Debate: Are WE sleeping on Trump like the Jewish people slept on... YALL GOT WHAT YALL WANTED

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Schultz is trash.

I knew there was a reason I never trusted him

F**k Lenard too
 

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Trump Celebrity Endorsements: A Full List Of Celebrities Supporting The Ex-POTUS​

By Dessi Gomez, Tom Tapp
October 25, 2024 3:00pm
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While the list of Hollywood supporters for Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris is long, a number of celebrities have thrown their hat in the ring for Donald Trump — and it’s not the first time for some.
In addition to the various celeb attendees of the 2024 Republican National Convention, musicians, actors, comedians, athletes and social media stars have shown support for the former President and current Republican candidate this time around.
Find out who they are below, and keep checking back as more declare their endorsements ahead of Election Day in November.
RELATED: Kamala Harris Celebrity Endorsements: A List Of Celebrities Supporting The VP
Richelle Ryan

Photo : Gabe Ginsberg/Getty Images

Richelle Ryan​

Adult film actress Richelle Ryan and Amber Rose plan to host a rally for Donald Trump in Las Vegas.
Mel Gibson at 'Monster Summer' screening

Photo : Amanda Edwards/Getty Images

Mel Gibson​

Actor Mel Gibson will vote for Trump.

Paula Deen

Paula Deen​

Paula Deen and Lara Trump are old pals, but the celebrity chef recently posed for a photo with the former president, as well.

John Schneider

Photo : Amanda Edwards/Getty Images

John Schneider​

Actor John Schneider is a vocal supporter of Donald Trump, even writing several songs about the former president. But the onetime Dukes of Hazzard star got into hot water last year when his online comments about current president Joe Biden prompted a Secret Service investigation.

Brett Favre

Photo : Dan Newlin/Twitter

Brett Favre​

Pro Football Hall-of-Famer Brett Favre supported Donald Trump in 2020 and, in early October, appeared in a local TV ad endorsing the former president for the 2024 cycle.

Donald Trump Elon Musk

Photo : JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images

Elon Musk​

Elon Musk publicly endorsed Trump just minutes after the attempt on the former president’s life earlier this year writing, “I fully endorse President Trump and hope for his rapid recovery.” Musk has since supported the campaign by interviewing Trump on X and appearing at a rally with him.

Victoria Jackson

Photo : Getty

Victoria Jackson​

SNL alumna Victoria Jackson has spoken out often in support for Trump this election cycle, sharing a number of posts on her Instagram page, including one earlier this year where she wrote emphatically, “VOTE TRUMP!!!”

Joe Exotic

Photo : Netflix

Joe Exotic​

Imprisioned Tiger King star Joe Exotic endorsed Trump in September, but said he’d like to see the candidate “get off of this name-calling and childish rhetoric” and focus on the issues.
Exotic, who’s serving a 21-year sentence, also offered his services as director of the Fish and Wildlife Service in a second Trump Administration.

Harrison Butker

Photo : Getty

Harrison Butker​

Kansas City Chiefs kicker and conservative Catholic Harrison Butker said he supports Donald Trump because he is “the most pro-life president.”

Brittany Mahomes at a KC Chiefs event

Photo : Fernando Leon/Getty Images

Brittany Mahomes​

Brittany Mahomes, wife of Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, has liked several comments on her Instagram in support of Donald Trump. After she liked one of the former president’s posts, Trump thanked her for her support by shouting her out.

John Daly

Photo : Phil Inglis/Getty Images

John Daly​

Longtime Trump pal John Daly told Tucker Carlson in 2023 that the pro golfers he knows “all want Daddy Trump back.”

Kelsey Grammer

Photo : Mathew Tsang/Getty Images

Kelsey Grammer​

Kelsey Grammer, a prominent Republican supporter who maintains that voting for Trump in 2016 and 2020 has not effected his career, endorsed the GOP candidate again this year.

Tucker Carlson

Photo : Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Tucker Carlson​

Tucker Carlson told attendees at the Republican National Convention that the former president surviving an assination attempt in Butler, PA was “divine intervention.”

Jim Caviezel

Photo : SUZANNE CORDEIRO/AFP via Getty Images

Jim Caviezel​

The Passion of the Christ star Jim Caviezel called Donald Trump “the new Moses” in an interview with Fox News last year.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Photo : The Washington Post via Getty Images

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.​

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. suspended his own campaign for president on August 23 and, later that same day, appeared onstage with Donald Trump to throw his weight behind the former president.

