#phm#ryland grace#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers




seen from United States
seen from Poland

seen from Australia

seen from United States

seen from Croatia
seen from United States

seen from Netherlands

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from Canada

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Italy

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Canada
seen from United States

seen from Somalia

seen from Sweden
Trumpâs approval rating is 34%. Let that number sink in.
Lower than Jimmy Carter at his lowest point.
As low as Herbert Hoover in the middle of the Great Depression before he got ousted.
He campaigned on ending wars in the Middle East. We have a new war in the Middle East.
He campaigned on lowering prices. Prices are up across the board: energy, tariffs, everything.
And the same people who were with him when he said he wouldnât do it are still with him now that heâs doing it.
Hereâs the real question: Does he care about any of this?
I would submit to everybody â he does not.
Heâs entered the nihilistic stage of his political career.
The polls donât matter. The people donât matter. The consequences donât matter.
That is the most dangerous version of this man.
And thatâs exactly where we are.
Presidentâs approval rating fell this week amid backlash over the Epstein files and the rising cost of living
President Donald Trump boasted Saturday that he has the âHIGHEST POLL NUMBERSâ of his political career, despite some recent surveys showing his approval rating is at its lowest point since his second term began.
Trump bragged about his approval rating on Saturday morning, just hours after MAGA firebrand Marjorie Taylor Greene announced sheâs resigning from the House of Representatives in January amid her growing feud with the president.
âI HAVE JUST GOTTEN THE HIGHEST POLL NUMBERS OF MY âPOLITICAL CAREER,ââ Trump wrote on Truth Social, without specifying which poll he was referring to. âWhile my great work on the Economy has not yet been fully appreciated, it will be!â
Our job: Invite disaffected Trump voters to join Team Democracy
October 15, 2025
Robert B. Hubbell
Trump seems intent on reminding us why we desperately need a No Kings Day and a second, peaceful American Revolution to preserve the Constitution and redeem democracy. Multiple news stories reminded us that Trump is attempting to exercise dictatorial powers that far surpass those of the British monarch from whom Americans freed themselves in the original American Revolution.
I take no pleasure in listing Trumpâs daily transgressions, and I do so only to urge us on to victory, not to proclaim doom. Most of Trumpâs unconstitutional behavior is barely recognized as such by the media. It is important that we not give Trumpâs lawlessness a âfree pass.â Instead, we must restore the Constitution and the rule of law to their rightful places of primacy in American democracy.
As we review Tuesdayâs stories, our reaction shouldnât be, âThatâs outrageous,â but rather, âThatâs outrageous and the people must rise up to demand fealty to the Constitution and respect for the law.â
With that prologue, letâs see the many ways that Trump violated the Constitution on Tuesday.
The US military killed six alleged drug smugglers in international waters.
Continuing a string of extrajudicial killings that violate US civil and criminal law, the Uniform Code of Military Justice, international laws and treaties, and the law of war, the Trump administration destroyed another boat off the coast of Venezuela. See AP News, US strikes another boat accused of carrying drugs off Venezuela.
Per the AP report, even Republicans in Congress are worried about the legality of the Trump administrationâs killing of non-combatants in international waters.
For a deeper dive into the unlawful nature of the killings, see The Hill, (9/06/25) Extra-judicial military killing is not a legitimate answer to drug trafficking.
Per the analysis in The Hill,
Extrajudicial killing is the use of deadly force by agents of a government absent the ordinary processes of criminal law â most basically a trial at which guilt is adjudicated by a fair tribunal. In the U.S., that means a judge and a jury. This an essential element of our constitutional system. The Fifth Amendment directs that âno person shall be deprived of life ⊠without due process of law.â The Constitution contains no exception allowing the president to deprive any person, even an alleged drug smuggler, of his life without due process.
Trump promises $20 billion to Argentina, but only if his political ally wins in the upcoming presidential election
During the federal shutdown, in which hundreds of thousands of federal workers are not being paid, Trump announced that he would give Argentina $20 billion in âaidâ that would go to political and social elites in that country. See HuffPo, Elizabeth Warren Will Attempt To Block Trumpâs Argentina Bailout.
