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'Absolutely furious' ex-ambassador drops the hammer on Trump over Afrikaner immigrants

During an appearance on MSNBC on Sunday morning, the former ambassador to South Africa blistered Donald Trump for speeding up the immigration status of Afrikaners by claiming they are fleeing "genocide" in their home country.

In short, Ambassador Patrick Gaspard bluntly stated the president is a liar.

Speaking with "The Weekend" host Elise Jordan, the former diplomat began by stating for the record, "You know, I'll say a couple of things. First, you know, when I come on shows like this, I'm trained to kind of retain my anger. It's hard to do that on this. On this issue, I'm absolutely furious."

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"One, Trump is playing to a domestic U.S. fringe political audience which I'll talk about in a second,' he explained. "There's a geopolitical impact, because there's an attempt to punish South Africa for the posture that it's taken internationally on the war in Gaza and its claims against Israel."

"And Trump is very clear about the need to punish South Africa in that regard," he added before continuing, "But there's a third thing that's happening. Donald Trump is the master of distraction and he knows that while we're having this conversation we're not talking about the prices that are going up for average Americans in Walmart and he loves that."

Addressing Trump's claim about the mass seizure of land aimed solely at the Afrikaners, he later stated, "It's just not happening. It is a fiction from Donald Trump, from Elon Musk and so many of their friends in the fringe, right, like Tucker Carlson."

"So now you have a president who is overturning the long-term asylum procedures that we have here in the U.S. for people who are fleeing violence, real political violence from countries like Afghanistan," he elaborated. "But he's throwing it open to a group of people who are political pawns right now; Afrikaners from South Africa who may or may not feel physically threatened in some way."

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Fresh outrage as Trump admin floats multi-billion dollar 'trail of tears' plan

A plan reportedly under consideration by the Trump administration to send up to one million Gazans to the divided country of Libya was met with criticism on Friday and Saturday, with several observers calling it part of a plan to carry out ethnic cleansing.

On Friday, NBC News reported that the Trump administration has broached the plan with Libya's leadership, though no final agreement has been reached. NBC News' reporting relied on several unnamed sources "with knowledge of the effort."

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'What?' MSNBC host stunned by 'loony tunes' edict from Pam Bondi to DOJ employees

A former Department of Justice lawyer who was unceremoniously fired by the Donald Trump administration absolutely stunned one of the hosts of MSNBC's "The Weekend" when she revealed the contents of a memo she had received from Attorney General Pam Bondi before she was ousted.

According to Liz Oyer, who advised on pardons at the DOJ, Bondi buried employees with a flood of memos that began with one explaining that their mission going forward was to work for Trump.

They then proceeded to grow more detailed.

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"If I could just share a quick anecdote," she began. "You know, when I was at the department before I was fired, we were getting bombarded daily with these orders from the attorney general."

"Pam Bondi signing memos to the workforce that are giving us our marching orders, telling us you are all the president's lawyers, carry out his his mission," she elaborated. "And it got down so far into the minutiae that we got a memo to the 115,000 employees of the department saying the Department of Justice is abolishing paper straws because the president doesn't like paper straws so it is our obligation as attorneys in the Department of Justice to eradicate the scourge of of paper straws and replace them with plastic."

She then added, "That is loony tunes."

"Liz, there are real things happening in this country," co-host Eugene Daniels interjected. "Serious things that people are dealing with, doesn't matter what side of the spectrum you're on politically. And so, I mean, I'm gobsmacked that the people who are, who spend their lives thinking about the rule of law, defending and protecting the rule of law, the Constitution are being asked to do things just because, you know, Donald Trump doesn't want to do them."

Waving his hands, he added, "I guess i probably shouldn't be as shocked as I am because of where we are politically, but ... what?"

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See it: Trump posts bizarre video of himself playing Journey's 'Don't Stop Believing'

Donald Trump posted a bizarre video of himself playing Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believing” on a stage before devoted fans.

The clip, which was produced by artificial intelligence, shows the president sitting on a stage in front of a piano festooned with an American flag.

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Trump DOJ plan would let it indict lawmakers who opposed him with no oversight

According to a bombshell report from the Washington Post, the Department of Justice under Attorney General Pam Bondi is considering a plan that would let federal prosecutors investigate and indict members of Congress unfettered by traditional oversight designed to stop political persecution.

Traditionally, before such an investigation could proceed, a prosecutor would have their case reviewed by the lawyers in the Justice Department’s Public Integrity Section. But that would go away under the new proposal.