Zachary Levi at 'Shazam! Fury of the Gods' premiere in Los Angeles

Photo : Getty Images

Zachary Levi​

During a Donald Trump rally in Michigan, the actor name-dropped his DC role in Shazam! (2019) while making a surprise appearance to endorse the twice-impeached president for a second term, after his first pick, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., dropped out of the race last month.

Danica Patrick

Danica Patrick​

The former Indycar driver joined Trump VP pick JD Vance at a rally in North Carolina and endorsed the ticket.
She told Vance, “I’ve never voted before, but this time around I have to vote. It’s too important.”

Taryn Manning

Photo : Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images

Taryn Manning​

Orange is the New Black actress Taryn Manning has called Trump “my hero.”

GettyImages-1051892330.jpg

Photo : SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images

Kanye​

Ye and Donald Trump have had a bumpy relationship since their much-publcised 2018 meeting in the Oval Office, but when the rapper was asked in February if he would be supporting Trump in 2024 he responded, “Yeah, of course, it’s Trump all day.”

Dennis Quaid

Photo : Getty

Dennis Quaid​

The Reagan starendorsed Donald Trump on Joe Rogan’s podcast, Chris Wallace’s Max show and on Piers Morgan Uncensored, telling Morgan, “People might call him an a–hole, but he’s my a–hole.” In early October, he spoke at a Trump rally in Coachella

Randy Quaid

Photo : Getty

Randy Quaid​

Randy Quaid is also on Team Trump, recently writing on social media that he and his wife “have both supported Trump since 2015.”

GettyImages-2162600929.jpg

Photo : Leon Neal/Getty Images

Jason Aldean​

Donald Trump greets Jason Aldean and his wife Brittany at the Republican National Convention in July.

Savannah Chrisley at the 2024 RNC

Photo : Getty Images

Savannah Chrisley​

Reality TV star Savannah Chrisley spoke onstage on the second day of the 2024 Republican National Convention

Amber Rose at the 2024 RNC

Photo : Getty Images

Amber Rose​

Model and reality TV contestant Amber Rose also spoke at the GOP Convention, telling attendees that “Donald Trump and his supporters don’t care if you’re Black, white gay or straight. It’s all love.”

Kodak Black

Photo : Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Kodak Black​

Donald Trump pardoned Kodak Black on his last day in office and the rapper returned the favor by appearing at a Trump campaign rally in New York this month.

Dana White

Photo : Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC

Dana White​

UFC CEO Dana White also spoke at the 2024 RNC.

GettyImages-2162603810.jpg

Russell Brand​

Russell Brand attended the Republican National Convention in July after endorsing Trump one month earlier.

GettyImages-1499766999.jpg

Photo : Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images

Rob Schneider​

Rob Schneider is an outspoken Trump supporter who makes frequent appearances on conservative shows such as Fox & Friends

Roseanne Barr

Photo : Getty Images

Roseanne Barr​

Roseanne Barr, whose “Cancel This!” special aired on Fox Nation, supported Trump’s 2020 campaign and is doing so again this time around.

Kid Rock

Photo : Getty Images

Kid Rock​

Musician Kid Rock performed during the 2024 Republican National Convention.

GettyImages-1229431797.jpg

Lil Pump​

Rapper Lil Pump appeared on stage with Trump during the 2020 campaign, and has also supported him during the 2024 effort

Screenshot-2024-09-19-at-4.17.46%E2%80%AFPM.png

Photo : Fox News

Kevin Sorbo​

Kevin Sorbo has been vocal in the media and online about his support for Trump, going so far as at hawk t shirts with Trump’s defiant image on them after the PA assassination attempt. Proceeds went to the campaign.

Chris Janson

Photo : Getty Images

Chris Janson​

Country music singer Chris Janson performed on the first day of the Republican National Convention.

James Woods

James Woods​

James Woods is a longtime, outspoken Trump supporter.

50 Cent

Photo : Getty Images

50 Cent​

Rapper Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson has gone back and forth with his support of the 45th President of the United States. After the assassination attempt on Trump, 50 Cent’s name trended, and he then put Trump’s face on his album cover.

Hulk Hogan

Photo : Getty Images

Hulk Hogan​

Hulk Hogan ripped his shirt as he spoke on the final day of the 2024 Republican National Convention.

GettyImages-2160842622.jpg

Lil Wayne​

Lil Wayne received a pardon from Donald Trump in 2021 and the two have had discussions about criminal justice reform issues.

