What Happened Today - 6 May 2026

What Happened Today – 6 May 2026

Lutnik’s testimony…

Iran War Update…

Imagery of US assets overseas…

Troops in Germany…

Not NICE…

Ted Turner/Merger Update

Tom Homan…mass deportations coming…

Special Election Results

Donny’s Day Care

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Lutnik’s testimony…

Howard Lutnick went up to the Hill and basically tried to pretend he suddenly developed amnesia about Jeffrey Epstein and that 2012 island lunch his whole family supposedly just “stumbled into,” and the members were not buying a word of it.

 

Behind closed doors with the House Oversight Committee, he leaned hard on “I don’t recall” when they pressed him on why he, his wife, kids, and nannies ended up having lunch on Epstein’s private island, Little St. James, even though the files show he arranged the visit and had been in business with Epstein years after he claimed he’d cut him off. He flat-out told them he couldn’t remember the purpose of the trip, couldn’t remember details of the meeting, and refused to answer whether he’d coordinated any of this with Trump or talked to Trump about his testimony, which is exactly the kind of dodge you use when the truthful answer is politically radioactive.

 

Democrats walked out of that room and lit him up to reporters, calling him a “pathological liar” and saying the whole performance felt like part of a bigger coverup around the Epstein files and who knew what, when. They pointed out that he has already been caught in multiple lies: for years he said he cut Epstein off in 2005 after seeing the creepy massagetable setup, claimed he was “never in the room” with him again, then the documents and his own earlier Hill testimony showed he met with Epstein again in 2011, invested alongside him in a company, and took his family to the island for that lunch in 2012. Now in this latest House appearance, instead of cleaning it up, he just layered on more evasions, no acknowledgement of the contradictions, just this weird mix of downplaying the relationship while the paper trail says otherwise.

 

Republicans aren’t exactly rushing to defend the substance either; even the GOP chair, Comer, has said on camera that Lutnick hasn’t been “100% truthful” about his Epstein connection and especially about the island visit. On the outside, the White House is still circling the wagons, talking about his “historic work” at Commerce and acting like this is all a media distraction, but on Capitol Hill there are now bipartisan calls for him to resign because his story keeps changing every time new documents drop. Bottom line: he went in there to “clear the air,” and came out looking even slimier — lots of spin, lots of memory holes, and still no straight explanation for why a sitting commerce secretary kept Epstein in his orbit years after he supposedly decided the guy was a “disgusting person.”

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Iran War Update…

Today they’re out here playing branding games with a war, like this is a product launch instead of people’s lives and the global economy on the line. “Operation Epic Fury” is now “over,” according to Rubio, and we’ve magically moved on to “Project Freedom,” which they swear is a separate, “temporary” thing, not just the exact same mess with a fresh coat of patriotic paint. They’re trying to sell it like Stage 1 is done, now we’re in Stage 2, as if changing the name changes the fact that we’re still tangled up around the Strait of Hormuz with tankers stuck, insurers freaking out, and the whole world paying for Trump’s chestthumping. And stage 2…Project Freedom was “ended” last night…so…

 

No, Trump has not conceded a damn thing, he’s doing his usual “we’re winning if Iran just does what we already agreed they would do” routine, posting vague crap about how the war could end “if Iran agrees to give what has been agreed to,” like he’s some master dealmaker and not the guy who lit this fuse in the first place. Behind all the noise, the real story is this socalled onepage memo they’re working through with Iran — a 14point “memorandum of understanding” that would declare the war over, start a 30day negotiation sprint, supposedly reopen the Strait of Hormuz, lift sanctions, and freeze parts of Iran’s nuclear program. It’s literally one page to paper over months of bombing, shipping disruptions, and nuclear brinkmanship, hammered out by Trump’s richguy envoys like Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, not exactly the Ateam you’d pick if you were serious about longterm regional stability.

 

Meanwhile, prices are already cooked in from the damage they’ve done, and people need to stop pretending that if they snapped their fingers and fully reopened the strait tomorrow, everything would magically go back to 2023 gas and shipping costs. You slam a critical choke point like Hormuz, screw with oil and shipping lanes for weeks, trigger war risk premiums on tankers and insurance, and those cost shocks cascade through fuel, transport, food, manufactured goods — and once those price hikes are in, companies do not rush to roll them back. Even the Fed’s own work on the 2025 tariffs shows that when you jack up trade costs, they pass through into consumer prices fast and then just sit there; they found the new tariffs alone already added about 0.3 percent to core goods and 0.1 percent to overall core prices, and that’s before you stack a Gulf shipping crisis on top. So yeah, even if they “opened” the strait fully today, the reality is we’re going to be eating these higher prices for months, if not longer, because supply chains don’t instantly heal and corporations don’t voluntarily give up a markup once they’ve tested that the market will tolerate it.

