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Trump expected to invoke wartime authority to speed up mass deportation effort in coming days

The Trump administration is expected to invoke a sweeping wartime authority to speed up the president’s mass deportation pledge in the coming days, according to four sources familiar with the discussions.

The little-known 18th-century law, the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, gives the president tremendous authority to target and remove undocumented immigrants, though legal experts have argued it would face an uphill battle in court.

CNN previously reported that the authority was being widely discussed at several agencies as administration officials prepared to implement the law. The primary target remains Tren de Aragua (TDA), a Venezuelan organized crime group that is now operating in the United States and other countries.

Trump had ordered his administration to designate TDA as a foreign terrorist organization and use the measure to remove those identified.

The announcement, which could come as soon as Friday, has been a moving target as officials finalize the details. The move would likely pave the way for quicker removals of certain immigrants.

CNN reached out to the Department of Homeland Security for comment.

The law is designed to be invoked if the US is at war with another country, or a foreign nation has invaded the US or threatened to do so. Legal experts say it would be difficult for Trump to use the act when the US isn’t being attacked by a foreign government, even if the administration does cite threats from gangs or cartels.

The Alien Enemies Act has been invoked three times in US history – all during war – according to the Brennan Center. During World Wars I and II, it was used to justify detentions and expulsions of German, Austro-Hungarian, Italian and Japanese immigrants. The law played a role in the infamous US policy of Japanese internment during World War II, according to the non-partisan law and policy institute.

https://www.cnn.com/2025/03/13/politics/alien-enemies-act-deportation-consideration/index.html


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Long live the King.


The more things change the more they stay the same.
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Originally Posted by dawglover05
Please for the love of all that is good tell me that you’re joking. You are joking right?

If so, my bad. If not, I really don’t know what I can say to make you see the plain as day difference between the two instances.

You’re missing the point. Check under his hat.

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Schumer says he will vote to advance GOP spending bill, lowering threat of shutdown
https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/5194156-schumer-gop-funding-bill-shutdown/

tRaItOr.


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Originally Posted by PitDAWG
Trump expected to invoke wartime authority to speed up mass deportation effort in coming days

The Trump administration is expected to invoke a sweeping wartime authority to speed up the president’s mass deportation pledge in the coming days, according to four sources familiar with the discussions.

The little-known 18th-century law, the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, gives the president tremendous authority to target and remove undocumented immigrants, though legal experts have argued it would face an uphill battle in court.

CNN previously reported that the authority was being widely discussed at several agencies as administration officials prepared to implement the law. The primary target remains Tren de Aragua (TDA), a Venezuelan organized crime group that is now operating in the United States and other countries.

Trump had ordered his administration to designate TDA as a foreign terrorist organization and use the measure to remove those identified.

The announcement, which could come as soon as Friday, has been a moving target as officials finalize the details. The move would likely pave the way for quicker removals of certain immigrants.

CNN reached out to the Department of Homeland Security for comment.

The law is designed to be invoked if the US is at war with another country, or a foreign nation has invaded the US or threatened to do so. Legal experts say it would be difficult for Trump to use the act when the US isn’t being attacked by a foreign government, even if the administration does cite threats from gangs or cartels.

The Alien Enemies Act has been invoked three times in US history – all during war – according to the Brennan Center. During World Wars I and II, it was used to justify detentions and expulsions of German, Austro-Hungarian, Italian and Japanese immigrants. The law played a role in the infamous US policy of Japanese internment during World War II, according to the non-partisan law and policy institute.

https://www.cnn.com/2025/03/13/politics/alien-enemies-act-deportation-consideration/index.html

Good. If these people broke our laws and came here illegally, they must be considered a threat because they have already shown they have no problem breaking laws they must be removed and removed quickly!!!


Romans 10:9 "That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and believe in thy heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved."
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Originally Posted by MemphisBrownie
Schumer says he will vote to advance GOP spending bill, lowering threat of shutdown
https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/5194156-schumer-gop-funding-bill-shutdown/

tRaItOr.

I think 'coward' is a much more accurate word. The stereotype of Dems being these ineffective wusses lives on.


There is no level of sucking we haven't seen; in fact, I'm pretty sure we hold the patents on a few levels of sucking NOBODY had seen until the past few years.

