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Post by onelasttime on Jul 19, 2022 21:30:49 GMT
Man baby? Boy he’s not going to like that.
“GOP lawmaker says Trump 'lost his mind' as Joe Rogan calls him a 'man baby'”
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Post by onelasttime on Jul 19, 2022 21:36:04 GMT
I’m pretty sure if the Republicans thought they could get away with this it would “sign us up!”.
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Post by cindosha on Jul 19, 2022 21:37:36 GMT
Man baby? Boy he’s not going to like that. “GOP lawmaker says Trump 'lost his mind' as Joe Rogan calls him a 'man baby'” 🤣🤣🤣🤣. God this is pathetic. Is this really all you have? All the bullshit going on in this country this is what you have? my God. 🙄🙄🙄🙄
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Deleted
Posts: 0
Nov 22, 2024 20:36:15 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Jul 19, 2022 21:51:21 GMT
You are absolutely wrong. I paid .95 cents a gallon one time at Costco in 2018. Granted it was only once but I paid under $1.50 per gallon for most of 2018-2019. I paid under $2.00 a gallon during most of 2020. Maybe you live in NYC or Cali where everything is double or triple of anything and everything and that’s what you paid. I know what I paid. You are absolutely lying. No you fucking idiot. Did you even look at that site? Average price. AVERAGE. Do you know what average means? And I live in the same state as you. The only liar here is you. And pixie
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Post by pixiechick on Jul 19, 2022 21:53:52 GMT
You are absolutely wrong. I paid .95 cents a gallon one time at Costco in 2018. Granted it was only once but I paid under $1.50 per gallon for most of 2018-2019. I paid under $2.00 a gallon during most of 2020. Maybe you live in NYC or Cali where everything is double or triple of anything and everything and that’s what you paid. I know what I paid. You are absolutely lying. No you fucking idiot. Did you even look at that site? Average price. AVERAGE. Do you know what average means? And I live in the same state as you. The only liar here is you. And pixie WTH did I lie about?
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Post by onelasttime on Jul 19, 2022 22:49:41 GMT
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Post by cindosha on Jul 19, 2022 23:10:32 GMT
You are absolutely wrong. I paid .95 cents a gallon one time at Costco in 2018. Granted it was only once but I paid under $1.50 per gallon for most of 2018-2019. I paid under $2.00 a gallon during most of 2020. Maybe you live in NYC or Cali where everything is double or triple of anything and everything and that’s what you paid. I know what I paid. You are absolutely lying. No you fucking idiot. Did you even look at that site? Average price. AVERAGE. Do you know what average means? And I live in the same state as you. The only liar here is you. And pixie I don’t care what the average price was I’m telling you what I paid during that time. Nice language. I must’ve really pissed you off huh?
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Post by cindosha on Jul 19, 2022 23:22:09 GMT
The thing that makes me mad about the whole gas price thing is this. The right was so ready to blame Biden when gas prices went up. But of course now that they are coming down, it will be for many other reasons and have nothing to do with the president. You consider 30 cents a gallon the prices going down? The high gas prices are absolutely biden’s fault as well as inflation and all the other problems in this country right now because of this ridiculous idiotic administration. If we ever get back down under $3 a gallon we can talk about gas prices going down. But I’m not holding my breath. 🙄🙄
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Post by onelasttime on Jul 19, 2022 23:23:34 GMT
Man baby? Boy he’s not going to like that. “GOP lawmaker says Trump 'lost his mind' as Joe Rogan calls him a 'man baby'” 🤣🤣🤣🤣. God this is pathetic. Is this really all you have? All the bullshit going on in this country this is what you have? my God. 🙄🙄🙄🙄 You do understand this makes you look kind of silly don’t you? Ponder it for a bit any maybe the 💡 might come on.
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lindas
Pearl Clutcher
Posts: 4,305
Jun 26, 2014 5:46:37 GMT
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Post by lindas on Jul 19, 2022 23:40:55 GMT
The Chevy Volt was discontinued in 2019. The price he’s stating is for a used 2017/2019 (depending on model) one. The replacement vehicle is the Chevy Bolt with a starting price of $34,500. So let’s buy Pete’s used Volt for $26000. Put $5000 down, finance $21000 for 60 months at the current average used car rate of 4% and you’re looking at a payment of $387 a month. According to Biden buying an electric car will save you about $80 a month on gas but you have the increase in your electric bill and they cost more to insure. Great if you can afford it, not so great if you’re struggling to make ends meet now with inflation rate at 9%.
