Trump to sign Order charging $100,000 per H1B visa
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Poast new message in this thread
Date: September 19th, 2025 3:37 PM Author: coiffed free-loading home preventive strike
but it's illegal u dumb retarded birdshits, just stupid meat to his dumb raciss base. PAJEETS FOREVER
Josh Wingrove
@josh_wingrove
·
1h
NEWS: Trump is set to sign a proclamation adding a $100,000 fee to H-1B visa applications, moving to overhaul a system the administration thinks is too easily abused right now -- undercutting American workers, particularly in STEM fields. He'll sign as soon as today, we're told.
Aaron Reichlin-Melnick
@ReichlinMelnick
Almost certainly illegal and likely to be struck down in court. Congress has only authorized the government to set fees to recover the cost of adjudicating the application. There is no statutory authority to impose fees designed to limit the use of a visa.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49284620) |
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Date: September 19th, 2025 8:52 PM Author: Tan roommate nursing home
lol at an Indian telling us what’s legal in our country
Your scam is over, worthless asshole
No one wants you here
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49285388) |
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Date: September 19th, 2025 8:55 PM Author: Tan roommate nursing home
You made that money thanks to whites
Without whites you’d have died in the slums of Mumbai long ago
Suck our cocks and be grateful , Dalit trash
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49285393) |
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Date: September 19th, 2025 8:54 PM Author: Tan roommate nursing home
The only dumb retards are Indians
They’re unqualified scammers who don’t assimilate and add no value
Fuck off
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49285390) |
Date: September 19th, 2025 3:51 PM Author: stimulating flushed rigor laser beams
why does trump take a moronic approach to every policy he tries to address?
h1b abuse is a problem. but he comes up with the dumbest possible way to attack it
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49284669) |
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Date: September 19th, 2025 4:02 PM Author: Flesh Spectacular Pisswyrm
Say it with me.
High.
Ashkenazi.
IQ.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49284697) |
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Date: September 19th, 2025 4:18 PM Author: coiffed free-loading home preventive strike
they have every right to sue so now trumpkins are saying u cannot sue dictator for a CLEARLY illegal law cause u are supposed to just go along with whatever dictator wants?
ljl furk the usa
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49284742) |
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Date: September 19th, 2025 5:21 PM Author: coiffed free-loading home preventive strike
eat shit birdshits!
1. Authority Over Immigration Fees
Congress sets immigration law. The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) governs visas, including H-1B.
USCIS (part of DHS) sets fees, but only within authority granted by Congress. Under 8 U.S.C. §1356(m), USCIS may charge fees to recover the “full costs of providing adjudication services,” but those fees must be reasonably tied to costs, not arbitrary revenue raising.
President cannot set fees directly. The President can issue executive orders or influence agency rulemaking, but fees must still comply with the law and administrative procedure.
2. Statutory Issues
A $100,000 fee is not “cost recovery.” Adjudicating an H-1B petition costs a few hundred dollars, not six figures. That gap would be indefensible under the statute.
Congress has in the past set supplemental fees (e.g., the $4,000 fee on some large H-1B/L-1 employers under Pub. L. 111-230), but those required specific legislation, not presidential action.
3. Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
To raise fees, DHS/USCIS must go through notice-and-comment rulemaking.
An arbitrary $100,000 fee would be vulnerable to challenge as arbitrary and capricious under the APA, since it isn’t tied to costs or statutory purpose.
4. Constitutional Issues
Nondelegation & separation of powers: Only Congress can authorize revenue-raising measures of this scale.
Due process & equal protection: A fee so excessive that it effectively bars access could be challenged as unconstitutional discrimination (though courts usually defer heavily in immigration).
5. International/Trade Issues
The U.S. has obligations under WTO/GATS Mode 4 and treaties with India and others. A $100,000 fee targeted at H-1Bs could be argued as a trade barrier or violation of treaty commitments.
6. Practical Reality
If a president tried this by executive order, lawsuits would be filed immediately by:
Tech companies
Immigration advocacy groups
Possibly foreign governments
Courts would likely strike it down quickly as beyond executive authority and contrary to statute.
