-
GCA Forums News for Wednesday June 11 2025
Posted by Thomas Miller on June 11, 2025 at 12:53 pmOn today’s edition of GCA Forums News for Wednesday, June 11, 2025, we will cover the following important trending topics:
1. We will update our viewers on the latest fiasco between President Donald J. Trump and Elon Musk.
2. We will cover if the relationship between Trump and Musk will ever reconcile or if this is the END of a fast-paced new friendship and alliance. Musk keeps on saying that Trump is on Epstein’s pedophile flight log which Trump vehemently denies.
3. We will cover the Los Angeles riots and the feud between Trump, Tom Homan, and California Governor Gavin Newsom and contemplate the theory that Newsom is trying to stir up political chaos, civil war, and divisions against Trump because he has an ulterior motive to gain brownie points and get ahead in the 2028 Presidential election. Kamala Harris has not announced she will run for the office of Governor of California.
4. We will cover Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill. Fellow Republican senators seem to be more opposed. Remember that the Big Beautiful Bill barely passed the House by one vote. Now, with several Republican senators against the bill, Trump has a long, dim road ahead trying to make it into law.
5. The economy and job market are awful. Many Americans either have or are expecting to lose their jobs with no promising employment in the future. The U.S. economy is on life support, and Wall Street is in denial, where the DJIA is swinging upwards by triple digits and tanking the same. The volatility in the stock market signals that the stock and bond markets are clueless..
7. We will thoroughly examine inflation, the Federal Reserve Board’s potential cuts in interest rates and mortgage rates, housing inventory, home prices, and the overall housing and mortgage markets.
8. What is going on with sanctuary cities and sanctuary states? Illinois Governor JB Pritzker is in Washington on a conference with lawmakers concerning offering a haven to illegal migrants and discussing sanctuary cities and states, as well as the federal government cutting federal funding dollars to states that are proclaimed sanctuary cities and sanctuary states.
9. What are the updates on mayors, judges, and politicians shielding illegal migrants from Federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents? What is the latest on Congressman Hakim Jeffreys that he will publicly name all federal ICE agents who are rounding up illegal migrants and deporting them?
10. Is Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency completely dead? Is there any way to cut billions of dollars of wasteful spending? Why are U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel dragging their feet when filing charges on the Biden Administration’s wrongdoings? Are the pardons and commutations signed with the auto pen null and void, or will nothing happen with that, too? Senator Adam Schiff, former Congresswoman Liz Cheney, Dr. Anthony Fauci, Barack Obama, Bill Gates, Hillary and Bill Clinton, Andrew Cuomo, Hunter Biden, Joe Biden, Dominion voting machines, and hundreds if not thousands of people of power who committed crimes and crimes against humanity needs to get charged, arrested, tried, and sentenced to prison for a long time. Pam Bondi and Kash Patel are either completely incompetent, lazy, or not thinking about doing anything. Why aren’t these corrupt judges getting charged, arrested, tried, and sentenced? Why are they not being put in their places? What is the latest on New York Attorney General Letitia James and Fulton County, Georgia District Attorney Fani Willis?
We will give you a comprehensive detailed report on the topics from above and more. Stay tuned.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wXMEF63N3N8&list=RDNSwXMEF63N3N8&start_radio=1
Wiggie replied 2 hours, 49 minutes ago 7 Members · 11 Replies -
11 Replies
-
GCA Forums News for Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Key Points
- Donald Trump and Elon Musk have been at odds for a minute, yet Musk keeps talking about feeling bad for those sharp tweets.
- Rumors say a handshake is still on the table.
- Riots across Los Angeles flared after crowds shouted about immigration.
- Trump fired back at Gavin Newsom over who gets to call in the National Guard.
- Trump’s huge infrastructure wish list, the Big Beautiful Bill, is stuck in the Senate.
- Moderates say the math doesn’t increase unless the price tag shrinks.
- New job numbers are trickling in, barely enough to keep headlines upbeat.
- Wall Street is wobbling, and every earnings call feels like a game of jury still out.
- The Federal Reserve is tapping the brakes on rate cuts.
- Meanwhile, a mountain of homes sits on the market, and new mortgages still carry sticker-shock interest.
- Washington is embracing sanctuary cities, and Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker will tell Congress about it on June 12.
- Chicago mayors and other local leaders keep blocking ICE agents at city limits.
- House Speaker Hakeem Jeffries says voters deserve to see the rules in plain sight.
- Musk quit running the Department of Government Efficiency after its promised savings got laughed at.
- D.C. watchers say the desk is gathering dust again.
- Federal prosecutors are still investigating Biden and a few associates, yet the indictment box is empty as of June 11, 2025.
Trump and Musk Feud
- Donald Trump and Elon Musk once joked that their ups and downs could fill a soap opera.
- Musk stirred the pot by hinting that Trump had hitched a ride on Jeffrey Epstein’s plane.
- Trump fired back, shouting fake news louder than usual.
- Musk later muttered something about regretting certain tweets, and now the headlines pretend the ice is melting.
- No one inside either camp can say whether the next handshake comes or goes.
Los Angeles Riots and Political Feud
- Protesters in Los Angeles have pressed hard against immigration rules, and the shouting quickly turned into broken glass.
- Trump didn’t wait for California Governor Gavin Newsom; he sent in the National Guard and then bragged about keeping law and order.
- Newsom has cried politicized muscle for his part, and pundits already smell 2028 on the wind.
Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill
- House members passed Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill by a margin so thin it felt like tape holding a window shut.
- Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski have opposed it, warning that the deficit will widen if the Senate joins the parade.
- Any final version will be diced and sliced and probably unrecognizable to the people who first cheered it.
Economy and Job Market
- Payrolls picked up 139,000 new names in May, a decent number until you notice the pace keeps sputtering.
- Unemployment sits at 4.2, yet the coffee shop talk is about when the next dip might hit.
- For its part, Wall Street keeps jagging up and down as if the ticker is arguing with the morning papers.
Inflation, the Federal Reserve, and Housing
- The Federal Reserve is in no rush to slash interest rates.
- Many insiders think the earliest cuts could land in late 2025, and even that depends on where inflation settles.
- In the meantime, the housing world is jammed with roughly $700 billion worth of listings.
- With mortgages around 6.85 percent, most buyers feel pinched, and prices barely budge.
Sanctuary Cities and States
- Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker plans to speak before Congress on June 12 and defend his sanctuary rules.
- He faces loud federal hints about yanking money if he doesn’t bend.
- Out west, California is tinkering with its playbook after similar pressure from Trump’s team.
- Both places find that public opinion is split right down the middle.
ICE and Migrant Shielding
- Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass is taking heat for programs that block ICE from making routine arrests.
- Detractors say her policies turn the city into a no-go zone for federal agents.
- Congressman Hakeem Jeffries stoked the fire by demanding that ICE officers show identification on the scene.
- That demand leaves city cops and immigrant advocates squirming.
Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency
- Elon Musk walked away from the Department of Government Efficiency late last month, saying he was done with the grind.
- Critics of the office say it never managed to trim anything but headlines.
- A deputy who might step up as a replacement still hasn’t surfaced, and no new plans are leaking.
