Feeble old Jon Voight - Drunken Deviant Druggie ... Now MAGAturds Grovel To Him

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Sujet : Feeble old Jon Voight - Drunken Deviant Druggie ... Now MAGAturds Grovel To Him
De : c186282 (at) *nospam* nnada.ne (c186282)
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Date : 06. Jun 2025, 05:11:37
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>
  Voight, with the cash from early success, became
  a sort of total drunk for 20+ years.

He's still a drug addicted drunk, just like Hegseth and Trump.

That ignorant queer will keel over and be dead soon along with his queer
boss Trump.  They're both old sick and unhealthy.   Death awaits.



Fat old Trump has no power over hollywood.   I expect him to be dead by
2026, dead in a puddle of his own shit.


"The Berman Amendment provided that, apart from materials designed to
promote terrorism, the president does not have �the authority to regulate
or prohibit, directly or indirectly ... the importation from any country,
or the exportation to any country, whether commercial or otherwise,
regardless of format or medium of transmission, of any information or
informational materials, including but not limited to publications, films,
posters, phonograph records, photographs, microfilms, microfiche, tapes,
compact disks, CD ROMs, artworks, and news wire feeds.�"

Tariffs and Other Governmental Controls on Foreign Films, Movies and Social
Media

Written by

John R. Vile
, published on May 13
 

President Donald Trump has announced that he plans a 100% tariff on all
movies imported into the United States that are made in "foreign lands."
The American film industry makes some of its movies in other countries and
some lawyers have questioned whether such a tariff would infringe on
freedom of speech. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon)

Pointing to economic problems faced by the film industry and incentives
that other nations have offered to entice filmmakers to shoot movies
abroad, on May 4, 2025, President Donald Trump announced on Truth Social
that he planned to set in motion a 100% tariff on �any and all Movies
coming into our Country that are produced in Foreign Lands� (Alpert 2025).

In 1917, Congress adopted the Trading with the Enemy Act (TWE), which
allowed the president during times of national emergencies to embargo
transactions with hostile nations (Michalec 1992, 813). The International
Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977 further gave the president authority
over tariffs, an area that is traditionally exercised by Congress under its
power over foreign commerce and taxation.

While economists and members of the U.S. film industry attempt to assess
the ultimate impact of such tariffs, how they would be levied, and what
effect they might have on increasing movie prices (White and Mason 2025;
Zahn 2025), some lawyers are questioning the constitutionality of the
tariff. They point out that in 1988 Congress adopted the Berman Amendment
to the 1977 Emergency Economic Powers Act, which is found in Volume 50,
Section 1702 of the U.S. Code under �Presidential authorities.�
Berman Amendment bars president from regulating film imports

The Berman Amendment provided that, apart from materials designed to
promote terrorism, the president does not have �the authority to regulate
or prohibit, directly or indirectly ... the importation from any country,
or the exportation to any country, whether commercial or otherwise,
regardless of format or medium of transmission, of any information or
informational materials, including but not limited to publications, films,
posters, phonograph records, photographs, microfilms, microfiche, tapes,
compact disks, CD ROMs, artworks, and news wire feeds.�

In Trump�s first administration, the Berman Amendment came into play when
courts ruled that Trump did not have authority to ban the social media
platform TikTok from operating in the United States, unless it was sold to
a non-Chinese owner. (China-based ByteDance, Ltd. owns TikTok.) Congress
responded by changing the law to provide an exception for TikTok. Relying
on this change, Trump issued another order directed against TikTok in his
second administration, which he has, however, subsequently paused.
Film industry generates a trade surplus

Whereas Trump has aimed his highest tariffs on nations that have huge trade
balances in their favor, the film industry has been quite lucrative for the
U.S., generating a trade surplus of $15.3 billion a year (Alpert 2025).

Trump�s proposed tariff on foreign-made films may have less to do with
First Amendment concerns over the free flow of ideas than with preserving
jobs in the U.S. film industry. That might mean that the tariff would not
violate traditional First Amendment prohibitions on content or viewpoint
discrimination. Courts faced with a challenge on such a tariff might focus
more on interpreting the language of the tariff than on constitutional
issues.

In the meantime, California Gov. Gavin Newsom has proposed that Trump
support a film tax credit program instead (Ables 2025).

John R. Vile is a political science professor and dean of the Honors
College at Middle Tennessee State University.
https://firstamendment.mtsu.edu/article/tariffs-and-other-governmental-
controls-on-foreign-films-movies-and-social-media/

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6 Jun05:11 o Feeble old Jon Voight - Drunken Deviant Druggie ... Now MAGAturds Grovel To Him1c186282

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