Iowa’s Water Quality: Legislation, Litigation Or Collaboration?

ICYMI – Ted Corrigan, CEO and general manager of Des Moines Water Works, and Larry Weber, professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of Iowa, who leads the Iowa Watershed Approach and is co-founder of the Iowa Flood Center and former director of IIHR. They discuss water quality and water supply issues across the state.

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Dry Spring In Iowa

It is abnormally dry in our part of Iowa. Just as we are needing rain, we are not getting it. A home gardener can irrigate new trees, fruits and vegetables, but the massive scale required to hydrate Iowa’s main commodity crops and livestock is not available. Creating the infrastructure to pump water from ancient aquifers is doable, yet an unsustainable practice. It seems like we are heading into a drought. (The map is from the state climatology website which provides data about precipitation, temperature and other aspects of the climate).

Iowans are familiar with drought. In the 2012 drought corn yield per harvested acre was 123.1 bushels compared to the average of the seven following years at 170.4 bushels. The drought decreased corn yield by 27.8 percent according to USDA numbers.

There is a relatively finite amount of water on Earth which cycles through the atmosphere, on land, and in the oceans. Some of it rests in deep underground aquifers where it has been since prehistoric times. An increasingly warm climate impacts how water cycles, It is getting hotter. “Earth’s global average surface temperature in 2020 tied with 2016 as the warmest year on record,” according to an analysis by NASA. The oceans are getting warmer too.

Rising air and water temperatures and changes in precipitation are intensifying droughts, increasing heavy downpours, reducing snowpack, and causing declines in surface water quality, with varying impacts across regions. Future warming will add to the stress on water supplies and adversely impact the availability of water in parts of the United States.

Fourth National Climate Assessment.

The problem goes beyond Iowa. The Hoover Dam, located on the Colorado River near the Nevada-Arizona border, is suffering the consequences of drought. Lake Mead, the artificial lake created behind the dam, is at a lower water level than was when it was built. The water shortage will impact 25 million people including in the cities of Los Angeles, San Diego, Phoenix, Tucson and Las Vegas.

Farmers are abandoning crops, Nevada is banning the watering of about one-third of the lawn in the Las Vegas area, and the governor of Utah is literally asking people to pray for rain.

Firefighters are facing worsening conditions this summer — after nearly 10,000 fires in California alone during the last wildfire season burned 4.2 million acres (1.7 million hectares), an area nearly as large as Kuwait.

Reuters, June 10, 2021

Water in California’s Lake Oroville will fall so low this summer that its hydroelectric power plant may be forced to shut down for the first time.

We must do something more than pray for rain. It begins with recognition.

The Lakota phrase “Mní wičhóni” (“Water is life”) was the protest anthem from Standing Rock heard around the world, but it also has a spiritual meaning rooted in Indigenous world views. For Native Americans, water does not only sustain life, it is sacred.

Bioneers.org

Action to prevent drought must include acknowledging that climate change is real, something Senators Chuck Grassley and Joni Ernst have both done. The next step is addressing the climate crisis through policy and legislation and that’s been the rub. The climate crisis is more complicated than any single policy or law.

Peter Rolnick of Citizen’s Climate Lobby wrote a guest opinion in the Cedar Rapids Gazette on June 15, 2021. He commended the Iowa senators and Rep. Cindy Axne for supporting the bipartisan Growing Climate Solutions Act. If passed, the law would engage farmers in storing more carbon in our soil instead of emitting it into the air in the form of carbon dioxide or methane. The relationship to drought is clear. A molecule of CO2 or methane sequestered in the ground is one that does not get into the atmosphere and increase warming. Even the American Farm Bureau is in favor of this bill, which on its own raises red flags. One bill is not enough.

We need much more in the way of policy and legislation. The Biden administration’s approach of embedding work on climate change in each of the executive branch departments is important. It is up to each of us to encourage those in government to work toward viable climate solutions. There are personal actions we can take to reduce our carbon footprint, yet the most effective action is in the government arena. If constituents don’t remind members of our governing bodies to act on the climate crisis, they seem likely to forget.