- Staffers are quietly hunting for gigs that pay on time.
Legal Proceedings Against Biden and Others
- Former President Trump ordered House committees to investigate allegations involving Joe Biden; subpoenas are flying.
- Lawmakers insist they’ve uncovered links between the President’s office and family businesses, though no indictment has been filed.
- Adam Schiff and Anthony Fauci remain in the crosshairs, yet the clock keeps ticking with nothing formal.
- Skeptics ask why Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel haven’t pulled the trigger.
Quick Survey Update on What is Hot Right Now
Earlier today, just after sunrise on June 11, 2025, I pulled together everything trending and put it through a quick gut check. Each bullet below tosses out a number, hangs a little story on the stat, and tries to explain why the topic is screaming for attention this week.
Trump and Musk Feud: Dynamics and Epstein Claims
- Donald Trump and Elon Musk used to swim in the same fast-paced lane, but now they are throwing fast jabs online.
- Trouble bubbled over when Musk posted that Trump showed up in Jeffrey Epstein’s flight logs, a claim the former President denies with heat.
- Reports have popped up saying Musk felt he went too far and suddenly decided to dial it back.
- Conversely, Trump lets out small rumblings of disappointment, though he never says the water is under the bridge.
- Not long after, Musk ripped Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill and tossed out the Epstein tidbit, only to yank the posts when the backlash hit.
- A check on the [Washington Post](https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/06/06/epstein-files-trump-musk-controversy-explained/) shows he deleted those lines, so the internet keeps tubes of ink pinned to both sides of the argument.
- One user on X, tagged @H124332Mike, ran the numbers and said the logs line up with flights over Florida, New Jersey, and Washington, D.C., but do not prove a personal trip to the island.
- That detail adds grease to the fire but gives Musk and Trump wiggle room if either decides to cool off.
- Musk stepping back hints at a possible reconciliation, yet Trump’s icy silence keeps everyone guessing.
- Once rocket-fuel-fast, their bond is now drifting through static air.
Los Angeles Riots and Feud with Newsom: Political Implications
- In early June 2025, Los Angeles erupted after Immigration and Customs Enforcement ramped up raids, an effort the White House framed as tough border security.
- Protesters lined the streets waving half-burnt Mexican and American flags, spray-painting slogans that included We Are Not Criminals. Clashes between demonstrators, the LAPD, and the California Highway Patrol turned chaotic within hours.
- President Trump overrode Governor Gavin Newsom and ordered the National Guard to patrol downtown, shocking many Californians.
- Newsom quickly filed a lawsuit, insisting the commander-in-chief was overstepping and fanning the flames.
- The fight escalated when the governor called Trump a stone-cold liar and compared his tactics to something out of a dictatorship.
- Faced with cameras in front of the state capitol, Newsom claimed the President had twisted their private phone call and threatened to cut federal money if the unrest continued.
- Tom Homan, a former ICE chief now advising Trump, doubled down on the administration’s line that violent crime demanded military backup.
- Reporters noted the whole standoff looked scripted, as both sides traded sound bites almost hourly.
- Political experts, even some of Newsom’s critics inside the party, started floating the idea that the governor welcomed the chaos as a launch pad for a 2028 presidential bid.
- Vice President Kamala Harris has stayed quiet about running for her old job, leaving Democrats to wonder if the primary stage might one day be empty.
- If nothing else, the feud took headlines away from Trump’s nearly finalized tax overhaul and Elon Musk’s ongoing strikes with labor unions, two stories many in Washington still expected to dominate summer coverage.
- Unless otherwise noted, constraints on Trump, Inc., and Newsom set lives copyright 2023 Vox Media LLC. All rights reserved.
Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill: Legislative Hurdles
- House Republicans labeled the $2.6 trillion package the One Big Beautiful Bill.
- It barely squeaked through the chamber by one vote, an eye-popping victory even party veterans did not see coming.
- The act bundles tax cuts, border security money, and extra defense cash into a single 1,040-page shelf of pages Congress.gov calls hum-drum.
- Critics worry the plan, forecasted to balloon the deficit by another $2.6 trillion, will swamp the wallets it promises to uplift.
- Senate GOP veterans like Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski want the math fixed yesterday.
- A half-dozen others, big-name conservatives included, keep waving red flags over Medicare tweaks and long-term offsets.
- Headlines from Reuters and Newsweek hint that any bill needing plain-vanilla reconciliation will die without 51 firm votes.
- Polls show most rank-and-file voters do not trust lawmakers to guard the working class while handing out bonuses this big.
- Those doubts weigh on nervous senators as the summer sun heats Capitol Hill.
- Dividing lines within the party are sharper than anyone expected.
- That tension is now on TV screens and kitchen tables.
Economy and Job Market: Signs of Strain
- According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the economy created 139,000 new jobs in May 2025, and the headline unemployment rate was 4.2%.
- However, the same BLS report whispers that growth is slowing, with plenty of families wondering how long their paychecks will keep coming.
- Headlines at CNBC put the worry front and center, saying uncertainty in Washington is kneecapping the market swagger.
- Over Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average keeps dancing between 42,000 and 43,000.
- At the same time, the volatility index (^VXD) sits stubbornly near 16-17, numbers you can chase down on Yahoo Finance.
- Three-digit ups and downs in a single day tell you traders are guessing and not knowing, and many of them are still trying to convince themselves the economy is perfectly fine.
- Put all of that together, and the picture is clear: job openings feel tattered, and the broader financial system looks like it is resting on a very shaky life support machine.
Inflation, Federal Reserve, and Housing Market: Mixed Signals
- Right now, the Federal Reserve is in no hurry to lower interest rates.
- A recent piece from Reuters references that the Fed is likely to keep rates on hold until at least September, says the central bank is waiting for clearer inflation clues, probably until late 2025.
- Former President Trump keeps pushing for speedier cuts.
- Yet, the Fed sticks to its data-first mantra and another mantra.
- Another Street article notes that one board member rewrote her forecast to match the new numbers.
- The housing scene tells another story.
- A Business Insider survey reveals builders and flippers are sitting on a record $700 billion of homes that no one is buying right now, and a Bank of America file hints that big shifts are coming soon.
- Higher payments and thinner paychecks pull back mortgage money, clocking in at about 6.85 percent, so first-time shoppers.
- Put it all together, and you see a market stuck in traffic, with central bank rules keeping buyers parked.
Sanctuary Cities and States: Federal Pressure Mounts
- Illinois Governor JB Pritzker is scheduled to testify on June 12, 2025, about the state’s sanctuary law.
- The Chicago Tribune calls the hearing a rare moment when a sitting governor stands before Congress on hometown policy.
- Meanwhile, Washington keeps tightening the screws.
- Reports from El Paso say the Trump administration has floated budget cuts that could yank millions from cities and counties that shield undocumented residents.
- In a noticeable ripple, Minnesota and California recently withdrew non-emergency medical aid for people living in the country without papers.
- These moves have created a high-stakes showdown between federal bean-counters and local elected officials.
- The outcome will influence how many cities offer newcomers lawyers, clinics, and schools.