 

And Rubio yesterday trying to spin it like our big new “goal” is to open the strait — you know, like it already was before Trump decided to start “Epic Fury” and kick the hornet’s nest — is just insulting. They broke something that was functionally working, wrapped it in some macho branding, and now want credit for trying to get back to the status quo they blew up, while regular people are stuck with the fallout at the pump and in the grocery aisle. This ends for us — the people actually paying for it — long after the White House moves on to the next slogan, because wars, tariffs, and shipping shocks have long tails, and we’re all stuck riding it out whether we voted for this or not.

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Imagery of US assets overseas…

Iran has done way more damage to U.S. assets than the administration wants to admit, and Trump’s people have been sitting on imagery and downplaying the hit so the public doesn’t see how bad Epic Fury has actually gone.

 

We now know from independent satellite analysis that Iranian strikes have chewed through a huge amount of U.S. infrastructure across the Gulf — hangars, barracks, fuel depots, radars, air defense gear, even aircraft and comms nodes — with at least 228 structures or pieces of equipment damaged or outright destroyed at U.S. military sites alone since this kicked off in late February. That’s on top of what they hit in Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi, Qatar, and elsewhere, including the 5th Fleet headquarters and key radar domes, which is not some minor “glancing blow” scenario — it’s core infrastructure that underpins the whole U.S. posture in the region. And instead of being straight about it, the official line has been to lowball the extent of the damage while quietly evacuating people and scrambling to keep things running from the shadows.

 

On the imagery front, the censorship is real: Planet Labs and other commercial satellite companies have confirmed they pulled or delayed highres images of the war zone after a request from the Trump administration, which asked providers to put an “indefinite withhold” on certain Middle East conflict areas. They initially did a short delay, then expanded it and made it retroactive, meaning a lot of the worst hits to U.S. and allied facilities weren’t visible in near real time to journalists, analysts, or the public — exactly when we should have been seeing how bad this war was spiraling. The White House isn’t out front saying “we’re hiding imagery,” of course; they’re framing it as operational security, but when your own damage and your own screwups are what keep disappearing from public view, that’s less about safety and more about narrative control.

 

The cost? It’s massive, and it’s not just some Pentagon line item that doesn’t touch us. Early estimates for repairing and replacing the damaged bases, radar systems, air defense assets, and other hardware are already running into the tens of billions, with some assessments saying total costs could end up in the 40–50 billion range once you add in reconstruction, relocations, and lost equipment. That’s our money — taxes, more borrowing, higher deficits, interest payments — layered on top of everything we’re already eating from tariffs, oil shocks, and shipping disruptions, which ultimately feeds back into inflation and longterm budget pressure. So when they shrug this off like “we’ll rebuild bigger and better,” what they really mean is “we’ll rebuild on your dime, and you’ll feel it in the economy for years while we pretend it’s all strength and winning.”

 

On the troop side, yes, they absolutely moved people off base because some of these places became unlivable; reporting has described multiple Gulf bases as “all but uninhabitable,” with troops shifted into hotels and office parks and even moved out to Europe to get them out of the strike zones. Bases in Kuwait took some of the worst hits, with makeshift ops centers destroyed and service members killed, while Bahrain, Saudi, and Qatar also saw drones and missiles tear into key facilities and aircraft. Some forces have been rotated back into reinforced areas or deeper bunkers, but a lot of the temporary “work from hotel” posture is still there because the infrastructure is damaged and they’re scrambling to build more hardened shelters and better missile defenses on the fly.

 

What’s “next” to fix this mess is the usual Pentagon pattern: spend more on bunkers, more on hardening, more on missile defense, more on new tech — they’re already talking about “more and more bunkers” and upgraded forceprotection systems — instead of asking why we were left so exposed before the war and why the political leadership kept poking Iran while bases were this vulnerable. Meanwhile, the administration’s instinct is to clamp down on what we see from orbit and spin the rest, so we’re paying for damaged bases, replacement radars, and a whole relocation operation, but we’re only getting a sanitized version of how ugly it’s really been. For regular people, that means more money blown abroad, more pressure on the budget, and a longer hangover from a war we didn’t ask for, while the folks who started it keep trying to hide the receipts — including the literal satellite photos.

