Hoping ,to have more money than brains one day.
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yep, I was watching it and away it went
to bad its not on tv at all or streaming
alot of somebody I never heard of.
Air Force Lieutenant missing for nearly 80 years laid to rest at Jacksonville National Cemetery
https://www.actionnewsjax.com/news/local/air-force-lieutenant-missing-nearly-80-years-laid-rest-jacksonville-national-cemetery/PTN55UZF6RGSPIKCI3GVPFAKKU/?utm_campaign=trueanthem&utm_medium=trueanthem&utm_source=facebook&fbclid=IwY2xjawFQ5KVleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHdar26OI1TPRfPCwFKhAajnxBa6oaP04aBEK8l28ENClV51Q9NyQKKAX5g_aem_lppb_Hno3Slduad5TRnPFg
Robert Drake
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Debbie L. Gallamore
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I woke up and as I had my morning coffee, I realized that everything is about to change. No matter how I vote, no matter what I say, something evil has invaded our nation, and our lives are never going to be the same.
I have been confused by the hostility of family and friends. I look at people I have known all my life--so hate-filled that they agree with opinions they would never express as their own. I think that I may well have entered the Twilight Zone.
You can't justify this insanity. We have become a nation that has lost its collective mind!
• If a man pretends to be a woman, you are required to pretend with him.
• Somehow it’s un-American for the census to count how many Americans are in America.
• Russians influencing our elections are bad, but illegals voting in our elections are good.
• It was cool for Joe Biden to "blackmail" the President of Ukraine, but it’s an impeachable offense if Donald Trump inquires about it.
• Twenty is too young to drink a beer, but eighteen is old enough to vote.
• People who have never owned slaves should pay slavery reparations to people who have never been slaves.
• People who have never been to college should pay the debts of college students who took out huge loans for their degrees.
• Immigrants with tuberculosis and polio are welcome, but you’d better be able to prove your dog is vaccinated.
• Irish doctors and German engineers who want to immigrate to the US must go through a rigorous vetting process, but any illiterate gang-bangers who jump the southern fence are welcome.
• $5 billion for border security is too expensive, but $1.5 trillion for “free” health care is not.
• If you cheat to get into college you go to prison, but if you cheat to get into the country you go to college for free.
• People who say there is no such thing as gender are demanding a female President.
• We see other countries going Socialist and collapsing, but it seems like a great plan to us.
• Some people are held responsible for things that happened before they were born, and other people are not held responsible for what they are doing right now.
• Criminals are caught-and-released to hurt more people, but stopping them is bad because it's a violation of THEIR rights.
• And pointing out all this hypocrisy somehow makes us "racists"?!
Nothing makes sense anymore, no values, no morals, no civility and people are dying of a Chinese virus, but it racist to refer to it as Chinese even though it began in China.
We are clearly living in an upside down world where right is wrong and wrong is right, where moral is immoral and immoral is moral, where good is evil and evil is good, where killing murderers is wrong, but killing innocent babies is right.
Wake up America, the great unsinkable ship Titanic America has hit an iceberg, is taking on water, and is sinking fast. The choice is yours to make. What will it be? Time is short, make your choice wisely!
(Not my words but very accurate and disturbing!)
Feel free to copy and paste. I did.
Boeing on strike this am
Georgia Judge Dismisses Two Charges In Election Case Against Trump
By Ryan Saavedra
•
Sep 12, 2024 DailyWire.com
•
A judge in Georgia dismissed two criminal charges against former President Donald Trump on Thursday, ruling that prosecutors did not have the authority to bring the charges.
Fulton County Judge Scott McAfee ruled that state prosecutors could not file the charges because a U.S. Supreme Court decision “preempts the State’s ability to prosecute perjury and false filings in a federal district court.”
The decision meant that “Counts 14, 15, and 27 must be quashed,” McAfee ruled.
Out of the three counts that were dismissed, two of them were against Trump, including Count 15, Conspiracy to commit filing false documents; and Count 27, Filing false documents.
Trump was not charged with Count 14, Criminal attempt to commit filing false documents, but others in the racketeering case were.
Trump has now defeated five of the original 13 charges he was hit with in District Attorney Fani Willis’ controversial indictment from August 2023.
