NOW TOO MUCH FOR US? In a nation which is no more a nation...

FRIDAY, JANUARY 16, 2026

...we're badly in need of a guide: "A guide...who only has at heart [our] getting lost?"

In recent weeks, the flooding of the zone has proceeded at a new and disturbing pace. This has created a world which may well be "now too much for us," in roughly a million ways.

At the center of this storm is (tragically) an apparent madman who is not a clinical madman. Last week, the fatal shooting of Renee Good, and the welter of claims which instantly followed, sent us back to the melodic opening passage of a difficult poem by Frost:

Directive 

Back out of all this now too much for us,
Back in a time made simple by loss
Of detail, burned, dissolved, and broken off
Like graveyard marble sculpture in the weather,
There is a house that is no more a house
Upon a farm that is no more a farm
And in a town that is no more a town...

"Back out of all this now too much for us?" Plainly, we Americans seem to be in such a place right now. We live in a country which is no more a country, perhaps recalling a behavioral code which is no more any such code.

Frost referred to a house which is no more a house, in a town which is no more a town. And then, he spoke about a guide, a guide who might take us somewhere:

(Continuing directly from above)
The road there, if you'll let a guide direct you
Who only has at heart your getting lost,

May seem as if it should have been a quarry -
Great monolithic knees the former town
Long since gave up pretense of keeping covered.
And there's a story in a book about it...

And so on from there.

Where might that mysterious guide be able to take us? Presumably, back to that house when the house remained a house. Back to that farm when it was still a farm, in a town which was still a town.

The poem gets very difficult from there. But using that language as a guide, is it likely we Americans will be able to find "the road there"the road back to a nation which, however imperfect it may have been, could still function as a nation?

Will we Americans find the road there? With an apparent madman who can't be described as a madman at the head of a building tsunami, we'd have to say that the odds don't seem real good. Any by the way:

Isn't this the way empires have always come undone, when the empire becomes too large and too complex, when things fall apart; the center cannot hold, and mere anarchy is loosed upon the world which is no more a world?

Last night, we watched the ugly madness of the Gutfeld! programa "late-night comedy show" which isn't a comedy show and isn't a late-night show either.

This morning, we attempted to scan the New York Times. On the front page of today's print editions, this report sits in the upper right-hand corner of the paper's front page:

Trump Sharpens Threat As Clashes With Agents Continue in Minnesota
Says Insurrection Act Could Be Invoked

This article is by Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, Mitch Smith and Thomas Fuller.

How do we know that's the featured report on the front page of today's print edition? We know that because the Times presents a picture of its front page as part of its "Today's Paper" site.

That said, the New York Times is, in many ways, a newspaper which is no more a newspaper. 

We wanted to read that featured reportthe report which tops today's page A1but the report can be found nowhere on either of the paper's two major sites. When we tried to find the report through the New York Times search engine, that engine which is no more an engine provided no link to any such report:

The engine which is no more an engine, inside the paper which no more a paper, doesn't seem to know that that featured report exists!

"Time just gets away from us." It's the closing line of the Coen Brothers' 2010 remake of True Grit. The Oscar-nominated film tells a story of devotion to task, at the risk of death, across the river and in the territory where no established order prevails.

In the current situation, the complexity of the time has helped create a world which is now too much for us. 

How complexified is our failing worldour world which is no more a world? Consider the start of this news reporta news report which can be found on the "nytimes.com" web site:

Was Renee Good Obligated to Comply With an ICE Agent’s Orders?

Moments before Renee Good was shot to death on a Minneapolis street last week, a federal agent ordered her to get out of her Honda Pilot.

Was she legally obligated to comply?

The answer is contingent on many factors, experts said, including the complex interplay of power and jurisdiction among law enforcement agencies. While Ms. Good was compelled to follow a lawful order, it is not clear whether the immigration agents on the scene were acting within their authority.

“What were the ICE officers even attempting to do?” asked Rachel Moran, an expert on police accountability at the University of St. Thomas School of Law in Minneapolis. “There’s a couple of key questions, I think. One is, were they involved in a legitimate enforcement operation at that point? And the second is, was she actually blocking their vehicles?”

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has said that agents had been trying to free a vehicle that was stuck in the snow when “a mob of agitators that were harassing them all day began blocking them in, shouting at them and impeding law enforcement operations.”

Putting aside the question that has driven heated debate over the episode—whether the agent’s decision to shoot Ms. Good was reasonable—agents would be within their powers to take action against anyone obstructing a legitimate operation, experts said. But whether Ms. Good’s actions met that test is open to interpretation.

Video of the episode shows that Ms. Good’s Honda was blocking at least one lane of traffic, but cars were able to pass.