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Troops in Germany

Trump’s Germany move is him swinging a hammer at the architecture of U.S. power because his ego got bruised, not because there’s some grand strategy behind it.

Right now, the Pentagon is officially saying about 5,000 troops are coming out of Germany over the next 6 to 12 months, roughly 14 percent of the 35–36,000 U.S. personnel there. That announcement alone already rattled allies and defense people, because those aren’t just random bodies — they’re tied to specific warfighting units, logistics hubs, airfields, medical facilities, command centers, all the stuff that makes the U.S. military actually able to move and fight in Europe and beyond. Then Trump goes out and basically says, “We’re going way down, a lot more than 5,000,” turning what the Pentagon tried to frame as a limited adjustment into an openended threat to gut the footprint whenever he feels like punishing Germany or whoever else annoyed him that week.

 

And you’re exactly right: this isn’t just about “protecting NATO” as some favor to Europe — those bases in Germany are about position for the United States. Germany is the staging ground and nerve center: Ramstein, Landstuhl, logistics corridors, prepositioned equipment, airlift routes, intel nodes, missile defense planning; it’s how the U.S. surges forces into Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Africa without having to start from scratch on U.S. soil every time. You rip out thousands of troops and, even worse, cancel the planned longrange missile deployments and other systems we were supposed to add, and you don’t just “save money” — you hand Russia and anyone else watching a nice little gap in U.S. reach and deterrence.

 

This is why you’ve got people from the Armed Services Committee to NATO vets saying this is not grounded in any coherent national security strategy; it’s Trump lashing out over Germany’s chancellor calling him out on the Iran war and over Europe not marching in lockstep with his nonsense. Lawmakers are warning it will embolden Russia, weaken NATO’s frontline, and send the message that the U.S. presence in Europe is now a political bargaining chip instead of a stable pillar you can plan around. Allies are already talking about how this accelerates the “salami slicing” of America’s commitment — a slow, quiet hollowingout that adds up over time even if we technically still have some troops left on paper.

 

For us, the “effects” look like this: worse deterrence, more crisis risk, and ultimately higher costs anyway when something blows up and we have to rush forces back in under fire instead of keeping a stable, forwarddeployed posture. You lose that forward position, and every deployment gets slower, more expensive, more dangerous, and less credible — which is the opposite of “protecting America,” no matter how many rallies he does saying Europe is freeloading and we’re just “bringing our boys home.” So if he follows through and pushes it beyond the 5,000 the Pentagon is already planning, we’re not just trimming fat; we’re cutting into muscle and pretending it’s some big win, while the actual benefit goes straight to Moscow and anyone else who’s happy to see U.S. power pulled back from the map.

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Not NICE…

Trump’s “NICE” stunt is what it looks like: a dumb branding gimmick to slap a smiley sticker on the same brutal ICE machine and hope people are too distracted by the logo to notice what the agency actually does.

 

He latched onto some fanboy post online where a supporter said they wanted him to change ICE to “NICE” — National Immigration and Customs Enforcement — so the media would have to say “NICE agents” all day, and of course he jumped on it like it was genius branding. He reposted it with “GREAT IDEA!!! DO IT,” then blasted out a mock federalstyle logo, full eagleandshield treatment, so it looks like a real agency patch even though nothing has actually changed in law or policy. DHS accounts even reshared it with the spelledout name like they’re betatesting the rebrand in public, while at the same time pushing softfocus PR videos of ICE agents taking off masks and being “friendly” in the community.

 

The whole thing is backwards: instead of fixing the abuses, the raids, the deaths in custody, the family separations, the deportation mills — all the reasons people hate ICE — he’s trying to cuteify the acronym so the press has to literally call them “NICE agents.” Public polling is already underwater for ICE, with disapproval well above 50 percent, and his answer isn’t accountability or reform, it’s cosmetic spin and a logo drop like this is a new product line at Trump Org. And of course he’s doing it while still cranking the same enforcement rhetoric, talking up crackdowns and mass arrests, so the substance does not change — just the word they want forced into headlines.

