• volore@scribe.disroot.org
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    42 minutes ago

    They should return it to France until they decide the inscription at the base is worth living up to again. You know, “give me your tired, give me your poor”? Doesn’t really jive with the whole immigration gestapo thing.

    • barneyrubble@lemmy.worldOP
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      29 minutes ago

      No. It was a great and kind and beautiful gift. We’ll keep it. Thank you all the same. Instead we’ll get rid of the current tennant of the Whitehouse by impeachment or 25th amendment or whatever works.

  • killea@lemmy.world
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    1 hour ago

    Well since he’s already metaphorically done it, I guess they figured they might as well set a literal precedent.

  • Optional@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    He could do a lot of hypothetical things. Drink water with both hands, rape underage girls, kill people out of a limitless ignorance, get shot in the face - let’s face it, the world’s his hypothetical oyster.

    • barneyrubble@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 hours ago

      Yeah. I guess he hypothetically decided to tear down the West Wing of the Whitehouse, without permission, where he was just a tennant. Hypothetically speaking.

      Dude. You tear down a part of my house where you are a temporary guest and we’ll see how that goes.

        • barneyrubble@lemmy.worldOP
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          2 hours ago

          No it didn’t happen.

          But you’ve got to nip this guy in the bud, because he will do some crazy ass shit before you know it. Before he tells you.

          Iran war, west wing, no audits, 1.776 billion dollar slush fund… kind of come to mind.

          • artyom@piefed.social
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            47 minutes ago

            You cannot “nip in the bud” random hypothetical situations all day. Its a waste of time. There are too many actual problems to be freaking out over something no one expressed any intention of doing.

    • barneyrubble@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 hours ago

      Well the Epstein files are bad, no doubt, but the chubby Cheeto-in-Chief just keeps getting worse and worse by killing more and more people.

      I don’t think that the acts of his last 2 administrations can be compared to the Epstein files. I think they are just a furtherance of his psychopathic personality.

      Sexual slavery is really, really, really, really bad. No doubt. Murdering people (like the Venezuelan boat strikes, Iranian school girls…) and starving people (like the Cuban embargos) is just a whole 'nuther level of evil, that is just a further step into a mountainous shit load of psychopathy.

      It’s not one (Epstein files) or the other (Iran war, boat strikes, starving Cubans); it’s both and!

      To wit: He did all of that shit to children and sex slaves AND did all of that other crap to other human beings. It is additive, not exclusive or separate or explanatory.

      Hope I’m clear.

  • barneyrubble@lemmy.worldOP
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    2 hours ago

    Apparently there’s a paywall. Here is the entire article:

    You could try this link:

    https://www.politico.com/news/2026/06/05/white-house-ballroom-donald-trump-00951892

    Or: here’s the text:

    Trump could also tear down the Statue of Liberty, DOJ argues in defense of White House ballroom Justice Department lawyers said the courts are powerless to intervene in the dispute over the former East Wing.

    The White House, including the West Wing and construction of the new ballroom, is seen from the Old Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House campus Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Tom Brenner) The White House, including the West Wing and construction of the new ballroom, is seen on Feb. 25. | Tom Brenner/AP

    By Kyle Cheney and Josh Gerstein 06/05/2026 01:22 PM EDT

    A federal appeals court panel expressed skepticism Friday about the Trump administration’s view that courts are powerless to stop the construction of the White House ballroom now that the East Wing had been demolished.

    Two members of a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit repeatedly pressed administration lawyers about its argument that President Donald Trump’s pet project — now well underway — could not be stopped by the courts even if it was found to be illegal, because it was too far along and involved significant national security interests.

    “When did it become a fait accompli?” Judge Patricia Millett asked. “If this were complete lawlessness by the government … it couldn’t be stopped?”

    “On these theories, I think that’s right,” replied Yaakov Roth, a Justice Department attorney.

    Millett, an Obama appointee, peppered Roth with questions about the extent of the Trump administration’s view of its power to “move fast and break things” without being subject to legal challenge.

    “If the government decides, very quickly, to bulldoze the Statue of Liberty — the people whose ancestors that was the first thing they saw coming to this country, but the government moved too fast — nothing can be done?” the judge asked.

    “I think that’s right, yes,” Roth responded.

    A federal judge in March halted construction on the ballroom during the legal battle, but the D.C. Circuit quickly paused the ruling, allowing construction to continue while the litigation is ongoing.

    The Friday exchange underscored the Trump administration’s full-throttle effort to defend Trump’s massive reconstruction project, which the president has made clear is a personal priority, along with other aesthetic and architectural ambitions he has across Washington. Millett was joined in her skepticism by Judge Bradley Garcia, a Biden appointee.

    Judge Neomi Rao, a Trump appointee, questioned whether the plaintiff in the lawsuit, the National Trust for Historic Preservation, had a basis to sue in the first place, especially when set against Trump’s claim that the ballroom would serve as a critical national security bulwark in addition to an event space.

    Roth told the panel that the Trust’s “aesthetic” concerns about the White House must take a back seat to the security issues at stake.

    Watch: The Conversation Play Video33:01 Brian Armstrong on Dimon, Trump, and crypto’s future “The balance of harms and public interest are so lopsided in favor of this project,” Roth said. “It’s an architectural preference on one hand and the safety and security of the president of the United States on the other hand.”

    Roth also asserted that it would be overreach for the courts to take any steps to halt the ballroom project at its outset or now, even if it was clearly illegal under federal law. Rather, he said, if a court found the project illegal, the only remedy would lie with Congress.

    “Congress can figure out how to deal with that, given the fact that we have these national security imperatives,” Roth said. “It’s well along. They’ve installed like 3 million pounds of steel rebar. … Congress would be the appropriate entity to decide: How do we balance these considerations at this juncture?”

    The National Trust’s lawsuit argues that the White House grounds, a designated national park, cannot be updated without congressional approval. The park, like Yellowstone, they contend, can’t simply be repurposed at the whims of the administration.

    “They just don’t want to go to Congress,” the trust’s attorney, Tad Heuer said, stressing that, under the Constitution, “Congress controls federal property.”

    While other, more modest changes at the White House, such as the installation of tennis courts and a pool, may well have been unauthorized, they were never challenged in court, Heuer said. But the ballroom, which required the demolition of the White House’s entire East Wing, is of a different scale.

    Trump has repeatedly ridiculed the lawsuit over the project, asserting in a social media post that it was “brought by a woman walking her dog, who has absolutely No Standing to bring such a suit.” In fact, the National Trust has claimed standing through Alison Hoagland, a historian and retired professor who has volunteered on various preservation boards and regularly visits the area.

    Hoagland’s court declaration says nothing about a

    • NekoKoneko@lemmy.world
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      1 hour ago

      Thanks for posting the text. Not surprising to see Neomi Rao lobbing softballs to the DOJ and signaling what she needs them to say to vote in favor of Trump.