
Problem is that since the DoJ decided to drop the case, the Judge pretty much had to dismiss the case outright even though there is evidence of the event happening. There was nobody actually to try the case now.
So, it was either dismiss without prejudice which mean the charges can be brought back(like Trump wanted) OR with prejudice which means Trump cannot use future charges as a means to influence policy within NYC. There is no good option here.
That is why state charges should have been filed if possible in the first place.
The distance between what is said and what is known to be true has become an abyss. Of all the things at risk, the loss of an objective reality is perhaps the most dangerous. The death of truth is the ultimate victory of evil. When truth leaves us, when we let it slip away, when it is ripped form our hands, we become vulnerable to the appetite of whatever monster screams the loudest.

Trump Media's stock is tanking on the news that basically the President and other insiders may sell off up to 134 million shares from time to time. Meaning that the President may finally cash out.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/comp...93456b17&ei=11

So, at what time starts the civil war between MAGA and Temu Stark's bots?
/popcorn
Hard to tell. Rachel Bade is mostly a court stenographer/PR for the Trump admin. Trump or Susie is just floating a trial ballon to see how this plays in the press.
Rachel is just a less horny version of Olivia Nuzzi.
For people asking, the Trump/eDolf split rumor is a "pOLitiCo EXCLUSIVE".
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Apparently imported meds might be included in the tariffs. Per CNN:
How much you want to bet insurance companies start denying these due to the price increases?
President Donald Trump has floated the idea of higher tariffs on pharmaceutical products, though he has suggested that life-saving drugs could be spared. If they are not, the impact on many Americans could be unthinkable, according to one CEO.
Speaking to BBC World Service radio, Gareth Sheridan, the Irish CEO of Nutriband, a US health care company, noted that Ireland – which exports a lot of pharmaceuticals – makes a wide range of medications, including those used for chemotherapy and for treating heart conditions and diabetes.
“These types of treatments can’t afford a disruption in the global supply chain. You know, as a comparable situation, tariffs on automobiles: You can’t afford a BMW now? Okay, you can buy a Ford and you can still get to work,” he said.
“If you have a 25% hike on chemotherapy and you can’t afford your treatment anymore, what’s the alternative? I mean, ultimately, people are going to die and they’re going to die because they can’t afford to live.”
Remember: Last year, the United States imported $232.7 billion worth of medicinal and pharmaceutical products, based on official US data.

I don't think tariff is baked into the market yet. Personally, I am not too concerned about the market. Been through much worse and it always recovered.
I am more concerned with the sufferings that his tariff will bring. I understand that there are a lot of nationalist economists in the administration that would like to bring manufacturing back into the US. Lofty goals. Except that it is not going to bring prices down.
Reshoring cost money. Wages in the US is also higher. Companies are not going to do all that out of the goodness of their heart. Somebody will pay for those. Namely customers. Not to mention that complete reshoring will take decades to complete.
Will reshoring bring more jobs and wages? Maybe. The US is not the blue-collar country it used to be. Our work force has shifted toward more white-collar. Manufacturing has become highly mechanized and automated. The US also lacks the get your hands covered in grease type of mechanical and electrical engineers which will be needed at these new factories. Tons of solid-state electrical engineers that would not even know how to design the wiring of a transformer box. We are not going to be able to train these highly trained workers overnight.
Combined with all the cuts to social services, we are looking at unprecedented level of suffering for those less well off.
Last edited by Rasulis; 2025-04-02 at 05:30 PM.

This sledgehammer approach to tariff is beyond stupid.
Here is an example. The US imposed a 25% tariff on all imported pickup trucks. As a result, domestic carmakers have focused on building big pickup trucks that don't face foreign competition, while largely ignoring the more hotly contested market for sedans. Has it made the price of Ford and GM pickup trucks cheaper? Hell, NO! Even with the tariff, Toyota is still cheaper with better reputation.
It has made GM and Ford lazy. They have less incentive to invest, invent and compete on the world stage. While building big pickup trucks has been very profitable for U.S. automakers here at home, there's not much market for those vehicles elsewhere around the world. Protected companies tend to grow complacent.
Outside the US, Toyota is king. The Chinese companies are catching up fast.
Last edited by Rasulis; 2025-04-02 at 05:58 PM.
a lot of the US feels like its sleepwalking through the good times expecting them to never end and i fear they're ending rather quickly as they were always built on a shaky, temporary foundation that we never shored up as a nation (in large part because republicans seemingly want the nation in this precarious position)
Elon is actually out here complaining about billionaires in the Wisconsin election... I seriously can not at how stupid this is.
