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Monday, November 18, 2024
Of All the Bad Trump Cabinet Picks, Matt Gaetz is the Worst
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Metro to Resume Enforcing Traffic Laws
Even the mayor has started to come around. “I have observed a slight increase, anecdotally, in very reckless driving with extraordinarily high rates of speed on local roads, and I’m comfortable if somebody in that scenario gets pulled over for a significant traffic violation,” Mayor Freddie O’Connell told the Banner.
Getting pulled over in Nashville used to be a fairly regular occurrence. Before graduating high school, I got at least a handful of speeding tickets and warnings, and attended driving school on two separate occasions; in general, I felt very monitored on the road. Because of that, I'd try to follow the speed limit, use turn signals more consciously, and come to a full stop at every stop sign. The thought of a law man out there who might pull me over changed the way I drove.
Then, in 2018, I learned that the Metro Nashville Police Department would no longer pull over drivers for minor infractions. After a series of studies were released purporting to find no correlation between the number of traffic stops and the reduction of criminal activity, traffic stops fell off precipitously.
It had long been a goal of the department to reduce the number of stops. In 2012, MNPD initiated 445,152 stops. By 2018, they got that number down to 204,484. In 2022, the most recent year for which there’s full data, MNPD conducted just 18,663 traffic stops.
With this in mind, at the start of Covid, I bought a cheap 1990 Mazda Miata and didn’t bother to register it. I treated it as a “fugitive” car of sorts. I stopped considering speed limit signs, referred to it as my go-kart, and on lazy Sunday afternoons, I’d blitz down Briley Parkway and split off onto the rural roads in North Davidson County. Looking back on that period, I am certain that I achieved nirvana.
My point in telling this story is that I could feel the lack of police presence on the roads, and as a result, my behavior changed. Even with the risk entailed while driving an unregistered vehicle, I wasn’t concerned in the slightest about being stopped.
Similarly, less conscious and more reckless drivers than myself across the country have changed their behavior. As traffic stops plummeted, drivers have acted more erratically and, as a result, roads have gotten more dangerous for both drivers and pedestrians. Pedestrian deaths are currently the highest they’ve been in forty years.
A number of reports analyzing what’s contributed to this rise focus on the size of SUVs, the use of smartphones, or inadequate infrastructure. Twelve years ago, an entire global initiative designed to address it called Vision Zero emerged. And cities like Nashville have adopted its tenets, building out pedestrian infrastructure and modifying roads to make them safer (e.g. illuminating crosswalks and banning right on red). Vision Zero initiatives are tied deeply into Freddie O’Connell’s transit referendum. It’s a program you hear about repeatedly from local leaders as a kind of secular mandate from heaven that requires urgent attention.
And yet, the solution is sitting right at their feet. The roads are more dangerous now because people drive more dangerously. The most immediate thing the city could do to make them safer is empower police officers to pull over people for driving like idiots again.
Rod's Comment: It seems hard to deny that traffic enforcement leads to better driving. I have received a few tickets in my life and after everyone, for a while, I am more cautious about driving the speed limit and coming to complete stops at stop signs and following other traffic laws. I would assume that not only does getting a ticket cause the person getting the ticket to drive more safely but when some people drive more safely, it effects the way other people drive. Why we ever thought that we could cut back on traffic enforcement and it not affect people's behavior, I don't know.
I walk almost every day for exercise. One is taking their life in their hand when crossing an intersection. After I get the "walk" light, cars just keep turning. I hope that Metro resuming traffic enforcement includes a focus on people making illegal turns and failing to yield the right-of-way to pedestrians.
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Bill Freeman, Business Mogul, Mayoral Candidate, Democrat Donor, Dead by Suicide
Bill Freeman |
suicide. Bill Freeman has been a fixture in the lives of Nashvillians for as long as I can remember. He was a major developer, served on board of various organization, was a major fundraiser for national, state, and local Democrat candidates, and was himself an unsuccessful candidate for mayor.
