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Author Topic: U.S. Politics  (Read 196538 times)

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #752 on: June 15, 2022, 12:05:02 PM »
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What an absolute disaster in Texas as over 160,000 people are without water in Odessa during a major heatwave right on the cusp of Summer. Greg Abbott the right wing Governor is a total failure. This was always a danger with faulty deficient water lines that was never repaired just like he never fixed the power grid problem. That's why President Biden's Infrastructure Bill was so important to repair all the crumbling infrastructure in our states but Republicans for years ignored these projects that needed to be fixed.

Almost every Republican in the House and Senate voted against President Biden's Infrastructure Bill. The few Republicans that did, Donald Trump tried to primary them in the primary elections. Once again, Republicans are voting against the American people. They vote against things that are important and truly matter by repairing water mains so they don't burst and run out of water.

Instead, Republicans ban books in schools and ban transgenders from playing sports. How does that benefit your life? It doesn't. Republicans only push bogus cultural issues and ignore what matters most which is jobs, healthcare, and sound infrastructure so we don't have disasters like this.

165,000 people in West Texas could be without water for days amid heat wave after main breaks

Ector County declared a state of disaster as the city of Odessa potentially faces 48 hours of no water.



A water main break in West Texas could leave the 165,000 residents in and around Odessa with little or no water for 48 hours, officials said Tuesday, just as a heat wave grips the city.

There's an "imminent threat" of "severe damage, injury, or loss of life or property" looming in the famed oil boom town because of a "main water line failure," according to a declaration of disaster from the Ector County Office of Emergency Management.

"The loss of potable water is expected to be forty-eight hours at this time," the declaration said.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott directed state agencies to help coordinate the local response and restore the water supply.

The water main break couldn’t have come at worse time for Odessa as residents face an early summer heat wave, with a high temperature of 100 degrees Tuesday and forecasts for 98 Wednesday and 96 Thursday.

Crews are working to repair the break underneath the intersection of 42nd and San Jacinto streets, according to a city statement.

Despite best efforts of workers, the city said repairs are "taking longer than anticipated."

"Water levels have reached a point that a Boil Water Notice has been issued," the city added. "Citizens should expect a significant loss in water pressure and/or no water at all. A significant portion of the community remains without water at this time."

Those caring for children, senior citizens and people with weakened immune systems must take particular note of the boil water order, the city said.

"To ensure destruction of all harmful bacteria and other microbes, water for drinking, cooking, and ice making should be boiled and cooled prior to use for drinking water or human consumption purposes," according to another city statement. "The water should be brought to a vigorous rolling boil and then boiled for two minutes."

Tammy Henken, a 47-year-old mother of seven in Odessa, chuckled at the city's water boil notice.

"How can we boil water that we don't have?" Henken said Tuesday afternoon.

She hopes to get through the next 48 hours leaning on friends in neighboring Midland, who have not been impacted by the water main break, and visiting her husband's workplace on the outskirts of Odessa, which has its own well.

"And I take this as a chance to help my children learn how to trust God," Henken added.

Bottled water is being distributed at three locations: McKinney Park, Ector County Coliseum and the intersection of West University Boulevard and Farm to Market Road (FM) 1936 in West Odessa.

Hospitals and nursing facilities are being provided with emergency water supplies, said state Rep. Brooks Landgraf, R-Odessa.

"I know this is a frustrating day in our community," he told constituents in a statement.

Odessa, which sits more than 350 miles west of Dallas on Interstate 20, might be best known from author Buzz Bissinger's seminal non-fiction work "Friday Night Lights," looking at the town's love affair with high school football.

The book led to a movie and critically acclaimed NBC television show of the same name.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/165000-people-west-texas-water-days-heat-wave-main-breaks-rcna33561

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #752 on: June 15, 2022, 12:05:02 PM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #753 on: June 15, 2022, 12:49:48 PM »
Trump’s pick for Pa. governor says he sees ‘parallels’ to Hitler’s power grab in Capitol riot

Doug Mastriano — who attended the Jan. 6 rally — was asked whether the riot was similar to the Reichstag fire, which Hitler used as a pretext to seize more power in 1933.



WASHINGTON — The Donald Trump-endorsed nominee for governor in Pennsylvania compared the Jan. 6 attack to historical events staged by the Nazis, saying that he saw "parallels" between the criticism of the Jan. 6 attack and the 1933 Reichstag fire, which Hitler used to seize more power.

