Youtube comments of ๐ฅ ZCorp Alpha ๐ฅ (@zcorpalpha2462).
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KAMALA HARRIS - Grew up in Westmount Quebec, as she reports a Middle Class, Working Class Neighborhood.
The average home sales price in Westmount is $2,275,000, or $878/sqft. When you buy a home in Westmount, you can expect to pay between $1,337,500 to $2,997,500.
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KAMALA HARRIS - Grew up in Westmount Quebec, as she reports a Middle Class, Working Class Neighborhood.
The average home sales price in Westmount is $2,275,000, or $878/sqft. When you buy a home in Westmount, you can expect to pay between $1,337,500 to $2,997,500.
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Omar SM The episode opens with the Rangers communicating with a group of big-headed, agrarian aliens. The Rangers fail to understand anything the alien leader says, thinking he is speaking in "some kind of weird, jibber-jabber space dialect," though the alien is actually speaking in plain English. Nevertheless, the Rangers, believing that the aliens threaten America, label them as terrorists and open fire. The aliens manage to retreat back to an orphanage while the Rangers head back to their ship, take off, and fire a nuke back at the alien planet. While flying through space, a planet shows up on the spaceship's "Insurgent Scan" and the Rangers nuke it just to be safe.
After some congratulatory remarks by Commander, another planet shows up on the scan, this time with traces of minerals and gold. The Rangers land on the planet to investigate and encounter a squid-like alien native of the planet flagging them down for help. The alien recalls the story about a group of evil aliens who had recently invaded the planet intent on enslaving the natives, stealing their natural resources and destroying their culture. Suddenly, one of the evil aliens shows up and explains that his kind did this because they are evil and greedy.
Commander and Dick instantly sympathize with the evil alien and even invite him to go bass fishing. Frustrated, the squid alien makes one last-ditch plea for help but to no avail. The Rangers suddenly remember their original mission and blast both of the aliens regardless, for the sake of "Democracy and Liberty". The episode ends with Commander, once again, congratulating the other two rangers. The celebration is interrupted when Commander spots a glob of semen floating through the air, apparently from Dick who was busy masturbating while fantasizing about Commander.
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When I was 19, ๐, was 1994. Enjoying Jersey Shore, New York City, Up State New York Mountains ๐๏ธ, driving a Hyundai Tiberan into the ground ( I miss that car ), getting ready to go to Culinary School that September. But June, OMFG, I was enjoying LIFE ๐ฅ๐ฅ๐คฃ
Wasnโt even thinking ๐ญ about half the shit people today at that age worry about.
I had like 2 beautiful woman that year and clubs, I was always tall so they just let me in, stay out all night
Point is, I have beautiful memories of age 19, sad that kids today donโt
Age 48 1/2 now and I regret nothing
Oh, Occupy Wall Street was a Joke, cause I remember that rich girl protesting, homeless guy attacked her, she went running ๐โโ๏ธ to the NYPD for help ๐. Some trust fund baby
The entire thing was hilarious stupid
2008 / 2009 I believe
Pepperidge Farm Remembers ๐
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TM :
That's great! It starts with an earthquake,
Birds and snakes, an aeroplane.
Lenny Bruce is not afraid.
Eye of a hurricane, listen to yourself churn.
World serves its own needs, dummy, serve your own needs.
Feed it off an aux speak, grunt, no strength.
The ladder starts to clatter with fear fight, down, height.
Wire in a fire, representing seven games
In a government for hire and a combat site.
Left of west and coming in a hurry
With the furies breathing down your neck
Team by team reporters baffled, trumped, tethered, cropped.
Look at that low playing! Fine, then.
Uh oh, overflow, population, common group
But it'll do. Save yourself, serve yourself.
World serves its own needs, listen to your heart bleed,
Dummy, withโฆ
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Funny you made this unique YouTube video. Today, McDonalds really admitted loses across its financial markets. Not necessarily their fault, cause prices of food cost & ๐ฒ operating expenses. I predict 1. Fast Food 2. Chain Restaurants 3. Supermarkets will all go bankrupt by 2035 - 2040. Only ones that will survive will be Cosco & Samโs Club, they will work a deal with USA ๐บ๐ธ Government to open like a chain โ๏ธโ๐ฅ of Box ๐ฆ Stores run by the Government, only way to buy food, drink, materials for home ๐ก, especially since so many people are renting now, not owning .
United States ๐บ๐ธ of America Will resemble 1991 Soviet Union by 2041.
So, save money ๐ต, buy gold silver cooper bars, pay down your bills ๐ธ if possible.
2030 - 2045 will be very dark in the USA ๐บ๐ธ.
Maybe even consider a move to Mexico ๐ฒ๐ฝ, learn to barter with local cartels with liquor ๐ฅ- Tobacco ๐ - Metal Bars of Exchange ๐ฐ
Even Sports ๐ teams are showing damage .
Yes, a Future America ๐บ๐ธ lifestyle that will be extremely GRAY
God Help Us โ๏ธ
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Ricky Abril Robert โBobโ Massi, popularly known as โThe Property Man,โ is one of the most well-known legal faces in the United States. A high-profile attorney, Bob Massi began practicing law in 1980. He provides legal counsel and representation in the areas of personal injury, real estate, business law, wills, trusts, and probate. Massi is currently a candidate for the Democratic nomination to be governor of Massachusetts. Now, people want to know more about him, so here are some details from Bob Massiโs wiki.
Oh yea, ๐
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That makes zero sense
Jets have a contact, they canโt move for many years
Also, stadium ๐๏ธ replaced the old one .The meadows ( Like this wide spread open fields of tall weeds of New Jersey . Lot of Toxic Waste buried there . Very Unhealthy ๐ฅ. Always confuses team that play the Jets and Giants ( Share the same stadium ๐๏ธ), play in New Jersey. Actually they are the NJ Jets & Giants ๐๐บ๐ธ๐คทโโ๏ธ
I grew up in that area for 41 years, it stinks ๐ฆ to high heaven ๐
Jets Page ๐:
The two teams leased the parcel of land on which the stadium stands from the NJSEA for a 25-year term, with options to extend it which could eventually reach 97 years. After the 15th year of the lease, and every five years, hence; one of the two teams may opt out of the lease after giving the state 12 months notice.
Note ๐: Old granite mountain โฐ๏ธ in the meadows, that datesโ
Back to the dinosaurs ๐ฆ, its covered in Graffiti & homeless people for years
Always see it from New Jersey Turnpike on the way to New York City ๐ Manhattan
Also, thatโs where the MOB got rid of Problems ๐คฃ๐ต
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Facts โ๐ฅ๐
Economics
Free Money Didnโt Help People Find Jobs, Finland Says
By Kati Pohjanpalo
February 8, 2019 at 1:47:45 AM EST Updated on February 8, 2019 at 4:24:40 AM EST
Preliminary results show no major impact on employment levels
Full results of basic income trial not expected until 2020
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Distributing free money to the unemployed improves their well-being, but doesnโt appear to have any significant impact on their job prospects.
Thatโs according to the preliminary results of a landmark experiment in Finland, the first country in the world to trial a basic income at a national level.
The Nordic social welfare champion spent the last two years handing out 560 euros ($635) per month to a randomly selected group of 2,000 jobless people aged between 25 and 58. The basic aim was to explore new ways of distributing social security in a world where more workers are threatened by automation and fewer are likely to take on traditional nine-to-five jobs. The current system is seen as too bureaucratic and often dissuades people from taking on temporary or part-time work.
