Note about a friend in Ashville

Ed note: I received this note today from a friend who was able to contact a mutual friend in Ashville, NC. Hard to imagine. Are we ready here with water, supplies, sanitation and cash?

“I had a good full talk with ……several days ago, after a couple days trying to contact him (finally able to reach him with help from ……….. who gave me his son ………..’s number).  He was doing OK, though without power; likely restored by now.  No water for a LONG time as big mudslide destroyed water main from mountain reservoir that serves Asheville – you’ve probably heard about that.  A huge oak tree was resting on his roof, & was to be removed by large crane in a few days; if it had fallen slightly differently, a large branch could have crashed into his bedroom & killed him in bed.  During the very heavy rain, water was pouring into his backyard & forming a pool, despite his efforts to block the water coming in from nearby stream.  He was able to eat peanut butter & jelly sandwiches, & had lots of breakfast cereal, hoping to be able to purchase food before long.  After fallen trees were cleared from all the roads, he was able to drive downtown, where Trader Joe was open, with long line (2 blocks) waiting to get in – he heard woman guarding the door say, OK next 3 people can go inside.  Other grocery stores apparently closed.  He was in good spirits & taking things as they come, as well as he can–at age 86.”

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Trust this horse?

Thanks to Bob P.

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60 Minutes, Medicare and more — comments from Heather Cox Richardson

“It’s been a tradition for more than half a century that the major party candidates for president sit down with 60 Minutes in October,” host Scott Pelley said to the camera last night before 60 Minutes aired an interview with Vice President Kamala Harris. This year, both Harris and Republican nominee former president Donald Trump accepted an invitation for an interview.

“Then a week ago,” Pelley said, “Trump backed out. The campaign offered shifting explanations. First it complained that we would fact-check the interview. We fact-check every story,” Pelley said. “Later, Trump said he needed an apology for his interview in 2020. Trump claims correspondent Leslie Stahl said in that interview that Hunter Biden’s controversial laptop came from Russia. She never said that.

“Trump has said his opponent doesn’t do interviews because she can’t handle them. He had previously declined another debate with Harris, so tonight may have been the largest audience for the candidates between now and election day. Our questions addressed the economy, immigration, reproductive rights, and the wars in the Middle East and Europe. Both campaigns understood this special would go ahead if either candidate backed out.”

And with that, 60 Minutes aired its interview with Vice President Harris.

Trump broke a fifty-year tradition so his false world would not be challenged by reality. He apparently wants to make sure voters cannot base their decisions about the country’s future on facts. Hiding reality is in keeping with his continued refusal to release his tax returns or a medical report—even after the shooting in Butler, Pennsylvania—or the video from the incident at Arlington National Cemetery, instead insisting that people take him at his word about what happened. 

If voters trust his disinformation campaign, rather than thinking things through for themselves, who will his policies help? 

A bombshell story from a forthcoming book by veteran journalist Bob Woodward today revealed that in 2020, when he was president, Trump secretly shipped Covid-19 testing equipment to Russian president Vladimir Putin for his own personal use at a time when Americans could not get it.  

A Trump aide told Woodward that Trump and Putin have spoken as many as seven times since Trump left the White House, prompting Edward Luce of the Financial Times to comment: “What possible business could an out-of-office U.S. president have to call Vladimir Putin seven times?” Woodward recounts a moment when Trump told a senior aide to leave the room so “he could have what he said was a private phone call with Russian president Vladimir Putin.” 

The Woodward book also says that when South Carolina senator Lindsey Graham was visiting with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, also known as MBS, in March 2024, Graham said “Hey, let’s call Trump.” According to Woodward, an aide brought MBS a bag full of burner phones, one of which was labeled “TRUMP 45.”

This news highlights the fact that Trump retained classified documents when he left the White House, carrying them with him to Mar-a-Lago, where he tried to hide them from federal officials. A grand jury indicted him on 37 felony counts for those actions, but Judge Aileen Cannon, a Trump appointee, dismissed the case in July after concluding that Special Counsel Jack Smith was improperly appointed.  

Trump’s campaign came out swinging after the story broke, with Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung calling Woodward “a total sleazebag who has lost it mentally.”

