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A congresswoman questioned where the money would come from to cover deployments within the limited budget. The speaker responded by recalling 2020 when Minnesota Governor Walz abandoned a police precinct and allowed it to be burned, leading to days of chaos in Minneapolis. Because of this, the National Guard mobilization was too late. The speaker stated that President Trump recognized that such situations are bad for citizens. The speaker believes ICE has the right to safely conduct operations in any state, especially after 21,000,000 illegals crossed the border under the previous administration. The congresswoman reiterated her budget question. The speaker stated that the National Guard and Marines were deployed to protect ICE in Los Angeles so they can enforce immigration law, unlike what Governor Walz did in 2020.

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"The democrats have fucked around and lost 2,100,000 registered voters since 2020." "Zero. About carjackings. Three." "the city with said murder rate, well, that just happens to be Democrat ran." "the city with the highest murder rate in Texas is Houston." "Well, who runs Houston? A democrat." "now they wanna bring what Trump doing in DC to Chicago, and the democrats are losing their fucking mind." "the biggest question is why are democrats so obsessed with keeping crime around?" "Because, you know, they say Trump is trying to attack the black and brown communities." "Them communities are the ones that get the biggest benefit out of this." "I think the damn whole crap party and everybody in it is the biggest, goofiest, Max Smith's motherfuckers I've ever seen in my life." "I'm off to the gym, man. Love peas and chicken grease. I'm a get out of here."

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In Chicago, crime is rampant with people being attacked and shoved into subway trains. Law and order must be restored by giving police their tools and respect. Drug dealers are causing a crime wave, leading to a call for the death penalty for them and human traffickers. Implementing this will reduce crime by 75%. Hiring 1000 more police officers is crucial to putting violent criminals behind bars.

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The speaker accuses the Trump administration of authoritarian tendencies, citing the federalizing of the National Guard and threats to deploy marines. He claims Trump is inflaming the situation and needs to "pull back." The speaker says he spoke with Trump on Friday night for twenty minutes, but Trump never mentioned the National Guard, calling Trump a "stone cold liar." He states there's "no working with the president, there's only working for him, and I will never work for Donald Trump." He says he received no heads-up about the National Guard deployment, finding out from a staffer. He believes Trump manufactured a crisis, as local law enforcement didn't request additional resources, and is moving towards a constitutional crisis. Regarding threats of arrest, the speaker challenges Hohman to arrest him, telling him to "lay your hands off four year old girls that are trying to get educated." He says he has had no communication with Hohman.

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This dire public safety crisis stems directly from the abject failures of the city's local leadership. The radical left city council adopted no cash bail. By the way, every place in the country where you have no cash bail is a disaster. That's what started the problem in New York, and they don't change it. That's what started it in Chicago. No cash bail. We're gonna end that in Chicago. No cash bail. We're gonna change the statute. We're gonna change the statute and get rid of some of the other things, and we'll count on the Republicans in Congress and Senate to vote. We have the majority, so we'll vote. Got that done, and that's one of the greatest things that's ever happened to people in this country.

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I stand firm against anyone who seeks to take away the freedom, opportunity, and dignity of the people of Illinois. A happy warrior remains a warrior. If you come for my people, you will have to go through me.

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Speaker 0: "My first reaction was that this is a good thing." "I think that the governor as well as, the mayor should be on board with it just so we can get a bit more of security in Chicago the way that we need." "The the crime has dropped since 2024." "Do you feel like the city feels safer?" "No." "Not at all." "No." "Especially with the police being defunded."

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"We've already sued New York." "We've already sued Illinois." "If they don't comply, we're going to sue them." "We're gonna take away your federal funding." "You're going to have to comply." "We're gonna send in law enforcement." "Our National Guard are ready to go." "They have been working hand in hand with our park services here in DC." "The metro police are loving it." "They can actually now arrest people." "They have federal officers with them." "They're buddied up, and they are making arrests, keeping Americans safe and keeping our capital safe." "All of our museums are free." "Families deserve to be able to go there." "They feel safe now to walk their own neighborhood where they live because of what our great great men and women in law enforcement are doing at the directive of the president."