But it gets worse. Trump backtracked on the promise of the financial bailout, saying that the aid would be granted only if Trumpâs preferred candidate wins in the upcoming presidential election in Argentina. See WSJ, Trump Says Argentina Bailout Depends on Mileiâs Party Winning Upcoming Elections. (âTrump praised Milei as âMAGA all the way.â)
Trumpâs corruption has become so ubiquitous that he no longer tries to hide it. Using US taxpayer dollars to advance the political fortunes of Trumpâs personal favorite in the presidential race is corruptionâplain and simple, not to mention âfraud, waste, and abuse.â Every member of Congress should be standing on their desks in protest of this grotesque misuse of taxpayer money.
Trump forces the resignation of US Attorney who refused to prosecute attorneys who investigated Russiaâs interference in 2016 election
Trump has ordered the DOJ to prosecute attorneys and agents of the DOJ and FBI who helped to investigate Russiaâs interference in the 2016 presidential election. To the surprise of no one, the US Attorney tasked with initiating that prosecution found that there was no basis to prosecute the DOJ attorneys and FBI agents who investigated Russiaâs 2016 interference.
So, as Trump has done on numerous occasions previously, he ordered Attorney General Pam Bondi to fire the US Attorney (Todd Gilbert) who refused to file a corrupt indictment against Trumpâs political enemies. See NYTimes, U.S. Attorney Was Forced Out After Clashes Over How to Handle Russia Inquiry. (Accessible to all.)
Per the NYTimes,
After reviewing the evidence, Mr. Gilbert told his superiors that he did not believe there was sufficient evidence to justify a grand jury investigation, these people said. Frustrated by that answer, aides to Attorney General Pam Bondi and her deputy, Todd Blanche, blamed a senior career attorney in the office who they believed had swayed Mr. Gilbert: Zachary Lee, a veteran prosecutor with more than two decades of experience involving public corruption and narcotics, among other issues. [¶]
Pressed to further sideline or remove Mr. Lee, Mr. Gilbert refused, these people said. Department officials then informed Mr. Gilbert that he would be fired, and he resigned shortly afterward, posting a GIF on social media with a joke from the movie âAnchorman,â in which the lead character exclaims, âBoy, that escalated quickly!â
As before, there is now a frantic search in the DOJ to find an attorney, any attorney, who will file a bad-faith indictment against the DOJ attorneys and FBI agents who investigated Russiaâs 2016 interference.
In the meantime, the House Judiciary Committee plans to call former Special Counsel Jack Smith to testify about his investigation of Trump. The Republicans may regret that decision. On Tuesday, Smith made his first public comments since resigning from his post as Special Counsel after the Supreme Court said Trump could commit crimes with impunity. See NYTimes, Jack Smith Calls Idea That Politics Infected Trump Prosecutions âLudicrousâ. (Accessible to all.)
Per the NYTimes, Jack Smith said the following:
The idea that politics played a role in who worked on that case, or who got chosen, is ludicrous.â Mr. Smith offered a dour hourlong assessment of Mr. Trumpâs campaign of retribution against his enemies, rebuking the indictments of James B. Comey, the former F.B.I. director, and Letitia James, the New York attorney general, over the objections of career prosecutors. He also called out the forced resignations of prosecutors who unsuccessfully opposed White House efforts to drop the bribery case against Mayor Eric Adams of New York. âNothing like what we see now has ever gone on,â he said. âThere are rules in the department about how to bring a case â follow those rules,â he added. âYou canât say: âI want this outcome. Let me throw the rules out.ââ
I think having Jack Smith testify before the House Oversight Committee to revisit the evidence against Trump is a brilliant idea. That would force the House to come back into session, allowing the discharge petition to become effective, and forcing a vote on the Epstein Transparency Act, which calls for the DOJ to release the Epstein files.
Acting US Attorney Lindsey Halligan removes career prosecutor in Eastern District of Virginia
Former insurance attorney turned acting US Attorney in the Eastern District of Virginia, Lindsey Halligan, has apparently fired or transferred the senior prosecutor in that office, Maggie Cleary. Although there is no word on why that has happened, the reason seems clear: Maggie Clearyâs name did not appear on the indictments of James Comey and Letitia James, forcing Lindsey Halligan to appear as the sole attorney on the indictments.
See CNN, Senior prosecutor removed as Lindsey Halligan reshapes key US attorneyâs office.