According to a preliminary assessment published on Friday by the social services agency Kela, the recipients of the monthly stipend spent on average about half a day more in employment per year than the control group.
โOn the basis of an analysis of register data on an annual level, we can say that during the first year of the experiment the recipients of a basic income were no better or worse than the control group at finding employment in the open labor market,โ said Ohto Kanninen, Research Coordinator at the Labour Institute for Economic Research.
The recipients did however report โless stress symptoms as well as less difficulties to concentrate and less health problems than the control group,โ said Minna Ylikanno, lead researcher at Kela. โThey were also more confident in their future and in their ability to influence societal issues.โ
Feeling Better
Self-perceived assessment of own state of health was better among recipients
Kela, Finnish Ministry of Social Affairs and Health
Old Debate
Kelaโs results are set to add fodder to a debate thatโs been intriguing political philosophers and economists for centuries: What happens when citizens are given money with no strings attached?
Against the background of a global discussion on how to deal with rising inequality, the pilot project has attracted international attention and is being closely watched by economists, sociologists and billionaires including Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk.
Read more on the history of a Universal Basic Income
The idea of a basic income as a replacement for means-tested welfare payments has its share of supporters on both the left and the right of the political spectrum. Advocates say it eliminates poverty traps and redistributes income while empowering the individual and reducing paperwork. The concept has inspired Italyโs populist government, which this week started honoring its election promise of a โcitizenโs incomeโ for the poor.
Read more on Italyโs Citizens Income
Other countries have taken different avenues, with the U.K. opting instead for a Universal Credit system that replaced six means-tested benefits and tax credits with a single monthly payment.
Finlandโs experiment was implemented by the government of Juha Sipila, the countryโs first millionaire prime minister, between 2017 and 2018.
Despite solid economic growth and falling unemployment, Finland suffers from an aging population. The country is seen as a trend-setter when it comes to social policy, with its education system and baby boxes (containers full of baby clothes and care products delivered to expectant mothers) admired around the world.
Useful Data
With its road-testing of a basic income, the government wanted to find out whether a basic income could simplify the social security system, eliminate excessive bureaucracy and remove incentive traps. Researchers at Kela also wanted to measure its impact on the participantsโ physical and psychological well-being.
Olli Karkkainen, an economist at Nordea Bank Abp, found the results surprising.
โI had expected the basic income experiment to have a greater positive impact on employment because incentives for work were boosted so significantly,โ he said in an interview.
Pirkko Mattila, Finlandโs minister of social affairs and health, said that despite its success in providing useful data, โthe basic income model developed for the experiment is not likely to be adopted as such for more extensive use.โ
According to some estimates, a nationwide basic income would add around 5 percentage points to Finlandโs public deficit relative to gross domestic product.
Fridayโs preliminary results only looked at the first year and focused on statistical data, with a final report not due until 2020.
โ With assistance by Leo Laikola, and Brad Cook
(Adds economistโs comment in 14th paragraph, chart.)
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I am 38, Thus, I would have loved having the Internet in 1984, lolย Ok, I was only 8 years old then, but schoolwork would have been faster, help my parents out at the time.......It would have been very helpful for directions, schoolwork, research, etc.....Have to change with the times. But, talking with a person is still important, but " Technology " does play a big part of society in 2014 & beyond.
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ย @quinwithersย Um, you really want to go there โ๏ธ
America gained 7 million new jobs โ more than three times government expertsโ projections.
Middle-Class family income increased nearly $6,000 โ more than five times the gains during the entire previous administration.
The unemployment rate reached 3.5 percent, the lowest in a half-century.
Achieved 40 months in a row with more job openings than job-hirings.
More Americans reported being employed than ever before โ nearly 160 million.
Jobless claims hit a nearly 50-year low.
The number of people claiming unemployment insurance as a share of the population hit its lowest on record.
Incomes rose in every single metro area in the United States for the first time in nearly 3 decades.
Delivered a future of greater promise and opportunity for citizens of all backgrounds.
Unemployment rates for African Americans, Hispanic Americans, Asian Americans, Native Americans, veterans, individuals with disabilities, and those without a high school diploma all reached record lows.
Unemployment for women hit its lowest rate in nearly 70 years.
Lifted nearly 7 million people off of food stamps.
Poverty rates for African Americans and Hispanic Americans reached record lows.
Income inequality fell for two straight years, and by the largest amount in over a decade.
The bottom 50 percent of American households saw a 40 percent increase in net worth.
Wages rose fastest for low-income and blue collar workers โ a 16 percent pay increase.
African American homeownership increased from 41.7 percent to 46.4 percent.
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A week ago Monday, Politico shook the world of media, politics, policy, and the nation with its now-infamous leak of a February draft opinion of the United States Supreme Court. Chief Justice John Roberts confirmed the leak in an angry response and warned of two things.
The opinion was a draft, and the justices had not yet voted on the outcome, so the initial 5-4 verdict in favor of overturning Roe was just speculation. Second, he commissioned an internal inquiry to find out the leaker's identity so that the Court could punish them.
What followed highlighted the stark differences confronting the nation - in ideology, hypocrisy, respect for tradition, and tactics - that unfortunately will bedevil us for decades to come.
The story broke down into two parts: the leak itself and the possibility that the Court could find Roe unconstitutional.
The White House gave the green light to the Left to play down the leak and accentuate the latter. "I don't think we have a particular view on [leaking], other than to say we certainly note the unprecedented nature of it," Jen Psaki, the press secretary, said. "Our focus is not losing sight of what the content is in the draft and what is at risk here."
Over at the House, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), the J6 Commission and rule-of-law purist when it suits him, went even further. "I don't care how the draft leaked. That's a sideshow," he tweeted. "What I care about is that a small number of conservative justices, who lied about their plans to the Senate, intend to deprive millions of women of reproductive care.โ
Liberal media outlets, delighted that a wedge issue was again brewing, went to work to provide cover for the Left's shocking position. Was the leak illegal? Could it be prosecuted? Was it unethical?
Reuters commissioned a fact-checking story of "experts." "Drafts of Supreme Court opinions are not classified documents like national security files," said the University of California, Berkeley criminal law professor Orin Kerr, ruling out prosecutions. But Kerr maintained that the person could be disbarred if the leaker were a lawyer, a far-lower penalty.
Not so fast, other experts chimed in.
The signaling was explicit. There would be no negative consequences for the leaker whatsoever. If the leaker remained anonymous - remember how Schiff vigorously protected the identity of the "Whistleblower" in Trump's first impeachment - they still stood to gain enormously, perhaps by writing an anonymous tell-all book and winning the gratitude of the pro-choice movement for generations.
The lack of morality of the leaker or how the leak had wrecked confidence in the only noble institution remaining in Washington became irrelevant. That the leak completed the Court's politicization meant nothing. The probability of violence as nationwide protests spawned, including intimidating the offending justices in front of their homes, was shrugged off as the price to pay in a fair fight.
As expected, social media erupted to drive the action. WISN 12 News showed a video of Iowa middle schoolers walking out in protest. Forgive us for thinking these weeks were dedicated to preparing for end-of-term finals.
