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

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
20 bucks is great but ive never heard anyone doing that! , when i lived back home not even 10 years ago i paid over 85 bucks a month. but im also of a generation who uses their phone alot.
It was $20 on top of the line itself which the wife says was about $50. Now we're paying $210/mth for phone, unlimited internet and sat TV. That's still less than what we're paying for house insurance so not so bad.

The phone lines here are really old so never had internet access thru that other than dial-up. Would cost way too much to upgrade for the few customers on our section of line. I've been seeing fibre-optic cable being laid down near town so must be getting it in there soon.

:peace:
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
What the heck, AP? First sentence hangs this on the Biden administration and does not expand on that.

The comments are ugly.

 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
It is time for citizens and politicians to sign up to host these families in their own homes. If they don’t have anyone sign up, obviously there is no real support. Let’s find out?

He’d be surprised shocked still in complete denial if he’d find out how many would actually do that,
Imagine someone explaining to the evangelicals that it would be the Christian thing to do.

1711764826302.png
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus

Maybe she should aim her berates at these pirates.

 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
This guy is called leftist but allusions to Orban and references to sympathy for Russia in their war on Ukraine speak more about the growing strength of a politically illiberal movement in Europe that favors strongman leaders over democracies these days.


Pro-Russia candidate Peter Pellegrini elected Slovakia president

Critics worry Slovakia under Fico will abandon its pro-Western course and follow the direction of Hungary under populist Prime Minister Viktor Orbán.
The new government immediately halted any arms deliveries to Ukraine. Thousands have repeatedly taken to the streets across Slovakia recently to rally against Fico's pro-Russian and other policies, including plans to amend the penal code and take control of the public media.


No good is going to come from this, I suspect.
 
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printer

Well-Known Member
Former Obama advisor: Kushner engaged in ‘level of corruption that we’ve just never seen’ with foreign relations
Former Obama Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes said that President Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner engaged in a “level of corruption that we’ve just never seen” when talking about his firm’s recent investments overseas.

Rhodes said that Kushner engaged in corruption when asked about The New York Times’ recent reporting which detailed that 99 percent of his investment fund’s, “Affinity Partners,” money came from foreign sources. The outlet also reported Kushner is working on developing hotels in the Balkans, specifically in Serbia and Albania. The outlet also noted that the firm has taken money from Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.

“Well, in a word, entirely, Alex,” Rhodes told MSNBC’s Alex Wagner during his Wednesday appearance on “Alex Wagner Tonight.”

“I mean, look, this is not subtle corruption that we’re looking at,” he continued. “This is a guy, Jared Kushner, who had no expertise, no qualification whatsoever to be in the White House while he was there. He made it his account to work in the Gulf Arab states. He basically helped lead the cover-up for MBS. Get him in from the cold after the murder of Jamal Khashoggi.”

Rhodes said Kushner securing a $2 billion investment from Saudi Arabia six months after leaving the White House is a way for the Saudi to have an influence on U.S. foreign policy if Trump returns to the Oval Office after the November election.

“What they think he can do for them if there is a second Trump term,” Rhodes said. “And basically, what we can take from that investment is that in a second Trump term, US foreign policy in the Middle East and around the world will be made entirely with the interests of Mohammed bin Salman in mind.”

Kushner oversaw Middle East policy during his time in the Trump administration. The investment was scrutinized after The Times’s 2022 report said that the Saudi sovereign’s advisory panel was in favor of giving funds to Kushner’s firm, arguing because of his “inexperience,” but the decision was reversed by a bigger board headed by the Saudi Crown Prince’s Mohammed bin Salman.

“He chose to work on issues in the Middle East, and he chose to work with the Gulf Arab states, knowing that the payout would be on the back end,” Rhodes said, pointing to the impeachment inquiry into President Biden by House Republican, alleging his son, Hunter, used access to his father to profit off of it.

“And here we have the president’s son in law who worked in the White House, unlike hunter Biden, who’s collected $2 billion, on the back end of his service, now he’s got his, father-in-law running for president. United States,” Rhodes said. “Right? This is not only unusual, this is unprecedented.”

Kushner defended himself and his firm’s action regarding conflicts-of-interest allegations when asked by The Times.

“Following the laws and the rules is something we always do,” he told the outlet. “Perception, I’ve learned that from my time in politics, is important. But I can’t control what everyone is going to write or say about me.”

House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer (R-Ky.) said back in August that Kushner crossed “crossed the line of ethics” by accepting a $2 billion investment.

“This is just putting a price tag on American foreign policy,” Rhodes said. “This is a level of corruption that we’ve just never seen, and it’s hiding in plain sight.”
 

printer

Well-Known Member

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Former Obama advisor: Kushner engaged in ‘level of corruption that we’ve just never seen’ with foreign relations
Former Obama Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes said that President Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner engaged in a “level of corruption that we’ve just never seen” when talking about his firm’s recent investments overseas.

Rhodes said that Kushner engaged in corruption when asked about The New York Times’ recent reporting which detailed that 99 percent of his investment fund’s, “Affinity Partners,” money came from foreign sources. The outlet also reported Kushner is working on developing hotels in the Balkans, specifically in Serbia and Albania. The outlet also noted that the firm has taken money from Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.

