…are plants that will soon die from too much carbon pollution, you might just be a Warmist
The blog of the day is Blazing Cat Fur, with a post on tanning salons trying to kill gay people with cancer or something.
Read: If All You See… »
…are plants that will soon die from too much carbon pollution, you might just be a Warmist
The blog of the day is Blazing Cat Fur, with a post on tanning salons trying to kill gay people with cancer or something.
Read: If All You See… »
We wouldn’t want to blame the perpetrators committing murder and attempted murder (they’re illegal, right?) when this mostly occurs in Democrat run cities, right?
“Not again”: Beto O’Rourke mourns gun violence in Kansas City and calls for end to shooting epidemic
Presidential candidate Beto O’Rourke, a former congressman from Texas, tweeted “not again” when he learned about a shooting in Kansas City, Kansas that left four people dead and five others injured.
“Not again,” O’Rourke tweeted on Sunday morning. “I visited Kansas City in August—and everyone I met was warm, generous, and welcoming. My heart is with all who are impacted by this tragedy. Together, communities like ours, which have been victims of gun violence, will lead the way in ending this epidemic.”
The shooting discussed by O’Rourke occurred at the Tequila KC bar in Kansas City on Saturday night, according to CNN. The incident left four people dead including a man in his late 50s, a man in his mid-30s and two other men in their mid-20s, all of whom were Hispanic. Five others were injured at the shooting, with two having been released from the hospital as of Sunday morning.
Police spokesman Thomas Tomasic said investigators believe “possibly two suspects that entered” the bar and began shooting. They also said that, when it comes to the motivation behind the incident, they “do not feel it’s racially motivated” and “don’t feel that these suspects are going to go out and do this again.”
They used handguns. Does Beto want to confiscate those now? But, see, no one knows the motivation
(NY Times) One week after he had angrily barged into a small neighborhood bar, seething and belligerent, the man returned, cursing and shouting about gangs. He threw a plastic cup at a bartender who refused to serve him, witnesses said, and fought with a customer before he was escorted out, just as he had been the week before.
But two hours later, in the pre-dawn darkness of Sunday morning, he and another man stormed back in and opened fire on the crowd, the authorities and witnesses said, killing four people, wounding five others and shattering the sense of safety this tight-knit Latino community felt inside Tequila KC, a bar that for many served as an extension of their living rooms.
Both gunmen left the scene before the police arrived, and no arrests were made Sunday in connection with the attack, which occurred shortly before 1:30 a.m. and sent dozens of panicked patrons into the street.
“This is a community bar,†said Jose Valdez, 39, who was working as a bartender when the shots began. “Here, everybody knows everybody.â€
An armed guard is typically stationed at the front entrance, Mr. Valdez said, but he was not there on Saturday night.
I’d say the motivation is that the guy was pissed off, and, like a lot of shootings, it was about disrespect.
Sunday’s killings were the latest in a series of mass shootings that have unfolded across the country with numbing frequency. Through August, at least 38 shootings with three or more fatalities had been recorded in the United States, data shows. Each deadly episode has brought cries for stricter gun-control laws.
Who wants to bet the guy didn’t purchase it legally? But, hey, let’s punish law abiding people who have firearms for protection….hey, wait, what was that part about armed security usually being at the door of the bar? It says something about the area and the people that they need that at a bar.
In a statement Sunday, Governor Laura Kelly of Kansas, a Democrat, said she continued to be “frustrated†at how often mass shootings occur. “Our nation has an obligation to address this ongoing public health crisis,†she said.
See, it’s the fault of the gun.
Is it really a protest when they aren’t really being peaceable and causing lots of other people issues? Further, since the UK Guardian is Very Concerned of the arrest of the young girls, did no one think to ask “where are their parents?”
Climate change protests: four teenage girls among 30 arrested in Sydney
Four teenage girls are among dozens of protesters demanding government action on climate change to be arrested in Sydney on Monday.
The Extinction Rebellion climate protests movement has planned a “spring rebellion†from Monday to Sunday, including marches aimed at blocking traffic.
The protesters in Sydney were arrested and bundled into a mobile “custody unit†on Monday afternoon after they allegedly failed to move on when asked to do so by police.
Some 30 people were arrested, including four girls aged under 16, organisers say.
“Alleged offences committed range from obstructing traffic to disobeying reasonable direction,†New South Wales police said in a statement.
The assistant commissioner Mick Willing said police respected the right of groups and individuals to protest, but “we have a responsibility to the community and local businesses to ensure they can go about their normal activities without being impacted on or put at riskâ€.
