/r/50501 Mirror

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Going to turn this into a protest sign just for FOTUS on his birthday.


Originally Posted By u/kweathergirl At 2025-05-28 11:55:18 PM | Source


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Originally Posted By u/economic-rights At 2025-05-29 01:36:27 AM | Source


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Originally Posted By u/Used_Bridge488 At 2025-05-28 10:11:31 PM | Source


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Originally Posted By u/Mediocre-Property-48 At 2025-05-28 08:41:07 PM | Source


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Originally Posted By u/serious_bullet5 At 2025-05-28 09:15:51 PM | Source


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Originally Posted By u/transcendent167 At 2025-05-28 09:11:54 PM | Source


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Originally Posted By u/Kalepa At 2025-05-28 09:44:42 PM | Source


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Originally Posted By u/transcendent167 At 2025-05-28 08:17:42 PM | Source


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Originally Posted By u/Kung-Fu-Magik At 2025-05-28 06:34:05 PM | Source


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Originally Posted By u/snozzbeery At 2025-05-28 07:42:11 PM | Source


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Originally Posted By u/MapleDonutGoblin At 2025-05-28 07:44:31 AM | Source


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Video


Originally Posted By u/serious_bullet5 At 2025-05-28 01:54:30 PM | Source


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“West Point Cadets’ Silent Revolt—Anonymous Graduates and Faculty Reveal Why President Trump Didn’t Shake Their Hands”

By Robert Hawks

May 28, 2025

WEST POINT, NY — In an unprecedented turn of events that unfolded with all the subtlety of a brass band playing “Taps” backwards, President Trump declined to extend his stay at the graduation ceremony of the United States Military Academy, leaving the newly minted second lieutenants’ hands as unsullied by presidential sweat as the honor code itself.

The mainstream media, ever allergic to nuance and eager to maintain their symphony of static, hasn’t said a peep about the real reason for the snub.

But through a series of clandestine interviews with anonymous graduates and equally reticent Academy faculty members, I have unearthed the hidden story of this ceremonial duck-and-cover.

The reason, dear reader, lies within the very marrow of West Point’s ethos: the Honor Code.

For those unfamiliar (or who haven’t been paying attention since the dawn of the republic), the Honor Code stands stark and absolute:

“I will neither lie, nor cheat, nor steal, nor will I tolerate the actions of anyone who does.”

One newly minted officer, who would only identify themselves as “Second Lieutenant K,” offered a hushed explanation:

“We realized that by shaking the hand of a man already convicted of 31 felonies, we’d be tacitly tolerating those actions. It’s not just semantics—under our code, we can’t wink at dishonor and call it ceremony.”

Faculty members, equally cryptic yet unwavering in their adherence to the Honor Code, found themselves wrestling with the potential fallout of the traditional handshake.

“Cadets approached me after final drills,” admitted an anonymous instructor. “They were genuinely concerned. ‘Sir, if I shake his hand, am I violating the code?’ They weren’t being flippant. These are people who signed up to die for principles if called upon—don’t underestimate how seriously they take them.”

Another faculty officer, known only as “Major T,” put it bluntly:

“Look, you can salute the office.

“That’s tradition and lawful.

“But to physically clasp the hand of a man who has lied, cheated, and stolen—when our code demands zero tolerance? That’s not a handshake. That’s an ethical trap.”

The consensus among these sources was clear: A handshake would have become a symbolic endorsement of the very actions the Honor Code forbids.

And it wouldn’t be a momentary lapse either—cadets feared it could haunt their entire careers.

“Years from now,” explained a cadet, “someone might claim that our commissions were tainted—born in an act that violated the very code we swore to uphold.”

Thus, an extraordinary decision was made behind closed doors, framed in the same ironclad logic that has guided this institution since the days of Benedict Arnold’s ghost: better to forego the handshake altogether than compromise the moral backbone of the Corps of Cadets.

The decision, while sparing the graduating class an ethical quagmire, also spared the nation a broadcast spectacle that would have further underlined our national rift:

“Can you imagine,” mused Major T, “an entire line of newly commissioned officers refusing to shake the President’s hand, yet saluting him? It would’ve been the perfect image of our times—honor intact, but unity fractured.”

