HuffPost: ‘Take Your Dementia Meds’: Gavin Newsom Fires Back At Trump With New List Of ‘Lies’

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker also speculated about the president’s neurological health during a separate conversation.

President Donald Trump and California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) traded barbs on social media on Tuesday, with plenty of name-calling.

Trump trashed Newsom as “Newscum” ― a name he often uses for the governor ― while Newsom’s press office accused the president of suffering from dementia.

At least one other Democratic governor, Illinois’ JB Pritzker, also suggested the president may have “some” dementia during an unrelated discussion on Tuesday.

Trump lashed out at Newsom in a lengthy post on Truth Social, claiming the governor is “is in final stages of approval” for low-income housing in the “super luxury” Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles after the devastating fires earlier this year.

He also claimed Newsom “allowed their houses to burn” by “not accepting” water from the Pacific Northwest.

Neither claim is accurate; Newsom over the summer announced funding to rebuild low-income housing lost to the fires, and Trump’s water claims have been repeatedly debunked.

Newsom and his press office team, who have been trolling Trump and other right-wing figures on X, say they found five lies in Trump’s statement.

“Take your dementia meds, grandpa. You are making things up again,” they wrote, along with a fact-check:

Newsom also called Trump’s claims a “straight-up lie” in a message posted on his personal account.

When someone replied to ask Grok, the AI tool built into X, to weight in, it confirmed Newsom’s take on the issue.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/newsom-trump-dementia_n_68ca0cc7e4b0e64fe309ecad

‘I’ve Asked Pam To Look Into That’: Trump Openly Discusses Plans To Dismantle Democracy, Says All His Critics Should Be ‘Put In Jail’

Donald Trump signed a memorandum to deploy troops in Memphis, Tennessee several days ago from the Oval Office. During his gaggle with the press, Trump threw a temper tantrum over protestors who crashed his recent restaurant visit in D.C. Trump stated that he asked U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi to look into whether or not these protestors can be charged under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act and put in jail. “They should be put in jail. What they’re doing to this country is really subversive,” Trump remarked.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/i-ve-asked-pam-to-look-into-that-trump-openly-discusses-plans-to-dismantle-democracy-says-all-his-critics-should-be-put-in-jail/vi-AA1MJ0o6

Washington Post: A D.C. neighborhood long home to immigrants pushes back against ICE arrests

The text messages ricocheted across Mount Pleasant, a historically diverse enclave two miles north of the White House, moments after someone said they saw federal agents stopping a Latino immigrant driving his daughter to school.

“At a raid now at mt p and Lamont!!!” popped up on Phaedra Siebert’s phone a few blocks from the intersection, she recalled later. Sprinting over, the former museum curator joined a crowd that was screaming at officers they assumed were with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

“Shame on you!” they chanted. “Shame on you!”

“We’ve got ICE out here!” someone yelled. “ICE here!”

President Donald Trump’s crackdown on crime in D.C. roiled large swaths of the nation’s capital, as Washingtonians encountered police checkpoints, armed National Guard troops and masked immigration agents. Although the president’s 30-day emergency ended Wednesday, the heightened pace of immigration arrests has continued in the city.

In Mount Pleasant, a left-leaning neighborhood whose large Latino population has long been part of the community’s fabric, residents have responded out of a sense of kinship to the sight of ICE agents swooping in, presumably to apprehend people living and working there suspected of being in the country illegally.

On weekday mornings, those upset by the arrests volunteer to chaperone groups of children walking to schools. Others patrol the streets, some while walking their dogs and riding bikes. Everyone is on the lookout for agents in unmarked SUV’s with tinted windows and out of state license plates that are hard to miss against a backdrop of elegant brick rowhouses and apartment buildings and a colorful low-rise commercial corridor.

If something catches their attention, they blow homemade whistles — their high-pitched trill echoing through the streets — and text warnings to hundreds of neighbors, many of them on a messaging system the man behind it likened to a “bat signal.”

“Can we stop ICE from coming? No,” said Rick Reinhard, who has lived in Mount Pleasant for more than 50 years and helped launch the network, among several residents use to communicate. “But can we make it uncomfortable? … Yeah.”

Mount Pleasant residents have their reasons for focusing their concern on ICE. In the month since the start of Trump’s crackdown, according to White House officials, law enforcement has apprehended slightly more than 1,000 immigrants across D.C., accounting for about 38 percent of the arrests they have reported for the period.