Many years ago, when I worked at Metro Development and Housing Agency Freeman was either an official of the agency or a board member of MDHA. When I was a running for Metro Council the first time, I met with Freeman and solicited a campaign contribution. He has been in the news one way or another for the last forty-so years.
Freeman committed suicide using a gun. He had suffered multiple strokes over the years and had never fully recovered. He was 73 years old.
Condolences to the family. RIP
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Sunday, November 17, 2024
How Robert F. Kenndy Jr. Could Destroy One of Civilization's Best Achievements
Hegseth is simply not qualified to administer the largest bureaucracy in the
Tulsi Gabbard is a Russian propogandist and likely a Russian asset. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is simply a nutjob. The only way Trump could have had worst cabinet picks is if he included Tucker Carlson, Michael Flynn, Roger Stone, Steve Bannon, and Alex Jones. Wait, Trump still might find a place for them.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr is a special kind of nutjob. He has been spreading misinformation for more than twenty years. I guess I am kind of surprised that Trump picked Kennedy. For one thing, Kennedy is a nutjob of the left. Of course, Trump is not a conservative. There is nothing conservative about trade wars, ballooning the deficit, abrogating America's leadership role in the world and appeasing dictators, and disdain for the rule of law and constitutional governance. These days however the fringe of the left and the right are not that different. Nevertheless, Trump came to power riding the conservative brand. I would have thought that to put a left-wing activist in his cabinet would be going too far for Trump's supporters, but it is not. Trump and Kennedy did have in common a distrust of vaccines and advocacy of weird, unorthodox treatments for those infected by Covid. I guess that sealed the deal.
I am not certain that Trump is really that committed to getting Kennedy in his cabinet. Maybe Kennedy is just a bargaining chip. Maybe Trump will withdraw the Kennedy nomination and then Trump's critics can feel like they accomplished something, and they will let the rest slide through.
Kennedy presents a special threat to the nation's health. We need someone in that position who people take seriously, someone who will rally people to get vaccinated or follow CDC guidelines when a health crisis emerges, not someone who is going to discourage and likely put incentives in place to discourage vaccines. We need a serious person in that position. We need someone with gravitas and who is respected in the public health field. With Kennedy we have someone that only conspiracy theorist trust. I fear a return of deadly diseases that have mostly been eradicated.
Since his appointment, I have had people who appear to be rational people try to make excuses for Kennedy and to normalize him. It is really hard to do. They will say he is not opposed to vaccines; he just wants to make them safe and offer other rationalizations as to why Kennedy's appointment is not that alarming.
I know that many Trump supporters will favor the Kennedy nomination not in spite of him being a nutjob and conspiracy theorist, but because of it. Many have lost faith in institutions and think than any establishment point of view or consensus is suspect. They no longer have faith in the media, academia, science, the government, the military, the intelligence community, and the non-profit sector. They are tired of "elites" telling them what they should think. They don't trust the people with credentials and experience. They reject "the establishment." There has been a democratization of who the influencers are. The only elites many trust are the mavericks casting doubts on norms and challenging consensus.
I am posting below some links and excerpts from articles that explain who Robert Kennedy Jr. is and what he has done and what he advocates and why his reputation is well deserved. I know some will take some statement Kenedy made recently that sound reasonable and moderate and giving Trump the benefit of the doubt, they will conclude Kenedy is not that weird. There is a reason Kennedy's reputation is well deserved. Some of these articles are kind of lengthy. Not everything can be explained in 280 characters.
I know the true Trumpinistas will never entertain any criticism of Trump. The leader can do no wrong. For one thing, they will dismiss these articles because of the source. If it appears in the New York Times or The Atlantic it is immediately dismissed. If it is not reported by Fox News are a very limited number of other outlets, then it is not to be considered. Trumpinistas do not want any contrary information. Their mind is made up and they do not want to be confused with facts. Their response will be "bullshit" and "fake news." Nevertheless, responsible people need to push back when people try to normalize people like Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
RFK Jr.’s Conspiracy Theories: Here’s What Trump’s Pick For Health Secretary Has Promoted
by Sara Dorn, Forbes, Nov 15, 2024- ...
