The Morning Briefing: Let's Trigger Lefties With Talk of a Third Term for President Trump
Stephen Kruiser
Top O' the Briefing
Happy Friday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. The Sine Qua Non Sequitur is enjoying various olive loaf hors d’oeuvres at a Spanish-dubbed Hee Haw retrospective this weekend.
Let's enjoy a little World Cup humor before we get to the other stuff. This was floating around social media and cracked me up: England and France are the only two Muslim countries left in the World Cup.
We're going to take a quick look at a couple more reasons to enjoy this time we have with a real president in charge, then head off into that good weekend.
I continue to marvel at not only how much President Donald Trump has on his plate, but also at the vigor with which he deals with it all. Yes, it's true that presidents tend to have a lot on their plates, but this president has extra helpings because of the nightmare that preceded him in the Oval Office.
That he keeps the schedule that he does at the age of 80 should become the stuff of legend one day, on the off chance that historians decide to become honest again in the future.
President Trump has had a busy week, what with the Independence Day celebrations, NATO, and Iran all on the agenda. There were a couple of other things that I really enjoyed, and that's what we'll focus on today.
This is from Catherine:
President Donald Trump has declared he is requesting a rehearing for a crucial birthright citizenship case after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against the original understanding of the Fourteenth Amendment and opened the floodgates for “birth tourists” and “anchor babies.”
The current warped view of birthright citizenship is that any child born on U.S. soil is a citizen even if his parents just walked or flew across the border, or even if the parents are affiliated with enemy governments or with international criminal organizations. After the Supreme Court majority ruled this was the right view of birthright citizenship at the end of June, ignoring historical evidence to the contrary and serious threats to our elections and national sovereignty, Trump first urged Congress to pass legislation to correct the decision. But he seems somewhat impatient with the length of time this will take and is seeking a quicker resolution.
Trump's relentless focus on cleaning up the host of horrible immigration policies that have plagued this nation for decades is what endears him to the people who were on board with him first. For those of us who live in border states, it's also some of his most important work.
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https://pjmedia.com/stephen-kruiser/2026/07/10/the-morning-briefing-lets-trigger-lefties-with-talk-of-a-third-term-for-president-trump-n4954858