Following Trump’s emergency declaration on Aug. 11, Attorney General Pam Bondi said D.C.’s lenient policies toward immigrants, which prohibited police from cooperating in ICE arrests, made the city more dangerous. Immigration agents intensified enforcement in areas such as Columbia Heights and Mount Pleasant, neighborhoods popular among the city’s 95,000 immigrants, more than a quarter of them estimated to be undocumented.

Siebert, 54, was on her own self-styled walking patrol Aug. 28 just before 8 a.m. when she saw the text about agents detaining the man at the corner of Mount Pleasant and Lamont streets.

As she arrived, she said, she saw that the officers already had the man in handcuffs and that his daughter was weeping. Loren Galesi, who also lives in the neighborhood, had positioned herself in front of what she thought was an agent’s car, an act of protest she later described as “so out of character for me.”

“In a political city, we’re not political,” Galesi, 42, a graduate student in history at Georgetown University, said of herself and her husband, who moved to Mount Pleasant with their two children in 2021. “I vote every four years, that’s the extent to my involvement.”

Something changed in her after the start of Trump’s crackdown, said Galesi, as she witnessed “these masked agents show up and take our neighbors away.”

At the intersection that morning, Galesi saw the agents place the man in a car and drive off. Her friend, Liz Sokolov, 50, an educator who had been on her own patrol when she came upon the crowd, was in tears. “It just feels like you’re living in a country you don’t recognize,” Sokolov said later.

She tried to comfort herself with the thought that the detained man “knew we didn’t want him taken away and knew we were using our voices to help.” Yet, a litany of unsettling questions remained, not the least of which was when the agents would return.

Everyone is scared

The ICE raids — and the possibility of more in the future — has caused fear in the neighborhood, a sloping pocket just off 16th Street NW with a diverse population of lawyers, policy analysts, Capitol Hill staffers, and blue collar workers, many of them immigrants from El Salvador.

The neighborhood has faced a variety of crises over the years, including a 1991 riot that began when a police officer shot a Salvadoran immigrant. A five alarm fire in an apartment building in 2008 displaced 200 low income Latino families. The pandemic delivered another wave of pain five years ago.

Six days after Trump’s Aug. 11 emergency declaration, the administration made it known that Mount Pleasant was on its radar. On social media, ICE posted a video of agents descending on a neighborhood plaza and ripping down a banner that used a Spanish epithet to denigrate the agency.

“We’re taking America back, baby,” an agent says in the video, his face concealed by sunglasses, a hat, and a black gaiter.

Residents replaced the banner with another — “No Deportations in Mt. Pleasant,” it read — though their defiance did not salve the general unease.

“People are really, really scared; they don’t want to go to their jobs, they don’t want to go shopping,” said Yasmin Romero-Castillo, head of a local tenants association who buys groceries for residents too afraid to leave their apartments.

As she spoke, she sipped tea at Dos Gringos, a cafe whose owner, Alex Kramer, has been a Mount Pleasant fixture since 1994. Kramer said her business suffered during the crime emergency because employees from nearby shops weren’t going to work and dropping in for coffee. “The neighborhood is dead; they have killed the vibe,” Kramer said. “You listen for the whistles and the helicopters. Everyone is scared. I’m scared.”

The shrill of a whistle and a woman shouting, “Get your hands off of her!” is what caught Claudia Schlosberg’s attention on Labor Day as she watered her garden.

Schlosberg, 71, a civil rights and health care attorney who has lived in Mount Pleasant since 1978, dropped her hose and ran to the corner where U.S. Park Police officers and other agents were questioning the driver of a van and her passenger.

The officers, Schlosberg said, smashed the window, pulled the passenger out and whisked him away. A woman who questioned the arrest had been pulled off her bicycle and over to the sidewalk by a man in a vest marked “Police.” As she tried to video, Schlosberg said the same man threatened her with pepper spray and ordered her to move back.

“What are you doing?” Schlossberg recalled responding. “Why are you doing this? Get out of here!”

Two days later, Schlosberg was part of a group of 50 residents who went to a local library, expecting to voice their concerns over the immigration arrests at a meeting with someone from the office of D.C. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D).

