![]() |
| Help me with this crazy thing. |
President Donald J. Trump called House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) and Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) to thank them for passing his signature economic bill. The Big Beautiful Bill Act is going to be law at 7:30pm on Friday.
Fireworks, gloating and watching America countdown to decline.
While the far right influncers are cashing their checks promoting the law, Trump will celebrate his fifth Independence Day at the White House.
Also, the U.S. Park Service, U.S. Secret Service, Washington, DC Metropolitan Police and the National Guard are expected to be in action.
Protests are expected to happen in the wake of the law's passage.
In the celebration of the law, Trump will host a UFC Fight on the South Lawn and invite Dana White, Kid Rock, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., FBI Director Kash Patel and deputy Dan Bongino. Johnson, several Republican House members and Senate members will be there as well.
Congress job approval 22%.
President Donald J. Trump's job approval is 36%.
Vice President JD Vance's job approval is 43%.
Democrats have a favorable of 39%.
Republicans have a favorable of 43%.
Most Americans believe the country is going in the wrong direction.
The economy is the most important issue facing Americans.
Rep. Derrick Van Orden (R-WI) represents the 3rd Congressional District of Wisconsin. His district covers Eau Claire, Wisconsin Rapids, Stevens Point, La Crosse, Chippewa Falls, Memomonie, Lancaster, Tomah and part of Wisconsin Dells.
He is a former U.S. Navy Seal who is programmed with hate and thoughts of violence. He enjoys watching Arabs die. He is a staunch supporter of Israel.
Van Orden went off on a library page over a display of LGBTQ books at a pride month section of a Prairie du Chien library.
Apparently he enjoys Americans suffering. He made an offensive post which he later deleted. He claimed it was all in error. Just like all the DOGE cuts.
All the federal employees who lost their jobs will suffer more. They will lose their benefits, find it difficult to get Medicaid, food assistance and unemployment.
Van Orden had posted on social media his joy to see Americans lose their healthcare and food necessities.
Van Orden said Thursday that his enthusiastic reply to a social media post highlighting the loss of school meals and health care for millions of Americans was a mistake.
His district is Republican leaning and it may be considered a swing since it has a rating of R+3.
Democrats quickly pounced on the remarks.
Sen. Chris Murphy reacted.
Republican Congressman Van Orden.
— Chris Murphy 🟧 (@ChrisMurphyCT) July 3, 2025
You need to understand these people know exactly how badly they are hurting people and they love it. It’s sick. pic.twitter.com/UJwOJmU5nQ
The BBB is considered unpopular due to tax cuts for billionaires and heavy cuts to Medicare, Medicaid, SNAP and important subsidies.
The post, made in protest of the Trump-endorsed “Big Beautiful Bill” after it cleared both the House and Senate, stated: “17 million people just lost health care. 18 million kids just lost school meals. 3 million Americans just lost food assistance.”
Van Orden replied to the message with a one-word response: “YES!” — a comment he later claimed was posted in error.
“That was supposed to be a response to a different text. And, all of that is BS,” Van Order then responded, also adding that his initial tweet was “an error” in a separate reply.
Van Orden made headlines earlier this week when student journalist Kenzie Nguyen of Punchbowl reported that the congressman denied Trump influencing his decision for backing the bill and responding that Republicans were “not a bunch of little bitches.”
“No, no, no, I’m not going to allow you to get away with that,” Van Orden reportedly responded. “The president of the United States didn’t give us an assignment. We’re not a bunch of little bitches around here. I’m a member of Congress that represent almost 800,000 Wisconsinites. Is that clear?”
According to MSNBC, on Wednesday, a day before the bill passed Van Orden wrote an urgent letter to Wisconsin’s Democratic governor Tony Evers asking him to approve the state budget to protect the rural hospitals in the area from the cuts he voted for.

No comments:
Post a Comment