In contrast to Trump’s disinformation campaign, Vice President Harris is running a normal campaign, offering policy proposals. Today she proposed a plan to permit Medicare to help cover the costs of long-term home health care aides for seniors. Harris announced the plan on ABC’s The View, where she spoke of the so-called sandwich generation, people—mostly women—who are taking care of their elderly parents at the same time they are also taking care of children. “[I]t’s just almost impossible to do it all, especially if they work,” Harris said, adding that many end up having to leave their jobs. She also called for Medicare to cover vision and hearing care to enable seniors to live independently for longer.  

Harris said the money to pay for the new services will come from savings realized through Medicare’s new ability to negotiate drug prices—an ability Republicans are eager to end—and through cracking down on Medicare fraud. A fact sheet about the plan emphasizes that it will enable the government to work with the private sector to expand the home care workforce and provide more access to telehealth. 

Her plan also calls for stopping states from seizing family homes of recently deceased Medicaid beneficiaries to restore funding, a program called “Medicaid estate recovery.” Those seizures particularly hurt rural and minority populations, she noted, preventing them from building wealth. 

Reed Abelson and Margot Sanger-Katz of the New York Times note that both expanded home care benefits and drug negotiations are popular. KFF, which conducts health policy research, reports that Medicaid estate recovery has been criticized because it “falls primarily on individuals with limited incomes, raises little revenue, and is applied very unevenly across the states.” 

Deepa Shivaram of NPR noted that a relatively large percentage of middle-aged and older women remain undecided in this race and Harris’s plan speaks to their needs. The plan would also bring more money and care workers into rural towns with aging populations, giving those areas an economic boost.  

In a fact sheet, the Harris-Walz campaign noted that Trump is focused on tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations, has repeatedly called for cuts to Medicare and Medicaid, and gave clemency to those abusing the system. As Amy B. Wang and Azi Paybarah explained in the Washington Post: “In his last year in office, Trump commuted the sentences of at least five people who collectively filed nearly $1.6 billion in fraudulent claims through Medicare or Medicaid.”

On The View, Harris said, “In this election, people are ready for a new generation of leadership that’s about fixing problems.” 

The 2020 60 Minutes interview for which Trump demanded an apology last week was the one in which he promised his health care plan was “fully developed,” then angrily walked out. His exit was apparently planned, for shortly after his departure, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany walked up to Stahl with a giant book, saying: “Lesley, the President wanted me to deliver his health care plan. It’s a little heavy.”

Trump and McEnany likely expected that the audience would remember their theatrical move rather than the reality, which was that the book contained no Trump healthcare plan because one didn’t exist. 

Four years later, it still doesn’t. Trump said at the September 10 presidential debate that he has the “concepts of a plan.”

CNN today set a deadline of Thursday for Trump to accept its invitation for an October 23 presidential debate. Harris has already accepted. 

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So What?

Thanks to Mike C.

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Art on screens at Museum House

The twin towers just east of the Cascade Tower are opening in the coming months. They are beginning to show art (hard to discern) on exterior screens. Not sure how this is really going to work but here’s a current photo I snapped. Check out their website here which states “Museum House is a collection of over 500 rental homes, designed for inspired living. Comprised of a North and South Tower, the project includes rooftop level and third floor amenities,….

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What do you see?

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Telecom giant AT&T to remove 8 miles of lead cables in Lake Tahoe after legal battle

A remnant of an old telecommunications system, the lead cables were forgotten for decades

By Julie Brown Davis, Tahoe Editor (thanks to Pam P.)

Lake Tahoe is one of the most protected bodies of water in the country — and yet, for decades, 8 miles of lead-clad cables have been abandoned underwater, where they remain today. 

Those lead cables have no place in Lake Tahoe, say environmental watchdogs.

Now, after a protracted legal battle, a telecommunications giant agreed to pull the lead cables out of Lake Tahoe as soon as this fall, with an expedient path to do so in the works. 

AT&T said it will remove the lead cables from Lake Tahoe as part of a court settlement reached on Sept. 18. The settlement ends a yearslong legal battle with environmental nonprofit California Sportfishing Protection Alliance. (click Page 2 to continue)

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Trick or “Treat” at Mar-a-Lago

Thanks to Pam P.

