Leopards Eating MAGA Faces (The Trump Policies Being Implemented Thread)

voltronblack

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:mjpls: a$$holes like this guy is why I believe it a waste of time trying to get maga and republicans voters in general to vote democrat because they will sooner or later vote republicans politician's back into power so long as they give off the appearance of only wanted to hurt the right kind of people:mjpls:
 

Formerly Black Trash

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Any potential shooter bout to use the God's plan line on him
You seen that video of them dragging that lady out who spoke up at the town hall?

It's all fun and games until ppl pushing back on stuff like that

Trump and them overconfident, they never had to use real violence yet to make ppl fall in line
 

Wargames

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They know they just stuck between their voters and a billionaire primarying them.

They are fukked and the smarter ones know it. If they are in a purple district they might as well retire now and save their money.

Stagflation is maybe a few months from officially happening and come hell or high water Musk is going to get those tax cuts on the books.
After they cut Medicaid and snap expect a lot of these cowards to not even run. The party will try and let someone else run under the Republican brand and the crazy part is I expect those new republicans to get elected enough to stop the democrats from getting a veto proof majority.

Because of all Americans republicans are the stupidest Americans.
 

bnew

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[Congrats, you played yourself] I am a hard working American and have been all of my life. You just took my income away for no reason.

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bnew

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1/30
Alan Smithee DGA



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2/30
‪Christine‬ ‪@madbookishatheist.bsky.social‬

and what suburban housewives that will now watch as their daughters are stripped of their rights, who will watch those same daughters die of sepsis due to abortion bans, daughters who won't have access to high earnings jobs and birth control.
Fuq 'em.

3/30
‪devrawiz.bsky.social‬ ‪@devrawiz.bsky.social‬

It's always well to remember the adage "Be careful what you wish for". Politicians rarely keep promises.

4/30
‪4gabriel.bsky.social‬ ‪@4gabriel.bsky.social‬

White Women for Trump are also being fired for being DEI and losing their WIC & other programs

5/30
‪Jazzminmin‬ ‪@jazzminmin.bsky.social‬

Cry me a river.

6/30
‪the-thc-ministry.bsky.social‬ ‪@the-thc-ministry.bsky.social‬



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7/30
‪GoldenGator‬ ‪@goldengator.bsky.social‬

How about we not forget Bluesky for Bluesky?

86% of Bluesky voters voted for Bluesky.

The only group higher in percentage of supporters was Bluesky at 92%.

8/30
‪bibliophile696.bsky.social‬ ‪@bibliophile696.bsky.social‬



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9/30
‪Joe Fink 🇸🇮 🇺🇦 🇨🇦 🇬🇱 🇵🇦 🇺🇳‬ ‪@joefink53.bsky.social‬

And eggs and gas are free like he promised, right? Just not in my neighborhood...

10/30
‪jasonegenberg.bsky.social‬ ‪@jasonegenberg.bsky.social‬

Democrats keep playing defense while Republicans rewrite the rules and seize power. This article breaks down the bold blueprint they need to fight back, reclaim the working class, and save democracy—before it’s too late.

The Democratic Blueprint to Take Back America—Before It’s Too Late.

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11/30
‪Alan Smithee DGA‬ ‪@alansmitheedga.bsky.social‬

The GOP owns the media and controls the narrative. There's no end to the crazy bullshyt they get morons to believe.

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12/30
‪superman55.bsky.social‬ ‪@superman55.bsky.social‬

And I mean they have made these fools to completely turn off their common sense and critical thinking abilities. They have made these lunatics believe in eggs rather than decency. Sickness over vaccines, autocracy over freedom and a felon over a prosecutor.

13/30
‪Alan Smithee DGA‬ ‪@alansmitheedga.bsky.social‬



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14/30
‪Christine‬ ‪@spottedtb.bsky.social‬

Or any thinking skills at all.

15/30
‪Brandi Z‬ ‪@bzabs.bsky.social‬

If there was ever something more 💯 correct yet.. still awful for our human race 🫥😳🫥

16/30
‪Proud eX since Trump 2.0‬ ‪@sharpeststone.bsky.social‬

Please don't share that the email address for Federal employees to report to Elon what they did last week is hr@opm.gov

It would be an absolute shame if instead they were flooded by emails from concerned Americans, spam, porn, etc.

