Jan 20, 2026

A Poll

 

17 comments:

Anonymous said...

Should Congress? Definitely. Would Congress? No way. Cowards.

Anonymous said...

Trump’s Insane New Threat Leaves No Doubt: It’s Time for the 25th Amendment.

Anonymous said...



Investing.com - A key gauge of stock market volatility rose above the 20 level for the first time since November, as U.S. stock futures sank with traders assessed the impact of U.S. tariff threats over Greenland.

Anonymous said...

According to the outlet, the president wrote: "Dear Jonas: Considering your Country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize for having stopped 8 Wars PLUS, I no longer feel an obligation to think purely of Peace, although it will always be predominant, but can now think about what is good and proper for the United States of America. Denmark cannot protect that land from Russia or China, and why do they have a 'right of ownership' anyway?

Anonymous said...

Doctor who treated Dick Cheney calls for congressional inquiry into Trump’s presidential fitness.

Anonymous said...

Nice topic for a Social Security blog.

Anonymous said...

The votes will never be there to remove Trump from office. And they won't lift a finger for the 25th option.

Anonymous said...

ChatGPT says:
Impeachment: Very likely
Senate trial: Certain
Removal: Possible but not guaranteed
If the president’s party controls ≥34 Senate seats: removal is unlikely

@9:38 You seem to think this question is irrelevant for the Social Security program. The premise of the question would clearly have a catastrophic effect on the US economy and significantly worsen program finances by a combination of decreased payroll taxes (unemployment driven) and increased benefit payments (inflation driven) . The situation would then be protracted without impeachment and removal.

Anonymous said...

Being obsessed by the Noble Peace Prize is not normal.

Anonymous said...

On Monday, Bacon wrote on X, "Very embarrassing conduct," in response to news that Trump told Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre he wanted to acquire Greenland because he didn't win the Nobel Peace Prize.

Bacon warned Trump last week that "if he went through with the threats, I think it would be the end of his presidency. And he needs to know: The off-ramp is realizing Republicans aren't going to tolerate this and he's going to have to back off. He hates being told no, but in this case, I think Republicans need to be firm."

Anonymous said...

Democrat congress absolutely would especially if democrats get the senate. This country is economically going down the s******.

Anonymous said...

Would Democrats vote to impeach?
Absolutely, because it's the right thing to do.

Would Republicans vote to impeach?
Probably not, because they're cowards.

Anonymous said...

He meets a Listing, though.

Anonymous said...

But many people have taken to X (Twitter) to express their concerns over Mr Trump's health and his "rambling" speech during his White House press briefing. One person wrote: "This @realDonaldTrump press conference is a complete disaster. He’s rambling incoherently and flipping through a picture book of 'accomplishments' in front of the press. He’s clearly unwell. It’s getting really bad." Another commented: "Trump is clearly in the stages of dementia. Scatty, mind wandering, picture prompts, incoherent ramblings - all signs of dementia. In the most bizarre press conference I’ve seen…”

Anonymous said...

Trump, 79, Kicks Off Press Conference by Reading Aloud to Himself
Donald Trump arrived nearly an hour late and proceeded to give a completely disjointed, barely coherent speech.

It’s been exactly one year since Donald Trump returned to the nation’s highest office. To mark the occasion, the president secured quality time in front of some of America’s top journalists Tuesday to, apparently, do little other than to talk to himself.
Trump joined the White House press briefing, sidling up alongside Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt with a large stack of papers that turned out to be more prop than speech. But it was the content of Trump’s remarks—or rather, lack thereof—that caused some onlookers to question whether the president was in a healthy state of mind.


“Hm, I’m just looking at these charges, it’s just pretty incredible,” Trump said, rifling through the stack of papers, intermittently pausing to hold a page up to the camera. “Many murderers. Many, many murderers. People that murdered.”
The president did not stop to name names, or to clarify which people he was targeting in his scrambled monologue, but the entries followed a general template that read at the top: “Minnesota: worst of worst.”
Trump continued to read names and lists of charges, sometimes without even looking at the camera. Instead, it appeared he was simply reading brand new information aloud to himself.

Anonymous said...

Way to entertain the latest manifestation of TDS. You entertain the wildest of fantasies in your caricatures of Trump and pretend they are true. Trump has plenty of faults. How about dealing with those facts, rather than making up stuff?

Anonymous said...

The majority of Congress consists of either the felon's sycophants or sad spineless sacks.