One threatening tweet said, "If Kavanaugh doesn't like the pro-abortion protests outside his house, he can simply drive or relocate to a different state, right?" This message had 276,000 likes and was retweeted 30,000 times. Twitter censors meekly played along, not suspending the account.
Some conservatives fought back to highlight the Left's hypocrisy, but they were drowned out. A pro-lifer tweeted: "Just imagine if pro-life activists published a map with Ruth Bader Ginsburg's address, urged frenzied, panicking pro-lifers to go to her home and protest over abortion, and the Trump administration merely told the media, "The president's view is that there is a lot of passion."
So, what did Justice Alito's majority opinion say? "We hold that Roe and Casey must be overruled ..it is time to heed the Constitution and return the issue of abortion to the people's elected representatives."
A 5-4 majority, in a draft opinion, was not saying that abortions would be illegal. They were arguing that there is no federal constitutional protection afforded to abortion. In the spirit of federalism, where state's rights are paramount, each state could decide how much to allow or restrict abortion. Mississippi could outlaw abortions after 15 weeks. Some states could allow exceptions for rape and incest. Others could restrict exceptions to severe fetal abnormalities. Such an approach would be no different from each state's own rules about K-12 education, marriage, divorce, and police.
Rather than appreciate the elegance of the opinion, the Left decided to do what it always does best - organize protests with such overwhelming force to subdue all debate. Think BLM, the Georgia voter law, trans laws, and CRT. Sen. Marco Rubio, Florida Republican, said it best. "The next time you hear the far left preaching about how they are fighting to preserve our Republic's institutions & norms, remember how they leaked a Supreme Court opinion in an attempt to intimidate the justices on abortion."
Our latest Golden/TIPP Poll of 1,320 respondents confirmed the Left's support for the leak and, as a consequence, its aftermath. We asked, "Do you approve or disapprove of the leaking of the Supreme Court decision related to abortion?"
Overall, 53% disapproved and 29% approved. There were differences based on party and ideology:
Democrats approved 45%-38%
Republicans disapproved 69%-19%
Independents disapproved 57%-21%
Conservatives disapproved 66% to 26%
Moderates disapproved 52% to 24%
Liberals approved 44% to 43%
Most Americans Disapprove of the Supreme Court Leak
The New York Times has already raised trail balloons, indirectly inviting other leakers to act by promoting anxiety and tension within the Left. Adam Liptak, their Supreme Court reporter, wrote that contraception, gay intimacy, and same-sex marriage, rights established by three Supreme Court decisions, could now all be at risk.
Two weeks ago, no one would have believed that the United States Supreme Court would be at the center of dangerous discord and unrest. Accepting the Court's rulings as the law of the land, a respected tradition that has been the world's envy, is now at stake.
The Left's new mantra is: If you don't like the Court's draft opinions, leak internal deliberations to suit your narrative and drive protests to intimidate justices to go your way. Americaโs founding fathers are turning in their graves.
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Ready : ๐ฅโ
๐ฅ
A wealth tax might be unconstitutional. The Constitution puts limitations on โdirect taxes,โ with an exemption for the federal income tax. Legal experts differ on whether a wealth tax would be a direct tax, which would require a form of implementation so complex as to be unworkable. But everybody who has considered the issue knows there would be lawsuits right away, if Congress imposed a wealth tax, with the Supreme Court likely to decide. There are many other forms of taxation proven to be legal, and Congress could simply change the details to collect more from the wealthy. So why impose an unproven tax the Supreme Court could strike down, instead?
Wealth taxes have failed before in Congress. Legislators trying to draft a billionaire tax have run into many barriers when it comes to sorting out the details. Taxpayers hit by the tax would have to evaluate all their assets, every year, raising questions of how an already understaffed IRS would be able to audit those filings. Some assets lose value in a given year, another accounting headache, given that rich people, in theory, could report negative income every now and then. Some people donโt have the cash to pay millions or billions of dollars in taxes on assets, which would require forced asset sales. All in all, a billionaireโs tax might sound straightforward, but it would be cumbersome, in practice
Thank You ๐บ๐ธ
Please educate yourself Kyle on such subjects
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You critical of President Trump โ๏ธ๐คฃ๐บ๐ธ
Canada ๐ Problems :
As of December 2024, the average price of a home in Canada was $723,600 CAD. This is based on the MLSยฎ HPI Aggregate Composite, which is a benchmark price that includes the average cost of one-story and two-story homes, townhouses, and apartments.
Factors that affect home prices
Location
The price of a home can vary depending on the province or city. For example, in 2023, the average price of a home in British Columbia and Ontario was higher than in other provinces.
Type of home
The price of a home can also vary depending on the type of home, such as a one-story or two-story home, townhouse, or apartment.
Supply and demand
The number of homes available for sale and the number of buyers can affect the price of a home.
Historical home prices
In 2022, the average price of a home in Canada was $703,875.
In 2021, the average price of a home in Canada was $688,096.
In 2020, the average price of a home in Canada was $567,332.
Canada's healthcare system faces many challenges, including long wait times, lack of access to family doctors, and strained healthcare workers
Donโt Make Me Laugh ๐
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Andrew Cuomo
Andrew Mark Cuomo (/หkwoสmoส/; born December 6, 1957) is an American politician, author, and attorney who has been the 56th Governor of New York since January 1, 2011. A member of the Democratic Party, he was elected in 2010, holding the same position his father, Mario Cuomo, held for three terms from 1983 to 1995.
Andrew Cuomo
Andrew Cuomo 2017.jpg
56th Governor of New York
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 1, 2011
Lieutenant Robert Duffy
Kathy Hochul
Preceded by David Paterson
64th Attorney General of New York
In office
January 1, 2007 โ December 31, 2010
Governor Eliot Spitzer
David Paterson
Preceded by Eliot Spitzer
Succeeded by Eric Schneiderman
11th United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development
In office
January 29, 1997 โ January 20, 2001
President Bill Clinton
Preceded by Henry Cisneros
Succeeded by Mel Martรญnez
Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban Development for Community Planning and Development
In office
May 28, 1993 โ January 29, 1997
President Bill Clinton
Preceded by Skirma Kondratas
Succeeded by Saul N. Ramirez, Jr.
Personal details
Born Andrew Mark Cuomo
December 6, 1957 (age 59)
New York City, U.S.
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Kerry Kennedy (m. 1990; div. 2005)
Domestic partner Sandra Lee (2005โpresent)
Children 3
Parents Mario Cuomo
Matilda Raffa Cuomo
Residence Executive Mansion
Education Fordham University (BA)
Albany Law School (JD)
Website Government website
Born in Queens, New York, Cuomo is a graduate of Fordham University and Albany Law School of Union University, New York in New York. He began his career working as the campaign manager for his father, and then he was an assistant district attorney in New York City before entering private law practice. He founded Housing Enterprise for the Less Privileged (HELP USA) and was appointed chair of the New York City Homeless Commission, a position he held, from 1990 to 1993.
In 1993, Cuomo joined the Clinton Administration, when he was appointed assistant secretary for community planning and development in the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. From 1997 to 2001, he was U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development.
In 2006, Cuomo was elected Attorney General of New York. In May 2010, Cuomo announced he was running for governor in the 2010 election, and he won with 63% of the vote. During his first term, New York legalized same-sex marriage and toughened gun control. In 2014, he was elected to a second term with 54% of the vote.