✅ Bottom line:
The president cannot legally charge $100,000 per H-1B visa without new legislation from Congress. Any attempt to do so unilaterally would run into statutory, administrative, constitutional, and international law problems, and would almost certainly be invalidated in court.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49284903) |
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Date: September 19th, 2025 10:19 PM Author: Infuriating step-uncle's house death wish
oops
1) It’s not a USCIS “fee” at all—it’s a lawful condition on entry imposed by the President
The White House proclamation does not purport to change USCIS’s fee schedule under 8 U.S.C. § 1356(m). It uses the President’s independent authority under INA § 212(f) and § 215(a) to “suspend” or “impose…restrictions” on the entry of a class of nonimmigrants when he finds their entry “detrimental” to U.S. interests. The proclamation restricts entry of H-1B workers outside the U.S. unless the employer has made a $100,000 payment, for a defined 12-month period, with national-interest waivers available. That is a classic § 212(f)/§ 215(a) entry restriction—not an agency user fee.
2) Supreme Court precedent gives the President very broad § 212(f)/§ 215(a) leeway
In Trump v. Hawaii, the Court emphasized § 212(f) “exudes deference” and upheld sweeping entry restrictions so long as the President articulates a facially legitimate rationale. Here, the proclamation recites labor-market and national-security findings and tailors the measure (time-limited; outside-U.S. only; national-interest waivers). Under Kleindienst v. Mandel, that easily clears the “facially legitimate and bona fide” threshold. Sale v. Haitian Centers Council likewise recognizes robust presidential power in the entry context.
3) The APA doesn’t apply to the President; agencies can implement immediately under recognized exceptions
Challenges framed as “arbitrary and capricious fee-setting” miss the mark: a presidential proclamation is not subject to APA notice-and-comment, and the President is not an “agency.” See Franklin v. Massachusetts and Dalton v. Specter. Any implementing instructions by DHS/DOS ride the foreign-affairs and/or good-cause exceptions in 5 U.S.C. § 553(a)(1) and § 553(b)(B), particularly where the proclamation itself supplies the governing rule of decision (no entry/visa issuance absent the payment).
4) § 1356(m) “cost-recovery” limits are irrelevant here
Petitioners will argue a six-figure amount can’t be cost-tethered under § 1356(m). But the government answer is simple: this payment is not a USCIS adjudication fee—it is a condition on entry imposed by the President under § 212(f)/§ 215(a). As such, § 1356(m) and OMB Circular A-25 don’t constrain the President’s proclamation. To the extent funds are collected, they are deposited consistent with the Miscellaneous Receipts Statute, 31 U.S.C. § 3302, avoiding any “unlawful revenue-raising” theory.
5) “Major Questions” and post-Chevron arguments don’t move the needle
Loper Bright (no Chevron) and West Virginia v. EPA (major questions) target agency gap-filling. Here, Congress itself spoke clearly in § 212(f): the President may “impose…any restrictions” on entry he deems appropriate upon a detriment finding. Courts have already treated § 212(f) as an unusually explicit delegation, and Hawaii controls the standard of review. Even if “major questions” were invoked, the clear-statement is in § 212(f)’s text, repeatedly upheld by the Court.
6) Constitutional claims face the plenary-power and consular nonreviewability wall
Noncitizens abroad have minimal constitutional protections in the entry context; U.S. employers have no fundamental right to sponsor a particular foreign worker. Kerry v. Din reaffirms that citing a statutory ground or stated rationale suffices. Under Mandel, courts don’t “look behind” a facially legitimate reason. And because visa issuance and admission decisions are presumptively nonreviewable, many suits must be routed through ultra vires or narrow statutory channels rather than APA merits review.
7) International/trade objections (WTO/GATS) don’t create a domestic cause of action
The GATS Annex on Movement of Natural Persons says the agreement does not apply to measures affecting access to a member’s employment market (and U.S. Mode-4 commitments are limited). In any event, WTO agreements are generally non-self-executing in U.S. courts, so they can’t invalidate a domestic proclamation.
8) Distinguishing prior H-1B litigation (e.g., NAM v. DHS)
Plaintiffs will cite the 2020 injunction against PP 10052. But that case involved a categorical suspension by district court order with limited precedential weight and without the Hawaii holding squarely endorsing the precise mechanism used here (a monetized, time-limited restriction with national-interest waivers). Here the government will argue this is narrower (not a total ban), better tailored, and supported by specific findings, bringing it well within Hawaii/Mandel deference.
---
Bottom line framing (for a motion to dismiss / summary judgment):
1. Threshold: This is a Presidential § 212(f)/§ 215(a) proclamation; APA claims fail under Franklin/Dalton.
2. Merits: The proclamation provides a facially legitimate rationale (labor-market and security findings), is time-limited, and includes waivers → valid under Hawaii/Mandel.
