Wake Up, America! Wake Up! PLEASE!!

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The Roe decision does NOT pass constitutional tests, everyone knows that, which is why it should be overturned... What does that have to do with mythical creatures?
All of these my body my choice extremist are throwing a hissy fit because there is a leak that their precious Roe vs Wade may be overturned. I am sure that most of these people don't even know the truth about anything concerning this Roe vs Wade 1973 Supreme Court Case other than the title Roe vs Wade means I can abort babies.

 

just proves.....money can buy everything​

Trump settles lawsuit over inauguration funds spent at his hotel​


Donald Trump's company and inauguration committee agreed Tuesday to pay $750,000 to the District of Columbia to resolve allegations that they illegally misused nonprofit funds while staging events surrounding Trump's inauguration.

D.C. Attorney General Karl Racine had accused the Trump Organization of overcharging Trump's inauguration committee for services at the Trump International Hotel, where more than $1 million was spent in January 2017, including for a private party for Mr. Trump's three older children.

"After he was elected, one of the first actions Donald Trump took was illegally using his own inauguration to enrich his family. We refused to let that corruption stand," Racine said in a press release. "With our lawsuit, we are now clawing back money that Trump's own inaugural committee misused."
 

2 different articles​

DHS IG says Wolf changed intel report on Russian interference in 2020​



Former Homeland Security Acting Secretary Chad Wolf changed and delayed an intelligence report detailing Russian interference in the 2020 U.S. presidential election, according to a new review by the Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) top watchdog.

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© Credit: CBSNewsScreen-Shot-2020-11-30-at-12.37.11-PM.png


The decision to deviate from DHS standard review procedures "rais[ed] objectivity concerns," according to the report, and led to the perception that unorthodox interference by a top DHS official was intended to help Donald Trump's reelection bid.

The Office of the Inspector General (OIG) at DHS, through its Office of Intelligence and Analysis (I&A), released the redacted results of its investigation into Russian interference in the election — "DHS Actions Related to an I&A Intelligence Product Deviated from Standard Procedures" — on Tuesday

"We found that DHS did not adequately follow its internal processes and comply with applicable [intelligence community] policy standards and requirements when editing and disseminating an I&A intelligence product regarding Russian interference with the 2020 U.S. Presidential election," the DHS OIG report states, in part.

Homeland Security Secretary Altered Report on Russian Election Interference to Help Trump, Watchdog Says​


Former Acting Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Chad Wolf delayed and changed an intelligence report warning of Russian interference in the 2020 election due to concerns it would “hurt” former President Trump, according to an investigation by the department’s inspector general office.
 
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Alito Wants a Brawl And Looks Likely To Get One​


For decades, activists across the political spectrum have believed that Supreme Court justices are pretenders — ideologues and partisan hacks who try to disguise personal agendas behind black robes.

Associate Justice Samuel Alito sits during a group photo at the Supreme Court in Washington, April 23, 2021.
© Erin Schaff/The New York Times via AP, PoolAssociate Justice Samuel Alito sits during a group photo at the Supreme Court in Washington, April 23, 2021.


Justice Samuel Alito’s startling draft opinion revoking a constitutional right to abortion, joined by four colleagues to form a provisional narrow majority, puts this old critique in a somewhat new light: Ideological aims and partisan ones are at least partly in tension.

On narrowly partisan grounds, not many Republican operatives would advise that the best strategy for the 2022 midterms and 2024 presidential elections is to put abortion rights front and center in a consuming national debate. But if the court follows through with its draft opinion — obtained by POLITICO and published Monday night — front and center is where it will be, even as polls consistently show majorities of 60 percent or more wish to leave the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision intact.

Alito plainly does not care about that.

For years, on abortion, the Supreme Court’s conservative majority has been divided by jugglers and brawlers. Jugglers, led by Chief Justice John Roberts, have tried to balance competing principles — a willingness to revisit Roe at margins while also respecting precedent and trying to preserve the mystique of oracular detachment on which he believes the court’s legitimacy depends.

The brawlers, led in this instance by Alito, say to hell with that.

His draft opinion on Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization — the case has not yet entered the national shorthand, What’s your view on Dobbs?, but presumably soon will — runs for 98 pages of argument and citations. But its essence can be summed up in three words: Bring it on.


