regrettrump.bsky.social
@regrettrump.bsky.social
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Every couple of weeks we get a different description of the apparently awful stench coming off our necrotic president and I think it's high time the media nail down exactly what kind of rotten meat covered in women's perfume he actually smells like.
January 14, 2026 at 9:47 PM
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Ive been saying since the hand legion came up. Its advanced syphilis. Im nkt even joking. Rotten skin legions, severe mental decline, exhaustion, eradic behavior and the smell of decay comes out of every pore. Its a perfect match 🤮
January 14, 2026 at 10:09 PM
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He's a 79 year old, morbidly obese man suffering from dementia and incontinence.

Of course he smells like shit.
January 14, 2026 at 9:56 PM
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Two Target employees detained by federal officers at Richfield store are U.S. citizens, Rep. Michael Howard said. Target declined to comment.

Gift link: www.startribune.com/target-emplo...

Reach me with tips at carson.hartzog@startribune.com | Signal: carsonhartzog.13
Target employees detained by federal officers were U.S. citizens, legislator says
Minnesota Rep. Michael Howard, who represents Richfield, said the employees also were injured in the incident.
www.startribune.com
January 14, 2026 at 9:43 PM
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jesus christ, man, trump’s face is drooping and he’s barely conscious, RFK, jr’s hands are so shaky he can barely read his own remarks, whole cabinet’s falling apart
Trump face is drooping and he's fighting wokeness again today
January 14, 2026 at 9:41 PM
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As Democrats negotiate fiscal 2026 funding for the Dept of Homeland Security with Republicans before a Jan. 30 shutdown deadline, they’re demanding new rules for ICE and Border Patrol agents—such as forcing them to use body cameras, refrain from wearing masks, and go through more extensive training.
‘Abolish ICE’? Many Democrats are ready to fund it — with conditions
It's not clear a Homeland Security funding bill can get done, but furious negotiations are underway.
www.politico.com
January 14, 2026 at 9:56 PM
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Zero percent chance this is true.
January 14, 2026 at 4:40 PM
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Having seen several abductions up close, it is really hard to convey how much the thing they’re doing is roaming in military convoys until they see someone who is alone and isn’t white, and then jumping out in large numbers, pulling them into a van, and screeching off, all in 90 seconds or so.
"“They specifically asked me if I knew where the Hmong families lived on my street & in the neighborhood.” Lugert-Thom responded, “I don’t know anything about that” & she said they then asked, “Well, what about the Asian families?”"

"“I was a bit shaken & a bit shocked of what I was asked to do.”"
A St. Paul resident says federal officers knocked on her door and asked her to identify Hmong and Asian households in her North End neighborhood last week.
January 14, 2026 at 2:31 PM
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Enten: "Trump has just fallen off a cliff when it comes to Gen Z. Trump's net approval in February of 2025 was +10. It's a drop of 42 points to -32. My goodness gracious."
January 14, 2026 at 4:18 PM
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U.S. Suspends Immigrant Visa Processing for 75 Countries
#Trump
U.S. Suspends Immigrant Visa Processing for 75 Countries
Trump is escalating his immigration crackdown as he gears up for a second year back in office.
foreignpolicy.com
January 14, 2026 at 10:10 PM
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A week ago I think I knew maybe 3 parents at my kid’s preschool, and now I know almost all of them, and have steeled myself to give my life for their kids and their teachers if I need to.
January 14, 2026 at 9:15 PM
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JUST IN: Iran has closed its airspace for all flights
January 14, 2026 at 10:24 PM
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Danish official says there's a 'fundamental disagreement' with Trump over Greenland
#Trump
Danish official says there's a 'fundamental disagreement' with Trump over Greenland
A top Danish official said Wednesday that a “fundamental disagreement” over Greenland remains with President Donald Trump after talks in Washington with Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of ...
www.dailykos.com
January 14, 2026 at 10:30 PM
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Know what’s fucking insane?

Our NATO allies are sending troops to Greenland to defend against a possible US invasion.