Mayors and ICE: Mayors Shield Migrants, Sparking Federal Ire
- Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and Nashville’s Freddie O’Connell have pushed rules blocking ICE from their streets.
- Federal agencies call that plain obstruction, as reported by Reuters.
- The headlines jump off the page: masked ICE officers, tear gas, angry crowds lining Main Street.
- Republicans in California have not held back.
- They accuse Governor Gavin Newsom and Bass of letting Los Angeles burn while rioters chant.
- Fox News published their quotes less than a day later.
- Congressman Hakeem Jeffreys keeps a tally of masked raids, warning that nobody knows who these agents are until it is too late.
- Todd Lyons, Acting ICE Director, fired back in a Capitol hallway, demanding that politicians quit putting my people in danger.
- The clash shows how far local sanctuary laws can stretch before they snap under federal pressure. Jeffrey jumps into the ring, but only the stripes are tied in brighter colors.
Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency: A Failed Venture?
- In late May 2025, Elon Musk resigned from the Department of Government Efficiency, an exit NPR called “Musk leaves DOGE.”
- He stepped down after the White House budget started to wobble, and critics blamed a tax plan Trump had pushed.
- The short-lived department poured money into headlines but struggled to clamp down on actual waste.
- According to The Economist, saved dollars quickly became a punchline because courts kept overturning their contracts, and spending kept creeping up.
- Now, nobody knows who might grab the steering wheel next.
- That uncertainty could freeze any new cost-cutters who dared to follow Musk’s lead.
- For the billionaire, this is a rare stain on his White House playbook, which may slow down similar efficiency pushes for a long time.
Legal Proceedings Against Biden Administration Figures: Slow Progress
- Donald Trump recently called for a fresh investigation into President Joe Biden, claiming there is a secret effort to hide signs of mental decline.
- Reports like the one in the [Washington Post](https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/06/04/trump-biden-investigate-cover-up-decline-autopen/) say the former President even talked about Biden signing documents on an autopen.
- Meanwhile, the House Oversight Committee has released findings that tie Biden to overseas business dealings involving his family.
- Their webpage, found at [House Oversight: Biden family investigation](https://oversight.house.gov/landing/biden-family-investigation/), lists interviews and bank records, yet no criminal charges have appeared on a court docket as of June 11, 2025.
High-profile figures like Adam Schiff, Liz Cheney, and Anthony Fauci remain unindicted. Social media critics on X wonder why Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel haven’t moved faster; many posts accuse the pair of either delaying the case or failing to show competence. The drawn-out timeline only deepens public frustration and turns Capitol Hill into yet another stage for partisan finger-pointing.
Key Citations
- CNN says Elon Musk now wishes he had never tweeted that odd Trump praise back in 2023.
- You can read the short piece here.
- NBC covered Musk admitting the same mistake, framing it like a celebrity regret tour.
- It’s a light read if you want a second take.
- The Washington Post keeps dragging the Epstein angle into this, claiming Musk hinted Trump might be in those infamous files.
- In Sacramento, Gavin Newsom and Donald Trump are still fighting over the National Guard.
- CalMatters dropped a piece on the back-and-forth yesterday.
- AP News echoed that by saying the feud heated up after a border protest in L.A.
- Newsom slapped Trump with fanning the flames rhetoric.
- The Los Angeles Times quoted him as calling the President’s claims inflammatory.
- One Big Beautiful Bill is sitting in the hopper of Congress.gov.
- Short title, long debates ahead.
- The Tax Foundation ran numbers on it and says that if the math holds, most middle-class households could see paper losses for at least a year.
- Reuters reported that a bloc of GOP senators is already looking for tax shelters and loopholes to inject before the markup.
- In labor news, BLS just released the May sheet.
- Unemployment dipped, but underemployment barely budged, so the good news is sticky.
- Yahoo Finance has dusted off the DJIA volatility chart and noted a steady climb in jitter scores since early February.
- Reuters insiders believe the Fed will pause rate increases until at least September while inflation still wiggles sideways.
- Business Insider declares the U.S. housing market is stuck in limbo-land thanks to stubbornly high mortgage rates and anemic inventory.
- The Chicago Tribune announced that Governor Pritzker would testify before Congress about Illinois’s sanctuary laws next week.
- El Paso says sanctuary cities are feeling financial heat, and many are quietly reconsidering their welcome mat.
- Reuters filed a scoop on new ICE raids in Los Angeles.
- Neighbors describe masked agents as shadowy phantoms on the block.
- Fox News talked to an ICE official who said politicians keep putting my people in danger, a rare outburst that went semi-viral.
- NPR confirmed late last month that Musk has stepped away from supporting DOGE, leaving fans to wonder who’s next in the meme coin space.
- The Economist called Musk’s grip on government policy a catastrophic failure, though that headline has its brand of snark.
- For his part, Trump ordered a probe into what he claims is a Biden cover-up.
- The Washington Post laced that bit into their weekend wrap-up.
The House Oversight Committee released another folder in the Biden family investigation story, so the leak cycle continues.
-
GCA Forums News for Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Key Points
- Donald Trump and Elon Musk have been at odds for a minute, yet Musk keeps talking about feeling bad for those sharp tweets.
- Rumors say a handshake is still on the table.
- Riots across Los Angeles flared after crowds shouted about immigration.
- Trump fired back at Gavin Newsom over who gets to call in the National Guard.
- Trump’s huge infrastructure wish list, the Big Beautiful Bill, is stuck in the Senate.
- Moderates say the math doesn’t increase unless the price tag shrinks.
- New job numbers are trickling in, barely enough to keep headlines upbeat.
- Wall Street is wobbling, and every earnings call feels like a game of jury still out.
- The Federal Reserve is tapping the brakes on rate cuts.
- Meanwhile, a mountain of homes sits on the market, and new mortgages still carry sticker-shock interest.
- Washington is embracing sanctuary cities, and Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker will tell Congress about it on June 12.
- Chicago mayors and other local leaders keep blocking ICE agents at city limits.
- House Speaker Hakeem Jeffries says voters deserve to see the rules in plain sight.
- Musk quit running the Department of Government Efficiency after its promised savings got laughed at.
- D.C. watchers say the desk is gathering dust again.
- Federal prosecutors are still investigating Biden and a few associates, yet the indictment box is empty as of June 11, 2025.
Trump and Musk Feud
- Donald Trump and Elon Musk once joked that their ups and downs could fill a soap opera.
- Musk stirred the pot by hinting that Trump had hitched a ride on Jeffrey Epstein’s plane.
- Trump fired back, shouting fake news louder than usual.
- Musk later muttered something about regretting certain tweets, and now the headlines pretend the ice is melting.
- No one inside either camp can say whether the next handshake comes or goes.
Los Angeles Riots and Political Feud
- Protesters in Los Angeles have pressed hard against immigration rules, and the shouting quickly turned into broken glass.
- Trump didn’t wait for California Governor Gavin Newsom; he sent in the National Guard and then bragged about keeping law and order.
- Newsom has cried politicized muscle for his part, and pundits already smell 2028 on the wind.
Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill
- House members passed Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill by a margin so thin it felt like tape holding a window shut.
- Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski have opposed it, warning that the deficit will widen if the Senate joins the parade.
- Any final version will be diced and sliced and probably unrecognizable to the people who first cheered it.
Economy and Job Market
- Payrolls picked up 139,000 new names in May, a decent number until you notice the pace keeps sputtering.
- Unemployment sits at 4.2, yet the coffee shop talk is about when the next dip might hit.
- For its part, Wall Street keeps jagging up and down as if the ticker is arguing with the morning papers.
Inflation, the Federal Reserve, and Housing
- The Federal Reserve is in no rush to slash interest rates.
- Many insiders think the earliest cuts could land in late 2025, and even that depends on where inflation settles.
- In the meantime, the housing world is jammed with roughly $700 billion worth of listings.
- With mortgages around 6.85 percent, most buyers feel pinched, and prices barely budge.
Sanctuary Cities and States
- Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker plans to speak before Congress on June 12 and defend his sanctuary rules.
- He faces loud federal hints about yanking money if he doesn’t bend.
- Out west, California is tinkering with its playbook after similar pressure from Trump’s team.
- Both places find that public opinion is split right down the middle.
ICE and Migrant Shielding
- Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass is taking heat for programs that block ICE from making routine arrests.
- Detractors say her policies turn the city into a no-go zone for federal agents.
- Congressman Hakeem Jeffries stoked the fire by demanding that ICE officers show identification on the scene.
- That demand leaves city cops and immigrant advocates squirming.
Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency
- Elon Musk walked away from the Department of Government Efficiency late last month, saying he was done with the grind.
- Critics of the office say it never managed to trim anything but headlines.
- A deputy who might step up as a replacement still hasn’t surfaced, and no new plans are leaking.
- Staffers are quietly hunting for gigs that pay on time.
Legal Proceedings Against Biden and Others
- Former President Trump ordered House committees to investigate allegations involving Joe Biden; subpoenas are flying.
- Lawmakers insist they’ve uncovered links between the President’s office and family businesses, though no indictment has been filed.
- Adam Schiff and Anthony Fauci remain in the crosshairs, yet the clock keeps ticking with nothing formal.
- Skeptics ask why Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel haven’t pulled the trigger.
Quick Survey Update on What is Hot Right Now
Earlier today, just after sunrise on June 11, 2025, I pulled together everything trending and put it through a quick gut check. Each bullet below tosses out a number, hangs a little story on the stat, and tries to explain why the topic is screaming for attention this week.
Trump and Musk Feud: Dynamics and Epstein Claims
- Donald Trump and Elon Musk used to swim in the same fast-paced lane, but now they are throwing fast jabs online.
- Trouble bubbled over when Musk posted that Trump showed up in Jeffrey Epstein’s flight logs, a claim the former President denies with heat.
- Reports have popped up saying Musk felt he went too far and suddenly decided to dial it back.
- Conversely, Trump lets out small rumblings of disappointment, though he never says the water is under the bridge.
- Not long after, Musk ripped Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill and tossed out the Epstein tidbit, only to yank the posts when the backlash hit.
- A check on the [Washington Post](https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/06/06/epstein-files-trump-musk-controversy-explained/) shows he deleted those lines, so the internet keeps tubes of ink pinned to both sides of the argument.
- One user on X, tagged @H124332Mike, ran the numbers and said the logs line up with flights over Florida, New Jersey, and Washington, D.C., but do not prove a personal trip to the island.
- That detail adds grease to the fire but gives Musk and Trump wiggle room if either decides to cool off.
- Musk stepping back hints at a possible reconciliation, yet Trump’s icy silence keeps everyone guessing.
- Once rocket-fuel-fast, their bond is now drifting through static air.
Los Angeles Riots and Feud with Newsom: Political Implications
- In early June 2025, Los Angeles erupted after Immigration and Customs Enforcement ramped up raids, an effort the White House framed as tough border security.
- Protesters lined the streets waving half-burnt Mexican and American flags, spray-painting slogans that included We Are Not Criminals. Clashes between demonstrators, the LAPD, and the California Highway Patrol turned chaotic within hours.
- President Trump overrode Governor Gavin Newsom and ordered the National Guard to patrol downtown, shocking many Californians.
- Newsom quickly filed a lawsuit, insisting the commander-in-chief was overstepping and fanning the flames.
- The fight escalated when the governor called Trump a stone-cold liar and compared his tactics to something out of a dictatorship.
- Faced with cameras in front of the state capitol, Newsom claimed the President had twisted their private phone call and threatened to cut federal money if the unrest continued.
- Tom Homan, a former ICE chief now advising Trump, doubled down on the administration’s line that violent crime demanded military backup.
- Reporters noted the whole standoff looked scripted, as both sides traded sound bites almost hourly.
- Political experts, even some of Newsom’s critics inside the party, started floating the idea that the governor welcomed the chaos as a launch pad for a 2028 presidential bid.
- Vice President Kamala Harris has stayed quiet about running for her old job, leaving Democrats to wonder if the primary stage might one day be empty.
- If nothing else, the feud took headlines away from Trump’s nearly finalized tax overhaul and Elon Musk’s ongoing strikes with labor unions, two stories many in Washington still expected to dominate summer coverage.
- Unless otherwise noted, constraints on Trump, Inc., and Newsom set lives copyright 2023 Vox Media LLC. All rights reserved.
Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill: Legislative Hurdles
- House Republicans labeled the $2.6 trillion package the One Big Beautiful Bill.
- It barely squeaked through the chamber by one vote, an eye-popping victory even party veterans did not see coming.
- The act bundles tax cuts, border security money, and extra defense cash into a single 1,040-page shelf of pages Congress.gov calls hum-drum.
- Critics worry the plan, forecasted to balloon the deficit by another $2.6 trillion, will swamp the wallets it promises to uplift.
- Senate GOP veterans like Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski want the math fixed yesterday.
- A half-dozen others, big-name conservatives included, keep waving red flags over Medicare tweaks and long-term offsets.
- Headlines from Reuters and Newsweek hint that any bill needing plain-vanilla reconciliation will die without 51 firm votes.
- Polls show most rank-and-file voters do not trust lawmakers to guard the working class while handing out bonuses this big.
- Those doubts weigh on nervous senators as the summer sun heats Capitol Hill.
- Dividing lines within the party are sharper than anyone expected.
- That tension is now on TV screens and kitchen tables.
Economy and Job Market: Signs of Strain
- According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the economy created 139,000 new jobs in May 2025, and the headline unemployment rate was 4.2%.
- However, the same BLS report whispers that growth is slowing, with plenty of families wondering how long their paychecks will keep coming.
- Headlines at CNBC put the worry front and center, saying uncertainty in Washington is kneecapping the market swagger.
- Over Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average keeps dancing between 42,000 and 43,000.
- At the same time, the volatility index (^VXD) sits stubbornly near 16-17, numbers you can chase down on Yahoo Finance.
- Three-digit ups and downs in a single day tell you traders are guessing and not knowing, and many of them are still trying to convince themselves the economy is perfectly fine.
- Put all of that together, and the picture is clear: job openings feel tattered, and the broader financial system looks like it is resting on a very shaky life support machine.
