
It’s Wednesday…
President Shitshow’s public schedule for…

President Begging to See Violence on TV against protesters is hosting a roundtable to lie about what it means to be ANTIFA. In a preview of the nonsense we’ll hear, President Wannabe a King So Bad posted a 1963 DOJ memo without context and declared that the governor of Chicago and its mayor should be in jail.
The Memo:


Image Text:
U.S. Code. Those provisions authorize the President, when faced with such unlawful obstructions against the authority Federal service such of the militia of any State, and use such of the armed forces, as he considers necessary” (10 U.S.C. § 333), and to use “the militia of the several states, and the militia of the United States includes the national guard, meaning the Army National Guard and the Air National Guard of the several states.” 10 U.S.C. § 311 and § 101 (9), (10), (12).
In furtherance of the President’s order the Secretary of Defense immediately called into active military service all of the units and members of the Army National Guard and Air National Guard of the State of Alabama for the indefinite military service of the United States for an indefinite period and until relieved by proper orders. The call was transmitted by the Secretary of the Army, acting by direction of, and under delegation of authority from, the Secretary of Defense, to the Governor of Alabama. The message (No. D.A. 340868, of June 11, 1963) was furnished immediately to the Governor of Alabama and to the Commanding Officers of the Army National Guard and Air National Guard of the State of Alabama.
It is apparent that the Alabama National Guard was called into active federal service pursuant to 10 U.S.C. §§ 332-4, and in accordance with the procedure provided in those sections. Since the call to federal service is made under the authority of 10 U.S.C. § 3500, referred to by Mr. Bowen, the procedure prescribed by that section was not used.
I trust that the foregoing information will be of assistance to you.
Sincerely,
(signature)
Attorney General
I googled my fingers to the bone trying to find a link to the actual memo. It exists—probably—but it’s hiding better than a politician’s ethics. Since I use ChatGPT, I tried out its Scholar AI for research help. Even that one couldn’t dig up the memo, but we did find its context and produce a summary.
🧾 The 1963 DOJ “National Guard” Memo — What It Really Means
People sometimes share a 1963 Department of Justice memo claiming it proves presidents can use the military against U.S. citizens. That’s false. The memo was written under Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy right after the University of Alabama desegregation crisis (June 11 1963). It simply explained the legal basis for President John F. Kennedy’s federalization of the Alabama National Guard to enforce a federal court order when Governor George Wallace blocked Black students from enrolling.
The memo cites 10 U.S.C. §§ 332–334—the same statutes in the Insurrection Act—to confirm that Kennedy acted lawfully and followed the correct chain of command.
It does not authorize lethal force, martial law, or political crackdowns.
It applies only when state authorities defy federal court orders or obstruct federal law, and it requires a presidential proclamation and limited, lawful enforcement.
Using that memo to justify sending troops against protesters or “protecting” federal property today would be unconstitutional and contrary to its original purpose. The 1963 memo is a record of enforcing civil rights and court rulings, not suppressing dissent.
Primary sources:
- Executive Order 11111 (June 11 1963)
- Proclamation 3542
- Title 10 U.S. Code §§ 332–334 (Insurrection Act provisions)
Before we produced the above summary with links to primary sources. I asked three questions:

AI response:
⚖️ 1. Does that memo say the National Guard can use lethal force?
No, absolutely not.
The memo contains no language whatsoever authorizing, suggesting, or even discussing the use of lethal force.
It’s purely administrative and legalistic — it explains which statute (10 U.S.C. §§ 332–334) Kennedy used to federalize the Alabama National Guard.
Those sections only deal with activation and command authority — not with rules of engagement or permissible force.
Once federalized, the Guard remains bound by:
- The Posse Comitatus Act (18 U.S.C. § 1385),
- Department of Defense directives on use of force, and
- Constitutional limits under the Fourth Amendment and Fifth Amendment.
In 1963, the Guard’s mission was to enforce a court order peacefully, not to suppress a riot or use violence — and in fact, they did so without any use of force at all.
So:
🔹 The memo does not authorize lethal force.
🔹 It merely confirms that the President legally assumed command of the Alabama Guard.
🪖 2. Can the President use that memo as justification to nationalize Chicago’s Guard to “protect ICE facilities” or confront protesters?
No — that would be a gross and unlawful misreading of the memo and of 10 U.S.C. §§ 332–334.
Those statutes (sometimes called the Insurrection Act provisions) allow federalization only when:
- There are unlawful obstructions or rebellions that make it impracticable to enforce federal law through normal means, and
- The President’s intervention is necessary to enforce federal law or court orders — not to protect property from protest in general.
Even then, the President must:
- Issue a proclamation ordering the obstructionists to disperse,
- Demonstrate that state authorities are unable or unwilling to enforce federal law, and
- Limit action to restoring law and order, not political suppression.
In Chicago’s case:
- Peaceful protest (even if disruptive) is not an insurrection.
- ICE facilities are already protected by federal law enforcement (DHS, Federal Protective Service).
- Using the Guard to “bash heads of protesters” would violate the First Amendment, Fourth Amendment, and Posse Comitatus Act.
So even under the Insurrection Act, that would be illegal and unconstitutional — and citing the 1963 memo wouldn’t change that.
🚫 3. Does that memo justify Trump’s (or any president’s) overreach that courts already blocked?
No — it actually undercuts it.
Here’s why:
- The 1963 memo is about federal enforcement of a federal court order — a lawful act to ensure constitutional rights.
- Trump’s 2020 and 2021 attempts (e.g., threatening to “dominate the streets” with troops, or invoking the Insurrection Act for protests) were not tied to specific court orders or insurrections.
- Courts and the military alike recognized those actions as potential overreach because they failed the necessity and proportionality tests that were met in 1963.
So, rather than supporting later misuse, the memo is a case study in proper limits:
→ Kennedy used his authority narrowly, under judicial supervision, to enforce civil rights law.
→ Any president citing that memo for domestic suppression or political aims would be twisting its intent beyond recognition.
The TL;DR version:

