#351 2025-08-23 10:34:15
It's more than half the country that hates him now.
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#352 2025-08-23 21:41:09
Chickens come home to roost. And the problem will only get worse when Medicaid cuts kick in.
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#353 2025-08-24 13:53:48
"What I see as an Italian each time I saw that specific hat on Trump"
This was an exposition held in Rome one year before the Italian entrance in WW2. The top text says "autarchism" (ruling based on individualism and rejection of the government - ironic since it was commissioned by the government) and the bottom text says "Mussolini is always right"
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#354 2025-08-29 10:42:58
Complicit:
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#355 2025-08-30 10:52:28
Yeah, I'll be happy when all of these limousine liberals are in their graves along with their quasi-religious conservative counterparts. Neither outlook is valid, or acceptable.
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#356 2025-08-31 21:53:06
Jumping The Gun:
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#357 2025-09-01 07:16:34
Eh, it was fun while it lasted.
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#358 2025-09-01 09:29:09
#359 2025-09-01 19:15:29
Single-handedly destroying everything of valued in this country. It's going to take at least a generation to clean up after this fuck.
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#360 Today 14:21:35
We're in the Upside Down now...
Newsmax sues Fox News, calling it a monopoly that abuses its power
By Liam Reilly, CNN
Updated: 2:02 PM EDT, Wed September 3, 2025
Source: CNN
See Full Web Article
Christopher Ruddy’s pro-Trump channel Newsmax on Wednesday filed an antitrust lawsuit against Fox News, accusing the Rupert Murdoch-owned broadcaster of illegally blocking competition in the right-wing pay-TV market.
The lawsuit, filed in the US District Court for the Southern District of Florida against the Fox News Network and its parent company, Fox Corp, accused Fox of engaging in “an exclusionary scheme to increase and maintain its dominance in the market for US right-leaning pay TV news.”
“Fox’s control over this must-have news channel gives it significant market power and leverage to impose onerous demands on distributors of its content,” Newsmax alleges in the lawsuit. “Fox leverages this market power to coerce distributors into not carrying or into marginalizing other right-leaning news channels, including Newsmax.”
Newsmax accused Fox of engaging in multiple anticompetitive behaviors: Granting access to Fox’s content so long as distributors don’t carry other right-wing channels; imposing fees if distributors carry other channels; and building barriers into carriage deals that bar other channels from competing. Newsmax claims that it could have achieved better success if it weren’t for the trio of measures.
In a statement, Ruddy, the company’s founder and chief executive, said “Fox may have profited from exclusionary contracts and intimidation tactics for years, but those days are over.”
Newsmax declined to comment. Fox did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Newsmax is seeking monetary damages and wants the court to restrict Fox from maintaining its allegedly “exclusionary contracts and monopolistic practices.”
“This lawsuit is about restoring fairness to the market and ensuring that Americans have real choice in the news they watch,” Ruddy said. “If we prevail, Fox’s damages could be tripled under federal law – an outcome that would send a powerful message to any company that thinks it can monopolize public discourse.”
A fractured right-wing media landscape
The lawsuit between two far-right, pro-Trump outlets marks a notable fracture in the once-cohesive world of MAGA Media.
While both networks regularly court pro-Trump conservatives by parroting the Trump administration’s agenda on their airwaves, the lawsuit showcases Newsmax’s ambitions to carve up Fox’s conservative, pro-Trump audience – even as Fox’s ratings have soared during the second Trump administration. The network regularly ranks No. 1 in viewership, not just in conservative circles, but in all cable news.
Newsmax has enjoyed ratings success, too, during the same period. In April, the Ruddy-owned channel reported that eight million cable viewers had watched Newsmax but not Fox News during the first quarter, with prime-time viewership up 20% year-over-year. In August, the channel reported having 26 million quarterly viewers.
The complaint also pits two conservative media moguls against one another as they vie for President Donald Trump’s attention.
Ruddy’s network, which settled with Dominion Voting Systems in August after falsely accusing the company of rigging the 2020 presidential election, has over the years housed several Fox personalities, including Eric Bolling and Greta Van Susteren, as well as other prominent right-wing conservatives, such as ex-Trump White House official Sebastian Gorka and Dick Morris.
Ruddy, who boasts of being a longtime friend to Trump, saw his network partner with the president’s Trump Media as part of Truth+’s global launch in July, a de facto show of the president’s support even as Newsmax was beamed to conservatives globally.
Murdoch and Fox, meanwhile, have intermittently found themselves in friendly and hostile territory with Trump. While Trump voraciously consumes the Murdoch-owned network’s content, the president occasionally cools on the network when its anchors criticize his actions.
And despite saying Murdoch is “in a class by himself” in February when Murdoch stopped by the Oval Office, Trump in mid-July filed a libel lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal, its publisher Dow Jones, and News Corp., naming Murdoch, News Corp chief executive Robert Thomson, and two WSJ reporters as defendants.
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#361 Today 17:21:29
[MichaelJacksonEatingPopcorn.GIF]
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