Inflation, Federal Reserve, and Housing Market: Mixed Signals
- Right now, the Federal Reserve is in no hurry to lower interest rates.
- A recent piece from Reuters references that the Fed is likely to keep rates on hold until at least September, says the central bank is waiting for clearer inflation clues, probably until late 2025.
- Former President Trump keeps pushing for speedier cuts.
- Yet, the Fed sticks to its data-first mantra and another mantra.
- Another Street article notes that one board member rewrote her forecast to match the new numbers.
- The housing scene tells another story.
- A Business Insider survey reveals builders and flippers are sitting on a record $700 billion of homes that no one is buying right now, and a Bank of America file hints that big shifts are coming soon.
- Higher payments and thinner paychecks pull back mortgage money, clocking in at about 6.85 percent, so first-time shoppers.
- Put it all together, and you see a market stuck in traffic, with central bank rules keeping buyers parked.
Sanctuary Cities and States: Federal Pressure Mounts
- Illinois Governor JB Pritzker is scheduled to testify on June 12, 2025, about the state’s sanctuary law.
- The Chicago Tribune calls the hearing a rare moment when a sitting governor stands before Congress on hometown policy.
- Meanwhile, Washington keeps tightening the screws.
- Reports from El Paso say the Trump administration has floated budget cuts that could yank millions from cities and counties that shield undocumented residents.
- In a noticeable ripple, Minnesota and California recently withdrew non-emergency medical aid for people living in the country without papers.
- These moves have created a high-stakes showdown between federal bean-counters and local elected officials.
- The outcome will influence how many cities offer newcomers lawyers, clinics, and schools.
Mayors and ICE: Mayors Shield Migrants, Sparking Federal Ire
- Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and Nashville’s Freddie O’Connell have pushed rules blocking ICE from their streets.
- Federal agencies call that plain obstruction, as reported by Reuters.
- The headlines jump off the page: masked ICE officers, tear gas, angry crowds lining Main Street.
- Republicans in California have not held back.
- They accuse Governor Gavin Newsom and Bass of letting Los Angeles burn while rioters chant.
- Fox News published their quotes less than a day later.
- Congressman Hakeem Jeffreys keeps a tally of masked raids, warning that nobody knows who these agents are until it is too late.
- Todd Lyons, Acting ICE Director, fired back in a Capitol hallway, demanding that politicians quit putting my people in danger.
- The clash shows how far local sanctuary laws can stretch before they snap under federal pressure. Jeffrey jumps into the ring, but only the stripes are tied in brighter colors.
Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency: A Failed Venture?
- In late May 2025, Elon Musk resigned from the Department of Government Efficiency, an exit NPR called “Musk leaves DOGE.”
- He stepped down after the White House budget started to wobble, and critics blamed a tax plan Trump had pushed.
- The short-lived department poured money into headlines but struggled to clamp down on actual waste.
- According to The Economist, saved dollars quickly became a punchline because courts kept overturning their contracts, and spending kept creeping up.
- Now, nobody knows who might grab the steering wheel next.
- That uncertainty could freeze any new cost-cutters who dared to follow Musk’s lead.
- For the billionaire, this is a rare stain on his White House playbook, which may slow down similar efficiency pushes for a long time.
Legal Proceedings Against Biden Administration Figures: Slow Progress
- Donald Trump recently called for a fresh investigation into President Joe Biden, claiming there is a secret effort to hide signs of mental decline.
- Reports like the one in the [Washington Post](https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/06/04/trump-biden-investigate-cover-up-decline-autopen/) say the former President even talked about Biden signing documents on an autopen.
- Meanwhile, the House Oversight Committee has released findings that tie Biden to overseas business dealings involving his family.
- Their webpage, found at [House Oversight: Biden family investigation](https://oversight.house.gov/landing/biden-family-investigation/), lists interviews and bank records, yet no criminal charges have appeared on a court docket as of June 11, 2025.
High-profile figures like Adam Schiff, Liz Cheney, and Anthony Fauci remain unindicted. Social media critics on X wonder why Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel haven’t moved faster; many posts accuse the pair of either delaying the case or failing to show competence. The drawn-out timeline only deepens public frustration and turns Capitol Hill into yet another stage for partisan finger-pointing.
Key Citations
- CNN says Elon Musk now wishes he had never tweeted that odd Trump praise back in 2023.
- You can read the short piece here.
- NBC covered Musk admitting the same mistake, framing it like a celebrity regret tour.
- It’s a light read if you want a second take.
- The Washington Post keeps dragging the Epstein angle into this, claiming Musk hinted Trump might be in those infamous files.
- In Sacramento, Gavin Newsom and Donald Trump are still fighting over the National Guard.
- CalMatters dropped a piece on the back-and-forth yesterday.
- AP News echoed that by saying the feud heated up after a border protest in L.A.
- Newsom slapped Trump with fanning the flames rhetoric.
- The Los Angeles Times quoted him as calling the President’s claims inflammatory.
- One Big Beautiful Bill is sitting in the hopper of Congress.gov.
- Short title, long debates ahead.
- The Tax Foundation ran numbers on it and says that if the math holds, most middle-class households could see paper losses for at least a year.
- Reuters reported that a bloc of GOP senators is already looking for tax shelters and loopholes to inject before the markup.
- In labor news, BLS just released the May sheet.
- Unemployment dipped, but underemployment barely budged, so the good news is sticky.
- Yahoo Finance has dusted off the DJIA volatility chart and noted a steady climb in jitter scores since early February.
- Reuters insiders believe the Fed will pause rate increases until at least September while inflation still wiggles sideways.
- Business Insider declares the U.S. housing market is stuck in limbo-land thanks to stubbornly high mortgage rates and anemic inventory.
- The Chicago Tribune announced that Governor Pritzker would testify before Congress about Illinois’s sanctuary laws next week.
- El Paso says sanctuary cities are feeling financial heat, and many are quietly reconsidering their welcome mat.
- Reuters filed a scoop on new ICE raids in Los Angeles.
- Neighbors describe masked agents as shadowy phantoms on the block.
- Fox News talked to an ICE official who said politicians keep putting my people in danger, a rare outburst that went semi-viral.
- NPR confirmed late last month that Musk has stepped away from supporting DOGE, leaving fans to wonder who’s next in the meme coin space.
- The Economist called Musk’s grip on government policy a catastrophic failure, though that headline has its brand of snark.
- For his part, Trump ordered a probe into what he claims is a Biden cover-up.
- The Washington Post laced that bit into their weekend wrap-up.
The House Oversight Committee released another folder in the Biden family investigation story, so the leak cycle continues.
-
GCA Forums News for Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Key Points
- Donald Trump and Elon Musk have been at odds for a minute, yet Musk keeps talking about feeling bad for those sharp tweets.
- Rumors say a handshake is still on the table.
- Riots across Los Angeles flared after crowds shouted about immigration.
- Trump fired back at Gavin Newsom over who gets to call in the National Guard.
- Trump’s huge infrastructure wish list, the Big Beautiful Bill, is stuck in the Senate.
- Moderates say the math doesn’t increase unless the price tag shrinks.