That raises the question, experts said, of whether the agent who asked Ms. Good to exit her car was performing what amounts to traffic enforcement, a function of the local police.

Michael Feinberg, a lawyer and former F.B.I. agent, wrote in an article for Lawfare, a legal affairs website, that according to Minnesota statute, peace officers, defined as state or local law enforcement officers, are empowered to enforce the law against stopping on a road or highway, a misdemeanor. Federal agents may serve as peace officers only at the request and under the direction of a state or local officer. (Custody of anyone they arrest, according to the law, must be turned over to a state or local officer.)

Under federal statute, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents have the power to make arrests for illegal entry to the United States, federal felonies or “any offense against the United States” if it occurs in the agent’s presence.

But the agents’ newly aggressive tactics seem to reflect an expanded view of their power, said Jenn Rolnick Borchetta, the deputy project director on policing for the American Civil Liberties Union, raising concerns about “ICE agents who are supposed to be doing civil immigration enforcement thinking that they’re empowered to take actions like criminal law enforcement.” She added, “There are important differences on the limits of their authority that they don’t seem to be observing.”

The complexification continues from there, a marker of the complexification which dogs every aspect of our governmental systems. According to experts, there's no way an empire so complex and so incomprehensible can be kept from falling apart.

Was Renee Good about to be arrested when she tried to drive away? The furious agent who tried to open the door of her car hadn't said she was under arrestbut it's at that point that a tsunami of legal complexity intrudes.

In a similar way, it's virtually impossible to explain any part of our government systems in a way we average shlubs can be expected to understand. In such ways, the towns which are no more our towns have instead become the home of general incomprehension.

(For the record: Noem has also said that Renee Good "had been stalking and impeding [the ICE agents'] work all throughout the day." Is there any evidence in support of that claim? More than a week later, have you seen any attempt to report and examine that claim? Do even the most elementary facts ever get established as the zone is newly flooded each hour of every day?)

Last night, the clowning on the Fox News Channel was barely recognizable as human. This morning, the New York Times presents an exhausting welter of news reportsso many so that the Times, as it routinely does, has lost track of the principal news report which sits atop the front page of its print edition!

As we've frequently chronicled, this weird circumstance prevails at the Times a great deal of the time. Then again, also this:

The Times refuses to report or discuss the possible medical state of the apparent madman who isn't a clinical madman (because there's no such thing). Also, the Times refuses to report, or to discuss, the torrents of garbage which flow from gonzo pseudo-journalistic performers like Gutfeld and Watters, along with the corporate stooges who surround them, on a daily basis.

They keep presenting news content which is no longer any such thing. The New York Times keeps averting its gaze from their ludicrous misbehaviorfrom behavior which is no more the behavior of recognizable humans.

Nor is it true that we Blues have played no role in this state of coming undone:

We worked very hard, for years on end, to send the madman back to the White House. Over on our own "news channel," the corporate stars we're trained to love will never discuss those failures.

They're disappeared, removed from our view. They're persistently cited on Fox, disappeared from the view of us Blues.

Beyond that, the corporate stars we're trained to love won't discuss or discuss the gonzo conduct of Gutfeld and Watters and Hannity and the army of others. In this world which is no more a world, professional courtesyand a dominant refusal to serveguides those corporate multimillionaires to align with a creed which is no more a creed, in which such basic reporting simply never occurs.

The madman who is a sitting president has behaved inexcusably for fifteen years, from his birther years on. It has been fifteen years of increasingly crazy behavior, but so what? The editorial board of the New York Times has never been willing to make this obvious statement

This endless behavior is inexcusable. Simply put, it's time for this person to go.

On the editorial side, they've never been willing to say that! On the news side, they've never been willing to identify President Trump's endless array of crazy misstatements and vile accusations as the stuff of an ongoing front-page news focusas the sort of astonishing (and disturbing) behavior which needs to go right to page one every time it occurs.

Forget the likely medical issues which may lie at the heart of this crazy behavior. At the Times, they won't even come to terms with the simple existence of the crazy behavior itself. 

In short, we're served by journalists who are no more journalists inside a nation which is no more a nation. They bow to a code which no more a code as they refuse to perform.

In a wide assortment of ways, we Blues helped put the sitting president where he currently is. In this tribe which is much like other tribes, we remain unable to grasp that fact, and it's very hard to see where the flood takes us from here.

We regard the president's apparent medical condition as an obvious human tragedy. We also think it's very dangerous. And yet, the silence which is very much a silence continues to roll along.

We're all badly in need of a guide, one who might help us get found.