The other three charges that Trump has beaten includes: Count 5, Solicitation of violation of oath by public officer, Count 28, Solicitation of violation of oath by public officer; and Count 38, Solicitation of violation of oath by public officer.
The charges that remain against Trump include:
Count 1, Violation of the Georgia RICO Act
Count 9, Conspiracy to commit impersonating a public officer
Count 11, Conspiracy to commit forgery in the first degree
Count 13, Conspiracy to commit false statements and writings
Count 17, Conspiracy to commit forgery in the first degree
Count 19, Conspiracy to commit false statements and writings
Count 29, False statements and writings
Count 39, False statements and writings
“President Trump and his legal team in Georgia have prevailed once again,” said Steve Sadow, Trump’s lead attorney on the case. “The trial court has decided that counts 15 and 27 in the indictment must be quashed/dismissed.”
https://www.dailywire.com/news/georgia-judge-dismisses-two-charges-in-election-case-against-trump?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=dwbrand
thats why there here....have fun
Hawaii is saying they do not have to adhere to The Laws
these european players are brutal
Hawaiian Supreme Court rules that individuals have no Second Amendment rights under its history, state law, and “spirit”
By Standing for Freedom Center Staff / Tuesday, February 13, 2024
“As the world turns, it makes no sense for contemporary society to pledge allegiance to the founding era’s culture, realities, laws, and understanding of the Constitution. ‘The thing about the old days, they the old days.’”
Justices with the Hawaii Supreme Court argue that Hawaii must follow the “spirit of Aloha,” not the rulings of the U.S. Supreme Court, when it comes to the Second Amendment rights of individuals.
The Supreme Court of Hawaii has handed down a decision that claims there is no right to carry a firearm for self-defense in the state, while also chastising the U.S. Supreme Court and making the assertion that Hawaii is not required to follow its rulings on the Second Amendment.
The judges made the 5-0 ruling last week in a case involving Christopher Wilson, a man who was arrested in 2017 for carrying a firearm in violation of Section 134-25, a state law that doesn’t allow people to carry a firearm outside the home.
Wilson filed suit to have the charges dismissed, claiming the law violates his Second Amendment right to carry a firearm for self-defense.
A district court initially upheld the charge. However, following the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in New York State Pistol & Rifle Association v. Bruen that found that there is a Second Amendment right to carry a firearm outside the home for self-defense, a circuit court judge reversed the decision and dismissed the charges against Wilson.
The state appealed to the Supreme Court of Hawaii, which this past week dismissed Wilson’s suit, a decision that will now require him to stand trial.
The decision by the Supreme Court of Hawaii has garnered national attention for its brazen refusal to follow the Supreme Court’s ruling, as well as its unique reasoning.
While Article 1, Section 17 of the Hawaiian Constitution is nearly identical to the words of the Second Amendment, the state supreme court found that there is actually no right to carry a firearm in the Hawaiian Constitution and argued that the U.S.’s highest court also got it wrong when reviewing the U.S. Constitution.
“We read those words differently than the current United States Supreme Court,” read the unanimous ruling, which was written by Justice Todd Eddins.
The opinion claimed that when the state’s supreme court sees things differently than the Supreme Court, “this court frequently walks another way. Long ago, the Hawai?i Supreme Court announced that an ‘opinion of the United States Supreme Court . . . is merely another source of authority, admittedly to be afforded respectful consideration, but which we are free to accept or reject in establishing the outer limits of protection afforded by . . . the Hawai?i Constitution.’”
The judges stated that, until the last few decades, there was no understanding that the Second Amendment provided individuals the right to bear arms. They also argued that justices had cherrypicked laws and historical tradition, while ignoring anything that would debunk their reasonings in order to come to its 2022 decision in Bruen, its 2008 decision in District of Columbia v. Heller, and its 2010 decision in McDonald v. City of Chicago, all of which affirm the individual’s right to self-defense under the Constitution.
The Hawaiian Supreme Court also took issue with the test established by the U.S. Supreme Court in Bruen, which requires judges to look to the historical tradition of firearms restrictions when deciding Second Amendment cases.