“Unfortunately, despite the warnings issued by local police and our colleagues from across the country, this group continue to set out to break the law and put themselves and others at risk,†Willing said in a statement.
I am 100% behind the Rights to protest peaceably and petitioning for redress of grievance, but, once you start physically causing other people problems, you need to cease what you’re doing and do it somewhere else (like not in the streets during rush hour) or be arrested when you won’t move on.
Among those walking were sisters 10-year-old Luka and 12-year-old Maddie Brett-Hall alongside Ember Henninger, also 10, from the Blue Mountains.
The march was their second protest after they attended a flash mob at Echo Point earlier in 2019.
“I feel like we need to make a difference,†Maddie told AAP.
First, where are the parents, and second, what difference? Other than being loud, obnoxious, rude, and causing problems for others, what difference are they making?
Earlier in the day the Victorian activist Miriam Robinson said the group must “get right up in people’s grills†to convince governments to take firm action on climate change.
“We always apologise for causing inconvenience,†the retired public servant told AAP on Monday.
“But this is nothing compared to the inconvenience that is going to start happening when we start to run out of food and water.â€
These people. Always with the doom and gloom. But, you know what helps make sure there’s food and water? Reliable energy sources, like fossil fuels.
Extinction Rebellion specifically wants governments to “tell the truth†about climate change by declaring a climate and ecological emergency.
It also wants them to prevent biodiversity loss and reduce greenhouse gas emissions to net zero by 2025, and let the public drive decisions on climate change through a Citizens’ Assembly.
So much nuttbaggery. The notion, though, of giving all the power over from elected officials, no matter how bad, to an unelected group of pseudo-religionists is insane.
BTW, this kind of thing is happening all over the 1st World. Amsterdam, Britain, Canada, and many other nations/cities are seeing these annoying protests.
Read: Bummer: Four Young Girls Among Those Arrested During An Australian Extinction Rebellion “Protest” »
They thought everything would be free for them. Nope
HYBRID AND ELECTRIC CAR OWNERS SEE $75 FEE IN CAR-TAB BILLS
Beginning this month, hybrid-vehicle owners in Washington state will start paying an annual $75 car-tab fee to finance electric-car charging stations they’ll never use.
The little-known increase is labeled “Hybrid Vehicle Transportation Electrification” on bills from the state Department of Licensing (DOL).
“I was totally baffled,” said Brian Cook, of Shelton, Mason County, who received a vehicle-registration renewal notice last week to get his October 2020 tabs for his 2010 Toyota Prius. “It’s just another add-on, especially if you’re retired. You are on a budget, and if $75 is taken out of your budget, you have to work around it.”
The hybrid fee was part of House Bill 2042, intended to promote electric vehicles and reduce carbon emissions. Owners of plug-in electric cars like the Nissan Leaf, who already pay $150 into the state roads fund in lieu of gasoline taxes, will also pay the $75 electrification fee, for a total $225.
The fees are on top of car-tab taxes that help fund Sound Transit expansion as well as state and local transportation projects.
Why?
The new fee will pay for several electric-car incentives. Proponents intend to fill gaps in the statewide charging networks, to help overcome so-called “range anxiety” with an e-fueling station every 40 to 70 miles on major highways.
Well, since almost no private parties are stepping up, the state should charge the users for these to be built.
Amendments by state Sen. Rebecca Saldaña, D-Seattle, added hybrid owners to those paying the $75. In a Senate Transportation Committee hearing this year, Saldaña said she hopes to afford a used electric car, and that middle and lower-income people won’t feel comfortable buying them until charging stations are more available.
Um, the vast majority of Prius’ are hybrids, so they do not need to plug in to charge. That’s the beauty of them. And they’re getting punished for this. Hilariously, a goodly chunk of the people who drive them are causing elected Warmists to do this. So, hoist/petard.
Read: Bummer: Electric/Hybrid Vehicle Owners To See $75 Extra Fee »
…are pumpkins which will soon be wiped out from climate change, you might just be a Warmist
The blog of the day is Brass Pills, with a post on sex dolls programmed to require consent.
It’s Fall week!
Read: If All You See… »
Let’s see if I can finish this in a separate post
Crossing fingers.
Strange. I’ve never had a problem like this before. It just won’t let me post the full list, stops at Animal Magnetism. But, it’s not those links, because I can’t add just one more on.
Read: Pinup Part 2 »
Happy Sunday! Another fantastic day in America. Fall is in the air, pumpkin spice fashion is showing up, and the baseball playoffs are in full swing. This pinup is by Earl Moran, with a wee bit of help.