GettyImages-2168654754.jpg

Sexyy Red​

Rapper Sexyy Red endorsed Trump in 2023 saying, “We need him back in office.”

GettyImages-1810445501.jpg

Trace Adkins​

Former All-Star Celebrity Apprentice winner Trace Adkins performed the National Anthem at the 2020 RNC and headlined a welcome party for the confab’s 2024 edition.

DaBaby

Photo : Aaron J. Thornton/FilmMagic

DaBaby​

Asked in 2022 if he supported Trump, rapper DaBaby said, “Hell, yeah…Trump is a gangster.”

Jon Voight

Photo : Getty Images

Jon Voight​

Jon Voight, an outspoken supporter of Donald Trump for years, was awarded the National Medal of Arts by Trump in 2019.

GettyImages-1465415980.jpg

Photo : Getty Images

Scott Baio​

Scott Baio spoke at the 2016 RNC.

Azealia Banks

Photo : Lorne Thomson/Redferns

Azealia Banks​

Azealia Banks attended a Trump rally in July after publicly coming out in support of him in 2023 saying, “He’s been through how many bankruptcies? How many wives? How many television shows? Seriously, nothing can take him down.”

Steve Mnuchin

Photo : Patrick T. FALLON / AFP

Steve Mnuchin​

Producer and former Trump Secretary of the Treasury Steve Mnuchin, whose Liberty Strategic Capital acquired a hefty 5.5% stake in Lionsgate Class A voting shares late last year, also endorsed his former boss.

Dean Cain

Dean Cain​

Former Lois & Clark star Dean Cain told Fox News earlier this year, “I’m endorsing President Trump 100%. No question about it.”

Rod Blagojevich

Photo : Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images

Rod Blagojevich​

Former Democratic governor turned Celebrity Apprentice contestant Rod Blagojevich supported Trump during the Republican National Convention in July.
 

respiration

/ˌrespəˈrāSH(ə)n/
BGOL Patreon Investor
To keep it a buck, I really found it irritating that dude would keep minimizing the danger of a second Trump presidency and Trump's fascist goals and intentions by referring to him as "the mean Twitter man".

... Equating awareness, education and real concern with irrational fear like little kids being afraid of monsters under the bed. As if FACTS, the concerns of historians, experts in political history, government, military and law were superseded by his simple-ass dismissive personal opinion.

None of this is a "man up" issue nor has it ever been. It's not a " just strap up" issue. It's also not a "we've been through worse" situation (who is "we" and how can you determine "worse"?). Who in the hell wants to live in a society that has regressed to Jim Crow? Where it isn't even safe for our kids and elders to leave the house?

It has been an issue of, "are you gonna get off your ass and vote to keep Trump out of office."

You don't have to be in love with everything about Kamala Harris. You just have to know that she is well capable of running the country, and would not destroy it nor democracy. You have be intelligent enough to be aware that this narcissistic sociopath Trump and his fellow racists/neo-fascists have had 4 years to restructure and correct the mistakes that were made in the failed coup on Jan 6, 2021 and enact a better plan to take over and destroy democracy as we know it. One needs to have the common sense to know that a man who never admits being wrong, has never had to want for anything, truly work or know what struggle is, who lacks empathy and intelligence, is a serial liar, has no integrity, is a financial criminal and a serial rapist and child molester, is completely self-centered, who is a virulent racist and who has promised to go after his political enemies if he is elected and has said that they deserve to die- is dangerous to hold the reins of power. One needs to know that he would make sure this time to fill all the cabinet positions and department appointments with loyalists and sycophants and further stack the Supreme Court into it having a far-right supermajority that would last longer than many of us will be alive.

This is an issue of "shit is real and it's at our doorstep now, literally".

Real billionaires, and heads of industry and real think tanks composed of legal experts, lawyers, politicians, business heads, etc are dead set on passing an agenda that would thrust us into authoritarianism. This year we've learned about Project 2025. This is not about imaginary monsters under the bed. It's about real life human monsters out in the open.

I hated the minimization on here of intelligence and common sense, as if this was some verbal pissing contest. I wish the brother to whom I'm addressing this was here to see it and account for his words that were in effect urging us all just to chill and maybe take a nap (anti-woke).

Yet seeing as he hasn't been seen around here in more than six months, I pray all is well with him and his loved ones. There is no personal hatred for the man, just for those words and sentiments he expressed.
 

