Who’s watching the SOTU speech tonight?
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Clever to ask the assembled congress people to "stand up if you believe the first duty of the US government is to protect US citizens, not illegal aliens". The Dems painted themselves in a corner with their sitting, and there they sat with the cameras on them. Held it there for a couple minutes too.
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The "THIS IS HUGE" dramatic reaction in that tweet is a nice connection to your other thread about MAGA basically becoming a vat of slop and conspiracies. I know we saw the start of that back when Trump lost in 2020, but I think the MAGA movement is at an inflection point where their Dear Leader will eventually be no longer in power and there will be a void... who will make up their own reality for the sheep to follow next?
Side note - I used Kalshi to bet he would say the phrase Save Act, and he indeed said "Save America Act" which didn't count, so I lost the bet. Oh well.
Oh and lots of female democrats yelling. I'd say what happened to decorum but then that might actually get @george-k to return with a picture of Pelosi tearing up a speech.

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Clever to ask the assembled congress people to "stand up if you believe the first duty of the US government is to protect US citizens, not illegal aliens". The Dems painted themselves in a corner with their sitting, and there they sat with the cameras on them. Held it there for a couple minutes too.
@Horace said in Who’s watching the SOTU speech tonight?:
Clever to ask the assembled congress people to "stand up if you believe the first duty of the US government is to protect US citizens, not illegal aliens". The Dems painted themselves in a corner with their sitting, and there they sat with the cameras on them. Held it there for a couple minutes too.
Ok, that’s one highlight.
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But I did just watch about 15 minutes of Cocaine Bear. That was enough. How they attracted such a good cast for such an awful movie is beyond me.
@Mik said in Who’s watching the SOTU speech tonight?:
But I did just watch about 15 minutes of Cocaine Bear.
Show some respect. It's "Mr. Secretary" to you. Even his friends just call him 'Bobby'. OK, Kid Rock calls him sweet-cheeks, but that's it.
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For those who couldn't watch due to what I assume must have been a personal emergency, here is 13 minutes of highlights.
Link to videoThe most surprising - and frankly, disappointing - thing to come out of the speech was how strongly in favor of murder the Democrats are.
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Watching how the men's hockey team was paraded in front of the country on national TV must have left a mark on at least a few of the women's team. Wishing their culturally imposed "principles" hadn't robbed them of the opportunity of a lifetime that would have been cool for their grandchildren and great grandchildren to watch.
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I think that they should put a buzzer on all the audience and if they appauld, they would get shocked. Let the speech stand on its own.
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The speech was an elaborate trap for the Dems, and it worked very well. Trump fashioned his presentation to make the inevitable childishness of the Dem peanut gallery look as ridiculous and unlikeable as possible. I agree with Shapiro's take here.
Link to video -
Good luck finding that cheap gas.
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"Inflation is plummeting."

D'oh!!!
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Yet another lie. Whoever invented those numbers on that spreadsheet should be ashamed of themselves.
@Horace said in Who’s watching the SOTU speech tonight?:
Yet another lie. Whoever invented those numbers on that spreadsheet should be ashamed of themselves.
We all know he's reduced inflation by 4000%. I went into buy groceries today and came away with a check for $500.
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Democrats’ Response to the President’s Big Speech: What’s True, What’s Spin
By Francis Gauthier
Before you read a single talking point, understand this:
What follows isn’t cable-news spin. It isn’t a social media thread. It isn’t partisan copy-paste.
• #FactCheck
• #FollowTheData
• #Accountability
• #TruthMatters
It comes out of a structured, claim-by-claim deep-dive research project that pulled transcripts, government releases, economic data tables, enforcement reporting, and fact-check compilations into one place and tested them against primary sources.
Every claim from the Democrat response to the State of the Union was broken down into:
• The exact quote
• The metric being claimed
• The time window implied
• The data source required to verify it
• The statistical or legal assumptions underneath it
Then those claims were cross-checked against:
• Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI releases
• Bureau of Economic Analysis GDP data
• Treasury tariff revenue
• CBO incidence assumptions
• Health policy projections
• Documented clinic closures
• Reporting and litigation records on immigration enforcement
No vibes. No slogans. No outrage theater.
