Stuff that doesn't really fit in either "Examples of" thread....

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
This started as an article on geography — then took a depressing turn. Another tale of systematically screwing the natives.

 

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Well-Known Member
Florida Supreme Court justices sharply question state on abortion ballot measure
Florida’s Supreme Court justices appeared skeptical of the state’s arguments Wednesday that the language on a ballot initiative to protect abortion rights was misleading.

Nathan Forrester, who argued on behalf of the state attorney general’s office, urged the court to disqualify the measure.

He said voters won’t understand what the amendment will do because the language used to describe it was too broad and had an “enormously wide range of meanings.”

But several justices immediately questioned Forrester’s contention. The amendment may be sweeping in what it proposes, they said, but that’s an argument the state should make to voters, not the court.

“It’s pretty obvious that this is an aggressive, comprehensive approach to dealing with this issue. The people of Florida aren’t stupid. They can figure this out,” Chief Justice Carlos Muñiz said.

“It seems like to me all these things need to be argued about in the political process, because otherwise it’s a restriction on the substance of what can be proposed. We’re not given the power in the constitution to impose such a restriction,” Justice Charles Canady said.

Muñiz noted it will likely be up to the court to determine the limits of the amendment if it passes.

“There’s no possible way a summary could tick through all these different variables and possible implications. … The summary says what it says. People can see for themselves if it’s too broad or vague or whatever,” Muñiz said.

Courtney Brewer, arguing on behalf of the initiative sponsor group Floridians Protecting Freedom, said the summary’s language was easy to understand.

“There is no question that voters understand what viability means in the abortion context. This is a term and its meaning that have become a part of the cultural fabric of our nation,” she said.

Florida’s Supreme Court acts as a gatekeeper for ballot measures. Once a measure gathers enough signatures to qualify, the court is charged with determining that the language that will appear on the ballot is only about one subject and won’t confuse voters. The court is not supposed to rule on the merits of a measure.

The amendment would establish a right to abortion to the point of fetal viability, which would be determined by health providers but is usually around 22 to 25 weeks of pregnancy.

If a measure makes it to the ballot, it needs to reach a 60 percent threshold to be approved. Citizen-led ballot initiatives face a steep path to getting on the ballot, as the GOP-majority Legislature has changed requirements over the years to make it more difficult.

Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) also appointed five of the seven justices, shifting the balance of the state Supreme Court and leading to more measures being rejected.

But the toughest questions and comments Wednesday were directed at opponents of the measure.

“You’re saying this is a wolf. And a wolf it may be, but it seems our job is to say whether it’s a wolf in sheep’s clothing. That’s all we get to do,” Justice John Couriel said.

“This may be as sweeping as you say, it may be that it wipes away all regulation of abortion. … We may find that very persuasive from the standpoint of whether or not to vote in favor of the amendment. But … the question before us is, is this hiding a ball in some meaningful way, or can voters look at this and say, that’s sweeping and we shouldn’t approve this?” Couriel added.

Still, the justices also made clear that a separate case involving the state’s 15-week abortion ban is intertwined with the amendment.

Muñiz raised the issue of fetal personhood and whether voters would understand the practical impact of the amendment, because the court hasn’t taken a position on whether the constitution protects “an unborn child at any stage of pregnancy.”

The court in September heard arguments challenging the constitutionality of the current abortion ban but has not yet issued a ruling. If the current ban is upheld, a separate six-week ban would then be triggered.

If the amendment passes, it would effectively reverse the 15-week ban as well as the pending six-week cutoff.

Even with a 15-week ban, Florida has become a haven for women seeking abortions from other states with even stricter laws, so any change in policy would be felt across the Southeast.
 

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Well-Known Member
Better than thinking Canada can fix the problem. Need to negotiate like Canada does.

Federal judge tosses PhRMA lawsuit challenging Medicare drug negotiations
A Texas federal judge on Monday dismissed a lawsuit challenging the Biden administration’s Medicare drug price negotiations filed by the pharmaceutical industry lobbying group PhRMA.

The decision marks a small victory for the Biden administration, as it’s the first time a court has outright dismissed a challenge to Medicare’s new price negotiation powers.

There are eight other lawsuits filed by drug companies and other plaintiffs, and the legal fight could stretch for years. The federal government sent out its initial offer to drug companies earlier this month, and while the negotiations will end in August, the prices won’t take effect until 2026.

Judge David Alan Ezra in the Western District of Texas granted the Biden administration’s request to dismiss the lawsuit, ruling that the plaintiffs lacked standing.

PhRMA was joined in the lawsuit by the National Infusion Center Association (NICA) and the Global Colon Cancer Association, but Ezra dismissed NICA from the case because he said the court lacked jurisdiction.

As NCIA was the only plaintiff that resided in Texas, the entire case was dismissed. However, it was dismissed without prejudice and could be brought up again.

“We are disappointed with the court’s decision, which does not address the merits of our lawsuit, and we are weighing our next legal steps,” PhRMA spokesperson Nicole Longo said in a statement to The Hill.

PhRMA represents some of the largest drug companies in the world. The group sued the administration in June, arguing Medicare negotiation is unconstitutional and violated drug companies’ due process.
 

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cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
This isn’t political necessarily (I mean everything is at some level) but I found it interesting

Considering that in about a century we went from this
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to this
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I’m expecting that soon there will
be a watermelon plant that you cut open to reveal 20 pounds of wagyu tenderloin.

At which point I’ll add more veg to my diet!
 

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Russia Booted from UN Chemical Weapons Executive Council, Replaced by Ukraine!
As originally reported on Fox News (yes, they do occasionally report on real news), Russia has finally been kicked off the governing body of the UN organization charged with enforcing the Chemical Weapons Convention of 1997:

Russian President Vladimir Putin faced another overlooked setback on the international stage, a new report by the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies (FDD) highlights.
In a blow to Russian influence and prestige, members of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) ousted Russia for the first time ever from the body’s 41-member Executive Council while electing Ukraine to fill one of three open seats in the OPCW’s Eastern European Group.
The report, titled "For Russia, A Year of Setbacks at the OPCW," notes that the challenge ahead is for the United States and its allies to hold Russia accountable for its violations of the Chemical Weapons Convention, the treaty that established the OPCW to ensure its implementation.
The continued possession and stockpiling of chemical weapons by Russia received far too little focus, the report argues. Moscow remains an OPCW member despite openly trying to assassinate its enemies with chemical weapons, including Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny, who died in a Siberian prison colony and had been poisoned numerous times in the past for being the main political opponent of Putin.
"Navalny's tragic death should galvanize action by Western governments across the international organization space. The ideal place to start is the OPCW and penalizing Putin for his original chemical weapons attack on Navalny," Andrea Stricker, deputy director of FDD’s Nonproliferation and Biodefense Program and author of the report, told Fox News Digital.
Now if we can just get the UN General Assembly to strip the Russian Federation of its Permanent Seat on the Security Council, we might finally succeed in turning the UN into a potentially useful international organization that really could stop wars of aggression in the future.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
There’s o
Russia Booted from UN Chemical Weapons Executive Council, Replaced by Ukraine!
As originally reported on Fox News (yes, they do occasionally report on real news), Russia has finally been kicked off the governing body of the UN organization charged with enforcing the Chemical Weapons Convention of 1997:


Now if we can just get the UN General Assembly to strip the Russian Federation of its Permanent Seat on the Security Council, we might finally succeed in turning the UN into a potentially useful international organization that really could stop wars of aggression in the future.
There’s one teensy problem with booting Russia from the Security Council

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