We’ll know it when we hit the drought this year. News media has been forthright in reporting it because so many Iowa livelihoods depend upon the weather. When will we wake up to take action to address what is causing the drought? Not soon enough.

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Juneteenth Is A National Holiday

On Thursday, June 17, 2021, President Joe Biden signed a law which created Juneteenth (June 19) as a federal holiday. Following are the president’s remarks at the signing ceremony.

East Room – 3:51 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, thank you, thank you.

Well, thank you, Madam Vice President.

One hundred and fifty-six years ago — one hundred and fifty-six years — June 19th, 1865 — John, thanks for being here — a major general of the Union Army arrived in Galveston, Texas, to enforce the Emancipation Proclamation and free the last enslaved Americans in Texas from bondage. A day, as you all know — I’m going to repeat some of what was said — that became known as Juneteenth. You all know that. A day that reflects what the Psalm tell us: “Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning.”

Juneteenth marks both the long, hard night of slavery and subjugation, and a promise of a brighter morning to come. This is a day of profound — in my view — profound weight and profound power.

A day in which we remember the moral stain, the terrible toll that slavery took on the country and continues to take — what I’ve long called “America’s original sin.”

At the same time, I also remember the extraordinary capacity to heal, and to hope, and to emerge from the most painful moments and a bitter, bitter version of ourselves, but to make a better version of ourselves.

You know, today, we consecrate Juneteenth for what it ought to be, what it must be: a national holiday. As the Vice President noted, a holiday that will join the others of our national celebrations: our independence, our laborers who built this nation, our servicemen and women who served and died in its defense. And the first new national holiday since the creation of Martin Luther King Holiday nearly four decades ago.

I am grateful to the members of Congress here today — in particular, the Congressional Black Caucus, who did so much to make this day possible.

I’m especially pleased that we showed the nation that we can come together as Democrats and Republicans to commemorate this day with the overwhelming bipartisan support of the Congress. I hope this is the beginning of a change in the way we deal with one another.

And we’re blessed — we’re blessed to mark the day in the presence of Ms. Opal Lee. As my mother would say, “God love her.” (Applause.)

I had the honor of meeting her in Nevada more than a year ago. She told me she loved me, and I believed it. (Laughter.) I wanted to believe it. (Laughs.) Ms. Opal, you’re incredible. A daughter of Texas. Grandmother of the movement to make Juneteenth a federal holiday.

And Ms. Opal is — you won’t believe it — she’s 49 years old. (Laughter.) Or 94 years old, but I — (laughter). You are an incredible woman, Ms. Opal. You really are.

As a child growing up in Texas, she and her family would celebrate Juneteenth. On Juneteenth, 1939, when she was 12 years old, the white — a white mob torched her family home. But such hate never stopped her any more than it stopped the vast majority of you I’m looking at from this podium.

Over the course of decades, she’s made it her mission to see that this day came. It was almost a singular mission. She’s walked for miles and miles, literally and figuratively, to bring attention to Juneteenth, to make this day possible.

I ask, once again, we all stand and give her a warm welcome to the White House. (Applause.)

As they still say in the Senate and I said for 36 years, “if you excuse me there for a point of personal privilege,” as I was walking down, I regret that my grandchildren aren’t here because this is a really, really, really important moment in our history.

By making Juneteenth a federal holiday, all Americans can feel the power of this day, and learn from our history, and celebrate progress, and grapple with the distance we’ve come but the distance we have to travel, Jim.

You know, I said a few weeks ago, marking the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre, great nations don’t ignore their most painful moments. Great nations don’t ignore their most painful moments. They don’t ignore those moments of the past. They embrace them. Great nations don’t walk away. We come to terms with the mistakes we made. And in remembering those moments, we begin to heal and grow stronger.

The truth is, it’s not — simply not enough just to commemorate Juneteenth. After all, the emancipation of enslaved Black Americans didn’t mark the end of America’s work to deliver on the promise of equality; it only marked the beginning.

To honor the true meaning of Juneteenth, we have to continue toward that promise because we’ve not gotten there yet. The Vice President and I and our entire administration and all of you in this room are committed to doing just that.

That’s why we’ve launched an aggressive effort to combat racial discrimination in housing — finally address the cruel fact that a home owned, to this day, by a Black American family is usually appraised at a lower rate for a similar home owned by a white family in a similar area.