Closing music, True Grit: "Time just gets away from us?"

To our ear, the Coen Brothers played the story as devotion to task, by each of the two major characters, to the point of possible death, in service to unshakable codes, in the uncharted land across the river where there's no established order at all.

To our ear, this closing music just leaped off the screen.  The singer there is Iris DeMent. For her full three verses, click this.

As you may know, there's a football connection, this very weekend. We hope they're both full of pure grit.


54 comments:

  1. Most traffic stops unfortunately require blasting three bullets into soccer moms heads for absolutely no fucking reason because freedumb bitches. Somerby is too old to blog, but old enough to be Presidrnt.

    ReplyDelete

  2. "That said, the New York Times is, in many ways, a newspaper which is no more a newspaper. "

    True dat. No one reads that shit anymore.

    "While Ms. Good was compelled to follow a lawful order, it is not clear whether the immigration agents on the scene were acting within their authority."

    Ha-ha. Your idiotic "no more a newspaper" is going to get people killed, Bob. But, then, that's probably what they want to do.

    When federal officers order you get out of your car, you're not starting to think about "limits of their authority". What you do is you getting out of your car, period.

    Capeesh, Bob?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You fucking jaggoffs and weirdos can Nazi the truth. Ross is an idiot officer and a big pussy.
      https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/15/video/ice-shooting-renee-good-minneapolis-videos.html?unlocked_article_code=1.E1A.iMYS.Wj4daDYBJ233&smid=url-share

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    2. Squeal harder, Soros-monkey.

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    3. The swamp won't be drained until ALL the Nobel prize medals have been turned over to President Trump in recognition and honor.

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    4. Ross is almost as retarded as his defenders.

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    5. But Ross' defenders are even bigger pussies than he is.

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  3. Steve M. at "No More Mister Nice Blog" has been doing some actual media analysis:

    https://nomoremister.blogspot.com/2026/01/the-media-still-believes-there-are-only.html

    https://nomoremister.blogspot.com/2026/01/or-alternately-centrist-think-tanks.html

    It might be too much to expect Somerby to write stuff like this, but he could at least read it and become better informed about the press and popular opinion as measured by polls.

    For example, Steve M. complains:

    "And yet Anderson's most recent Times focus group features eleven Trump fans -- who, you will be astonished to learn, think Trump is doing an awesome job as president.

    The Times feeds us pro-Trump focus groups with the implication that this is how "the other half" thinks. But it's not the other half. It's a minority of the population -- and for now, independents and Democrats add up to an anti-Trump majority."

    Somerby used to point out the failures of the New York Times' focus groups examining Trump supporters, but now he calls the Times Blue Media and acts as if any protest of Trump is going to manufacture more Republican voters, when as Steve M. notes, the Democrats calling for defunding the police actually gave Biden 80 million votes and the presidency, more than any president in history.

    Increasingly, I admire the way Walz has been sticking up for Minnesotans against government oppression. If he were running for President, I would vote for him, as I did Harris/Walz.

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    1. According to MSNOW reporter outside the WH, the president is very interested in invoking the insurrection act. I repeat, he's very interested.

      Great fucking reporting.

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    2. Recall that Somerby recently opined that it was time for Walz to go.

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    3. O’Donnell is still doing admirable work over there.

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    4. O'Donnell is great, agreed.

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  4. While Trump engages in clown-show buffoonery to distract us from his crimes, Heather Cox Richardson said this yesterday:

    "
    10 of 378
    January 15, 2026
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    Heather Cox Richardson from Letters from an American Unsubscribe
    Thu, Jan 15, 11:44 PM (9 hours ago)
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    Forwarded this email? Subscribe here for more
    January 15, 2026
    Heather Cox Richardson
    Jan 16





    READ IN APP

    You know what Americans aren’t talking about very much today after Trump’s threat to detonate the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) this week and his threat this morning to invoke the Insurrection Act in Minnesota?

    They aren’t talking a lot about the fact that the Department of Justice has released less than 1% of the Epstein files despite the law, the Epstein Files Transparency Act, Congress passed requiring the release of those files in full no later than December 19. Trump loyalists are trying to shift public anger at Trump over the files back to former president Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, whom QAnon conspiracy theorists believed were at the heart of a child sex trafficking scheme.

    Representative James Comer (R-KY) has threatened to hold former president Clinton in contempt of Congress for refusing to appear for a closed-door deposition about Epstein. But in a scathing four-page public letter to Comer, the Clintons called the subpoenas invalid and noted that Comer had subpoenaed eight people in addition to the Clintons and had then dismissed seven of them without testimony.