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So it's good that trump abuses a law that probably won't hold up in court that has only ever been used when a foreign country is at war with America to get what you want? Why am I not surprised by that? That's who people such as yourself have become. Laws? They don't matter. The constitution? It doesn't matter. Well it doesn't matter unless it's the second amendment.


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Originally Posted by oobernoober
Originally Posted by MemphisBrownie
Schumer says he will vote to advance GOP spending bill, lowering threat of shutdown
https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/5194156-schumer-gop-funding-bill-shutdown/

tRaItOr.

I think 'coward' is a much more accurate word. The stereotype of Dems being these ineffective wusses lives on.

Yes, it does-they don't seem to have a plan at all

I did hear today when I went out to pick up lunch that Schumer might be voting to keep the govt open because if the dems let it shut down trump could classify anyone he wants as non essential and keep them laid off until he tells the repubs to come back to the table and open the govt back up-it would be a way to accomplish some of what he wants and blame it on the dems.

They thought the dems "really might" grow a spine when it comes to the tax cut bill-we shall see

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The Dems are dealing with Trump the way Trump deals with Putin.


Blue ostriches on crack float on milkshakes between the sidewalk titans of gurglefitz. --YTown

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The obvious truth is trump is going to make them look bad no matter what they do. If some of them back down and vote for it he will call them weak and say they gave in or say some of them came to their senses. If they vote to defeat it he will say they are denying the will of the voters who gave him a mandate.

Appeasement will never work.


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Where's the help for West Virginia and other places devastated by the storms?

did we just forget about our fellow americans?


“To announce that there must be no criticism of the President, or that we are to stand by the President, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public.”

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Originally Posted by Swish
Where's the help for West Virginia and other places devastated by the storms?

did we just forget about our fellow americans?

Yep.
"We" fleeced'em, now we eff'em.
Votes are in the bag; on to better things.


"too many notes, not enough music-"

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Originally Posted by Swish
Where's the help for West Virginia and other places devastated by the storms?

did we just forget about our fellow americans?

First things first... gotta rename Gulf of Mexico and annex Canada and Greenland.

Priorities, man....


There is no level of sucking we haven't seen; in fact, I'm pretty sure we hold the patents on a few levels of sucking NOBODY had seen until the past few years.

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And I have no doubt that certain people on here were quietly hoping it would fail too.


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NOBODY wanted harm to befall those astronauts. Now, if Musk himself or Trump were on the capsule, we’d be in full agreement on what leftist want to see happen. If those two were blown to hell this very second, not many would be crying for them on the left. And those who did would be FAKE NEWS.

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Putin bombs energy plants hours after telling Trump he would halt attacks:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/putin-bombs-energy-plants-hours-011214554.html


You don’t say…


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Originally Posted by MemphisBrownie
And I have no doubt that certain people on here were quietly hoping it would fail too.

Morons are going to moron.


Intoducing for The Cleveland Browns, Quarterback Deshawn "The Predator" Watson. He will also be the one to choose your next head coach.

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was war with Iran part of the campaign promise?


“To announce that there must be no criticism of the President, or that we are to stand by the President, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public.”

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Originally Posted by MemphisBrownie


And I have no doubt that certain people on here were quietly hoping it would fail too.

This is about as accurate as the $50m dollars of condoms going to Gaza nonsense.

When you gotta make stuff up to bolster your point....


There is no level of sucking we haven't seen; in fact, I'm pretty sure we hold the patents on a few levels of sucking NOBODY had seen until the past few years.

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What point? When you get all of your news from slanted posters on Twitter you aren't making a point.


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Originally Posted by Swish
was war with Iran part of the campaign promise?

Apparently, total isolationism, a Venezuelan economy, a big rusky commie red new world order, and WW3 were on the ballot after all… Hell, if I knew trump was such an anti-capitalistic-anarchist, I might have given him a closer look before I kicked him to the curb.

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Massive purge of Pentagon websites includes content on Holocaust remembrance, sexual assault and suicide prevention

Articles about the Holocaust, September 11, cancer awareness, sexual assault and suicide prevention are among the tens of thousands either removed or flagged for removal from Pentagon websites as the department has scrambled to comply with Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth’s order to scrub “diversity” content from all its platforms.

A database obtained by CNN shows that more than 24,000 articles could be purged, with many gone already. The scrub goes well beyond just the removal of images from the Pentagon’s visual database, known as DVIDS, and includes articles from across more than 1,000 websites hosted by the department.