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Post by onelasttime on Jul 20, 2022 0:15:07 GMT
The Chevy Volt was discontinued in 2019. The price he’s stating is for a used 2017/2019 (depending on model) one. The replacement vehicle is the Chevy Bolt with a starting price of $34,500. So let’s buy Pete’s used Volt for $26000. Put $5000 down, finance $21000 for 60 months at the current average used car rate of 4% and you’re looking at a payment of $387 a month. According to Biden buying an electric car will save you about $80 a month on gas but you have the increase in your electric bill and they cost more to insure. Great if you can afford it, not so great if you’re struggling to make ends meet now with inflation rate at 9%. What this Congressman was trying to do is make people believe the cost of a used EV was $55,000. He was deliberately spreading misinformation. What Secretary Pete pointed out that just like there are different price ranges for gas powered used cars so are there for used EVs. And right now, all cars, new & used, gas powered or battery powered are expensive. As far as President Biden claiming EV’s save $80 on gas, he may be a little low on his estimate of savings. Also as there are more EVs out there the cost of insurance should come down. From Kelly Blue Book… link
Keep in mind, the numbers below are an average. “ How Much Does it Cost to Charge an Electric Car?” Nick Kurczewski 03/29/2022 12:00pm “Many people ask the single biggest question about electric cars: What will I spend to charge the vehicle? If you’re looking at an electric car vs. a gas car, doing some upfront research on charging compared with gas costs will help you make an informed decision. To answer the question of cost, we enlisted the help of John Voelcker, a longtime automotive journalist and industry analyst who specializes in electric vehicles. He’s heard every argument made for (and against) electric vehicle ownership, including recharging costs compared to traditional refueling. You Need to do Some Math Don’t sweat it. The math involved is pretty simple. For the most accurate estimate, it helps if you have a recent electric bill for reference. You’ll want to calculate the amount you pay for electricity in a given month. Then we’ll provide examples so you can determine how much you spend on each kilowatt-hour (kWh) of electricity used. For home charging, find your electric bill, then divide the [number] of kilowatt-hours you used into the bottom-line dollar total. That’ll give you the price you paid per kWh,” Voelcker explains. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, the average U.S. household pays nearly 14 cents per kWh. Let’s apply this rate to a typical electric car. This example does not take into consideration any discounts provided by your utility. What is the Cost to Charge an EV in kWh?“A conservative rule of thumb is that an electric car gets 3 to 4 miles per kWh,” Voelcker says. “So divide the total miles you drive each month by 3 to get the kWh you would use monthly. Multiply that number by your cost per kWh. The dollar amount you get will most likely be lower than what you pay each month to buy gasoline.” To put this into perspective, let’s give an example. Let’s say you drive about 1,183 miles per month (Americans drive an average of about 14,200 miles annually). For an EV, you will use about 394 kWh in that timeframe. Using the U.S. household average from January 2022 of nearly 14 cents per kWh, it would cost about $55 per month to charge an electric car.How Does the Recharge Cost Compare to a Fuel Fill-Up?According to AAA, the average price of gas hovers at $4.25 per gallon as of this writing. So, filling up a 12-gallon gas tank currently costs about $51. Things get a little tricky because, as we all know, cars and trucks use vastly different amounts of fuel. Let’s say you’re driving an economy car that brings a combined average of 30 miles per gallon during a mix of city and highway driving. Using that same 12-gallon tank as a reference point, you’ll have 360 miles of driving range for each fill-up. If you’re driving the same 1,183 miles per month, you’ll need to refuel just over three times each month and spend about $167 ($51 x 3.28).Again, this is only an estimate since fuel prices and mileage vary. But considering few cars and SUVs come anywhere close to delivering a 30 mpg combined average, our fairly conservative number-crunching in this scenario makes it clear that recharging will cost less than keeping a car refueled. The financial gap narrows with a more fuel-efficient vehicle, but it remains. Costs of Charging an EV at HomeElectricity rates are subject to many factors, including the region where you live, the time of year, and even the time of day when peak charges apply. For the most part, electricity usage