Saturday, May 9, 2026

Trump phone cancelled? Outrage grows over delays and deposit concerns

Yet another scam from the Trump crime family. 

https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/1402011-trump-phone-cancelled-outrage-grows-over-delays-and-deposit-concerns

Trump phone cancelled? Outrage grows over delays and deposit concerns

Trump phone was announced in June 2025 by Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump

Published May 09, 2026
Trump phone cancelled? Outrage grows over delays and deposit concerns

Trump Mobile has drawn sharp customer criticism after pre-order buyers of its gold-colored T1 smartphone reported receiving emails indicating their devices would not ship.

The venture, announced in June 2025 by Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, collected deposits from hundreds of thousands of customers for the $499 Android device, originally promised for August 2025 delivery.

Trump phone cancelled? Outrage grows over delays and deposit concerns
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Social media reactions on X reflect widespread frustration among supporters.


 One post stated: “Trump Supporters are flipping out because Don Jr & Eric have allegedly scammed them & took all their deposits for the Illustrious Gold Trump phone which they’ve never received & probably never will. They also didn’t read the fine print because there’s no refunds on them period!”

Another user wrote: “So, the Trumpers who signed up for the $500 Trump phone YEARS ago and have still not received them just got an email saying they will NEVER receive them and.....wait for it.....wait for it...... Trump's keeping their deposit.”

A third post noted: “In regards to Trump Phone, this came from you. Yes, reports from buyers and multiple outlets confirm that pre-order customers for the Trump Mobile T1 'golden' phone (announced ~2025 with ~$100 deposits, full price around $500) received emails this week stating the devices won't ship and deposits are non-refundable. No phones have been delivered after months of delays. Fine print noted risks, but complaints are widespread.”

Although some customers and social media users are describing the project as cancelled, Trump Mobile has issued no official statement confirming the cancellation of the T1 smartphone program.

Observes said the phone delays are due to real supply chain and US manufacturing cost issues, not a personal decision by Trump. 

They are of the view that the company policy still allows full refunds on request but Business execution fell short of the hype. 


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Monday, April 20, 2026

What would Jesus do?

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Iran's president condemns 'insult' to Pope Leo XIV, calls 'desecration of Jesus' unacceptable | Snopes.com

https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/trump-pope-iran-president/?utm_source=mail.snopes.com&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_campaign=was-trump-s-doordash-grandma-a-paid-actor-facts-behind-top-rumors

Confirmed: Iran's president condemns 'insult' to Pope Leo XIV, calls 'desecration of Jesus' unacceptable

Masoud Pezeshkian's post came about 12 hours after U.S. President Donald Trump attacked Pope Leo XIV on Truth Social.

Published April 14, 2026

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, a Middle Eastern man with greying hair, conducts an interview with Iranian state media.
Image courtesy of khamenei.ir accessed via Wikicommons, @drpezeshkian on X, illustrated by Snopes

Click on the above link to read the entire Snopes article confirming Pezeshkian's statement. Yes, it's politically motivated, but what does it say about our so-called president that the Iranian leader comes down closer to Jesus than does Trump? 
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Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Drinking the Kool-Aid


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Monday, April 13, 2026

anti-Christ

Interesting. The image from Truth Social didn't follow through in my email, even though I can see it in my record folder. One more try, this time with a URL from CBS News: 

 https://assets2.cbsnewsstatic.com/hub/i/r/2026/04/13/6c6fd1c6-5177-4b36-bd94-86b4f0730628/thumbnail/620x768/19057b5a7c6603a561634d75aeec3390/trump-jesus-post.jpg 

What IS that black winged figure in the upper background? 

Glenn


 

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anti-Christ

This is a TruthSocial post from Donald Trump's account, @realDonaldTrump. I am sure that Trump's supporters would all publicly call themselves good Christians. Wonder what they have to say about this? (Outrage, from the news reports.) And what, I wonder, is that black winged figure at the top center of the image? Just FYI, Trump claims he thought the picture was of him as a doctor. Uh-huh. I know his sycophants won't invoke the 25th Amendment, but they should. 