What is happening in Ye Olde Blogoshere? The Fine 15
Trying to publish this thing. Having trouble adding on the normal lists of rule 5 and linkfests and stuff. Maybe a little at a time?
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). 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.
The rest are in the next post. WordPress just won’t let me go further. Strange (Update: the TMP folder was full, causing the inability to post beyond 680 or so words, and couldn’t update plugins. Now let’s see if I remember to strip this extra stuff out next week )
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?
Perhaps the Times’s editorial board shouldn’t have backed an utterly horrible candidate in Hillary Clinton. Oh, and to use Mr. Obama’s words, elections have consequences. There’s also a very important line that should be remembered
Watch Out, America — The Supreme Court Is Back in Session
On Monday, the Supreme Court will begin hearing cases in its first complete term since the retirement of Justice Anthony Kennedy, and the confirmation of Justice Brett Kavanaugh, gave the court a newly emboldened right-wing majority.
The current five-member bloc has already started overturning decades-old precedents and remaking the law in ways that align remarkably well with conservative policy preferences.
The new term offers no shortage of opportunities for the conservative justices to block or roll back rights for certain groups — for example, women, L.G.B.T. people and undocumented immigrants brought to America as children — while bolstering rights for others, like gun owners and those who would knock down the crumbling wall between church and state.
Illegal aliens should only have as many rights from crime as everyone else, as our Constitution protects them. What it doesn’t protect is their ability to stay here in contradiction of federal law. And, ZOMG, how dare the Court protect 2nd Amendment Rights and blow away the entirely fictional wall between church and state.
In one of the most hotly anticipated cases, to be argued Tuesday, the justices will consider whether employers may fire employees for being gay or transgender.
The arguments will cover three separate cases — two involving gay men who said they were fired because of their sexual orientation and one involving a transgender woman who was fired after telling her employer that she was transitioning from male to female.
In regards to the first link, it mostly discusses Altitude Exp vs Zarda. You’ll have to dig pretty deep to find any article which notes that Zarda had been telling female clients for quite some time that he was gay, in order to calm them down for a tandem jump, and
On one occasion after Zarda informed a female client about his sexual orientation and performed the tandem jump with her, the client alleged that Zarda had inappropriately touched her and disclosed his sexual orientation to excuse his behavior. In response to this complaint, Zarda’s boss fired him. Zarda denied touching the client inappropriately and claimed that he was fired solely because of his reference to his sexual orientation.
Hence the reason why Zarda lost in a jury trial. And then up through many levels of court appeals. Touching clients (and telling them stories about their gay adventures, which was part of the firing) won’t keep your employed. As for the the gender confused case, R.G. & G.R. Harris Funeral Homes Inc. v. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, said person decided they were a woman, were going to transition, and the funeral home said “not here.” They weren’t interesting in what would appear to their clients dealing with funerals to be a crossdresser. It is a very Christian focused business, but, they did offer a severance package, which the gender confused refused. And then the gender confused and the EEOC lost in court multiple times.
Here we go
Such discrimination is a daily fact of life for gay, lesbian and transgender people across the country. Some states have laws barring it, but most don’t. For people in states without their own legal protections, the only hope is federal law — specifically, Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which bars employers from firing, harassing or discriminating against an employee “because of†that person’s “sex.†The plaintiffs in these three cases argue that the plain language of Title VII applies to them, because they would not have been fired but for their sex — after all, if the gay men had been women, their attraction to men would not have been an issue for their employers.
The employers in these cases, with the backing of the Trump administration, say the civil rights law provides no protection to the plaintiffs, because when it was passed in the 1960s, no one imagined that it would apply to sexual orientation or gender identity. That’s true — many L.G.B.T. Americans were closeted at the time, and they faced severe consequences for standing up for their equality in public. But what lawmakers might have thought more than 50 years ago is irrelevant to the matter at hand, which is what the law they passed actually says.
See, it doesn’t matter what the lawmakers might have thought, it matters what the law says. These leftists/Progressives/Marxists/Communists/etc, let’s just call them Modern Socialists, including the NY Times Editorial Board, have long argued that the Constitution is outdated, but, it says what is says. The Modern Socialists want to eliminate 2nd Amendment Rights because we didn’t have semi-auto and automatic weapons back then, but the Amendment is the Amendment.
Likewise, they want to erode the 1st. Free Speech, religious rights, and asking for redress of grievance. Further, they are fine with ignoring the peaceably part of protesting, as long as it applies to Modern Socialist groups.