“Well, in a word, entirely, Alex,” Rhodes told MSNBC’s Alex Wagner during his Wednesday appearance on “Alex Wagner Tonight.”

“I mean, look, this is not subtle corruption that we’re looking at,” he continued. “This is a guy, Jared Kushner, who had no expertise, no qualification whatsoever to be in the White House while he was there. He made it his account to work in the Gulf Arab states. He basically helped lead the cover-up for MBS. Get him in from the cold after the murder of Jamal Khashoggi.”

Rhodes said Kushner securing a $2 billion investment from Saudi Arabia six months after leaving the White House is a way for the Saudi to have an influence on U.S. foreign policy if Trump returns to the Oval Office after the November election.

“What they think he can do for them if there is a second Trump term,” Rhodes said. “And basically, what we can take from that investment is that in a second Trump term, US foreign policy in the Middle East and around the world will be made entirely with the interests of Mohammed bin Salman in mind.”

Kushner oversaw Middle East policy during his time in the Trump administration. The investment was scrutinized after The Times’s 2022 report said that the Saudi sovereign’s advisory panel was in favor of giving funds to Kushner’s firm, arguing because of his “inexperience,” but the decision was reversed by a bigger board headed by the Saudi Crown Prince’s Mohammed bin Salman.

“He chose to work on issues in the Middle East, and he chose to work with the Gulf Arab states, knowing that the payout would be on the back end,” Rhodes said, pointing to the impeachment inquiry into President Biden by House Republican, alleging his son, Hunter, used access to his father to profit off of it.

“And here we have the president’s son in law who worked in the White House, unlike hunter Biden, who’s collected $2 billion, on the back end of his service, now he’s got his, father-in-law running for president. United States,” Rhodes said. “Right? This is not only unusual, this is unprecedented.”

Kushner defended himself and his firm’s action regarding conflicts-of-interest allegations when asked by The Times.

“Following the laws and the rules is something we always do,” he told the outlet. “Perception, I’ve learned that from my time in politics, is important. But I can’t control what everyone is going to write or say about me.”

House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer (R-Ky.) said back in August that Kushner crossed “crossed the line of ethics” by accepting a $2 billion investment.

“This is just putting a price tag on American foreign policy,” Rhodes said. “This is a level of corruption that we’ve just never seen, and it’s hiding in plain sight.”
Meanwhile in the GOP:
“But HunterHunterHunterHunterHunterHunterHunter!!”
 

printer

Well-Known Member
California water regulators put major farming area on ‘probation’
State water regulators voted unanimously on Tuesday to place an agricultural hub in Central California under “probation” due to excessive groundwater pumping that has dried up the region.

Citing multiple deficiencies in the Tulare Lake basin’s groundwater sustainability plans, the State Water Resources Control Board made the decision to toughen usage restrictions and reporting requirements in this southern portion of the San Joaquin Valley.


“Excessive groundwater extraction can cause long-term overdraft, failed wells, deteriorated water quality, environmental damage and irreversible land subsidence,” a draft version of the probation resolution noted.

These effects, the resolution continued, both damage infrastructure and reduce “the capacity of aquifers to store water for the future,” taking a considerable economic toll.

Tuesday’s vote constituted the first time in state history in which water regulators used their authority to crack down on community-level groundwater declines, via the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, according to the Los Angeles Times.

The State Water Board defines probation as a “first phase of intervention,” which requires most groundwater pumpers to cover the costs associated with assessment, planning and enforcement costs.

Among the dangerous effects of groundwater pumping in the region has been “land subsidence,” a phenomenon in which water removal opens sediment pore space — causing structural collapse and declines in land surface elevations, according to a State Water Board staff report.

Water extraction has taken such a dramatic toll that certain spots in the northwestern and western side of the Tulare Lake basin sunk as much as six feet from June 2015 to April 2023, per the report.

“My family would not be here if not for agriculture,” Joaquin Esquivel, the Water Board’s chair, said toward the end of Tuesday’s all-day meeting, prior to the vote.

Stressing that his grandparents were migrant farmworkers, Esquivel acknowledged that the word probation could “come off as punitive, as a failure.”

“That’s not what this is. It’s a step in the road, in our discussion,” he said. “The decision doesn’t come easy.”

With the region now on probation, individuals who extract more than 2 acre-feet of groundwater annually will need to report this activity to the State Water Board and pay associated fees.

For reference, the average American household uses about one acre-foot of water each year — meaning that this requirement would apply mostly to the region’s agricultural sector.

At the Tuesday meeting, board member Laurel Firestone described the state’s role in this matter as a “backstop,” while noting that she is “cautiously optimistic” about this step.

“We don’t have a choice,” Firestone added. “This is the new climate that we’re in, the new reality that we’re in.”
 

Sativied

Well-Known Member
CNN’s version of fair and equal coverage… It was clearly a shift since the previous elections. Fox got hammered for its right bias, the right says “but CNN”. They tried hard to keep up with all of Trump’s lies and now pretend the same thing applies to Biden. The whole article is a farce.