Let’s stop pretending, he writes in bristling, vehement words that he plainly has been sharpening in his mind for decades, that intensely opposing views about the morality of abortion can or should be resolved by the courts. Let’s recognize, he argues, that much of the language swirling around the legal debate — Latin phrases like stare decisis, medical concepts like ******* viability or gestational trimesters, and so on — is so much sophistry and an evasion from the heart of the matter.
As he sees it, the heart of the matter is that there is no legitimate constitutional right to abortion and never was — “Roe was egregiously wrong from the start” — and so the whole matter should be thrown to the political arena. That’s where one of the most intimate dimensions of human life can be debated in a loud, thrashing, angry debate, right out in the open.

Even people who have labored for decades to preserve a woman’s right to decide for herself whether to carry a pregnancy might agree there is something crisp and free of pretense about where a majority of the Supreme Court appears ready to go. In recent years, many of these activists — seeing the legal foundations of Roe gradually eroding — have voiced their own version of the Alito argument: OK, then, you want a political fight? Let’s have it.

Historically, many abortion rights supporters have believed that putting that debate out in the open — and on the ballot — at a moment when the stakes are undeniably clear is a winning proposition for them
. The logic is that anti-abortion activists are always focused and hyper-engaged, while the broader majority who supports abortion rights often will organize and vote on the issue when they feel their rights are imminently threatened.

A related argument is that Roe v. Wade had the opposite effect of what many of its backers wanted. Instead of removing the issue from politics, a backlash to the court was the engine for a new conservative movement in the 1970s. It may even have inhibited the process by which political debate in the states was gradually leading to more liberal laws and possibly a more durable consensus on abortion rights. In some moods, such feminist legal pioneers as the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg explored this possibility. Alito, almost tauntingly, quotes her from 1992 (a year before joining the high court) on how Roe may have “prolonged divisiveness” and “deferred stable settlement of the issue.”

It is hardly the most relevant angle on the story — not compared to the tangible, real-world effect on individuals if the draft opinion or something close to it is what the Supreme Court decides in its official decision in coming weeks — but one must note that there is plainly a kind of rough-hewn principle in Alito’s thinking.

He clearly has strong ideological views, but that makes it harder to level a charge of partisanship — especially if Democrats are able to mobilize voters around abortion rights.

Compare this case, for instance, to the 2000 case of Bush v. Gore. Then, a narrow majority of Republican-appointed justices seemingly put partisanship over legal principle when they ignored their own pious sermons about interpreting the Constitution narrowly to invent an ad hoc rationale that awarded a disputed presidential election to George W. Bush.

Alito doesn’t look to be guilty of that kind of hypocrisy. His eagerness to attack Roe v. Wade has been obvious since he joined the court in January 2006. He seems entirely sincere when he writes in the draft that justices should not be “affected by any extraneous influences such as concern about the public’s reaction to our work.”

Fidelity to his own principles seems closely linked to another trait that jumps off the page of his draft. He comes off as a contentious, self-assured loudmouth. Many passages sound less like a formal legal ruling than the argumentative tones of a relative who gets carried away at Thanksgiving — Do we have to talk politics over dinner? — or the fellow at nearby table at a neighborhood tavern— Sir, would you mind terribly lowering your voice just a little?

His draft vibrates with contempt. Arguments made in previous abortion cases are not just misplaced but “very weak,” just as Roe was not just wrong but “egregiously wrong.” He doesn’t stop at saying there was not much support for a constitutional right to abortion until the latter half of the 20th century, he adds: “Zero. None.”

These brawling instincts were apparently compelling — at least in the privacy of Supreme Court chambers — to four colleagues who voted with him: Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett. It’s worth remembering that a draft opinion is a draft: Some of these people may, upon consideration, decide that they would rather try to keep juggling on abortion for a while. That would lead to a more modest final opinion, that trims Roe v. Wade but defers the fateful confrontation that Alito so urgently wants.

Whatever happens, however, the self-confidence of his jurisprudential mind is now part of the public record. It invites the question: What makes him so sure of himself?

The draft opinion is replete with references to the advantages of turning a complicated moral issue over to the political debate in 50 states. But there’s nothing to stop the nationalization of the debate at the congressional level — outlawing abortion everywhere if Republicans chose to do so with a narrow majority next time they take control of Congress, or the opposite when Democrats are in charge.