The Pentagon previously said in a memo last month that it would be removing news and feature articles promoting diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) content.

Pentagon Press Secretary John Ullyot said in a statement Wednesday that the Defense Department was “pleased by the rapid compliance” across the Pentagon with the directive removing DEI content from all platforms.

“In the rare cases that content is removed – either deliberately or by mistake – that is out of the clearly outlined scope of the directive, we instruct the components and they correct the content so it recognizes our heroes for their dedicated service alongside their fellow Americans, period.”

But dozens of the articles either flagged for removal or removed already — but still accessible via the Internet Archive’s Wayback machine — and reviewed by CNN have no ostensible connection to DEI programs; race theory; gender ideology or identity-based programs.

At least half a dozen articles already removed are about the Holocaust and now have the word “DEI” in their URL.

Those include an article about Holocaust survivor Kitty Saks, which remembers the Holocaust as “the state-sponsored, systemic persecution and annihilation of European Jewry”; an article about Holocaust Remembrance Week; and an article titled “A Cadet’s Perspective: Holocaust Days of Remembrance.”

The CEO of the Anti-Defamation League, Jonathan Greenblatt, told CNN that “we are concerned by reports that the Department of Defense has removed Holocaust-related content, including survivor stories, under the label of ‘DEI.’”

“Honoring the memory of the Holocaust and those who survived is not a matter of political ideology — it is a moral imperative and a vital component of education, remembrance, and the fight against antisemitism,” Greenblatt said. “The history of the Holocaust, including the liberation of the camps, also reflects the bravery and sacrifice of Allied soldiers — a legacy that should be preserved, not erased. We urge the DoD to reverse this decision and preserve these vital historical records.”

Articles related to September 11 remembrance, including service members reflecting on their service and where they were that day, have also been removed. So have articles about cancer awareness, including those related to Breast Cancer Awareness month and colon cancer awareness.

One such article authored by an Air Force Surgeon General titled, “A healthy lifestyle lowers your risk of getting breast cancer,” was removed and now has “DEI” in its URL.

Several articles about sexual assault have also been removed and now have “DEI” in their URL, including “April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month” and “A call to action – Three ways to combat sexual assault.”

Articles about suicide prevention have been purged, too, including ones titled: “VA releases veteran suicide statistics by state”; “Suicide prevention alliance focuses on troops, veterans”; and “Suicide Prevention Resources That Can Help.” The latter two articles now feature “DEI” in their URLs.

The content either removed or flagged for removal also includes thousands of articles about contributions made to the military over the years by women, LGBTQ people, people of color and historical figures like Jackie Robinson, who served in the US military during World War II.

Much of the content has been scrubbed not by individual units, but by an automated script run by DoD’s public web administrators, according to an email explaining the process that was obtained by CNN and three defense officials familiar with the matter. That appears to align with Hegseth’s February 27 memo, which said that DoD’s media arm, Defense Media Activity, “will support systematic content removal” from across the Pentagon’s many platforms.

That automated process has led to “a high level of irresponsible collateral damage,” one of the defense officials said. “People don’t understand the scope and the carelessness of ‘unpublishing’ that’s happened,” the official said.

Another of the defense officials said that the Pentagon understands that the process needs a significant course-correction and is now undergoing a more thorough review of what has been purged to determine if it should be republished.

“Because of these series of events, the department recognizes that this needs to be a more deliberative process involving human beings to ensure that a thorough review of content is completed,” the official said. “This may take more time than originally planned.”

https://www.cnn.com/2025/03/19/politics/pentagon-website-purge/index.html

Oooops! Again......


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'Segregated facilities' are no longer explicitly banned in federal contracts

https://www.npr.org/sections/shots-...n-federal-contracts-far-regulation-trump


So now we can segregate again! wInNiNg… YCMTSU

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Racists.

It’s what they do.


"The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." Thomas Jefferson.
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Welcome home!



HERE WE GO BROWNIES! HERE WE GO!!
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j/c:
South Korea's Hyundai to announce $20 billion U.S. investment
https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2025/03/24/south-korea-hyundai-us-investment.html


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Originally Posted by MemphisBrownie
j/c:
South Korea's Hyundai to announce $20 billion U.S. investment
https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2025/03/24/south-korea-hyundai-us-investment.html

That's not a Twitter post at all! Nobody gets diaper rash from simple links, bro!