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Contraceptive pill available over the counter for more women in NSW after ‘huge success’ of trial

from The Guardian – Thanks to Pam P.

No requirement to go to GP for new prescription for pill, as long as it has been taken for at least two years

More women in New South Wales will have easier access to the oral contraceptive pill as a trial designed to reduce pressure on the state’s healthcare system becomes permanent.

Under the changes, from Saturday women will be able to get a resupply of their pill from a certified pharmacist without needing to go back to the doctor for a new prescription – as long as they have been taking the medication for two years.

The over-the-counter trial started in September last year, with the service limited to women aged 18 to 35. The permanent scheme means the age eligibility criteria will be expanded to include those aged from 18 to 49.

A similar scheme has been implemented in Queensland, while a trial is under way in Victoria.

The NSW premier, Chris Minns, said it had been a “huge success” and hoped that making it permanent policy would lead to better outcomes.

A pharmacist stocks shelves at a chemisT

“We know that people across NSW are doing it tough right now, even cutting back on essential healthcare because of affordability,” he said.

“At a time when seeing a GP can be difficult, we hope that this service will make it a little bit easier for women to access affordable healthcare, where and when they need it.”

The state health minister, Ryan Park, said the government was looking at expanding the role of pharmacists across the state after announcing that treatment for issues including ear infections, gastro and acne would soon be available from pharmacies.

“By empowering pharmacists … we can help improve access to primary care services which will relieve the pressure on the state’s busy GPs and our hospital system,” he said.

The Royal Australian College of GPs criticised the expansion, accusing the government of putting politics before safety.

“This is politically driven policy and it has potentially devastating consequences … due to the risks of incorrect treatment and serious illnesses being missed,” the RACGP NSW chair, Dr Rebekah Hoffman, said this month.

“The NSW government is kidding itself if it thinks this move will do anything to reduce pressure on the state’s overflowing hospitals.”

Thursday’s development has been welcomed by the Pharmacy Guild of Australia’s NSW branch senior vice-president, Catherine Bronger.

“Making the availability of the pill at community pharmacies is the right thing for women and our communities,” she said.

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Nice to see PCC help with recycling

Thanks to Mary M.

PCC Community Markets logo
RECYCLE WITH SEADRUNAR Bring the plastic bags, wraps and films that aren’t accepted curbside to your neighborhood co-op. Our partner Seadrunar is breaking down barriers to recycling with a program that supports the wellbeing of planet and people. Find drop-off bins at five PCC locations. October 7–November 8, 2024    Ballard PCC Central District PCC Columbia City PCC Fremont PCC View Ridge PCC
What can you Recycle? All packaging must be clean and not have touched food.
No stickers or tape. 
Examples of acceptable plastics. Acceptable Plastics: Produce bags  Bread bags  Carryout bags   Dry cleaning bags  Product overwrap  Case wrap  Air pillows  Shipping envelopes  Newspaper bags  Bubble wrap
Examples of nonacceptable plastics. Nonacceptable Items:  Degradable bags Multilayer plastics
(i.e. candy bar wrappers, chip bags)
Learn more about how Seadrunar works. Seadrunar workers sorting recyclables.
WATCH VIDEO

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Elon Musk Presides Over Yet Another Failed Launch

Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

BUTLER, PA (The Borowitz Report)—In what experts are calling his most embarrassing implosion ever, Tesla CEO Elon Musk presided over yet another failed launch on Saturday.

As Musk looked on, a visibly impaired rocket started emitting abnormal, erratic noises before totally self-destructing.

“The rocket was old, malfunctioning, and without even a semblance of a guidance system,” one observer said.

Experts questioned why the Tesla chief would participate in a launch destined for failure, but Musk claimed, “It’s not a failure if the rocket won’t admit it failed.”

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Platforms and shelters improperly built on new Capitol Hill RapidRide

By 

Nicholas Deshais

Seattle Times staff reporter

Three station platforms aren’t the correct height for wheelchair access — and 25 shelters need to be removed, welded and painted again — along Seattle’s latest addition to its RapidRide bus service.