and costs are at their lowest late at night. That’s good news for anyone considering an EV, according to Voelcker. “While shoppers worry about access to public charging stations, they need to know that as much as 90% of electric car charging is done overnight at home,” Voelcker said. “The cheapest way to charge your electric car is almost always at home, overnight. Some utilities have special low rates for the overnight period when their demand is lightest.” Where you live directly impacts your electric bill. People living in Massachusetts pay nearly double for each kWh of energy used than in states like Nebraska or Idaho. The Cost of Level 2 and Faster ChargingWhen talking about public Level 2 charging and Level 3 fast-charging systems, the prices are harder to narrow when compared to standard at-home costs. That’s because charging networks vary in price, not to mention availability around the country. You can always opt to have a Level 2 charger installed in your garage. The cost isn’t cheap. About $2,000 for parts and installation is a reasonable ballpark figure. Moving up to Level 2 means you’ll cut your charging time sometimes by half. And it can potentially add value to your home. “Every electric car (Tesla included) can use public Level 2 stations,” says Voelcker, “but Nissan Leafs use one fast-charging standard (called CHAdeMO) while every other EV uses a different fast-charging standard called CCS.” Finding the Right Plug to Charge an EVVoelcker explains the difference sounds more complex than it is. “The vast majority of fast-charging locations have both kinds, with a different cable on each side of the station. It’s like the same gas pump could dispense both regular gasoline and diesel fuel from different hoses.” As for the price, a 240-volt (Level 2) recharge could cost you anywhere from zero dollars to a fixed hourly rate. Charging networks often provide membership programs to minimize your recharge cost. That’s especially useful if you can’t regularly charge your vehicle at home. The EVgo network charges rates by state, and it varies for Level 2 charging. On its website, the pay-as-you-go approach costs 30 cents per minute in Georgia for its rates effective March 2022. However, if you’re an EVgo Plus member, the rate drops to 24 cents per minute. The Faster the Charging, the Higher the RateUnlike a typical 240-volt Level 2 home recharging system, you will find Level 3 chargers in commercial settings because they’re prohibitively expensive for a private individual to get installed at home. Tesla has its own dedicated Supercharger network. But the rates can vary widely depending on region, timing, the Tesla model you’re charging, and whether you choose Tier 1 or Tier 2 recharge speeds (the latter being quick but more expensive). One important caveat: Tesla Superchargers only work for Tesla vehicles. That is until the network opens up to other EVs in the United States. The non-Tesla Supercharger pilot began in November 2021 in Europe. Voelcker stresses that home charging is the best option for anyone considering an electric car. Yet, equally important is knowing where to find EV perks close to home. “Some workplaces offer charging for employees’ cars … But electric-car owners quickly learn which public stations near them are free, which charge for charging, and how much they cost,” he said. For example, a bustling parking lot in a crowded city center might lure EV owners with the promise of free recharging. But the resultant fee for parking there could easily zoom past what you’d have paid to fill up even the thirstiest gas-powered car or truck. Voelcker’s final words of advice to EV owners: “Always ask before plugging in!”
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Post by onelasttime on Jul 20, 2022 0:18:37 GMT
No kidding…
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Post by Scrapper100 on Jul 20, 2022 0:23:00 GMT
I need to go back snd read the article but couldn’t get past the .14 kWh maybe 20 years ago. I don’t remember our numbers but know they are in the 20-30 range then you need to add on distribution which is often more than the cost of the electric itself. Gotta love California or maybe the article uses low numbers.
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Post by onelasttime on Jul 20, 2022 0:34:03 GMT
I need to go back snd read the article but couldn’t get past the .14 kWh maybe 20 years ago. I don’t remember our numbers but know they are in the 20-30 range then you need to add on distribution which is often more than the cost of the electric itself. Gotta love California or maybe the article uses low numbers. From the article… ”Where you live directly impacts your electric bill. People living in Massachusetts pay nearly double for each kWh of energy used than in states like Nebraska or Idaho.”