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The alarming new power Trump will claim in a second term
Judd Legum
Jul 9




Donald Trump walks off the stage on June 27, 2024 (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Donald Trump says that if he returns to the White House in 2025, he will have the power to effectively cancel any federal program — or even an entire agency — by refusing to spend money appropriated by Congress.

Trump made the extraordinary announcement on the policy section of his presidential campaign website, Agenda47. In a video, Trump says that the president has "the Constitutional power to stop unnecessary spending through what is known as Impoundment." According to Trump, if Congress appropriates money that he decides is unnecessary, he has the authority to "refuse to waste the extra funds." This is known as "impoundment."

The last president to claim the authority to impound Congressionally-appropriated funds was former President Richard Nixon. In the 1970s, Nixon unilaterally canceled billions in spending "for highways, water pollution, environmental assistance, drug rehabilitation, public housing, and disaster relief." Nixon's impoundment of Congressionally-appropriated funds was challenged frequently — and often successfully — in court.

But, to remove any doubt, Congress passed the Impoundment Control Act of 1974, which prohibits the president from impounding funds without Congressional approval. The Impoundment Control Act is consistent with the Justice Department’s views of presidential impoundment under Nixon and former President Ronald Reagan. In 1969, then-Assistant Attorney General (and future Chief Justice of the Supreme Court) William Rehnquist wrote that "the suggestion that the President has a constitutional power to decline to spend appropriated funds" is "supported by neither reason nor precedent." In 1988, then-Assistant Attorney General Charles Cooper declared that "[t]here is no textual source in the Constitution for any inherent authority to impound." Cooper noted the president is obligated to "faithfully execute" the law, not ignore it.

Trump, however, has decided that the Impoundment Control Act is unconstitutional and has pledged to challenge it in court. Trump says he will use his self-proclaimed impoundment authority on "Day One" and order "federal agencies to identify portions of their budgets where massive savings are possible through the Impoundment Power." Trump says he will use impeachment to "crush the Deep State."

In his statement, Trump claims that "[l]eading constitutional scholars agree that impoundment is an inherent power of the president." None of those scholars are named.

The implications of Trump's claimed authority are enormous. For example, Trump has said he wants to "abolish the Department of Education." It would be extremely difficult to get Congress, even if it were under full Republican control, to approve such a deeply unpopular plan. Now, Trump is claiming the power to eliminate the Department of Education unilaterally by cutting off its funding.

Trump is also reportedly considering using impoundment to eliminate "green energy subsidies approved by President Biden as part of the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act and funding for the World Health Organization."

How Trump violated the Impoundment Control Act in his first term
In 2019, the Trump administration withheld "$214 million appropriated to DOD for security assistance to Ukraine." Trump was impeached for this decision after it was revealed that the delay in distributing funds was part of an effort to pressure Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden and his family.

In 2020, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) found that Trump violated the Impoundment Control Act by withholding the appropriate funds. "Faithful execution of the law does not permit the President to substitute his own policy priorities for those that Congress has enacted into law," the GAO said.

The Project 2025 connection
Reviving presidential impoundment is a priority of Russ Vought, Trump's director of the Office of Management and Budget. The day before Trump left office, Vought wrote a letter to Congress claiming the Impoundment Control Act "is an albatross around a President's neck, disincentivizing the prudent stewardship of taxpayer money and inviting detractors in Congress to second-guess complex program implementation decisions."

Vought is a key author of Project 2025, the radical blueprint for a second Trump administration. He wrote Project 2025's chapter on the Executive Office of the President of the United States. Vought is also spearheading Project 2025's 180-day "playbook" for Trump — a document that will not be released publicly. If Trump wins another term, Vought is considered a top candidate to be the next White House Chief of Staff.

A self-described Christian nationalist, Vought currently leads the Center for Renewing America (CRA). On June 24, CRA produced a lengthy white paper promoting impoundment. The paper claims that laws passed by Congress create "a ceiling on Executive spending, not a floor" and that Congress cannot "compel the President to expend the full amount of an appropriation."

Vought favors circumventing Congress to impose a far-right ideological agenda. "What we’re trying to do is identify the pockets of independence and seize them," Vought told the New York Times.

Vought says that Trump is being open about his plans for impoundment and other unilateral executive actions "to later be able to claim a mandate." But, even though Trump first announced his views on impoundment a year ago, it's unlikely many voters know about the issue or its implications. The issue has received scant coverage in major media outlets.
 

respiration

/ˌrespəˈrāSH(ə)n/
BGOL Patreon Investor
The alarming new power Trump will claim in a second term
Judd Legum
Jul 9




Donald Trump walks off the stage on June 27, 2024 (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Donald Trump says that if he returns to the White House in 2025, he will have the power to effectively cancel any federal program — or even an entire agency — by refusing to spend money appropriated by Congress.

