Thursday, June 12, 2025

This was read in the Maine Legislature on Wednesday...

Actually, this was delayed by a day, 
so will be read today! 


 

8 comments:

  1. Manomet Conservation Sciences was founded 56 years ago (1969). Shiloh is their first fatality.

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  2. Heather Cox Richardson’s latest includes:

    Politico’s Lisa Kashinsky, Calen Razor, and Mia McCarthy reported today that of the 50 Republican members of Congress they surveyed, only 7 said they planned to go to the June 14 military parade in Washington, D.C. Although the parade is in honor of the 250th anniversary of the creation of the U.S. Army, the chairs of the House and Senate Armed Services committees do not plan to attend.

    Senator Rand Paul (R-KY), who has criticized Trump’s budget reconciliation bill, yesterday said: “I love parades, but I’m not really excited about $40 million for a parade. I don’t really think the symbolism of tanks and missiles is really what we’re all about…. All the images that come to mind are Soviet Union and North Korea.”

    More Here

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  3. Trump declares dubious emergencies to amass power, scholars say
    Analysis
    By Adam Liptak
    NYT
    To hear President Donald Trump tell it, the nation is facing a rebellion in Los Angeles, an invasion by a Venezuelan gang and extraordinary foreign threats to its economy.

    Citing this series of crises, he has sought to draw on emergency powers that Congress has scattered throughout the U.S. Code over the centuries, summoning the National Guard to Los Angeles over the objections of California’s governor, sending scores of migrants to El Salvador without the barest hint of due process and upending the global economy with steep tariffs.

    “He is declaring utterly bogus emergencies for the sake of trying to expand his power, undermine the Constitution and destroy civil liberties,” said Ilya Somin, a libertarian professor at Antonin Scalia Law School. -- nordy

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  4. If Trump cuts funding to NPR and PBS, rural America will pay a devastating price
    Margaret Sullivan
    Guardian


    With the sharp decline of the local newspaper business over the past 20 years, many parts of America have turned into what experts refer to as “news deserts”. These are places that have almost no sources of credible local reporting.

    As local newspapers have shuttered or withered – at a rate of more than two every week – news deserts have grown. The effects are sobering. People who live in news deserts become more polarized in their political views and less engaged in their communities.

    One of the foundations of democracy itself – truth – begins to disappear. People turn to social media for information and lies flow freely with nothing to serve as a reality check. -- nordy

    ReplyDelete