I know this administration doesn’t understand anything about anything, but the US is not self-sufficient enough to thrive in an interconnected world on our own.
January 14, 2026 at 10:32 PM
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uh oh -- Trump's eyes are closed
January 14, 2026 at 8:11 PM
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.@PabloReports: Do you stand with the autoworker who called Trump a pedophile protector?

Ruiz: Trump should release the Epstein files and prove him wrong.
January 14, 2026 at 7:28 PM
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BREAKING: Three-judge panel, on a 2-1 vote, refuses to block California from using its mid-decade redistricting map. storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.us...
January 14, 2026 at 8:50 PM
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In fact, Trump was like the only person in American public life who *praised* the Chinese government for its Tiananmen crackdown.
Trump claims to want to bomb Iran over human rights concerns. This excuse is obviously pretextual, fake and not something Trump has ever expressed interest in until 12 days ago. Nevertheless, as I write, corporate media is uncritically reporting on it as if it’s a sincere and genuine conviction.
As the US president moves from bombing one country to another, liberal-washing of Trump continues apace: by @ahjohnson.bsky.social
January 14, 2026 at 8:53 PM
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Imagine claiming you hated a vile pedophile so much that you flew around in his old plane for your campaign (it says "trump 2024") FIVE YEARS AFTER HE DIED...