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The speaker announces a historic action to rescue the capital from crime and chaos, calling it "liberation day in DC" and promising to take back the capital. He says he is "officially invoking section seven forty of the District Of Columbia Home Rule Act" and "placing the DC Metropolitan Police Department under direct federal control." He explains the National Guard will be deployed to restore order and safety and that troops will be allowed to do their job. He hints at extending the same measures to New York, and, if necessary, to Chicago, which he calls "a disaster" and its leaders "totally incompetent." He singles out Pritzker as "an incompetent" and notes his family "threw him out of the business" and that he "ran for governor." He references Los Angeles, saying LA "would be burning" without action, claiming "we actually sent in our military" to bring down the water.

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"They don't want Donald Trump to come in there with the National Guard because if they clean up the crime, Chicago will lose 800,000,800 million dollars in federal funding for crime programs." "It's a 100% true." "And black people are falling for it." "These liberal protesters are falling for it." "They don't even live in Chicago." "And so they're dependent on Donald Trump." "It's one big racket, bro, and it's not fair to the black people and the community members and the people that live, work, and play and have to deal with this nonsense on a regular basis." "It's so messed up, bro." "Money. I say this about everybody. Body. Follow the money. The money is gonna lead you to the reasons why."

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The secretary was asked to justify using the military for civilian law enforcement in Los Angeles. The secretary stated every American deserves to live in a safe community, and ICE agents need to be able to do their job of deporting illegal criminals. He said President Trump believes in law and order and has the authority to mobilize the National Guard or active duty troops to protect federal agents. When asked which authority justifies the use, the secretary stated it sounds like all three, citing millions of illegals waving flags from foreign countries and assaulting officers. He said the governor of California has failed to protect his people, along with the mayor of Los Angeles, so President Trump will protect the agents. When told orders for these purposes should be issued through governors, the secretary stated President Trump has all the authorities necessary.

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Speaker 0 opened by saying that over the last week he has interacted with over 300,000 plus real Chicagoans who say it is hate speech to evoke the Civil War or the Confederacy, to say that law enforcement is a sickness, while the other person has over 150 sworn CPD officers on his detail. He asked what the other person would say to those people and whether he would ask his 150 sworn officers to stand down if he and his wife Stacy are ever attacked, shot at, or rammed with a protester’s vehicle. Speaker 1 responded with sarcasm about the large number, joking that the interactions had “gone down to 300,000,” and claimed he had checked the other person’s comments. He asserted that the addiction on jails and incarceration and the addiction of militarism is evil, referencing Doctor King, and said it is incumbent to ensure that “the real Chicagoans” or the real people of America receive attention, suggesting we should spend billions of dollars overseas on the people in Chicago instead. Speaker 0 pushed back, saying that the real Chicagoans he talks to, mostly Black and Brown, feel that the other person does not distinguish between illegal aliens and real Chicago citizens, and that he is siding with illegal aliens over communities. He asserted that a recent incident involved “an illegal alien from Nicaragua” who grabbed a woman on the North Side, bashed her head into the sidewalk, knocked her unconscious, and raped her. He asked whether, if that had been the other person’s wife, Stacy, he would want ICE to deport that illegal alien, and asked for a yes or no answer. Speaker 1 pressed to get a direct answer, asking for a response “as a man, not as mayor,” and repeated the question about whether ICE should deport the rapist. Speaker 0 reiterated his question and stated that the answer for real Chicagoans is the deportation of the rapist, and that was the “answer for real Chicagoans.” Speaker 1 then apologized for being late, blaming traffic, and the other person quipped about the traffic, noting, “You’re not blaming me for the traffic, are you?” and said he had been watching.

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"The president has been trying to provoke violence here, right here, in the black communities and in the brown communities, having ICE kidnap our neighbors, having black having the black community be harassed and profiled and want, want a response. We say, hell no. We won't go." "Today, we get today today, we gather to speak plainly about policy path that sounds strong, but in truth, it weakens the very safety we see." "Black people are more likely to be stopped, searched, questioned, arrested, and harmed encounters with the law." "When we add the president of federal agents or the national guard to daily life in these neighborhoods, the burden can multiply." "We're fighting for freedom and safety for all people."