Just: what was said, what can be verified, what depends on modeling, and what crosses the line into rhetorical stretch.
The result isn’t a partisan rant. It’s a ledger. Some claims hold. Some are conditional. Some are overstated. A few are legally sloppy.
That’s how adults argue policy.
Proverbs 18:17 says, “The first to state his case seems right, until the other comes and examines him.” The principle: examine before you conclude. The application: always test the claim against the record.
A Conservative Rebuttal to the Democrat/Left Response to the 2026 State of the Union
The Democratic rebuttal leaned hard on emotion. The underlying PDF analysis shows something different: when you strip out the rhetoric and run the numbers, most of their claims are either conditional, overstated, or legally imprecise.
Let’s walk through it.
⸻- The “$1,700 Tariff Tax” Claim
Democrats say families “paid $1,700 in tariff costs.”
The document makes clear that this is a modeled estimate, not a receipt in anyone’s mailbox. It depends on:
• Assumed consumer pass-through rates
• CBO incidence modeling
• Treasury revenue totals
• Household count assumptions
The report itself calls it “Mostly true” — but only as an estimate built on assumptions.
That matters.
Tariffs are strategic economic tools. You can debate whether they’re wise. But presenting a model projection as if it were a proven household bill? That’s political packaging.
If you’re going to make the argument, say it honestly: “Based on economic modeling, we estimate…” Not “You paid this.” Big difference.
⸻ - Cost of Living: Selective Framing
Yes — shelter, food, and electricity rose year-over-year.
But the full inflation picture shows:
• Overall CPI: 2.4%
• Gasoline: down 7.5% year-over-year
• GDP still growing (more on that below)
The document labels this claim “Mostly true,” but notes that the rhetoric implies a broader economic spiral than the full data supports.
Translation: they cherry-picked the painful categories and ignored the moderating ones.
That’s politics, not analysis.
⸻ - Rural Clinic Closures and OBBB
Here’s where Democrats had their strongest footing.
There are documented rural clinic closures in Virginia explicitly tied by providers to the OBBB law. The report rates that portion “True.”
But the broader language — “across the country” — lacks documented scale in the report.
In other words:
• Yes, closures happened.
• No, there’s no documented nationwide collapse in this report.
Precision matters.
⸻ - “Millions Are Losing Health Care”
This is where the wheels wobble.
The report clarifies that the “millions” figure largely relies on projections — some extending years into the future. Early CMS signals suggest drop-offs, but projected uninsured totals depend on modeling and time horizon.
The verdict: “Partly true.”
That’s political shorthand for: “Technically defensible if you stretch the timeframe.”
Saying “millions are losing coverage” implies an immediate, real-time crisis. What the data shows is projected impact over years.
Those are not the same thing.
⸻ - ICE “Entering Homes Without Warrants”
This is the cleanest example of rhetorical inflation.
The dispute centers on administrative warrants versus judicial warrants.
Administrative warrants exist.
So saying “without warrants” is imprecise.
The report calls this claim “Misleading.”
If the argument is about constitutional standards and judicial authorization, say that. Don’t oversimplify into something factually incorrect. That weakens a serious civil-liberties debate.
⸻ - “GDP Nearly Flatlined”
This one doesn’t survive contact with the data.
BEA shows Q4 2025 real GDP grew at 1.4% annualized.
Slower than Q3? Yes.
Flatlined? No.
The report labels that “Misleading.”
Words matter. Especially when talking about the economy.
⸻
The Pattern
The PDF’s own conclusion is telling:
The strongest Democratic arguments were tied to auditable numbers.
The weakest were the ones that blurred legal definitions or exaggerated statistical terms.
That’s the pattern.
• When they cited documented clinic closures — solid.
• When they cited modeled tariff estimates but presented them as certainty — overstated.
• When they said GDP flatlined — rhetorical.
• When they said “without warrants” — sloppy.