3. Statutory fit: Because this is an entry restriction, not a § 1356(m) user fee, cost-recovery arguments are beside the point; deposits proceed under 31 U.S.C. § 3302.
4. Trade/foreign law: GATS Mode 4 doesn’t apply to employment-market access restrictions and is not self-executing in U.S. courts.
If a court follows Trump v. Hawaii, Mandel, Franklin, and Dalton, the $100,000 payment requirement—properly characterized as a condition on entry under § 212(f)/§ 215(a)—has a credible path to survive judicial review.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49285585) |
Date: September 19th, 2025 5:22 PM Author: coiffed free-loading home preventive strike
cry birdshits! this is never gonna happen, pajeets are here to stay
1. Authority Over Immigration Fees
Congress sets immigration law. The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) governs visas, including H-1B.
USCIS (part of DHS) sets fees, but only within authority granted by Congress. Under 8 U.S.C. §1356(m), USCIS may charge fees to recover the “full costs of providing adjudication services,” but those fees must be reasonably tied to costs, not arbitrary revenue raising.
President cannot set fees directly. The President can issue executive orders or influence agency rulemaking, but fees must still comply with the law and administrative procedure.
2. Statutory Issues
A $100,000 fee is not “cost recovery.” Adjudicating an H-1B petition costs a few hundred dollars, not six figures. That gap would be indefensible under the statute.
Congress has in the past set supplemental fees (e.g., the $4,000 fee on some large H-1B/L-1 employers under Pub. L. 111-230), but those required specific legislation, not presidential action.
3. Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
To raise fees, DHS/USCIS must go through notice-and-comment rulemaking.
An arbitrary $100,000 fee would be vulnerable to challenge as arbitrary and capricious under the APA, since it isn’t tied to costs or statutory purpose.
4. Constitutional Issues
Nondelegation & separation of powers: Only Congress can authorize revenue-raising measures of this scale.
Due process & equal protection: A fee so excessive that it effectively bars access could be challenged as unconstitutional discrimination (though courts usually defer heavily in immigration).
5. International/Trade Issues
The U.S. has obligations under WTO/GATS Mode 4 and treaties with India and others. A $100,000 fee targeted at H-1Bs could be argued as a trade barrier or violation of treaty commitments.
6. Practical Reality
If a president tried this by executive order, lawsuits would be filed immediately by:
Tech companies
Immigration advocacy groups
Possibly foreign governments
Courts would likely strike it down quickly as beyond executive authority and contrary to statute.
✅ Bottom line:
The president cannot legally charge $100,000 per H-1B visa without new legislation from Congress. Any attempt to do so unilaterally would run into statutory, administrative, constitutional, and international law problems, and would almost certainly be invalidated in court.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49284904) |
 |
Date: September 19th, 2025 10:20 PM Author: Infuriating step-uncle's house death wish
Lmao
1) It’s not a USCIS “fee” at all—it’s a lawful condition on entry imposed by the President
The White House proclamation does not purport to change USCIS’s fee schedule under 8 U.S.C. § 1356(m). It uses the President’s independent authority under INA § 212(f) and § 215(a) to “suspend” or “impose…restrictions” on the entry of a class of nonimmigrants when he finds their entry “detrimental” to U.S. interests. The proclamation restricts entry of H-1B workers outside the U.S. unless the employer has made a $100,000 payment, for a defined 12-month period, with national-interest waivers available. That is a classic § 212(f)/§ 215(a) entry restriction—not an agency user fee.
2) Supreme Court precedent gives the President very broad § 212(f)/§ 215(a) leeway
In Trump v. Hawaii, the Court emphasized § 212(f) “exudes deference” and upheld sweeping entry restrictions so long as the President articulates a facially legitimate rationale. Here, the proclamation recites labor-market and national-security findings and tailors the measure (time-limited; outside-U.S. only; national-interest waivers). Under Kleindienst v. Mandel, that easily clears the “facially legitimate and bona fide” threshold. Sale v. Haitian Centers Council likewise recognizes robust presidential power in the entry context.
3) The APA doesn’t apply to the President; agencies can implement immediately under recognized exceptions
Challenges framed as “arbitrary and capricious fee-setting” miss the mark: a presidential proclamation is not subject to APA notice-and-comment, and the President is not an “agency.” See Franklin v. Massachusetts and Dalton v. Specter. Any implementing instructions by DHS/DOS ride the foreign-affairs and/or good-cause exceptions in 5 U.S.C. § 553(a)(1) and § 553(b)(B), particularly where the proclamation itself supplies the governing rule of decision (no entry/visa issuance absent the payment).