That’s why we committed to increasing Black homeownership, one of the biggest drivers of generational wealth.

That’s why we’re making it possible for more Black entrepreneurs to access — to access capital, because their ideas are as good; they lack the capital to get their fair — and get their fair share of federal contracts so they can begin to build wealth.

That’s why we’re working to give each and every child, three and four years of age, not daycare, but school — in a school. (Applause.)

That’s why — that’s why we’re unlocking the incredibly creative and innovation — innovation of the history — of our Historical Black Colleges and Universities, providing them with the resources to invest in research centers and laboratories to help HBCU graduates prepare and compete for good-paying jobs in the industries of the future.

Folks, the promise of equality is not going to be fulfilled until we become real — it becomes real in our schools and on our Main Streets and in our neighborhoods — our healthcare system and ensuring that equity is at the heart of our fight against the pandemic; in the water that comes out of our faucets and the air that we breathe in our communities; in our justice system — so that we can fulfill the promise of America for all people. All of our people.

And it’s not going to be fulfilled so long as the sacred right to vote remains under attack. (Applause.)

We see this assault from restrictive laws, threats of intimidation, voter purges, and more — an assault that offends the very democracy — our very democracy.

We can’t rest until the promise of equality is fulfilled for every one of us in every corner of this nation. That, to me, is the meaning of Juneteenth. That’s what it’s about.

So let’s make this June- — this very Juneteenth, tomorrow — the first that our nation will celebrate all together, as one nation — a Juneteenth of action on many fronts. 

One of those is vaccinations. Tomorrow, the Vice President will be in Atlanta on a bus tour, helping to spread the word, like all of you have been doing, on lifesaving vaccines.

And across the country this weekend, including here in Washington, people will be canvassing and hosting events in their communities, going door-to-door, encouraging vaccinations.

We’ve built equity into the heart of the vaccination program from day one, but we still have more work to do to close the racial gap in vaccination rates. The more we can do that, the more we can save lives.

Today also marks the sixth anniversary of the tragic deaths of — at Mother Emanuel Church in Charleston, South Carolina. A killer motivated by hate, intending to start a race war in South Carolina. He joined his victims in a Bible study class, then he took their lives in the house of worship.

It’s a reminder that our work to root out hate never ends — because hate only hides, it never fully goes away. It hides. And when you breathe oxygen under that rock, it comes out.

And that’s why we must understand that Juneteenth represents not only the commemoration of the end of slavery in America more than 150 years ago, but the ongoing work to have to bring true equity and racial justice into American society, which we can do.

In short, this day doesn’t just celebrate the past; it calls for action today.

I wish all Americans a happy Juneteenth. I am shortly going to — in a moment, going to sign into law, making it a federal holiday.

And I have to say to you, I’ve only been President for several months, but I think this will go down, for me, as one of the greatest honors I will have had as President, not because I did it; you did it — Democrats and Republicans. But it’s an enormous, enormous honor.

Thank you for what you’ve done. And, by the way, typical of most of us in Congress and the Senate, I went down to the other end of the hall first and thanked your staffs because I know who does the hard work. (Laughter and applause.) They’re down there. They’re at the other end, but I thanked them as well.

May God bless you all. And may God protect our troops. Thank you. (Applause.)

Now, I’d like to invite up, while I sign, Senator Tina Smith, Senator Ed Markey, Senator Raphael Warnock, Senator John Cornyn, Whip Jim Clyburn, Representative Barbara Lee, Representative Danny Davis, Chair Joyce Beatty, and Sheila Jackson Lee, and Ms. Opal.

(The act is signed.) (Applause.)