... RFK Jr. Said Covid-19 Targets ‘Caucasians And Black People’
Kennedy Jr. was caught on camera in July of 2023 telling fellow diners that “COVID-19 is targeted to attack Caucasians and Black people” and “the people who are most immune are Ashkenazi Jews and Chinese,” according to a video made public in the New York Post, which also shows him saying the U.S. “put hundreds of millions of dollars into ethnically targeted microbes” and labs in Ukraine collected Russian and Chinese DNA “so we can target people by race.”
... He Claims The Fda “suppresses” Advancements In Health
... He Says That Wireless Technology Can Cause Cancer And Other Conspiracies
... He Says Fluoride Causes Diseases
... He Says Mass Shootings Are Linked to Prescription Drugs
... He Believes The 2004 Presidential Election Was Stolen From John Kerry (read more)
How Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Could Destroy One of Civilization’s Best Achievements
by Zeynep Tufekci, The New York Times, Nov. 15, 2024- Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said Tuesday that he will head up a panel on vaccine safety for Donald Trump.
The president-elect’s transition team spokeswoman later walked that back, saying that he is “exploring the possibility” of forming a panel on autism, but “no decisions have been made.”
Let’s hope Trump drops any idea of a vaccine panel headed by Kennedy. For more than a decade, Kennedy has promoted anti-vaccine propaganda completely unconnected to reality. If Kennedy’s panel leads to even a small decline in vaccine rates across the country, it will result in the waste of untold amounts of money and, in all likelihood, the preventable deaths of infants too young to be vaccinated.
That wasted money will largely affect public health departments, whose budgets are already strained. A 2010 study in Pediatrics calculated the public sector expenses of containing a measles outbreak in which 11 children were infected at $124,517, an average of more than $10,000 per infection. That’s not to say that families won’t be affected as well: During that outbreak, 48 children too young to be vaccinated had to be quarantined at an average cost of $775 per family; medical costs for one infant who was infected were close to $15,000.
But those costs pale into comparison to the loss that will be felt by families who lose children to vaccine-preventable diseases, which typically strike when children are infected while still too young to be vaccinated.
Take pertussis, more commonly known as whooping cough. There have been several dramatic spikes in pertussis infections in the past decade, and in 2012 there were 48,277 reported cases in the US—the most since 1955. More than 87 percent of all of the country’s pertussis deaths from 2000 to 2014 were in infants younger than 3 months, which meant they wereRobert F. Kennedy Jr. said Tuesday that he will head up a panel on vaccine safety for Donald Trump.
... Let’s hope Trump drops any idea of a vaccine panel headed by Kennedy. For more than a decade, Kennedy has promoted anti-vaccine propaganda completely unconnected to reality. If Kennedy’s panel leads to even a small decline in vaccine rates across the country, it will result in the waste of untold amounts of money and, in all likelihood, the preventable deaths of infants too young to be vaccinated.
That wasted money will largely affect public health departments, whose budgets are already strained. A 2010 study in Pediatrics calculated the public sector expenses of containing a measles outbreak in which 11 children were infected at $124,517, an average of more than $10,000 per infection. That’s not to say that families won’t be affected as well: During that outbreak, 48 children too young to be vaccinated had to be quarantined at an average cost of $775 per family; medical costs for one infant who was infected were close to $15,000.
But those costs pale into comparison to the loss that will be felt by families who lose children to vaccine-preventable diseases, which typically strike when children are infected while still too young to be vaccinated.
