…is a horrible 1%er pool with its evil concrete, you might just be a Warmist
The blog of the day is This ain’t Hell…, with a post on Russia Russia Russia docs sent to DOJ.
It’s beer week.
Read: If All You See… »
…is a horrible 1%er pool with its evil concrete, you might just be a Warmist
The blog of the day is This ain’t Hell…, with a post on Russia Russia Russia docs sent to DOJ.
It’s beer week.
Read: If All You See… »
Happy Sunday! Another great day in Returned America. The Sun is shining, the mockingbirds are mocking, and the rescissions have started. This pinup is by Elias-Chatzoudis with a wee bit of help.
What is happening in Ye Olde Blogosphere? The Fine 15
As always, the full set of pinups can be seen in the Patriotic Pinup category, or over at my Gallery page (nope, that’s gone, the newest Apache killed access, and the program hasn’t been upgraded since 2014, so, most are hosted internally). While we are on pinups, since it is that time of year, have you gotten your Pinups for Vets calendar yet? And don’t forget to check out what I declare to be our War on Women Rule 5 and linky luv posts and things that interest me. I’ve also mostly alphabetized them, makes it easier scrolling the feedreader
Don’t forget to check out all the other great material all the linked blogs have!
Anyone else have a link or hotty-fest going on? Let me know so I can add you to the list. And do you have a favorite blog you can recommend be added to the feedreader?
Two great sites for getting news links are Liberty Daily and Whatafinger.
Read: Sorta Blogless Sunday Pinup »
There are times I wonder why I bother with these long posts, since my little blog doesn’t have a huge reach. But, this stuff matters, and Salazar is pushing “not-amnesty” just like Lindsay Graham, John McCain, and George W. Bush. See, it’s totally not amnesty
See? Oh, wait, telling a goodly chunk of illegals and those who’ve been in the US for a long time and do not speak English all about it
That’s her English tweet. Both say the same thing. And she’s been on a tear pushing this not-amnesty. Let’s dig into the actual Not-Amnesty, er, Dignity Act, go right to the big one, which is buried deep in the act (there are more details if you want to dig in full)
The Dignity Program will allow undocumented immigrants in the U.S. to earn legal status if they pass a criminal background check, pay back any taxes owed, and meet other requirements. Participants must also pay restitution to be eligible.
- Dignity Program. The bill establishes a seven-year deferred action program that would grant employment and travel authorization to undocumented residents who have been continuously in the U.S. since December 31, 2020.
- DHS estimates there were 10.5 million undocumented immigrants in the U.S. in 2020. Of this group, 84 percent had lived in the U.S. for more than 10 years. (snip)
- Dignity Status: Continued Legal Presence. Those who successfully complete the Dignity Program must apply for the Dignity Status. This legal status is renewable every seven years. Individuals can renew the status in perpetuity, as long as they remain in good standing. The status does not provide a path to U.S. citizenship. It allows individuals to stay and continue living in the U.S., while barring use of any federal means-tested benefits or entitlement programs.
OK, so, not-amnesty, just giving upwards of 10 million illegally present people permanent legal status. Will it really be just 10.3 million? Some estimates are of 20-30 million (let’s say 18.5 million). How about those who are from China and Islamic fundamentalist nations? Do they qualify?
Rest below the fold.
Read: GOP Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar Pushes (complete BS) Dignity Act »
…are horrible Bad Weather clouds, you might just be a Warmist
The blog of the day is The Gateway Pundit, with a post digging into Ukrainians thinking their leaders are extending the war to enrich themselves.
Read: If All You See… »
There would be no need for raising the roads, or even roads, if you would just stop driving a fossil fueled vehicle
Florida Keys guts road-raising projects, slashes jobs. Budget cuts derail climate plans
Facing federal uncertainty about hurricane relief funds and budget holes, the Florida Keys went on a slashing spree: gutting funding for its landmark road-raising program, exiting a decade-old regional climate change compact and cutting emergency staff roles designed to help prepare for storms.