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Originally Posted by FATE
Originally Posted by MemphisBrownie
j/c:
South Korea's Hyundai to announce $20 billion U.S. investment
https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2025/03/24/south-korea-hyundai-us-investment.html

That's not a Twitter post at all! Nobody gets diaper rash from simple links, bro!



Haha. It's hilarious when posters here attempt (poorly, I might add) to dismiss news as being real or serious just because it's also being shared/posted on twitter in addition to other means.


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Yet actual news sources don't con people into believing that posting a 12 year old news story is something new. And then when you show that to someone they have a melt down about it.


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The sheer pettiness of it all......



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Trump says countries that buy Venezuelan oil will face 25% tariff

https://apnews.com/article/trump-tariff-venezuela-oil-gas-tax-9197d606dea29caed6a7a79dd358d26a


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Originally Posted by MemphisBrownie
Originally Posted by FATE
Originally Posted by MemphisBrownie
j/c:
South Korea's Hyundai to announce $20 billion U.S. investment
https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2025/03/24/south-korea-hyundai-us-investment.html

That's not a Twitter post at all! Nobody gets diaper rash from simple links, bro!



Haha. It's hilarious when posters here attempt (poorly, I might add) to dismiss news as being real or serious just because it's also being shared/posted on twitter in addition to other means.

We’ve seen this movie before… remember Carrier? And that Chinese outfit Foxconn (sp?) Trump did a ground-breaking with to celebrate a mega plant that never materialized? So pardon me for being a skeptic of any news like this. Fool us once, shame on me… Fool us twice… not going to happen.

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I can't identify with all of these stories, but this does resemble my experience.

Half an hour or so waiting to get into a gate. Dead mice on the floor, one with maggots coming out of it, in a building that was set for demolition. Cockroaches all over the place. Bathrooms are disgusting and often out of paper towels. Water here is basically unpotable. It is "off color" and tastes like various metals. Makes me wonder when the "Camp LeJeune" equivalent television ads will run in my area. Many people still working with folding chairs and tables and cords running all over the floors. Operating expenses are going up. People leave work at work now, as well, myself included.

If anyone in the area doubts me, and wants to see for themselves, let me know and I'd be glad to show you at some point.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/rats-card-tables-byo-toilet-090155331.html

Rats, card tables and BYO toilet paper: Inside federal workers' return to office
Jessica Guynn, USA TODAY
Tue, March 25, 2025 at 5:01 AM EDT9 min read

Defense Department employees returned to work at an Army base in the Midwest only to find their offices were not mission ready.

Overflowing parking lots force them to scramble in ever-widening circles in search of open spots or risk tickets for parking illegally. Crammed into tight quarters, they sit elbow to elbow at card tables and talk over one another on the phone and on video calls. There are few spots to break for lunch or a snack because all of the cafeterias on the base shut down long ago.

Supplies are so scarce that they have to bring their own toilet paper and paper towels. To help out undermanned cleaning crews struggling to keep up with germ-riddled bathrooms and dirty workspaces, employees are told to pack up their trash and take it home with them.

Making matters worse, fresh worries about Legionella – the bacteria that causes Legionnaires’ disease and sometimes lurks in the base’s World War II-era buildings – have been making the rounds.

Morale has cratered as employees juggle long commutes and child care headaches, said a Defense Department employee who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Once driven to boost productivity, they now punch in and out like clockwork and have all but given up answering calls and emails after hours.

“We honestly get way more done at home than at the office, but those are facts and no one seems to want to know facts anymore,” he told USA TODAY. “This will end up costing the government much more money than it will ever save.”

His experience reflects the sometimes harsh realities of a rushed return to headquarters and field offices around the country ill prepared for a massive flood of workers after years of telework, according to eight federal employees inside seven agencies who spoke with USA TODAY on the condition of anonymity out of fear of reprisals.

The Office of Personnel Management – the federal government’s human resources division – told USA TODAY that the return to office is a priority for the Trump administration and that it is supporting federal agencies in making “necessary improvements to provide a safe and effective work environment for federal workers."

"In-person collaboration strengthens productivity, mission delivery and public service,” Charles Ezell, acting director of the Office of Personnel Management, said in a statement. “OPM is committed to ensuring a smooth transition by working with agencies to address workplace concerns, including facility conditions, resource availability and connectivity.”