Many in the neighborhood were already displeased that Bowser had signed an executive order directing her police force to coordinate with federal authorities indefinitely, though the mandate did not include ICE.

They never got to share those sentiments. Anthony Robertson, a Bowser staffer, showed up only to depart quickly without taking questions. “It really feels like there’s no one we can turn to protect our community,” Schlosberg said.

A mayoral spokesperson, in a statement, did not directly address the reason for Robertson’s departure but said the administration would “continue to work with the community” through “the appropriate senior officials who can provide the most relevant and timely information.”

The ‘eyes and ears’ of the community

Even before Trump took office in January, Reinhard contemplated ways to organize Mount Pleasant, figuring that the neighborhood’s immigrant population could be vulnerable if the president carried out a campaign threat to takeover the city.

By the spring, Reinhard, a photographer with a history of activism in the neighborhood, had started a texting network and recruited a few people. Then came Trump’s emergency declaration and membership on the channel ticked up: 50 people, then 80, then 100, then 200 and more.

Recruits are vetted to ensure they don’t work for the Trump administration, as well as law enforcement and news organizations, and are encouraged not to talk to outsiders about the channel. “There’s so much concern that they could seize our phones and infiltrate a group chat,” Galesi said. “There’s a strong sense that if you don’t live here, we can’t trust you.”

One neighborhood restaurant owner described the messaging system as the “eyes and ears” of Mount Pleasant. “As soon as someone posts they’ve seen something, someone will be like, ‘I’ll be there in five minutes,’” said the owner, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, fearful of drawing unwelcome attention to the restaurant. “It’s almost like a constant patrol. Instead of walkie-talkies, they’re using their phones.”

Others started their own chat groups, including Sokolov, who worried that a local day care center could be vulnerable because it caters to immigrants families. A friend with a 3D printer volunteered to make nearly 200 whistles they distributed across Mount Pleasant.

Siebert started her patrols weekday mornings, beginning at 6:45 a.m. She has become adept, she said, at spotting unmarked police SUVs, “usually black or charcoal,” with their darkened windows and concealed emergency lights.

“I’m glad to be doing something of use when it’s easy to feel entirely impotent,” she said. “I’m also glad to find a way to use my privilege as a nice White lady. People don’t clock me as a someone patrolling the patrollers but this is what we do. One of my tools is blonde hair.”

By the end of the first week of September, the visits from federal agents seemed to subside. Residents remained on alert, though. Their messaging systems still hummed. Patrols persisted.

As parents picked up children at the Bancroft Elementary School one afternoon, a man pointed down the street as he walked his Chihuahua and shouted, “Hey everybody! Be careful! ICE is out there!”

Heads turned, footsteps quickened.

“They’re down the street!” the man repeated. “They’re down there!”

At the end of the block, there was no sign of ICE or any other law enforcement, for that matter. “A UPS man said he’d seen them outside an alley,” the man explained. “And in another alley.”

He shrugged and moved on.

A few feet away, a boy turned to a stranger.

“What’s ICE?” he asked, his brow furrowed before he resumed his walk home.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/a-d-c-neighborhood-long-home-to-immigrants-pushes-back-against-ice-arrests/ar-AA1MIU0Q

Slingshot News: ‘Clearly, I Struck A Nerve’: Adam Schiff Ridicules Kash Patel For His Immature Outbursts During Senate Hearing [Video]

In his appearance on MSNBC with Chris Hayes yesterday, Senator Adam Schiff (D-CA) remarked on FBI Director Kash Patel’s testimony during an oversight hearing held by the Senate Judiciary Committee. 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/clearly-i-struck-a-nerve-adam-schiff-ridicules-kash-patel-for-his-immature-outbursts-during-senate-hearing/vi-AA1MK1il

HuffPost: Mike Johnson’s ‘Grade School’ Plea Gets A Red Mark For Hypocrisy Online

The House speaker talked about politicians turning down the “temperature and the violent rhetoric,” and critics said the same scathing thing.

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) was slammed for hypocrisy after he argued that political leaders should not use violent rhetoric against their opponents, while conveniently forgetting that President Donald Trump does it all the time.

Johnson on Tuesday said the assassination of right-wing activist Charlie Kirk had proven the need for political leaders of all stripes to “turn down the temperature and the violent rhetoric.”

It’s “not helpful,” he said.

