AcidicBasicGlitch

joined 3 months ago
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[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (4 children)

Its the timing of all this with Iran that has me most concerned and the fact that Trump just got rid of the only agency that does a thorough investigation into industrial explosions.

And the fact that the Mossad snuck in drones to Iran recently for their attack

And the video of Landry signing this bill and mentioning our nuclear power plants and saying Trump will be signing his own EO soon

And the fact that Trump also just fired a Biden appointee who was head of the Nuclear safety board that oversees America's nuclear reactors

Hopefully all just part of a really weird series of coincidences

[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 days ago (1 children)

False flag attack he then blames on Iran is my biggest fear, and seems pretty likely.

[–] [email protected] 17 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Fighting back is often the only choice you're left with when Nazis gain power, but I do wish people would keep in mind there's a difference between strategizing and being smart about how and when you fight back vs encouraging individuals to run full speed at the entire U.S. military with a bullseye on their forehead.

Also, if you're bringing fascists and rule of law into this, hopefully you're not wilfully ignoring how they gain power in the first place, or the fact that the Nazis literally used a legal expert that provided them with the legal shield they needed to carry out a genocide without ever breaking the law.

Carl Schmitt

Or that one of Trump's biggest defenders against the "crooked courts" that keep getting in his way, and leaving him with no choice but to act like a dictator, is a Harvard Constitutional Law professor who also just happens to be a Carl Schmitt fanboy.

Adrian Vermeule-OUR SCHMITTIAN ADMINISTRATIVE LAW

Common-Good Constitutionalism Is an Idea as Dangerous as They Come

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

*Invading Poland via sneak attack while the U.S. acted to distract Poland by leading them to believe they were actually being heard in a discussion about ways to keep something exactly like this from happening.

[–] [email protected] 20 points 2 days ago

I really don't care, but if we're playing this game, could we get a hair test?

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 days ago

That's a bingo

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Yes, in this district nobody has ever challenged a board seat, and it's only happened 7 times throughout the history of the state in other districts.

Usually people just have the seat until they decide to step down.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 days ago

Yeah you're right, my bad.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

This is the first time there has ever been a challenge to a seat and an election in this district, so where did they get the idea that estimated voters would only be ~20/location?

They said that they got it from the registrar of voters, but each parish has its own registrar and the district covers 5 parishes. So which parish/registrar came up with that number, what was it based on since it was the first election? Why was the same number applied equally when taking 5 different parishes into consideration?

[–] [email protected] 13 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Ok I'll just come out and say this, I think it would be easy for a certain corrupt individual to create a false flag drone attack from a "foreign adversary" in order to boost patriotic morale and gain the support necessary to drag a certain country into a war he has repeatedly and very publicly announced he does not want to be involved in despite all evidence to the contrary.

Especially given that corrupt individual has dismantled several safety measures and regulations and eliminated positions of individuals who are trained to keep something like this from happening.

If you look at the amount of damage done by the Beeper attacks a few years ago, you really don't need a gigantic war drone to cause a catastrophe in certain conditions.

I know it sounds paranoid AF, but I find it especially odd that same individual is trying to shut down the only agency that would thoroughly investigate an industrial chemical explosion if one were to occur. https://grist.org/energy/trump-quietly-shutters-the-only-federal-agency-that-investigates-industrial-chemical-explosions/

 

Post on Mastodon

Very detailed Lemmy post I wrote about this fuckery and more

Local news article containing the quote about the voter registrar

On Homer Plessey Way, board member Daniel Milojevic stood outside the Bywater polling place in the Press Street Gallery suggesting people try the two Jefferson Parish locations.

He said the local registrar of voters gave the district only 300 ballots per location and told them they could expect about 20 people.

“We had to confirm the number of ballots weeks ago,” he said, before it was clear how high the turnout would be. Milojevic conceded that planning had clearly missed the mark.

As one astute gentleman asked while defending Reddit, and accusing me of spreading misinformation:

If hardly anybody knew, how did turnout exceed expectations within 2 hours?

Because the "expectation" provided by the registrar was literally 20 voters per location (60 voters in total) for the entire fucking city.

 

Yesterday my city held a very rare election, and most people didn't even know about until the last minute. I learned about it on Friday via this same subreddit, but the information posted only covered one of the two candidates in detail.

The brief description given for the other candidate, was also very oddly formatted and difficult to read.