President Donald Trump has ordered federal employees back to the office full-time as part of his administration’s mandate to make government bureaucracy less costly and more efficient for the American people. “If they don’t report for work, we’re firing them,” Trump said.

Many federal employees were directed to work part- or full-time from home since the COVID-19 pandemic. Some remote work arrangements began much earlier.

Less than half – 46% – of the 2.3 million federal employees were eligible for remote work and about 10% were fully remote, meaning they worked from home all the time or part-time, according to a report issued by the Office of Management and Budget in August.

Telework and hybrid schedules boosted productivity to record levels and made it much easier for them to manage their daily lives and family schedules, according to federal employees who spoke with USA TODAY.

Mad scramble for parking and cubicles
So far, the transition away from remote work has been bumpy. Federal agencies shed so much office space to reduce costs after the pandemic work-from-home order that there are now too many people for the available space.

Federal workers say they get in early to jockey for parking spots, desks, chairs and basic supplies, rely on spotty internet connections and retreat to their cars to discuss sensitive or classified matters out of earshot of coworkers. Some people have set up makeshift offices inside supply closets.

Of the six passenger elevators that reach the higher floors of a 30-story building in downtown Atlanta that houses the Internal Revenue Service and other federal agencies that serve the public, only one is in service, forcing long waits for federal employees and the visiting public. In some lobbies, the buttons for elevators that service the lower floors are missing and instead have a gaping rectangular hole exposing the wiring.

Assigned seating assignments didn’t match any of the cubicles in the IRS office. One IRS employee said he is squatting in a cubicle assigned to someone else.

Long ago abandoned on the desk is a framed Bible verse and a mostly untouched box of blank discs from 2003, even though IRS computers no longer even have CD drives. Some of his colleagues were not so lucky. They had to set up their laptops in crowded conference rooms.

Rather than making them more efficient, the in-person mandate has made them less so, the IRS employee said.

On LinkedIn, Kimbra Turner, a regulatory health information specialist, described a similarly chaotic return to the Food and Drug Administration’s main campus in Maryland.

With the agency on telework since 2010 or so, overcrowding was the main issue, she wrote. People showed up before 6:30 a.m. or 7 a.m. to find a parking space and leaving campus at the end of the work day could take as long as 30 minutes because of the backup.

Scouting for spots to have secure or sensitive conversations, some people worked out of closets, according to Turner. Networks were overloaded. Basics are in such short supply – not to mention the rash of broken monitors and even a broken desk – that she brought in her own keyboard and mouse.

“We are doing what we can, but this is NOT a situation that was implemented (or even designed) for efficiency,” she wrote. “We continue to show up and fight because the public health mission, the dedication of federal employees and the work of the federal government is stronger than the whims of a few egomaniacs.”

'They just want to stick it to us because they can'
Some offices that have stood semi-vacant for years have sanitation issues, from infestations of cockroaches and rats to clogged toilets and busted sinks to overflowing trash cans, and too few janitorial staffers to stay on top of it all.

Federal workers say they suspect the Trump administration deliberately made the return to office stressful to get people to quit in frustration.

Trump signed an executive order on Inauguration Day directing the heads of federal departments and agencies to "as soon as practical, take all necessary steps to terminate remote work arrangements and require employees to return to work in-person at their respective stations on a full-time basis, provided that the department and agency heads shall make exemptions they deem necessary."

Billionaire Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency have warned that federal workers must show up in the office. He has said he welcomes the wave of “voluntary terminations” of those federal employees who don’t.

“They say we are unproductive and lazy and that is just a big bald-faced lie,” an employee of the Department of Health and Human Services said. “There’s no rhyme or reason for doing this other than being vindictive and being bullies. These are punitive steps. They just want to stick it to us because they can.”

Long commutes and limbo for some federal employees
Federal workers say the biggest blow has been to their work-life balance with so much time wasted behind the wheel or on public transit in rush-hour traffic.

One Homeland Security employee estimates he spends 2 ½ hours a day in his car instead of playing with his newborn son. “It’s a huge morale killer,” he said.

An FDIC employee with one child and a second on the way lives with his parents and said the in-person mandate has forced him into an impossible situation.