The report notes that, should the proposal go into effect, "a long-standing provision in the Justice Department’s manual that outlines how investigations of elected officials should be conducted" would be shunted aside and allow possible prosecutions based purely on politics.

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Former Public Integrity Section attorney Dan Schwager sounded the alarm about the proposal by suggesting U.S. attorneys put in place by the president could use their power to pursue perceived enemies of the person who appointed them.

“The reason you have the section is exactly what this administration says they want, which is stop politicization,” he explained. “That requires a respect and ability to understand how the laws have been applied in similar situations in the past. The only way to ensure that public officials on both sides of the aisle are treated similarly is to have as much institutional knowledge and experience as possible.”

As it stands now, political corruption cases undergo special scrutiny near elections because they can severely impact election results even if nothing comes out of it and the investigation drops.

As the Post report notes, "The Justice Department manual says that PIN [Public Integrity Section] attorneys must approve — not just be consulted on — charges against members of Congress when the allegations are related to their public office or campaign activities. Still, the attorney general has final say on whether an indictment should be brought."

You can read more here.

GOP senator shrugs off threat and urges party to undermine Trump

A key Republican is breaking ranks with President Donald Trump — and he’s not afraid to tell him.

Sen. John Curtis — the Utah politician who replaced Sen. Mitt Romney last year — told CNN Sunday that it's essential to be an independent thinker and to challenge Trump.

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Project 2025 authors enroll Trump DOJ into secret new right-wing scheme: report

While Project 2025's proposals to dismantle the federal government and purge the civil servants with mass firings is ongoing under Donald Trump's administration, lesser-known and secretive plans are also being undertaken — which has pleased the authors.

According to a report from the New York Times, a Heritage Foundation plan to harass and tamp down on a growing pro-Palestinian movement is proceeding with the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice doing the dirty work following suggestions found in what is called "Project Esther."

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GOP's 'honest cruelty' could have sunk Trump scheme to avoid impeachment: analyst

President Donald Trump is terrified that a Democrat-controlled Congress would batter him with investigations and possible impeachment — and he has a plan to avoid it.

So wrote MSNBC's Hayes Brown Sunday. Unfortunately for Trump, his own party may have just thrown a wrench into his scheme.

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Pharmacists brace for drug shortages and soaring costs

In the dim basement of a Salt Lake City pharmacy, hundreds of amber-colored plastic pill bottles sit stacked in rows, one man’s defensive wall in a tariff war.

Independent pharmacist Benjamin Jolley and his colleagues worry that the tariffs, aimed at bringing drug production to the United States, could instead drive companies out of business while raising prices and creating more of the drug shortages that have plagued American patients for several years.

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'I give these SleazeBags fair warning!' Trump unloads over 'free' plane coverage

Donald Trump on Saturday lobbed an apparent threat of litigation at ABC.

Taking to his own social media site, Truth Social, the president asked, "Why doesn’t Chairman Bob Iger do something about ABC Fake News, especially since I just won $16,000,000 based on the Fake and Defamatory reporting of Liddle’ George Slopadopolus."

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Supreme Court 'directly communicated' profane response to Stephen Miller: lawyer

Donald Trump's White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller got a "direct" message from seven of nine Supreme Court justices, a former federal prosecutor said Saturday.

Ex-prosecutor Glenn Kirschner over the weekend published a video entitled, "The Supreme Court AGAIN Tells Trump NO UNCONSTITUTIONAL DEPORTATIONS Of Venezuelan Immigrants," in which the legal analyst highlighted a pattern in which at least seven Supreme Court justices have been standing up to the president.

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FBI calls deadly California clinic bombing an 'act of terrorism'

by Gabriel OSORIO with Huw GRIFFITH in Los Angeles

A bomb exploded on Saturday outside a California fertility clinic, killing one person in what the FBI labelled a terror attack.

The blast tore through downtown Palm Springs, ripping a hole in the clinic and blowing out the windows and doors of nearby buildings, an AFP journalist on the scene reported.

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​'Prepared to strike': Ex-prosecutor says the Supreme Court set a trap for Trump

The Supreme Court might just be giving Donald Trump enough rope to hang himself in a court of law, an ex-prosecutor said on Saturday.

Former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance over the weekend weighed in on the Supreme Court's recent hearing in a case involving a controversial law used to deport immigrants without due process.

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