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Post by aj2hall on Jul 20, 2022 0:42:42 GMT
The Chevy Volt was discontinued in 2019. The price he’s stating is for a used 2017/2019 (depending on model) one. The replacement vehicle is the Chevy Bolt with a starting price of $34,500. So let’s buy Pete’s used Volt for $26000. Put $5000 down, finance $21000 for 60 months at the current average used car rate of 4% and you’re looking at a payment of $387 a month. According to Biden buying an electric car will save you about $80 a month on gas but you have the increase in your electric bill and they cost more to insure. Great if you can afford it, not so great if you’re struggling to make ends meet now with inflation rate at 9%. He started by saying he recognizes most Americans can't afford an EV. And the video I watched, it was a little unclear if he said Volt or Bolt. The starting price depends on where you live and subsidies that might be available. The starting price for a new Bolt in my area is $28,000 after the offer, putting it the same ballpark as the cost of other new 4 passenger sedans. Car and Driver puts the average new car cost at 47,000. www.chevrolet.com/electric/bolt-euvwww.chevrolet.com/electric/shopping/configurator/model?make=Chevrolet&model=Bolt%20EUV&radius=250&year=2022&zipCode=03861www.caranddriver.com/news/a38748092/new-car-average-sale-prices-47100/There are a lot of variables, but it's likely that even with the cost of electricity, an EV still saves you money over the cost of buying gas. www.kbb.com/car-news/how-much-does-it-cost-to-charge-an-ev/“A conservative rule of thumb is that an electric car gets 3 to 4 miles per kWh,” Voelcker says. “So divide the total miles you drive each month by 3 to get the kWh you would use monthly. Multiply that number by your cost per kWh. The dollar amount you get will most likely be lower than what you pay each month to buy gasoline.”
To put this into perspective, let’s give an example. Let’s say you drive about 1,183 miles per month (Americans drive an average of about 14,200 miles annually). For an EV, you will use about 394 kWh in that timeframe. Using the U.S. household average from January 2022 of nearly 14 cents per kWh, it would cost about $55 per month to charge an electric car.
According to AAA, the average price of gas hovers at $4.25 per gallon as of this writing. So, filling up a 12-gallon gas tank currently costs about $51. Things get a little tricky because, as we all know, cars and trucks use vastly different amounts of fuel.
Let’s say you’re driving an economy car that brings a combined average of 30 miles per gallon during a mix of city and highway driving. Using that same 12-gallon tank as a reference point, you’ll have 360 miles of driving range for each fill-up. If you’re driving the same 1,183 miles per month, you’ll need to refuel just over three times each month and spend about $167 ($51 x 3.28).
Again, this is only an estimate since fuel prices and mileage vary. But considering few cars and SUVs come anywhere close to delivering a 30 mpg combined average, our fairly conservative number-crunching in this scenario makes it clear that recharging will cost less than keeping a car refueled. The financial gap narrows with a more fuel-efficient vehicle, but it remains.
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Post by aj2hall on Jul 20, 2022 0:47:29 GMT
I need to go back snd read the article but couldn’t get past the .14 kWh maybe 20 years ago. I don’t remember our numbers but know they are in the 20-30 range then you need to add on distribution which is often more than the cost of the electric itself. Gotta love California or maybe the article uses low numbers. average cost of electricity by state from 2020. Hawaii is the highest. Louisiana, Arkansas and Idaho are among the lowest. www.eia.gov/electricity/state/
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Post by Scrapper100 on Jul 20, 2022 1:36:15 GMT
I need to go back snd read the article but couldn’t get past the .14 kWh maybe 20 years ago. I don’t remember our numbers but know they are in the 20-30 range then you need to add on distribution which is often more than the cost of the electric itself. Gotta love California or maybe the article uses low numbers. average cost of electricity by state. Hawaii is the highest. Louisiana, Arkansas and Idaho are among the lowest. www.eia.gov/electricity/state/I just pulled out my bill generation is a little more than .11 however when you add distribution it is between .28 and .45 kWh in our area so quite a bit more and more than double most of ours is in the .36 but it in the next month or so some of ours will be in the .45 range as we are now using our AC and will be for the next few months - our October bill is usually the highest. We are on a tiered system vs time of day as they said that would be at least $500 or more a year for us. So far they are letting us stay on this system. If you have solar or an electric vehicle you get moved to time of day but its a little bit lower but it wasn't much different except most of the energy is at a higher rate than the rate I stated above.
