India Wins Cricket World Cup, Stamping Its Domination of the Sport But in India’s villages, streets, and communities ... hug before she finished speaking and then ran back to join his teammates in celebrating. Mujib Mashal is the South Asia bureau chief for The Times ... 06/29/2024 - 11:09 pm | View Link
PORTRAITS OF GIVING: King Township’s Michelle Frauley armed with superpowers of kindness, compassion Giving and serving are two of the things Michelle does best and most often. She’s been nominated three times (by peers and patients) for the Toronto Star Florence Nightingale Award for Ontario nurses ... 06/29/2024 - 12:59 pm | View Link
Join Us to Hear About the Loopholes of Hawaii’s Pay-to-Play Law A joint investigation examined the role money plays in politics in Hawaii. Hear how journalists put the story together in a livestreamed event on July 10. 06/28/2024 - 4:24 am | View Link
Minneapolis' Young Joni among New York Times' 22 "Best Pizza Places in the United States" MINNEAPOLIS — The New York Times is praising the "freewheeling creative spirit ... Earlier this month, 50-plus members of the staff at Kim's formally announced their intention to join local ... 06/26/2024 - 6:51 pm | View Link
Germany hit by devastating rain that flooded roads and derailed high-speed train: 'We must learn from this … disaster' The massive rainfall and disastrous flooding left citizens and responders missing and dead. River water levels rose twice as high as usual. Roads became impassable rivers in mere seconds. A mudslide ... 06/26/2024 - 12:00 pm | View Link
See, this is what happens when you elect Christofascists to positions of responsibility where they have little to no oversight. Gov. Kevin Stitt recently approved all of the "regulations put forward by Ryan Walters that included time for prayer in schools and expanded the state Education Department’s “foundational values” to acknowledge a “Creator” and the existence of good and evil," so I guess he now feels he can do whatever he wants, including disregarding Oklahoma's own statutes.
Ominously, all teachers are expected to adhere to the new policy.
CNN's Dana Bash asked Rep. Jim Clyburn about Joe Biden's (you knew this was coming) ability to lead the country following the debate between the President and the felon. Most of us were appalled to learn there would be no fact-checking during the debate. But the one guy who was happy about it was the serial-lying former President.
ABC News host Jonathan Karl clashed with political strategist and convicted criminal Steve Bannon about violence from Republicans.
During an interview that aired Sunday on ABC's This Week program, Bannon dismissed death threats received by Dr. Anthony Fauci after he called to put the doctor's head "on a pike."
"I'm not backing off my rhetoric," Bannon insisted.
"Are you concerned about those death threats, though?" Karl asked.
"Do you think I don't get death threats and have security all the time?" Bannon retorted.
Rep. Dan Goldman didn't hold back with his criticism of CNN's useless presidential debate so-called "moderators," who sat there like a couple of stumps that lost their ability to speak when they should have been fact checking serial liar Trump during an interview this Friday on CNN's Anderson Cooper 360.
Cooper started things out by asking Goldman about the freakout on the left that Biden should be replaced due to his poor performance during the debate, with no one disputing that Biden had issues, and Goldman was pitch perfect with what the reaction should be:
REP.
In a preview from his interview on Sunday's This Week show, Bannon declared he feels “great” about reporting to prison on Monday for defying a Jan. 6 Committee subpoena. He even likened it to having “served my nation” in the Navy. “I’m serving my country right now as a political prisoner … of Nancy Pelosi and Merrick Garland,” he added.
I can't begin to tell you just how horrible this Chevron ruling is, and as usual with the Roberts court, in an earlier ruling in which the conservatives anointed themselves final authorities on everything, they got an important detail very wrong. Via the New Republic:
On Thursday, the justices ruled in favor of Ohio and several other states that challenged the Environmental Protection Agency’s plan to bring them into compliance with ozone pollution–control requirements.