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Trump Approval Rating Falls to Lowest Point of Second Term, Poll Shows

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27 minutes ago, Yellowtail said:

Yet their religion is fine with killing thousands of protesters and every infidel on the planet that refuses to convert, got it,

The so called protesters being mostly CIA / MOSSAD inspired and armed insurgents who attacked

police and government officials trying for 'regime change' ?

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13 minutes ago, LatPhrao said:

"I do not know anyone that voted for Trump that wishes they voted for Harris." Then you don't know Jack, do you.

Your post got me wondering and I was curious if there was any data to be found on this. Turns out, you do 'know jack'. According to this survey, if voters were given a 'do-over', they would choose Harris. And, the more time goes on, the bigger the margin for Harris. To wit:

A new NBC News poll shows that many voters would now choose between former Vice President Kamala Harris over President Donald Trump, according to CNN data guru Harry Enten.

“Regrets … some folks had a few,” Enten said during a segment showing Harris' improved numbers.

Trump defeated Harris in the November 2024 election by just more than a point and a half, according to the survey, but Harris pulled ahead by one point in a redo poll conducted in April 2025 and is now leading by an eight-point margin.

“Kamala Harris wins in a redo, asking folks essentially if you could redo the 2024 election, how would you vote?” Enten explained. “She wins it by, get this, eight points. A massive shift from what we saw back in November of 2024 when Donald Trump won by a point, and I will note that this sample was weighted to the 2024 result in which Donald Trump won by a point. And yet Kamala Harris in this weighted sample, she wins by eight amongst the sample that voted for Trump by one.”

On 4/24/2026 at 4:28 PM, ericthai said:

First, the U.S. is not simply an “import economy.” It runs a trade deficit in goods, but it’s also one of the largest exporters in the world and dominates services, finance, and high-value industries.

Second, the “petrodollar = whole economy” idea is overstated. Oil being priced in dollars helps reinforce global dollar use, but the dollar’s role comes much more from:

  • the size of the U.S. economy

  • deep, liquid Treasury markets

  • relative political and legal stability

60% of global reserves are still in dollars—not just because of oil.

Third, the debt point: the U.S. debt is large (between $34–36T publicly held depending on measure, not a flat $40T owed at market rates), but it’s issued in its own currency. The U.S. doesn’t face the same “can’t pay interest” constraint as countries borrowing in foreign currencies. Rising rates matter, but they don’t trigger instant collapse scenarios.

Finally, even if oil were priced in multiple currencies tomorrow, that would be a gradual shift, not a sudden “lights out” event.

Global systems don’t flip overnight—especially ones as entrenched as dollar-denominated finance.

So yeah—there are legitimate concerns about deficits and long-term fiscal policy. But “petrodollar disappears = U.S. economy collapses instantly” is more dramatic than economic reality.

Wait and see!

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