It seemed odd to have such a rare and last minute election quietly scheduled the same day of the No Kings rally and Pride Festival, especially after the vote regarding the millage for the Orleans Parish Sheriff budget was criticized for being scheduled during Jazz fest.

Anyway, I got up early on Saturday a little before 6 am and found an article covering both candidates. I tried to post the article but as soon as I hit submit, the post was already removed.

Weird, I thought maybe somebody already posted the information and I must have missed it. I checked the subreddit and still didn't see it. Odd, so I tried to just post it as a text post with the information and link included, but again, it was removed as soon as I hit submit.

... Very weird, I figured I must have been temporarily suspended from posting or something, but I was still able to comment as usual, and a few hours later, when I posted something about the protest, I had no issues.

I was planning to go vote along with several other people after the No King protest. But by the time the protest was over, people were learning voters were being turned away because the voting locations were saying they ran out of ballots.

I thought that might be disinformation, so I went anyway. Confirmed that yep, I couldn't vote. The best they could offer was allowing me to add my name, phone number, and optionally who I would have voted for if I had been allowed to vote, to a list of names being collected on an unofficial sheet of spare printer paper.

New Orleans voters in rare conservation district election turned away in droves Saturday

Hundreds of New Orleans residents showed up to vote Saturday in the Crescent Soil and Water Conservation District election only to find all the available ballots had already been cast.

The race, between the incumbent, urban farmer Erica “Sage” Johnson of Orleans Parish, and Lloyd Landry IV, a commercial fishing captain from St. Charles Parish, will decide who represents the district covering Orleans, Jefferson and St. Charles parishes.

The district's five-member board works with landowners to manage resources, including water, soil, forests and wildlife. There are 44 districts across the state and they fall under the jurisdiction of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries.

The district said ahead of the election that only 300 ballots would be available at each of the eight polling places throughout the three parishes and urged voters to come early.

Still, many arriving at the three voting locations in New Orleans as early as 9 a.m. were surprised to find the available ballots there had already run out.

Nola.com Correction: This story was changed to reflect that the conservation district falls under the Department of Agriculture and Forestry.

This actually makes this even more suspicious because Louisiana just passed a bill to deregulate seafood safety and inspection, and hand oversight of seafood regulation over to this department.

The candidate who is suddenly challenging the incumbent for her seat is a commercial fishing captain.

The incumbent also released a statement last night, addressing the vote, and said she had actually requested more ballots be made available.

The head of city council, who is also one of the top candidates for the upcoming mayoral election (if we're allowed to vote by then) has called for a do-over.

Councilwoman Helena Moreno calls for redo Soil and Water Board election

I guess we'll just have to wait and see what happens.

Here are what the official ballots looked like if anyone is interested.

A. They literally could have just given people a laptop, printer access, and a pair of scissors to make more.

B. Using these seems like it creates the risk of people just creating new votes to add on to the total tally. Especially odd given the very sheisty recount that somebody paid for using an alias, after the vote for the sheriff budget, where an official suddenly remembered some extra ballots he had forgotten about in another room.

 

Hundreds of New Orleans residents showed up to vote Saturday in the Crescent Soil and Water Conservation District election only to find all the available ballots had already been cast.

The race, between the incumbent, urban farmer Erica “Sage” Johnson of Orleans Parish, and Lloyd Landry IV, a commercial fishing captain from St. Charles Parish, will decide who represents the district covering Orleans, Jefferson and St. Charles parishes.

The district's five-member board works with landowners to manage resources, including water, soil, forests and wildlife. There are 44 districts across the state and they fall under the jurisdiction of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries.

Interesting... 🤔

159
submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

•https://toad.social/@PimentoMori/114675591725322491

What Is Truth (Live at The White House, Washington D.C., April 17, 1970)

 

"I can't help gloating over it all, I admit," Mardan said on-air on Rossia-1. "The worse it is for the United States, the better it is for us."

As Cherkasov pointed out, "Cheering over unrest in the United States is standard fare for the Kremlin and Kremlin-friendly media."

The rhetoric is well-practiced and hardly new, he added.

"These outlets have, after all, come up with surveys that purportedly show America as their country's main adversary for the last 20 years."

Much of the pro-Putin coverage that depicts the Los Angeles area as "apocalyptic," Cherkasov said.

