A Moment Of Zen

For Thanksgiving I will offer this little video that America’s hope is in the hands of the under 30 age group. They seem to be up to the challenge. After all they saved the country from the massive turn to the extremist right that major polls predicted. We need to keep them engaged – or in the case of Iowa, simply get them engaged.

So here is a short clip of Katie Porter’s son, Paul, giving his view of life as the kid of a congress member. Three minutes of insight and amusement:

Happy Thanksgiving all.  Please take care and we will see you next week.

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Sunday Funday: Happy Thanksgiving Edition

The classic segment on Thanks giving from WKRP In Cincinnati: (3 minutes)

A big thanks to perhaps the very best Speaker of the House ever, Nancy Pelosi. Sadly, now after great leadership from Pelosi, America will see what lousy leadership is, Ridiculous investigation spurred by lies and disinformation. But the public will be spared the details by a corporate media that is almost 100% extreme right wing. They will cover for Republicans with lies and disinformation. Can anyone say Soviet Union?

We will try to take it a little light today. We need to decompress from the midterms and relax for Thanksgiving.

A) We would be remiss if we did not give some thought to what tragedy that took place 59 years ago this coming Tuesday in Dallas Texas?

B) As Speaker Pelosi moves out of her leadership role in the Democratic Party, who is expected to be next in line for the role?

C) At a much anticipated speech Tuesday night, who had to have the doors locked in order to keep people from walking out?

D) November 19, 1978 what event gave rise to the saying “drinking the Kool-Aid?”

E) Once it became certain that Republicans would have at least a one seat majority in the House, they held a press conference to announce they would do what?

F) Thomas Jefferson refused to declare Thanksgiving during his presidency. Why?

G) Testifying in the Trump Organization tax fraud trial CFO Alan Weisselberg indicated which members of the Trump family knew and participated in the fraud?

H) After a week+ Arizona has a new governor. Who won?

I) President Joe Biden met for three hours with what other major world leader in Bali Monday?

J) The Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade made its debut in what year?

K) What company’s whose employees were told they could no longer work from home ended up locking its doors so employees couldn’t come into the office out of fear of sabotage?

L) Congress is holding hearings on establishing a non-voting seat in the US House for what group of people that was promised to them nearly 200 years ago?

M) What major world-wide sporting event begins today?

N) Ticket selling snafus for what major singing star is focusing attention on what ticket selling behemoth?

O) In 1953 an accidental huge over order of turkeys by the Swanson company led to the invention of what staple of American dinners?

P) What percentage of Americans eat turkey on Thanksgiving day?

Q) The Senate voted to suspend the filibuster for a bill that would protect same sex and interracial marriages. How many Republicans voted against the suspension?

R) The world teetered on the verge of a possible escalation of Russia’s war against Ukraine as a missile struck in what third country, killing two and possible invoking NATO retaliation?

S) A White House wedding and I didn’t get invited! Who got married in the White House yesterday?

T) The US celebrates on the fourth Thursday of November. When does Canada celebrate their thanksgiving?

BONUS) The FDA approved lab grown what as safe for human consumption this week? 

Al Franken

Congrats to horrible lying scumbag Kevin McCarthy on winning the nomination to lead a terrible group comprised almost entirely of nut jobs and/or chickenshits.

Answers:

A) The assassination of President John Kennedy

B) Rep. Hakeem Jeffries of New York

C) Trump

D) The mass suicide of the followers of Jim Jones in Guyana

E) Investigate the President. They got nothing else

F) Jefferson believed in the separation of Church and state and believed that Thanksgiving was a sort of a religious holiday

G) Trump and his two sons, Junior and Eric

H) Katie Hobbs!

I) President Xi of China

J) 1924 – so just a couple years short of a century

K) Twitter 

L) The Cherokees

M) The World Cup – it ends a week before Christmas

N) Ticketmaster

O) The TV dinner

P) 88% (according to Good Houskeeping)

Q) 37

R) Poland

S) Presidential Grand daughter Naomi Biden

T) The second Monday of October or what we call Columbus (or Indigenous peoples) Day

BONUS) Meat, specifically chicken 

Many years ago I remember watching the middle-aged Tea Party Patriots™ marching around in their silly little tri-corner chucklef*ck hats, holding misspelled protest signage, and laughing my ass off at them. I never, ever imagined they’d become the mainstream Republican party. – Liam Nissan

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Grocery Prices And Corporate Mergers

Why Food Prices Could Skyrocket

As you can see in the video above what was once one of the saving graces of the supermarket industry – real competition – is a disappearing state. Grocery store competition is now down to 3, maybe 4 competitors in a given area.