He pays $1,200 a month in rent, well below market, and his mom cares for his child during the work day. If he moved closer to the office, the rent would be nearly triple, not to mention the additional child care costs.

So for now he’s gritting his teeth for the four-hour round-trip commute. “I’m just blessed to have a job still,” he said.

For many of these workers, the return to office is not all smaller sacrifices, like missing out on an early morning run or eating dinner with the family.

Some commutes are so lengthy that federal employees are crashing in shared sublets or youth hostels on weeknights, with family, friends or neighbors picking up the slack on the homefront.

Extra expenses plus gas and car maintenance add up quickly to a substantial pay cut, they say. Also off the table are dinners out or putting away for retirement or a house.

Those federal employees who were hired as remote workers and sometimes live hundreds of miles – or states – away face a tough choice: Uproot their lives or walk away from the job they love.

Still others are stuck in limbo with no idea where or when they will be asked to report in person. OPM is “phasing in” the return of remote workers who are more than 50 miles from an agency office.

One HHS employee hired as a remote worker lives hundreds of miles from the main office. “My duty station is my home,” she said.

She still doesn’t know if she will be assigned to an office near where she lives or if she will be called into the headquarters.

“If it’s near, that would be fine. I have no problem with that, and I have no problem with doing my job in person,” she said.

If not, her husband would have to give up his job and she would have to pull her kids out of school, with no guarantee that she will keep her job with mass layoffs looming.

“If I am told I have to go somewhere hundreds of miles away, it’s going to be a nonstarter for me,” she said.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: 'Morale killer': Inside federal employees' return to office


Blue ostriches on crack float on milkshakes between the sidewalk titans of gurglefitz. --YTown

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People aren't really concerned about facts anymore. Once that occurs we can see the results.


Intoducing for The Cleveland Browns, Quarterback Deshawn "The Predator" Watson. He will also be the one to choose your next head coach.

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Originally Posted by dawglover05
“We honestly get way more done at home than at the office, but those are facts and no one seems to want to know facts anymore,” he told USA TODAY. “This will end up costing the government much more money than it will ever save.”


"... no one seems to want to know facts anymore" got me.


There is no level of sucking we haven't seen; in fact, I'm pretty sure we hold the patents on a few levels of sucking NOBODY had seen until the past few years.

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Trump signs sweeping executive order targeting election rules

https://www.yahoo.com/news/trump-signs-sweeping-executive-order-233646766.html


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To be fair to the counter argument, im sure there were plenty of turds who manipulated working from home, but the whole “They’re not working, they’re out golfing and working a second job” thing is a farce, especially if you’ve seen my golf game. The other thing about those turds is that they’re turds in the office too.

The bottom line fact is that production as a whole for my sub-agency exceeded projections and goal standards during the COVID era. It was actually a thing of beauty how rapidly we got set up. I did negotiations for a $965M effort from my bedroom in the house I lived in at the time and we got it done in warp speed because we were able to work around the clock much easier.

And here’s the thing, im not even asking for full time telework, but can we just have something that makes sense? Right now, if I want to go down to my dentist in Cincinnati, I’d then have to drive up to Dayton for work because I couldn’t just work the rest of the day at home. If I am sick, but good enough to work, I still am not allowed to do it from home. So in both of those scenarios, I opt for a full day of sick leave.

People who were offered fully remote positions who live in BFE or close to contractors now have until May to move - on their own dime - back to their home base or get canned. I mentioned already that we lost one REALLY good person that way.

Something hybrid and/or something that just makes common sense would be nice. Hell, if they offered telework or 3 days hybrid but you had to work 50 hours per week, I’d take that because that’s what I was doing anyway. Make it contingent on performance reviews and meeting objective production goals.

That won’t be considered though.


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Originally Posted by oobernoober
Originally Posted by dawglover05
“We honestly get way more done at home than at the office, but those are facts and no one seems to want to know facts anymore,” he told USA TODAY. “This will end up costing the government much more money than it will ever save.”


"... no one seems to want to know facts anymore" got me.


i thought all the businessmen out there would've saw this slam dunk investment opportunity. all the empty office buildings could've been refurbished into either Apartment complexes, or daycare centers/retirement housing. slam dunk with the government willing to give a tax break. Tower City in downtown Cleveland could use some loving.


“To announce that there must be no criticism of the President, or that we are to stand by the President, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public.”

- Theodore Roosevelt
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