⸻
The Conservative Position
A strong conservative rebuttal doesn’t deny economic pressures. It does three things: - Demands precision in economic claims.
- Distinguishes projections from present reality.
- Insists on legal accuracy in enforcement debates.
You don’t win by ignoring numbers.
You win by reading the footnotes.
Tariffs can be debated.
Health policy can be debated.
Immigration enforcement can be debated.
But exaggeration is not analysis.
And voters know the difference.
⸻
Clean Analytical Summary
Based on the PDF review:
• Tariff household cost claim: Modeled estimate, plausible but not measurable fact.
• Inflation claim: Accurate for selected categories, incomplete for overall inflation picture.
• Rural clinic closures: Documented in specific cases; national scale less established.
• “Millions losing coverage”: Projection-dependent; timeframe critical.
• ICE “without warrants”: Legally imprecise; dispute is judicial vs administrative warrants.
• GDP “flatlined”: Incorrect characterization of 1.4% growth.
In short: The rebuttal leaned more on framing than falsification. Most claims sit in the “mostly true but rhetorically stretched” category rather than outright falsehood.
That’s important. Because political credibility is lost in the stretch.
⸻
Truth isn’t advanced by exaggeration. “Better is a poor and wise child than an old and foolish king, who will no more be admonished” (Ecclesiastes 4:13). The principle: humility before facts. The application: check the numbers before repeating the line.
- The “$1,700 Tariff Tax” Claim
-
Democrats’ Response to the President’s Big Speech: What’s True, What’s Spin
By Francis Gauthier
Before you read a single talking point, understand this:
What follows isn’t cable-news spin. It isn’t a social media thread. It isn’t partisan copy-paste.
• #FactCheck
• #FollowTheData
• #Accountability
• #TruthMatters
It comes out of a structured, claim-by-claim deep-dive research project that pulled transcripts, government releases, economic data tables, enforcement reporting, and fact-check compilations into one place and tested them against primary sources.
Every claim from the Democrat response to the State of the Union was broken down into:
• The exact quote
• The metric being claimed
• The time window implied
• The data source required to verify it
• The statistical or legal assumptions underneath it
Then those claims were cross-checked against:
• Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI releases
• Bureau of Economic Analysis GDP data
• Treasury tariff revenue
• CBO incidence assumptions
• Health policy projections
• Documented clinic closures
• Reporting and litigation records on immigration enforcement
No vibes. No slogans. No outrage theater.
Just: what was said, what can be verified, what depends on modeling, and what crosses the line into rhetorical stretch.
The result isn’t a partisan rant. It’s a ledger. Some claims hold. Some are conditional. Some are overstated. A few are legally sloppy.
That’s how adults argue policy.
Proverbs 18:17 says, “The first to state his case seems right, until the other comes and examines him.” The principle: examine before you conclude. The application: always test the claim against the record.
A Conservative Rebuttal to the Democrat/Left Response to the 2026 State of the Union
The Democratic rebuttal leaned hard on emotion. The underlying PDF analysis shows something different: when you strip out the rhetoric and run the numbers, most of their claims are either conditional, overstated, or legally imprecise.
Let’s walk through it.
⸻- The “$1,700 Tariff Tax” Claim
Democrats say families “paid $1,700 in tariff costs.”
The document makes clear that this is a modeled estimate, not a receipt in anyone’s mailbox. It depends on:
• Assumed consumer pass-through rates
• CBO incidence modeling
• Treasury revenue totals
• Household count assumptions
The report itself calls it “Mostly true” — but only as an estimate built on assumptions.
That matters.
Tariffs are strategic economic tools. You can debate whether they’re wise. But presenting a model projection as if it were a proven household bill? That’s political packaging.
If you’re going to make the argument, say it honestly: “Based on economic modeling, we estimate…” Not “You paid this.” Big difference.
⸻ - Cost of Living: Selective Framing
Yes — shelter, food, and electricity rose year-over-year.
But the full inflation picture shows:
• Overall CPI: 2.4%
• Gasoline: down 7.5% year-over-year
• GDP still growing (more on that below)
The document labels this claim “Mostly true,” but notes that the rhetoric implies a broader economic spiral than the full data supports.