Alito declares that none of the arguments in his ruling will affect current law on the right to marry or contraception. But he can hardly declare that by fiat, since some of those rights rest on the same legal principles and precedents that buttressed
Roe. The idea that abortion will now primarily be the province of the political branches rather than the judicial one seems unlikely. If some states are right that abortion is the equivalent of taking a human life, court cases with plaintiffs that all fetuses in all states have the same constitutional protections are inevitable.

Citing sources from Abraham Lincoln to 20th-century philosopher Isaiah Berlin, Alito reflects on the 14th Amendment’s reference to “liberty” before lecturing, “we must guard against the natural human tendency to confuse what the Amendment protects with our own ardent views about the liberty that Americans should enjoy.” But there is not a hint in the draft opinion that Alito is applying those cautionary words to himself.

Bring it on means bring it on. Neither Alito nor anyone else can be sure what will follow and where it will lead.
 

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hell we all knew those trumptards didn't have a lick of fucking sense....look at them on here....well dipshit not a trumptard......more of a rumpchard​

Trump aide told lobbyist he feared people underestimated what the president was capable of: new book​



Mick Mulvaney speaking at the 2018 Conservative Political Action Conference. (Gage Skidmore/Flickr)
© Raw StoryMick Mulvaney speaking at the 2018 Conservative Political Action Conference. (Gage Skidmore/Flickr)

One of the many former chiefs of staff to Donald Trump was secretly warning D.C. Republicans that the president could become volatile if he loses the 2020 election.

The new book "This Will Not Pass" by Alexander Burns and Jonathan Martin details the final months before the election, with Mulvaney being relegated to "a largely ornamental position as special envoy for Northern Ireland."

The book cited "former colleagues" who believed Mulvaney to be "a brittle know-it-all." But when he spoke with "the head of an influential Washington business lobby," he revealed his real concerns about what might happen if Trump lost.

"Speaking with Josh Bolten, the former White House chief of staff to George W. Bush and now chief of the Business Roundtable, Mulvaney said he was worried that people were underestimating what the man he served was capable of," said the book, which became publicly available on Tuesday.
 

this will piss off dimwit!​

Ron DeSantis tramples the First Amendment: GOP's Disney payback is clearly unconstitutional​



When Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Florida Republican Party punished Disney for its criticism of the "Don't say gay" bill — in other words, for corporate speech that was clearly political in nature, their retaliation was not just fiscally shortsighted, it was illegal. Any government attempt to restrict a corporation's speech based on the content of that speech must satisfy the strictest scrutiny, meaning the restriction adopted by the government must be narrowly tailored to serve a compelling government interest. Restrictions based on political viewpoint have long been prohibited. Stripping Disney of its special tax status in two Florida counties (which both lean Democratic), while leaving intact more than 1,800 similar tax districts in largely Republican counties, is not narrowly tailored to achieve any clear objective, nor is silencing political critics a compelling or even legitimate government interest in the first instance.

More than 10 years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court vested corporations with the same legal protections as other individuals when speaking on political issues. In the infamous Citizens United decision of 2010, the court elevated the protection due corporate political speech, shielding corporate expenditures for that purpose under the First Amendment. Maligned by the left for largely valid reasons, Citizens United has empowered Big Oil, utility companies and other deep-pocket industries to boost politicians like DeSantis, who symbiotically protect their corporate profits instead of protecting constituents worried about climate, even as Florida's coasts sink visibly around them.

Vesting well-funded corporations with expanded political speech rights may have sealed the fate of our rising oceans, but Citizens United also arms corporations like Disney with legal ballast to protect themselves against would-be autocrats who seek to silence them. Although DeSantis was quick to disavow any retaliatory motive in his move to strip Disney of its independent taxing status, his disavowal is absurd in light of the timing and his own comments. Late in 2021, DeSantis warned Florida's most powerful companies not to display "corporate wokeness," widely regarded as showing support for LGBTQ rights and racial justice. He further threatened that if corporations did display "wokeness," the state would "look under the hood" of their operations, with the clear implication that they would examine more closely business practices previously deemed acceptable.
Although DeSantis disavowed any retaliatory motive in his move against Disney, that seems absurd in light of the timing — and his own comments.