Glenn 

 

 

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Monday, April 6, 2026

King George III, 250 years later.


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-KkbwtQgjc

Those who fail to learn from history by Bill Bramhall for April 6, 2026 | GoComics

https://www.gocomics.com/bill-bramhall/2026/04/06












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Wednesday, April 1, 2026

JD Vance Says UFOs Are ‘Demons,’ Not Aliens

JD Vance Thinks UFOs Are ‘Demons,’ Not Aliens, as He Admits to Obsessing Over the UFO Files

Let's keep this guy away from NASA. 

https://people.com/jd-vance-says-ufos-are-demons-not-aliens-11936660

Recommended viewing, if you subscribe to Apple TV (The only Apple product I have ever purchased): "For All Mankind." 

 

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Saturday, March 21, 2026

Mission Accomplished


This cartoon is titled “War Planning Meeting”. Donald Trump has a juice box and sits at a table with two high-ranking military men and Pete Hegseth. Hegseth looks drunk and has a bottle of booze in his jacket. One of the military men says, “Next time, let’s have one of these BEFORE we attack..”
This cartoon shows Donald Trump, David Ellison, and Bari Weiss watching Spongebob do the news at CBS. Spongebob waves two American flags and cheers a sign that shows the Middle East with the headline, “TRUMP IS WINNING!” Trump says, “He’s bright! He’s energetic! And he’ll attract younger viewers!”
Bramhall's World for Monday, March 9, 2026. (Bill Bramhall / New York Daily News)
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Friday, March 20, 2026

Fwd: The latest distraction


Thursday, March 5, 2026

Trump wants regime change in Iran. History suggests that could lead to a long, complicated struggle

Trump wants regime change in Iran. History suggests that could lead to a long, complicated struggle

By Matt Field | Analysis | March 4, 2026

Bay of Pigs captives.The US-orchestrated regime-change operation in Cuba in 1961 known as the Bay of Pigs invasion ended in a failure that only strengthened Cuba's ties to the Soviet Union, the opposite of the hoped-for result. Credit: Miguel Vinas via Wikimedia Commons.

There was a time not too long ago when President Donald Trump and his allies criticized Democratics for their supposed penchant for war. "KAMALA WILL SEND YOUR SONS TO WAR," Trump aide Stephen Miller posted on social media during the 2024 presidential campaign. As a candidate, Trump claimed many times that if he won he would end the war between Russia and Ukraine in a day, perhaps even before officially taking office.

After his inauguration, Trump boasted about ending wars and even made an unsuccessful bid for a Nobel Peace Prize—before later accepting someone else's. But in year two of his presidency, with US missiles raining down on Tehran, the president's time as self-described peacemaker appears to be over. Instead Trump has taken the United States into the kind of foreign entanglement he once decried.

Yes, Iran's leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is now dead. And few, if any, commentators in the United States appear to be sorry about that. Yet the implications of the quick decapitation of Iran's leadership remain unclear. As history shows, when it comes to forcibly changing the government of a foreign adversary, an initial victory can frequently be illusory.

Below are six notable cases of attempted regime change through military intervention. In each case, the result was years or even decades of unintended consequences.

Ukraine, February 2022. Russian President Vladimir Putin sent his military into Ukraine in a full-scale invasion, arguing that the government there posed a threat to Russia. Years earlier, Ukrainians had ousted a Russian-backed president, and the country was veering further from Moscow's sphere of influence. When Russian tanks and aircraft poured over the Ukrainian border in a massive show of force, the United States feared a rout and offered to evacuate President Volodymyr Zelensky. The Russian advance fizzled, however, and images of its tanks charred and abandoned spread on the internet. Four years later, the two countries remain locked in a stalemate, with no clear end to the war in sight.