- New job numbers are trickling in, barely enough to keep headlines upbeat.
- Wall Street is wobbling, and every earnings call feels like a game of jury still out.
- The Federal Reserve is tapping the brakes on rate cuts.
- Meanwhile, a mountain of homes sits on the market, and new mortgages still carry sticker-shock interest.
- Washington is embracing sanctuary cities, and Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker will tell Congress about it on June 12.
- Chicago mayors and other local leaders keep blocking ICE agents at city limits.
- House Speaker Hakeem Jeffries says voters deserve to see the rules in plain sight.
- Musk quit running the Department of Government Efficiency after its promised savings got laughed at.
- D.C. watchers say the desk is gathering dust again.
- Federal prosecutors are still investigating Biden and a few associates, yet the indictment box is empty as of June 11, 2025.
- Donald Trump and Elon Musk once joked that their ups and downs could fill a soap opera.
- Musk stirred the pot by hinting that Trump had hitched a ride on Jeffrey Epstein’s plane.
- Trump fired back, shouting fake news louder than usual.
- Musk later muttered something about regretting certain tweets, and now the headlines pretend the ice is melting.
- No one inside either camp can say whether the next handshake comes or goes.
- Los Angeles Riots and Political Feud
- Protesters in Los Angeles have pressed hard against immigration rules, and the shouting quickly turned into broken glass.
- Trump didn’t wait for California Governor Gavin Newsom; he sent in the National Guard and then bragged about keeping law and order.
- Newsom has cried politicized muscle for his part, and pundits already smell 2028 on the wind.
Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill
- House members passed Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill by a margin so thin it felt like tape holding a window shut.
- Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski have opposed it, warning that the deficit will widen if the Senate joins the parade.
- Any final version will be diced and sliced and probably unrecognizable to the people who first cheered it.
Economy and Job Market
- Payrolls picked up 139,000 new names in May, a decent number until you notice the pace keeps sputtering.
- Unemployment sits at 4.2, yet the coffee shop talk is about when the next dip might hit.
- For its part, Wall Street keeps jagging up and down as if the ticker is arguing with the morning papers.
Inflation, the Federal Reserve, and Housing
- The Federal Reserve is in no rush to slash interest rates.
- Many insiders think the earliest cuts could land in late 2025, and even that depends on where inflation settles.
- In the meantime, the housing world is jammed with roughly $700 billion worth of listings.
- With mortgages around 6.85 percent, most buyers feel pinched, and prices barely budge.
Sanctuary Cities and States
- Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker plans to speak before Congress on June 12 and defend his sanctuary rules.
- He faces loud federal hints about yanking money if he doesn’t bend.
- Out west, California is tinkering with its playbook after similar pressure from Trump’s team.
- Both places find that public opinion is split right down the middle.
ICE and Migrant Shielding
- Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass is taking heat for programs that block ICE from making routine arrests.
- Detractors say her policies turn the city into a no-go zone for federal agents.
- Congressman Hakeem Jeffries stoked the fire by demanding that ICE officers show identification on the scene.
- That demand leaves city cops and immigrant advocates squirming.
Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency
- Elon Musk walked away from the Department of Government Efficiency late last month, saying he was done with the grind.
- Critics of the office say it never managed to trim anything but headlines.
- A deputy who might step up as a replacement still hasn’t surfaced, and no new plans are leaking.
- Staffers are quietly hunting for gigs that pay on time.
Legal Proceedings Against Biden and Others
- Former President Trump ordered House committees to investigate allegations involving Joe Biden; subpoenas are flying.
- Lawmakers insist they’ve uncovered links between the President’s office and family businesses, though no indictment has been filed.
- Adam Schiff and Anthony Fauci remain in the crosshairs, yet the clock keeps ticking with nothing formal.
- Skeptics ask why Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel haven’t pulled the trigger.
Quick Survey Update on What is Hot Right Now
Earlier today, just after sunrise on June 11, 2025, I pulled together everything trending and put it through a quick gut check. Each bullet below tosses out a number, hangs a little story on the stat, and tries to explain why the topic is screaming for attention this week.
Trump and Musk Feud: Dynamics and Epstein Claims
- Donald Trump and Elon Musk used to swim in the same fast-paced lane, but now they are throwing fast jabs online.
- Trouble bubbled over when Musk posted that Trump showed up in Jeffrey Epstein’s flight logs, a claim the former President denies with heat.
- Reports have popped up saying Musk felt he went too far and suddenly decided to dial it back.
- Conversely, Trump lets out small rumblings of disappointment, though he never says the water is under the bridge.
- Not long after, Musk ripped Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill and tossed out the Epstein tidbit, only to yank the posts when the backlash hit.
- A check on the [Washington Post](https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/06/06/epstein-files-trump-musk-controversy-explained/) shows he deleted those lines, so the internet keeps tubes of ink pinned to both sides of the argument.
- One user on X, tagged @H124332Mike, ran the numbers and said the logs line up with flights over Florida, New Jersey, and Washington, D.C., but do not prove a personal trip to the island.
- That detail adds grease to the fire but gives Musk and Trump wiggle room if either decides to cool off.
- Musk stepping back hints at a possible reconciliation, yet Trump’s icy silence keeps everyone guessing.
- Once rocket-fuel-fast, their bond is now drifting through static air.
Los Angeles Riots and Feud with Newsom: Political Implications
- In early June 2025, Los Angeles erupted after Immigration and Customs Enforcement ramped up raids, an effort the White House framed as tough border security.
- Protesters lined the streets waving half-burnt Mexican and American flags, spray-painting slogans that included We Are Not Criminals. Clashes between demonstrators, the LAPD, and the California Highway Patrol turned chaotic within hours.
- President Trump overrode Governor Gavin Newsom and ordered the National Guard to patrol downtown, shocking many Californians.
- Newsom quickly filed a lawsuit, insisting the commander-in-chief was overstepping and fanning the flames.
- The fight escalated when the governor called Trump a stone-cold liar and compared his tactics to something out of a dictatorship.
- Faced with cameras in front of the state capitol, Newsom claimed the President had twisted their private phone call and threatened to cut federal money if the unrest continued.
- Tom Homan, a former ICE chief now advising Trump, doubled down on the administration’s line that violent crime demanded military backup.
- Reporters noted the whole standoff looked scripted, as both sides traded sound bites almost hourly.
- Political experts, even some of Newsom’s critics inside the party, started floating the idea that the governor welcomed the chaos as a launch pad for a 2028 presidential bid.
- Vice President Kamala Harris has stayed quiet about running for her old job, leaving Democrats to wonder if the primary stage might one day be empty.
- If nothing else, the feud took headlines away from Trump’s nearly finalized tax overhaul and Elon Musk’s ongoing strikes with labor unions, two stories many in Washington still expected to dominate summer coverage.
- Unless otherwise noted, constraints on Trump, Inc., and Newsom set lives copyright 2023 Vox Media LLC. All rights reserved.
Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill: Legislative Hurdles
- House Republicans labeled the $2.6 trillion package the One Big Beautiful Bill.
- It barely squeaked through the chamber by one vote, an eye-popping victory even party veterans did not see coming.
