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Top Trump Official's POTUS Praise Goes Viral For Cringiest Reasons

Top Trump Official's POTUS Praise Goes Viral For Cringiest Reasons

Yahoo13 hours ago
State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce drew widespread criticism and ridicule for her latest effusive tribute to Donald Trump during a press briefing.
While discussing Middle East policy on Tuesday, Bruce abruptly shifted into glowing praise of the president, even thanking God for him.
Bruce hailed Trump's supposed sacrifices and character: 'We can say this simply by having watched him most of his adult life in some capacity, but certainly with what he's given up and sacrificed to be the leader of this country.'
She later described Trump as 'very honest' and 'transparent,' adding that she knows 'to trust him' and 'not second guess him.' She also praised 'the power of his personality and leadership' and expressed her gratitude that 'he's the one making the decisions.'
Tammy Bruce: "The work of the President of the United States -- thank god for him -- is going to make sure that this is not a lost opportunity. We can say this simply by having watched him most of his adult life in some capacity, but certainly with what he's given up and… pic.twitter.com/sjnhbrW0Hf
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) July 2, 2025
Critics online mocked the moment as cultish, and more:
Man, this is some bizarre mashup of 1984, Jonestown and North Korea. https://t.co/aabiVP1Lvv
— Michael Freeman (@michaelpfreeman) July 2, 2025
These people have lost their freaking minds.
— Anthony Wilson 🥏🙄 (@anthonybwilson) July 2, 2025
This is not just sycophancy, it is a creepy level of submission to Trump's Kim Jong-un style of measuring loyalty. https://t.co/aC5NpWE3gm
— Michael Dominowski (@dominowski) July 2, 2025
Sickening sycophancy.
— 𝐂𝐡𝐢𝐝𝐢 (@ChidiNwatu) July 2, 2025
US North Korean TV Show host https://t.co/5Scqfdkc9f
— Commentator of Life (@Pundit2000) July 2, 2025
We are North Korea.
— Nicole (@SHassenn) July 2, 2025
She has truly embraced the kool-aid with open arms. https://t.co/PgWhrAHFsz
— Pat Cochran (@pcochran16) July 2, 2025
🤮🤮🤮🤮
— SkyeDemo (@demo_skye) July 3, 2025
Does she think she's talking to a Sunday school class and Trump is Jesus in this scenario?
— Lib Dunk (@libdunkmedia) July 2, 2025
The Cult. Feel like these folks know what is coming- and it is greatly in their favor.
— Jenelle V 🇺🇸 (@JenelleComedy) July 2, 2025
Lawrence O'Donnell's Unfiltered Reaction To Bonkers Trump Presser Moment Says It All
Critics Snap At White House's Latest Wild Image Of Trump
Michael Steele Issues Ominous Alert For ALL Republicans: 'Trust Me, Baby'
Trump Asks DeSantis The Weirdest Question About Marjorie Taylor Greene, In Front Of Her BF
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How Trump's Spending Bill Helps The Rich Buy Their Private Jets
How Trump's Spending Bill Helps The Rich Buy Their Private Jets

Forbes

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How Trump's Spending Bill Helps The Rich Buy Their Private Jets