And so, President Trump’s decision to depart swiftly wasn’t born of political cowardice or personal pique, but of a carefully orchestrated plan to protect the very soul of West Point.

After all, in a world where handshakes can be loaded weapons, even the Commander-in-Chief had to recognize that the Honor Code brooks no compromise.

Or perhaps he simply realized that he’d be exposed.

As for the graduates, they walked away with their honor unsullied, commissions secure, and a story to tell that would never appear on cable news but will echo down the halls of the Academy long after the brass bands fall silent.

In the end, what’s a handshake, really, when compared to the weight of an oath sworn under the long shadow of the Hudson?

After all, even the president can’t break the spine of an honor code written in blood, sweat, and the quiet resolve of those who know that a commission earned in truth must never be tarnished by the stains of another man’s lies.

I did not write this


Originally Posted By u/liss614 At 2025-05-28 08:01:24 PM | Source


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Video


Originally Posted By u/saigonrain At 2025-05-28 10:58:40 AM | Source


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Is anyone else seeing them? I've never seen this kind of straight up propaganda outside of election ads. I submitted feedback to Hulu but what else can we do short of canceling?


Originally Posted By u/mfroomy At 2025-05-28 06:32:30 PM | Source


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If you’re still using any of the META platforms, like it or not you are:

  1. Supporting a pro-MAGA oligarch (Zuckerberg)
  2. Supporting the use of AI at environment-harming scale
  3. Supporting the amplification of hate speech and disinformation
  4. Supporting the indoctrination of people into hate groups

When I chat with folks in real life about pulling the plug on META, most folks have concerns about losing touch with their connections. If you’re my age (GenX), we got along just fine staying in touch with people before Facebook came around. Facebook made us think that quantity of connections is somehow better than quality of connections, and that’s just not the way the world works. Consider how you feel before you open a META app/website and after. Does the platform enrich your life or make you feel better?

Change is hard, but this movement is going to require some sacrifice from each of us, and this isn’t really a huge change in the grand scheme of things.

Note: I’m assuming that anyone involved in 50501 is already off of Xitter, which is worse than META.

Citations (since hyperlinks are wonky on this sub):

  1. https://www.cnn.com/2025/01/07/media/mark-zuckerberg-meta-fact-checking-analysis/index.html
  2. https://www.forbes.com/sites/bernardmarr/2023/05/02/5-amazing-ways-how-meta-facebook-is-using-generative-ai/
  3. https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/social-media/meta-new-hate-speech-rules-allow-users-call-lgbtq-people-mentally-ill-rcna186700
  4. https://www.npr.org/2021/07/13/1015483097/an-ugly-truth-how-facebook-enables-hate-and-disinformation

Originally Posted By u/hikeonpast At 2025-05-28 12:58:02 PM | Source


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We have a right to protest, and while they have been working decently so far, the only way anything can be done is if we stand our ground and refuse to leave until Trump is out of office and put in prison.

We can't do a 1 day, 1 week, 1 month, ect. Protest, we must do a Protest UNTIL he is out of office and not leave a second sooner!


Originally Posted By u/Jmememan At 2025-05-28 03:40:27 PM | Source


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My name is Kat, I'm a girl from Canada. Many of us over here have watched what's happening in the states with horror and empathy. I doubt that will change anytime soon.

My question is, what can I do to assist? I desperately want to lend whatever aid I can to whoever I can in this fight against tyranny, but my options seem so limited. Being trans and a foreigner, coming directly to a protest is simply too extreme a risk.

How can I help? What can I do? If anyone has suggestions please tell me. I feel helpless and I'm ready and willing to put work in.


Originally Posted By u/TheHuuurrrq At 2025-05-28 05:39:53 PM | Source


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The people have spoken; we’re instituting a policy to ban the use of AI on the subreddit. It now qualifies as low-effort posting and posts obviously using AI will be removed for breaking that rule.

We still need more active Moderators, so we rely on the community to report rule breaking posts.