The line, which traverses the Capitol Hill, First Hill, Central District and Madison Valley neighborhoods, opened last month.

Orange steel plates are on the street at three center median stations, in order to raise buses by less than an inch for better operation of wheelchair ramps. The problem was identified before the route began running on Sept. 14 and the steel plates are temporary, said Ethan Bergerson, a spokesperson with the Seattle Department of Transportation, which was responsible for the line’s construction.

King County Metro, which operates the line, is looking at other ways to solve the problem, including bus adjustments or changing platform height to a designated 13 inches so the plates can be removed.

The three stations with low platforms are at stop 104, serving eastbound Madison Street between Terry and Boren avenues; stop 105, for eastbound Madison Street between Summit and Boylston avenues; and stop 124, which serves westbound Madison Street at East Union Street and 12th Avenue East.

Aside from the platform flaws, all of the line’s 25 bus shelters have issues with paint thickness and color, incorrect welds and holes in their frames. Unfixed, the shelters could easily rust and have an otherwise shorter life span.

Work began Friday on the shelters and will happen offsite. Two to four shelters will be removed at a time, and repair and reinstallation is expected to be complete within four months.

The line will continue normal operations through the work.

Neither SDOT nor Metro provided an estimate of how much the repair work would cost, or what led to the construction flaws.

Al Sanders, Metro’s spokesperson, said engineers and project managers at SDOT and Metro are looking into what went wrong, adding he wouldn’t “point fingers.”

“We’re working to discover where the issues were,” Sanders said. “We just want to make sure they’re fixed.”

The $144.3 million, 2.5-mile line runs every six minutes for most of every day, largely along Madison Street between Martin Luther King Jr. Way and First Avenue. On Sundays, it runs less frequently.

Building the line took three years, and brought nearly 4 miles of new sidewalks, new bike and pedestrian signals, rebuilt utilities by Seattle City Light and Seattle Public Utilities, the replacement of a 120-year-old water main, and a road made of concrete designed to slow speeds down near schools, libraries and hospitals.

Metro’s RapidRide network launched in 2010 with the A Line connecting Tukwila to Federal Way. The program promised more frequent service with swifter commutes, using some elements associated with bus-rapid transit like bus-only lanes, traffic signals that turn green for the vehicles, fewer stops and more doors for passengers to get on and off the coaches.

The G Line is the eighth in Metro’s RapidRide network. Four more lines are in the works — the I, J, K and R lines — and are expected to begin service in 2027 through 2030.

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What I’m Thinking About on the First Anniversary of the War

By Thomas L. Friedman Opinion Columnist in the NYT

So what am I thinking about on this first anniversary of the Hamas-Hezbollah-Iran-Israel war? Something my strategy teacher, Prof. John Arquilla of the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School, taught me: All wars come down to two basic questions: Who wins the battle on the ground? And who wins the battle of the story? And what I am thinking about today is how, even after a year of warfare, in which Hamas and Hezbollah and Israel have inflicted terrible pain on one another’s forces and civilians, no one has decisively won the battle on the ground or the battle for the story. Indeed, one year after Oct. 7, this is still the first Arab-Israeli war without a name and without a clear victor — because neither side has a clear win or a clean story.

We can and should sympathize with Palestinian statelessness and Arabs in the West Bank living under the duress of Israeli settlements and restrictions, but to my mind, there is nothing that can justify what Hamas attackers did on Oct. 7 — murdering, maiming, kidnapping and sexually abusing any Israeli they could get their hands on, without any goal, any story, other than to destroy the Jewish state. If you believe, as I do, that the only solution is two states for two indigenous peoples between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea, the Hamas rampage set that back immeasurably.

And what story is Iran telling? That it has some right under the U.N. Charter to help create failed states in Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and Iraq so it can cultivate proxies inside them for the purpose of destroying Israel? And by what right has Hezbollah dragged Lebanon into a war with Israel that the Lebanese people and government had no say in and are now paying a huge price for?

