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Six drastic plans Trump is already promising for a second term

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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  1. Execute drug dealers
  2. Move homeless people to outlying ‘tent cities’
  3. Deploy federal force against crime, unrest and protests
  4. Strip job protections for federal workers
  5. Eliminate the Education Department
  6. Restrict voting to one day using paper ballots

For the first time since leaving office, former president Donald Trump has started getting specific about what he would do if he wins a second term in the White House.
The pitches he’s made onstage over the past month in speeches from D.C. to Dallas to Las Vegas are a stark contrast from ordinary stump speeches. He promises a break from American history if elected, with a federal government stacked with loyalists and unleashed to harm his perceived enemies.


There has never been a potential candidate like Trump: a defeated former president whose followers attacked the Capitol, who still insists he never lost, and who openly pledges revenge on those he views as having wronged him.

As his 2016 campaign and administration showed time and again, from the border wall to the Muslim ban, he and his aides worked furiously to translate rally slogans into official policy — whether or not there were legal or political barriers to overcome. And if Trump does return to the White House in 2025, this time he will be surrounded by fewer advisers interested in moderating or restraining his impulses.






Instead, his administration would probably be staffed by dedicated loyalists, and would have the advantage of an emboldened conservative majority on the Supreme Court. He and his advisers would also have more experience in how to exert power inside the federal bureaucracy and exploit vulnerabilities in institutions and laws.

Trump has strongly hinted that he wants to run for president again and has been considering an early announcement ahead of the November midterms. Last week’s search of his Mar-a-Lago residence and club added urgency for those of his advisers who favor an early launch, a person with direct knowledge told The Washington Post, but Trump hasn’t committed to a timeline.

A Trump spokesman did not respond to requests for comment.
Here are six specific proposals that have recently surfaced in Trump’s speeches — and what each plan might look like if he pursued it from the White House.

 
I do think making the homeless as uncomfortable as possible is the only way to get them to go somewhere else.

I think the national guard should patrol the worst areas of major cities. It’s ridiculous what is going on now.

nobody has solved either problem.
 
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I do think making the homeless as uncomfortable as possible is the only way to get them to go somewhere else.

I think the national guard should patrol the worst areas of major cities. It’s ridiculous what is going on now.

nobody has solved either problem.
Where are they supposed to go? Most people aren't homeless because they just don't want to work. Just trying to push them out isn't going to make them go away, it's just going to move them around.
 
I do think making the homeless as uncomfortable as possible is the only way to get them to go somewhere else.

I think the national guard should patrol the worst areas of major cities. It’s ridiculous what is going on now.

nobody has solved either problem.
They are homeless. Just how much more uncomfortable can you get? Why not invest resources in why they are homeless instead?
 
  1. Execute drug dealers
  2. Move homeless people to outlying ‘tent cities’
  3. Deploy federal force against crime, unrest and protests
  4. Strip job protections for federal workers
  5. Eliminate the Education Department
  6. Restrict voting to one day using paper ballots

For the first time since leaving office, former president Donald Trump has started getting specific about what he would do if he wins a second term in the White House.
The pitches he’s made onstage over the past month in speeches from D.C. to Dallas to Las Vegas are a stark contrast from ordinary stump speeches. He promises a break from American history if elected, with a federal government stacked with loyalists and unleashed to harm his perceived enemies.


There has never been a potential candidate like Trump: a defeated former president whose followers attacked the Capitol, who still insists he never lost, and who openly pledges revenge on those he views as having wronged him.

As his 2016 campaign and administration showed time and again, from the border wall to the Muslim ban, he and his aides worked furiously to translate rally slogans into official policy — whether or not there were legal or political barriers to overcome. And if Trump does return to the White House in 2025, this time he will be surrounded by fewer advisers interested in moderating or restraining his impulses.






Instead, his administration would probably be staffed by dedicated loyalists, and would have the advantage of an emboldened conservative majority on the Supreme Court. He and his advisers would also have more experience in how to exert power inside the federal bureaucracy and exploit vulnerabilities in institutions and laws.