Next President of the United States 2020 ๐บ๐ธ
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Awwwwwwwwwwwwww ๐
New Power Plant construction ๐ง runs on Propane Fuel
Not realizing that modern power electric โก๏ธ grid needs โ Gas & Propane โ, but these channels only say Green Energy.
Green Energy needs to be stored ( Solar & Wind ) in large storage batteries ๐ชซ, which are run on Gas & Propane โผ๏ธ๐คฃ๐ฅ๐คฆ
So, Senator Fetterman is actually correct โ
Young Environmentalists, thou cute, donโt seem to understand how American ๐บ๐ธ power ๐ฅ grid works .
Which is sad & absolutely hilarious ๐คฃ
You had your way, we all be living in a dark cave with zero power ๐
I wish college, university, or these groups would educate with facts ๐
Yes, itโs not a perfect system, but in 2024 - next few years, this is what we have. Enjoy having electricity โก๏ธ & fuel โฝ๏ธ or sit in the Dark ๐ณ๏ธ
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Reasons to Keep the Electoral College โฆโฆ
โฆ
The U. S. Government
U.S. Political System
History & Major Milestones
U.S. Constitution & Bill of Rights
U.S. Legal System
Defense & Security
Campaigns & Elections
Business & Finance
U.S. Foreign Policy
U.S. Liberal Politics
U.S. Conservative Politics
Women's Issues
Civil Liberties
The Middle East
Race Relations
Under the Electoral College system, it is possible for a presidential candidate to lose the nationwide popular vote, yet be elected president of the United States by winning in only a handful of key states.
Did the Founding Fathersโthe framers of the Constitutionโnot realize that the Electoral College system effectively took the power to select the American president out of the hands of the American people?
In fact, the Founders always intended that the statesโnot the peopleโselect the president.
FEATURED VIDEO
What You Need to Know About the Electoral College
Article II of the U.S. Constitution grants the power to elect the president and vice president to the states through the Electoral College system. Under the Constitution, the highest-ranking U.S. officials elected by the direct popular vote of the people are the governors of the states.
Beware the Tyranny of the Majority
To be brutally honest, the Founding Fathers gave the American public of their day little credit for political awareness when it came to selecting the president.
Here are some of their telling statements from the Constitutional Convention of 1787.
"A popular election in this case is radically vicious. The ignorance of the people would put it in the power of some one set of men dispersed through the Union, and acting in concert, to delude them into any appointment." โ Delegate Elbridge Gerry, July 25, 1787
"The extent of the country renders it impossible, that the people can have the requisite capacity to judge of the respective pretensions of the candidates." โ Delegate George Mason, July 17, 1787
"The people are uninformed, and would be misled by a few designing men." โ Delegate Elbridge Gerry, July 19, 1787
The Founding Fathers had seen the dangers of placing ultimate power into a single set of human hands. Accordingly, they feared that placing the unlimited power to elect the president into the politically naive hands of the people could lead to a "tyranny of the majority."
In response, they created the Electoral College system as a process to insulate the selection of the president from the whims of the public.
Small States Get Equal Voice
The Electoral College helps give rural states with lower populations an equal voice.
If the popular vote alone decided elections, the presidential candidates would rarely visit those states or consider the needs of rural residents in their policy platforms.
Due to the Electoral College process, candidates must get votes from multiple statesโlarge and smallโthus helping to ensure that the president will address the needs of the entire country.
Preserving Federalism
The Founding Fathers also felt the Electoral College system would enforce the concept of federalismโthe division and sharing of powers between the state and national governments.
Under the Constitution, the people are empowered to choose, through a direct popular election, the men and women who represent them in their state legislatures and in the United States Congress. The states, through the Electoral College, are empowered to choose the president and vice president.
A Democracy or Not?
Critics of the Electoral College system argue that by taking the selection of the president out of the hands of the public at large, the Electoral College system flies in the face of democracy. America is, after all, a democracy, is it not?
Two of the most widely recognized forms of democracy are:
Pure or Direct Democracy โ All decisions are made directly by a majority vote of all eligible citizens. By their vote alone, citizens can enact laws and select or remove their leaders. The power of the people to control their government is unlimited.
Representative Democracy โ The citizens rule through representatives whom they elect periodically to keep them accountable. The power of the people to control their government is thus limited by the actions of their elected representatives.
The United States is a representative democracy operated under a "republican" form of government, as provided for in Article IV, Section 4 of the Constitution, which states, "The United States shall guarantee to every State in the Union a Republican form of Government..." (This should not be confused with the Republican political party which is merely named after the form of government.)
A Republic
In 1787, the Founding Fathers, based on their direct knowledge of history showing that unlimited power tends to become a tyrannical power, created the United States as a republicโnot a pure democracy.
Direct democracy works only when all or at least most of the people participate in the process.
The Founding Fathers knew that as the nation grew and the time required for debating and voting on every issue increased, the publicโs desire to take part in the process would quickly decrease.
As a result, the decisions and actions taken would not truly reflect the will of the majority, but small groups of people representing their own interests.
The Founders were unanimous in their desire that no single entity, be it the people or an agent of the government, be given unlimited power. Achieving a "separation of powers" ultimately became their highest priority.
As a part of their plan to separate powers and authority, the Founders created the Electoral College as the method by which the people could choose their highest government leaderโthe presidentโwhile avoiding at least some of the dangers of a direct election.
But because the Electoral College has worked just as the Founding Fathers intended for over 200 years does not mean that it should never be modified or even abandoned completely.
Changing the System
Any change to the way America chooses its president will require a constitutional amendment. For this to come about:
First, a presidential candidate must lose the nationwide popular vote, but be elected through the Electoral College vote. This has already happened exactly four times in the nation's history:
In 1876, Republican Rutherford B. Hayes, with 4,036,298 popular votes won 185 electoral votes. His main opponent, Democrat Samuel J. Tilden, won the popular vote with 4,300,590 votes but won only 184 electoral votes. Hayes was elected president.1๏ปฟ
In 1888, Republican Benjamin Harrison, with 5,439,853 popular votes won 233 electoral votes. His main opponent, Democrat Grover Cleveland, won the popular vote with 5,540,309 votes but won only 168 electoral votes. Harrison was elected president.1๏ปฟ
In 2000, Republican George W. Bush lost the popular vote to Democrat Al Gore by a margin of 50,996,582 to 50,456,062. But after the U.S. Supreme Court halted vote recounts in Florida, George W. Bush was awarded the state's 25 electoral votes and won the presidency through a 271 to 266 vote margin in the Electoral College.1๏ปฟ
In 2016, Republican Donald Trump lost the popular vote with 62,984,825. Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton received a total of 65,853,516 popular votes. In the Electoral College, Trump was granted 306 votes to Clinton's 232.1๏ปฟ
It is sometimes reported that Richard M. Nixon received more popular votes in the 1960 election than winner John F. Kennedy, but official results showed Kennedy with 34,227,096 popular votes to Nixon's 34,107,646. Kennedy won 303 Electoral College votes to Nixon's 219 votes.1๏ปฟ
Next, a candidate that loses the popular vote but wins the electoral vote must turn out to be a particularly unsuccessful and unpopular president. Otherwise, the impetus to blame the nation's woes on the Electoral College system will never materialize.