Take pertussis, more commonly known as whooping cough. There have been several dramatic spikes in pertussis infections in the past decade, and in 2012 there were 48,277 reported cases in the US—the most since 1955. More than 87 percent of all of the country’s pertussis deaths from 2000 to 2014 were in infants younger than 3 months, which meant they were too young to have gotten their first pertussis shot. too young to have gotten their first pertussis shot.
... Kennedy made his name in the anti-vaccine movement in 2005, when he published a story alleging a massive conspiracy regarding thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative that had been removed from all childhood vaccines except for some variations of the flu vaccine in 2001. In his piece, Kennedy completely ignored an Institute of Medicine immunization safety review on thimerosal published the previous year; he’s also ignored the nine studies funded or conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that have taken place since 2003. (read it all)
FactChecking Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
By Jessica McDonald, FactCheck.Org, Updated on August 23, 2024 - Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is no stranger to FactCheck.org. He is a prominent anti-vaccine advocate who has been on our radar for years, primarily as the founder of Children’s Health Defense, a nonprofit that spreads anti-vaccine misinformation.
We’ve written numerous stories about his claims and those made in posts appearing on his nonprofit’s website. In 2021, the Center for Countering Digital Hate named Kennedy and CHD one of the “Disinformation Dozen,” or top 12 spreaders of misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccines online.
.... Kennedy, who is also an environmental activist and lawyer, has been opposed to vaccines since at least 2005, when he published an error-laden story in Rolling Stone and Salon that pushed the false notion that certain vaccine ingredients cause autism. The publications later retracted or withdrew the story.
... Kennedy also played a part in one of the worst measles outbreaks in recent memory. In 2018, two infants in American Samoa died when nurses accidentally prepared the combined measles, mumps and rubella, or MMR, vaccine with expired muscle relaxant rather than water. The Samoan government temporarily suspended the vaccination program, and anti-vaccine advocates — including Kennedy and his nonprofit — flooded the area with misinformation. The vaccination rate dropped to a dangerously low level. The next year, when a traveler brought measles to the islands, the disease tore through the population, sickening more than 5,700 people and killing 83, most of them young children.
Kennedy also promotes conspiracy theories. He believes the CIA was behind the killing of his uncle, and likely his father. He’s alleged that the 2004 presidential election was stolen (it wasn’t). He’s written a book claiming that Dr. Anthony Fauci, the former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, was part of “a historic coup d’état against Western democracy.” And he has repeatedly questioned whether HIV is the true or only cause of AIDS (it unequivocally is).
.... He misrepresents major conclusions from papers and gets other details wrong. He conveniently ignores the scientific literature — often vast, and of higher quality — that runs counter to his beliefs. He misleads on vaccine law and misunderstands key governmental programs, consistently viewing them through a lens of conspiracy and corruption.
... One of Kennedy’s most common and pernicious false claims is that vaccines are not tested for safety in clinical trials. .. “Vaccines are the only medical product that is not safety-tested prior to licensure,” Kennedy said in a July 15 “Fox & Friends” interview.
“We should have the same kind of testing — placebo-controlled trials — that we have for every other medication,” he also said to Fox News’ Jesse Watters on July 10. “Vaccines are exempt from pre-licensing placebo-controlled trials.”
“None of the vaccines are ever subjected to true placebo-controlled trials,” Kennedy said in a June 15 episode of the “Joe Rogan Experience” podcast. “It’s the only medical product that is exempt from that prior to licensure.”
Kennedy’s line is a falsehood he’s been using since at least 2017, when he said much the same in a Q&A interview with STAT.
All vaccines undergo safety testing prior to authorization or approval. To claim that vaccines are not tested for safety is overtly false.
In multiple interviews, Kennedy misleads about the hepatitis B vaccine, falsely suggesting that the reason the vaccine is given to newborns is to boost profits for vaccine makers. (read much more)
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Friday, November 15, 2024
Repeat Offenders Strike Again
The Pamphleteer, Nov. 15, 2024 -Two men out on bond were rearrested in Nashville on Wednesday while driving a stolen vehicle. According to WSMV, they were also in possession of a “modified fully automatic pistol” and drugs. Both suspects were already facing a number of previous charges—such as felony gun and drug possession—before being apprehended once again.