Translation: they cherry-picked the painful categories and ignored the moderating ones.
That’s politics, not analysis.
⸻ - Rural Clinic Closures and OBBB
Here’s where Democrats had their strongest footing.
There are documented rural clinic closures in Virginia explicitly tied by providers to the OBBB law. The report rates that portion “True.”
But the broader language — “across the country” — lacks documented scale in the report.
In other words:
• Yes, closures happened.
• No, there’s no documented nationwide collapse in this report.
Precision matters.
⸻ - “Millions Are Losing Health Care”
This is where the wheels wobble.
The report clarifies that the “millions” figure largely relies on projections — some extending years into the future. Early CMS signals suggest drop-offs, but projected uninsured totals depend on modeling and time horizon.
The verdict: “Partly true.”
That’s political shorthand for: “Technically defensible if you stretch the timeframe.”
Saying “millions are losing coverage” implies an immediate, real-time crisis. What the data shows is projected impact over years.
Those are not the same thing.
⸻ - ICE “Entering Homes Without Warrants”
This is the cleanest example of rhetorical inflation.
The dispute centers on administrative warrants versus judicial warrants.
Administrative warrants exist.
So saying “without warrants” is imprecise.
The report calls this claim “Misleading.”
If the argument is about constitutional standards and judicial authorization, say that. Don’t oversimplify into something factually incorrect. That weakens a serious civil-liberties debate.
⸻ - “GDP Nearly Flatlined”
This one doesn’t survive contact with the data.
BEA shows Q4 2025 real GDP grew at 1.4% annualized.
Slower than Q3? Yes.
Flatlined? No.
The report labels that “Misleading.”
Words matter. Especially when talking about the economy.
⸻
The Pattern
The PDF’s own conclusion is telling:
The strongest Democratic arguments were tied to auditable numbers.
The weakest were the ones that blurred legal definitions or exaggerated statistical terms.
That’s the pattern.
• When they cited documented clinic closures — solid.
• When they cited modeled tariff estimates but presented them as certainty — overstated.
• When they said GDP flatlined — rhetorical.
• When they said “without warrants” — sloppy.
⸻
The Conservative Position
A strong conservative rebuttal doesn’t deny economic pressures. It does three things: - Demands precision in economic claims.
- Distinguishes projections from present reality.
- Insists on legal accuracy in enforcement debates.
You don’t win by ignoring numbers.
You win by reading the footnotes.
Tariffs can be debated.
Health policy can be debated.
Immigration enforcement can be debated.
But exaggeration is not analysis.
And voters know the difference.
⸻
Clean Analytical Summary
Based on the PDF review:
• Tariff household cost claim: Modeled estimate, plausible but not measurable fact.
• Inflation claim: Accurate for selected categories, incomplete for overall inflation picture.
• Rural clinic closures: Documented in specific cases; national scale less established.
• “Millions losing coverage”: Projection-dependent; timeframe critical.
• ICE “without warrants”: Legally imprecise; dispute is judicial vs administrative warrants.
• GDP “flatlined”: Incorrect characterization of 1.4% growth.
In short: The rebuttal leaned more on framing than falsification. Most claims sit in the “mostly true but rhetorically stretched” category rather than outright falsehood.
That’s important. Because political credibility is lost in the stretch.
⸻
Truth isn’t advanced by exaggeration. “Better is a poor and wise child than an old and foolish king, who will no more be admonished” (Ecclesiastes 4:13). The principle: humility before facts. The application: check the numbers before repeating the line.
@Mik said in Who’s watching the SOTU speech tonight?:
Democrats’ Response to the President’s Big Speech: What’s True, What’s Spin
By Francis Gauthier-
Let's see Francis Gauthier provide a comparable fact-checking write up against claims made in Trump's SOTU speech.
-
Or let's see @mik quotes a comparable fact-checking write up against claims made in Trump's SOTU speech.
- The “$1,700 Tariff Tax” Claim
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