Finally, the constitutional amendment must get a two-thirds vote from both houses of Congress and be ratified by three-fourths of the states.
Even if the first two criteria were met, it remains highly unlikely that the Electoral College system would be changed or repealed.
Under the above circumstances, it is probable that neither the Republicans nor the Democrats would hold a strong majority of seats in Congress. Requiring a two-thirds vote from both houses, a constitutional amendment must have strong bi-partisan supportโsupport it will not get from a split Congress. (The president cannot veto a constitutional amendment.)
To be ratified and become effective, a constitutional amendment must also be approved by the legislatures of 39 out of the 50 states. By design, the Electoral College system grants the states the power to elect the president of the United States.
How likely is it that 39 states are going to vote to give up that power? Moreover, 12 states control 53 percent of the votes in the Electoral College, leaving only 38 states that might even consider ratification.
No Bad Results
Even the harshest critics would have trouble proving that in more than 200 years of operation, the Electoral College system has produced bad results. Only twice have the electors stumbled and been unable to choose a president, thus throwing the decision to the House of Representatives.
And who did the House decide on in those two cases? Thomas Jefferson and John Quincy Adams.
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Note ๐: Thought ๐ญ you find this interesting: ๐
Another fiscal cliff is looming for millions of unemployed Americans.
The Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) and the Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation (PEUC) programs are set to expire at the end of 2020, leaving around 15 million jobless workers without any unemployment benefits unless Congress steps in.
โYou're really seeing a huge black-and-white change from very aggressive help to the unemployed, to almost nothing in a matter of months,โ Andrew Stettner, an unemployment insurance expert and senior fellow at the Century Foundation, told Yahoo Money. โIt's just a really untimely and very disastrous situation to let these benefits expire the day after Christmas.โ
Read more: Hereโs what you need to know about unemployment benefits eligibility
The expiration of those benefits, along with the exhausted savings of out-of-work Americans, could significantly reduce consumer spending and slow the economic recovery.
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - OCTOBER 17: People receive food at the Thessalonica Christian Church during a distribution site on October 17, 2020 in New York City. The Bronx, a borough which has long struggled with poverty and neglect, has been especially impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. The official unemployment rate in the Bronx is 21% while the unofficial number is presumed to be almost twice that. With many residents unable to afford health care and being home to a significant amount of front-line workers, the Bronx has the highest COVID-19 death rate in New York City. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
People receive food at the Thessalonica Christian Church during a distribution site on October 17, 2020 in New York City. The Bronx, a borough which has long struggled with poverty and neglect, has been especially impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
โWe pay attention to unemployment insurance when there's a recessionโ
Currently, 9.4 million workers rely on PUA, which provides unemployment benefits to contractors, self-employed, and other workers โ all of which will get their last payment on December 26 or 27.
Another 6 million will lose eligibility for PEUC at the end of the year, according to estimates by Ernie Tedeschi, a managing director and policy economist for Evercore ISI. PEUC provides an additional 13 weeks of benefits once jobless workers exhaust what their state typically provides โ approximately 26 weeks of benefits. Currently, 4 million receive PEUC, but more people are relying on it each week that passes by.
โThink about PEUC as being a shadow of the layoffs that we had earlier in the pandemic,โ Tedeschi told Yahoo Money. โAll the people who got laid off in March and April โ coincidentally six months ago โ are just now exhausting their state benefits and going over into PEUC.โ
Some of the people on PEUC may be able to move to Extended Benefits (EB) a federal program that provides additional 13 weeks but that program is also expiring in many states as their unemployment rates decrease.
Yahoo Money sister site Cashay has a weekly newsletter.
The expiration of PUA and PEUC would be the third financial cliff jobless Americans have faced: first, the expiration of the extra $600 in weekly unemployment benefits under the CARES Act in July and second, the expiration of the extra $300 under Lost Wages Assistance (LWA) program in September.
Read more: How long will your unemployment benefits last?
This comes as unemployment claims remain elevated with over 700,000 Americans filing for first-time unemployment benefits last week.
โWhat usually happens is we pay attention to unemployment insurance when there's a recession,โ Michele Evermore, a senior policy analyst at the National Employment Law Project, told Yahoo Money. โThen when it's over, most people go back to their lives and stop paying attention to unemployment.โ
โThe recovery loses even more momentumโ
While some unemployed Americans survived on accumulated savings over the last few weeks, most of that extra money will be depleted by mid-December if no more stimulus is passed, according to an analysis by Evercore ISI.
Jobless workers more than doubled their liquid savings between March and July, but two-thirds burned through those accumulated savings in August alone, according to a study from the JPMorgan Chase Institute.
โUnemployed workers wisely and prudently saved some of their benefits throughout the year,โ Tedeschi said. โThese workers will have mostly exhausted whatever savings they had by December.โ
Theyโve also reined in their spending, recording a 14% drop in August, following a 22% increase when the unemployed received that extra $600 in benefits, the JPMorgan Chase Institute study found.
Read more: Do you have to pay taxes on unemployment benefits?
At the beginning of November, spending was down by 6.4%, after being down just 3.5% in mid-October, according to data from Opportunity Insights and JPMorgan Chase. That trend will likely continue until the end of 2020 and accelerate even more in the beginning of 2021, according to Tedeschi, weighing on the economic recovery.
โIt's very possible that when you look at the aggregate, the United States would continue to grow after these programs expire,โ Tedeschi said. But โI would expect that it grows at a slower rate and that the recovery loses even more momentum.โ
Denitsa is a writer for Yahoo Finance and Cashay, a new personal finance website. Follow her on Twitter @denitsa_tsekova.
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Excuse Me Kyle โ๐ฅ๐ฅ
What is the Electoral College?
The Electoral College is a process, not a place. The Founding Fathers established it in the Constitution, in part, as a compromise between the election of the President by a vote in Congress and election of the President by a popular vote of qualified citizens.
What is the process?
The Electoral College process consists of the selection of the electors, the meeting of the electors where they vote for President and Vice President, and the counting of the electoral votes by Congress.
How many electors are there? How are they distributed among the States?
The Electoral College consists of 538 electors. A majority of 270 electoral votes is required to elect the President. Your State has the same number of electors as it does Members in its Congressional delegation: one for each Member in the House of Representatives plus two Senators. Read more about the allocation of electoral votes.
The District of Columbia is allocated 3 electors and treated like a State for purposes of the Electoral College under the 23rd Amendment of the Constitution. For this reason, in the following discussion, the word โStateโ also refers to the District of Columbia and โExecutiveโ to the State Governors and the Mayor of the District of Columbia.
How are my electors chosen? What are their qualifications? How do they decide who to vote for?
Each candidate running for President in your State has their own group of electors (known as a slate). The slates are generally chosen by the candidateโs political party in your State, but State laws vary on how the electors are selected and what their responsibilities are. Read more about the qualifications of the electors and restrictions on who the electors may vote for.
What happens in the general election? Why should I vote?
The general election is held every four years on the Tuesday after the first Monday in November. When you vote for a Presidential candidate you are actually voting for your candidate's preferred electors. Learn more about voting for the electors.
Most States have a โwinner-take-allโ system that awards all electors to the Presidential candidate who wins the State's popular vote. However, Maine and Nebraska each have a variation of โproportional representation.โ Read more about the allocation of electors among the States.
What happens after the general election?