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Our corporate counsel has been in constant communication with our attorney general for several months now. "the right wing in this country wants a rematch of the civil war." the president of The United States Of America has declared war on the people of Chicago and people across America. "He's more interested in giving billions of dollars to other nations while farmers in urban cities around this country, are literally being destabilized." we literally have people who are volunteering in this city, on the Southwest Side, the Northwest Side, all over this city to make sure that we're protecting children from being separated from their families. "volunteers who are literally putting themselves at risk of being shot and killed by the federal government." And if they won't do it, then the city of Chicago will using every single tool that's available to us.

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I really am honored that the National Guard has done such an incredible job working with the police. And we haven't had to bring in the regular military, which we're willing to do. After we do this, we'll go to another location, and we'll make it safe also. We're gonna make our country very safe. Chicago is a mess. You have an incompetent mayor, grossly incompetent. And we'll straighten that one out probably next. And it won't even be tough. And the people in Chicago, mister vice president, are screaming for us to come. They are. They're wearing red hats just like this one. African American ladies, beautiful ladies are saying, please, president Trump, come to Chicago. Please. I did great with the black vote, as you know, and they want something to happen. So I think Chicago will be our next, and then we'll help with New York.

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The speaker stated they want ICE to target Democratic inner cities, specifically sanctuary cities, because that's where the people are. They cited New York, Chicago, and LA as examples. The speaker believes Chicago has a bad governor, Pritzker, who is possibly the worst in the country. They claim Chicago, New York and LA have been overrun by criminals, many of whom are not from those cities or California. The speaker alleges Biden allowed 21 million people into the country, vast numbers of whom were murderers, killers, gang members, and people from jails emptied into the U.S. They believe most of these people are in blue, Democrat-run cities and that Democrats think they will use them to vote, but that this will not happen.

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The speaker criticizes Democrat governance of major cities, arguing that Democrat-run cities have allowed savage, bloodthirsty criminals to prey on innocent people. They claim radical left judges, politicians, and activists in these cities have adopted a policy of catch and release for thugs and killers. The speaker cites a specific incident in Charlotte, North Carolina, where a 23-year-old woman who came from Ukraine was murdered on a public train, presenting a photo of the victim and stating she was a beautiful young girl with a magnificent future in this country who is now dead. The killer is described as a deranged monster who was roaming free after 14 prior arrests. The speaker asserts that a depraved criminal element of violent repeat offenders is spreading destruction and death throughout the country and insists that the response must be forceful and strong, stating that “they” understand only one language: to be vicious like them. They claim that 24 of the top 25 most dangerous cities in America are run by Democrat mayors, with Chicago highlighted as an example where 50 people were murdered in recent weeks and hundreds were shot. The speaker contends that it is time to stop this madness and that the people of the country need protection, safety, law, and order. A claim is made that it has been proven that safety can be restored, citing Washington, DC, as an example. The speaker describes DC as previously a bloodthirsty, horrible, dangerous place and one of the worst, but now it is a crime-free city, and they assert that this can be done and can happen fast. The speaker states the goal to keep it that way. The audience is urged to seek help from the president, with the message that Chicago needs help and other cities need help. The speaker pledges to take whatever actions are necessary to achieve safety, declaring that they will make America safe again, including the big cities. The address concludes with a call for support and for decisive action to restore safety and order.