I grew up in an Iowa where in one city we had at the same time stores such as Eagle Foods, Benner Tea, The Great A&P Tea Company, The Big Bee, Randall’s Super Value, Hy Vee plus a myriad of neighborhood corner groceries. Competition was fierce.

Now in any Iowa city, depending on the size of the town, you may have a Hy Vee, possibly a Walmart with a grocery, and possibly a Fareway. In Iowa’s few larger cities there may also be a Target with groceries, the rare in Iowa Costco and possibly an Aldi’s. That is about it for grocery stores in Iowa these days. Not a lot of competition. Mostly it is Hy Vee and Walmart.

In the video where it talks about Kroger’s and Albertson’s and all the various brands they have acquired over the years you can see the competition has been pretty well subsumed. Thus when you see that the price of your favorite beans have gone up at one store you can guess that there is no competition to stop either the rise or the amount of the rise.

So as we all will do so, remember when you complain that the price of groceries is high there are a myriad of factors that is going in to those rising prices. Farmers aren’t getting much more, but the retailer is simply because they can. As noted by Representative Katie Porter, recent price rises have included a whopping dollop of excess profit for the corporation:

Equipped with one of her easy-to-read, data-filled posters, Porter got Konczal to admit that surging corporate profits are forcing American consumers to pay significantly more for goods and services.

“According to this chart, what is the biggest driver of inflation during the pandemic? The blue – the dark blue is the recent period,” Porter pointed out.

“It would be corporate profits,” Konczal confirmed.

“And what is that percentage?” Porter asked.

“It is 54 percent,” Konczal replied, “and that number does stay that level of high if you update that number to more recent numbers as well.”  

Also note that it is NOT workers wages that is driving inflation, but again, corporate profits that are driving inflation. Plus suppliers to grocery stores and other retail outlets are adding their extra corporate profits onto their product thus multiplying the effect of inflation.

Posted in Corporate Greed, Republican Policy | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Chuck Cites Religious Liberty To Take Away Rights

hobnobbing with criminals?

Well, you voted for him, Iowa. One of America’s most out of touch citizens just voted as one of America’s ruling elites to stop Congress from enshrining the right for a certain group of Americans to marry who they wish. Most Americans think that being able to marry the person you love would be a very basic human right. Apparently Chuck Grassley doesn’t agree.

According to the Des Moines Register Grassley said this:  

“My vote against this bill is not about opposing the recognition of same-sex or interracial marriages; it’s about defending the religious liberty enshrined in our founding documents,” Grassley said. “This legislation is simply unnecessary.”

The Register doesn’t go in to Grassley’s “defending religious liberty” statement. It must be noted that even the extremely right wing Mormon Church made a statement in favor of the bill that would enshrine gay and interracial marriage:   

Nov 15 (Reuters) – The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints said on Tuesday it supports proposed federal legislation intended to protect gay-marriage rights, as long as it also protects the right of religious groups to believe such unions are against God’s word.

The Utah-based church said in a statement posted on its website its doctrine related to marriage – that God commanded it be between a man and a woman – would remain unchanged.

But the church said it would support the legislation after a bipartisan group of senators negotiated an amendment to the version passed by the U.S. House in July. The change states that the bill would have no impact on religious liberties protected under the U.S. Constitution.

Specifically, the Senate version states no church can face a civil lawsuit or other legal action for refusing to provide any service or access to its facilities for any marriage it opposes.

Grassley also claimed that there is no reason for Congress to enshrine the right for these groups to marry in law. Could be that old, out of touch Chuck missed the little kerfuffle caused in the early summer when the Supreme Court overturned “settled law” and overturned Roe v. Wade. In his opinion , Justice Clarence Thomas clearly stated the Court should set its eyes on overturning similar cases, including cases that protected same-sex marriage:

The U.S. House passed a similar bill in July, spurred by the Supreme Court’s overturn of Roe v. Wade. In a concurring opinion, Justice Clarence Thomas suggested the court reconsider other settled cases, including the precedent protecting same-sex marriages.