17/30
‪Margi in WA still upset 2024‬ ‪@upset2024.bsky.social‬

Hey Alan, post this everyday. It's always a good reminder. I wish there was a meme for Lazy Democrats who decided to sit the election out bc they were unhappy with the choices.

18/30
‪wawasa-wae.bsky.social‬ ‪@wawasa-wae.bsky.social‬

I'm curious, did these folks vote for tRUMP as if their lives depended on it? He did nothing for these groups in his first administration, what made them think he would do anything for them now?............ SHEEP!

19/30
‪Ly🍁💛Só observando 🚩🦋‬ ‪@lyobservadora.bsky.social‬

Alan, this is a beautiful young brazilian woman!

20/30
‪Menha‬ ‪@m-zola.bsky.social‬

Whilst I get the sentiment completely (voting against your own interest) the vast majority of voters that actually put Trump in office were working class/blue collar straight White men and middle America straight white women. Completely overrepresented.

21/30
‪J.G.‬ ‪@legacydem.bsky.social‬

Small point: All FIVE trans women out of 200,000+ women NCAA athletes.
Case of putting the oxygen mask on the baby 1st.

22/30
‪msreyes25.bsky.social‬ ‪@msreyes25.bsky.social‬

I have no sympathy for them 👍🏼

23/30
‪Trust Science‬ ‪@itrustscience.bsky.social‬

And “Women for Trump” 🤔😡
Don’t get me started

24/30
‪joe-opinion.bsky.social‬ ‪@joe-opinion.bsky.social‬

The truth is that the orange turd told us himself when he was telling us the snake story but many Americans are synchronous dogmatic painfully, ignorant, and full of hate and spite.

25/30
‪joe-opinion.bsky.social‬ ‪@joe-opinion.bsky.social‬

* sanctimonious

26/30
‪Pr3vious G3neration‬ ‪@pr3vgen.bsky.social‬

May the innocents that are hurt be few are far between. Although we already know some have already lost their lives. May this regime eat itself fast so we can start picking up the pieces. Canadian ally! Love and Respect!

27/30
‪NyeBev4Eva‬ ‪@nyebev4eva.bsky.social‬

Have you heard of punching up and not down?
Also, winning voters back is easier if you don't carry on like this.

28/30
‪EvilBunny Pottymouth Resists The Cultists everyday!‬ ‪@mrsquirrel.bsky.social‬

😂😂😂

29/30
‪AlwaysInaBook📚‬ ‪@alwaysinabook.bsky.social‬

Stupid people, ugh 🤯🤯

30/30
‪Jon Black‬ ‪@jondcblack7.bsky.social‬

And we want more please

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To post tweets in this format, more info here: https://www.thecoli.com/threads/tips-and-tricks-for-posting-the-coli-megathread.984734/post-52211196
 

bnew

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Farmers feeling weight of Trump policies with shutdown of aid


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In the last two presidential elections, farmers voted overwhelmingly for Donald Trump, but now some are saying his efforts to cut the government are causing major financial pressure. William Brangham reports and speaks with Nick Levendofsky, executive director of the Kansas Farmers Union, for more perspective.



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Damn

The interesting thing will be if he grasps on to another single issue as an excuse to vote republican again or punishes them at the ballot box next time.

We will find out on the next episode of FAFO SZN
Why wouldn't he continue to vote for Republicans when Obama did this?:mjlol:

Its crazy because this is either it for America or we enter an era of government none of us have seen since post Depression. WATTBA
 

bnew

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How Trump’s Attacks on DEI Are Hurting Communities That Voted for Him​


9 minute read

West Virginia Continues To Battle Endemic Poverty
A truck drives through downtown Clarksburg, West Virginia.Spencer Platt / Getty Images

By Alana Semuels

February 25, 2025 1:25 PM EST

Clarksburg, West Virginia has lead service lines scattered throughout the city, which has caused elevated levels of lead in some children’s blood, resulting in health issues like developmental delays.