4) § 1356(m) “cost-recovery” limits are irrelevant here
Petitioners will argue a six-figure amount can’t be cost-tethered under § 1356(m). But the government answer is simple: this payment is not a USCIS adjudication fee—it is a condition on entry imposed by the President under § 212(f)/§ 215(a). As such, § 1356(m) and OMB Circular A-25 don’t constrain the President’s proclamation. To the extent funds are collected, they are deposited consistent with the Miscellaneous Receipts Statute, 31 U.S.C. § 3302, avoiding any “unlawful revenue-raising” theory.
5) “Major Questions” and post-Chevron arguments don’t move the needle
Loper Bright (no Chevron) and West Virginia v. EPA (major questions) target agency gap-filling. Here, Congress itself spoke clearly in § 212(f): the President may “impose…any restrictions” on entry he deems appropriate upon a detriment finding. Courts have already treated § 212(f) as an unusually explicit delegation, and Hawaii controls the standard of review. Even if “major questions” were invoked, the clear-statement is in § 212(f)’s text, repeatedly upheld by the Court.
6) Constitutional claims face the plenary-power and consular nonreviewability wall
Noncitizens abroad have minimal constitutional protections in the entry context; U.S. employers have no fundamental right to sponsor a particular foreign worker. Kerry v. Din reaffirms that citing a statutory ground or stated rationale suffices. Under Mandel, courts don’t “look behind” a facially legitimate reason. And because visa issuance and admission decisions are presumptively nonreviewable, many suits must be routed through ultra vires or narrow statutory channels rather than APA merits review.
7) International/trade objections (WTO/GATS) don’t create a domestic cause of action
The GATS Annex on Movement of Natural Persons says the agreement does not apply to measures affecting access to a member’s employment market (and U.S. Mode-4 commitments are limited). In any event, WTO agreements are generally non-self-executing in U.S. courts, so they can’t invalidate a domestic proclamation.
8) Distinguishing prior H-1B litigation (e.g., NAM v. DHS)
Plaintiffs will cite the 2020 injunction against PP 10052. But that case involved a categorical suspension by district court order with limited precedential weight and without the Hawaii holding squarely endorsing the precise mechanism used here (a monetized, time-limited restriction with national-interest waivers). Here the government will argue this is narrower (not a total ban), better tailored, and supported by specific findings, bringing it well within Hawaii/Mandel deference.
---
Bottom line framing (for a motion to dismiss / summary judgment):
1. Threshold: This is a Presidential § 212(f)/§ 215(a) proclamation; APA claims fail under Franklin/Dalton.
2. Merits: The proclamation provides a facially legitimate rationale (labor-market and security findings), is time-limited, and includes waivers → valid under Hawaii/Mandel.
3. Statutory fit: Because this is an entry restriction, not a § 1356(m) user fee, cost-recovery arguments are beside the point; deposits proceed under 31 U.S.C. § 3302.
4. Trade/foreign law: GATS Mode 4 doesn’t apply to employment-market access restrictions and is not self-executing in U.S. courts.
If a court follows Trump v. Hawaii, Mandel, Franklin, and Dalton, the $100,000 payment requirement—properly characterized as a condition on entry under § 212(f)/§ 215(a)—has a credible path to survive judicial review.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49285586) |
Date: September 19th, 2025 5:26 PM Author: Stirring university brethren
180
too many Indians who then hire nothing but Indians
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49284915) |
Date: September 19th, 2025 5:47 PM Author: coiffed free-loading home preventive strike
some are now saying trump is just signing a "PROCLAMATION" which doesnt amount to anything, ljl is this is actually true and its not an executive order at least
he really knows his supporteers are just dumb as shit
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49284954) |
Date: September 19th, 2025 6:15 PM Author: sticky piazza
This sounds likely?
Almost certainly illegal and likely to be struck down in court. Congress has only authorized the government to set fees to recover the cost of adjudicating the application. There is no statutory authority to impose fees designed to limit the use of a visa.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49284998) |
Date: September 19th, 2025 6:17 PM Author: Confused Maniacal Headpube
YOU ARE DONE HERE SHITSKINS
1800000000000000000000000000 FUCK SHIT EATING DRAVIDIAN TURDS
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49285005) |
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Date: September 19th, 2025 7:40 PM Author: underhanded point stock car
To be fair,
CR this is why America hasn't participated in a war for many decades now. Congress has simply refused to declare war. One weird trick!
