That could be. There is, also, his son-in-law Jared Kushner who could be part of his handlers.Maybe this Susie is his Zionist handler, which is why he is hinting that she is more powerful than him.
That could be. There is, also, his son-in-law Jared Kushner who could be part of his handlers.Maybe this Susie is his Zionist handler, which is why he is hinting that she is more powerful than him.
Marionettes Always Govern America
Is it really necessary to have another thread opened on Trump, can this not be merged with existing one? @Kadam303 this isn't twitter where you need to open a new thread everytime you have a thought, there is a thing called the search function and it would be great to see you use it from time to time
Done.Hi Pearce,
I agree, can you move it there?
thank You
How far will he get with this? The Dems will surely have their judges stop whatever they can from this being accomplished. I guess, wait and see.Trump declares war against immigration aka the social engineering of American domestic decline. Smart move by him, after all the ruckus of late from Epstein/MTG/Massie. Seems like the National Guard shooting gave him the needed political capital to make this move.
The Associated Press- Dec. 5, 2025
U.S. President Donald Trump was awarded the new FIFA peace prize on Friday at the 2026 World Cup draw -- giving the spectacle to set matchups for the quadrennial soccer tournament even more of a Trumpian flair.
Trump, who had openly campaigned for the Nobel Peace Prize, had been heavily expected to receive the newly created FIFA prize. FIFA president Gianni Infantino, a close ally of Trump, has said he thought Trump should have won the Nobel for his efforts to broker a ceasefire in Gaza.
In awarding the prize, Infantino told Trump it was a “beautiful medal for you that you can wear everywhere you want to go.” Trump promptly placed the medal around his neck. The certificate that Infantino handed Trump recognizes the U.S. president for his actions to “promote peace and unity around the world.”
Infantino also presented Trump with a gold trophy with his name on it that depicts hands holding up the world. “You definitely deserve the first FIFA Peace Prize for your action, for what you have obtained in your way,” said Infantino, who spoke after a video was played that showed images of Trump meeting with world leaders from countries whose conflicts he has taken credit for resolving.
Trump thanked his family, including his wife, first lady Melania Trump, and praised the leaders of the other two host nations -- Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum -- in his brief remarks, saying the co-ordination with the countries has been “outstanding.”
“This is truly one of the great honours of my life,” Trump said, adding that “most important, I just want to thank everybody. The world is a safer place now.”
Infantino has often spoken about soccer as a unifier for the world, but the prize is a departure from the federation’s traditional focus on sport.
Infantino has been a frequent visitor to the Oval Office, including in November when the administration announced new efforts to expedite visa processing for World Cup visitors. Infantino had a prime seat at Trump’s January inauguration and FIFA has established an office at Trump Tower in Manhattan.
FIFA has given no details about the process for choosing a winner. When Infantino first announced last month that the organization would give out a peace prize, some of its senior officials were caught off guard, learning about it through reports in the media.
The FIFA president was also on hand Thursday at the newly renamed Donald J. Trump Institute of Peace in Washington, where Trump and the leaders of the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda signed a deal aimed at ending the conflict in eastern Congo.
FIFA’s award to Trump came during a week in which his administration has been engaged in shuttle diplomacy to try to end the war in Ukraine, while also under scrutiny for lethal strikes on alleged drug boats in the Caribbean and as Trump hardens his rhetoric against immigrants.
The Nobel for peace was awarded this year to Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado, who said shortly after the prize was announced that she was dedicating it in part to Trump for “his decisive support of our cause.” Machado will receive the award at the traditional Nobel Peace Prize ceremony in Oslo, Norway, on Dec. 10.
Nobel is so passé. Trump gets his Peace Prize... from FIFA?!?
Dhillon, who was sworn in earlier this year, noted that about 200 of the division’s 400-plus attorneys accepted a government-wide retirement package in her second week in office. She added that another 100 lawyers resigned in the following months, leaving the division down “75 percent” of its prior workforce. Dhillon explained the department is now working to rehire attorneys “who want to do the work as Congress wrote the laws and the courts interpreted the laws.”
She emphasized that the division’s focus is shifting away from what she described as “politics of racial spoils and woke ideology” toward enforcing existing statutes across a wide range of areas. These include university admissions policies, employment discrimination cases involving federal contractors and grant recipients, protections for service members and their families, and statutes related to workplace rights for American citizens vis-à-vis foreign workers.
Dhillon: I’m Harmeet Dhillon, Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights, and I’m here to share an important update about one of my many important duties here at the DOJ, which is enforcing our federal election laws. Here are some facts and figures for you. In the last eight months, the DOJ has reached out to all 50 states, asking them to share their voter rolls with us so that we can help them comply with the Help America Vote Act, which requires states to maintain clean voter rolls.
Four states complied voluntarily. We sued North Carolina early on, and they are checking the voter records of 100,000 voters who were improperly enrolled on their voter rolls, and they’re going to fix their problem voluntarily. We have an agreement in place almost with another dozen states, and I expect very soon we’ll be looking at their voter data and comparing it with our records and helping them clean up those voter rolls.
Now, we have 15 lawsuits pending against 14 states. That’s right. California got sued twice, and we are in litigation with them. They’re refusing to provide their records, even though many of these states voluntarily provide their voter rolls to nonprofit groups like Eric and even other groups. And so we are going to make sure that we get to the bottom of those and then we’re going to get to the rest of the state. So, we’re engaged with nearly 30 states. Here’s what we found so far.
We’ve checked 47.5 million voter records. We found 260,000 plus dead people enrolled in the state’s voter rolls, which is pretty concerning. They’re going to be removed with the help of the DOJ, and finally, that there are several thousand non-citizens who are enrolled to vote in federal elections. This is very concerning, and the DOJ is partnering with local law enforcement where appropriate to prosecute people who have unlawfully voted in our elections.
Even one person voting, who shouldn’t have voted, is one too many because every citizen is entitled to one person one vote, assumption that their vote is being counted equally and only with other American citizens. We will not rest at this DOJ with the leadership of the Attorney General, Pam Bondi, until we complete this project and provide confidence to all American voters that the rolls are clean and the elections are free and fair.