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Not sure those whom I know in the USDOT disagree. Who disagrees and why would they think that? Honest question.The USDOT rank-and-file generally disagree with you on this point.
Not sure those whom I know in the USDOT disagree. Who disagrees and why would they think that? Honest question.The USDOT rank-and-file generally disagree with you on this point.
I do wonder when the American people will have enough of these two parties and make a decision to go in a different direction
I spent about a year as an embedded FTE within a USDOT component agency under the Biden administration; based on that (and subsequent interactions with USDOT feds within the various component agencies), I'd say that the majority of the rank-and-file are neutral to negative on the good Mayor. Admittedly, that is heavily anecdotal and just a small sample size considering the overall number of USDOT employees, so take it FWIW.Not sure those whom I know in the USDOT disagree. Who disagrees and why would they think that? Honest question.
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I thought that's what happened in November 2016 when Trump was elected. So, what happened? Was his "different direction" not different enough?
Understood. I have worked with, and have some friends who work within the USDOT organization, that have been generally pretty happy with how he has managed the people in the organization. With 50,000 employees or more, I would imagine that many people have many different opinions though.I spent about a year as an embedded FTE within a USDOT component agency under the Biden administration; based on that (and subsequent interactions with USDOT feds within the various component agencies), I'd say that the majority of the rank-and-file are neutral to negative on the good Mayor. Admittedly, that is heavily anecdotal and just a small sample size considering the overall number of USDOT employees, so take it FWIW.
This was such a great show.I think each of the benchmarks of a stable society continue to crumble before our eyes. I am not saying that we will have a full on collapse, but I do wonder when the American people will have enough of these two parties and make a decision to go in a different direction. I have no idea if that will come in the form of vote or force, and I pray that it is vote, I do see more and more people expressing their thoughts on everything from infrastructure, to foreign policy, to economy, to health care, and everything in between.
As I have posted previously, the genius of this clip is so many of us can relate to what is is saying, even if it was just a TV show. When this was created over a decade it was a thought, but now we can actually feel what he is saying:
But regardless of what happens in DC, we have a duty to change this country starting with were we live and work. Our homes and our communities are the places that we have the greatest level of influence and our neighbors can see the greatest change. I think as planners, we have even a greater capability to make real change a reality. It does not matter if we vote R or D, but I think we know what needs to happen to improve the quality of lives of the people who live in our communities and we strive to do that every day. If things do go bad and it results in significant restructuring, there will be winners and losers. There always is. But if our communities and households have strong foundations, we will be just fine, if not better than before.
The 118th Congress has few laws to show for its first year
Now I don't want Trump in office either, but they are citing his involvement with the Insurgency Riots as the reason why. My concern is he hasn't been convicted of anything yet. If he had had been convicted, then there is no issue.![]()
Colorado supreme court disqualifies Trump from state’s 2024 ballot
State’s highest court declares former president ineligible for White House under the US constitution’s insurrection clausewww.theguardian.com
The start of a cascade we hope.
Impeachment is not criminal but political. He faces criminal charges.Now I don't want Trump in office either, but they are citing his involvement with the Insurgency Riots as the reason why. My concern is he hasn't been convicted of anything yet. If he had had been convicted, then there is no issue.
I have fears that if he gets into office, he will never leave and then we will be up a creek. Something like this only fuels the outrage of his supporters.
I can see that thought process, but a court found that he incited insurrection. Most confederate soldiers up to Jefferson Davis were never convicted of treason, insurrection or other crimes.Now I don't want Trump in office either, but they are citing his involvement with the Insurgency Riots as the reason why. My concern is he hasn't been convicted of anything yet. If he had had been convicted, then there is no issue.
I have fears that if he gets into office, he will never leave and then we will be up a creek. Something like this only fuels the outrage of his supporters.
I am not arguing and I 100% agree. But for his voters, unless he is convicted, they don't care. And even then for some of them it won't be enough.I can see that thought process, but a court found that he incited insurrection. Most confederate soldiers up to Jefferson Davis were never convicted of treason, insurrection or other crimes.
Don't you talk about my great great great grandaddy that way.. BTW I am not a follower of "genealogy" and am not an ancestor worshipper.Taking up arms against the rightful government is most definitely a crime in this country. Every single Confederate was treasonous. End of story.