Doug Mastriano was at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

Mastriano, a Pennsylvania state senator, has been subpoenaed by the House Jan. 6 committee. He organized buses to D.C. that day, according to receipts his campaign's lawyer previously acknowledged turning over to the Jan. 6 committee. Video shows he was just feet away as rioters ripped down police barricades, but he has said he followed police lines “as they existed” and says he left the Capitol when it was “apparent that this was no longer a peaceful protest.”

His primary election victory last month has prompted a renewed look at his role on Jan. 6, including previously unpublished photos that show him in the back of a crowd that breached a police barricade.

He is also receiving increased attention about his comments about Jan. 6.

Last week, Mastriano live-streamed on Facebook as he was interviewed Friday for the podcast "The World According to Ben Stein."

Stein — a former Richard Nixon speechwriter who hosted the 1990s gameshow "Win Ben Stein's Money" and played an economics teacher in the 1986 movie "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" — called the deadly Jan. 6 attack "a ridiculously trivial thing" on the podcast.

Stein said the country is getting "more and more into a dictatorship," and compared Jan. 6 to the 1933 fire on the Reichstag, the legislative branch in Berlin, that Hitler blamed on communists. The Nazis then used the fire as a pretext to suspend civil liberties and assume more power.

"The Nazis immediately seized upon it [the Reichstag fire] to impose emergency measures," Stein said. "I think something like this is happening with the Jan. 6 nonevent."

Stein called the riot a "ridiculously trivial thing."

“It was not an insurrection," he added. "It was not an attempt to take over the government. It was a demonstration by a group that felt frustration by the statistical impossibility of the vote having gone the way the Democrats said it did.”

Mastriano responded to Stein's comparison, saying he concurred with the comparison between Jan. 6 and the Reichstag fire.

"I agree with the political, with the historic analogy laid out there, so using something that was very suspicious in Berlin to advance their agenda, you know, the national socialists there," Mastriano said. "I do see parallels.”

Mastriano, who previously said that those who broke the law on Jan. 6 "must be prosecuted," said on Stein's podcast that law enforcement had taken "extreme, heavy-handed measures" in response to the attack.

"It's just really heartbreaking watching how quickly our country's falling down, and that we have people being publicly arrested for show to send a message," Mastriano said. "I think what we're seeing in America now makes McCarthy in the '50s look like an amateur."

A member of the online sleuths Sedition Hunters — individuals who have spent the past 17 months investigating the Jan. 6 attack and identifying hundreds of rioters to law enforcement — say they have found new photos of Mastriano on the Capitol grounds moments before the rioters breached a police barricade line on the eastern side of the U.S. Capitol. Minutes later, rioters smashed the window of a door leading into the Capitol rotunda, according to timelines the online sleuths have constructed using the videos, photos, press coverage and social media posts of the day.

Online sleuths have assisted the FBI in hundreds of Capitol riot investigations, successfully identifying rioters months before they are arrested.

NBC News has reviewed the videos and images used to construct the timelines and compared other images of Mastriano at the rally with those identified by the sleuths. In the images, Mastriano appears to be wearing the same scarf and hat and is in a consistent place in the crowd. In the series of images, Mastriano is accompanied by a woman who appears to be his wife, and Mastriano has publicly acknowledged that his wife was with him that day. He has never disputed his identification in previous images.

The images, shared with NBC News, appear to show Mastriano holding up his cellphone as rioters in the front of the mob face off with police at the Capitol steps. Reconstructed timelines and other videos filmed nearby show rioters would breach this police line within minutes, ripping away a crowd control rope line and rushing past officers up the stairs. The timelines and videos, including unedited versions, that show Mastriano in the crowd were reviewed by NBC News.



Online sleuths also identified a video posted by "Stop the Steal" organizer Mike Coudrey on Jan. 6 that appears to show Mastriano taking photos or video with his cellphone as rioters face off with police on the steps of the U.S. Capitol. Coudrey's tweet celebrated the mob, which he said "broke through 4 layers of security at the Capitol building.

Mastriano’s campaign did not respond to NBC News’ request for comment. Mastriano previously said that he “respected all police lines as I came upon them" and that he never stepped foot on the Capitol stairs. One of his campaign aides, Grant Clarkson, was near the front of the mob, NBC previously reported. There has been no evidence that Clarkson entered the Capitol that day and he has insisted he did not.

Mastriano is facing Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro, the Democratic gubernatorial nominee, in November.