After the general election, your State's Executive prepares a Certificate of Ascertainment listing the names of all the individuals on the slates for each candidate. The Certificate of Ascertainment also lists the number of votes each individual received and shows which individuals were appointed as your State's electors. Your Stateโs Certificate of Ascertainment is sent to NARA as part of the official records of the Presidential election.
The meeting of the electors takes place on the first Tuesday after the second Wednesday in December after the general election. The electors meet in their respective States, where they cast their votes for President and Vice President on separate ballots. Your Stateโs electorsโ votes are recorded on a Certificate of Vote, which is prepared at the meeting by the electors. Your Stateโs Certificate of Vote is sent to Congress, where the votes are counted, and to NARA, as part of the official records of the Presidential election.
Each Stateโs electoral votes are counted in a joint session of Congress on the 6th of January in the year following the meeting of the electors. Members of the House and Senate meet in the House Chamber to conduct the official count of electoral votes. The Vice President of the United States, as President of the Senate, presides over the count in a strictly ministerial manner and announces the results of the vote. The President of the Senate then declares which persons, if any, have been elected President and Vice President of the United States.
The President-elect takes the oath of office and is sworn in as President of the United States on January 20th in the year following the general election.
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No Excuse
I donโt mean to sound harsh, but, you always need a back up plan
I have a Home ๐ก with 2 1/2 Acres Paid Off
Debt ๐ธ Free
I am only Age 49, now I can relax rest of my life.
Wasnโt easy but it took planning & being smart, not stupid ๐ฅ๐ฅ๐คฃ
Note ๐: Sometimes have to eat soup ๐ instead of going out to Cheesecake Factory or something X tend your older wardrobe. Maybe, put off having kids till you can afford a child expenses for 18 years + University . I drive a 2011 Chevy Silverado, now she is all tricked out in โ Red & White โ detail, still cheaper to get parts then buying a 2025 Model. Individuals โ AKA DO NOT PLAN AHEAD โผ๏ธ โ
Facepalm ๐คฆ
My experience, A.I. does a good job ๐
Lot of people today are Lazy, Entitled, or Not Willing to UnLoad trucks at 3 AM
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A wealth tax might be unconstitutional. The Constitution puts limitations on โdirect taxes,โ with an exemption for the federal income tax. Legal experts differ on whether a wealth tax would be a direct tax, which would require a form of implementation so complex as to be unworkable. But everybody who has considered the issue knows there would be lawsuits right away, if Congress imposed a wealth tax, with the Supreme Court likely to decide. There are many other forms of taxation proven to be legal, and Congress could simply change the details to collect more from the wealthy. So why impose an unproven tax the Supreme Court could strike down, instead?
Wealth taxes have failed before in Congress. Legislators trying to draft a billionaire tax have run into many barriers when it comes to sorting out the details. Taxpayers hit by the tax would have to evaluate all their assets, every year, raising questions of how an already understaffed IRS would be able to audit those filings. Some assets lose value in a given year, another accounting headache, given that rich people, in theory, could report negative income every now and then. Some people donโt have the cash to pay millions or billions of dollars in taxes on assets, which would require forced asset sales. All in all, a billionaireโs tax might sound straightforward, but it would be cumbersome, in practice
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Andrew Cuomo
Andrew Mark Cuomo (/หkwoสmoส/; born December 6, 1957) is an American politician, author, and attorney who has been the 56th Governor of New York since January 1, 2011. A member of the Democratic Party, he was elected in 2010, holding the same position his father, Mario Cuomo, held for three terms from 1983 to 1995.
Andrew Cuomo
Andrew Cuomo 2017.jpg
56th Governor of New York
Incumbent
Assumed office
January 1, 2011
Lieutenant Robert Duffy
Kathy Hochul
Preceded by David Paterson
64th Attorney General of New York
In office
January 1, 2007 โ December 31, 2010
Governor Eliot Spitzer
David Paterson
Preceded by Eliot Spitzer
Succeeded by Eric Schneiderman
11th United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development
In office
January 29, 1997 โ January 20, 2001
President Bill Clinton
Preceded by Henry Cisneros
Succeeded by Mel Martรญnez
Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban Development for Community Planning and Development
In office
May 28, 1993 โ January 29, 1997
President Bill Clinton
Preceded by Skirma Kondratas
Succeeded by Saul N. Ramirez, Jr.
Personal details
Born Andrew Mark Cuomo
December 6, 1957 (age 59)
New York City, U.S.
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Kerry Kennedy (m. 1990; div. 2005)
Domestic partner Sandra Lee (2005โpresent)
Children 3
Parents Mario Cuomo
Matilda Raffa Cuomo
Residence Executive Mansion
Education Fordham University (BA)
Albany Law School (JD)
Website Government website
Born in Queens, New York, Cuomo is a graduate of Fordham University and Albany Law School of Union University, New York in New York. He began his career working as the campaign manager for his father, and then he was an assistant district attorney in New York City before entering private law practice. He founded Housing Enterprise for the Less Privileged (HELP USA) and was appointed chair of the New York City Homeless Commission, a position he held, from 1990 to 1993.
In 1993, Cuomo joined the Clinton Administration, when he was appointed assistant secretary for community planning and development in the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. From 1997 to 2001, he was U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development.
In 2006, Cuomo was elected Attorney General of New York. In May 2010, Cuomo announced he was running for governor in the 2010 election, and he won with 63% of the vote. During his first term, New York legalized same-sex marriage and toughened gun control. In 2014, he was elected to a second term with 54% of the vote.
Next President of the United States ๐บ๐ธ
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John Henrik Really ? I have Asian neighbors, they all live in a mansion. But, the entire family , I mean the whole family lives under one roof helping each other with bills, house, yard work, children, etc... Now, is something wrong with them ?
Thatโs how it is in China ๐จ๐ณ, thou they live in the United States. Just sharing a great example , maybe Americans should use this example
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A wealth tax might be unconstitutional. The Constitution puts limitations on โdirect taxes,โ with an exemption for the federal income tax. Legal experts differ on whether a wealth tax would be a direct tax, which would require a form of implementation so complex as to be unworkable. But everybody who has considered the issue knows there would be lawsuits right away, if Congress imposed a wealth tax, with the Supreme Court likely to decide. There are many other forms of taxation proven to be legal, and Congress could simply change the details to collect more from the wealthy. So why impose an unproven tax the Supreme Court could strike down, instead?
Wealth taxes have failed before in Congress. Legislators trying to draft a billionaire tax have run into many barriers when it comes to sorting out the details. Taxpayers hit by the tax would have to evaluate all their assets, every year, raising questions of how an already understaffed IRS would be able to audit those filings. Some assets lose value in a given year, another accounting headache, given that rich people, in theory, could report negative income every now and then. Some people donโt have the cash to pay millions or billions of dollars in taxes on assets, which would require forced asset sales. All in all, a billionaireโs tax might sound straightforward, but it would be cumbersome, in practice
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Oh My, whatโs this โ๐คฃ
On January 3, 2021, Cynthia Lummis, the first woman senator from Wyoming, is scheduled to commence her term, so the number of female senators is expected to reach 26 once again
Note ๐: She will be in office for 6 years & where is all the female Iโm government admires โโโ
What โ A conservative Lady, how evil ๐ฆนโโ๏ธ, LoL ๐ First in 144 Year History โ ๏ธโผ๏ธ
If it was AOC , be all over the news.