He could go up to almost every one of his voters and say I committed a crime, show a video of him doing it, and then say he would do it again. Most of his voters would say he only did it to protect America, the video is a deep fake, and they love him because he's going to keep "fighting for them." At this point most of his supporters are going to follow him anywhere. There are still a lot of people who don't like him, but somehow think he's better than a democrat and will vote for him when the time comes. Those people will say the court overstepped its bounds, but hope and pray in private that he gets disqualified.I am not arguing and I 100% agree. But for his voters, unless he is convicted, they don't care. And even then for some of them it won't be enough.
For context see Joseph Conrad's "Lord Jim".He could go up to almost every one of his voters and say I committed a crime, show a video of him doing it, and then say he would do it again. Most of his voters would say he only did it to protect America, the video is a deep fake, and they love him because he's going to keep "fighting for them." At this point most of his supporters are going to follow him anywhere. There are still a lot of people who don't like him, but somehow think he's better than a democrat and will vote for him when the time comes. Those people will say the court overstepped its bounds, but hope and pray in private that he gets disqualified.
he hasn't been convicted of anything yet
You are way too modest.Generally, in terms of the Supreme Court cases I have read about in my short life, the ability of the courts to address issues related to the Constitution, do not necessarily, I think, have to involve a conviction. Yes, rigorous and thorough fact finding would need to be a thing. But it seems to me, as a lay observer with constrained and limited mental capacity and not very well educated at all, there must have been enough publicly available information about the happenings surrounding the J6 event, that the CO Supreme Court probably had to able make a determination on the ripeness of the 14A case that was brought before them. One can be incensed and outraged about the "raw deal" that Trump is getting in CO right now, but at the end of the day, the nature of what has gone before that particular court, does seem ripe.
You are way too modest.
It's not his voters that I'm concerned about. Most of them see him as some kind of messiah. It's the other Rs that just dismiss the crimes, the hate speech, and whatever else because it would get them primaried or they would lose some votes. It's come down to gotta hate on Dems over having any kind of moral grounds. Those are the people I want voted out. Vote out the support and tRump goes away.I am not arguing and I 100% agree. But for his voters, unless he is convicted, they don't care. And even then for some of them it won't be enough.
Very valid. The Republican Party at this point does not actually have a platform, and doesn't stand for anything. Well, maybe fascism.It's not his voters that I'm concerned about. Most of them see him as some kind of messiah. It's the other Rs that just dismiss the crimes, the hate speech, and whatever else because it would get them primaried or they would lose some votes. It's come down to gotta hate on Dems over having any kind of moral grounds. Those are the people I want voted out. Vote out the support and tRump goes away.
I voted for Nader in Y2K, for Bernie in '12, for Howard Dean, heck, for Gene McCarthy in '72. I agree we should have more choices.Very valid. The Republican Party at this point does not actually have a platform, and doesn't stand for anything. Well, maybe fascism.
It is really unfortunate, because the U.S. needs multiple healthy political parties from multiple perspectives. At this point, I'd settle for two.
None of the folks exempted from office due to the 14th Amendment have been tried since it was enacted as part of Reconstruction. Whether he is convicted of any crime is irrelevant, as the Amendment is an additional eligibility requirement for holding high public office. Like you have to be at least 35 years old, born in the US, and not given aid and comfort to groups trying to overthrow the Constitution.Now I don't want Trump in office either, but they are citing his involvement with the Insurgency Riots as the reason why. My concern is he hasn't been convicted of anything yet. If he had had been convicted, then there is no issue.
I have fears that if he gets into office, he will never leave and then we will be up a creek. Something like this only fuels the outrage of his supporters.
It's not his voters that I'm concerned about. Most of them see him as some kind of messiah. It's the other Rs that just dismiss the crimes, the hate speech, and whatever else because it would get them primaried or they would lose some votes. It's come down to gotta hate on Dems over having any kind of moral grounds. Those are the people I want voted out. Vote out the support and tRump goes away.
STFU, Donny.Well I guess we're past 'Thoughts & Prayers' now.
It's now time to say 'Get Over It' after a mass shooting.
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Trump Tells Iowa To "Get Over It" After Last Week's School Shooting
The shooting at a small-town Iowa high school left one dead and five others injured.www.huffpost.com
Here's a headline that says it all:STFU, Donny.
But there are so many WORDS. Can you just sign an emoji for me?Apparently MTG had a book signing over the weekend and very, very few people showed up. I'm thinking maybe she lost her supporters at "book".
Does Iowa matter anymore?
Does Iowa matter anymore?
Please I hope not.Does Iowa matter anymore?
Just remember that it is "way out there".Does Iowa matter anymore?
Does Iowa matter anymore?
Can I be a MAGA, even though I'm a Democrat?^^^tRump keeps saying who's a MAGA, not who's a Republican.