Although no case exists on the Supreme Court docket challenging marriage rights, U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin said there is “urgency” to codify marriage rights into law.

“Millions of Americans — our family members, our neighbors, our congressional staff members and certainly our constituents — are scared,” Baldwin, a Democrat, said on the Senate floor, “scared that the rights they rely on to protect their families could be taken away.”

So here we go. Six more years of the way out of touch Grassley imposing his religious views on the country. I don’t know about you, but old Chuck has certainly violated my religious freedom with this vote. But he don’t care. Imposing their religious views on Americans is a long time Republican tradition. Just ask Clarence Thomas, who wants to impose a bunch of his religious views on Americans.

It seems that just like women’s health, extreme Republicans like Grassley are more than willing to stick their noses into our personal business and make their religious views into law. And just like women’s health, Chuck Grassley has set the US Supreme Court up to overturn rights of Americans to impose their religious views.

Once again Iowans are more than happy to give up their rights to a powerful person who will take away rights from their perceived enemies. Grassley, much like his current mentor Trump, is fusing his personal prejudices with what he believes is good for the country.

Posted in #trumpresistance, 2022 Election campaign, Charles Grassley, church and state, Republican hypocrisy, Republican Policy, SCOTUS | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Chuck Cites Religious Liberty To Take Away Rights

What Is The Iowa GOP Long Game For Our Public Schools?

If Iowa’s public schools are so bad, what is the Republican Trifecta in Des Moines doing to improve them?

If more Iowans knew what Republicans are really up to, they would not agree with their big plans. After Iowa Republicans successfully suppressed enough of the vote to win more than they should have in the mid-terms, they appear to be full steam ahead on a mission to dismantle public education in favor of private schools.

Do Iowans realize what is happening?  No but they soon will.

Crazily, the Republicans justify this hand-out to  parents so their kids can go to private scho0l, by saying it’s because our public schools are failing.  Never mind that they are the ones that have caused said failure. They have been in charge of all three branches of state government and it is their party that has underfunded public schools year after year. 

Now that our public schools are showing the results of Republicans’ intentional lack of support/sabotage, they blame the schools and say they have no choice but to spend taxpayer money sending some of Iowa’s kids to private schools.  Oh and if you’re not persuaded what they’re doing is good for Iowa,  they have a nifty slogan that fits on a bumper sticker: “students not systems” or something along that line.

Here’s the story in the Iowa Capitol Dispatch.

House Republicans form new ‘education reform’ committee

by Robin Opsahl, Iowa Capital Dispatch
November 16, 2022

The Iowa House of Representatives will have a new committee for the upcoming session to take up bills on major changes to the state education system.

House Speaker Pat Grassley speaks to press Feb. 16, 2022 following the passage of the 2022 House tax proposal. (Photo by Katie Akin/Iowa Capital Dispatch)

House Speaker Pat Grassley will chair the new Education Reform Committee for the 2023 session, according to a news release. Rep. Skyler Wheeler, R-Hull, will head the existing Education Committee.

The new five-person committee is meant to take up any legislation which contains “significant reforms to our educational system,” according to the news release. The formation comes after Gov. Kim Reynolds made changes to the state public school system a major part of her reelection campaign platform, advocating for a private school voucher system.

The governor’s proposal to provide 10,000 taxpayer-funded scholarships to private schools failed in the House during this year’s legislative session, with insufficient Republican support. But in the election, Republicans expanded their numbers in the House. In addition, some GOP candidates won in primary races where Reynolds backed challengers over Republican incumbents who opposed the private school scholarship program.

Grassley said in a news release that the new Republican majority will “deliver results” for Iowa.

“We are in a better position than ever to listen to Iowans and deliver on their priorities in this upcoming session,” Grassley said.

Grassley did not specify what proposals the new committee will address. “The House Republican caucus plans to consider a broad set of education reforms this session,” Grassley said in a statement, according to the Cedar Rapids Gazette. “This new committee will allow these important issues to be put in front of the entire caucus for the in-depth discussions they deserve.”