- The act bundles tax cuts, border security money, and extra defense cash into a single 1,040-page shelf of pages Congress.gov calls hum-drum.
- Critics worry the plan, forecasted to balloon the deficit by another $2.6 trillion, will swamp the wallets it promises to uplift.
- Senate GOP veterans like Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski want the math fixed yesterday.
- A half-dozen others, big-name conservatives included, keep waving red flags over Medicare tweaks and long-term offsets.
- Headlines from Reuters and Newsweek hint that any bill needing plain-vanilla reconciliation will die without 51 firm votes.
- Polls show most rank-and-file voters do not trust lawmakers to guard the working class while handing out bonuses this big.
- Those doubts weigh on nervous senators as the summer sun heats Capitol Hill.
- Dividing lines within the party are sharper than anyone expected.
- That tension is now on TV screens and kitchen tables.
Economy and Job Market: Signs of Strain
- According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the economy created 139,000 new jobs in May 2025, and the headline unemployment rate was 4.2%.
- However, the same BLS report whispers that growth is slowing, with plenty of families wondering how long their paychecks will keep coming.
- Headlines at CNBC put the worry front and center, saying uncertainty in Washington is kneecapping the market swagger.
- Over Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average keeps dancing between 42,000 and 43,000.
- At the same time, the volatility index (^VXD) sits stubbornly near 16-17, numbers you can chase down on Yahoo Finance.
- Three-digit ups and downs in a single day tell you traders are guessing and not knowing, and many of them are still trying to convince themselves the economy is perfectly fine.
- Put all of that together, and the picture is clear: job openings feel tattered, and the broader financial system looks like it is resting on a very shaky life support machine.
Inflation, Federal Reserve, and Housing Market: Mixed Signals
- Right now, the Federal Reserve is in no hurry to lower interest rates.
- A recent piece from Reuters references that the Fed is likely to keep rates on hold until at least September, says the central bank is waiting for clearer inflation clues, probably until late 2025.
- Former President Trump keeps pushing for speedier cuts.
- Yet, the Fed sticks to its data-first mantra and another mantra.
- Another Street article notes that one board member rewrote her forecast to match the new numbers.
- The housing scene tells another story.
- A Business Insider survey reveals builders and flippers are sitting on a record $700 billion of homes that no one is buying right now, and a Bank of America file hints that big shifts are coming soon.
- Higher payments and thinner paychecks pull back mortgage money, clocking in at about 6.85 percent, so first-time shoppers.
- Put it all together, and you see a market stuck in traffic, with central bank rules keeping buyers parked.
Sanctuary Cities and States: Federal Pressure Mounts
- Illinois Governor JB Pritzker is scheduled to testify on June 12, 2025, about the state’s sanctuary law.
- The Chicago Tribune calls the hearing a rare moment when a sitting governor stands before Congress on hometown policy.
- Meanwhile, Washington keeps tightening the screws.
- Reports from El Paso say the Trump administration has floated budget cuts that could yank millions from cities and counties that shield undocumented residents.
- In a noticeable ripple, Minnesota and California recently withdrew non-emergency medical aid for people living in the country without papers.
- These moves have created a high-stakes showdown between federal bean-counters and local elected officials.
- The outcome will influence how many cities offer newcomers lawyers, clinics, and schools.
Mayors and ICE: Mayors Shield Migrants, Sparking Federal Ire
- Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and Nashville’s Freddie O’Connell have pushed rules blocking ICE from their streets.
- Federal agencies call that plain obstruction, as reported by Reuters.
- The headlines jump off the page: masked ICE officers, tear gas, angry crowds lining Main Street.
- Republicans in California have not held back.
- They accuse Governor Gavin Newsom and Bass of letting Los Angeles burn while rioters chant.
- Fox News published their quotes less than a day later.
- Congressman Hakeem Jeffreys keeps a tally of masked raids, warning that nobody knows who these agents are until it is too late.
- Todd Lyons, Acting ICE Director, fired back in a Capitol hallway, demanding that politicians quit putting my people in danger.
- The clash shows how far local sanctuary laws can stretch before they snap under federal pressure. Jeffrey jumps into the ring, but only the stripes are tied in brighter colors.
Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency: A Failed Venture?
- In late May 2025, Elon Musk resigned from the Department of Government Efficiency, an exit NPR called “Musk leaves DOGE.”
- He stepped down after the White House budget started to wobble, and critics blamed a tax plan Trump had pushed.
- The short-lived department poured money into headlines but struggled to clamp down on actual waste.
- According to The Economist, saved dollars quickly became a punchline because courts kept overturning their contracts, and spending kept creeping up.
- Now, nobody knows who might grab the steering wheel next.
- That uncertainty could freeze any new cost-cutters who dared to follow Musk’s lead.
- For the billionaire, this is a rare stain on his White House playbook, which may slow down similar efficiency pushes for a long time.
Legal Proceedings Against Biden Administration Figures: Slow Progress
- Donald Trump recently called for a fresh investigation into President Joe Biden, claiming there is a secret effort to hide signs of mental decline.
- Reports like the one in the [Washington Post](https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/06/04/trump-biden-investigate-cover-up-decline-autopen/) say the former President even talked about Biden signing documents on an autopen.
- Meanwhile, the House Oversight Committee has released findings that tie Biden to overseas business dealings involving his family.
- Their webpage, found at [House Oversight: Biden family investigation](https://oversight.house.gov/landing/biden-family-investigation/), lists interviews and bank records, yet no criminal charges have appeared on a court docket as of June 11, 2025.
High-profile figures like Adam Schiff, Liz Cheney, and Anthony Fauci remain unindicted. Social media critics on X wonder why Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel haven’t moved faster; many posts accuse the pair of either delaying the case or failing to show competence. The drawn-out timeline only deepens public frustration and turns Capitol Hill into yet another stage for partisan finger-pointing.
Key Citations
- CNN says Elon Musk now wishes he had never tweeted that odd Trump praise back in 2023.
- You can read the short piece here.
- NBC covered Musk admitting the same mistake, framing it like a celebrity regret tour.
- It’s a light read if you want a second take.
- The Washington Post keeps dragging the Epstein angle into this, claiming Musk hinted Trump might be in those infamous files.
- In Sacramento, Gavin Newsom and Donald Trump are still fighting over the National Guard.
- CalMatters dropped a piece on the back-and-forth yesterday.
- AP News echoed that by saying the feud heated up after a border protest in L.A.
- Newsom slapped Trump with fanning the flames rhetoric.
- The Los Angeles Times quoted him as calling the President’s claims inflammatory.
- One Big Beautiful Bill is sitting in the hopper of Congress.gov.
- Short title, long debates ahead.
- The Tax Foundation ran numbers on it and says that if the math holds, most middle-class households could see paper losses for at least a year.
- Reuters reported that a bloc of GOP senators is already looking for tax shelters and loopholes to inject before the markup.
- In labor news, BLS just released the May sheet.
- Unemployment dipped, but underemployment barely budged, so the good news is sticky.
- Yahoo Finance has dusted off the DJIA volatility chart and noted a steady climb in jitter scores since early February.