4:06 P.M. EDT

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Celebrate Pride Month At These Iowa Events

June is pride month!  Here is a list of events around Iowa

June 24
PARTY IN THE PARK Iowa City IA
Thu, 6:30 – 8:00 PM
Frauenholtz-Miller Park, 4329 St Patricks Dr
Iowa City

June 21
Pride Week 2021
Mon, Jun 21 – Sun, Jun 27
Dubuque

June 18
Studio Summer Pride Week
Wed, Jun 16 – Sun, Jun 20
13 S Linn St
Iowa City

June 26
TPI Pride Month Color Run
Sat, 8 AM
Maytag Park, 301 South 11th Ave W
Newton

June 21
Pride 2021 LGBTQ Community Forum
Mon, 6 – 8 PM
Dubuque Museum of Art, 701 Locust St
Dubuque

June 26
Pride with Found
Sat, 3 – 11 PM
6022 Maple St
Omaha

June 27
PRIDE QUEEN’S BALL Burlington IA
Sun, 2 – 7 AM
852 Washington St
Burlington

June 30
Drag King DSM Show
Wed, 9:00 – 11:30 PM
Wooly’s, 504 E Locust St
Des Moines

June 26
HUMBOLDT D & I PRIDE CELEBRATION
Sat, 12 – 2 AM
Bicknell Park
Humboldt

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Republicans Are Why Iowa Can’t Have Nice Things

Does no one else find it strange, mind-boggling and infuriating that our governor REFUSED FEDERAL MONEY that is supposed to be helping Iowans?  Kim Reynolds said no thanks, we’re all fine,  especially those of us who live in the governor’s mansion and make regular appearances on Fox News.  Democratic candidates for office, please, please hammer this in your campaigns as an example of how one party rule is ruining our state.  Our Republican governor gave back money that belonged to Iowans. Money from the federal government that was intended for people.  How pathetically bad is that.  And from the Iowa press?  Crickets…

https://www.facebook.com/IowaSenateDemocrats

In May, Gov Reynolds promised Fox News she would reject $33 million a week in federal help for unemployed Iowa families. Now it’s happening.

But even then, Governor Reynolds admitted that Iowa has “more jobs available than we have people on unemployment.” BINGO! Iowa’s worker shortage is a chronic problem, not caused by pandemic relief.

Americans have choices…and Governor Reynolds keeps pointing out that Iowa is increasingly not a choice they like.

Young people especially simply don’t want to stay in, or move to, a state like what Iowa’s become, a state where the rights and wages of workers are constantly under attack.

Going on Fox News to reject help for working families may raise Gov Kim Reynolds’ profile with Republican donors, but she’s also making it harder to grow Iowa’s economy.

 

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99 Counties For Climate Action

Rob Hogg

From our inbox: A note from Senator Rob Hogg –

Climate change virtual statewide program
Thursday, July 8, 7:00 to 8:30 pm
Plus other news (my announcement I am not
running for re-election to state senate in 2022)

Dear Friends:

Let me begin with the other news first. Yesterday, I announced I would not be running for re-election to my state senate seat in 2022.

As I said in my statement (see below), I am announcing now because I know I won’t be running for re-election and I believe it is important to allow new candidates to get started on their campaigns. Thanks to everyone who has shared kind thoughts and support. Here is the complete statement I issued:

“Today, I am announcing I will not be seeking re-election in 2022. It has been an honor to represent the people of Senate District 33 in the Iowa Senate.

“I am proud of my accomplishments in the Iowa Legislature, including flood recovery, flood mitigation, the Iowa Flood Center, watershed management authorities, expansion of solar power and other renewable energy, Iowa’s preschool program, Iowa’s STEM education initiative, expanded job training programs through our community colleges, raising the minimum wage, prohibiting discrimination against LGBTQ Iowans, strengthening Iowa’s child safety seat law, and passing Iowa’s smoke-free law.

“I have not finalized my plans for the future. This has certainly been a time for reflection about what’s important in life. But I do know I will not be running for re-election in my current senate district so I am making this announcement today. I also know there are other highly qualified people who are interested in running, and I believe it is important to allow candidates to get started. I look forward to seeing what new Democratic candidates can do to compete and win across Iowa.”

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I do have another year-and-a-half as a state senator and, beyond that, I hope to stay involved in public policy. I strongly support our leaders, Senator Zach Wahls and Representative Jennifer Konfrst, and the work of legislative Democrats to pick up seats and take back the majority in both chambers.