Originally Posted By u/greenascanbe At 2025-05-28 05:39:15 PM | Source


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Video


Originally Posted By u/transcendent167 At 2025-05-28 06:12:45 PM | Source


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May 27, 2025 Heather Cox Richardson

Political scientist Adam Bonica noted last Friday that Trump and the administration suffered a 96% loss rate in federal courts in the month of May. Those losses were nonpartisan: 72.2% of Republican-appointed judges and 80.4% of Democratic-appointed judges ruled against the administration.

The administration sustained more losses today.

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan ruled that 14 states can proceed with their lawsuit against billionaire Elon Musk and the “Department of Government Efficiency.” The administration had tried to dismiss the case, but Chutkan ruled the states had adequately supported their argument that “Musk and DOGE’s conduct is ‘unauthorized by any law.’” “The Constitution does not permit the Executive to commandeer the entire appointments power by unilaterally creating a federal agency…and insulating its principal officer from the Constitution as an ‘advisor’ in name only,” she wrote.

U.S. District Judge Richard Leon struck down Trump’s March 27 executive order targeting the law firm Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr, more commonly known as WilmerHale. This law firm angered Trump by employing Robert Mueller, the Republican-appointed special counsel who oversaw an investigation of the ties between the 2016 Trump campaign and Russian operatives.

Leon, who was appointed to the bench by President George W. Bush, made his anger obvious. “[T]he First Amendment prohibits government officials from retaliating against individuals for engaging in protected speech,” Leon noted. “WilmerHale alleges that ‘[t]he Order blatantly defies this bedrock principle of constitutional law.’” Leon wrote: “I agree!” He went on to strike down the order as unconstitutional.

Today NPR and three Colorado public radio stations sued the Trump administration over Trump’s executive order that seeks to impound congressionally appropriated funds for NPR and PBS. The executive order said the public media stations do not present “a fair, accurate, or unbiased portrayal of current events to taxpaying citizens.” NPR’s David Folkenflik reported White House spokesperson Harrison Fields’s statement today that public media supports “a particular party on the taxpayers’ dime,” and that Trump and his allies have called it “left-wing propaganda.”

The lawsuit calls Trump’s executive order and attempt to withhold funding Congress has already approved “textbook retaliation.” “[W]e are not choosing to do this out of politics,” NPR chief executive officer Katherine Maher told NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly. “We are choosing to do this as a matter of necessity and principle. All of our rights that we enjoy in this democracy flow from the First Amendment: freedom of speech, association, freedom of the press. When we see those rights infringed upon, we have an obligation to challenge them.”

U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis today denied the administration’s motion for a 30-day extension of the deadline for it to answer the complaint in the lawsuit over the rendition of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the Maryland man sent to El Salvador through what the administration said was “administrative error.”

Despite five hearings on the case, the administration’s lawyers didn’t indicate they needed any more time, but today—the day their answer was due—they suddenly asked for 30 more days. Xinis wrote that they “expended no effort in demonstrating good cause. They vaguely complain, in two sentences, to expending ‘significant resources’ engaging in expedited discovery. But these self-described burdens are of their own making. The Court ordered expedited discovery because of [the administration’s] refusal to follow the orders of this court as affirmed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit and the United States Supreme Court.”

Trump is well known for using procedural delays to stop the courts from administering justice, and it is notable that administration lawyers have generally not been arguing that they will win cases on the merits. Instead, they are making procedural arguments.

Meanwhile, stringing things out means making time for situations to change on the ground, reducing the effect of court decisions. Brian Barrett of Wired reported today that while Musk claims to have stepped back from the Department of Government Efficiency, his lieutenants are still spread throughout the government, mining Americans’ data. Meanwhile, Office of Management and Budget director Russell Vought will push to make DOGE cuts to government permanent in a dramatic reworking of the nation’s social contract. “Removing DOGE at this point would be like trying to remove a drop of food coloring from a glass of water,” Barrett writes.

Political scientist Bonica notes that there is a script for rising authoritarians. When the courts rule against the leader, the leader and his loyalists attack judges as biased and dangerous, just as Trump and his cronies have been doing.

The leader also works to delegitimize the judicial system, and that, too, we are seeing as Trump reverses the concepts of not guilty and guilty. On the one hand, the administration is fighting to get rid of the constitutional right of all persons to due process, rendering people who have not been charged with crimes to prisons in third countries. On the other, Trump and his loyalists at the Department of Justice are pardoning individuals who have been convicted of crimes.