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Post by onelasttime on Jul 20, 2022 1:36:48 GMT
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Post by Merge on Jul 20, 2022 1:41:40 GMT
I need to go back snd read the article but couldn’t get past the .14 kWh maybe 20 years ago. I don’t remember our numbers but know they are in the 20-30 range then you need to add on distribution which is often more than the cost of the electric itself. Gotta love California or maybe the article uses low numbers. average cost of electricity by state. Hawaii is the highest. Louisiana, Arkansas and Idaho are among the lowest. www.eia.gov/electricity/state/Those prices are from 2020. We’re paying a lot more than that in Texas right now - 15-18 cents/kWh depending on how long your contract is for and how much you use. Plus the lovely fees they’ve tacked on to make consumers pay for what the energy suppliers lost last year. Thanks, Greg Abbott!
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Post by onelasttime on Jul 20, 2022 1:45:34 GMT
Somehow I find it hard to believe dumpster don has “unbelievable prowess” for anything especially for asking questions that make any sense.
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Post by pixiechick on Jul 20, 2022 1:55:23 GMT
Well that’s certainly going to make the “6” change their thinking on their decision on abortion isn’t it. Damn photo ops. They accomplished nothing. "pretending she is handcuffed is the most @aoc thing ever."
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Post by aj2hall on Jul 20, 2022 2:05:11 GMT
Those prices are from 2020. We’re paying a lot more than that in Texas right now - 15-18 cents/kWh depending on how long your contract is for and how much you use. Plus the lovely fees they’ve tacked on to make consumers pay for what the energy suppliers lost last year. Thanks, Greg Abbott! I know, sorry they're outdated. The new numbers won't be out until December, but it seemed like a reliable source and you can get the general idea of where states are in comparison to each other.
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Post by aj2hall on Jul 20, 2022 2:12:18 GMT
I just pulled out my bill generation is a little more than .11 however when you add distribution it is between .28 and .45 kWh in our area so quite a bit more and more than double most of ours is in the .36 but it in the next month or so some of ours will be in the .45 range as we are now using our AC and will be for the next few months - our October bill is usually the highest. We are on a tiered system vs time of day as they said that would be at least $500 or more a year for us. So far they are letting us stay on this system. If you have solar or an electric vehicle you get moved to time of day but its a little bit lower but it wasn't much different except most of the energy is at a higher rate than the rate I stated above. Sorry, I know California pays more for almost everything. I just checked, our bill for July was 19 cents per kWh for power, delivery and all of the other charges.
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Post by aj2hall on Jul 20, 2022 2:21:25 GMT
Well that’s certainly going to make the “6” change their thinking on their decision on abortion isn’t it. Damn photo ops. They accomplished nothing. Well, the video of AOC has over 2 million views. If their goal was publicity, they accomplished that. And if they're keeping up the momentum and the attention on women's reproductive rights as long as they can, ideally until November, that's positive, too. I give them credit for standing with other women and standing up for what they believe in. My representative wasn't there, but I would have been proud of him if he did attend. And no, the goal was not to get the 6 conservatives to change their mind. But they did accomplish something. www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/reps-ocasio-cortez-omar-democrats-arrested-abortion-rights-protest-rcna38956More than a dozen House Democrats were arrested outside the Supreme Court on Tuesday during a demonstration that involved blocking the street to protest the high court's June decision overturning Roe v. Wade.Capitol Police said they made 35 arrests, including 17 lawmakers.
Among those arrested were Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Carolyn Maloney of New York, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, Cori Bush of Missouri, Veronica Escobar of Texas, Jackie Speier and Barbara Lee of California, and Ayanna Pressley and Katherine Clark of Massachusetts. The lawmakers said they were engaging in an act of civil disobedience.
Speier, 72, said in a statement that she had “never been arrested before, but I can hear the late, great Congressman John Lewis imploring me to ‘make some noise and get in good trouble.’”
"We must be willing to speak out for patients who have the right to basic health care, and the fundamental right to bodily autonomy," Speier said.