But this Israeli government does not have a clean story in Gaza, either. This was always going to be the ugliest of Israeli-Palestinian wars since 1947, because Hamas had embedded itself in tunnels underneath Gazan homes, schools, mosques and hospitals. It could not be targeted without significant civilian casualties. Therefore, as I argued from the start, it was doubly incumbent on Israel to make clear that this was not just a war to defend itself but also to destroy Hamas in order to birth something better: the only just and stable solution possible, two states for two people. (click on page 2 to continue)

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Buttigieg on Fox News

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Regressive Burden: WA’s Climate Act Taxes the Working Class

by Casey Corr in the Post Alley commentary — thanks to Ed M.

Twelve years ago, I left my hometown of soggy Seattle and moved to dry Yakima, where my wife and I bought land overlooking acres of shrub steppe and orchards. 

The switch from traffic jams, coffee houses, and views of water to open roads, sunshine, grassland, and owls hooting on my roof was a culture jolt, but equally so was the change in local politics. The country road to my house is festooned by neighbors with flags of fierce loyalty to their man Trump. 

In Yakima, many voters distrust government out of a sense that elites have ignored their needs. The elites offer tax breaks to Tesla buyers and debt forgiveness to college graduates. That’s not an agenda for those who drive pick ups or who never went to college. 

People in Yakima build things or grow crops. They drive long distances and operate farm equipment. They are the working people the Democratic Party claims to represent, but that’s not true anymore, and polls show working people have migrated to Trump. To see why, one reason would be that the most cherished policy of Gov. Jay Inslee and the state Democratic Party, the Climate Commitment Act (CCA), which purports to combat climate change. The program charges fees to oil companies, which in turn pass along those costs in the form of higher fuel prices, as much as 50 cents a gallon. 

A November ballot measure Initiative 2117 seeks to abolish the CCA. I have no doubt the measure will be overwhelmingly supported in conservative Yakima County, while getting strong opposition from liberal King County.

Backers of I-2117 argue the CCA is excessive taxation.  What the CCA precisely will cost individual families is disputed, though the conservative Washington Policy Center estimates the program last year cost $631 for a typical family with two cars and natural gas home heating. That’s a big hit in Yakima County, where the median household income is about $65,167, which is about half of Seattle’s median household income.

Passed in 2021, the Climate Commitment Act created one of the largest state tax increases in decades – though the increase was obscured by calling it a fee on polluters in a “cap and trade” program. The goal was simple: impose so much financial pain on users of fossil fuels that they use less and/or switch to alternative energy sources.

Normally, a new state program that imposes higher costs to fuel cars or heat homes would attract voter concern and media scrutiny, especially since similar proposals were rejected by voters in 2016 and 2018.  But that’s not what happened. The new and improved CCA did not generate much controversy until gas prices soared to $5 a gallon and some taxpayers revolted. 

Gov. Inslee, who initially had promised that the CCA might cause gas prices to go up by just “pennies” if anything, later blamed the surge in gas prices on oil company greed. His outrage was disingenuous because consumer pain was a CCA feature, not a bug. 

If Trump supporters complain that things are rigged by elites against working people, they got plenty of evidence from the news media, state agencies, and the courts who put a collective thumb on protecting the CCA and downplaying any effects on family budgets

The Seattle Times turned much of its coverage over to its “Climate Lab” team whose salaries are funded in part by donations from climate activists. (The Times says donors have no influence over coverage.) The CCA has now raised $2 billion, but The Times has not done a single story examining how the new tax affects families. Times reporters will call the CCA “a new carbon market” where “top polluters” pay fees with little or no mention of the consumers ultimately paying. 

Other CCA supporters are doing their part. Pressured by the state Attorney General’s office, Puget Sound Energy was not allowed to disclose program costs on itemized bills sent to customers. In court, CCA supporters secured favorable ballot language on Initiative 2117 that bars any mention of gas prices and refers instead to CCA revenues as “investments” in transportation, clean air, renewable energy, conservation, and emissions reduction. A one-time utility rebate of $200 to 700,000 lower-income customers was mandated by a state agency to credit the CCA and was timed with the election calendar.

Proponents of the CCA have argued falsely that killing the program would cut funding for road projects – even though CCA dollars are barred by law from going to highways. Proponents argue that the CCA will make the air cleaner, but the program lacks mechanisms to determine effectiveness. 

