Anonymous wrote:Hey look: The FBI arrests two leaders of the 764 child exploitation ring.
Are you democrats going to set up a legal defense fund for them?
Anonymous wrote:If the "First 100 Days" got your knickers in a twist just wait for the "Last 100 Days."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh. Can WH and faux news endlessly spit out enough fawning nonsense today about “historic 100 days”? . No one fking cares. The stock market has shed 12 trillion. Prices are about to sky rocket because shelves are empty. What the actual fk. How much validation does one person need? Oh yeah, I forgot they’re a narcissist and any damage to the ego about bad press is too much to handle.
If you’re like me — 23, working-class and born into a country already on fire — President Donald Trump’s first 100 days feel less like chaos and more like clarity.
For the first time in years, there’s motion. Bureaucracies that seemed untouchable are getting streamlined. Energy policy is shifting. Agencies that operated without accountability are being challenged. The tone in Washington is sharp, confrontational and direct.
The generational split here is obvious. Older Americans, especially those with pensions and property, are panicked by any shake-up. They’ve spent decades benefiting from inflated assets and cheap debt. For them, even a modest dip in the markets feels like a threat to their way of life.
But for my generation, disruption is normal. We graduated into an economy that felt rigged, got smacked by a pandemic, drowned in inflation and watched every institution, from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to the Ivy League, burn through credibility like kindling. We’ve been priced out of homes, overregulated at entry-level jobs and gaslighted into thinking we’re lazy for questioning it all.
This is what makes Trump’s second term feel different. It’s not just about remaking policy; it’s about recalibrating reality. Now, we’re watching someone bulldoze the mess and start re-laying the foundation. Yes, people are screaming. They’re calling it dangerous, reckless, authoritarian. But if you grew up watching your generation get crushed by the consequences of bipartisan cowardice, this doesn’t feel like tyranny. It feels like someone finally picking up the shovel.
This is why nobody listens to 23 year olds. You sound like a self-involved child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gen X here. We paid into a system (SS, Medicare) our entire working lives with promise of some level of return, and are now on the cusp of retirement - you’re goddamn right we’re pissed.
Most of us Gen-Xers saved a lot in 401Ks that have compounded like crazy for 30+ years. I'm not pissed at all. I never thought SS would be there for me so I saved accordingly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://app.gptzero.me/ is 84% confident that "23 year old working-class" post is AI slop. I am 95% confident. It's obviously not a real person's opinion.
https://wapo.st/4m9nAc2
hope you don't depend on your AI for real work.
Anonymous wrote:If the "First 100 Days" got your knickers in a twist just wait for the "Last 100 Days."
Anonymous wrote:https://app.gptzero.me/ is 84% confident that "23 year old working-class" post is AI slop. I am 95% confident. It's obviously not a real person's opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh. Can WH and faux news endlessly spit out enough fawning nonsense today about “historic 100 days”? . No one fking cares. The stock market has shed 12 trillion. Prices are about to sky rocket because shelves are empty. What the actual fk. How much validation does one person need? Oh yeah, I forgot they’re a narcissist and any damage to the ego about bad press is too much to handle.
If you’re like me — 23, working-class and born into a country already on fire — President Donald Trump’s first 100 days feel less like chaos and more like clarity.
For the first time in years, there’s motion. Bureaucracies that seemed untouchable are getting streamlined. Energy policy is shifting. Agencies that operated without accountability are being challenged. The tone in Washington is sharp, confrontational and direct.
The generational split here is obvious. Older Americans, especially those with pensions and property, are panicked by any shake-up. They’ve spent decades benefiting from inflated assets and cheap debt. For them, even a modest dip in the markets feels like a threat to their way of life.
But for my generation, disruption is normal. We graduated into an economy that felt rigged, got smacked by a pandemic, drowned in inflation and watched every institution, from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to the Ivy League, burn through credibility like kindling. We’ve been priced out of homes, overregulated at entry-level jobs and gaslighted into thinking we’re lazy for questioning it all.
This is what makes Trump’s second term feel different. It’s not just about remaking policy; it’s about recalibrating reality. Now, we’re watching someone bulldoze the mess and start re-laying the foundation. Yes, people are screaming. They’re calling it dangerous, reckless, authoritarian. But if you grew up watching your generation get crushed by the consequences of bipartisan cowardice, this doesn’t feel like tyranny. It feels like someone finally picking up the shovel.
This is why nobody listens to 23 year olds. You sound like a self-involved child.
Anonymous wrote:https://app.gptzero.me/ is 84% confident that "23 year old working-class" post is AI slop. I am 95% confident. It's obviously not a real person's opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh. Can WH and faux news endlessly spit out enough fawning nonsense today about “historic 100 days”? . No one fking cares. The stock market has shed 12 trillion. Prices are about to sky rocket because shelves are empty. What the actual fk. How much validation does one person need? Oh yeah, I forgot they’re a narcissist and any damage to the ego about bad press is too much to handle.
If you’re like me — 23, working-class and born into a country already on fire — President Donald Trump’s first 100 days feel less like chaos and more like clarity.
For the first time in years, there’s motion. Bureaucracies that seemed untouchable are getting streamlined. Energy policy is shifting. Agencies that operated without accountability are being challenged. The tone in Washington is sharp, confrontational and direct.
The generational split here is obvious. Older Americans, especially those with pensions and property, are panicked by any shake-up. They’ve spent decades benefiting from inflated assets and cheap debt. For them, even a modest dip in the markets feels like a threat to their way of life.
But for my generation, disruption is normal. We graduated into an economy that felt rigged, got smacked by a pandemic, drowned in inflation and watched every institution, from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to the Ivy League, burn through credibility like kindling. We’ve been priced out of homes, overregulated at entry-level jobs and gaslighted into thinking we’re lazy for questioning it all.
This is what makes Trump’s second term feel different. It’s not just about remaking policy; it’s about recalibrating reality. Now, we’re watching someone bulldoze the mess and start re-laying the foundation. Yes, people are screaming. They’re calling it dangerous, reckless, authoritarian. But if you grew up watching your generation get crushed by the consequences of bipartisan cowardice, this doesn’t feel like tyranny. It feels like someone finally picking up the shovel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let’s obsess about auto-pen and deflect.
He can’t answer any questions. Always comes back to blaming Biden. What an idiot.
Yes he has Biden Derangement Syndrome