I remember the virtual and hate towards Obama for doing what they cheer Trump does.

Typical, lots of claims, 0 citations. You lie as much as TACO!

Like this, Brad?

Now they are cheering Donald Trump for murdering people, they don’t even know who they are, because they happen to be in a speedboat in the Caribbean. These people are on boats that cannot even make it to the United States. There is no evidence they have illegal drugs on board.
 
You lie. You never criticized Obama for anything to the extent you criticize Trump. You surely never called him n authoritarian or a fascist. You were and are too scared of being called a racist by your fellow leftists
Fuck you racists

Go suck Millers cock and then climb into the sewer where you belong

Before we stomp you to the curb and kick you back into the sewer


You cant cheat enough to win

Your fucked


You lost

America hates racists
 
I think once, Obama authorized a drone to kill a suspected Middle East terrorist. I criticized it at the time. I don’t think such action is legal without at least congressional consultation.

Now they are cheering Donald Trump for murdering people, they don’t even know who they are, because they happen to be in a speedboat in the Caribbean. These people are on boats that cannot even make it to the United States. There is no evidence they have illegal drugs on board.

The same people who were enraged because Obama did it, are cheering on this action. What’s the difference between Trump and Obama?
During Biden's 4 years, Pete the Transportation secretary had a chemical train derailment happen, and the right ripped this poor man a new one...meanwhile Reality TV Pat has had more planes fuck ups in the history of this nation and you hear crickets.
 
Diogenes, please post your sources.


Brad's claim is not true. While the U.S. military (primarily the Navy, in coordination with the Coast Guard) has conducted at least 15 lethal airstrikes on speedboats in the Caribbean Sea since early September 2025—killing over 60 people—these actions do not align with the described scenario of indiscriminate murders of unidentified individuals on non-viable migrant vessels without evidence of drugs. Here's a breakdown based on verified reports from multiple sources:Key Facts on the Strikes
  • Nature of the Targets: The boats struck are "go-fast" speedboats (typically 20-50 feet long, multi-engine vessels capable of 50-80+ knots in open water), designed for high-speed smuggling from Venezuela, Colombia, or other South American origins through the Caribbean to the U.S. or islands like Trinidad and Tobago. These are not "boats that cannot even make it to the United States"—they are built for long-range transit (up to 700 miles round-trip) and carry up to 3,000 pounds of cargo per vessel.

    en.wikipedia.org +1
  • Evidence of Drugs: In several cases, drugs were recovered post-strike (e.g., 375+ packages of cocaine recovered by Dominican authorities after a September 2025 strike killing 3 people).

    nytimes.com +1
    The U.S. administration claims all targets were identified via intelligence as drug-laden vessels operated by cartels like Tren de Aragua (designated a terrorist organization in February 2025), often en route to the U.S. However, no public evidence (e.g., photos, manifests) has been released for most strikes, leading to criticism from lawmakers (e.g., Sen. Rand Paul) and international leaders (e.g., Colombian President Gustavo Petro) that some may involve fishermen or uninvolved parties.

    pbs.org +1
    Historical Coast Guard data shows ~27% of suspected drug boat interceptions (pre-strike era) yield no drugs, but this doesn't directly apply to the military's intel-driven strikes.

    aljazeera.com
  • Identification of Victims: Victims are not entirely "unknown"—the U.S. has linked many to Tren de Aragua or similar groups based on surveillance (e.g., drone footage showing crew and routes).

    usatoday.com +1
    However, in most cases, no names or nationalities are publicly disclosed pre-strike, and post-strike identifications are incomplete (e.g., two unidentified bodies washed ashore in Trinidad after a September strike).

    en.wikipedia.org
    Survivors (rare, e.g., 2 from an October submersible strike) were repatriated to Colombia and Ecuador after vetting, with one Ecuadorian cleared of charges.

    cnn.com +1
    Critics, including human rights groups, argue this amounts to "extrajudicial killings" without due process.

    globalsecurity.org +1
  • Context and Legality: These strikes stem from an August 2025 naval buildup (8+ warships, 10,000 troops) under President Trump's directive to treat cartels as "unlawful combatants" in an "armed conflict," bypassing traditional Coast Guard interdictions (which involve boarding and arrests).

    en.wikipedia.org +1
    Legal experts question this under international law (e.g., no imminent threat justification, potential violations of UNCLOS).

    bbc.com +1
    Venezuelan officials call it a pretext for regime change.

    pbs.org
    No evidence links strikes to migrant boats; those are handled separately by Coast Guard (e.g., engine disablements, not killings).

    militarytimes.com


 
Obama deported lots of illegals and the Democrats did not protest but they are fighting tooth and nail to stop Trump from deporting illegals. Weird
 
Obama deported lots of illegals and the Democrats did not protest but they are fighting tooth and nail to stop Trump from deporting illegals. Weird
Whatcha talking about?

AI Overview
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Yes, there were significant and widespread protests against the Obama administration's high rates of deportation
. Immigrant rights activists, civil liberties organizations, and faith leaders frequently demonstrated against the administration's policies, especially as the number of deportations reached record highs.
 
Whatcha talking about?

AI Overview
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Yes, there were significant and widespread protests against the Obama administration's high rates of deportation
. Immigrant rights activists, civil liberties organizations, and faith leaders frequently demonstrated against the administration's policies, especially as the number of deportations reached record highs.
How many did they try to kill?? I can think of two shootings at ice facilities in Texas and one at an ICE raid in California I an also remember at least two attempts to run over ICE agents
 
Who told you that? Do you have a citation? Did you just make up the thing about intercepting electronic communications?
If I did would you admit that POTUS has a lot more information on the smuggling of narcotics in Venezuela than you have?
 
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If you had a citation and I deemed it creditable on the topic, I would.
AI Overview



While the U.S. government does not publicly confirm the specifics of its intelligence-gathering methods, reports indicate that U.S. intelligence agencies
intercept important communications as part of ongoing operations related to counternarcotics trafficking and to gather intelligence on the Maduro regime.
Key points regarding U.S. interception of communications:
  • Targeted Intelligence Gathering: U.S. intelligence collection efforts focus on tracking drug dealers and cartel operations, which involves intercepting relevant communications.
  • Covert Operations: The U.S. President has authorized the CIA to conduct covert operations within Venezuela to influence political, military, or economic conditions, which can include intelligence gathering activities.
  • Specific Incidents: Reports in late 2025 mention that a U.S. EP-3 aircraft with "radio-electronic reconnaissance capabilities" was operating within Venezuela's Exclusive Economic Zone, a type of aircraft designed to intercept electronic signals.
  • Surveillance of Officials: U.S. intelligence reports have, at times, included information about conversations involving U.S. officials and Venezuelan figures (such as Nicolás Maduro), which were likely gathered through the interception of communications between foreign nationals.
  • Cyberattacks: In 2025, it was reported that the CIA had successfully carried out a clandestine cyberattack against the Venezuelan government's computer network in the final year of the previous administration, demonstrating the use of digital tools for intelligence purposes.
It is also important to note that the Venezuelan government itself engages in extensive digital surveillance and interception of its citizens' communications, with telecom companies reporting that millions of phone lines have been affected by state-requested interceptions.

How Does the U.S. Decide Which Boats to Target? Here’s What We Know.


Marco Rubio, the secretary of state and national security adviser, has reinforced the perception that the United States knows who is on the boats, where they are coming from and what they carry. “We track them from the very beginning,” he said this month.

Officials briefed on the strikes said that intercepted “signals intelligence” suggesting the boats were carrying drugs is the strongest intelligence collected.
 
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