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Post by aj2hall on Jul 20, 2022 2:24:49 GMT
www.newsweek.com/democratic-congress-members-arrested-abortion-rights-protest-supreme-court-aoc-1726131 Based on the Twitter accounts of the representatives or official statements, below is a list of the members of Congress who confirmed that they were arrested.• Alma Adams of North Carolina • Cori Bush of Missouri • Assistant Speaker Katherine Clark of Massachusetts • Madeleine Dean of Pennsylvania • Veronica Escobar of Texas • Sara Jacobs of California • Barbara Lee of California • Andy Levin of Michigan • Carolyn Maloney of New York • Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York • Ilhan Omar of Minnesota • Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts • Jan Schakowsky of Illinois • Jackie Speier of California "There is no democracy if women do not have control over their own bodies and decisions about their own health, including reproductive care," Maloney said in a statement. "I have the privilege of representing a state where reproductive rights are respected and protected—the least I can do is put my body on the line for the 33 million women at risk of losing their rights. The Republican Party and the right-wing extremists behind this decision are not pro-life, but pro-controlling the bodies of women, girls, and any person who can become pregnant. Their ultimate goal is to institute a national ban on abortion. We will not let them win. We will be back."
"Today, I am making good trouble," Schakowsky tweeted, along with a video of her being led by a police officer.
"Today I was arrested in a civil disobedience action at the Supreme Court to protest Roe v. Wade getting overturned and the assault on reproductive rights across the country," Omar said in a statement provided to Newsweek. "Our reproductive rights are under assault across the country, thanks to an extremist court with little regard for precedent or our basic rights. I will do whatever it takes, including putting my body on the line, to protect our reproductive rights."
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Post by aj2hall on Jul 20, 2022 2:27:59 GMT
In the spirit of John Lewis, the 17 Representatives did accomplish something today. www.brookings.edu/blog/how-we-rise/2020/07/23/five-things-john-lewis-taught-us-about-getting-in-good-trouble/ “Get in good trouble, necessary trouble, and redeem the soul of America.” John Lewis made this statement on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama on March 1, 2020 commemorating the tragic events of Bloody Sunday.
Bloody Sunday is often noted as a pinnacle of Lewis’ life. This defining moment encapsulates five things he taught us about getting in good trouble.
Vote, always Never too young to make a difference Speak truth to power Become a racial equity broker Never give up
Lewis was a lightning bolt for equity, social change, and social justice. We must continue his legacy, never forget history, pursue equity, and get in good trouble.
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Post by cindosha on Jul 20, 2022 2:28:41 GMT
www.newsweek.com/democratic-congress-members-arrested-abortion-rights-protest-supreme-court-aoc-1726131 Based on the Twitter accounts of the representatives or official statements, below is a list of the members of Congress who confirmed that they were arrested.• Alma Adams of North Carolina • Cori Bush of Missouri • Assistant Speaker Katherine Clark of Massachusetts • Madeleine Dean of Pennsylvania • Veronica Escobar of Texas • Sara Jacobs of California • Barbara Lee of California • Andy Levin of Michigan • Carolyn Maloney of New York • Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York • Ilhan Omar of Minnesota • Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts • Jan Schakowsky of Illinois • Jackie Speier of California "There is no democracy if women do not have control over their own bodies and decisions about their own health, including reproductive care," Maloney said in a statement. "I have the privilege of representing a state where reproductive rights are respected and protected—the least I can do is put my body on the line for the 33 million women at risk of losing their rights. The Republican Party and the right-wing extremists behind this decision are not pro-life, but pro-controlling the bodies of women, girls, and any person who can become pregnant. Their ultimate goal is to institute a national ban on abortion. We will not let them win. We will be back."
"Today, I am making good trouble," Schakowsky tweeted, along with a video of her being led by a police officer.
"Today I was arrested in a civil disobedience action at the Supreme Court to protest Roe v. Wade getting overturned and the assault on reproductive rights across the country," Omar said in a statement provided to Newsweek. "Our reproductive rights are under assault across the country, thanks to an extremist court with little regard for precedent or our basic rights. I will do whatever it takes, including putting my body on the line, to protect our reproductive rights."
So are we supposed to be impressed by this? A bunch of attention seeking boobs? Yawn.