House Democrats, who have been the minority party since 2011, released a statement Wednesday saying Iowans “believe that public money is for public schools.”

“Iowans don’t care if a new committee in the Iowa Legislature is created to consider the Governor’s voucher plan or other bad ideas like jailing teachers and banning books because it’s just all politics,” House Democratic Leader Jennifer Konfrst said in the news release. “House Democrats stand alongside Iowans and will oppose any bill that shifts money from public schools to private schools.”

The 2023 legislative session begins Jan. 9.

Iowa Capital Dispatch is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Iowa Capital Dispatch maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Kathie Obradovich for questions: info@iowacapitaldispatch.com. Follow Iowa Capital Dispatch on Facebook and Twitter.

Our stories may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. We ask that you edit only for style or to shorten, provide proper attribution and link to our web site. Please see our republishing guidelines for use of photos and graphics.
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Update on Iowa CO2 Pipelines

At a public meeting on the 2012 Iowa drought with then Lieutenant Governor Kim Reynolds and Governor Terry Branstad listening to a corn farmer.

While driving to the Democratic office in North Liberty after a shift of door knocking, I passed a seemingly endless line of black tank cars waiting to be loaded with ethanol or corn syrup in Cedar Rapids. That Iowa’s vast agricultural promise, countless thousands of acres of fertile soil, would come to this is saddening and frustrating. As a state we’ve become entrenched with what we know (i.e. corn growing) and don’t want to consider alternatives. Such entrenchment is why Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) is being proposed in Iowa to support the ethanol business.

Art Cullen cut to the chase in a July 15 Storm Lake Times editorial, titled “Pipelines Will Happen,” saying, “The pipelines will get buried. The Iowa rainmakers will get theirs as we pretend that we are addressing the planet being on fire.”

While Cullen may be right, the corn ethanol business and CCS make no sense in 2022.

Johnson County Supervisor Jon Green expressed his skepticism in an email:

My introduction to CCS was in Wyoming with the Two Elk project.

The first thing I learned was this has been tried many, many times, with millions of dollars of public money chasing these technologies. I have yet to learn of a single project that worked at a scale sufficient to make the technology feasible. So I begin from a position of deep mistrust when someone comes along and says they can magically make it work.

But let us set those concerns and experience aside: even if these projects do exactly what they promise, the effects will be small (in terms of carbon reduction, although the tax incentives are staggering) and only provide incentives to continue producing ethanol, a carbon loser.

I realize we can’t just flip a switch and electrify the entire country tomorrow, but every dollar we invest into pipelines is a buck that could’ve been used for solar panels or wind turbines.

Nov. 14, 2022 email from Johnson County Supervisor Jon Green.

When I wrote a series of posts about CCS a year ago, it was a process of personal learning. Since then, it became increasingly clear that the technology doesn’t work well enough to meet its promise, as Green said. It is a big money game in which the rich get richer and the opinions of Iowans may be faithfully recorded on the Iowa Utilities Board website, yet in the end will be ignored without considerably more uproar than we are seeing now.

Des Moines activist Ed Fallon has been following resistance to CO2 pipelines and is more optimistic.

When the first of these pipelines was proposed by Summit, proponents were sure it would be a slam dunk because Iowa corn farmers love ethanol. What Summit underestimated was the depth of resistance among farmers to having their land forcibly taken through eminent domain. In fact, farmers’ opposition has proven so strong it’s quite possible these pipelines will be defeated. That’s especially true if landowners, farmers, and other opponents continue to stand together.

Nov. 13, 2022 email from Ed Fallon.

From my experience with S.A.F.E. (Saving America’s Farmland and Environment) in 2013 I understand how business proposals centered around land use can be defeated. In that campaign MidAmerican Energy proposed to build a nuclear power plant near Wilton on prime farm land. When farmers organized around stopping the plan and formed a coalition, even Republicans like Jeff Kaufmann came on board and the plan was stopped. Fallon’s comments are consistent with my experience in Wilton. The difference is the CO2 pipelines will run for hundreds of miles instead of on a specific, limited parcel.