“Time-traveling to 1791 or 1868 to collar how a state regulates lethal weapons — per the Constitution’s democratic design — is a dangerous way to look at the federal constitution. The Constitution is not a ‘suicide pact,’” the judges wrote. “We believe it is a misplaced view to think that today’s public safety laws must look like laws passed long ago. Smoothbore, muzzle-loaded, and powder-and-ramrod muskets were not exactly useful to colonial era mass murderers.”
The court even attacked the concept of history itself, citing Melissa Murray’s, Children of Men: The Roberts Court’s Jurisprudence of Masculinity to argue that “the current Court ‘frequently relies [on] moments in which women and people of color were expressly excluded from political participation and deliberation.’”
“History is messy. It’s not straightforward or fair. It’s not made by most,” they wrote.
The court reasoned, “As the world turns, it makes no sense for contemporary society to pledge allegiance to the founding era’s culture, realities, laws, and understanding of the Constitution. ‘The thing about the old days, they the old days.’”
The last line quoted in the ruling was by a fictional drug dealer in the gritty HBO crime series “The Wire.”
Oddly enough, the court then spent several pages arguing that restriction of firearms was consistent with the history of the Kingdom of Hawaii before it was part of the U.S., most notably the edicts and laws of King Kamehameha I and Queen Lili?uokalani.
Then its argument took an even more interesting turn.
“In Hawai?i, the Aloha Spirit inspires constitutional interpretation,” Justice Eddins argued, explaining,
“When this court exercises ‘power on behalf of the people and in fulfillment of [our] responsibilities, obligations, and service to the people’ we ‘may contemplate and reside with the life force and give consideration to the “Aloha Spirit.”’ The spirit of Aloha clashes with a federally-mandated lifestyle that lets citizens walk around with deadly weapons during day-to-day activities.”
Anne Lopez, Hawaii’s Attorney General, praised the decision, stating,
“This is a landmark decision that affirms the constitutionality of crucial gun-safety legislation. Gun violence is a serious problem, and commonsense tools like licensing and registration have an important role to play in addressing that problem. More broadly, Justice Eddins’ thoughtful and scholarly opinion for the court provides an important reminder about the crucial role that state courts play in our federal system.”
While Lopez supported the decision, others found the ruling hard to believe.
Jonathan Turley, a professor of constitutional law at George Washington University, addressed the court ruling in his blog recently, writing,
“It has been 65 years since Hawaii became a state, but the Hawaiian Supreme Court appears to be having second thoughts. In an extraordinary ruling, the unanimous Supreme Court rejected the holdings of the United States Supreme Court on the Second Amendment as inapplicable to the 50th state. Hawaii apparently is controlled not by the precedent of the Supreme Court but the ‘spirit of Aloha.’ While Queen Lili?uokalani would be pleased, the justices on that ‘other’ Supreme Court may view such claims as more secessional than spiritual.”
The Hawaiian Supreme Court’s opinion is all over the map. On the one hand, the justices tried to bolster dismissal of the Bruen test by dismissing the wisdom of the Founders and colonial firearm traditions. But then on the other, it relies on Hawaii’s own historical tradition, beginning with its history as a kingdom, of excluding an individual right to carry a firearm as their reasoning for denying the plaintiff his Second Amendment rights.
Unique in this decision are the Hawaiian justices’ attitude toward the U.S. Supreme Court. Similar to members of today’s mainstream media, they appear to believe that the decisions of America’s ultimate judicial authority hold no legitimacy when they go against their own worldview. The Hawaiian court’s decision is full of condescension, accusations, and falsehoods directed at the High Court that reads more like that of an angry college freshman churning out the first draft of a political science essay than judges who respect the Constitution and the concept of federalism.
This can be seen most clearly when the judges move away from the issue of the Second Amendment and try to relitigate the Dobbs case, which overturned Roe v. Wade. Here, they truly let their inner activist shine.
The Supreme Court of Hawaii argues,
“Bruen, McDonald, Heller, and other cases show how the Court handpicks history to make its own rules. (At the same time that it purported to anchor its holding in American common law, the Dobbs majority engaged in historical fiction, disregarding evidence that undermined its view and ignoring the reproductive autonomy that American women originally exercised — autonomy that included matters of pregnancy, childbirth, and abortion.)”
