- May 7, 2015
- 1,170
- Tinnitus Since
- 29.09/2014
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Acoustic trauma using headphones
Here, he looks comfortable.Donald Trump with convicted pedophile and sex trafficker, Jeffrey Epstein, 1997.
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8-year-olds, dude!
Here, he looks comfortable.Donald Trump with convicted pedophile and sex trafficker, Jeffrey Epstein, 1997.
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A paedophile protector, a paedophile and his accomplice. Nice photo @Luman.
No orange paint. Hmmmm.So this must be before he decided to bronze-up then? He looks very uncomfortable!
Probably wanting to visit the island, you know, bless the little girls.
Trump's own mortgages reveal the scandal he accused others of doing.President Trump is demanding the resignation of Lisa D. Cook, who was appointed by Biden in 2022 to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. She is facing accusations of mortgage fraud.
Wow!
It is not 0.2% of our economy. In 2024, the United States spent about $78 billion on International Affairs for discretionary programs. It's a small fraction (about 1%) of the total federal budget but around 4% of discretionary spending. Total foreign assistance obligations reached approximately $82 billion, split across peace, health, and humanitarian goals, with major funds supporting Ukraine and other key partners like Israel and Jordan.Wow!
The man who doesn't think for himself strikes again! Just the kind of guy the Bronzer-upper loves.
Let me clue you in with some real facts:
177 countries "get US money", huh? Sounds like America is PayPal'ing the planet. Fun fact: that "money" is about 0.2% of the budget, mostly spent on US farmers, US weapons, US contractors, and US interests. It's not charity, it's cheap insurance against wars, pandemics, and chaos that cost way more later. Congress votes on it (remember them?). Cutting it won't help Americans—it just makes future problems louder, bloodier, and a lot more expensive. But sure, let's count flags instead of dollars and call it analysis.
Funny thing is, if we used the same math on Norway, we'd also be "funding most of the world." The difference is that Norway gives about 1% of its economy, not 0.2%, and mostly spends it on boring stuff like vaccines, schools, peace talks, and not-starting-wars. No aircraft carriers, fewer boom, more UN meetings, and wool sweaters. Still not charity tho—just cheaper than dealing with refugees, pandemics, and wars later. Turns out even small countries figured out that prevention is less expensive than cleanup.
And by the way, what should the "extra" money go to? More guns & schools?
Ah yes, the sacred denominator shuffle. When you say 4% of discretionary spending instead of 1% of the budget or 0.2% of the economy, the money suddenly feels heavier in your wallet, doesn't it? Same dollars, more drama.It is not 0.2% of our economy. In 2024, the United States spent about $78 billion on International Affairs for discretionary programs. It's a small fraction (about 1%) of the total federal budget but around 4% of discretionary spending. Total foreign assistance obligations reached approximately $82 billion, split across peace, health, and humanitarian goals, with major funds supporting Ukraine and other key partners like Israel and Jordan.
Ukraine received significant emergency funding, with around $182.8 billion allocated and $83.4 billion disbursed by late 2024 for support and regional stability. If they are going to get our money, it should be given as loans to be repaid with interest, the way Europe does.
All of this and more translates into many hundreds, if not thousands, of additional taxes for American households. It should be far less.
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Good news on the US financial front @Luman. Trump says that his tariffs have brought in 17 trillion dollars! He is so smart; he makes our spending on world assistance quite trivial in comparison.It is not 0.2% of our economy. In 2024, the United States spent about $78 billion on International Affairs for discretionary programs. It's a small fraction (about 1%) of the total federal budget but around 4% of discretionary spending. Total foreign assistance obligations reached approximately $82 billion, split across peace, health, and humanitarian goals, with major funds supporting Ukraine and other key partners like Israel and Jordan.
Ukraine received significant emergency funding, with around $182.8 billion allocated and $83.4 billion disbursed by late 2024 for support and regional stability. If they are going to get our money, it should be given as loans to be repaid with interest, the way Europe does.
All of this and more translates into many hundreds, if not thousands, of additional taxes for American households. It should be far less.
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Trump is not "embarrassing himself", and who cares if he is? Why are you so concerned about issues in America? No country is perfect. I have already explained, in previous posts, that it's leftist organizations like the ACLU that prevent guns from being restricted from people with problems, which has led to injuries and deaths of innocents.Ah yes, the sacred denominator shuffle. When you say 4% of discretionary spending instead of 1% of the budget or 0.2% of the economy, the money suddenly feels heavier in your wallet, doesn't it? Same dollars, more drama.
Labeling Ukraine funding as "foreign aid" is doing some serious cardio, too. Most of that money goes straight back to US weapons manufacturers, US factories, and US jobs. Apparently, paying Americans to replace old tanks is now a charity. It probably also helps save lives, but that doesn't mean you, Columbo, and that ugly dog are getting fucked.
And your "Europe gives loans with interest" line is adorable. Who told you that? LOL, LOL. Europe gives grants, guarantees, write-offs, and crossed fingers, too. Wars are famous for paying back on time, after all. Nothing stabilizes a warzone like a late fee.
The "thousands in extra taxes per household" math only works if you pretend the money vanishes into space instead of cycling through defense, agriculture, logistics, and allies who keep problems far away from US borders.
Cutting prevention always feels good, until cleanup shows up with a much bigger bill.
By the way, I'd love a pie chart for school shooting prevention, too, but there isn't one. No single budget line, no clean slice, just scattered grants, underfunded research, and a lot of political discomfort. Funny how you track every dollar sent abroad, but can't seem to total up what you spend to stop kids from getting shot at home. Guess some pies are safer to bake than others, eh Lumie?
Seems to me you're trying to pull attention away from your hero embarrassing himself and your country on a daily basis.
I love how you went from "177 countries are stealing our lunch money" to a full crime-stat TED Talk in one reply. That's Olympic-level pivot.Trump is not "embarrassing himself", and who cares if he is? Why are you so concerned about issues in America? No country is perfect. I have already explained, in previous posts, that it's leftist organizations like the ACLU that prevent guns from being restricted from people with problems, which has led to injuries and deaths of innocents.
Let's talk about crime. In 2025, the murder rate has plummeted, down more than 17% in the first half of 2025 across study cities, with some experts suggesting this year could see the lowest murder rate in U.S. history if trends hold. Overall, violent crime (including aggravated assault, robbery, and rape) is down, with significant drops in robberies (-20%) and carjackings (-24%). Property crimes are also down, including residential burglaries (-19%) and larcenies (-12%). Motor vehicle theft, which had previously been on the rise, has reversed course and declined by 25% in the first half of 2025. Could this good news be related to the border closings and deportations?
When it comes to Trump's job performance, those with TDS cannot come to terms with the fact that he has not crashed the economy or reneged on his promise to close the borders and deport illegals, so they focus on long, complicated, and questionable theories that allege everything he does, by his very nature, is wrong.