Further, if we stretch it, the power of the federal government needs to be immediately reduced, based on the 10th Amendment.
Regardless, what will the Court rule? The Times thinks they will rule against the gays and gender confused because they are gay and gender confused, not because there were actually reasons to fire them. They weren’t just fired in a vacuum.
This term, the court also will hear a challenge to President Trump’s decision in 2017 to reverse President Barack Obama’s 2012 executive order protecting undocumented immigrants who were brought to the United States as children — the roughly 700,000 young men and women known as Dreamers.
…..Mr. Obama claimed that he was using well-established presidential discretion to decide how to enforce immigration laws and to prioritize the deportation of certain people and not others, like the Dreamers.
Even Obama said that DACA was un-Constitutional, and you can bet that will be brought up. And, since it was an Executive Action, any future president has the explicit ability to cancel it. They have that discretion. I thought the Times said that it doesn’t matter what people thought, but what the law/Constitution actually says.
Read: NY Times Seems Pretty Upset That The Supreme Court Could Return Conservative Verdicts »
Oh, wait, wait, no, sorry, they just want Other People punished for daring to use their Constitutional Republic protected Free Speech right
Free Speech Is Killing Us
Noxious language online is causing real-world violence. What can we do about it?
There has never been a bright line between word and deed. Yet for years, the founders of Facebook and Twitter and 4chan and Reddit — along with the consumers obsessed with these products, and the investors who stood to profit from them — tried to pretend that the noxious speech prevalent on those platforms wouldn’t metastasize into physical violence. In the early years of this decade, back when people associated social media with Barack Obama or the Arab Spring, Twitter executives referred to their company as “the free-speech wing of the free-speech party.†Sticks and stones and assault rifles could hurt us, but the internet was surely only a force for progress.
No one believes that anymore. Not after the social-media-fueled campaigns of Narendra Modi and Rodrigo Duterte and Donald Trump; not after the murder of Heather Heyer in Charlottesville, Va.; not after the massacres in a synagogue in Pittsburgh, two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, and a Walmart in a majority-Hispanic part of El Paso. The Christchurch gunman, like so many of his ilk, had spent years on social media trying to advance the cause of white power. But these posts, he eventually decided, were not enough; now it was “time to make a real life effort post.†He murdered 52 people.
Having spent the past few years embedding as a reporter with the trolls and bigots and propagandists who are experts at converting fanatical memes into national policy, I no longer have any doubt that the brutality that germinates on the internet can leap into the world of flesh and blood.
The question is where this leaves us. Noxious speech is causing tangible harm. Yet this fact implies a question so uncomfortable that many of us go to great lengths to avoid asking it. Namely, what should we — the government, private companies or individual citizens — be doing about it?
Funny, nothing about Antifa or other hardcore lefties. Or that the Walmart killer held some radical leftist views, as well.
Using “free speech†as a cop-out is just as intellectually dishonest and just as morally bankrupt. For one thing, the First Amendment doesn’t apply to private companies. Even the most creative reader of the Constitution will not find a provision guaranteeing Richard Spencer a Twitter account. But even if you see social media platforms as something more akin to a public utility, not all speech is protected under the First Amendment anyway. Libel, incitement of violence and child pornography are all forms of speech. Yet we censor all of them, and no one calls it the death knell of the Enlightenment.
Except, the way the 1st Amendment is written is explicitly designed to keep the Congress from passing laws that abridge the freedom of speech. That means on the citizens and private entities.
One has to wonder if the NY Times, and writer Andrew Marantz, would be cool if this was about Free Press killing us with their noxious language? The same case could be made. (neither should be limited)
The screed goes on and on and on, and you have to wonder if any editor at the Times sat back and said “you know, this is a Really Bad Idea.” Or do they just want troll material? Unhinged conversation material? Controversial material for the sake of ginning up controversy? As the First Street Journal notes
The author’s bias is apparent in so many ways. The speech he decries is all from the right side of the political spectrum. Not a word was published against the speech of Antifa, which has led to violence from the far left in this country. There was no criticism of speech by those supporting the socialist regime in Nicaragua or advocating the same socialism which led to totalitarianism and as many as 100 million deaths in the old Soviet Union, in Communist China, in Pol Pot’s Cambodia and North Korea. No, he was concerned that a social media campaign helped elect Donald Trump!
Mr Marantz, while exercising his First Amendment rights, clearly does not like the unregulated speech of others:
Read both articles.
Read: NY Times Wants To Crack Down On Freedom Of The Press Over Noxious Language »