Several months later, DeSantis made good on that threat. On March 28, the governor signed the controversial "Don't say gay" bill into law, prohibiting teachers from discussing sexual orientation and encouraging parents to sue over ill-defined violations. On that same day, Disney's CEO criticized the new law, vowing to see it repealed. Disney released a statement that the bill "should never have been signed into law… Our goal as a company is for this law to be repealed by the legislature or struck down in the courts, and we remain committed to supporting the national and state organizations working to achieve that. We are dedicated to standing up for the rights and safety of LGBTQ+ members of the Disney family, as well as the LGBTQ+ community in Florida and across the country."
 

the right just plain out to fuck america​

The Must-Read Mitch McConnell Quote on Social Security​



If you're concerned about the future of Social Security, it's helpful to understand what lawmakers in power have said about it. That's because those in a leadership position on the federal level could potentially make changes that affect benefits for the elderly.

Currently, the White House, the House of Representatives, and the U.S. Senate are all controlled by Democrats. Most lawmakers on the left have voiced strong support for expanding Social Security and uniform opposition to any benefit cuts. After the midterm elections next November, however, it is very possible that control of the House or the Senate could change hands.

If the Republicans reclaim a Senate majority again, current Minority Leader Mitch McConnell will likely become the majority leader. That's why this quote from McConnell about Social Security is so important.

The potential future majority leader has made his position on Social Security clear​

Mitch McConnell recently addressed the issue of Social Security's future, stating, "If we're fortunate enough to have the majority next year, I'll be the majority leader. I'll decide in consultation with my members what to put on the floor. We will not have as a part of our agenda a bill that raises taxes on half the American people and sunsets Social Security and Medicare within five years."


McConnell's quote came in response to a plan put forth by Senator Rick Scott, chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee. Scott created "An 11-Point Plan to Rescue America," which he described as a blueprint for what the GOP might do if it took control of Congress. Among the other things in the plan, Scott called for all federal legislation to sunset after five years so Congress would need to approve it again if it was important.

This would have the effect of requiring Congress to vote regularly to reauthorize Social Security and Medicare. It would create substantial uncertainty for seniors and could pose problems for future retirees, who wouldn't necessarily be able to count on Social Security being available for them.

McConnell rejected this plan, though, and his words suggest that a Republican majority in the Senate likely would not pose a serious immediate threat to Social Security.

Is entitlement reform no longer on the table?
McConnell's words are important because they seem to reflect a shift in the Republican Party that has taken place in recent years.

Reforming Social Security has long been a priority on the right, with many Republican lawmakers expressing concern that the program's finances are in trouble. Traditionally, while the left was in favor of Social Security expansion, lawmakers on the right routinely proposed changes that would serve as a de facto cut to benefits. These included raising full retirement age or changing the way raises are calculated to make cost-of-living adjustments less generous.
McConnell rejected this plan, though, and his words suggest that a Republican majority in the Senate likely would not pose a serious immediate threat to Social Security.

Is entitlement reform no longer on the table?​

McConnell's words are important because they seem to reflect a shift in the Republican Party that has taken place in recent years.

Reforming Social Security has long been a priority on the right, with many Republican lawmakers expressing concern that the program's finances are in trouble. Traditionally, while the left was in favor of Social Security expansion, lawmakers on the right routinely proposed changes that would serve as a de facto cut to benefits. These included raising full retirement age or changing the way raises are calculated to make cost-of-living adjustments less generous.

However, former President Donald Trump embraced a more populist approach and said that he wasn't in favor of Social Security cuts that would leave less money for seniors. McConnell's assurances that Social Security wouldn't be subject to sunsetting may suggest other Republicans have embraced this shift and that cuts to Social Security may no longer be a priority -- or even a Republican goal at all.

If that is indeed the case and this trend continues, then current and future retirees may be able to enjoy greater confidence that they'll get all the promised retirement benefits they deserve.

The $18,984 Social Security bonus most retirees completely overlook

If you're like most Americans, you're a few years (or more) behind on your retirement savings. But a handful of little-known "Social Security secrets" could help ensure a boost in your retirement income. For example: one easy trick could pay you as much as $18,984 more... each year! Once you learn how to maximize your Social Security benefits, we think you could retire confidently with the peace of mind we're all after. Simply click here to discover how to learn more about these strategies.
 