Despite Nashville’s ongoing struggle with recidivism, public officials continue to push peripheral policy solutions such as red flag laws and community policing. During a December media roundtable, Mayor O’Connell commented on the city’s revolving door of criminal behavior. “One thing that has come up repeatedly is that very often MNPD is not failing to apprehend suspects,” he said. The mayor also implied that the current process deserves a closer look: “This is going to involve… some initial review of that criminal legal process that will involve the District Attorney's Office [and the] judiciary.”
In April, Metro Nashville Police Department Chief Drake made it clear that changes need to be made across the entire criminal justice system—including the DA, parole, and public defenders offices. Meanwhile, officers on the ground have had a hard time facing the victims of repeat violent offenders. “On this side of the fence, we’re tired of having those conversations,” he said. “We want it to stop.”
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Thursday, November 14, 2024
How Donald Trump Could Serve a Third Term
by Rod Williams, Nov. 14, 2024 - Yesterday, President-elect Donald Trump raised eyebrows when he told House Republicans, “I suspect I won’t be running again unless you say, ‘He’s so good we’ve got to figure something else out.’”
Was he joking? I don't know. Trump's supporters often say he is joking when he makes remarks about abusing power or locking up his critics or speaks approvingly of people shooting journalist. I don't know what is a joke and what is to be taken seriously.
The 22nd Amendment to the Constitution says, "No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice, and no person who has held the office of President, or acted as President, for more than two years of a term to which some other person was elected President shall be elected to the office of the President more than once." That clearly being what the Constitution says, how could Trump continue to serve?
He has previously talked of suspending the Constitution, and I guess he could do that. I think that would be too bold of a move, however, and to actually suspend the Constitution would require a loyal military ready to seize power. I would not put that past Trump, but I don't think he would have all the pieces in place to pull off suspending the Constitution in the next four years.
Here is how he would likely do it, if he is serious. He could run as Vice President and on day one the new President would resign and thus Vice President Donald Trump would become president. That does not violate the Constitution. That's the way Trump's buddy Putin continued in power in Russia.
If this is what Trump does, I think the guy running for president would have to be Don. Jr. I think J. D. Vance could not be trusted enough to actually resign should he be elected. This would not be something done to deceive voters; the plan would be clearly stated.
Of course, I hope that Trumps screws up so badly that the American people turn against him. Also, Trump is old and in four years he may be dead or too ill to continue in office. However, if he remains popular and is physically able, it is a real possibility he could serve a third term. By the end of a third term, I think he would have consolidated enough power to suspend the Constitution.
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How Davidson County Voters Voted in the Recent Election
Please note that the above is for Davidson County only and districts may cross county lines. For more Davison County election results follow this link.
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Majority of Guns Reported Stolen in Nashville Taken from Vehicles. So far this year, 788 guns have been stolen from vehicles in Nashville.
doors, secure any valuables---especially guns, and REMOVE THE KEYS.
So far this year, 788 guns have been stolen from vehicles in Nashville, 23 were taken from autos just last week. The total number of guns stolen this year in Davidson County is 1,076, which means that 73% of guns stolen so far in 2024 have been taken from automobiles.
MNPD’s special initiative to combat vehicle theft and related crimes, begun on February 1st, has resulted in 926 arrests and the recoveries of 485 stolen vehicles and 190 guns.
Just like guns taken from vehicles, stolen autos are routinely involved in criminal activities, including carjackings and robberies.
My Comment: With 788 guns one could start a small war. If you get killed by a stray bullet in a shootout between rival gangs, such as recently happened at the recent TSU homecoming event, you can blame your law-abiding friendly neighborhood gun owner who leaves his handgun in his car. I think we need a law making it a crime to leave a gun in a car, unless the gun is secured in a gun safe secured to the vehicle. We don't have such a law. Please be responsible.