This appears to be another case of firing DOJ attorneys in retribution for refusing to bring politically motivated prosecutions to please Trump.
Trump threatens to remove the World Cup Tournament from Boston and the Olympics from Los Angeles
Trump has no authority to decide where FIFA plays the games of its World Cup Tournament or where the International Olympic Committee (IOC) decides to hold the Olympics. But Trump has threatened to pressure the presidents of FIFA and the IOC to move the venues away from Boston and Los Angeles. See The Guardian, Trump threatens removal of World Cup games from Boston, Olympics from LA.
The worst thing that could happen to Trump, from his perspective, is to get between sports fans and their ability to watch the World Cup and Olympic Games. Trump isnât going to move the games because it would be logistically impossible to do so. But if he did, he would have a whole new constituency of voters who hate him. Heck, they will hate him for threatening to do so.
U.S. airports refuse to run video of Kristi Noem blaming Democrats for government shutdown
The Hatch Act prohibits government employees from engaging in partisan politics while performing their official duties. The Trump administration has reduced the Hatch Act to a quaint relic of the beforetimes. For example, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has distributed a video of her blaming Democrats for the government shutdownâat a time when Republicans control both chambers of Congress and the presidency.
Fortunately, airports across the nation are refusing to subject travelers to the blatantly improper use of government communications to blame Democrats for the shutdown. See The Guardian, US airports refuse to air Kristi Noem video blaming Democrats for shutdown.
Although airports are subject to FAA jurisdiction, they are owned and operated by various municipal and state agencies. They are right to resist the politicization of the shutdown by Homeland Security. The refusal to comply with the prohibitions of the Hatch Act is another sign of Trumpâs wannabe status as dictator!
Concluding Thoughts
Trump is struggling with the votersâand Republicans know it. That is why they are working so hard to engage in even more gerrymandering in red states to increase the number of âsafeâ Republican seats in the House. If they werenât worried, they wouldnât do it. They are worried, so they are increasing partisan gerrymandering, bigtime!
A recent analysis in The Economist provides a stark view (for Trump) of just how widespread and deep his unfavorability ratings are. Before looking at The Economist, letâs say it together:Â Polls arenât votes, itâs the trend that matters over time and across polls, and nothing is over until the last vote is counted.
But it should give you confidence that there is nothing wrong with your grip on reality when you read the most recent nationwide polling described in The Economist, Donald Trumpâs approval rating. The article is behind a paywall, so it may not be available to all (but I was able to read the article without signing in, so perhaps it is unlocked.)
The polling and discussion are impressive in their detail, but here is the big takeaway: In every leading issue, in every major cohort of voters, and in 43 states (excluding MT, ND, ID, WV, TN, AR, and AL), Trump is underwater in approval ratings.
He has moved from positive to negative territory on inflation, healthcare, jobs, immigration, and crime. He has lost ground in every voting cohort except for white males with a high school diploma or less, and even there, Trump is slightly underwater.
None of this means that we can ease up. But it should give us confidence that our feelings are shared by millions of Americans who supported Trump in 2024 and are now disappointed (at least) in his performance.
Although Trump isnât on the ballot in 2026 and 2028, we know that every Republican on the ballot will defend Trump to the hiltâincluding on the Epstein files, tariffs, healthcare cuts, mass firings, attacks on universities, military occupation of cities, and more.
As we protest in the coming weeks, we should remember that there is a receptive audience who are unhappy with Trump and willing to be persuaded. Letâs focus on inviting them to Team Democracy rather than blaming them for the crisis we find ourselves in. Our job is to convince more Americans to join us in the streets in peaceful protest until our numbers are so large that we cannot be ignored.
[Robert B. Hubbell Newsletter]
Trump is facing "historically bad" poll numbers at the end of his first year back in office.
58% of Americans consider him to be a failure. One other way of saying failure is LOSER.
Even his keystone issue, immigration, gets just a 42% approval from Americans. That will continue to slide as ICE continues to behave like Nazi Brown Shirts.
He did little to quell reports that he is melting down over Harrisâs poll numbers.
Sounds like someoneâs panicking!