President Donald Trump’s administration has vowed to gut and remake the Federal Emergency Management Agency, including lowering how much cash the federal agency gives states to rebuild after a disaster.
Specifically, a leaked memo from FEMA suggests the agency is considering dramatically raising the threshold for what qualifies as a disaster, which would lock local governments out from any federal cash if a disaster were small enough, like a hurricane that only brushes Key West but not the rest of the Keys. That could put Monroe on the hook for up to $174 million for a single hurricane.
“We would have zero reimbursement. That could be devastating for the Keys,” said Christine Hurley, Monroe County’s administrator.
I remember in my lifetime when states where not so reliant on the federal government during emergencies, either for aid, rebuilding, or money. When states didn’t immediately demand tons of help. And we shouldn’t be so darned reliant on Los Federales
To make that happen, the Keys cut 40 staff roles, including a floodplain mitigation manager, one employee in the resilience department and cut and consolidated several emergency management roles, just ahead of the peak of hurricane season.
Sounds mostly like scam jobs.
But perhaps the biggest hit of Monroe’s tightening of its purse strings is to its nationally leading program to raise roads ahead of sea level rise, which is already swamping a handful of Keys neighborhoods and expected to inundate up to 90 of them in the next few decades alone.
Key West shows a steady 2.64mm a year in sea rise, equivalent to .87 feet per hundred years, which is slightly above average during the Holocene and below expected during a Holocene warm period. It’s a very good station going back to 1913. Do they need to eventually raise roads? Sure. Because you also have erosion, and the Keys are primarily coral based islands created when the seas were much higher, and you cannot expect stability out in the ocean like that. Plus, land subsistence.
So far, Monroe has spent nearly $300 million to raise roads in just seven communities. The total project list compiled by the county would cost an estimated $4.7 billion — a staggering price for a county of around 80,000 people with an annual budget of about $680 million.
Sounds like they were overspending. I wonder who was get fat at the government trough.
When do they get rid of the airports, cruise ship ports, fossil fueled boats, and so forth?
Read: Oh Noes: Budget Cuts End Road Raising Project In Florida Keys »
Well, hey, looks like those illegals sent to El Salvador had some value after all, and get to be repatriated
El Salvador releases hundreds of US deportees from notorious prison in US-Venezuela swap
The Trump administration completed a large-scale prisoner swap with Venezuela on Friday, sending about 250 Venezuelans who had been deported and imprisoned in El Salvador back to their home country in exchange for 10 US nationals, officials said.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on social media the Americans, the last known to be detained in Venezuela, were now “on their way to freedom.”
“Until today, more Americans were wrongfully held in Venezuela than any other country in the world,” Rubio said in a statement. “Every wrongfully detained American in Venezuela is now free and back in our homeland.”
Among the Americans released were Jorge Marcelo Vargas, Lucas Hunter and Wilbert Joseph Castaneda, a US official confirmed.
The sister of Hunter, 37, previously told CNN he had vacationed in the region in late 2024 to kite surf. The nonprofit Global Reach said he was “kidnapped by Venezuelan border guards” from inside Colombia in January.
The planes with the Venezuelans, reportedly TDA gang members, were landing Friday night.
Venezuelan officials on Friday afternoon announced the arrival of a separate flight from Texas delivering its citizens, including several children who had been separated from their families and kept in US care. “On this flight, there can be good news for Venezuelans,” interior minister Diosdado Cabello said, adding, “more movement” and additional arrivals are expected today.
Time for them to all go home. If any want to become Americans they can do it through the normal naturalization process.
The families of Americans wrongfully detained in Venezuela met virtually with senior national security official Seb Gorka earlier this year, participants and a White House official told CNN.
Following that meeting, an American Air Force veteran was released from imprisonment in Venezuela in May, CNN reported. Joseph St. Clair was released to US special envoy Richard Grenell, the family statement said. St. Clair had been detained since November and was one of nine Americans declared wrongfully detained in Venezuela.