We had a great event with Senator Wahls last night at Overlook Pavilion in Ellis Park in Cedar Rapids. I hope you can support the Iowa Senate Democrats’ Majority Fund. You can contribute online at this link:
https://secure.actblue.com/donate/iowa-senate-majority-fund-1

You can also mail a check made payable to the “Senate Majority Fund” care of Senator Rob Hogg, P.O. Box 1361, Cedar Rapids, IA 52406, and I will be sure to get it to Senator Wahls and the Iowa Senate Democratic campaign team. Thanks to all who have already contributed. Democrats need your financial help to compete and win across the state in 2022, especially as we are waiting for the new district maps.

+++++

State Rep. Ras Smith announced he is a candidate for Governor today. Here is a link to a one-minute, 47- second video to introduce his candidacy:

State Rep. Ras Smith is a husband, father, veteran state lawmaker from Waterloo, with a family farm in Grundy County. We don’t know who else will run, but I hope you will watch his video and follow his campaign.

+++++

With the drought deepening and spreading across Iowa, and other parts of the United States, the fight against climate change and for a sustainable future is as urgent as ever.

Please take action to conserve and sustain our natural resources. And please speak up with our national Congressional delegation – both Republicans (Ernst, Grassley, Feenstra, Hinson, and Miller-Meeks) and Democrat (Axne) – to urge them to actually pass climate legislation this summer.

If you would like to get more involved and more informed, please join me on Thursday, July 8, from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m., for a statewide virtual event called “99 Counties for Climate Action.”

Speakers include Phil Engen, a volunteer with Citizens Climate Lobby; Brian Campbell, the new director of the Iowa Environmental Council; Genie Maybanks, the new director of the Iowa Solar Energy Trade Association; and Dianne Dillon-Ridgley, Iowa resident and long-time board member of the National Wildlife Federation.

You can learn more about this event at this Facebook event page:
https://www.facebook.com/events/2927530794172841

Here is an Eventbrite link where you can register and get the Zoom link:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/99-counties-for-climate-action-tickets-158619508219

I hope you will join me for this event, and please speak up for the climate action we so urgently need.

Rob

Senator Rob Hogg
Cedar Rapids
Telephone: (319) 247-0223
Email: SenatorRobHogg@gmail.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HoggForSenate
Twitter: @SenatorRobHogg

Rob Hogg is a State Senator from Cedar Rapids. Contact Rob at SenatorRobHogg@gmail.com.
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Deadline For Democracy: Massive Public Pressure Needed Now


Action alert from Indivisible:

This week, we’re taking over our usual newsletter’s slot with a big update: Today, we’re launching Deadline for Democracy, a movement-wide, all-hands-on-deck campaign to get the For the People Act passed in July.

The next six weeks will make or break the For the People Act. Our allies in the Senate are directly asking for a massive show of grassroots force. So here’s what we’re planning — a nationwide campaign called Deadline for Democracy during the July 4th Recess, which starts on June 28th, two weeks from today.

This outlines our very best assessment of where we stand on getting the For the People Act through the Senate, why we think that June and July are absolutely crucial, and what you can do about it. But as you’ve probably noticed, things are moving fast. So keep an eye out for more updates via Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram or text INDIVISIBLE to 97779 to be added to our rapid response text message list.

It’s time to dig deep and plan events that will attract the attention of activists, local media, and of course, your senators. This is a great opportunity to try something new and go as big and as bold as possible. We’re always blown away by Indivisibles; creativity, from cakes and chickens at town halls, coffins for democracy, to votercades and light brigades — it’s why we started Indivisible in the first place, and why we continue! Together, we were made for this moment.

With that, here are your weekly to-dos:

  1. Check out the Deadline for Democracy website, with resources and materials to help you get up to speed. That’s where you can find and register events, see the full partner list, and more.
  2. Find an event near you and sign up to attend, then be sure to write it on your calendar (in ink!). No event nearby? Register to host one yourself. If you’re one of the thousands of people in all 50 states who pledged this month to take action during recess, this is the action for you!
  3. Read Ezra’s Medium Post about Joe Manchin. We know lots of folks are worried about Manchin, and we don’t blame you! Check out what Ezra had to say last week and let us know what you think.
  4. Sign up for Indivisible Texts: We send out breaking news and action alerts to our text message rapid response team. Text INDIVISIBLE to 97779 to join.
  5. Donate to Indivisible. Running digital ads, providing event merch, updating policy explainers, hosting maps and websites, and sending recruitment texts all cost money — plus all our ongoing expenses. We’re spending $505,154 to make Deadline for Democracy happen, so if you can, please chip in to make it and all our work possible.
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Can Iowa’s Altered Landscape Ever Be Restored?