Trump made the extraordinary announcement on the policy section of his presidential campaign website, Agenda47. In a video, Trump says that the president has "the Constitutional power to stop unnecessary spending through what is known as Impoundment." According to Trump, if Congress appropriates money that he decides is unnecessary, he has the authority to "refuse to waste the extra funds." This is known as "impoundment."

The last president to claim the authority to impound Congressionally-appropriated funds was former President Richard Nixon. In the 1970s, Nixon unilaterally canceled billions in spending "for highways, water pollution, environmental assistance, drug rehabilitation, public housing, and disaster relief." Nixon's impoundment of Congressionally-appropriated funds was challenged frequently — and often successfully — in court.

But, to remove any doubt, Congress passed the Impoundment Control Act of 1974, which prohibits the president from impounding funds without Congressional approval. The Impoundment Control Act is consistent with the Justice Department’s views of presidential impoundment under Nixon and former President Ronald Reagan. In 1969, then-Assistant Attorney General (and future Chief Justice of the Supreme Court) William Rehnquist wrote that "the suggestion that the President has a constitutional power to decline to spend appropriated funds" is "supported by neither reason nor precedent." In 1988, then-Assistant Attorney General Charles Cooper declared that "[t]here is no textual source in the Constitution for any inherent authority to impound." Cooper noted the president is obligated to "faithfully execute" the law, not ignore it.

Trump, however, has decided that the Impoundment Control Act is unconstitutional and has pledged to challenge it in court. Trump says he will use his self-proclaimed impoundment authority on "Day One" and order "federal agencies to identify portions of their budgets where massive savings are possible through the Impoundment Power." Trump says he will use impeachment to "crush the Deep State."

In his statement, Trump claims that "[l]eading constitutional scholars agree that impoundment is an inherent power of the president." None of those scholars are named.

The implications of Trump's claimed authority are enormous. For example, Trump has said he wants to "abolish the Department of Education." It would be extremely difficult to get Congress, even if it were under full Republican control, to approve such a deeply unpopular plan. Now, Trump is claiming the power to eliminate the Department of Education unilaterally by cutting off its funding.

Trump is also reportedly considering using impoundment to eliminate "green energy subsidies approved by President Biden as part of the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act and funding for the World Health Organization."

How Trump violated the Impoundment Control Act in his first term
In 2019, the Trump administration withheld "$214 million appropriated to DOD for security assistance to Ukraine." Trump was impeached for this decision after it was revealed that the delay in distributing funds was part of an effort to pressure Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden and his family.

In 2020, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) found that Trump violated the Impoundment Control Act by withholding the appropriate funds. "Faithful execution of the law does not permit the President to substitute his own policy priorities for those that Congress has enacted into law," the GAO said.

The Project 2025 connection
Reviving presidential impoundment is a priority of Russ Vought, Trump's director of the Office of Management and Budget. The day before Trump left office, Vought wrote a letter to Congress claiming the Impoundment Control Act "is an albatross around a President's neck, disincentivizing the prudent stewardship of taxpayer money and inviting detractors in Congress to second-guess complex program implementation decisions."

Vought is a key author of Project 2025, the radical blueprint for a second Trump administration. He wrote Project 2025's chapter on the Executive Office of the President of the United States. Vought is also spearheading Project 2025's 180-day "playbook" for Trump — a document that will not be released publicly. If Trump wins another term, Vought is considered a top candidate to be the next White House Chief of Staff.

A self-described Christian nationalist, Vought currently leads the Center for Renewing America (CRA). On June 24, CRA produced a lengthy white paper promoting impoundment. The paper claims that laws passed by Congress create "a ceiling on Executive spending, not a floor" and that Congress cannot "compel the President to expend the full amount of an appropriation."

Vought favors circumventing Congress to impose a far-right ideological agenda. "What we’re trying to do is identify the pockets of independence and seize them," Vought told the New York Times.

Vought says that Trump is being open about his plans for impoundment and other unilateral executive actions "to later be able to claim a mandate." But, even though Trump first announced his views on impoundment a year ago, it's unlikely many voters know about the issue or its implications. The issue has received scant coverage in major media outlets.
It would behoove folks to wake TFU.
 
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