Republicans really didnโt do that bad & I feel they will win Georgia ๐บ๐ธ
So, political bias in the media. But, a ton of conservative people are awake now.
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Love Medicaid or hate it, by the year 2021, it is to be reorganized. I have seen videos on CSPAN, great channel. Anyway, when you have more people on Medicaid, then are paying into the system, " Tax Payers - Government $ , etc...", you have a serious problem. I do not know the solution, but it will run out like social security. No aid, no food, hundreds to thousands on the streets of America starving by the next decade. Unreal......
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Sometimes, as we age, we love time alone. I reside in " Deep Rural Southwest Georgia ". for 8 years now. 31 years 10 minutes from New York City. I loved it, but now I am older, I enjoy the open spaces & quiet. Goals change as we age, I still get out when I go to Atlanta. But, peace in todays world is nice. Some days I turn off my computers, some days I live on them !ย lol, It depends on what we need to get done. Thus, also, certain bills, events for college, events for work, you use the Internet. You have no choice but to use the web Mr. O'Reilly. Society today, deal with it. Peace
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Do people know , That the male body, if not released , naturally removes seman. When one male sleeps, it is so the body releases toxic elements. So, men masterbate weather they want to. Or not, lol. I try explaining this to a religious friend of mine, she did not believe me, and says i am going to hell now ! Porn ? Well, nothing like getting experience men. In the end, I prefer the real thing. Peace. ๐
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What gets me, ok, is that when the Gen Y, hits their 50's & 60's, around 2040, their is going to be an entire Generation broke. How will they retire ? How will they get medical care, food, everyday living expenses ? Will they ever be able to visit or travel ? Age sets in, health declines. I am already looking at my own life at age 39, to make sure their is a roof over my head at age 79. These are the decisionsmthat need to be made. The next ones up are Generation Z, & I am unsure how they will succeed ? ๐
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Does not matter. Thus, in the end, we all age. Men & Woman reach a point of no return. Nothing will help you in the end. Both sexes do not love each other for themselves & the human being element, we are doomed as a society. I am tall, fit, at age 39, but I understand that this will not last. Why can't I be attractive at age 79 ? Do we humans have a " AKA Date of Expiration " ? I am not talking death, thus, discussing, while still being alive, but considered useless sexually ? Very interesting & sad how society judges our physical selfs, over our internal selfs. Thank You ๐
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Okay, Lets be fair. I go about my business going to work, university, taking care of my errands, living in a nice rural part of the United States.... I totally Ignore people. Not in a mean way, I just do my own thing......Ladies smile at me ( I think I am decent, 6 Foot 5 Inches Tall - Toned ), It is amazing how many ladies wish to talk to me. The more I Ignore them, the more they approach me. I live my life as a man, & I do my own thing. Maybe more men should not really give a damn. Just do your own thing & Ignore people. World would be a better place.
P.S. I am happy. Working, own car, own home, not in debt. Age 39. Single. I am content.
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I remember the 1980's, ( I am 39 ), Commercials on TV were few, & they were fun to watch, like this : 1. Windex with something funny with theย sun. 2. Hersey's Bar 3. Just a little simple aspirin commercial, 4. preview of the late news, 5. back to the program, maybe even Jell-O or Hi C drink. The commercials were short & fun.
Now, going into 2015, half the program we are watching is major drug commercials, that last a crazy time period, & they have these weirdย brain teaser things that make you watch the whole commercial, ย telling you how this drug can have side affects !ย ย LoL, No, TV is sad now, thatย is why I only watch veryย few shows & I tape them, to skip the commercials on my DVR. We live in different times now......ย
.....& remember, their was only 5 channels on the TV then, 10, if you had early cable.
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Trump is correct about Venezuela ๐ป๐ช, Oil rigs are completely Rusted ๐ฅ. Due to neglect In a Tropical ๐ด region where equipment needs to be constantly maintained. Over 20 Years.
Chevron is already present, but it will take โ YEARS โ, Demolition, Rebuilding, Build New Rigs, Drill Oil, Refine Oil, Production, Shipping Capacity.
So, weโre looking at 2035 earliest before any Oil is available from Venezuela ๐ฅ๐ฅ๐บ๐ธ
Chevron feels major way for country to Regenerate itself, unless they wish to become a United States ๐บ๐ธ territory. Funding from USA Government. Thus, process would go faster
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ย @mskololia1ย You critical of President Trump โ๏ธ๐คฃ๐บ๐ธ
Canada ๐ Problems :
As of December 2024, the average price of a home in Canada was $723,600 CAD. This is based on the MLSยฎ HPI Aggregate Composite, which is a benchmark price that includes the average cost of one-story and two-story homes, townhouses, and apartments.
Factors that affect home prices
Location
The price of a home can vary depending on the province or city. For example, in 2023, the average price of a home in British Columbia and Ontario was higher than in other provinces.
Type of home
The price of a home can also vary depending on the type of home, such as a one-story or two-story home, townhouse, or apartment.
Supply and demand
The number of homes available for sale and the number of buyers can affect the price of a home.
Historical home prices
In 2022, the average price of a home in Canada was $703,875.
In 2021, the average price of a home in Canada was $688,096.
In 2020, the average price of a home in Canada was $567,332.
Canada's healthcare system faces many challenges, including long wait times, lack of access to family doctors, and strained healthcare workers
Donโt Make Me Laugh ๐
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ย @dawidj.vanhuffel8217ย Another Source:
15th Century โ The Chinese: This theory is espoused by a small group of scholars and amateur historians led by Gavin Menzies, a retired British Naval officer. It asserts that a Muslim-Chinese eunuch-mariner from the Ming Dynasty discovered America โ 71 years before Columbus. Zheng He was a real historical figure, who commanded a huge armada of wooden sailing vessels in the early 15th century. He explored Southeast Asia, India and the east coast of Africa using navigational techniques that were, at the time, cutting edge.
But Menzies, in his best-selling 2003 book, 1421: The Year China Discovered America, asserts that Zheng He sailed to the east coast of the United States, and may have established settlements in South America. Menzies based his theory on evidence from old shipwrecks, Chinese and European maps, and accounts written by navigators of the time. Menzies' scholarship, though, has been called into question. Many of his claims are presented "without a shred of proof," says historian Robert Finlay, writing in the Journal of World History. Indeed, most historians say the "China first" theory is full of holes.
-- Eric Weiner
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ย @brandonkruse6412ย A federal judge has ruled unconstitutional President Joe Biden's plan to forgive student loan debt. In a decision issued yesterday, U.S. District Judge Mark T. Pittman ruled in favor of plaintiffs Myra Brown and Alexander Taylor.
Brown has student loans but is entirely ineligible for Biden's forgiveness program because her loans are privately held. Taylor has loans but is ineligible for the full $20,000 in debt relief. The Job Creators Network Foundation sued on their behalf, arguing that Biden's bailout plan violated the Administrative Procedure Act (which requires a period of public comment) and that the Department of Education lacks the authority to implement the program.
Pittman found that the program did not violate administrative procedure. Instead, he found that the Higher Education Relief Opportunities for Students Act of 2003 ("HEROES Act")โwhich Biden used to justify his moveโdoes not actually "provide the executive branch clear congressional authorization to create a $400 billion student loan forgiveness program." Bident's student debt relief plan "is thus an unconstitutional exercise of Congress's legislative power and must be vacated."