Maddow Blog | Poll: U.S. majority supports Jan. 6 criminal charge against Trump​


In the immediate aftermath of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, a Washington Post-ABC News poll found that a 54 percent majority of Americans believed Donald Trump should be criminally charged for inciting the riot. As the Post reported this morning, public attitudes apparently haven’t changed much.

In the abstract, results like these may seem like little more than political curiosities. After all, indictments are not the results of popularity contests.

But as a practical matter, it’s not quite that simple. A variety of officials in positions of authority have decisions to make about how, whether, and when to hold the former president responsible for his alleged misconduct, and the fact that most Americans support charging Trump is likely to help stiffen spines.
 
All of these my body my choice extremist are throwing a hissy fit because there is a leak that their precious Roe vs Wade may be overturned. I am sure that most of these people don't even know the truth about anything concerning this Roe vs Wade 1973 Supreme Court Case other than the title Roe vs Wade means I can abort babies.

I'm sure you want to give us the preachings of your church................

but tell me...after all these babies are born to mothers who didn't want them......what funding will the church push for to help feed them.....oh wait you people just cut snap and other programs to help children and i just posted where the right wants to make cuts to social security

and if a baby is ****** on a mom who didn't want that baby....what kind of home life will he have>.........the state could very possibly end up paying his prison term when he steals


but your only concern is the fetus.........nothing about what comes out nor any care for it anyway

and since you church going people have did away with so many programs like planned parenthood.........and some states have a higher death rate for pregnant women than some countries in Africa..........thank you again to you and your church.....i didn't even get into the fact that 1 in 5 children in this country go to bed hungry.....or the number of mothers living on the streets and in shelters...with children

but again that is of no concern to you or your church


since...I am assuming you can not have a baby......what gives you the right to dictate to someone else their right?
 
Poor sub, you can't actually believe the bullshit you spew here...

On a side note, I'm so very entertained at watching liberals flip out over the possibility of Roe being rightfully overturned... If it is, it won't make abortion illegal, but makes it a state by state issue, like it should be.
Look how he responded to my post, This, oh I care so much for the children they will be unwanted, they are not simply a fetus, as soon as that sperm cell hits that egg it is life, at that point a baby has two options, to live and be born or to die because of health issues or to be murdered by selfish women through abortions. Keep hitting the dislike button, I refuse to talk to brain dead leftist.
 

Maddow Blog | Poll: U.S. majority supports Jan. 6 criminal charge against Trump​


In the immediate aftermath of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, a Washington Post-ABC News poll found that a 54 percent majority of Americans believed Donald Trump should be criminally charged for inciting the riot. As the Post reported this morning, public attitudes apparently haven’t changed much.

In the abstract, results like these may seem like little more than political curiosities. After all, indictments are not the results of popularity contests.

But as a practical matter, it’s not quite that simple. A variety of officials in positions of authority have decisions to make about how, whether, and when to hold the former president responsible for his alleged misconduct, and the fact that most Americans support charging Trump is likely to help stiffen spines.
STUPID

Maddow? Really? That dude is completely full of *******

Im sure there was no bias in that poll
HAHAHAHAHAHAHA

He’s doing so well msdnc gave him one whole day a week

29C2104C-56E2-4701-99AD-1DC436943CC7.jpeg8BF1C262-5C64-4805-8AF0-74BB2249B3AF.jpeg
 
I'm sure you want to give us the preachings of your church................

but tell me...after all these babies are born to mothers who didn't want them......what funding will the church push for to help feed them.....oh wait you people just cut snap and other programs to help children and i just posted where the right wants to make cuts to social security

and if a baby is ****** on a mom who didn't want that baby....what kind of home life will he have>.........the state could very possibly end up paying his prison term when he steals


but your only concern is the fetus.........nothing about what comes out nor any care for it anyway

and since you church going people have did away with so many programs like planned parenthood.........and some states have a higher death rate for pregnant women than some countries in Africa..........thank you again to you and your church.....i didn't even get into the fact that 1 in 5 children in this country go to bed hungry.....or the number of mothers living on the streets and in shelters...with children

but again that is of no concern to you or your church


since...I am assuming you can not have a baby......what gives you the right to dictate to someone else their right?

What are you doing to help these people. You are very concerned about them, so I’m sure you are donating and volunteering constantly.

Or are you just another liberal hypocrite?

You are very very bad at this
 
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