In 2023, the environmental-justice division of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) introduced a new program designed to increase lead testing for local children and families so that officials could catch elevated lead levels early and prevent long-term health complications. Partnering with cash-strapped state agencies, the EPA bought kits that could measure lead levels in children with just a finger prick, gave out gift cards to incentivize testing, and offered testing opportunities in offices where families picked up benefits and received breast-feeding support.

The program invested $150,000 in lead-testing kits for Harrison County, where Clarksburg is located, which raised testing rates in children from about 8% to 41%, says Camilla McMillen-Haught, director of Women, Infant, and Children (WIC) Nutrition in six West Virginia counties, including Harrison. Children with high levels of lead were then targeted for health interventions like dietary changes that would reduce their risk of long-term problems.

The future of the program is now uncertain, due to the Trump Administration’s focus on rooting out efforts to prioritize diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) and environmental-justice initiatives. A proposed expansion of the lead-testing program to states like Ohio is threatened as well.

An EPA staffer connected to the initiative was put on administrative leave in early February as part of the Trump Administration’s purge of federal government workers. The person told TIME they were pulled into a meeting and told they had 15 minutes to log out of their work email and settle their affairs. (The staffer asked not to be named for fear of being fired permanently.) An additional 167 members of the EPA’s Office of Environmental Justice and External Civil Rights were put on administrative leave, according to the agency, many after receiving emails that said they were identified as spending more than half their time on environmental-justice initiatives.

These moves were part of President Trump’s executive order, titled “Ending Radical and Waste Government DEI Programs and Preferencing,” which he issued on his first day in office to target DEI and environmental-justice programs. (A Maryland judge on Feb. 21 largely blocked the Administration from carrying out much of the DEI executive order, though staff members and recipients of grants have not yet seen changes since then.) The Administration’s goal, it said, was to slash spending and end initiatives that single out minorities for help.

In the directive, Trump criticized his predecessor’s own executive order seeking to advance racial equity and support for underserved communities as “illegal and immoral discrimination.” New EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said in a video posted on X Feb. 12 that “the days of irresponsibly shoveling boatloads of cash to far-left activist groups in the name of environmental justice and climate equity are over.” He added, on Feb. 22, "UPDATE: I just cancelled another 21 wasteful DEI and Environmental Justice grants, with the help of our amazing @DOGE team, racking up $67m more in savings!"

But many of the environmental-justice programs targeted by the new Administration’s staff cuts and funding freezes do not benefit minorities or left-leaning environmental groups, according to Adam Ortiz, who until January served as the EPA’s Regional Administrator for Region 3, which includes Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia. Often they help poor, white communities in conservative areas—places that overwhelmingly voted for Trump.

Clarksburg, a beneficiary of the West Virginia lead-testing program, is a former manufacturing hub that is 90% white and has a poverty rate of 23.2%, about double the national average. Harrison County, where it is located, voted for Trump by a margin of 40 percentage points in 2024.

“These are communities that had the most hope in this Administration and are now feeling the most suffering,” says Jacob Israel Hannah, the CEO of Coalfield Development Corp., a nonprofit that does workforce development in 21 counties in West Virginia. Coalfield Development had won nearly $700 million in federal funding for projects across the state. Over half of its budget has come from federal grants in the past few years as the Biden Administration funneled “unprecedented” amounts of funding to Appalachia, Hannah says. But nearly all that money has been frozen by federal spending pauses targeting DEI, environmental justice, and clean-energy initiatives.

When asked about the idea that ending DEI and environmental justice activities hurts communities that supported Trump, an EPA spokesperson said in a statement to TIME that it is “working diligently” to implement President Trump’s executive orders. It placed the 168 Office of Environmental Justice employees on administrative leave after EPA career staffers determined that their functions “did not relate to the agency’s statutory duties,” the statement said. The agency is “in the process of evaluating new structure and organization to ensure we are meeting our mission of protecting human health and the environment for all Americans,” according to the statement.

Harrison Fields, a White House spokesman, wrote in an email to TIME that “protecting the civil rights and expanding opportunities for all Americans is a key priority of the Trump Administration, which is why he took decisive actions to terminate unlawful DEI preferences.”