On Monday, Trump issued a presidential pardon to former Culpeper County, Virginia, sheriff Scott Jenkins, a longtime Trump supporter whom a jury convicted of conspiracy, mail and wire fraud, and seven counts of bribery. Jared Gans of The Hill explained that Jenkins accepted more than $70,000 in bribes to appoint auxiliary deputy sheriffs, “giving them badges and credentials despite them not being trained or vetted and not offering services to the sheriff’s office.” Jenkins had announced he would “deputize thousands of our law-abiding citizens to protect their constitutional right to own firearms,” if the legislature passed “further unnecessary gun restrictions.” Jenkins was sentenced to ten years in prison.

Although Jenkins was found guilty by a jury of his peers, just as the U.S. justice system calls for, Trump insisted that Jenkins and his wife and their family “have been dragged through HELL by a Corrupt and Weaponized Biden D[epartment] O[f] J[ustice].” Jenkins, Trump wrote on social media, “is a wonderful person, who was persecuted by the Radical Left ‘monsters,’ and ‘left for dead.’ This is why I, as President of the United States, see fit to end his unfair sentence, and grant Sheriff Jenkins a FULL and Unconditional Pardon. He will NOT be going to jail tomorrow, but instead will have a wonderful and productive life.”

Today Trump gave a presidential pardon to Paul Walczak, a former nursing home executive who pleaded guilty to tax crimes in 2024. The pardon arrived after Walczak’s mother donated at least $1 million to Trump. The pardon spares Walczak from 18 months in prison and $4.4 million in restitution. Also today, Trump announced plans to pardon reality TV stars Julie and Todd Chrisley, who were sentenced to 7 and 12 years in prison for conspiracy to defraud banks of $36 million and tax evasion. Their daughter spoke at the 2024 Republican National Convention.

Bonica notes that delegitimizing the judicial system creates a permission structure for threats against judges. That, too, we are seeing.

Bonica goes on to illustrate how this pattern of authoritarian attacks on the judiciary looks the same across nations. In 2009, following a ruling that he was not immune from prosecution for fraud, tax evasion, and bribery, Italy’s Silvio Berlusconi railed about “communist prosecutors and communist judges.” In 2016, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan of Türkiye rejected the authority of his country’s highest court and purged more than 4,000 judges. Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe pushed judges to stop protests, and the judiciary collapsed. In the Philippines in 2018, Rodrigo Duterte called the chief justice defending judicial independence an “enemy,” and she was removed. In Brazil in 2021, Jair Bolsonaro threatened violence against the judges who were investigating him for corruption.

But, Bonica notes, something different happened in Israel in 2023. When Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition tried to destroy judicial independence, people from all parts of society took to the streets. A broad, nonpartisan group came together to defend democracy and resist authoritarianism.

“Every authoritarian who successfully destroyed judicial independence did so because civil society failed to unite in time,” Bonica writes. “The key difference? Whether people mobilized.”


Originally Posted By u/IpppyCaccy At 2025-05-28 02:20:06 PM | Source


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This is literally my first time posting on Reddit ever, but I can’t take watching this happen to the country any more. I’m past the point of watching things deteriorate day after day and not feeling like there’s anything to do I’m ready to mobilize but there doesn’t seem to be any solid cohesive push back. I believe we need to apply much more pressure rapidly. I know we’re doing protests,town halls occasional strikes and sit in’s but there’s been no change and things continue to rapidly decline. I’m not sure what the next steps are but, I truly believe we’re at the tipping point of a revolution and it needs to be focused and it’s going to take everyone it. Im not sure what to do to help or advance this so im super open to ideas. Im not saying we’re not doing anything don’t get me wrong. I’m very glad this subreddit exists and there’s somewhat of a movement it just doesn’t feel focused enough and not nearly large enough.


Originally Posted By u/ashyahst At 2025-05-28 01:50:39 PM | Source


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Originally Posted By u/transcendent167 At 2025-05-24 09:09:30 PM | Source


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Originally Posted By u/transcendent167 At 2025-05-24 12:15:00 PM | Source


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