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Speaker 0: He explains that he wanted to enforce laws with ICE agents and federal law enforcement but couldn't, so he needed to call the National Guard. The question is what "regular forces" means, since the statute says the president has to be unable to enforce the law with regular forces, and the Supreme Court had not decided that before yesterday. The Supreme Court now says "regular forces" means you have to try with the regular armed forces first before you can bring out the National Guard. The unintended consequence could be that the president is going to have to call the eighty second airborne or the marines or the hundred and first airborne division, as, for example, President Eisenhower did after Brown v. Board of Education in the South to enforce desegregation. The president might have to do that first in order to protect those federal buildings and ICE agents, and then if they fail, he can then call out the National Guard. Speaker 1: J. B. Pritzker, the governor in the state of Illinois, is saying this is a big win for Illinois and American democracy, an important step in curbing the Trump administration's consistent abuse of power and slowing Trump’s march toward authoritarianism. The claim is political. The president has obviously tried to work within the framework of the law as his legal team sees it. What happens from here? In fifteen seconds or so, what happens from here? I’m not surprised by Pritzker’s response, and I guess you aren’t either. Speaker 0: He notes that Trump will now have the right to go to the Supreme Court on the full merits. This is just preliminary, and he may be able to get the court, the full court, to reverse this preliminary decision. More worrisome, the Supreme Court is essentially inviting President Trump to send regular armed troops and deploy those to Chicago and Los Angeles before he can send the National Guard. A governor would rather have National Guard troops than the eighty second Airborne and the Marine Corps patrolling the streets of Chicago. Speaker 1: Yeah. Especially when you think...

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Witnessing a new era of political violence. Assassins have tried to murder President Trump twice and tried to kill Supreme Court Justice Kavanaugh. In Minnesota, legislators and even children attending Mass were gunned down in two separate incidents, and an assassin murdered our friend Charlie Kirk. A sniper shot three people at a Texas ice facility, and more than 200 violent rioters were at a Chicago ice facility chanting 'arrest ICE, shoot ICE,' at least one had a gun. We've seen this before: Portland and the LA riots. These are not peaceful protests, these are coordinated attacks by radical extremists, and they end now. Anyone who threatens or assaults our federal officers will be arrested and charged federally, not in a liberal state court. Same goes for anyone funding and aiding these extremists. You will be dismantled brick by brick. We are taking our country back. Make America safe again.

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Speaker 0: I loathe Donald Trump. Speaker 0: Everything we care about is under siege by a racist, misogynistic, homophobic, xenophobic president. Speaker 0: Donald Trump is a convicted felon, an adjudicated rapist, and a congenital liar. He's a racist, sexist, misogynistic, narcissist. Speaker 1: When Pritzker calls Trump antidemocratic and authoritarian, he's effectively calling more than 70,000,000 Americans the same thing. Speaker 0: Illinois Democrats have done more in the last five years to push back on the wave of authoritarian, antidemocratic, MAGA Republican nonsense than in any other place in the country. Speaker 1: Not even an assassination attempt has tempered governor Pritzker. Speaker 0: I am very pleased that he remains relatively unharmed, but it's still true that Donald Trump is a convicted felon, an adjudicated rapist, has been a, congenital liar, and is unfit for the office of president of The United States. Speaker 1: Pritzker's vitriol has become extreme.

PBD Podcast

Israel & Hamas Meeting, Epstein's Blackmail Network CONFIRMED & Diddy Locked Up | PBD Podcast | 661
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Bold headlines collide as the PBD crew thread together global diplomacy, Epstein lore, and pop culture. They report Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff heading to Egypt to press a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, with President Trump signaling a hostage-prisoner exchange once Hamas agrees. A map outlines Gaza withdrawal zones and an evacuation plan, while tens of thousands march in Tel Aviv. The panel discusses a Trump-Blair commission for regional stability and weighs Hamas’s disarmament prospects. Back home, political frictions sharpen. Chicago becomes a focal point as federal authorities deploy National Guard to Illinois and other states, while Governor Pritzker calls the move propaganda. A DHS-ICE clash unfolds with reports of vehicles boxed in and officers attacked; protesters accuse federal authorities of overreach. The hosts critique leadership gaps and debate sanctuary policies. Amid the domestic drumbeat, Trump touts tariff rebates and researchers note a spike in inflation-era prices, while Disney attendance slides and park pricing remains a factor. The discussion covers political optics and public safety. Celebrity legal drama and sports misadventure join the lineup. Diddy receives about four years on a subset of charges, while 50 Cent teases he’ll fill speaking engagements, trolling the moment. In Indianapolis, Mark Sanchez reportedly trips into a bar-side dispute, the 69-year-old grease-truck driver stabbing Sanchez, who is hospitalized with non-life-threatening injuries; the driver claims self-defense. In New York, the Mamdani-Cuomo dynamic headlines the mayoral race, with Cuomo issuing a public apology to Jewish New Yorkers for COVID-era policies. The panel explores authenticity and political optics in real time. Media trends and online culture close the show. Fox News dominates YouTube in the quarter, with VTMPBD Podcast close behind, while other outlets trail. Regulators in the UK impose age-verification on Pornhub, triggering a sharp UK traffic drop. Bad Bunny headlines Saturday Night Live and teases a Spanish-language Super Bowl set, fueling debates about audience and branding. Disney attendance remains down, and conversations circle inflation, pricing, and the streaming/advertising ecosystem as audiences shift and platforms compete for attention. The hosts promise more insights on future episodes and potential guests.