- Reuters insiders believe the Fed will pause rate increases until at least September while inflation still wiggles sideways.
- Business Insider declares the U.S. housing market is stuck in limbo-land thanks to stubbornly high mortgage rates and anemic inventory.
- The Chicago Tribune announced that Governor Pritzker would testify before Congress about Illinois’s sanctuary laws next week.
- El Paso says sanctuary cities are feeling financial heat, and many are quietly reconsidering their welcome mat.
- Reuters filed a scoop on new ICE raids in Los Angeles.
- Neighbors describe masked agents as shadowy phantoms on the block.
- Fox News talked to an ICE official who said politicians keep putting my people in danger, a rare outburst that went semi-viral.
- NPR confirmed late last month that Musk has stepped away from supporting DOGE, leaving fans to wonder who’s next in the meme coin space.
- The Economist called Musk’s grip on government policy a catastrophic failure, though that headline has its brand of snark.
- For his part, Trump ordered a probe into what he claims is a Biden cover-up.
- The Washington Post laced that bit into their weekend wrap-up.
The House Oversight Committee released another folder in the Biden family investigation story, so the leak cycle continues.
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6S2ydWo9uuc
-
Recent Headlines Worth Your Attention : Los Angeles Faces Tight Curfew as Federal Troops Arrive:
Huge crowds took to the L.A. streets this week, shouting against the local immigration round-ups. In a sudden move that stunned city leaders, President Donald Trump ordered 700 Marines and more than 2,000 National Guardsmen onto the sidewalks. California Governor Gavin Newsom called the deployment illegal and rushed to court, but an emergency judge shot down his plea. Newsom, joined by Mayor Karen Bass, now warns that the federal show of force could worsen a bad situation.
Trump’s Hush-Money Conviction Gets Another Look in Court:
Up in Manhattan, lawyers for Donald Trump are back, arguing that the hush-money jury got it all wrong. They want the case moved from state to federal court, claiming a Washington judge is the only one who can fairly weigh the evidence. The appeals hearing is teetering between legal fireworks and courtroom tedium.
U.S. and China Shake Hands on Trade Plan with No Paper in Sight:
In London, economic envoys from Washington and Beijing nodded that they had reached a broad deal to lower tariffs, yet nobody was celebrating. Details are still scribbled in notebooks, and analysts urge caution, suspecting the complicated wording could collapse before either President Trump or Xi signs off. The link will matter, but the headlines alone keep investors guessing for now.
Musk on Social Media:
Over the weekend, Elon Musk stepped back and said some of his earlier tweets about President Trump’s tax-and-spend plan went too far. In a follow-up post, he called them impulsive remarks. A spokesman later confirmed that Musk still supports lower taxes.
Austrian School Tragedy:
A school shooter opened fire in Graz, Austria, killing ten people, including seven students. The gunman is a former pupil but has not been publicly named. Thousands of townspeople gathered afterward for candles and a minute of silence.
North Carolina Drug Bust:
In North Carolina, authorities shut down a large narcotics ring called Operation Heatwave. Sheriff Chip Hughes said the sweep resulted in 32 arrests and $50,000 in cash and gear. Neighbors described the early-morning raids as thunderous.
Chattanooga City Budget:
Chattanooga City Council members unanimously approved a budget that includes pay increases for police and firefighters. Mayor Tim Kelly’s spending plan kicks in on July 1, 2025, and funds new ambulances and park repairs.
Together, the stories draw a line from Musk’s keyboard to Austrian courtyards and back to Tennessee council chambers. None are linked, yet each tells its slice of 2025 life.
If you want the latest chatter or raw web links, holler in one quick search box.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LUi2Dzz-DkI&list=RDNS9u9zr9nDM9Q&index=17
-
A massive protest in downtown Chicago has sparked national headlines after a violent clash broke out during an anti-ICE demonstration near Wabash and Monroe. A car sped through the crowd of over 1,000 protesters, raising concerns about public safety amid rising unrest. Earlier, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson condemned a recent ICE operation in the South Loop that he described as “deceptive” and “sickening.” Speaking during National Immigrant Heritage Month, Johnson accused federal agents of targeting immigrants with “human traps” and slammed the use of masked, armed officers arresting parents and even shoving grandmothers into unmarked vans. Governor JB Pritzker also weighed in, criticizing what he called “inappropriate ICE tactics” and raising concerns about potential First Amendment violations. Organizers vow to continue speaking out against what they call unjust immigration enforcement in solidarity with similar protests across the nation, including Los Angeles. Chicago is at the center of the storm. Will this spark a national reckoning over immigration tactics?
https://youtu.be/I3tAFfRKz_8?si=8V31rRv8oRjR-3m3
-
This reply was modified 1 day, 4 hours ago by
Lisa Jones.
-
This reply was modified 1 day, 4 hours ago by
Lisa Jones.
-
This reply was modified 1 day, 4 hours ago by
-
New York Attorney General Letitia James is facing explosive allegations—not from political opponents, but inside her house. Angel S. DuBose, a former staffer, has launched a GoFundMe to expose what she claims was a brutal assault and years-long cover-up tied directly to James and her former Chief of Staff, Ibrahim Khan. DuBose alleges she was drugged, assaulted, and ritually abused at a 2014 holiday party while working under James—who was then NYC’s Public Advocate. Her chilling account includes tampered evidence, silenced witnesses, and retaliation after she reported workplace harassment. She says the state’s highest prosecutor presided over a culture of impunity—and that her motto, “No one is above the law,” rings hollow. But DuBose isn’t alone. Former Deputy Press Secretary Sophia Quintanar also came forward, publicly accusing Khan of sexual harassment and calling out James for protecting him while covering up the investigation—until after her re-election. As pressure mounts and calls for an outside probe grow louder, DuBose’s GoFundMe and stage performances at the New York Theater Festival could bring this alleged scandal back into public view—this time with receipts. No statute of limitations on rape, kidnapping, or federal civil rights violations means this case isn’t going away.
WATCH THIS VIDEO for the full breakdown of:
Angel DuBose’s claims of assault and cover-up. Letitia James’s silent rise to power. Sophia Quintanar’s supporting allegations. What’s next in the fight for justice?
https://youtu.be/AAsHkuaU3ow?si=CbWPJHnR3YdNOmDa
-
This reply was modified 1 day, 2 hours ago by
Gustan Cho.
-
This reply was modified 1 day, 2 hours ago by
-
Elon Musk apologized to President Donald Trump for his postal meltdown last week over The Big Beautiful Bill. We will see how this makeup goes between Elon Musk and President Donald Trump.
-
Greg Bishop reviews the ongoing debate over immigration enforcement amid civil unrest. Gov. J.B. Pritzker is set to testify about migrant sanctuary policies and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson prepare for immigration enforcement and expected protests.
-
President Donald Trump has signed a new series of executive orders focused on immigration policy, economic growth, and national security.
The White House says these measures aim to streamline enforcement, tighten border control, and boost American industries. Critics, however, are warning of legal challenges and civil liberties concerns.
Stay tuned for the latest analysis and political fallout.
https://www.youtube.com/live/sUtah-tRBTs?si=E47B4keBXicsSR9o