 

This is classic Trump — obsessed with names, logos, and TVfriendly branding while the realworld harm ICE does stays intact. It’s not about making immigration enforcement humane or fair; it’s about making it sound “nice” so people stop associating it with kids in cages and ICE raids at 5 a.m., and if he can bully the media into repeating “NICE” enough, he thinks he can rewrite reality with a graphic designer and a Truth Social post.

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Ted Turner/Merger Update

Ted Turner dying feels like the end of an era where at least one billionaire used his money to actually build something weird and worldchanging instead of just stripmining it for clicks and stock buybacks.

 

This is the guy who literally invented 24hour news — CNN, the superstation model, TBS, TNT — and turned “breaking news” from a twiceaday thing into a constant, global feed that could put you inside history as it happened, for better and for worse. He owned the Braves, built entire cable empires, and for all his ego, he actually believed TV could inform people and maybe improve the world, not just pump rage and culturewar sludge. Without him, there is no Gulf War walltowall coverage, no “live from anywhere” baseline expectation, and frankly no Fox or MSNBC copycat model; he basically laid the tracks everyone else is now driving on, even the ones who hate what CNN became.

 

What it means for CNN now is bittersweet, because Turner hasn’t controlled it in ages — he sold into Time Warner, then watched it get passed around like a corporate football while the suits hollowed out exactly the kind of big, risky, global journalism he built it for. The current CNN is already a creature of mergers and privateequity brain, not Ted in a bow tie yelling about doing more international bureaus. But his death still matters symbolically: the last living connection to the original “news first, profits second” vision is gone, right when the network is about to be swallowed yet again by a new owner who absolutely does not share that philosophy.

 

On the merger front, it’s a mess and yeah, your fear about some MAGAadjacent halfwit running CNN isn’t conspiracy talk, it’s basically where we’re headed. Shareholders have already approved that giant $81 billion deal for Paramount (Skydance/Ellisoncontrolled) to buy Warner Bros. Discovery, which means CNN and CBS end up under the same umbrella if regulators sign off. David Ellison — the same guy Trump world is openly happy about, the same one who remade CBS News into something much more Trumpfriendly — is on track to be the power behind CNN’s next phase. And reporting has already flagged that this will be CNN’s third ownership change in a decade, with Paramount talking about “synergies” and “technology savings,” which is corporatespeak for layoffs, shrinking reporting muscle, and folding more of CNN’s future into streaming and brand management instead of hard news.

 

People inside and outside CNN are already sounding the alarm that with Netflix shoved aside and Paramount favored, Trump and his billionaire buddies basically got what they wanted: a chance to pull CNN further right, tame it, or at least make it less of a thorn in their side, right after Trump personally leaned on the process to kill off alternative bidders. That doesn’t mean overnight it becomes OAN, but it does mean more pressure to soften coverage, chase safe, bothsides nonsense, and push out anyone who won’t play along — that’s how we got the CBS drift and there’s no reason to think they won’t run the same script here.

 

So yeah, Ted Turner’s gone, and with him goes the last real moral leverage against that corporate capture — you can’t point to the founder in the room anymore and say “this isn’t what he built this for,” because now it’s just another asset in an $81 billion content bundle being steered by people who see “news” as a brand vertical, not a public service. The guy who dreamed up CNN as a 24/7 window on the world is dead, and the future of the thing he created is being decided by MAGAfriendly billionaires and merger lawyers; that’s the arc of media right now in one depressing sentence.

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Tom Homan…mass deportations coming…

Tom Homan saying “mass deportations are coming” and “you ain’t seen shit yet” is him basically announcing that the cruelty is the point and they’re gearing up to turn the whole country into a hunting ground for immigrants, again.

 

He said this at a Border Security Expo in Phoenix, bragging to a friendly room that this year will be “a big year” and that mass deportations are on the way, and mocking anyone who thinks Trump is backing off as “keyboard warriors.”  He admitted that 35–40% of the people they’ve arrested in Trump’s second term have no criminal record at all, and still framed that as necessary to “send a message to the world,” which tells you everything about what this is really about: numbers and fear, not safety.  This is the same guy who helped design family separation and “zero tolerance,” who shrugs off those kids as if their parents “chose” the separation, and he’s now in charge of scaling up Trump’s signature massdeportation fantasy.