The Hawaiian Supreme Court was very insistent that words have meaning and that the exact wording of an amendment matters. That was the main crux of their argument in this case: The Second Amendment doesn’t grant a right to everyday citizens because it doesn’t use the words “individual” or “self-defense.”
However, the 14th Amendment, which was used to insist on the constitutionality of Roe v. Wade, doesn’t use the words “abortion” or “privacy” nor does it state anything about the “right” to either. It actually says that no state shall deprive any person of the right to life, something an abortion clearly does by killing a child.
The Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in the Dobbs case because it determined that the case was wrongly decided — that there is, in fact, no right to an abortion in the U.S. Constitution — not because they were imposing their views on women. Abortion had nothing to do with the case the Hawaiian Supreme Court was deciding, but they used it to bolster their own views, effectively stating that the Dobbs decision, and any others that it doesn’t favor, including Bruen, Heller, and McDonald, delegitimize the Supreme Court’s authority.
This is a very dangerous proposition whereby political judges have decided they can follow those U.S. Supreme Court decisions they like but defy those with which they disagree.
Hawaii may have been the 50th and final state admitted to the Union, but that does not mean its residents have fewer rights than those who live in other states. The right to own a firearm for self-defense is an inalienable right, safeguarded by the Constitution of the United States, just like all other rights.
If Hawaii wants to secede and becomes its own kingdom, it can once again rule according to the “spirit of Aloha,” but until then, it, like all other states, must submit to the U.S. Constitution as written by the Founding Fathers and interpreted by the U.S. Supreme Court — not the Hawaiian Supreme Court
https://www.standingforfreedom.com/2024/02/hawaiian-supreme-court-rules-that-individuals-have-no-second-amendment-rights-under-its-history-state-law-and-spirit/?fbclid=IwY2xjawFPmbhleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHdTpfF-9R_FrbiqnZf1Nq9pNP20A7hiIIePsQnC76RE4oAA0qdrPk9FKSw_aem_1cUhBIBPWgCzpG5FvMnZ_g
Royal County Down checks in at No. 1 on Golf Digest’s most recent World’s 100 Greatest Golf Courses list. It’s also first on Golfweek’s Best International Courses for 2024 and sixth on Golf.com’s Top 100 Courses in the World for 2023-24.
okeydokey
you guys sure keep em coming.....
wouldnt hurt with 22's....
thats the nice thing about getting old .....zzzzzzzzzzzz
one of the best narrators ever
yay, ill ck in tomorrow
birdies or better and tiers are up now.....thats 4....
NEW YORK — (AP) — James Earl Jones, who overcame racial prejudice and a severe stutter to become a celebrated icon of stage and screen — eventually lending his deep, commanding voice to CNN, "The Lion King" and Darth Vader — has died. He was 93.
His agent, Barry McPherson, confirmed Jones died Monday morning at home in New York's Hudson Valley region. The cause was not immediately clear.
The pioneering Jones, who in 1965 became one of the first African American actors in a continuing role on a daytime drama ("As the World Turns") and worked deep into his 80s, won two Emmys, a Golden Globe, two Tony Awards, a Grammy, the National Medal of Arts and the Kennedy Center Honors. He was also given an honorary Oscar and a special Tony for lifetime achievement. In 2022, a Broadway theater was renamed in his honor.
well we got 2 procores.....no irish open yet
sounds good
tough pickin
true,but if not its not a worry
agreed, he aint even won a championship
It puzzles me is why was he even there with 2 1/2 hours before gametime, you would think he should have been there well before he was.....
Hotlanta....
24,12,6,5.....should be a good race
WOW...Tyreke Hill arrested on way to game with Jaguars, ala Scottie Sheffler arrested for trying get through traffic....2 hours to game time !!!!!
that will save alot of money
Kamala is doing the same thing in present time to carry over to the next time she has time to discuss timing.....reparetions is a Joke
no picks are working today, only 2 golfers under par today, Soudersburg and Blixt......through 10
VA ordered to build thousands more homes for veterans on West Los Angeles campus
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/realestate/va-ordered-to-build-thousands-more-homes-for-veterans-on-west-los-angeles-campus/ar-AA1q8vF9?ocid=msedgntphdr&cvid=832191afdb1d4e3cabe4cd8de6a259f3&ei=147