    They also noted that Comer had done nothing to force the Department of Justice to release all the Epstein files as required by law, including all the material relating to them, as Bill Clinton has publicly called for. They said, “There is no plausible explanation for what you are doing other than partisan politics.”

    It is so obvious why Trump is trying to hide the Epstein files, but why are people like Somerby helping him bury them?

    ReplyDelete
  5. “There are important differences on the limits of their authority that they don’t seem to be observing.”
    That is a statement of the painfully obvious.

    I don't know why Bob calls this "complexification" -- which may or may not be a word -- when it's pretty straight forward, as enumerated in the statement above. ICE do not have jurisdiction to perform most of the actions in which they have engaged.

    Seemingly, ICE have created a forcefield around themselves, say about 1mi in radius, where entering that field immediately constitutes obstruction and endangers them, which allows them to use a force of their choosing on citizens with absolute immunity, according to Vance.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. It’s so freaking Un-American, almost gestapo-like, that there is a police force or enforcement agency that purportedly has absolute immunity. That should concern everyone. It used to concern conservatives.

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    2. I’m afraid Somerby is missing the moment. I imagine him blogging in 1865, saying “we in the north helped bring this about” and “ we only talk for so long, then we hit”. He’s basically dithering during this fascist takeover.

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    3. On the other hand, I might have missed Bob's point. Perhaps, Bob is ridiculing The NY Times for making their reporting so confusing and discerning complexity where there's none to be found.
      Trump has been lying and gaslighting us for 15 years and the media has refused to call him out for that using very plain language.
      Now we are analyzing the video frame by frame to discern what happened. Everyone can see what happened. Do ICE agents have authority to enforce traffic laws? They don't.
      The newly minted propaganda outlet, CBS, jumps in with their internal bleeding story. Again, transparent bullshit.

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  6. Whether Good was legally obliged to obey the agent's order isn't relevant to the shooting. The agent was legally justified, since she drove her vehicle into him.

    That kind of technicality is important for the radicals who want to disrupt ICE's legal duties. The disrupters are clever enough to look for ways to interfere with ICE without being convicted of interfering with ICE.

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    1. Hmm. But I believe it's a big question whether they are clever enough.

      The untimely departed cat-lady, for example, heard "Drive!" and hit the gas pedal. How clever was that? They are retarded.

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    2. Flies not swarming this morning, Renfield?

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    3. "The agent was legally justified, since she drove her vehicle into him."

      That's simply not true. The NY Times frame-by-frame analysis shows Ross' lower body completely unimpacted by the car, and also that his upper body has a forward lean into the car, which is the only reason there would be any contact with his upper body.

      This link should work:

      https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/15/video/ice-shooting-renee-good-minneapolis-videos.html?unlocked_article_code=1.E1A.iMYS.Wj4daDYBJ233&smid=url-share

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    4. @1:04 - Good wasn't clever, but the radicals who encouraged her did get what they wanted -- a martyr. Those radicals don't mind a death in The Cause.

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    5. Go take a flying fuck, Dickhead, you fucking fascist freak.

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    6. Yeah, David: the sacrificial lamb.

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    7. Quaker in a BasementJanuary 16, 2026 at 1:22 PM

      "...she drove her vehicle into him."

      No.

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    8. "The NY Times frame-by-frame analysis"

      Yeah, I love their analyses. I remember one of the Iraqi WMD. And then a few years of their captivating russiagate analysis. And then their analysis of Demented Joes' dementia.

      Very nice, all.

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    9. Thanks for the link, Hector. However slight his injury, hitting him shows that the vehicle was headed toward him That justifies the shooting legally, although it may have been a bad decision.

      The Times seems to blame the agent for Good running into him, writing: It also establishes how Mr. Ross put himself in a dangerous position near her vehicle in the first place.

      This reminds me of an old, sexist joke.

      A woman driving on Main Street crashes her car into another car. She tells the driver of the other car that the accident was his fault, saying, "I turned onto Main Street two blocks ago. You had plenty of time to turn your car off of Main Street"

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    10. Let's run it by a jury, Dickhead.

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    11. Ross' skirt was too short, so Good obviously ain't guilty.

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    12. Quaker - he went to the hospital. He had internal bleeding where the vehicle hit him.

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    13. "However slight his injury, hitting him shows..."

      If he's leaning forward with his upper body into the car as it goes past him, he's initiating the contact with the car, not the other way around.

      And your joke aside, Ross did place himself in a dangerous position in the first place, as many law enforcement analysts have noted.

      It's stupid to plant yourself in front of a car with its engine running, but this won't be the first time you defend the stupid.

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    14. According to 2 anonymous administration sources, Dickhead? Is that good enough for you, Dickhead? What if that was your daughter, you fucking fascist freak?