Libya, March 2011. As Libyan strongman Muammar Gaddafi's forces bore down on rebels in the city of Benghazi, the United States and allies began airstrikes to stall the assault and prevent a humanitarian crisis. Gaddafi had threatened to show "no mercy" to his enemies. The UN Security Council called for a no-fly zone over Libya and passed a resolution authorizing "all necessary measures" to protect civilians. "We will deny the regime arms, cut off its supply of cash, assist the opposition, and work with other nations to hasten the day when Gaddafi leaves power," former President Barack Obama told an audience after the US air barrage had begun.

The strikes changed the trajectory of the civil war in Libya and led to the downfall of Gaddafi, who was found in a drainage pipe by rebels, brutalized, and killed. Gaddafi had been a long-time antagonist of the West. Under his rule, Libya had been a prominent supporter of terrorism, including the Lockerbie bombing that blew a Pan Am jetliner out of the sky. His government had once tried to build nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons programs. But Gaddafi's downfall—which came just seven months after the US intervention—did not lead to lasting peace. It led instead to years of civil war and instability that contributed to conflicts in other countries.

Despite US efforts, Obama told The Atlantic in 2016, "Libya is a mess."

Iraq, March 2003. Following the 9/11 terror attacks, the George W. Bush administration began a long push to make the case that Iraq—which had no known connections to the al Qaeda attacks—also posed a grave risk to the United States and the world. The administration branded Iraq as part of the "axis of evil," along with North Korea and Iran. Though UN inspectors had been painstakingly dismantling Iraq's weapons of mass destruction programs before the 2003 invasion, the Bush administration argued that Iraq's efforts had continued. On March 17, three days before the US assault began, Bush gave Iraqi President Saddam Hussein 48 hours to leave the country.

The operation to crush Saddam and his military proceeded quickly; within weeks Baghdad was in control of allied forces. In a notoriously embarrassing moment, Bush gave a speech on the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier in front of a giant "Mission Accomplished" banner. The mission, of course, wasn't accomplished. Far from it. The war soon morphed into an Iraqi insurgency. The year 2007 proved to be the deadliest for US troops, with 900 deaths. The security situation in Iraq remained tenuous for years. In 2014, three years after US troops had left the country, the Islamic State (ISIS) terrorist group captured a large swath of Iraq, incorporating it into a so-called caliphate. Though US airstrikes and support to Iraq sent ISIS into retreat, to this day, security in the country remains a challenge.

Afghanistan, October 2001. Bush sent US forces to Afghanistan to topple the Taliban regime that had ruled the country since 1996 and provided a haven from which Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda plotted the September 11, 2001 terror attacks. "The Taliban must act and act immediately," Bush told Congress. "They will hand over the terrorists, or they will share in their fate." The Taliban didn't comply with Bush's edict, and a US-led coalition that included anti-Taliban fighters in Afghanistan attacked. Within two months, the Taliban surrendered its last stronghold, and the "war in Afghanistan seemed to be coming to a surprisingly rapid end," as The New York Times wrote. But then a deeply flawed US-backed government took power and what followed was a seemingly endless conflict that saw 2,300 US military deaths from 2001 to 2021, a small fraction of the 179,000 Afghan civilians, national police, nongovernmental organization staff, allied troops, and others who died. The war ended for the United States when former President Joe Biden ordered a withdrawal of remaining US forces in 2021, allowing the Taliban to rapidly retake power.

"I will not repeat the mistakes we've made in the past—the mistake of staying and fighting indefinitely in a conflict that is not in the national interest of the United States, of doubling down on a civil war in a foreign country, of attempting to remake a country through the endless military deployments of US forces," Biden said at the time.

