War

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
It's why the Europeans are hunkering down and told their populations to prepare for war as they prepare to go it alone on Ukraine if required. It's also why Orban and his buddy are suddenly playing ball, you don't tell your populations to prepare for war and fuck around with these clowns.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Meanwhile in Ukraine they are hitting the Russians in vital areas with drones, and it is hurting them out of all proportion.

I find it hard to believe that western intelligence agencies are not funding the Ukrainian drone efforts at all levels, tech and logistical support too. It is a lot of bang for the buck and the small drones can be funded through black budgets supporting certain crowd funding efforts as well as other programs. It is something made for the CIA and right up their ally.

 

CCGNZ

Well-Known Member
they’re trying to reason with the stable jenius

View attachment 5364576
This has to be the "piece de resistance" in exposing the true motives of this psycophant,after blatantly saying he wants the economy to tank,peoples savings depleted,and now shitcan the best border deal R's could wish for after incessantly harping on that matter it's clearly not "Making America Great Again",and it shows how little they respect their "base" when they pull an abrupt 180 after peddling the border issues as a national crises that needs immediate attention,how do the people who actually support them reconcile this flip,do they not perceive this as an insult to their intelligence?
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Speaker Johnson: Senate border deal ‘dead on arrival’ in House
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said in a Friday letter to his colleagues that Senate legislation addressing the border and aid to Ukraine and other countries would have been “dead on arrival” in the House, if reports about its terms are true.

The letter follows separate signals from House leadership aides and conservatives in the House and Senate that the supplemental package has no future in the House, even if approved by the Senate.

“I wanted to provide a brief update regarding the supplemental and the border, since the Senate appears unable to reach any agreement. If rumors about the contents of the draft proposal are true, it would have been dead on arrival in the House anyway,” Johnson said in a letter to colleagues.

The letter comes as Senate Republicans are searching for an alternative plan on how to get aid to Ukraine across the finish line.

The Ukraine support, which has its own critics in the GOP, was coupled with border talks as a means of securing its passage. But the coupling has actually made it more difficult for the Ukraine support to move forward, due to seemingly intractable policy and political concerns related to the border talks.

Former President Trump’s wins in the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary and his opposition to the border deal is a big part of the problem: Trump sees the package as not going far enough. He’s also said to want to use the border issue against President Biden in November.

Johnson’s message about the bill being “dead on arrival” in the House was also reiterated to Republican chiefs of staff Thursday by House Majority Leader Steve Scalise’s (R-La.) chief of staff.

In his letter, the Speaker turned to the next major action coming from House Republicans that will come in retaliation of border policies: impeachment of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, who Johnson charged has “wilfully ignored and actively undermined our nation’s immigration laws.” A markup of impeachment articles against Mayorkas in the House Homeland Security Committee is scheduled for Tuesday.

“A vote on the floor will be held as soon as possible thereafter,” Johnson said of the impeachment articles, adding that “public opinion polls show the country has overwhelmingly sided with us on this issue.”

The Department of Homeland Security wrote in a memo earlier this month that in trying to impeach Mayorkas, House Republicans are “wasting time on baseless and pointless political attacks” that are “harmful to the Department and its workforce and undercuts vital work across countless national security priorities.”

The Speaker also raised the H.R. 2 Secure the Border Act, which House Republicans passed last year, as containing “the core legislative reforms that are necessary to actually compel the Biden Administration to resolve the border catastrophe.” That bill, which includes restarting the “Remain in Mexico” policy and restarting construction of a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border, has conversely been declared dead on arrival in the Senate.

And he pointed back to his requests of Biden to take executive action to stem the flow of migrants at the border, including by restarting Trump-era policies.

“If [Biden] wants our conference to view him as a good faith negotiator, he can start with the stroke of a pen,” Johnson said.

Johnson reiterated his support for Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) in his feud with the federal government over placement of razor wire along the border. The Supreme Court said the government could remove the razor wire.

“I made clear that we stand with the Texas Governor Greg Abbott in his heroic efforts to protect the citizens of his state and all Americans, and I am emphasizing again today that House Republicans will vigorously oppose any policy proposal from the White House or Senate that would further incentivize illegal aliens to break our laws,” Johnson said.

WSJ editorial board hits Trump over border deal, MAGA ‘purge’
The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board hit former President Trump over his meddling in congressional talks on border security and his recent threat to donors to GOP presidential primary Nikki Haley’s campaign in a pair of Thursday editorials.

Earlier this week, Trump made a threat to Haley’s donors in a post on Truth Social, saying anyone who contributes to the former United Nations ambassador would be “permanently barred from the MAGA camp.” In response, the WSJ editorial board said if Trump and his allies “spend the coming months trying to purify the GOP of everyone who won’t kiss his ring, it will be a high act of self-sabotage” in a Thursday editorial.

“It will also be a good reason to vote for someone else,” the WSJ editorial board wrote.

The editorial on the border deal goes after the former president for his antagonism toward a possible deal on Ukraine aid and border security reform in Congress.

“Mr. Trump may imagine he can strike his own border deal if he wins, but that’s highly unlikely. Democrats are willing to discuss asylum and parole changes now because President Biden and Democrats are suffering in the polls from the ugly scenes on television,” the editorial reads.

“If Mr. Trump returns to Washington, the left will revert to its factory settings of opposing all Trump priorities,” the editorial continues. “Especially if Mr. Trump sabotages a bipartisan deal now.”

Republicans in the Senate who are in favor of sending aid to Ukraine and working out a deal with Democrats on border security are staking their hopes on those who are close to Trump, hoping they can prevent him from sinking it.

Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), chair of the Senate Republican Policy Committee, requested that colleagues who have endorsed the former president ask him to stop disparaging the deal pending a review of its details by lawmakers this week.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) told fellow Republican Senators on Wednesday that being able to pass border security reforms tied with Ukraine is becoming harder than originally expected. He also noted that the former president’s antagonism toward any border security deal could be impossible to push past.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Two things stopping Ukraine, ammo and soldiers. Greg is a great person to interview, he says these are the two things worrying for Ukraine.

 
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