Trump has strongly hinted that he wants to run for president again and has been considering an early announcement ahead of the November midterms. Last week’s search of his Mar-a-Lago residence and club added urgency for those of his advisers who favor an early launch, a person with direct knowledge told The Washington Post, but Trump hasn’t committed to a timeline.

A Trump spokesman did not respond to requests for comment.
Here are six specific proposals that have recently surfaced in Trump’s speeches — and what each plan might look like if he pursued it from the White House.

Don't worry, our resident Republicans of HORT say he's not popular at all with their fellow GOP voters :rolleyes:
 
They are homeless. Just how much more uncomfortable can you get? Why not invest resources in why they are homeless instead?
You can't spend tax money to try and improve people's lives, that's SOCIALISM!

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Where are they supposed to go? Most people aren't homeless because they just don't want to work. Just trying to push them out isn't going to make them go away, it's just going to move them around.
Ok. So who is doing a good job of handling it?

I am curious. Seems to me letting them steal $900 worth of things and shit in the streets hasn’t helped.

most are drug addicts, in this environment I am saying b.s. that many are sober and just can’t find work. How much money do you hand over to a drug addict before they are good?

I have no problem making all drugs legal. Just don’t ask for money to bail them out. Freedoms of choice has consequences.
 
Ok. So who is doing a good job of handling it?

I am curious. Seems to me letting them steal $900 worth of things and shit in the streets hasn’t helped.

most are drug addicts, in this environment I am saying b.s. that many are sober and just can’t find work. How much money do you hand over to a drug addict before they are good?

I have no problem making all drugs legal. Just don’t ask for money to bail them out. Freedoms of choice has consequences.
But they are homeless. They literally live on the streets. They have nothing. So what more can you take from them?
 
I do think making the homeless as uncomfortable as possible is the only way to get them to go somewhere else.

I think the national guard should patrol the worst areas of major cities. It’s ridiculous what is going on now.

nobody has solved either problem.
If you want to make it very, very hard to recruit people into the National Guard I'd go with this. How about using th NG to patrol schools in Texas or Florida? Lots of kids keep getting murdered in schools in those states.
 
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Ok. So who is doing a good job of handling it?

I am curious. Seems to me letting them steal $900 worth of things and shit in the streets hasn’t helped.

most are drug addicts, in this environment I am saying b.s. that many are sober and just can’t find work. How much money do you hand over to a drug addict before they are good?

I have no problem making all drugs legal. Just don’t ask for money to bail them out. Freedoms of choice has consequences.
Tell me you know absolutely nothing about the homeless epidemic without telling me you know absolutely nothing about it.

Your gross generalizations that aren't backed up by true fact and reasoning don't count.
 
Fortunately. Trump is done as far as the WH goes.

Over 80 million people voted for the alternative in 2020. Biden would beat him again if he runs....which I don't think he will.

Trump at the top of the ballot will also kill down ballot Republicans.
 
Ok. So who is doing a good job of handling it?

I am curious. Seems to me letting them steal $900 worth of things and shit in the streets hasn’t helped.

most are drug addicts, in this environment I am saying b.s. that many are sober and just can’t find work. How much money do you hand over to a drug addict before they are good?

I have no problem making all drugs legal. Just don’t ask for money to bail them out. Freedoms of choice has consequences.

Many homeless people are mentally ill.
 
None of that is surprising….the Republican war on schools and teachers has been going on now for a while…
 
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Every time I walk by a homeless person I can’t help it does always bother me how comfortable they seem. What an on brand Trump solution.
 
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@onlyTheObvious - you are going to hate the answer to your question of who is handling it well. Because it is a dreaded “socialist” country.

So shitting in public and look the other way shoplifting doesn’t work ?

what works for 9000 isn’t going to scale to hundreds of thousands. Temperature might have something to do with it. International Falls MN doesn’t have as many homeless as LA. Like Finland temp and population.

if california can’t do it with rubber stamp liberalism who can?

love the pretenders. It’s like global warming. Easy to say you care. It’s another to do something about it. Anybody putting ads in paper inviting them into their homes?
 
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