What did Biden do to get our citizens back? Hate Trump if you want, he puts Americans first.
Read: Trump Admin Trades 250 Venezuelans In El Salvador Prison For 10 Americans »
This is not exactly a new thing from the Cult of Climastrology, but, I’ve only seen it once.
Contrails are aviation’s most ignored problem. Could new routes help?
Passenger aircraft contribute significantly to global warming, primarily due to the large amounts of carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted during flights – one of the main greenhouse gases driving climate change.
But flight traffic is also responsible for other climate-damaging emissions including aerosols, nitrogen oxides and, to a very large extent, contrails.
Combined, these so-called non-CO2 emissions account for more than 60% of the climate damage caused by aircraft, according to researchers.
Last year they said it was just over a third from contrails.
Contrails — the white line-shaped clouds left behind by planes — pose a particular problem as they are able to trap heat, contributing to warming.
Research has been under way for years whether air masses in which particularly long-lived contrails form can be circumvented.
But, what if we do not see contrails from planes? Does that mean it’s not happening?
What are contrails?
First: No, they do not consist of chemicals nefariously left behind in the sky (remember the chemtrail conspiracists?).
Sure sounds like the cult is claiming they are chemicals nefariously left behind in the sky. Because, really, contrails are primarily water vapor. Except in Cult Land.
Read: Good Grief, The Climate Cult Discovers Contrails (again) »
…is a wonderful low carbon bike, you might just be a Warmist
The blog of the day is Green Jihad, with a post on climate cultist hijacking a plane.
Read: If All You See… »
It’s amazing how much caterwauling this minor cut, at least in terms of the federal budget, is causing among Democrats and a few squishy Republicans
Congress sends bill clawing back $9B in foreign aid, public media funds to Trump’s desk
House Republicans late Thursday night approved the first batch of cuts made by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), sending the $9 billion package to President Trump’s desk in a big victory for the GOP.
The legislation — which claws back already-approved federal funding for foreign aid and public broadcasting — cleared the chamber in a mostly party-line 216-213 vote less than one day after the Senate passed the measure.
Two Republicans, Reps. Brian Fitzpatrick (Pa.) and Mike Turner (Ohio), voted with every Democrat against the measure.
Trump is expected to sign the bill soon, as Republicans face a Friday deadline to enact the cuts or release the funds to the organizations they were appropriated for.
Would it be too much to ask for Republicans to go through the federal budget with the legendary fine toothed comb and eliminate everything that is unnecessary, that is not part of what Congress is supposed to do per the Constitution? To audit every agency and cut the fraud, waste, and abuse? That would be some real cuts.
“We’re gonna downsize the scope of government,” Mike Johnson said. “Government is too large, it does too many things and it does almost nothing well. We believe in a limited government that’s accountable and efficient and effective for the people and we’re gonna continue to demonstrate that through our actions here on the floor.”
$9 billion isn’t much, but, hopefully a start. We’ll see.
Some Republicans have also warned the president’s use of the rare tool to secure cuts to funding previously approved by Congress risks further eroding trust between both parties as lawmakers ramp up their annual funding work.
“Some”. Why do we care? Democrats do not care about bipartisanship. We all remember Obamacare, right?
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) earlier this month said passage of the rescissions package “would be an affront to the bipartisan appropriations process.”
“That’s why a number of Senate Republicans know it is absurd for them to expect Democrats to act as business as usual and engage in a bipartisan appropriations process to fund the government, while they concurrently plot to pass a purely partisan rescissions bill to defund those same programs negotiated on a bipartisan basis behind the scenes,” he continued, later adding: “This is beyond a bait and switch – it is a bait and poison-to-kill.”
Cry me a river. These little things are never negotiated, they’re just included and no one thinks about them. No one has been making a stunk in arguing over the small stuff. Suck it up, Dems.
Certainly NPR can make up that 1% of budget that the rescission package eliminates so they can yammer about liberal stuff, right?