There are a number of ways to illustrate the unusual degree of responsiveness of the current Trump administration, especially as compared to their predecessors. You could, for example, point to how the White House struck a deal with El Salvador to house illegal alien gang members, and then deported those gang members in a matter of days — before a federal judge could stop them. Similarly, the White House ended Hunter Biden’s Secret Service detail within about 24 hours of discovering that he still had one. President Trump also announced he was invalidating Joe Biden’s pardons, just a couple of days after an investigation revealed that Biden’s signature was being rubber-stamped with an Autopen on pretty much every document he signed while in office. These are the kinds of quick, decisive actions that — whether you agree with them or not — are not typical of most administrations.
But maybe the clearest example of the level of responsiveness we’re getting from the White House came last night, when the administration released more than a thousand of the so-called “JFK Files” on the internet, totaling more than 30,000 pages. These are declassified files relating to the assassination of President Kennedy that have never been seen before, and that should never have been classified in the first place.


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