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Trump picks Matt Gaetz for Attorney General
Me: What?
You: Trump picked Matt Gaetz to be his Attorney Gerneral.
Me: Really?
You: Really.
Me: No.
You: Yes.
Me: What the F***!! Wow. It really may be as bad as I thought it could be. This is bad, but I am trying to look on the bright side. I am trying to accentuate the positive. At least he didn't pick Michael Flynn or Alex Jones.
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Wednesday, November 13, 2024
The Marco Rubio Pick for Secretary of State offers a Glimmer of Hope
Now, that Trump will return to office, and return to office without the guardrails of his first term, I can only hope that his supporters were right, and I was wrong. I want to be wrong. If I was right, I can hope that our institutions can withstand the challenge.
Court challenges can slow some of Trump's worst instincts. I know that many liberal critics of Trump think of the Supreme Court as Trump lapdogs. I don't. I think the Court will uphold the Constitution. I also think our military take seriously their oath to the Constitution and they know they do not take an oath to a president. I don't think the military will shoot Americans even if ordered to do so by the president. Military officers can be fired by the president of course and loyalist can be promoted, but it would take a while to remake the military in Trump's image.
Another factor that may mitigate Trump's authoritarian tendencies is that he may quickly overreach, and the public may turn on Trump and Republicans would lose the next mid-term. If Trump imposes across the board tariffs, we will see an almost immediate increase in consumer prices and the public will not be happy.
While I think securing the border and expelling criminal immigrants is popular, if people see long-time illegal immigrant being arrested as they leave church or neighbors being drug out of their home, people will turn against Trump. Hearing someone say they will do something extreme is one thing; seeing is something else.
Also of course, there is some solace in that Trump is old, but not much. Trump is only a year older than me, and I do not feel like I am ready to kick the bucket anytime soon but life expectancy for American males is only 74.8 years, so maybe Trump won't live long enough to destroy our democracy. If he does complete this coming term, maybe he will be ready to retire in four years. In any event, I do not feel that this 2024 election will be our last. I think there is about a 90% chance we will again have a legitimate election in 2028. Despite my fears, I expect democracy to survive Trump.
I am paying close attention as Trump picks his cabinet and staff, looking for any glimmer of hope that Trump will not be as bad as I fear he could be. I am trying not to focus on the negative and instead accentuate the positive. I saw a glimmer of hope in that Trump has selected Marco Rubio as his Secretary of State. Trump could have picked someone like Steve Bannon or Tucker Carlson or Marjorie Taylor Green. That is sort of what I expected. Trump did pick a totally unqualified talk show host to head the Department of Defense, and I expected an equally bad choice for State.
Marco Rubio is qualified and smart and mainstream. He has served eight years in the Senate and is a member of the Foreign Intelligence Committee. He did, like most Republicans, bend the knee and kiss the ring, but Trump was not going to pick anyone who had not. Last term Trump surrounded himself with traditionalist establishment Republicans. I did not expect that this time. Anyone Trump picked would have to be a Trump loyalist. While Rubio proved himself to be a Trump loyalist, his loyalism came late. Rubio did vote against the most recent aid package to Ukraine. However, in 2022, Rubio said we should continue the funding of Ukraine as long as Ukraine would continue the fighting. I take some solace in that at least Rubio knows what the policy should be even though he buckled to Trump's will. In his heart, Rubio is not an isolationist.
Another thing that encourages me about Rubio is that he was pretty much the architect of our policy toward Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua. When Biden came to office he kept those policies in place.
I was watching an episode of The Bulwark last night and one of the members on the panel reported that he had a first-hand report from someone who was in the room who said that after Venezuela's Maduro did something particularly offensive that Trump was talking about invading and disposing Maduro and Rubio pulled out a mad and showed Trump why such a move would be risky and appealed to Trump's ego by explaining why such a move would prove embarrassing to Trump. If true, that is the kind of person we need around Trump. Rubio appears to be a hawk but pragmatic.