“Leaders cannot call their political opponents ‘Nazis’ and ‘fascists’ and ‘enemies of the state’ because they disagree with their policy priorities. I mean, this is something we should have learned in grade school,” Johnson told reporters. “This type of language spurs on depraved people, deranged people, who take that as a cue and this tragic phenomenon played out this week in Utah.”

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/mike-johnson-comment-reminder_n_68ca808ae4b0ce33ec38cf3f

‘I Have Nothing To Do With The Guy’: Trump Tries To Escape His Past As He Denies Any ‘Relationship’ With Epstein During Press Gaggle [Video]

During a gaggle with the press outside the White House several weeks ago, Donald Trump denied having had any “relationship” with Jeffrey Epstein. He dismissively told reporters, “I have nothing to do with the guy.” He even claimed he never set foot on Epstein’s island.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/i-have-nothing-to-do-with-the-guy-trump-tries-to-escape-his-past-as-he-denies-any-relationship-with-epstein-during-press-gaggle/vi-AA1MJXMG

Regtechtimes: U.S. veteran detained by immigration officers in California over identity despite valid ID

Justice Brett Kavanaugh, in his opinion, wrote that citizens or lawful residents would be free to go after brief encounters with immigration agents.

But this veteran’s experience shows the opposite. The officers didn’t check his documents when it would have taken only two minutes. Instead, they arrested him based on where he worked and his appearance.

On July 10, a 25-year-old U.S. citizen and Army veteran was on his way to work as a security guard at a cannabis farm in Camarillo, Ventura County, California. He never expected that his day would take a drastic turn. As he approached the farm, he noticed traffic piling up with cars stuck bumper-to-bumper. Protesters were walking along the sides of the street. He soon saw masked federal immigration agents blocking the road.

A terrifying encounter with immigration officers

He tried to explain that he was a U.S. citizen, a father of two, and an Army veteran who had served in Iraq. But the immigration agents didn’t seem to care. Their focus wasn’t on his identity or service record but on blocking his way.

As a contract worker, missing his job meant losing his paycheck. He got out of his car and tried to explain again. The immigration officers ignored him. When they started walking toward him, he got back inside his car to avoid confrontation.

The situation worsened when immigration agents began using tear gas to disperse the nearby protesters. The gas filled his car, making it difficult to breathe. He panicked but still tried to comply with the officers’ orders. However, they gave contradictory instructions like “pull over to the side” and “reverse” while also trying to open his car door.

Before he could react, an immigration agent smashed his window and sprayed pepper spray into the car. He was dragged out, and one agent knelt on his neck while another pinned his back. Despite holding valid identification in his wallet inside the car, the officers refused to check and confirm his citizenship.

He was zip-tied and made to sit in the dirt with other detainees for four hours. He overheard immigration agents questioning why he had been arrested but received no answers. After that, he was thrown into a jail cell without charges or explanations.

Inhumane Conditions in Immigration Detention

His first night in jail was unbearable. His hands, coated with tear gas and pepper spray, burned constantly because he wasn’t allowed to wash them off. Over the next three nights and days, he remained locked up without being allowed to make a phone call or speak to a lawyer.

He missed his daughter’s third birthday. Still, no explanation or apology was offered. After three days, he was released with no charges against him. He was simply let go, with immigration officials providing only a vague statement about cases being reviewed for “potential federal charges.”

This ordeal shook him deeply. He served his country wearing the military uniform, standing watch in dangerous conditions abroad. He believed in the values of fairness, respect, and dignity that are supposed to be guaranteed to every citizen in America.

However, despite proving his citizenship and military service, he was stripped of his rights. He was treated like an intruder, forcibly detained and isolated without cause.

The Broader Warning: This Could Happen to Anyone

The Supreme Court recently allowed immigration enforcement officers to continue their aggressive tactics in California. Justice Brett Kavanaugh, in his opinion, wrote that citizens or lawful residents would be free to go after brief encounters with immigration agents.

But this veteran’s experience shows the opposite. The officers didn’t check his documents when it would have taken only two minutes. Instead, they arrested him based on where he worked and his appearance.

This is not an issue about political sides or voting patterns. It’s about basic rights. If a U.S. citizen can be detained by immigration agents, silenced, and dehumanized despite holding valid identification, then anyone could be next.

This veteran’s experience has now become a warning signal. He is taking legal action with the help of the Institute for Justice under the Federal Torts Claim Act. However, he must wait six months before filing a lawsuit.