Afghanistan, December 1979. The Soviet Union sent thousands of troops to Afghanistan, occupying Kabul and large parts of the country in an attempt to install a friendly, socialist government that could withstand an Islamic insurrection. Before the invasion, the fractious Afghan government had been seeking to bring communist reforms to Islamic tribal areas, fueling a rebellion. The Soviets intervened to prop up the government—including by killing and replacing its leader. While Moscow envisioned a limited role, it increasingly found its troops involved in fighting. "Soviet leaders did not expect a protracted and costly involvement in Afghanistan when they approved the Soviet military intervention in December 1979," Artemy Kalinovsky, an expert on the Soviet Union at Temple University, wrote in a 2009 paper in the Journal of Cold War Studies, adding that "the months following the invasion were key in turning the intervention into a decade-long war."

In the end, The Soviet Union spent billions of dollars in a war that cost millions of lives, according to a US State Department history. The Red Army had not been able to defeat the Mujahideen insurgents and pulled out of Afghanistan in 1989. It left a "shattered country" that was ripe for the Taliban takeover a few years later.

Bay of Pigs, Cuba, April 1961. There are cases when regime change operations seem to go smoothly at first. The Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba—orchestrated by the US Central Intelligence Agency after Fidel Castro's movement toppled dictator Fulgencio Batista—was not one of these cases. Well before the invasion, Castro's government learned that US-backed counterrevolutionaries were training in Florida and Guatemala. From early on, the secret plan was not so secret. Part of the plot involved American planes made to look like those of Cuban defectors to obscure the role of the United States. Pilots were to use them to neutralize Castro's air force ahead of the invasion. But after the bombing runs, the US ambassador to the United Nations, attempting to exonerate his country, showed off photos of the planes, inadvertently revealing that they were American. Castro's planes had different nose cones. When the invasion forces landed in the swamps of southern Cuba, Castro's army was there to meet them, thwarting the counter revolution before it even began. The fiasco had the effect of drawing Castro's island regime closer to the Soviet Union. A little over a year later, the United States and the Soviet Union faced off in the Cuban Missile Crisis after the Soviets stationed nuclear missiles on the island to prevent another invasion and US spy planes discovered them. Today, Cuba is the midst of severe economic crisis, but the heirs to Castro's revolution remain in control of the island nearly 70 years after the Bay of Pigs.


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Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Fwd: And now my head hurts

With no apologies for the misspelling.



So far, so good


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Sunday, February 22, 2026

What's in a Name?

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Saturday, February 21, 2026

A supreme takedown for baby trump



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Friday, February 20, 2026

The Pedo files

This is a two-panel cartoon. The left panel is titled “Justice” and shows a scene in the UK where a police officer leads the former Prince Andrew away in handcuffs. The right panel takes place in the US and is titled “Just ICE.” It depicts a masked ICE agent leading a little girl away in handcuffs.

This cartoon depicts the former Prince Andrew in a dungeon, where he is chained to the wall and hangs by his handcuffed arms. A man dressed like an old-timey judge in wig and robe says, “Sorry, Andrew, Nobody but Trump believes the Epstein files are a Democrat hoax.”

Steve Bannon and Jeffrey Epstein are both shirtless and sit together in a hot tub oozing with gross water, fetid steam, the words “Sleaze” and fish bones floating on the surface. Bannon says, “This? I was just doing research for my documentary!”

Pam Bondi is pictured in an inset at the top left corner of this cartoon. She says, “I am a career prosecutor, and I have spent my entire career fighting for VICTIMS.” In the rest of the cartoon she is depicted as a small figure hugging Donald Trump’s tie and says, “And I will continue to do so.”

King Charles speaks to Donald Trump in this cartoon as the former Prince Andrew is dragged away by two police officers. Andrew is dressed only in a pair of boxer shorts. The king is dressed in his formal attire. Trump is dressed in a robe and crown. The king says to Trump, “No one is above the law.” Trump angrily responds, “Some king you are.”

