From: AlleyCat <katt@gmail.com>
Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,can.politics,alt.politics.trump,alt.politics.liberalism,alt.politics.democrats,alt.politics.usa.republican
Subject: Re: Why Do You Wee Wee Wranglers Want DC To Be MORE of a Crime-Infested Shithole Blue-City Cesspool, Than It Already Is?
Date: Fri, 22 Aug 2025 21:01:56 -0500
Organization: AlleyCat Computing, Inc.
"Trump Ready To "Crush" Russian Economy If Putin Avoids Talks With Zelenskyy"
By JOEY CAPPELLETTI and MARY CLARE JALONICK
WASHINGTON (AP) - Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham said Tuesday that he believes President Donald Trump is prepared to "crush"
Russia's economy with a new wave of sanctions if Russian President Vladimir Putin refuses to meet with Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the coming weeks.
Graham, who spoke with Trump on Tuesday morning, has pushed the president for months to support his sweeping bipartisan sanctions
bill that would impose steep tariffs on countries that are fueling Russia's invasion of Ukraine by buying its oil, gas, uranium,
and other exports. The legislation has the backing of 85 senators, but Trump has yet to endorse it. Republican leaders have said
they won't move without him.
"If we don't have this thing moving in the right direction by the time we get back, then I think that plan B needs to kick in,"
Graham said in a phone interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday. The Senate, now away from Washington for the August recess,
is scheduled to return in September.
Graham's call with Trump came less than 24 hours after high-stakes meetings at the White House with Zelenskyy and several European
leaders. Trump and the leaders emerged from those talks sounding optimistic, with the expectation being that a Putin and Zelenskyy
sit-down will happen soon.
Still, Trump's comments to Graham, one of his top congressional allies, mark the latest sign that pressure is building - not just
on Putin, but on Trump as well.
"Trump believes that if Putin doesn't do his part, that he's going to have to crush his economy. Because you've got to mean what
you say," Graham told reporters in South Carolina on Tuesday.
As Congress prepares to return to session in early September, the next few weeks could become a defining test of whether lawmakers
and international allies are prepared to act on their own if Trump doesn't follow through.
Connecticut Sen. Richard Blumenthal, the lead Democrat pushing the bill with Graham, says there is a "lot of reason for skepticism
and doubt" after the meetings with Trump, especially because Putin has not made any direct promises. He said the Russian leader has
an incentive to play "rope-a-dope" with Trump.
"The only way to bring Putin to the table is to show strength," Blumenthal told the AP this week. "What Putin understands is force
and pressure."
Still, Republicans have shown little willingness to override Trump in his second term. They abruptly halted work on the sanctions
bill before the August recess after Trump said the legislation may not be needed.
Asked Tuesday in a phone interview whether the sanctions bill should be brought up even without Trump's support, Graham said, "the
best way to do it is with him."
"There will come a point where if it's clear that Putin is not going to entertain peace, that President Trump will have to back up
what he said he would do," Graham said. "And the best way to do it is have congressional blessing."
The legislation would impose tariffs of up to 500% on countries such as China and India, which together account for roughly 70% of
Russia's energy trade. The framework has the support of many European leaders.
Many of those same European leaders left the White House on Monday with a more hopeful tone. Zelenskyy called the meeting with
Trump "an important step toward ending this war." German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said that his expectations "were not just met,
they were exceeded."
Still, little concrete progress was visible on the main obstacles to peace. That deadlock likely favors Putin, whose forces
continue to make steady, if slow, progress on the ground in Ukraine.
French President Emmanuel Macron told reporters after talks at the White House that Trump believes a deal with Putin is possible.
But he said sanctions remain on the table if the process fails.
===============================================================================
"Trump Derangement Syndrome" Is a Real Mental Condition
All you need to know about "Trump Derangement Syndrome," or TDS.
"Trump Derangement Syndrome (TDS) is a mental condition in which a person has been driven effectively insane due to their dislike
of Donald Trump, to the point at which they will abandon all logic and reason."
Justin Raimondo, the editorial director of Antiwar.com, wrote a piece in the Los Angeles Times in 2016 that broke TDS down into
three distinct phases or stages:
"In the first stage of the disease, victims lose all sense of proportion. The president-elect's every tweet provokes a firestorm,
as if 140 characters were all it took to change the world."
"The mid-level stages of TDS have a profound effect on the victim's vocabulary: Sufferers speak a distinctive language consisting
solely of hyperbole."
"As TDS progresses, the afflicted lose the ability to distinguish fantasy from reality."
The Point here is simple: TDS is, in the eyes of its adherents, the knee-jerk opposition from liberals to anything and everything
Trump does. If Trump announced he was donating every dollar he's ever made, TDS sufferers would suggest he was up to something
nefarious, according to the logic of TDS. There's nothing - not. one. thing. - that Trump could do or say that would be received
positively by TDSers.
The history of Trump Derangement Syndrome actually goes back to the early 2000s - a time when the idea of Trump as president was a
punch line for late-night comics and nothing more.
Wikipedia traces its roots to "Bush Derangement Syndrome" - a term first coined by the late conservative columnist Charles
Krauthammer back in 2003. The condition, as Krauthammer defined it, was "the acute onset of paranoia in otherwise normal people in
reaction to the policies, the presidency - nay - the very existence of George W. Bush."