Use of eminent domain to construct CO2 pipelines is to some extent, an Iowa issue. Sheri Deal-Tyne, who has been researching CCS for the last year explains:

Eminent domain is certainly at the forefront in Iowa and other Midwest states. We in the Midwest are being targeted for these projects because of the relatively “pure” stream of CO2 that comes off of ethanol production. This pure stream means it is cheaper to capture carbon at an ethanol plant than it is at a coal plant. Eminent domain is going to have less meaning in places like Texas and Louisiana.

Nov. 14, 2022 email from Sheri Deal-Tyne.

On Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2022, the Iowa Utilities Board will hold a meeting to discuss federal preemption pertaining to CO2 pipelines. This is an important meeting as Deal-Tyne explains:

The December meeting on preemption is important because currently there are no federal regulations regarding the siting of the pipelines. This is handled at the state level, and varies by state. The Pipeline Safety Act is relatively new, and CO2 pipelines were added as an afterthought. Following the Satartia, Mississippi accident, the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration issued for new rule making around CO2 pipelines, as well as scientific research in to what the safety protocols should be. But at the project level, the companies are claiming that there are regulations and that they are following them. Currently Summit has argued that the IUB does not have authority to consider safety issues because it falls under Federal jurisdiction. (this is where the preemption comes in).

Nov. 14, 2022 email from Sheri Deal-Tyne.

A year after first writing about CCS, the core issue remains: getting to a decarbonized environment means ceasing the production of CO2 and other greenhouse gases. The persistence of desire to perpetuate ethanol production in a decarbonized environment by collecting and burying CO2 would be a possible solution if the technology worked. It doesn’t. It hasn’t yet worked despite millions of dollars spent to make it work. There is no prospect that it will. That’s why I say CCS and corn ethanol make no sense.

Posted in Environment, Farming | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

Ann Selzer: Iowa Red Wave Explained By Huge Drop In Early Voting

Republican vote suppression laws worked in 2022 midterms

Listen to the conversation about the drop in early voting and what Ann Selzer has to say about it if you want your blood to boil even more than it likely already is after Iowa’s red tsunami.  The early voting topic starts at around 13:50 (but the whole program is worth a listen).

Selzer didn’t use the words “vote suppression” but that’s what it is – engineered by the Republican legislature. By shortening the early voting period, reducing satellite locations, making it harder to vote by mail, and many other burdensome rules pushed through the legislature by Republicans, early voting shrunk drastically compared to previous years. It is worth noting that she brought it up herself, pointing out that the panel hadn’t asked her about it but she felt it was very important to point out.

Selzer: “And so when you shrink the proportion of the total electorate, to me that is one of the compelling explanations for why Iowa went so Republican.”

 “We saw a decline in early voting. And I mean enough that I on the second night of looking at our data I said wait a second something may be wrong… we had about half the proportion of people we consider likely voters say that we’ve already voted, that we normally see.”

and this:

“From 2018, well we were showing in our data 15% of the people that we contacted said they had already voted and compared to of course 2020 was huge with early voting it was 43%, so almost three times as much. And before that 26%, 25%, 24% was what we would normally see. And so what happens, the consequence of that is that traditionally democrats bank a whole lot of votes in early voting, that that’s a big push that they have, and roughly that vote is two to one, roughly twice as many people voting for democrats as voting for republicans. And so when you shrink the proportion of the total electorate that is, to me that is one of the compelling explanations for why Iowa went so republican.

Also: There was no youth surge in Iowa.  “”We didn’t see anything in our data that was a strong surge in youth voting.”

Read the full transcript at https://www.iowapbs.org/

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Midterm Election Analysis

One of the better political podcasts out there, IMHO.

“On this episode of The MeidasTouch Podcast, we break down the latest midterm election results. During this episode we also recap the horrible predictions from pollsters, Fox News & Rupert Murdoch turning the page on Donald Trump (at least for now), what we should expect in the upcoming Georgia runoff and much more!”

Remember to subscribe to ALL the Meidas Media Podcasts:
MeidasTouch: https://pod.link/1510240831
Legal AF: https://pod.link/1580828595
The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://pod.link/1595408601
The Influence Continuum: https://pod.link/1603773245
Kremlin File: https://pod.link/1575837599
Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://pod.link/1530639447
The Weekend Show: https://pod.link/1612691018
The Tony Michaels Podcast: https://pod.link/1561049560

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The Wave That Didn’t Happen

…unless you live in Iowa.