Thursday, February 12, 2026

Every snowflake is unique

https://theweek.com/cartoons/political-cartoons-february-12-2026

This cartoon is titled “Every Snowflake is Unique” and depicts three different supporters of Donald Trump. The man at left says, “The halftime show hurt my feelings!” A woman in the middle with a Q-anon shirt says, “The truth of American history makes me feel bad!” The man at right with a “Screw your feelings” T-shirt says, “I’m afraid of transgender athletes!”Pam Bondi is at right and points at a distressed female victim of Jeffrey Epstein that sits, her head down, on the left side of this political cartoon. Bondi says, “The Dow is over $50,000! That’s what we should be talking about!”
(Image credit: Dave Whamond / Copyright 2025 Cagle Cartoons, Inc.)

This cartoon is titled “The Quid Pro Quo Tour.” Ghislaine Maxwell wears a cowboy hat and plays an acoustic guitar in a darkened jail cell. She sings, “I beg your pardon … and then I promise you a rose garden.”
(Image credit: Michael Ramirez / Copyright 2025 Creators Syndicate)

Jeff Bezos stands with his finger on a lightswitch that is part of a wall with the Washington Post masthead and “Democracy Dies in Darkness”. The wall is barely lit by a nearby light bulb. Bezos says, “Why is this light still on? Electricity is expensive!”(Image credit: David Horsey / Copyright 2025 Tribune Content Agency)

This cartoon is titled “The Lyin’ King” and takes place on the lawn outside the White House. President Barack Obama is here dressed in a suit, and is with Michelle Obama, dressed in a professional-looking outfit. Both look upset. Donald Trump is drawn as a lion with a cell phone. He says, “A staffer did it. Are you the help?”


(Image credit: Jack Ohman / Copyright 2025 Tribune Content Agency)

Forward: Things that make you go "hmmm."

Mus' be gremlins. 

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

The Trump Pipeline

Political cartoon
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Sunday, January 25, 2026

131 evil ICE agent cartoons

And that's not even counting the murder Saturday in Minneapolis of the 37-year-old US citizen and Veteran's Administration ICU nurse by Trump's goose-stepping NAZI goons. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m5z_REsKdI8

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Reply: He actually posted this




On Sat, Jan 24, 2026, at 9:14 PM, Glenn Meyer wrote:

Saturday, January 24, 2026

He actually posted this

Friday, January 23, 2026

Welcome to the club

https://theweek.com/cartoons/political-cartoons-january-23-2026

A man and a woman sit on a couch watching a large television. The image on the screen is a group of angry-eyed ICE agents that carry weapons and are masked. The man says, “What happened to all the gun nuts who said they needed their arsenals to deter government tyranny?” The woman points a finger at the screen and responds, “They joined ICE.”
This cartoon is called “Mar-A-NATO.” An angry Donald Trump, his belly hanging over his belt, is outside a club flying the NATO flag. Trump carries a putter named “sledge putter” and is eating a bag of “Greenland Rare Earth Chips.” NATO members are in the background watching and one says, “Maybe we don’t want to be in a club that would have him as a member.”
This editorial cartoon is titled “New Plan For Greenland.” It depicts a large, icy cliff that rises above the coast and a small, Greenland city. A large cave has been cut out of the side of the cliff and labeled “Epstein Files Repository.” There’s a hole leading down to the cave where someone can drop things. Nearby, a ship from the Department of Justice is on the water. It’s overloaded with boxes and moves toward the cave.
This cartoon is titled “ICE Agent Group Photo.” It shows a mob of masked insurrectionists outside the U.S. Capitol building. There is a “TRUMP” flag, a Confederate flag, and the Gadsden “Don’t Tread on Me” with a coiled snake.
A woman and man leave a movie theatre where the words “Melania: The Movie” are prominently displayed on the marquee. The man says, “The CGI was terrible. Real people don’t look or act like that.”
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Trump phone cancelled? Outrage grows over delays and deposit concerns

Yet another scam from the Trump crime family.  https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/1402011-trump-phone-cancelled-outrage-grows-over-delays-and...