 

When he talks like this, yes, it absolutely signals they’re ready to go back to the ugliest tactics we’ve seen: arresting people with clean records, using “collateral” arrests to sweep up whoever they can, and targeting folks who are literally doing everything by the book.  There is already reporting that ICE under this crew has been rearresting people who are in full compliance with the court process, using gimmicks like rescinding their documents and shoving them into “expedited removal” to strip away their hearings.  That’s the exact scenario you’re talking about: people who show up to their immigration hearings, follow the rules, try to do it the “right” way — and get ambushed and fasttracked out of the country anyway.

 

And the workplace piece is very much on the table. Homan has spent years railing against “sanctuary” cities and promising to “flood the zone” with ICE in jurisdictions that try to limit cooperation, which is code for more raids at homes, courthouses, and yes, places where people work.  He’s openly cheered on big workplace operations and brushed off the fact that many of the people detained have zero criminal record and are just working, paying taxes, and trying to keep their families afloat.  His line is basically: if you’re here without status and they can find you, they’ll deport you — churches, schools, hearings, job sites, it doesn’t matter.

 

The “why are they so hateful” part is simple and ugly: this is about using state power to dehumanize a group of people for political gain. Homan has literally said he’s “sick and tired” of hearing about family separation and told critics to “come get me, I don’t give a shit,” because in his mind, if you crossed the border, any cruelty that follows is your fault, not the government’s.  He talks about families like they’re statistics, refuses to own the trauma they caused, and keeps leaning into this punishment mentality where suffering is proof the system is “working.”  There’s no “NICE” in any of this — it’s the same ICE mindset on steroids, dressed up as law and order while they tear apart communities that keep this country running.

 

So when he says “you ain’t seen shit yet,” he’s telling us out loud that the goal is bigger raids, more detention, more families ripped apart — not just going after violent criminals, but making life so dangerous and miserable for millions of people that it becomes a warning to everyone else.  It’s not about protecting America; it’s about projecting dominance over the most vulnerable people they can reach, even when those people are literally showing up to court and clocking in to work to chase the same American dream this country loves to brag about.

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Special Election Results

Special elections last night were a little reminder that even on some random Tuesday, voters are still out here sending messages — and Republicans should not be getting comfortable.

 

The headline stuff: Democrats kept their recent trend of overperforming in offnight and special races, either holding what they needed to hold or coming in stronger than the underlying partisanship of the districts would suggest.  A bunch of these were lowerprofile — state legislative specials, local races, runoffs — but taken together, we’re still seeing that same pattern from 2023–2025: when people actually show up, the backlash to Trump, abortion bans, and general GOP chaos keeps showing up on the ballot, even in weirdtiming elections where Republicans historically had the advantage.

 

Most of what was on the board last night wasn’t big, marquee congressional specials, it was that usual mix of state house, state senate, local councils, and ballot questions scattered around the country that nerds at places like Decision Desk HQ track live while the rest of the media pretends nothing is happening.  But it matters because these are the races that decide who draws maps, who runs elections locally, who controls state chambers — and Democrats have been slowly chipping away in these, or at least forcing Republicans to sweat in places that should have been easy wins.  It’s less about one dramatic flip and more about the story the numbers keep telling: the GOP brand under Trump is still toxic enough that even lowturnout specials are not giving them the blowout margins they want heading into 2026.

 

There wasn’t some giant earthquake last night, but the ground is still tilted in a way that’s bad news for MAGA if it keeps up — and they know it, which is why you’ll see them double down even harder on voter suppression, gerrymanders, and culturewar panic instead of, you know, trying to win people over.

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VA Senate Leader FBI Probe

What’s happening in Virginia right now looks a lot more like a messy, very real corruption probe than one of Trump’s madetoorder revenge stunts — but of course his people are already trying to spin it to their advantage.

 

The FBI rolled into the district office of Virginia state Senate president pro tempore L. Louise Lucas in Portsmouth with a courtauthorized search warrant, as part of a federal corruption investigation that’s been brewing for a while.  According to people who’ve talked to the New York Times and AP, this isn’t some brandnew Trump directive; the probe started back in the Biden administration and is focused on possible corruption and bribery tied to marijuana dispensary businesses — including a cannabis shop linked to Lucas that agents also searched yesterday.  So on the timeline, this looks like one of those slow federal cases that finally spilled out into public view, not a fresh vendetta cooked up last week in the West Wing.