Follow this blog greatplainsaction.org

“We are a collective of Indigenous organizers of the Great Plains working to resist and Indigenize colonial institutions, ideologies, and behaviors. Our homelands are located in the vast grassland of Turtle Island, situated between the Rocky Mountains and the Mississippi River and stretching from the Northern Tundra to the Gulf of Mexico. ”

Iowa – Big-Agriculture’s Sacrifice Zone

No other landscape in the country has been biologically altered to the extent that Iowa has. Iowa is Big-Ag’s sacrifice zone.

Big-Ag, also known as Agribusiness, is the business of agriculture, which comodifies food systems for ultimate profit and product efficiency that satisfy the colonial-capitalist model. The Pesticide Action Network states that “industrial agriculture treats the farm as a factory, with ‘inputs’ (pesticides, fertilizers) and ‘outputs’ (crops). The end-objective is to increase yields while controlling costs — usually by exploiting economies of scale (i.e. ‘mono-cropping’), and by replacing solar energy and manual labor with machines and petrochemical inputs.” (1)

According to the Iowa Prairie Network, Iowa used to be as biologically diverse as many rain forests in South America but now its diversity is comparable to that of a desert. It is almost an artificial environment where food is grown in soil that needs constant application of fertilizers and other nutrients due to mono-cropping and heavy crop rotation schedules. These colonial-capitalist farming practices are not just affecting Iowa, but land all the way to the Gulf of Mexico and contributing greatly to the climate crisis”

read more

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Random Thoughts On A Hot Summer’s Day

Let’s start out with a couple of positive thoughts:

First – Joe Biden is doing a hell of a job. He has been a progressive’s dream so far as president, he has aggressively led the country’s response to the corona virus very successfully and he is now representing the US at the highest level in his trip to Europe and the G7 and he is about to go face-to-face with Putin. You can bet he won’t kiss Putin’s ass like Trump did.

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VP Kamala Harris has also been superior in her work on immigration. She also has voting rights on her portfolio. Between the two she and Biden are hitting all the most important issues hard. Nice to see a working president again, ain’t it?

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What can you say about Louie Gohmert? His question to Jennifer Eberlien, associate deputy chief of the National Forest Service, is in the running for the dumbest thing ever said by a politician ever. How Ms. Eberline did not break into hysterics is beyond me. You watch and try to keep from laughing. (1 minute)

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Jeff Bezos’ Washington Post did some very fine reporting on the huge amount of injuries at Jeff Bezos’ Amazon. Also reported last week that Jeff Bezos pays little taxes despite being the richest man ever, EVER! Plus in recent years he has even gotten tax credits for his kids. I am think he is a walking billboard for a wealth tax. Oh and he will soon be riding a Jeff Bezos rocket into outer space……..

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The Women’s college World Series this week was one of the most fun and exciting sporting events I have seen in a long while. I was once a huge sports fan, but became very jaded by multi-millionaires putting in half-assed performances for multi-billionaire owners whose main objective seems to be to bilk the citizens for every nickel they can squeeze out of the taxpayer.

The young women who played in the tourney games gave it their all. The series included David and Goliath stories and several instances of teams coming back from the brink to win. Oh, yeah, they also featured TEAMS not a bunch of individuals. So refreshing to see sports in that light once again.

Congratulations to the Oklahoma Sooners on their victory. They came back after losing the first game in a double elimination format.

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At the risk of jinxing the YouTube gods I will attempt to add the story of the whackos who believe that the Covid-19 vaccinations make a person magnetic. It is hard to decide whether these women or Louie Gohmert win the Dodo of the week award: (3 minutes)

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Once again Chuck Grassley let workers know how little he cares about them. In denouncing a decision that will slow line speeds at pork processing plants back to 1,106 animals per hour. That is over 18 per minute. one every 3.3 seconds. And that is considered too slow.