Breaking Points

Trump Says CHICAGO NATIONAL GUARD OCCUPATION Next
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Trump's plan to deploy the National Guard to major cities dominates the morning's headlines as the hosts lay out a cascade of legal and political maneuvering. They detail a proposal to expand deployments started in Los Angeles and Washington, federalizing guardsmen and even using active duty troops if necessary, with Chicago poised as the next testing ground. They cite Washington Post reporting that a multi-city, emergency-style deployment could begin as early as September, while noting changes allowing guardsmen to carry firearms under certain orders. They explain the legal framework under Posse Comitatus and Title 32 authority, the distinctions between state and federal control, and the risk of court challenges that have already appeared in California. The segment underscores that this is presented as a crime and homelessness crackdown, but observers describe it as a show of force in Democratic cities. They review Illinois Governor Kitsker's response, who says the state has received no requests or outreach from the federal government and has made no requests for federal intervention, calling Trump's move manufactured and political. They cover Maryland's Wes Moore, who labels the deployment unsustainable, unconstitutional, and a distraction, and Trump's retort that he would walk the streets with Moore if crime were cleaned up. The hosts relay Moore's claim that the plan could cost over a million dollars a day and would be unscalable, while noting Maryland's political context and the broader gerrymandering and redistricting dynamics discussed as it shapes the national conversation. They cite Data for Progress polling: 51% oppose the Trump administration taking over the DC police force and deploying the National Guard in the city, 44% support, underscoring a partisan split as the debate frames showmanship versus crime policy.

PBD Podcast

NEW Epstein Files, Trump's Chicago Take Over, Putin & Xi's Hot Mic Moment w/ Jillian Michaels | PBD
Guests: Jillian Michaels
reSee.it Podcast Summary
From leaked Epstein files to a high-profile clash over how history is taught, the episode threads power, media narratives, and accountability into a single conversation. The House committee released 33,295 pages of Jeffrey Epstein related records, including videos from the 2005 Palm Beach investigation and an DOJ interview, with redactions to protect victims. Nancy Mace left the briefing overwhelmed as lawmakers weighed what the victims described as a case far bigger than anticipated, naming rich and powerful people who should face consequences. Jillian Michaels joins the hosts to discuss CNN coverage of slavery and a Smithsonian installation that includes contested exhibits, including a piece about gender testing and sports. The conversation expands into the broader claim that nothing in the installations is solely about slavery, while acknowledging two separate conversations: the ethics of memory and the complexity of history. Amid the Jubilee chatter, there is a push to separate personal experience from political manipulation, with the hosts arguing that stories about the arts and history deserve a fuller, balanced dialogue, not a one-sided retelling. Over the weekend, Chicago faced seven killings and 54 shootings, prompting the discussion of federal help and the possible deployment of National Guard. Governor Pritzker resisted such a move while President Trump joked about the situation and later urged action, arguing that big cities face crime and must address it. The debate widened to the political tactic of calling for cross-state partnerships, and the hosts explored Pritzker’s reactions, as well as Mayor Brandon Johnson’s stance. In parallel, a CBS poll suggested Cuomo could beat Mamani in a New York City mayoral matchup if other candidates dropped out, with Cuomo leading 52% to 41%. The panel reflected on how the race could hinge on affordability and governance, and they discussed the possibility that Trump’s endorsements, media narratives, and public appearances shape the race. As the Jubilee segment delved into education, media, and the purpose of elections, the conversation circled back to accountability and the role of leadership in keeping communities safe.