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2022-election/trumps-pick-pennsylvania-governor-says-sees-parallels-hitlers-power-gr-rcna33167

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #754 on: June 15, 2022, 03:06:20 PM »
Lindsey Graham confirms Republicans would go after Social Security, Medicare if they get a Senate majority



Sens. Bernie Sanders and Lindsey Graham held a debate about the economy Monday at the the Edward M. Kennedy Institute in Massachusetts, aired on Fox Nation. The event was supposed to be some kind of kumbaya bipartisan thing, bringing the two sides together for a discussion about the economy. Sanders, an independent from Vermont, gave a full-throated defense of the vision progressives have for America: a public health care system, a living wage, and tax fairness. Graham, a South Carolina Republican, reiterated his party’s dream of ending Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.

“In the United States, Lindsey, we spend twice as much per capita on health care compared to the people of any other country, while major countries like Canada, the U.K., Germany manage to supply health care to all their people,” Sanders said. “Why is that?” he asked rhetorically. “Because they’re not having insurance companies ripping off the system.”

That’s socialism, said Graham. “And it’s not going to fix America. We are not a socialist nation. There is a better way, I promise you this.” His better way happens to be at the center of a big Senate Republican fight, and puts him at odds with his party leader, Mitch McConnell, who really does not want Republican members sticking their necks out right now and telling the American people that their vision is to do away with the decades-old programs that Americans revere, not to mention depend on.

If Republicans take over the Senate, Graham promised, they will start right in on the cuts. It’s not idle talk, by the way, as Graham is the ranking member of the Senate Budget Committee—he’d take over in 2023 if Republicans win the majority. “Entitlement reform is a must for us to not become Greece,” he said in the debate. By “reform,” he means cutting benefits and disqualifying people.

To be fair, Sen. Rick Scott was a lot less subtle about his plan to do away with the programs and pretty much everything else as we know it in American society, a plan McConnell has been apoplectic about going public. The Florida Republican, tasked with regaining the majority as head of the National Senate Republican Committee, released his vision earlier this year, a plan in which everything passed by Congress—every existing program—ends after five years.

This plan was exactly what McConnell did not want Republicans to talk about doing, and Scott has doubled down in opposition to his leader.

McConnell tried to defuse the situation back in March, telling reporters that he’s the one in control. “If we’re fortunate enough to have the majority next year, I’ll be the majority leader. I’ll decide in consultation with my members what to put on the floor.”

“We will not have as part of our agenda a bill that raises taxes on half the American people and sunsets Social Security and Medicare within five years. That will not be part of the Republican Senate Majority Agenda.” Note how careful he’s being there in talking about the programs he knows Americans love—Social Security and Medicare—without saying he’ll prevent them from being cut.

Which is precisely what Graham was talking about, a less radical and bombastic plan to end the programs as we know them, but an end nonetheless. That’s an agenda McConnell isn’t going to denounce.

Republicans are promising to come after your Social Security and Medicare.

Watch Video Here: https://twitter.com/i/status/1536436486119346176

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #754 on: June 15, 2022, 03:06:20 PM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #755 on: June 15, 2022, 03:40:15 PM »
Republican Nancy Mace defeats Trump-endorsed challenger Katie Arrington in SC primary

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Republican Nancy Mace defeated Katie Arrington in one of South Carolina’s most hotly-contested primary congressional races Tuesday night, delivering another setback to Donald Trump’s primary endorsement record.

Mace’s win over Arrington, who was once Mace’s colleague in the State House, dashes Arrington’s second attempt to represent the 1st Congressional District after she won her primary in 2018 only to lose to Democrat Joe Cunningham.

The Associated Press called the race for Mace at 11:13 p.m., showing Mace with about 53 percentage points to Arrington’s nearly 45%.

Mace declared victory at her primary night event in Mount Pleasant. In her speech, she thanked Arrington, who conceded the race, for running against her.

“It is not easy to put yourself out there, to put yourself in public, to put it all on the line and take that risk,” Mace said. “I want to thank her for her passion.”

Arrington conceded and endorsed Mace from her primary night event in Summerville. Mace touted being an “independent voice” in the Republican Party, which she said is important to winning key swing districts across the country and regaining the Republican majority in Congress.

“Getting the majority starts right here in South Carolina,” Mace said. “So what are we going to do in November? Keep the 1st.”

She will face Charleston pediatrician Annie Andrews, the Democratic candidate who ran unopposed, in November.

Mace’s win puts her on track to potentially secure a second term as the 1st District’s representative, making her the first woman to win a reelection bid in the district.

If she claims victory in November, she would become the first female representative to win two consecutive terms in the Lowcountry district that covers Beaufort and Berkeley counties, as well as parts of Charleston, Colleton, Dorchester and Jasper counties.

A SLIP IN TRUMP’S INFLUENCE

Mace, 44, adds another defeat to Trump’s national endorsement record, with Arrington joining the ranks of other Trump-backed losses like Georgia gubernatorial candidate David Perdue.