But he noted that some broadcasters in the United States have been using similar language, at least some of the time.

 

So they're continuing to bomb the underground nuclear facility in Natanz. But I'm confused by this article from 2023:

An Iranian nuclear facility is so deep underground that US airstrikes likely couldn’t reach it

Unless you plan to continue bombing for all eternity, wouldn't there be a good chance you're just kicking hornet's nest?

 

“I have no doubt that your day of liberation from this tyranny is closer than ever. And when that day comes, Israelis and Iranians will renew the alliance between our two ancient peoples. Together, we will build a future of prosperity, a future of peace, a future of hope.”

That sounds familiar...

Trump pledges to ‘liberate’ LA as he visits troops at Fort Bragg

 

In final days of session, legislature advances Landry immigration agenda

SB15 criminalizes the failure of local officials – including sheriffs and other law enforcement officers – to cooperate with federal immigration agencies, with penalties of up to 10 years in prison.

Up to 10 years in prison if you refuse to blindly follow orders? Seems reasonable /s

It also criminalizes acts by everyday Louisiana residents deemed to obstruct or “thwart” federal immigration enforcement efforts. It passed 71-30.

"Thwart" immigration efforts seems like it could be very loosely interpreted to mean anything from intentionally or even unintentionally obstructing or delaying efforts, peacefully protesting or expressing dissent, potentially interpreted to punish immigration lawyers for doing their job.

Also, just pointing out the city of New Orleans was already on that DHS list of jurisdictions in violation of Trump's sanctuary policy

Feels like it would have been less passive aggressive to just @ the city within the actual text of the bill.

“The Orleans Parish Sheriff, who should be trying to get out from under the handcuffs of the consent decree, [is] using that as a shield to avoid the possible implications of refusing to cooperate with ICE,” Morris told committee members.

Also, love this argument (especially as we're watching riots in L.A. and the city of Glendale canceling it's own contract with ICE) bc it essentially seems to be saying take off those old handcuffs, and put on these new much more restrictive handcuffs.

 

SB15 criminalizes the failure of local officials – including sheriffs and other law enforcement officers – to cooperate with federal immigration agencies, with penalties of up to 10 years in prison.

Up to 10 years in prison if you refuse to blindly follow orders? Seems reasonable /s

It also criminalizes acts by everyday Louisiana residents deemed to obstruct or “thwart” federal immigration enforcement efforts. It passed 71-30.

"Thwart" immigration efforts seems like it could be very loosely interpreted to mean anything from intentionally or even unintentionally obstructing or delaying efforts, peacefully protesting or expressing dissent, potentially interpreted to punish immigration lawyers for doing their job.

Also, just pointing out the city of New Orleans was already on that DHS list of jurisdictions in violation of Trump's sanctuary policy

Feels like it would have been less passive aggressive to just @ the city within the actual text of the bill.

“The Orleans Parish Sheriff, who should be trying to get out from under the handcuffs of the consent decree, [is] using that as a shield to avoid the possible implications of refusing to cooperate with ICE,” Morris told committee members.

Also, love this argument (especially as we're watching riots in L.A. and the city of Glendale canceling it's own contract with ICE) bc it essentially seems to be saying take off those old handcuffs, and put on these new much more restrictive handcuffs.

Durr we luv smol gubmint and freedum 🖕

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/66472753

It's been so crazy that I forgot all about the DHS list of jurisdictions in violation of the Trump administration's policy on sanctuary cities according to his EO released on April 28th. Apparently they published it last week and immediately took it back down.

When the EO was released, I figured my own city would be on the list, and it was, along with 36 other jurisdictions.

So can't say for sure, but it definitely has me a little nervous that all the jurisdictions on that list could soon be facing what we're seeing play out in California. The mayor said, she believes what is happening in L.A. is a test run, and I agree with her 100%

71
submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/66472753

It's been so crazy that I forgot all about the DHS list of jurisdictions in violation of the Trump administration's policy on sanctuary cities according to his EO released on April 28th. Apparently they published it last week and immediately took it back down.

When the EO was released, I figured my own city would be on the list, and it was, along with 36 other ~~jurisdictions~~ states. There are hundreds of counties listed

So can't say for sure, but it definitely has me a little nervous that all the jurisdictions on that list could soon be facing what we're seeing play out in California. The mayor said, she believes what is happening in L.A. is a test run, and I agree with her 100%

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