Breaking Points

Trump ALIVE: Threatens Chicago Troop TAKEOVER
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Trump’s Wednesday press conference unleashed a flood of headlines as he announced that the Space Force command center would move from Colorado to Huntsville, Alabama, while a video circulated suggesting he had died that he dismissed as AI. The hosts recount testing the clip with Fox’s Peter Doocy and note Trump’s remarks about going into Chicago, alongside comments on Ukraine and tariffs. The discussion then dives into the legal and constitutional questions raised by any federal intervention in a city. The panel analyzes Posse Comitatus and the Insurrection Act as possible frameworks, juxtaposed with Governor JB Pritzker’s rebuke that Chicago does not want troops on its streets. They discuss optics, feasibility, and the broader federal‑state balance. Other headlines include a major Epstein victims’ press conference on Capitol Hill, a document dump, and a looming discharge petition led by Ro Khanna and Thomas Massie to compel more documents. The hosts note the political calculus of Republican signatures and what the disclosures might reveal. Beyond the United States, protests rise in Malaysia, the Philippines, and Indonesia, driven by corruption and frustration with elites. Pam Bailey and others promote the book We Are Not Numbers, a Palestinian anthology, as part of the show’s cultural segment. The episode ties domestic drama to global political energy.

All In Podcast

Trump Brokers Gaza Peace Deal, National Guard in Chicago, OpenAI/AMD, AI Roundtripping, Gold Rally
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Global headlines collide with silicon as the All-In panel stitches a week of policy and tech into one narrative. The episode centers on President Trump’s Gaza ceasefire announcement and the first phase of a multi-stage peace process. The plan includes a ceasefire and unrestricted aid into Gaza, the release of all remaining Israeli hostages, and Israel’s release of about 2,000 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for troop withdrawals. The White House published a 20‑point framework, and Israel’s government was expected to vote on it soon. Aaron David Miller praised Trump’s pressure on both sides, while the hosts highlight Kushner’s behind‑the-scenes role and note that mainstream pundits have begun crediting the effort. Beyond the ceasefire, the conversation leans into the broader idea of moonshots in policy and finance. Shamath argues that stabilizing the Middle East could unlock monetization of oil as renewable and electric alternatives rise, while a more peaceful region accelerates private equity, solar projects, AI ventures, and new cities. The panel sketches a spectrum of possible breakthroughs, including Ukraine‑Russia diplomacy and potential China talks, with talk of a Nobel Peace Prize if several fronts succeed. They also point to Maryland’s Wes Moore’s approach as a model of state leadership, combining security surges with political pragmatism. Back home, the National Guard deployment in Chicago and the Portland security discussions reveal the federal‑state fault lines in contentious times. The crew describes 300 to 500 guardsmen backing ICE, facing opposition from Mayor Brandon Johnson and Governor Pritzker who call it authoritarian. Sacks argues the move is narrow and legally grounded; others compare federal authority to the DC experience, where local residents reported mixed feelings about troops. Polls show Trump’s approval slipping and a growing debate about whether aggressive enforcement can be politically sustainable, with some asserting safety gains justify the policy. On the tech frontier, the AMD‑OpenAI deal is treated as a landmark compute agreement, with six gigawatts of capacity and warrants for up to 160 million AMD shares. The panel emphasizes that Nvidia dominates incremental data‑center demand, and a total TAM could expand beyond a trillion by 2030, powered by tokens and new applications. They discuss roundtripping concerns, corporate liquidity, and the risk of sham transactions, noting that real demand underpins the growth. They close by highlighting Poly Market’s US launch and a gold rally as macro signals amid ongoing volatility.
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