Trump, who referred to Mace as an “absolutely terrible candidate,” endorsed Arrington in February. Mace responded through a video in front of Trump Tower posted to Twitter, where she said Arrington would be “more than qualified” to lose to a Democrat again, referencing Arrington’s 2018 loss to Cunningham.

Mace is the second Republican House incumbent from South Carolina Trump tried to oust. The other he was successful. State Rep. Russell Fry defeated U.S. Rep. Tom Rice, R-Myrtle Beach, who found himself a Trump target after he voted with nine Republicans to impeach Trump over his Jan. 6 riot response.

The outcome came as a surprise to some who anticipated the 7th District’s Republican primary to go to a runoff because it was a seven-person race.

But a loss for Trump doesn’t likely mean his influence will entirely go away in the state, where he enjoys overwhelming support among S.C. Republican voters.

It could, however, give a boost to other South Carolina Republicans, particularly former Trump administration official Nikki Haley, who are possibly eyeing a presidential run in 2024. Haley endorsed Mace in her primary and campaigned for her ahead of Tuesday.

Mace garnered endorsements in addition to Haley from a wide variety of political figures and organizations in the months leading up to Election Day, including former White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney, Summerville Mayor Ricky Waring and national lobbying organization the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

© The State (Columbia, S.C.)

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #756 on: June 15, 2022, 03:54:57 PM »
Herschel Walker Has a Secret Son He Doesn’t See
The Trump-endorsed Georgia Senate candidate who said a “fatherless home is a major, major problem” is an absentee dad himself
https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/herschel-walker-secret-son-report-1368573/

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #756 on: June 15, 2022, 03:54:57 PM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #757 on: June 15, 2022, 05:09:18 PM »
President Biden @POTUS

My approach has brought down COVID deaths by 90%.
 
It’s opened schools and businesses that were shuttered.

And it’s created the greatest jobs recovery in American history. 8.7 million new jobs in just 16 months – an all-time record.

Last week, I spoke with retailers about how ocean shipping price hikes are forcing them to raise costs.

Tonight, Congress passed a bipartisan bill to crack down on this behavior. It'll help lower costs for American families. I look forward to signing it.


https://twitter.com/POTUS/status/1536498144745234434

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #758 on: June 15, 2022, 11:45:56 PM »
Exclusive: Senator Tim Kaine says a key piece of new gun bill would dramatically reduce shootings

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Sen. Tim Kaine (D-VA) compared the new gun safety legislation to seat-belt laws, saying that both laws aren't likely to stop all fatalities but they'll help.

Speaking to Raw Story on Wednesday afternoon, Kaine noted that the "straw man purchase" was back in the bill after it had been previously taken out.

The legislation would crack down on illegal purchases of guns through other individuals to circumvent background checks and enact new rules for purchasers under 18. Last week, a man was arrested in Dallas for the illegal trafficking of almost 100 guns, some of which were used in north Texas shootings. There are laws already in place to help reduce weapons trafficking, but the Senate bill aims to raise the penalties for such tactics.

"It would dramatically reduce [the problem]," said Kaine. "There is nothing that we're going to do that will end it, but it's like a seatbelt does in every traffic fatality it makes rider safe. And, look, that's one of the more underreported pieces of the compromise. More intense background analysis of 18-21 year-olds including juvenile records."

He went on to cite the mental health piece of the bill, saying it was "fantastic," particularly after the COVID-19 crisis. Kaine proposed a bill that was passed in Feb. 2022 that helped fund mental health resources for healthcare workers who have been overworked and emotionally devastated after facing so much death with the pandemic.

As Kaine explained, the gunman responsible for the Virginia Tech shooting was previously diagnosed with selective mutism and severe depression. The laws on the books currently mandate that a person be officially institutionalized before they can be prevented from purchasing a gun. It makes the mental health restrictions considerably higher. Virginia changed their laws after the shooting, eliminating the loopholes that would allow those adjudicated as mentally unsound to purchase guns.

The mental health piece of the bill will be a big test for Republicans, who have said for decades that mass shootings are all related to mental health issues.

https://www.rawstory.com/tim-kaine-gun-legislation/

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #759 on: June 16, 2022, 12:45:16 PM »
President Biden @POTUS

Wall Street didn’t build this country.
 
The middle class built this country.
 
And unions built the middle class.

Our economic plans have created the greatest jobs recovery in American history.


Watch: https://twitter.com/POTUS/status/1537207782042214400

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #759 on: June 16, 2022, 12:45:16 PM »