*drools on self*
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49285223) |
Date: September 19th, 2025 7:40 PM Author: underhanded point stock car
To be fair,
Lmao @ Tommy literally MELTING DOWN AND LOSING HIS GODDAMN MOTHERFUCKING MIND ITT.
We love to see it, don't we, folx?!
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49285225) |
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Date: September 20th, 2025 4:03 PM Author: underhanded point stock car
To be fair,
1. DENIAL
2. ANGER
3. BARGAINING (NOTE: YOU ARE CURRENTLY HERE, SAAR)
>> "I don't give a shit, whatever Saar. America is only furking itself with this dumb move, ackkkkkkkshually this is great news... FOR INDIA! Lol stupid birdshits never not self-pwning, just you wait, frankly maybe Genius Modhi even pushed Dumbass Drumpfth to do this because it's going to be sooooo amazing for India's economy..."
4. DEPRESSION
5. ACCEPTANCE
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49287054) |
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Date: September 20th, 2025 1:16 AM Author: Flesh Spectacular Pisswyrm
- You can tariff companies still offshoring, that might be next
- American market is huge, tech is only 10-15% of the overall economy. You are greatly overestimating importance of these turds
- Even if all these jobs don’t come back it should ease pressures on domestic housing
- If these Indians can do these jobs in India why do companies choose to bring them over?
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49285888) |
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Date: September 20th, 2025 1:26 AM Author: coiffed free-loading home preventive strike
there's no tariffs on services, faggot. its not permissible, see majesty of the law: Tariffs are traditionally duties on imports of goods. Services are not “imported” in the same way as physical products, so tariffs in the classic sense don’t apply.
all fortune 500 comps are tech comps now, even walmart is a tech comp basically as it derives so much from online sales and needs tech for other shit like inventory
the amt of h1b is just a few 100k, it will have no impact on housing u retarded pedo worshipper
the comps already have increasingly been moving jerbs to india, go read abt GCC, ever furking big US comp has a GCC in furking india now.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49285905) |
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Date: September 20th, 2025 4:07 PM Author: underhanded point stock car
To be fair,
OK good so it sounds like this is both simultaneously NBD who gives a shit, and, also, a super stupid and consequential mistake in which America is shooting itself in the foot (typical birdshit retardation). Wow what are the odds.
In other words, this is literally a "win-win" for you, Tommy. Total Pajeet victory over stupid birdshits on every level, massive birdshit selfpwn LOLOLOL.
And yet you seem extremely MAF ITT... why is that, Saar?
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49287061) |
Date: September 20th, 2025 1:28 AM Author: coiffed free-loading home preventive strike
ChatGPT predicts this is gonna be a HUGE boom for US workers!
3. Predicted Migration of Jobs
Let’s assume ~85,000 H-1Bs are issued annually (the cap, plus some exemptions).
Today, perhaps 60–70% are filled by Indian nationals.
If the $100k fee stands:
Maybe 10–20% of those hires still go through (for critical, unique roles).
80–90% vanish, with those jobs shifting offshore.
Numbers:
Out of ~60k Indian H-1B slots annually → only ~10k would survive.
~50k jobs/year would instead be created in India or in alternative hubs.
4. Macro Impact
Over 5 years → ~250k jobs shift away from the U.S. to India and elsewhere.
India’s IT services export market ($250B+) would absorb much of this demand.
Canada & Mexico could also see big booms as “nearshore” options, since U.S. firms will want time-zone overlap without the fee.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49285912) |
Date: September 20th, 2025 1:38 AM Author: indecent set doctorate
This is one of the best things Trump has ever done.
It’s so good it definitely came from Stephen Miller.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49285933) |
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Date: September 20th, 2025 1:41 AM Author: coiffed free-loading home preventive strike
all MAGA birdshit retards care abt is the pain they perceive others suffering, not on whether shit is actually good policy
its hilarous, u are gonna destroy the US tech industry then cheer that it wasnt needed or NBD
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49285939)
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Date: September 20th, 2025 4:10 PM Author: underhanded point stock car
To be fair,
*Checks stonk market + crypto portfolio*
CR, just like Drumpfth's horrible tariffs crashed the American economy and destroyed trillions in American wealth. Why won't you stupid birdshits just listen to the experts?!
*Turns on CNN and adjusts double face mask as I prepare to nervously leave my house and go get my 45th round of Covid booster shots*
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5777658&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=4973486#49287068) |
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