... and STILL can't bring yourself to call him anything worse than "creep."
January 14, 2026 at 7:59 AM
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Trump's heavy hand tightens grip on U.S. economy
#Trump
Trump's heavy hand tightens grip on U.S. economy
President Trump is reaching deeper than ever into the gears of the U.S. economy, attempting to harness state power to directly shape prices, markets, interest rates and corporate behavior. Why it matters: The Trump administration's economic interventions — including its extraordinary criminal probe of the Federal Reserve — go far beyond typical electioneering. Trump is trying to reverse his sagging approval ratings by brute force, leaning on populist instincts to deliver visible cost relief before November. The result: institutional stability and capitalist norms — like so much else in the Trump era — are increasingly subordinate to raw presidential power. Zoom in: Trump has denied knowledge of the Justice Department's criminal inquiry into Fed chair Jerome Powell, which is nominally focused on cost overruns from the central bank's renovation of its D.C. headquarters. But Powell and his predecessors see the probe as the culmination of a months-long White House pressure campaign against the Fed , which has resisted cutting interest rates as fast as Trump wants. "That jerk will be gone soon," Trump said of Powell during an economic speech in Detroit Tuesday. The big picture: In the first 13 days of 2026, Trump has targeted the biggest drivers of voters' cost-of-living anxiety with direct, highly visible interventions outside the normal policy-making process. Energy costs: Trump has openly acknowledged that Venezuela's vast oil reserves factored into his decision to capture its leader, Nicolás Maduro. He urged Big Oil executives to invest $100 billion to revive Venezuela's decrepit infrastructure — then threatened to shut Exxon out of the effort after its CEO called the country "uninvestable." Housing costs: Trump ordered a $200 billion purchase of mortgage-backed securities in a highly unusual effort to lower mortgage rates. He also proposed a ban on "large institutional investors" from buying single-family homes, seeking to force down prices by squeezing corporate players out of the housing market. Consumer debt: Trump called for capping credit card interest rates at 10% for at least a year — an intervention into consumer lending aimed at delivering immediate relief to borrowers. Banks and lenders warned the move could restrict access to credit, especially for riskier consumers. Between the lines: Individual stocks have gotten hammered by Trump's recent intercessions, but the broader market has largely learned to discount the chaos. That muscle memory traces back to the " TACO trade " ("Trump Always Chickens Out") — Wall Street shorthand for investors buying the dip on Trump's tariff threats on the assumption he'd eventually back off. Many of these policies also lack the durability of a legislative solution, relying instead on executive orders or thundering pronouncements on Truth Social. Still, the escalation — particularly the unprecedented steps to erode the Fed's independence — has contributed to a trend of bond yields rising, the dollar slipping and investors flocking to gold. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent privately warned Trump on Sunday that the Powell investigation "made a mess" and could be bad for financial markets, as Axios first reported . Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), a key member of the Senate Banking Committee, vowed to block any action on Powell's replacement. Several other Republicans in Congress also raised alarms. What they're saying: "President Trump was given a resounding mandate by the American people to smash Washington, D.C.'s obsession with consensus orthodoxy that has let Americans down," White House spokesman Kush Desai said in a statement. "The Trump administration is turning the page on Joe Biden's economic disaster by implementing traditional free market policies that do work – like deregulation and tax cuts – while rectifying the America Last policies that have Americans behind." The bottom line: The economy's "invisible hand" is giving way to a clenched presidential fist.
www.axios.com
January 14, 2026 at 10:15 AM
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Trump Tirades about Shooting Get Darker as Polls Turn Brutal on ICE
#Trump
Trump Tirades about Shooting Get Darker as Polls Turn Brutal on ICE
As new polling shows Trump is losing the argument over the Minneapolis shooting, the writer of a new piece on this horror explains how Trumpworld sees this as an opening to wage open war on Americans.
newrepublic.com
January 14, 2026 at 10:36 AM
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January 14, 2026 at 10:54 AM
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Latino voters powered Trump’s comeback. Now they’re turning on his economy.
#Trump
Latino voters powered Trump’s comeback. Now they’re turning on his economy.
In 2024, economic anxiety and immigration concerns drove Latino voters to President Donald Trump. Those same issues are beginning to push them away. Across the country, the cost-of-living woes and immigration enforcement overshadowing Trump’s first year back in office are souring Hispanic businesspeople, a key constituency that helped propel him to the White House. In a recent survey of Hispanic business owners conducted by the U.S. Hispanic Business Council and shared exclusively with POLITICO, 42 percent said their economic situation is getting worse, while only 24 said it was getting better. Seventy percent of respondents ranked the cost of living as a top-three issue facing the country, more than double the number that selected any other issue. That’s a particularly striking number from this group: nearly two-thirds of respondents in the organization’s final survey before the 2024 election said they trusted Trump more than then-Vice President Kamala Harris to handle the economy. “The broader Hispanic community certainly feels let down,” said Javier Palomarez, the organization’s president and CEO. “It would be different if immigration and the economy had not been principal talking points for [Trump]. On both fronts, we didn't get what we thought we were going to get.” The combination of ongoing economic uncertainty and stubbornly high prices driven by Trump’s tariffs — coupled with the economic impact of the Trump administration’s ongoing raids in immigrant-heavy communities — makes the situation increasingly dire for some Hispanic business owners. Trump and his allies argue that they're just cleaning up the mess left by the previous president. "Republicans are putting in the work to fix the Bidenflation mess we inherited. From