He stresses that justice should not be restricted to one group or one viewpoint—it must be accessible and fair for all.

His case highlights how immigration enforcement policies, without proper checks, can strip citizens of their dignity and rights. It raises important questions about oversight, accountability, and fairness in immigration enforcement.

This is not just one person’s story—it’s a cautionary tale that underscores the importance of protecting every citizen from wrongful treatment by immigration authorities.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/u-s-veteran-detained-by-immigration-officers-in-california-over-identity-despite-valid-id/ar-AA1MJg0z

Slingshot News: ‘You Guys Don’t Care About Taxes’: Trump Insults Law Enforcement Officers To Their Faces, Implies They’re Too Dumb To Understand Taxes [Video]

Donald Trump gave remarks to law enforcement personnel and National Guard troops several weeks ago in Washington, D.C. During his remarks, Trump stated to the people in attendance that they “don’t care about taxes,” implying that they’re too dumb to care or understand. 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/you-guys-don-t-care-about-taxes-trump-insults-law-enforcement-officers-to-their-faces-implies-they-re-too-dumb-to-understand-taxes/vi-AA1MzsK2

MSNBC: Maddow Blog | FBI’s Kash Patel faces criticisms from within the Trump administration

The FBI director is facing all kinds of criticisms, including some from within the bureau that Patel ostensibly leads.

Kash Patel’s difficulties at the FBI certainly didn’t start last week, but his handling of Charlie Kirk’s shooting death hasn’t exactly helped the bureau’s hapless director.

On Wednesday afternoon, for example, Patel suggested via social media that Kirk’s shooter had been captured. That wasn’t just wrong, it also had the potential to undermine the investigation: People might’ve been discouraged from calling in tips after they saw the FBI director told the public that the suspect was no longer at large.

Patel was forced to walk back his mistake soon after, but the incident quickly led to criticisms from both the left and the right. Just as notable, however, were relevant details that soon followed. NBC News reported on Friday:

FBI Director Kash Patel was dining at Rao’s in New York on Wednesday night after the fatal shooting of Charlie Kirk, two sources familiar with his whereabouts told NBC News. Patel had posted on X at 6:21 p.m. ET that the ‘subject’ in Kirk’s killing was ‘in custody.’ Rao’s, a well-known restaurant that is notoriously tough to get into, opens at 7 p.m. Then, at 7:59 p.m., Patel posted a follow-up post that the ‘subject in custody has been released after an interrogation by law enforcement.’

The reporting on his whereabouts certainly didn’t make Patel look any better, but the details also suggest that there were people within the FBI who were eager to alert the public to the embarrassing details of Patel’s mistake.

Around the same time, a current law enforcement official who spoke on condition of anonymity told NBC News that the “horrific event” of Kirk’s killing showcased Patel’s “public inability to meet the moment as a leader.”

Two days later, Fox News published a report with a headline that said “knives are out” for Patel — a Shakespearean metaphor suggesting that at least some of the director’s opponents are coming for him from within the FBI. The same report quoted one insider who added that the White House, Attorney General Pam Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche “have no confidence in Kash.”

That reporting has not been independently verified by MSNBC or NBC News, and the president himself continues to offer public praise for the FBI director.

Yet, as the ground beneath Patel’s feet appears less certain, former Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey is poised to be sworn in as the FBI’s first co-deputy director, a move that continues to be bizarre (since the FBI already has a deputy director in former podcast personality Dan Bongino) and that probably won’t help quiet the whispers about Patel’s future.

https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/fbis-kash-patel-faces-criticisms-trump-administration-rcna231322

‘Watch Him With The Hands’: Trump Tests The Limits Of His Hypocrisy, Takes Jab At Gavin Newsom’s Body Language In Tone-Deaf Rant

During a recent bilateral meeting with Polish President Karol Nawrocki, Donald Trump hypocritically ranted about California Governor Gavin Newsom and his body language, specifically his hand gestures. Trump, who is known for wildly flailing his hands like he’s playing the accordion, should be the last person to call others out on their hand gestures.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/watch-him-with-the-hands-trump-tests-the-limits-of-his-hypocrisy-takes-jab-at-gavin-newsom-s-body-language-in-tone-deaf-rant/vi-AA1MzI1t