Let’s be honest about problems with the CCA. It creates a painful regressive tax that falls disproportionately on working people, making it more costly to heat a home, buy food transported by trucks, or get to a job site – all the while creating a huge fund of money flowing in large measure to Democrat-aligned organizations. Those recipients are now a powerful coalition defending the program. 

Despite an outflow of $2 billion in funds going to different groups, there has been almost zero scrutiny of how those dollars are spent and whether there is much nexus to carbon reduction. Many CCA dollars are going to community organizations to organize and lobby public officials. You can find $204,100 going to “develop collective knowledge concerning environmental racism and its relationship to food systems” or $486,529 for “workshops and demonstrations on preparing traditional foods.”

Seattle editorialists have shown little sympathy to arguments about flaws with CCA or the perversity of a tax that hurts most those who can least afford it.  Some Seattle opinion writers have denounced backers of I-2117 as MAGA nut cases who only care about their pennies, not about pollution. 

Inslee and his allies are out of touch with the struggles of working people who might object to tax dollars going to workshops on food preparation. Farmers in Yakima who are keenly aware of changing weather patterns that affect water supply and growing conditions might wonder why the CCA isn’t more focused directly on climate action. These same farmers never got the agriculture exemption promised by CCA.

Living in Yakima taught me that my beloved Seattle is indeed a different world. My hometown remains the engine of Northwest commerce and culture, but when politics tilts too far left, as it has, a kind of let-them-eat-cake mindset takes hold. 

A climate program that seeks to save the planet but screws the little guy needs a rewrite. Recognizing that climate change is real, we need a policy that is fair, affordable, and provably effective. Perhaps our next governor would care to sell that on both sides of the Cascades.

Demonizing critics of the CCA is the sort of politics that breeds resentments that elites don’t listen and don’t care — thus those flags of defiance on my country road. Trump is a grifter who plays on grievances, but many of those grievances come from real inequities. Our country, like our state, is polarized and the consequences are dangerous.  Shouldn’t we try to bridge this divide? 

Posted in Climate, Economics, environment, Politics | Comments Off on Regressive Burden: WA’s Climate Act Taxes the Working Class

Falsely justifying high tariffs – commentary by Heather Cox Richardson

William McKinley is having a moment (which I confess is a sentence I never expected to write). 

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump is elevating McKinley, representative from Ohio from 1877 to 1891 and president from 1897 to 1901, to justify his plan to impose new high tariffs. 

Trump’s call for tariffs is not an economic plan; it is a worldview. Trump claims that foreign countries pay tariff duties and thus putting new tariffs of 20% on all imports, and as much as 60% on Chinese imports, will bring enough foreign money into the country to fund things like childcare, end federal budget deficits, and pay for the tax cuts he wants to give to the wealthy and corporations.

This is a deliberate lie. Tariffs are essentially taxes on imported products, and they are paid not by foreign countries but by American consumers. Economists warn that Trump’s tariff plan would cost a typical family an average of more than $2,600 a year, with poorer families hardest hit; spike inflation as high as 20%; result in 50,000 to 70,000 fewer jobs created each month; slow economic growth; and add about $5.8 trillion in deficits over ten years. It would tank an economy that under the Biden administration, which has used tariffs selectively to protect new industries and stop unfair trade practices, has boomed.

Trump simply denies this economic success. He promises to make the economy great with a tariff wall. On September 27, he told rally attendees in Warren, Michigan: “You know, our country In the 1890s was probably…the wealthiest it ever was because it was a system of tariffs and we had a president, you know McKinley, right?… He was really a very good businessman, and he took in billions of dollars at the time, which today it’s always trillions but then it was billions and probably hundreds of millions, but we were a very wealthy country and we’re gonna be doing that now….” (click page 2 to continue)

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In case you missed the VP debate

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A need to remember

Thanks to Pam P.

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There’s a job for everyone

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Will this judgement apply to his other crimes?

Thanks to Diana C. – Time’s cover a few month’s ago

Screenshot

For six weeks, the former most powerful man in the world sat like an ordinary citizen in a drab courtroom, a criminal defendant being judged by a jury of his peers.