Funding freezes are another way that the Trump Administration has tried to weed out programs promoting DEI and environmental justice. One of the grants Coalfield Development Corp. won—worth around $130 million—would have created 1,000 new jobs by training unemployed coal workers to become solar installers and then to install 250 megawatts of solar on closed coal mines, says Hannah. But now, he says, when Coalfield staffers log into funding portals for the Department of Energy, the EPA, and the Department of Labor, they receive a message that their grants are “under review” and that they are not able to access the money they were promised. The grant applications included the term environmental justice because they would have helped underserved communities access jobs and clean power, Hannah says. If the grant goes away, “you will see the loss of what would have been over 1,000 new jobs in Appalachia,” Hannah says.

While some of the beneficiaries of environmental-justice projects have been low-income communities of color in cities, others are struggling white communities in Appalachia. The Biden Administration mandated that 40% of many of its climate and clean energy funds flow to “disadvantaged communities that are marginalized by underinvestment and overburdened by pollution.” It also set aside $500 million for Appalachian Community Capital to launch a Green Bank for Rural America that would have prioritized investments in 582 counties across the region.

“The important thing to understand about all the grants at the EPA is that they prioritized reaching the communities most overburdened by pollution,” says Zealan Hoover, who was until recently the Director of Implementation at the agency, overseeing $100 billion in funding. “In every state, there was a wide range of communities receiving funding.” That includes Alaska Native communities, rural communities in the Southeast and Gulf Coast, and places across the country that have disproportionately high energy costs, Hoover says.

Another nonprofit that saw its federal funding frozen is LiKEN (Livelihoods Knowledge Exchange Network), which works in Kentucky and West Virginia to help people in rural areas join global markets for sustainable agriculture and carbon capture. LiKEN received $3.1 million from the U.S. Forest Service’s Forest Landowners Support Program from the Inflation Reduction Act. It hired 10 staff to open satellite offices in eastern Kentucky and southern West Virginia that were set to become local hubs where the community could gather, says Betsy Taylor, the group’s executive director.

On Feb. 5, the organization received a form email from the U.S. Forest Service informing the group that its federal funds “are on hold until further notice.” LiKEN had to borrow money from private donors and furlough five staff. Taylor says she has a suspicion of why the money was frozen: “Diversity, equity, and inclusion. It was about serving underserved communities.” The vast majority of these communities were white, Taylor says.

The Administration’s funding freeze hits communities that would have benefited at a time of urgent need. Swaths of Appalachia suffered devastating floods on Feb. 15. “One of the things that has been surreal is the contrast between the shock that the government would not be honoring contracts that were congressionally approved, and the heroism of people on the ground who lost income rushing to communities affected by the floods,” Taylor says.

Many of the programs whose funding was paused or whose federal staff were placed on administrative leave focused on providing access to clean drinking water and functioning wastewater treatment plants, says Ortiz, the former EPA regional administrator. One project, spearheaded by a staffer now on administrative leave, according to Ortiz, sought to relocate a wastewater treatment plant in Richwood, W.V., that has been basically inoperable since a 2016 flood.

“Our environmental-justice work was really focused on places that historically didn’t have the ability to match funds or pay loans back,” Ortiz says. “For the first time since the 1930s and 1940s, these communities were receiving serious investments to rebuild critical infrastructure.”

In Pennington Gap, Virginia, which is located in a county where 86% of voters supported Trump in 2024, the future of a grant to demolish an asbestos-filled grocery store, issued through the EPA’s Environmental Justice Collaborative Problem-Solving Cooperative Agreement Program, is now in question. The nonprofit environmental group Appalachian Voices, which received the grant, can’t get in touch with its EPA program lead and can’t send out any more information to community members without EPA approval, says Emma Kelly, New Economy program coordinator for Appalachian Voices.

Other federal funding to Appalachian Voices that has been frozen includes money to support communities battered by flooding and monitor air quality, says Kelly. “These freezes, even if they are eventually overturned, are already having incredibly detrimental impacts,” she adds.

Many of the EPA environmental-justice staffers put on leave are eager to get back to work—even in an Administration that seems hostile to the very idea of the work that they do. “No economy is going to be restored,” says one staffer on administrative leave, who asked not to be named because they hope to be reinstated, "if you don’t have sanitation or clean drinking water."
 
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