I'll take a glimmer of hope wherever I can find it.
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Tuesday, November 12, 2024
All illegal immigrants should pack up and quickly move to California.
I am supportive of President Trump's pledge to close the southern border, and I am supportive of expelling recent arrivals and criminals. I oppose deportation of 20 million people, many of whom have been living here for decades. The purpose of this post, however, is not to opine on emigration policy. I am posting this as a public service to illegal aliens, also known as undocumented residents. I am reposting this in Spanish using a translation program, so I don't know how well those works. I know there are illegals here from China and various African counties and other places and all illegal immigrants do not speak Spanish. I hope someone is getting them the message that doom may await. The message is that while deportation looms, there is hope.
Like I said, I am not really sure that Trump will deport 15 to 20 million people. Trump talks a lot and doesn't deliver. You may remember he said he would build a wall, and Mexico would pay for it, and that didn't happen. So, his talk of mass deportation may be bluster. However, if I were a criminal illegal, I would be very worried. Since I am not an illegal, I have the luxury of just waiting to see what happens; if you are an illegal alien, you need to worry, especially if you are a criminal alien or on the terror watch list or a gang member. However, all is not gloom and doom. You have a champion.
California Governor Gavn Newsom is already preparing to fight back and make California a safe haven for illegal immigrants. President Trump does not take office for two and a half months, but Newsom is getting ready for battle. Newsom has called a special session of the legislature for Dec. 2 focused on bolstering the State's resources for the defense of what Newsom sees as fundamental rights.
When Trump was previously President, California filed over 100 lawsuits contesting the president's actions on immigration. California's Attorney General Rob Bonta is ready to do it again. Last week Bonta announced that the state is prepared to defend its values against the challenges brought by a second Trump administration.
"I don't think there's anything that the Trump administration won't try in pursuit of its ends and goals, so we have to be prepared for anything," said Bonta. "Mr. Trump repeatedly overstepped his authority between 2016 and 2020. There's no reason to think he won't do it again. We checked him and we stopped him, and we pushed him back into his box when he tried to step out of it. And that's what the law is for. That's what AGs do."
"We won't be flat-footed come January. You can be sure that as California attorney general, if Trump attacks your rights, I'll be there. If Trump comes after your freedoms, I'll be there. If Trump jeopardizes your safety and your well-being, I'll be there," said Bonta.
All illegal immigrants should pack up and quickly move to California. California will protect you. Plus, the weather is nice. Also, in January of this year California expanded the state's healthcare program to cover almost all illegal immigrants. There should be room for you in California, because the state is losing population. The super rich are fine with paying high taxes and living in their gated communities, but a lot of middle class are fleeing to places like Texas and Tennessee, so California can handle the influx. California is a welcoming state and will defend you. Go now while the gettin's good.
Note: The translation program did not work. It kept automatically changing it back to English and I gave up. If you have contacts with the illegal immigrant community, help spread the word. Tell your lawn care guy.
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Monday, November 11, 2024
Trump didn't say that. Ok, he said it, but you're taking it out of context, Ok, Ok, it was in context but ......
My friend Bill Bernstein posted the above in a Facebook post summarizing the respond of Trumpinistas to anyone pointing out outrageous and freighting things Trump says. The response is so standard that it almost doesn't need to be said. Often it is not said, but dismissed by a simple, "Fake News."
By saying "fake news," Trumpinistas to not mean it is not true that Trump said it, is is that: "He didn't say that. Ok, he said that, but it was out of context. Ok, ok, it was in context but that wasn't what he meant. Alright, that is what he meant and damn straight we should do it. Fine, you have TDS and Orange Man bad."
When Donald Trump said, "I could stand in the middle of 5th Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn't lose voters," he was spot on.
You may respond with a simple "Fake News."
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