lowering inflation to creating a housing plan, President Trump is fighting for the working families Democrats left behind," said Republican National Committee spokeswoman Delanie Bomar. Monica Villalobos, president and CEO of the Arizona Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, told POLITICO about a South Phoenix restaurant hit hard by tariffs and labor shortages. Then, a series of ICE raids in the parking lot in front of the restaurant caused customers and workers to stop showing up and forced the owners to shut it down for several days. She predicted this kind of situation will blow back on Republicans in the next election. “We certainly do sense that our members — our clients in Arizona and across the country — feel a sense of betrayal by this administration, given its excessive overreach,” Villalobos said. “Now that we've had a taste of [the Trump administration], I think you're going to see a big shift [in the vote].” In 2024, Trump won 48 percent of self-described Hispanic or Latino voters , the highest mark for a Republican presidential candidate in at least a half-century , driven largely by economic anxiety. But polling shows Trump’s approval among Latino voters cratering as their satisfaction with the economy and immigration enforcement plummet. In a November POLITICO Poll , a plurality — 48 percent — of Hispanic respondents said the cost of living in the U.S. is “the worst I can ever remember it being,” and a majority (67 percent) said responsibility lies with the president to fix it. According to a November Pew Research poll , about two-thirds (68 percent) of U.S. Hispanics say their situation today is worse than it was a year ago, and just nine percent say it is better; 65 percent of Latinos disagree with this administration’s approach to immigration, and a majority (52 percent) said they worried they, a family member or a close friend could be deported, a ten-point increase since March. Trump’s net favorability rating among Hispanics is now at 28 percent, per a recent The Economist/YouGov poll , 13 points lower than it was in February of last year . “Small business owners are becoming a swing constituency, when you think about the midterms coming up,” said Tayde Aburto, president and CEO of the Hispanic Chamber of E-Commerce. “And not because their values have changed—it's just because their costs did.” Latino voters have swung hard back toward Democrats in recent elections as well. In Passaic County, New Jersey, Latinos voted narrowly for Trump in 2024 but in November backed Democratic Governor-elect Mikie Sherrill by double digits . And in Miami, where over 70 percent of residents are Hispanic, a Democratic mayor was elected last month for the first time in 28 years last month. Those elections are a referendum on Trump’s economy, said Christian Ulvert, a Democratic strategist and adviser to newly-elected Miami Mayor Eileen Higgins’ campaign. “[Trump’s] agenda literally does little to nothing to help Hispanic families,” Ulvert said. “Worse, it preys on Hispanic families. And what we heard on the campaign trail most pointedly is the old adage: is my life better today than it was yesterday under new leaders? And resoundingly, not only verbally, but through the ballot box throughout the year, Hispanic families are saying, ‘no, my life is actually worse.’” Joe Vichot, the Republican Party chair in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, said he knows many Hispanic Republicans in Allentown who are supportive of curbing illegal immigration and fighting crime. “But there's also stories of people who have been here for 10 years or more with their family, but they've never been legal, that are now caught up into the [deportation] system,” he said. “There should be a way to find some type of common ground where that won't happen.” The White House has tried to ease the ailing economic sentiment by sending Trump and Vice President JD Vance on the road, delivering a series of stump speeches on affordability in working-class areas, including Vance’s Dec. 16 stop in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania , which includes the Hispanic-majority city of Allentown. They insist the economy deserves an “A+++” grade, and are now buoyed by a December consumer price index report released Tuesday that showed inflation rising at a slower pace than expected. “Joe Biden gave us a colossal catastrophe, but my administration has rapidly and very decisively ended that,” Trump said during a speech in Detroit Tuesday. “We have quickly achieved the exact opposite of stagflation — almost no inflation and super high growth.” But cooling inflation rates just mean prices aren’t rising as fast as they had been — prices still remain much higher on many goods than they had been in recent years. And improving macroeconomic trends are not yet being felt by consumers, said Massey Villarreal, a business executive in Houston. “I'm like most Americans. I hear the inflation number and I don’t translate it to my going to the grocery store, when I look at the cost of hamburger meat,” said Villarreal, a former chair of the Republican National Hispanic Assembly. Palomarez, the U.S. Hispanic Business Council president, compared it to the Biden administration’s insistence that the post-Covid economy was healthy, even as consumer sentiment plunged. “While we were talking about GDP and unemployment and jobs growth rates, people were worried about the rent and the price of gas and the price of eggs. And we've got kind of the same thing here," he said. In Chicago, where some of the most-publicized immigration enforcement occurred last year, Hispanic-run businesses have been hit hard. Sam Sanchez, CEO of Third Coast Hospitality, said 2025 was the hardest period for business of his four decades in restauranteering, aside from the COVID pandemic. “It sends a really negative message to the 48 percent of Hispanic voters that voted for President Trump,” Sanchez said. “Everything’s just starting to fall apart.”
www.politico.com
January 14, 2026 at 11:21 AM
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The Trump dynasty could run and run – but will Ivanka, Barron or Kai take the crown? | Arwa Mahdawi
#Trump
The Trump dynasty could run and run – but will Ivanka, Barron or Kai take the crown? | Arwa Mahdawi
This week, Trump’s granddaughter announced she definitely doesn’t want to go into politics. Expect a run for office very soon, says Arwa Mahdawi
www.theguardian.com
January 14, 2026 at 11:21 AM
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Does Congress Even Want Power Anymore?
#Trump
Does Congress Even Want Power Anymore?
The Republican majority has let Trump do pretty much anything he wants—even when it tramples on Congress’s authority.
newrepublic.com
January 14, 2026 at 11:41 AM