Injuries are rampant in the meat packing industry and the faster the lines go, the higher and worse the injuries. Grassley cares not one bit about that. No calculations by the senator on the cost to workers. Just in case you didn’t know where workers stood in the Grassley hierarchy.

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Sunday Funday: Going Full Dictator Edition

While it came as yet another shocking revelation that the previous administration was using their Justice Department to spy on American citizens they considered to be enemies to the President, I doubt few were really surprised. Considering all the other corruption inside the Trump Administration, this would fit right in line.

A thorough investigation must be held. Initial reports indicate that the Admin spied on Democrats especially Adam Schiff and Eric Swalwell. However, most of us have been fairly certain that the way Republican lesser lights such as Lyndsey Gram, Marco Rubio, Susan Collins and many more have pledged fealty to the wannabe Dictator Trump that some real dirt use have been gathered on these pathetic politicians. 

What better tool to use than the FBI to make the rebellious troops settle down? 

Since I will be away next week, we will include some Father’s Day questions and some Flag Day questions for tomorrow.

A) President Biden is on the first foreign trip of his presidency. What major meeting did he attend Thursday in Cornwall, England?

B) A declaration by what US Senator last week that he would not vote to kill the filibuster has thrown Democratic plans up in the air?

C) In Iowa, what state leader loudly decried a judge’s decision that pork processing line speeds must slow for safety purposes?

D) A charter plane carrying White House reporters was delayed in Washington DC due to what freak situation?

E) The former president gave a speech in North Carolina last weekend. What brought the most commentary was not what he said, but what instead?

F) While Father’s Day has been around in the US since 1910, when was the third Sunday in June officially made the permanent observance of Father’s Day?

G) Non-scientist US Representative Louie Gohmert astounded a bureaucrat when he asked if what could be done to counteract climate change?

H) Tomorrow is Flag Day. The number 13 is prominent in the original flag. Why?

I) Two strange rumors concerning the corona virus vaccinations are making the rounds right now. One is that it turns your skin color. The other says your body becomes what?

J) During his trip to Europe, President Biden promised how many vaccines to poor countries?

K) What nationally recognized Florida Democratic Representative announced her candidacy to oppose Marco Rubio for senator?

L) President Biden surprised graduates of what Florida high school which suffered a mass shooting a few years back, with a video address Tuesday?

M) June 17, 1972. Five men were arrested for a burglary of the National Democratic Headquarters in what building complex in Washington, DC? 

N) Three FDA advisors resigned Thursday following the FDA’s approval of a drug for what disease?

O) George Washington, Father of our country, was the father of how many children?

P) What happened to infrastructure negotiations between President Biden and Republican Senator Shelly Moore Capito of West Virginia?

Q) “Little Sister” is a small replication of what statue to be donated by France to the United States over the July 4th weekend?

R) VP Kamala Harris visited what countries last week?

S) A long siege of protests, legal wrangling and presidential declarations came to an end Wednesday  when TC Energy announced the end of attempting to build what pipeline?

T) What state was the 50th star on the US flag?

The Koch brothers still own a lot of real estate, but their best investment may be the Manchin they bought in West Virginia. – Noel Casler

Answers:

A) The G7 conference

B) Joe Manchin of West Virginia

C) Chuck Grassley. Never said a word about worker injuries

D) Cicadas that got into the planes wiring

E) After the speech, it appeared he had wet his pants during the speech

F) 1972

G) could we change the orbit of the moon around the earth?

H) The original US had 13 states

I) Magnetic. Metal objects will stick to your skin.

J) 500,000,000

K) Val Demmings

L) Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High in Parkland, Florida

M) Watergate

N) Alzheimer’s

O) 0

P) They ended because Republicans basically refused to move

Q) The Statue of Liberty

R) Mexico and Guatamala

S) The Keystone Pipeline

T) Hawaii

“Welcome to Revisionist Southern History. In this class, we’ll be learning that the Civil War began when the North seceded from the Confederacy, the Union Army consisted entirely of homosexual vampires, and slaves were so happy, they invented smiling.” – Middle Age Riot

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