Second, it’s not true that seniors will “never” have to spend more than $2,000 per year on prescription drugs “no matter what.” The cap is indexed to annual inflation in Part D costs, so it is highly likely to be set higher than $2,000 in future years.”

^^Best read in whiny voice…

A more accurate phrasing would be to say that the minimum tax will *help* ensure that *the most profitable* corporations pay at least some federal income tax.””

“a more accurate phrasing”, after using that article‘s title… They are the ones “misleading“. The honest mistake of saying 2024 instead of 2025 as he has said many times, does not qualify as misleading. It’s like calling a typo a lie. Oh and careful now, Biden wants to ‘mislead’ you into thinking his uncle got cannibalised. Cause if you believe that you won’t vote for the opponent.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
CNN’s version of fair and equal coverage… It was clearly a shift since the previous elections. Fox got hammered for its right bias, the right says “but CNN”. They tried hard to keep up with all of Trump’s lies and now pretend the same thing applies to Biden. The whole article is a farce.


Second, it’s not true that seniors will “never” have to spend more than $2,000 per year on prescription drugs “no matter what.” The cap is indexed to annual inflation in Part D costs, so it is highly likely to be set higher than $2,000 in future years.”

^^Best read in whiny voice…

A more accurate phrasing would be to say that the minimum tax will *help* ensure that *the most profitable* corporations pay at least some federal income tax.””

“a more accurate phrasing”, after using that article‘s title… They are the ones “misleading“. The honest mistake of saying 2024 instead of 2025 as he has said many times, does not qualify as misleading. It’s like calling a typo a lie. Oh and careful now, Biden wants to ‘mislead’ you into thinking his uncle got cannibalised. Cause if you believe that you won’t vote for the opponent.
Small wonder. CNN’s biggest shareholder also owns a big chunk of Murdoch’s cynically-misnamed News Corp.

Biden is to be punished for steering the ship of policy athwart the neoliberal agenda. CNN is positioned to do that, since many have not twigged to the change in the network’s sympathies. Old article but on point.

 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Looking into “they ate my uncle”, a more neutral source provides context that CNN left out because it vigorously humanizes Biden. Cherries picked.


“President Biden is proud of his uncle’s service in uniform,“ Bates said, adding Finnegan ”lost his life when the military aircraft he was on crashed in the Pacific after taking off near New Guinea.”

Biden “highlighted his uncle’s story as he made the case for honoring our ‘sacred commitment ... to equip those we send to war and take care of them and their families when they come home,’ and as he reiterated that the last thing American veterans are is ‘suckers’ or ‘losers.’”
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Read an interview with a Republican (Tom Cole) and although I do not see some things as he does I thought this insightful.

Is that what that is? [Points to a chest on the table]

Yeah. There’s actually always a mixture. I’m a big believer in open humidors and open bars because they bring people together. I used to tell this to Boehner. I said, “Quit the cigarette stuff. That’s an addiction.” I mean, you’re sitting *makes sucking noises* for three minutes or something.

With a cigar, you’re going to sit down for 30 to 45 minutes, and if you’re doing it with somebody, you’re going to talk, you’re going to have a relationship. You’re going to find something in common with one another. It’s a lovely way to build a relationship and to socialize with people in a way that the cigarette generally isn’t. You never see a 15-year-old kid standing outside a building with a $20 premium cigar, sucking it up. They don’t do that. This is an adult product that leads to adult conversations and can quite often lead to some really interesting relationships and, frankly, good relationships between people that don’t often get along.

One of the worst things Pelosi ever did, and I know she did it for health reasons… You guys won’t like this, but…

I know where this is going.

… When you quit smoking in the Speaker’s Lobby and when you let in the press, you just destroy one of the places where bipartisan relationships are built. That’s how I got to know Barney Frank. That’s how I got to know Jesse Jackson Jr. when he was up here. Sit down, have a cigar, build a relationship. They were smoking cigarettes and in Frank’s case I don’t think he was ever a big cigar guy, but Jesse was.

There’s got to be some spaces where people can get together. We used to do this in the Rules office — one of the best smoking venues in the Capitol. But you’d get members from different generations there. I mean, Hal Rogers is there all the way to freshmen. There are different committees and most people live their life within their committee. I don’t know what the hell’s going on over in Ways and Means or Energy and Commerce until they produce a product and head it toward the floor. But it’s really interesting when you sit down and hear, “This is what we’re doing in Science, and this is what we’re doing in Ag. This is why we have ag crop insurance or whatever.”

If you’re not in those committees, you don’t know. Over a cigar people talk about their work. Even their questions are interesting. Their observations are interesting. It’s an enjoyable thing, but it’s also a great way to learn information, build relationships and frankly in some ways, educate people because most people learn politics by listening to stories. They’re not reading political science books for God’s sake. They talk to real politicians and they hear real stories and that’s interesting.

“Bring back cigar diplomacy.” That’s the headline here.

I’ll tell you what, the world was a better place, I’m sure.
politico.com/news/magazine/2024/04/20/grow-up-a-veteran-republican-is-tired-of-his-partys-insurgents-00153454
 
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