A little-discussed portion of the billionaire President Donald Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill" hands a lucrative break to ultrawealthy Americans in the form of a tax policy for private jet purchases. An under-the-radar provision of Trump's spending bill lands a massive potential tax advantage for ... More the ultrawealthy as part of a provision which would cost an estimated $378 billion. Patrick McMullan via Getty Images Part of the spending package that just passed the Senate is the permanent restoration of the 100% 'bonus depreciation' federal law, which allows businesses to write off the full amount of qualifying items in the year of purchase. Bonus depreciation was originally a part of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, but phased down from the 100% level beginning in 2023 and was set to permanently expire by 2027, according to Thomson Reuters. The bonus depreciation policy applies to a slew of qualified, physical business expenses which depreciate over time, such as machinery and company cars, but the policy is often associated with big-ticket luxury items, such as private aircraft, and its institution last decade led to a boom in jet sales. That means that unlike standard business accounting procedures in which capital investments are spread across multiple years and are never fully written off, the full value of qualified property could be written off year one. A $10 million plane could now be a $10 million deduction in that same year, noted the aviation industry publication Flying magazine. 'For someone interested in buying a jet, whether new or used, this is a very big deal,' Matthew Bere, managing director of aviation at the Oklahoma-based bank BOK Financial, said this week, saying he expects the megabill's passage to 'spur a lot of activity in aircraft sales.' This is an 'example of oligarch friendly rules,' says Chuck Collins, director of the Program on Inequality and the Common Good at the Institute for Policy Studies progressive think tank. Collins described the bonus depreciation provision as a 'massive tax break for billionaires and centi-millionaires' from the 'private jet lobby' in a Tuesday post. Big Number $378 billion. That's how much the permanent establishment of 100% bonus depreciation would cost taxpayers over 10 years, according to Congressional Budget Office estimates. 'The all-at-once tax deduction could potentially reduce' jet buyers' taxable income by 'millions of dollars in a given year,' explained Bere. How The Senate Made This Deduction Permanent The version of Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' passed by the House in May only extended the 100% bonus depreciation through 2029, while the Senate made the deduction permanent. The private aviation industry celebrated the change, and charter plane provider FlyUSA described the legislation as 'a power-packed provision that could change the game for private aircraft acquisition.' Key Background The private jet friendly bonus depreciation provision adds to heavy criticism from Democrats and nonpartisan watchdogs who say the bill will disproportionately help the rich and hurt the poor. The bill will lower the lowest 20% of American earners' incomes by 2.9% while the top 1% of earners will get a 1.9% boost, according to the Yale University Budget Lab. 'This bill gives another tax break to the ultrawealthy — so they can buy another private jet,' Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., said this week. Environmental groups frequently criticize private jet usage for its outsized emission, and U.S. departures account for 65% of private jet flights globally, according to the International Council on Clean Transportation. Kyle Khan-Mullins and Lily Ogburn contributed reporting. Further Reading Forbes Senate Passes One Big Beautiful Bill Despite One Big Not-So-Beautiful Price Tag By Kelly Phillips Erb Forbes How Trump's Spending Bill Impacts Student Loans—Including Higher Payments And More Restrictions By Alison Durkee

Google Might Be Next to Settle With Trump
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'Essentially what this means is that the English language has failed us,' Robert Corn-Revere, the general counsel of the free-speech group Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, told me. 'We need a stronger word than hypocrisy to describe these kinds of activities.' The incoherence of Trump's position on the First Amendment has become clear as he has used the power of his office to target the speech of political foes at universities and law firms and uncompliant media outlets such as the Associated Press, while simultaneously condemning the very idea that the government should ever try to restrict the speech of his political allies. When the contradiction is pointed out, he dismisses it. His advisers push back fiercely. For Trump, what matters is winning. 'The idea that President Trump is infringing on the First Amendment is a joke,' White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told me in a statement. 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The AP, which has not bowed to Trump's demands and has yet to regain its spot, has since been let into the pool on occasion and continues to have access to White House briefings. The courts have not been impressed by such misdirection. Just three months after Trump's executive order barring unconstitutional abridgement of free speech, D.C. federal district Judge Beryl A. Howell ruled that Trump had committed that exact offense. At issue was a March 6 executive order, 14230, that declared that employees of the law firm Perkins Coie should be limited from entering federal buildings, interacting with federal employees, or holding security clearances because of the firm's 'dishonest and dangerous' activity, including the decision to represent Hillary Clinton during her 2016 presidential campaign and to promote diversity in its hiring practices. Three other federal judges have since thrown out Trump executive orders targeting three more law firms on the same grounds. 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For retailers, US-Vietnam trade deal leaves questions
For retailers, US-Vietnam trade deal leaves questions

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For retailers, US-Vietnam trade deal leaves questions

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