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Post by aj2hall on Jul 20, 2022 2:33:45 GMT
www.newsweek.com/democratic-congress-members-arrested-abortion-rights-protest-supreme-court-aoc-1726131 Based on the Twitter accounts of the representatives or official statements, below is a list of the members of Congress who confirmed that they were arrested.• Alma Adams of North Carolina • Cori Bush of Missouri • Assistant Speaker Katherine Clark of Massachusetts • Madeleine Dean of Pennsylvania • Veronica Escobar of Texas • Sara Jacobs of California • Barbara Lee of California • Andy Levin of Michigan • Carolyn Maloney of New York • Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York • Ilhan Omar of Minnesota • Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts • Jan Schakowsky of Illinois • Jackie Speier of California "There is no democracy if women do not have control over their own bodies and decisions about their own health, including reproductive care," Maloney said in a statement. "I have the privilege of representing a state where reproductive rights are respected and protected—the least I can do is put my body on the line for the 33 million women at risk of losing their rights. The Republican Party and the right-wing extremists behind this decision are not pro-life, but pro-controlling the bodies of women, girls, and any person who can become pregnant. Their ultimate goal is to institute a national ban on abortion. We will not let them win. We will be back."
"Today, I am making good trouble," Schakowsky tweeted, along with a video of her being led by a police officer.
"Today I was arrested in a civil disobedience action at the Supreme Court to protest Roe v. Wade getting overturned and the assault on reproductive rights across the country," Omar said in a statement provided to Newsweek. "Our reproductive rights are under assault across the country, thanks to an extremist court with little regard for precedent or our basic rights. I will do whatever it takes, including putting my body on the line, to protect our reproductive rights."
So are we supposed to be impressed by this? A bunch of attention seeking boobs? Yawn. I don't care if you're impressed or not. The 17 Representatives are considerably more impressive than most of the Republicans lately. (with the notable exceptions of Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger)
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Post by aj2hall on Jul 20, 2022 2:41:49 GMT
Not all of the votes have been counted, but the Democrats' risky move in MD to back the most extreme Republican candidate for governor might have passed the first hurdle. At the moment, he's in the lead. www.washingtonpost.com/elections/election-results/maryland/2022-primaries/?itid=hp_most-read_1www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2022/07/18/democrats-subsidizing-trump-like-candidates/ The Democratic Governors Association has spent $2 million on commercials and mailers to boost a Republican named Daniel L. Cox, a 2020 election denier, over Kelly M. Schulz, a more pragmatic Republican candidate for governor in Maryland, on the theory that Cox will be easier to defeat in a general election.
Cox is unfit to lead Maryland. He has called former vice president Mike Pence “a traitor” for not trying to overturn the 2020 election. He didn’t just attend Trump’s “Stop the Steal” rally on Jan. 6, 2021; he chartered three buses to ferry Trump supporters into the capital on that day which will forever live in infamy. Cox agitated for Trump to use the federal government to seize voting machines during that period, as well, and he’s already laying the groundwork to cry fraud if he loses this year.
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Post by aj2hall on Jul 20, 2022 2:48:06 GMT
I don't know if it's possible on a larger scale, but this plan for microtransit, to offer services similar to Uber or Lyft instead of buses seems like a good idea. www.npr.org/2022/07/19/1111765630/on-demand-shuttles-have-replaced-buses-in-a-small-north-carolina-townIt's $1.50 for a van to go anywhere within city limits The ride cost him $1.50, the standard fare residents pay when they order a van over the phone or through a mobile app. The vans will take them anywhere within city limits.
Lentz said the city spent years exploring the idea of replacing its fixed bus routes with on-demand rides, and finally took the leap in September 2020 in partnership with a company Via, which provided software, vehicles and drivers in exchange for city funding.
The service proved popular right from the start.
Lentz said the on-demand ride service is costing the city of Wilson about $1.6 million a year, compared to the $1.3 million it spent on bus service pre-pandemic.
But for a small city like Wilson, Lentz said he thought it was worth it.
"For $1.6 million, we're providing well over twice as many trips and covering 100 percent of the city with a system that picks you up within 15 to 20 minutes of your request, versus a bus that was only running once an hour."
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