesn’t understand President Trump’s moves and countermoves either. But, so far they have been very effective.
Ya; die is cast with Trump, I like massie, let’s see the receipts. They who must not be criticized are imo the biggest hurdle to peace in the world.
Optics...if the government shutsdown, the US Corporation shutsdown, probably for good.
That means the federal reserve shutsdown, the federal bureaucracy shutsdown, etc.
Why keep bundling up all this grift. They got 3 days. Forget the recess make them actually work. How hard is it to pass single item spending bills? They don't know BECAUSE THEY HAVE NEVER TRIED.
The reserve keeps doing Reserve crap
Which is to be expected, wete going to a gold backed crypto currency and US Treasury Note.
Trump is the Chairman of the federal reserve.
Controlled devolution is the process.
"Trump is the Chairman of the federal reserve." No he isn't " Which is to be expected, wete going to a gold backed crypto currency and US Treasury Note"..No we aren't
ConINC attacking Barrett....tells me ALL i need to know
https://x.com/Cernovich/status/1897345687244955992?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1897345687244955992%7Ctwgr%5E57eda5b42a0538274328b3c90d0ab16178917d1c%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.thedailybeast.com%2Ftrump-defends-amy-coney-barrett-from-maga-shes-very-smart%2F
The right-libertarian faction of the Republican Party forms an almost miniscule percentage of the party's coaltion. And there's a big difference between Massie's ideologically pure libertariansim, and the libertarian-influenced conservatism of the larger factions of the party's coaltion. Furthermore, the dominant faction under Trump - the Populist faction - is the least libertarian-influenced faction of any within the party's coalition. Nationalist Populism is actually not "classically liberal" economically, so it's not in alignment with the right-libertarian economic view that Massie espouses. The Republicans are not in power based on a libertarian-leaning majority of the electorate, because the majority of the electorate does not care for such principles. Trump's Populist movement, similar to the analogous movements in Europe, is instead based on a principle of "solidarity", which translates as a rather classically leftist (social democratic) economic program, combined with a social/cultural traditionalism.
It is this outdated, classically leftist economic program of Nationlist Populism that is the reason for the overlap between Trump's movement and the 2016 Bernie Sanders campaign. It's important to remember that exit polls in West Virginia for the 2016 Democrat Primary had 4 in 10 Democrat voters for Bernie stating that they would vote for Trump over Hillary in the General Election. The same reason explains why a Democrat is currently in his second term as governor of Kentucky, or why Democrat Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia lasted as long as he did. If you look at the last Kentucky governor race, it was actually the eastern, "coal-country" counties that went blue. Along with West Virginia and central Appalachia, these were always historically among the most pro-worker, pro-union and "old-left" Democrat-voting parts of the country.
Truth Social Post: https://truthsocial.com/@realDonaldTrump/114141533823019998
From Wikipedia:
On March 27, 2020, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, Massie forced the return to Washington of members of the House who were "sheltering in place" in their districts by threatening a quorum call that would have required an in-person vote on the $2.2 trillion aid package that had passed the Senate by a 96–0 vote.[84] Before Massie arrived on the House floor, just two representatives were present to pass the bill by voice vote. On the House floor, Massie said he was trying to "make sure our republic doesn't die by unanimous consent in an empty chamber".[84] Massie received criticism for endangering members of Congress by requiring them to gather amid a pandemic.[85][86]
After Massie's unsuccessful push, Trump said Massie should be removed from the Republican Party, calling him a "third rate [g]randstander"; John Kerry quipped that he "tested positive for being an asshole"; Representative Sean Patrick Maloney tweeted, "@RepThomasMassie is indeed a dumbass"; Representative Dean Phillips called his actions a "principled but terribly misguided stunt".[87] In a phone interview with Betsy Woodruff Swan of Politico, Massie responded in jest to Trump's calls for his removal, stating "I take great offense to that. I'm at least second-rate."[85] Some Republicans defended Massie: Paul Gosar called him a "good man and a solid conservative" and Chip Roy said Massie was "defending the Constitution today by requiring a quorum".[87]
In an interview with Politico, Massie said that "the fact that they brought all of these congressmen here in order to get a quorum shows you that I was right. The Constitution requires a quorum to pass a bill, and they were planning to subvert the Constitution". He also questioned why people such as grocery store employees or truck drivers should be expected to work during the pandemic, but not members of Congress, who "make $174,000 a year" and have "the best health care in the world".[85]