Trump is trying to get out of something. He’s still talking about auto pen and Obama, Russia, Russia, and Russia. He is just sick. Trump is just sick that his past might catch up with him. Congress is shutting down business.
The bill that just passed in 2025. When will it big beautiful bill they shut down the prices and
ChatGPT said:
The “One Big Beautiful Bill” (OBBB), officially the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, was signed into law on July 4, 2025, and contains hundreds of provisions across taxes, healthcare, welfare, energy, and defense Times Union+15Wikipedia+15Politico+15.
💸 When do the worst parts kick in?
- Tax changes
- Major tax cuts and expanded deductions (e.g. SALT cap raised to $40K, tip/overtime deductions, estate tax bump) became effective immediately upon signing—July 4, 2025—and some are set through 2028 The Guardian.
- Welfare & Medicaid reductions
- SNAP work requirements and cost-sharing to states start end of 2026, shifting funding burdens TIMECongress.gov+4Wikipedia+4Investopedia+4.
- Medicaid cuts—near $1 trillion over 10 years—begin now, with eligibility verifications, work/volunteer rules, co-pay changes, and coverage limits phasing in over the 2026–2030 period InvestopediaTIME.
- Energy & Consumer costs
- Stripping clean energy incentives and boosting fossil fuels will gradually increase electricity costs over the next 5–10 years—estimates suggest households may pay $40–$640/year more by 2035 MarketWatch.
🧾 Who loses and when?
- Immediately (mid‑2025): Middle-class sees tax relief; but programs begin facing cuts in Medicaid and SNAP.
- End of 2026 onward: Welfare provisions—work mandates, cost shifting, co‑pays—begin impacting the poor most.
- 2027–2035: Continued erosion of safety-net services, increased energy prices, and rising federal debt burden.
📉 Does this turn into a wealth transfer?
Yes. Independent analysts and watchdogs argue it shifts wealth toward the rich by:
- Adding $2.8–5 trillion to the deficit over 10 years The White House+1Times Union+1.
- Cutting nearly $1 trillion in Medicaid, SNAP, and welfare—while keeping tax breaks permanent The Daily Beast+10Investopedia+10The Guardian+10.
Critics label it “robbing working‑class Americans” and the “largest upward wealth transfer in American history” Midland Daily News+1Wikipedia+1.
✅ Summary
| Timing | Effect on Poor & Middle Class |
|---|---|
| Now/2025 | Tax breaks; beginnings of welfare reductions |
| 2026–2028 | SNAP/Medicaid work rules, limits, and cost shifts activate |
| 2027–2035 | Welfare access tightens, energy bills rise, deficits grow |
If you’d like to break down a specific section—like SNAP changes, Medicaid co-pays, state cost shifting, or energy pricing trends—I can give you a detailed timeline and analysis.
Key news on the “Big Beautiful Bill”
Here’s What’s In the ‘One Big Beautiful’ Tax And Spending Bill
What Medicaid Recipients Should Know About The ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’
Why cheaper power looks unlikely as Trump’s big budget law reshuffles the U.S. energy landscape
COUNTERPOINT: One Big, Beautiful Bill is robbing working-class Americans
Sources
Here’s the latest on the sudden passing of Roy Black and how Trump reacted:
⚖️ What happened?
- Roy Black, a prominent Miami defense attorney who had represented Jeffrey Epstein (alongside other high-profile clients like Rush Limbaugh and Justin Bieber), has died unexpectedly at age 80—his law partner confirmed he passed away suddenly at his Coral Gables home YouTube+1The Times of India+1The Times of India+1New York Post+1.
😡 Trump’s reaction: “Psycho” moment?
- While the headline you mentioned suggests Trump “goes psycho,” none of the articles directly describe Trump reacting in that way to Roy Black’s death.
- However, there’s mounting frustration within Trump’s camp over ongoing Epstein-related controversies. Trump has been accused of dismissing conspiracies about Epstein’s death and the “client list.” Right-wing voices—sometimes critical even of Trump—have voiced disillusionment with how the administration is handling these matters New York Post+3AP News+3WIRED+3.
🧩 What’s fueling tension
- Epstein files backlash
A DOJ memo earlier this month stated there’s no “client list” and insisted Epstein died by suicide. This statement triggered outrage—especially from Trump’s own MAGA base—who feel misled and are now pressuring him for answers AP News+1Al Jazeera+1. - Internal MAGA dissent
Influencers within the MAGA movement have been vocal against Trump and Pam Bondi’s handling of the Epstein disclosures. Trump himself has dismissed some of these critics as “weaklings,” describing the uproar as a “hoax” and accusing them of being manipulated by Democrats en.wikipedia.org+15Al Jazeera+15pbs.org+15.
📌 Summary
- Roy Black, a high-profile defense attorney associated with Epstein, has died suddenly at 80.
- There’s no public evidence Trump had an extreme or erratic reaction specifically tied to Black’s passing.
- Separately, Trump is under pressure from his own base over how he’s approached Epstein—especially regarding the “client list” and conspiracies—leading to internal conflict within MAGA.
Would you like me to track upcoming political fallout in the GOP, further statements from Trump, or reactions from legal circles about Roy Black’s unexpected death?
Relevant news on Epstein & MAGA unrest
Editorial Roundup: United States
It’s Not Just Epstein. MAGA Is Angry About a Lot of Things
Sources
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