      You're a fucking liar, you will always be a fucking liar, you fascist bastard.

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    15. Hector - I don't understand why it was stupid for Ross to walk in front of Good's SUV. It's perfectly normal to walk in front a a car with its engine running. In fact, we do that when we cross the street where cars are waiting at a traffic light .

      But, suppose it was stupid for Ross to walk in front of Good's SUV. What does that prove or signify? To me, it seems irrelevant.

      BTW I am not defending the shooting. I think the shooting was a mistake. I am just pointing out that it was justifiable under our laws.

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    16. And how exactly is it "a dangerous position" to be "in front of a car with its engine running", Soros-monkey, unless a terrorist is behind the wheel of that vehicle?

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    17. Is Ross a bigger moron than DiChead. I'd say it is close. First the idiot gets his arm stuck in a window and is drug down the street. Then the buffoon shoots a mom three times in the head simply for pointing out what a stupid little pussy he is.

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    18. If he was dead and the retarded cat-lady alive, then he would've been a moron. But the way it went, he definitely appears to be the smart one.

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    19. Anonymouse 1:56pm, have you considered switching teams…because you and Anonymouse 1:55pm, are made for each other.

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    20. Quaker - he went to the hospital. He had internal bleeding where the vehicle hit him.
      There's no propaganda that's too dumb or too transparent for David not to fall for.
      Have you seen any medically verifiable information that he had internal bleeding? He didn't. It's low IQ coverup by the DHS. I guess they know their audience.

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    21. Quaker in a BasementJanuary 16, 2026 at 2:53 PM

      David, he didn't go to the hospital. He went to the federal building.

      https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/01/15/us/minneapolis-shooting-ice

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    22. IIya, who would give you that information other than DHS? The medical team can’t divulge anything unless they are asked to do that and why would they be put in that situation in a very hostile environment? The DHS maybe be lying their butts off, but the reason that they’re faces are out there and not the ED physician isn’t that hard to fathom.

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    23. They can release the results of the CT Scan. Have you even seen a photographs of his bruising? Have you not seen him sauntering over to Good's SUV to admire his work? It wasn't a person with any injuries. Nothing happened to him and everyone knows it. No amount of gaslighting will change that.

      PS: When I see some actual diagnostic evidence of Ross' internal bleeding, I will humbly take back my comments.

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  7. Quaker in a BasementJanuary 16, 2026 at 1:24 PM

    Several Native Americans have reportedly been swept up in Donald Trump’s immigration enforcement surge in Minnesota, where federal agents are accused of racially profiling immigrants and citizens alike in rapid, warrantless arrests.

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/ice-native-americans-arrested-minnesota-citizens-b2901556.html

    Four members of the Oglala Sioux Tribe were arrested and detained last week, according to Tribe President Frank Star Comes Out. Three remain in federal detention, according to the Tribe.

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    Replies
    1. https://apnews.com/article/oglala-sioux-immigration-detention-donald-trump-minneapolis-fb02f775dbdf3b9bc62a9ca539a14148

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    2. In the video of ICE patrolling under Obama in early 2016 there’s an incident where the team arrests the wrong man. Evidently, that accident was cordially received by CNN, the viewers, and all other humanitarians.

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    3. This story seems to be fabricated. But, suppose in the process of deporting 600,000 illegal immigrants, four legal citizens had been wrongly held for a day or so. What could we conclude from that incident? Any law enforcement function occasionally picks up the wrong person.

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    4. Quaker in a BasementJanuary 16, 2026 at 2:55 PM

      How many such "mistakes" are too many for you?

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    5. We could conclude from that incident that ICE agency is working. Because the old saying goes: "It's only those who do nothing that make no mistakes".

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  8. Thank you President Trump
    Taiwan will invest $250 billion in U.S. chipmaking under new trade deal
    https://www.cnbc.com/2026/01/15/us-taiwan-chips-deal-china.html

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    Replies
    1. Fuck off troll bitch.

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    2. Unlike Biden getting actual investment frm Amerian based chip makers, the felon makes up deals with foreigners that never pan out. How is the flat screen tv plant in Wisconsin doing jaggoff?

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    3. How's that AC plant doing in Indianapolis, Mexico doing? The one the fucktard saved?

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    4. Sometimes I wonder who would be gullible and naive enough to fall for such nonsense. And then I discover. Taiwan does not invest in anything. Taiwan is a country, not a company.
      A more interesting question: what's going to happen when countries stop buying and start dumping US Treasuries. Any investment advice?

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    5. Taiwan is not a country, Soros-monkey.

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