UPDATE: Donald Trump Takes Office as the 47th US President

easy_b

Easy_b is in the place to be.
BGOL Investor
So I just got out of a meeting for a govt agency I work for (I'm a contractor). They still dont have any concrete guidance for us contractors but they are requiring our Fed counterparts to return 100% to office. We actually might lose a few people which wouldn't be good because we are full speed ahead on a lot of projects. I know program and project managers who are currently working from out of state. Our team has been just as productive as we were in the office and haven't fallen off at all over the last 4 years.

I'm not too worried because I stacked up a gang of dollars, but I don't look forward to a commute. The people I see complaining about work from home are pasty cracker bootlickers with shitty jobs.
I didn’t wanna tell people this, but I actually got a job offer and I accepted it last week from a contractor that deals with the government. I just called the contractor today and they said my position is not affected proceed as planned so the next two weeks I’ll be transitioning to that job from my current job. I can’t say what it is but I’m good for now.
 

Non-StopJFK2TAB

Rising Star
Platinum Member
IMO, the best possible case is the nation take this two year L, and nothing get done the two years after that.

Or nothing gets nothing done at all because people aren’t going to listen to him and the people he appoints.
The second sentence is where we are at. The days of listening to those people are over.

500 years is more than enough.
 

4 Dimensional

Rising Star
Platinum Member
So I just got out of a meeting for a govt agency I work for (I'm a contractor). They still dont have any concrete guidance for us contractors but they are requiring our Fed counterparts to return 100% to office. We actually might lose a few people which wouldn't be good because we are full speed ahead on a lot of projects. I know program and project managers who are currently working from out of state. Our team has been just as productive as we were in the office and haven't fallen off at all over the last 4 years.

I'm not too worried because I stacked up a gang of dollars, but I don't look forward to a commute. The people I see complaining about work from home are pasty cracker bootlickers with shitty jobs.

You lose a lot of talent not allowing people to do remote work, especially in the tech industry. There is no way I would relocate to the DMV area.

The private industry will likely stick with it though.
 

ArsenalCannon357

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
So I just got out of a meeting for a govt agency I work for (I'm a contractor). They still dont have any concrete guidance for us contractors but they are requiring our Fed counterparts to return 100% to office. We actually might lose a few people which wouldn't be good because we are full speed ahead on a lot of projects. I know program and project managers who are currently working from out of state. Our team has been just as productive as we were in the office and haven't fallen off at all over the last 4 years.

I'm not too worried because I stacked up a gang of dollars, but I don't look forward to a commute. The people I see complaining about work from home are pasty cracker bootlickers with shitty jobs.
IT NORMALLY IS ALWAYS THEM WHO SUFFERS..THE DUMB ASSES DON'T LEARN!!

This fool is burning it down by the hour.


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DC_Dude

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
So I just got out of a meeting for a govt agency I work for (I'm a contractor). They still dont have any concrete guidance for us contractors but they are requiring our Fed counterparts to return 100% to office. We actually might lose a few people which wouldn't be good because we are full speed ahead on a lot of projects. I know program and project managers who are currently working from out of state. Our team has been just as productive as we were in the office and haven't fallen off at all over the last 4 years.

I'm not too worried because I stacked up a gang of dollars, but I don't look forward to a commute. The people I see complaining about work from home are pasty cracker bootlickers with shitty jobs.
Where is the space for people?

I spoke to a few people and everyone keep saying folks going to be sitting 3 in a office.

Guess it depends on what agency you work in
 

DC_Dude

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
You lose a lot of talent not allowing people to do remote work, especially in the tech industry. There is no way I would relocate to the DMV area.

The private industry will likely stick with it though.
100 %. The amount of money saved (I’ve had talks with 1 of my VPs years ago). No overhead costs and the company is still bringing in the same or more in revenues.

Those private sector jobs will just lease out any office space they have in DC.

You ain’t never lied about losing talent in the tech industry.
 

COINTELPRO

Transnational Member
Registered
The issue with me is not the barriers to keep me from coming into the country, it is the barriers they're putting up to keep me here. Once you're here for awhile, they start turning stalkish chasing after you.

I don't see the allure of the United States at all, it is a petty, racist, shithole country. These immigrants have no idea what they're getting into. North Korea blocks it people from leaving the country and it looks like the United States does the same thing.

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COINTELPRO

Transnational Member
Registered
13th-03.jpg


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They wrote this amendment in this way to not acknowledge that they had people bonded up in slavery. The 13th amendment abolished slavery which is not an admission that they did anything wrong in the Constitution. The 14th amendment was written in that manner to give citizenship to us, without admitting to it in the Constitution.

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DC_Dude

Rising Star
BGOL Investor

But eggs too high...Bitch your co-pay about go up 300%....


Vulnerable House Republicans warn leaders against cutting Obamacare
The group of centrists also said the party needed to be careful about deep cuts to social safety net programs.

Meredith Lee Hill

01/23/2025, 3:26pm ET

House Republicans in competitive districts warned GOP leaders Thursday: We could lose our seats if you gut Obamacare to pay for a massive border, energy and tax bill.

A group of about a dozen centrist Republicans delivered the message in a meeting with GOP Whip Tom Emmer (R-Minn.) and other senior lawmakers, according to four Republicans familiar with the meeting who were granted anonymity to speak frankly. GOP members are already concerned that they’re poised to lose their trifecta and a swath of seats in the 2026 midterms — they worry GOP efforts to pare back the Affordable Care Act could pour fuel on the fire.


Centrists conveyed to leaders in the meeting that they needed to “learn the lessons” from the last GOP attempt to undercut the Affordable Care Act in 2017, according to one of the Republicans. The party went on to lose more than 40 House seats in the 2018 midterms.

Instead, they argued, Republicans needed to embrace the GOP’s role as the working class party. Leaders would counter that message by slashing programs working Americans rely on, they said. GOP lawmakers in the room included Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (Pa.), Young Kim (Calif.), David Valadao (Calif.), Andrew Garbarino (N.Y.), Tom Barrett (Mich.) and Don Bacon (Neb.).

And the group asserted that Republicans need to protect more than just Obamacare. A large swath of the GOP is discussing significant spending cuts, including to social safety net programs like Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps. Centrists warned their colleagues not to pursue deep cuts to those programs, which benefit low-income Americans, according to the four Republicans.

Thursday’s meeting was part of the series of listening sessions GOP leaders are holding with members as they try to outline their massive party-line reconciliation package. They’re also trying to figure out how to stave off a government shutdown that would kick in on March 15 and lift the debt ceiling.

The conversation was a broad “temperature check” among the more centrist members on what sort of spending cuts they could support, according to another Republican familiar with the meeting. Some members indicated they were more open to securing funding cuts by rescinding unspent Covid-19 funds and clawing back money from Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act, including credits for electric vehicles.

Emmer’s team ticked through slides of possible cuts to “feel out problems,” according to another person familiar with the meeting. As they went down the list, it became clear there were still many points of disagreement.

“Almost everything is: ‘That’s a problem. That’s a problem,'” said one of the people who was in the room.


:popcorn: :popcorn: :popcorn:
 

DC_Dude

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
The lawsuits people are going to file against the government for firing people are going to be out of this world.

Apparently this happened when Regan took office and a lot of people that lost their jobs got it back after his administration and sued the shit out the federal government.

Folks got paid millions (yes with a s). You can’t just fire someone they way they have been firing people.
 
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