 

That said, the politics around it are pure Trumpera garbage. Lucas is a top Democrat in Virginia, a key player in the recent redistricting push that Trump loudly hated, and a vocal critic of his allies, which means MAGA world is already cheering this on like it proves their conspiracy theories.  The referendum she helped lead reshaped the state’s maps in ways Republicans — and Trump himself — complained about, and now, just as the state Supreme Court is weighing challenges to that map, she’s suddenly the face of a federal corruption probe involving her office and a neighboring cannabis business.  It’s not that Trump ordered this up (all signs say the investigation predates his return), but you can bet he and his people will squeeze every ounce of political juice out of it, painting it as “Democrats cheating on maps and weed” regardless of what the evidence actually shows.

 

So, short version: yes, there’s a real FBI corruption investigation targeting Virginia’s Senate leader, rooted in cannabis and possible bribery, and it started before Trump came back into power — but we’re in such a poisoned environment that even a legit case instantly becomes another weapon in his broader war on Democrats and voting rights.  The system is supposed to be following the facts here, but the narrative machine around him will absolutely turn this into one more “see, they’re all corrupt except us” talking point, even as his own crowd is kneedeep in their own legal disasters.

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Donny’s Day Care

That “press conference” with all the kids was pure nightmare fuel — like they accidentally let the doomsday grandpa loose at Career Day and just let the cameras roll.

 

Trump brings this group of school kids into the Oval to hype the return of the oldschool Presidential Fitness Test, which could’ve been harmless “jumping jacks and pushups” stuff, and instead immediately starts traumadumping about the Iran war, nuclear weapons, and how he basically saved them from getting nuked.  He tells these little kids that if he hadn’t started the war, Iran would’ve hit the U.S. and Israel with nuclear weapons, and goes into his “we can’t let them have nukes” rant like he’s at a rally, not surrounded by children who just wanted a White House field trip.  The whole vibe was him using them as props while he bragged, rewrote history, and scared the hell out of everybody in the room who was older than eight.

 

Late night absolutely torched him for it. Desi Lydic on The Daily Show said that when he talks to adults he seems juvenile, but when he talks to kids he straightup looks like Pennywise — which, honestly, is dead on.  Seth Meyers rolled the clip of him talking nukes in front of the kids and joked that you could see them thinking, “Is this the test?” while he claimed he prevented a nuclear attack by starting a war, and then reminded viewers that Obama already had a deal in place that cut Iran’s enrichment by 98 percent.  Everyone’s reaction was basically: who in their right mind starts explaining nuclear conflict and war casualties to a bunch of kids there for a fitness photo op?

 

But the crown jewel was Kimmel’s “Donny’s Day Care.” He went allin, treating the Oval as this deranged daycare where the most dangerous thing in the room isn’t the scissors, it’s the president.  The bit framed Trump like an unhinged babysitter oversharing about global annihilation while the kids just stand there in their little blazers and dresses wondering what dimension they wandered into. You’ve got Kimmel joking that instead of nap time they get war stories, instead of snacks they get rants about “rigged elections” and how everyone is out to get him.  It landed because it didn’t even have to exaggerate that much — they just leaned into how wildly inappropriate his actual comments were and turned it into “Donny’s Day Care,” a place no parent in their right mind would send their kid.

 

Yesterday was supposed to be a feelgood “kids at the White House” moment, and he turned it into yet another selfobsessed, fearmongering monologue, this time with an elementaryschool audience.  And the comics did what they do best — took the sheer weirdness of it and made it impossible to unsee: Trump as the world’s worst daycare worker, explaining nuclear war between pushups and presidential fitness badges at “Donny’s Day Care.”

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So, that’s today…we made it thru another day…who the heck knows what will happen next or overnight – let’s hope that Trump does NOT have access to the codes – in fact, just connect his phone to a router that has all the child protections on it so he can’t fuck up anything else. 

 

Speak Truth!  Keep speaking TRUTH! 

Don’t Give up the Ship!

 

Go Cause Good Trouble, with Your Elbows Up!

 

These are facts that I researched and verified – AI helped put together some sentence structure, but the words and tone are mine. These are my views based upon facts, research and thoughtful consideration using logic. I own the copyright to any images used.  I’m comfortable to stand alone to uphold truth.  Feel free to check me, but do not attack me. I am only causing good trouble.

 

 

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