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Sunday Funday: Whole Lotta Money Edition

if it was good enough for Teddy, it’s good enough for me!

Holy Smoke, Democracyman! There sure was a lot of money spent this year to buy control of congress! 

Yes there sure was – over $9 billion was spent. Why not just auction those seats off and use the money for something useful like feeding the poor or something? 

Just want to remind you that this is all the fallout from a Supreme Court decision in early 2010 known as Citizens United. That decision was early enough in 2010 that it allowed the money floodgates to open which resulted in an avalanche of state legislatures turning Republican. Since 2010 was a census year, 2011 would be a redistricting year. 

Republicans took full advantage of their state legislative wins to gerrymander the hell out of state and national districts. Since then Republicans have been in the catbird seat.

What a week – what an election.

A) Penthouse to the outhouse –  who did most Republicans blame their losses on Tuesday?

B) The virus that won’t be caught. What variant of covid is now the dominant strain in the US?

C) At the global climate negotiations in Egypt, President Biden pledged that the US would cut its greenhouse gas emissions by what percent by 2030?

D) What fast food company made a horrible mistake in Germany when they sent out a message telling customers to “celebrate Krisattnacht” with them?

E) What one Iowa state wide race was won by a Democrat Tuesday?

F) In Germany the date of November 9th is known for two huge events. One was Kristallnacht in 1938. The other occurred in 1989. What happened in Germany on November 9, 1989?

G) This year November 9th was the date of Russia’s withdrawal from what major city in Ukraine?

H) Stock markets surged last week as reports noted that what appeared to be slowing?

I) Despite having suffered a stroke, who won the open senate seat in Pennsylvania Tuesday?

J) It looks like Elon Musk may tank what multi billion dollar company in record time?

K) Out lesbian women won two governorships Tuesday. Can you name the states that elected them?

L) A noose was found on the construction site of what project Thursday causing a suspension in operations while investigations occurred?

M) In southwest Ohio a man was shot dead by his neighbor last Saturday because the neighbor thought the dead man was what?

N) In another saga of rich men’s toys what crypto exchange is seeking bankruptcy following its collapse last week?

O) Vermont, Montana, California, Kentucky and Michigan all passed ballot measures that in some way protected what rights in these states?

P) A rising segment of homeless Americans is in what age group?

Q) In current use, what is a Mastodon? 

R) The Republican gubernatorial candidate in what state called her state a “banana republic” as counting is slow due to state laws?

S) November 14, 1666 the first experimental blood transfusion took place between two what kind of mammals?

T) November 18, 1883 – schoolteacher Charles Dowd of Connecticut proposed 4 uniform what for the US to solve the vexing problem that caused no one to know what time it was?

I  dare, nay, I double-dare, actually to hell with it, I triple-dog-dare a mainstream newspaper, magazine, or news outlet to do a big feature on asking Republican elites to venture into urban & Rust Belt diners to ask average Americans why they voted Democrat in the 2022 election. – Wajahat Ali tweet

Answers:

A) Donald Trump

B) Omicron BQ.1 and BQ.1.1

C) 50%

D) Kentucky Fried chicken

E) State Auditor Rob Sand won his race

F) The Berlin Wall came down

G) Kherson

H) inflation

I) John Fetterman

J) Twitter

K) Maura Healy in Massachusetts and Tina Kotek in Oregon

L) The Obama Presidential Center worksite

M) a Democrat. Yep he shot his neighbor because he thought the neighbor was a Democrat.

N) FTX

O) Abortion rights

P) over 60 – just think what will happen when Republicans take away Social Security and Medicare

Q) These days Mastodon is emerging as the heir apparent to a failing Twitter

R) Kari Lake in Arizona

S) two dogs

T) 4 uniform time zones

Republicans are out here screaming about raising the voting age to 21 because Gen Z is voting Democratic and “the brain doesn’t develop until age 25” but then they immediately say 18 years old should have free access to AR-15 assault rifles because freedumb.  – Liam Nissan

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