Donald Trump glowered, complained, bloviated, and snoozed during a trial both historic and tawdry over whether he falsified business records to cover up hush money paid to a porn star on the eve of the 2016 election. On May 30, the 12 jurors delivered their unanimous verdict: guilty on all 34 counts. To all his norm-shattering iterations—flashy businessman, name-brand showman, novice President—Trump has added a new title: felon.

The trial that led to the first-ever criminal conviction of a former U.S. President was often marked by its unseemliness. A motley cast of characters—the former porn star, the tabloid publisher, the crying press aide, the disgraced former fixer—recounted episodes of spankings, clandestine meetings, and payoffs, all intended to establish that Trump had criminally conspired to hide information about his behavior that could have affected voters’ choices.

But while the crimes may feel insubstantial, the stakes for American democracy are far weightier. Trump once again threatens to upend the precepts of the U.S. political system and test the foundations of the country’s rule of law.

Trump will hardly be humbled by this outcome; he’s already called the trial a scam and vowed to appeal, a process that could take months or longer. “This was a rigged trial. It was a disgrace,” Trump said after he was found guilty. “The real verdict is going to be on November 5th by the people.”

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From Shohei Ohtani, Aaron Judge to Juan Soto, Bryce Harper: 16 players in MLB playoffs who earn more than entire Tigers roster

from Sportskeeda – thanks to Mike C.

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A history of the “stolen” 2020 election by Heather Cox Richardson

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How long, O Lord?

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After a Decade, Scientists Unveil Fly Brain in Stunning Detail

Scientists have mapped out how 140,000 neurons are wired in the brain of the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster.

A tour of the brain of an adult fruit fly, including every one of over 140,000 neurons connected by more than 50 million synapses.CreditCredit…

By Carl Zimmer

Oct. 2, 2024

A fruit fly’s brain is smaller than a poppy seed, but it packs tremendous complexity into that tiny space. Over 140,000 neurons are joined together by more than 490 feet of wiring, as long as four blue whales placed end to end.

Hundreds of scientists mapped out those connections in stunning detail in a series of papers published on Wednesday in the journal Nature. The wiring diagram will be a boon to researchers who have studied the nervous system of the fly species, Drosophila melanogaster, for generations.

Previously, a tiny worm was the only adult animal to have had its brain entirely reconstructed, with just 385 neurons in its entire nervous system. The new fly map is “the first time we’ve had a complete map of any complex brain,” said Mala Murthy, a neurobiologist at Princeton who helped lead the effort.

Other researchers said that analyzing the circuitry in the fly brain would reveal principles that apply to other species, including humans, whose brains have 86 billion neurons.

In one of the new studies, the researchers tackled the mystery of how sensory signals flow through the brain and prompt it to produce commands. They created a computer simulation of the complete fly brain. When presented with simulated tastes, the artificial brain produced signals to stick out the tongue. (click on Page 2 to continue)

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John Green, Jodi Picoult, Angie Thomas join publishers in lawsuit fighting Florida book bans

From GoodGoodGood – thanks to Pam P.

Authors John Green, Jodi Picoult, and Angie Thomas have three things in common: They’re all majorly successful writers, their books have been banned in states across the country, and now, they’re joining a lawsuit to fight back.

Three photos side by side of authors John Green, Jodi Picoult, and Angie Thomas
Left to right: John Green, Jodi Picoult, and Angie Thomas. Photos courtesy of John Green, Rainer Hosch, and Imani Khayyam

The trio joins other authors like Julia Alvarez and Laurie Halse Anderson, as well as the Authors Guild, and publishers Penguin Random House, Hachette Book Group, HarperCollins Publishers, Macmillan Publishers, Simon & Schuster, and Sourcebooks in filing a lawsuit challenging Florida House Bill 1069. (Two students and two parents in Florida have also joined the lawsuit.)

In 2022, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed the bill into law, giving parents the ability to approve (or disapprove) what books schools could have in their libraries. 

This law would require Florida’s public schools to create a searchable list of all the materials in their libraries, as well as provide notice when adding new books. Its broad provisions have led to a swath of book challenges since it went into effect in July of last year. (click page 2 to continue).

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