Fantasizing about Jailing his political opponents:

Daily reminder that it really isn’t normal for the President of the United States to fantasize about tossing people in jail because they don’t kiss his ass enough for him.
Speaking of trying to jail someone he hates…
Former FBI director James Comey appeared in court today.
MORE: The government did not seek Comey’s detention and the district court judge, Michael S. Nachmanoff, released him on personal recognizance.
— Anna Bower (@AnnaBower) October 8, 2025
A second set of pre-trial motions is due by Oct. 30.
— Anna Bower (@AnnaBower) October 8, 2025
Comey’s defense counsel, Patrick Fitzgerald, said he expects that batch to include a motion regarding abuse of grand jury process and an “outrageous government conduct” motion.
Two prosecutors who are new to the case—Tyler Lemons and Gabriel Diaz—appeared in court alongside Lindsey Halligan.
— Anna Bower (@AnnaBower) October 8, 2025
Comey’s family attended the hearing—including his daughter, Maurene Comey, who was abruptly fired from her job as a federal prosecutor earlier this year.
Flash News…
Shitshow in One Act:
The Attorney General of Mar-a-Lardo’s Senate hearing boiled down to one clip: a theatrical performance, sold-out for an audience of one—her president.
Schiff gets Bondi so flustered that she starts blurting things out while he details what a farce this "oversight" hearing has been and the Republican members' lack of interest in doing their jobs pic.twitter.com/D4XrUGbO9x
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) October 7, 2025
President Wrong is the Wrongest his been all year…
The president’s claim that “Portland is burning to the ground” is extremely false, like one of the wrongest things of all the wrong things he has said this year. https://t.co/itFpFDIids
— Daniel Dale (@ddale8) October 8, 2025
Bailed out Argentina got a concert!
President Javier Milei of Argentina had a rock show to celebrate his new book, called "La Construción del Milagro" (The Construction of the Miracle). pic.twitter.com/cyJ46fFdOZ
— Crazy Ass Moments in LatAm Politics (@AssLatam) October 7, 2025
The concert took place on Monday.
Treasury Suck Up Scott Bessent said to CNBC on Oct. 2nd., that it’s not a cash payment but a swap line.
Scott Bessent on bailing out Argentina: What we're doing is maintaining America's strategic interest. America First doesn't mean America alone. You don't want to create another failed state… We're giving them a swap line. We're not putting money into Argentina.
— Ron Smith (@Ronxyz00) October 2, 2025
That is false.… pic.twitter.com/hBKywRlPhL
Show more =’s That is false. They are putting $20B into the Argentinian economy. (that’s ron’s opinion).
Google says the money hasn’t been sent yet…
Florida Man arrested for starting a California fire…
Breaking News: A Florida man has been arrested on charges that he intentionally ignited the Pacific Palisades Fire in Los Angeles that killed 12 people, a law enforcement official familiar with the case said on Wednesday. https://t.co/sxtXy6pqxx pic.twitter.com/h3EoDPLAxw
— Yahoo News (@YahooNews) October 8, 2025
Essayli on arrest for Palisades Fire: The defendant was arrested near his residence in Florida… The allegations in the affidavit supported by digital evidence, including the defendant's chatgpt prompt of a dystopian painting showing a burning forest and a crowd fleeing from it. pic.twitter.com/OpVmZMhJQe
— Acyn (@Acyn) October 8, 2025
This is an open thread
As I expected today’s shitshow will be a shitshow…
🚨HAPPENING TODAY AT THE WHITE HOUSE:
— Karoline Leavitt (@PressSec) October 8, 2025
"President Donald Trump is set to host a roundtable at the White House Wednesday afternoon to hear from independent journalists who have experienced Antifa's violence first-hand."https://t.co/5ZrKesUdYT
From the Fox News article: Independent journalists who are slated to join the discussion, Fox News Digital learned, include Cam Higby, Jonathon Choe, Andy Ngo, Katie Daviscourt, James Klug, Savannah Hernandez, Nick Shirley, Brandi Kruse and Julio Rojas.
Journalists is doing a lot of heavy lifting…