"In this country, we are not ruled by an all-powerful executive with a pen and a phone," Pittman wrote in his decision. "Instead, we are ruled by a Constitution that provides for three distinct and independent branches of government."
In a statement yesterday, Job Creators Network Foundation President Elaine Parker said Biden's bailout "would have done nothing to address the root cause of unaffordable tuition: greedy and bloated colleges that raise tuition far more than inflation year after year while sitting on $700 billion in endowments. We hope that the court's decision today will lay the groundwork for real solutions to the student loan crisis."
Of course, this battle isn't over yet. The Department of Justice has filed an appeal, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said yesterday.
More than 26 million people have already applied for student loan forgiveness, she said, and the Biden administration will keep their information "so it can quickly process their relief once we prevail in court."
The Job Creators Network Foundation suit is one of several cases challenging the program. These include a lawsuit from six Republican-led states and one from the Cato Institute. "Cato's suit joins at least six others, with plaintiffs making various claims of harm," noted Neal McCluskey, director of Cato's Center for Educational Freedom, in a blog post. "The ultimate aim of all the suits, though, is the same: To stop a move that is not only patently unconstitutional, but will inflict many painful costs on society."
"The constitutional issue is straightforward: The Constitution gives the power of the purse to Congress, but in declaring that it would forgive up to $20,000 in loans for households making below $250,000 a year, the Biden administration essentially created about $400 billion in new spending," McCluskey wrote late last month.
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Great Workers, these are good people who excelled at their jobs, ok. Never missed a day, never late, produced, stayed late, etc.....are the ones being laid off or fired. Then people call them lazy, stupid, muchies off the system. They did not ask to be put in this situation ! Dream is dead, The afterlife is darkness rotting worms on flesh. Live what you can every day, the future is dark and bleak. Good Luck
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A week ago Monday, Politico shook the world of media, politics, policy, and the nation with its now-infamous leak of a February draft opinion of the United States Supreme Court. Chief Justice John Roberts confirmed the leak in an angry response and warned of two things.
The opinion was a draft, and the justices had not yet voted on the outcome, so the initial 5-4 verdict in favor of overturning Roe was just speculation. Second, he commissioned an internal inquiry to find out the leaker's identity so that the Court could punish them.
What followed highlighted the stark differences confronting the nation - in ideology, hypocrisy, respect for tradition, and tactics - that unfortunately will bedevil us for decades to come.
The story broke down into two parts: the leak itself and the possibility that the Court could find Roe unconstitutional.
The White House gave the green light to the Left to play down the leak and accentuate the latter. "I don't think we have a particular view on [leaking], other than to say we certainly note the unprecedented nature of it," Jen Psaki, the press secretary, said. "Our focus is not losing sight of what the content is in the draft and what is at risk here."
Over at the House, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), the J6 Commission and rule-of-law purist when it suits him, went even further. "I don't care how the draft leaked. That's a sideshow," he tweeted. "What I care about is that a small number of conservative justices, who lied about their plans to the Senate, intend to deprive millions of women of reproductive care.โ
Liberal media outlets, delighted that a wedge issue was again brewing, went to work to provide cover for the Left's shocking position. Was the leak illegal? Could it be prosecuted? Was it unethical?
Reuters commissioned a fact-checking story of "experts." "Drafts of Supreme Court opinions are not classified documents like national security files," said the University of California, Berkeley criminal law professor Orin Kerr, ruling out prosecutions. But Kerr maintained that the person could be disbarred if the leaker were a lawyer, a far-lower penalty.
Not so fast, other experts chimed in.
The signaling was explicit. There would be no negative consequences for the leaker whatsoever. If the leaker remained anonymous - remember how Schiff vigorously protected the identity of the "Whistleblower" in Trump's first impeachment - they still stood to gain enormously, perhaps by writing an anonymous tell-all book and winning the gratitude of the pro-choice movement for generations.
The lack of morality of the leaker or how the leak had wrecked confidence in the only noble institution remaining in Washington became irrelevant. That the leak completed the Court's politicization meant nothing. The probability of violence as nationwide protests spawned, including intimidating the offending justices in front of their homes, was shrugged off as the price to pay in a fair fight.
As expected, social media erupted to drive the action. WISN 12 News showed a video of Iowa middle schoolers walking out in protest. Forgive us for thinking these weeks were dedicated to preparing for end-of-term finals.
One threatening tweet said, "If Kavanaugh doesn't like the pro-abortion protests outside his house, he can simply drive or relocate to a different state, right?" This message had 276,000 likes and was retweeted 30,000 times. Twitter censors meekly played along, not suspending the account.
Some conservatives fought back to highlight the Left's hypocrisy, but they were drowned out. A pro-lifer tweeted: "Just imagine if pro-life activists published a map with Ruth Bader Ginsburg's address, urged frenzied, panicking pro-lifers to go to her home and protest over abortion, and the Trump administration merely told the media, "The president's view is that there is a lot of passion."
So, what did Justice Alito's majority opinion say? "We hold that Roe and Casey must be overruled ..it is time to heed the Constitution and return the issue of abortion to the people's elected representatives."
A 5-4 majority, in a draft opinion, was not saying that abortions would be illegal. They were arguing that there is no federal constitutional protection afforded to abortion. In the spirit of federalism, where state's rights are paramount, each state could decide how much to allow or restrict abortion. Mississippi could outlaw abortions after 15 weeks. Some states could allow exceptions for rape and incest. Others could restrict exceptions to severe fetal abnormalities. Such an approach would be no different from each state's own rules about K-12 education, marriage, divorce, and police.
Rather than appreciate the elegance of the opinion, the Left decided to do what it always does best - organize protests with such overwhelming force to subdue all debate. Think BLM, the Georgia voter law, trans laws, and CRT. Sen. Marco Rubio, Florida Republican, said it best. "The next time you hear the far left preaching about how they are fighting to preserve our Republic's institutions & norms, remember how they leaked a Supreme Court opinion in an attempt to intimidate the justices on abortion."
Our latest Golden/TIPP Poll of 1,320 respondents confirmed the Left's support for the leak and, as a consequence, its aftermath. We asked, "Do you approve or disapprove of the leaking of the Supreme Court decision related to abortion?"
Overall, 53% disapproved and 29% approved. There were differences based on party and ideology:
Democrats approved 45%-38%
Republicans disapproved 69%-19%
Independents disapproved 57%-21%
Conservatives disapproved 66% to 26%
Moderates disapproved 52% to 24%
Liberals approved 44% to 43%
Most Americans Disapprove of the Supreme Court Leak
The New York Times has already raised trail balloons, indirectly inviting other leakers to act by promoting anxiety and tension within the Left. Adam Liptak, their Supreme Court reporter, wrote that contraception, gay intimacy, and same-sex marriage, rights established by three Supreme Court decisions, could now all be at risk.
Two weeks ago, no one would have believed that the United States Supreme Court would be at the center of dangerous discord and unrest. Accepting the Court's rulings as the law of the land, a respected tradition that has been the world's envy, is now at stake.
The Left's new mantra is: If you don't like the Court's draft opinions, leak internal deliberations to suit your narrative and drive protests to intimidate justices to go your way. Americaโs founding fathers are turning in their graves.
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