FAFO

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Gentile, a father of two, was stopped by officials in February after returning from a trip abroad and landing at Los Angeles International Airport. DHS officials confiscated his green card and Argentine passport and directed him to report to a Customs and Border Protection (CBP) office in Raleigh, North Carolina, where he lives. Officials there detained him and sent him to a local county jail. He was then transferred to Stewart Detention Center.

Gentile was convicted in 2020 of infliction of injury and sentenced to three years' probation, according to court records seen by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. The case was closed in 2023.
Sending oh noes and anyways
 
Twice a month, planes land on the gravel airstrip in Noatak, Alaska, about 70 miles north of the Arctic Circle, carrying the diesel that residents need to heat their homes in the bitter cold.

And once a month, they receive electricity bills four times higher than those for most of the rest of the country that include two separate charges: one for the cost of the energy itself, and another for the cost of the fuel used to fly it there.

“The fuel cost is the thing that kills,” Bessie Monroe, 56, who works as an assistant to the village’s tribal administrator, said as she pulled up her bill. Even though she supplements the heat from her generator with a wood-burning stove — and can still sometimes feel the chill of wind through one of her walls — Ms. Monroe has paid roughly $250 a month for electricity for her small one-bedroom house this winter.
So a few years ago, in an effort to build a local source of electricity and save residents money, the Inupiat village of 500 worked with its utility company to install a small farm of solar panels. And when Congress approved new tax credits for clean energy projects in 2022 through the Inflation Reduction Act, signed into law by President Joseph R. Biden Jr., the village saw an opportunity to buy more.

But the fate of the project — and dozens more like it in Alaska and around the country — is now in doubt, leaving villagers unsure of their financial future.

Those doubts are at the root of an intraparty feud unfolding among Republicans in Washington, where G.O.P. members of Congress are casting about for ways to pay for President Trump’s domestic agenda. Some fiscal hard-liners have zeroed in on clean energy tax credits as a prime target for elimination.


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40-026 Noatak - Harris: 19 19.19%, Trump: 66 66.67%
Wanting to go backwards on energy and giving to China and other countries the gift of being the leaders in energy technology for the next century seems kind of…stupid.
 
Gawd i love this thread. I feel a little bad for the ignorant non-voters, the 1/3 of all eligible who are too dismayed with politics to vote at all. But these voters - F 'em.
I feel bad for the uninformed voters who were taken advantage of. Those working 2 or 3 jobs that don't have much time to read about the candidates or were mislead by their church (my father in law).

I don't feel bad for the Ramrousers of the world that actually listened and knew trump was planning this shit and voted for him. Those who actually want what is happening.
 
I feel bad for the uninformed voters who were taken advantage of. Those working 2 or 3 jobs that don't have much time to read about the candidates or were mislead by their church (my father in law).

I don't feel bad for the Ramrousers of the world that actually listened and knew trump was planning this shit and voted for him. Those who actually want what is happening.
Lovin’ every second of the Golden Age. Heading to my beach house tomorrow for a CLE conference at Amelia Island. Peace.
 
I feel bad for the uninformed voters who were taken advantage of. Those working 2 or 3 jobs that don't have much time to read about the candidates or were mislead by their church (my father in law).

I don't feel bad for the Ramrousers of the world that actually listened and knew trump was planning this shit and voted for him. Those who actually want what is happening.
I hear ya… but I don’t feel bad for the uninformed either. I don’t care how many hours they work. Not paying attention, following blindly their church leaders or the faux news channel they watch on what little free time they have. Now they’re finding out. It’s too late. They should have “found out” first and voted as an informed individual. But no. They fucked around and now they can find out. We paid attention but we still have to eat the same shit sandwich. The fact that somebody else who didn’t pay attention and voted for the shit sandwich can eat it too without me feeling sorry for them. No disrespect to you or your FIL, but I’m not going to feel sorry for anybody who actually voted for this shit.

That’s what this entire thread is about. They fucked around and now they’re finding out.
 

American Automotive Policy Council President Matt Blunt today issued the following statement on the Trump administration’s United Kingdom trade announcement:



“The U.S. automotive industry is highly integrated with Canada and Mexico; the same is not true for the U.S. and UK. We are disappointed that the administration prioritized the UK ahead of our North American partners. Under this deal, it will now be cheaper to import a UK vehicle with very little U.S. content than a USMCA compliant vehicle from Mexico or Canada that is half American parts. This hurts American automakers, suppliers, and auto workers. We hope this preferential access for UK vehicles over North American ones does not set a precedent for future negotiations with Asian and European competitors,” said Governor Matt Blunt, president of the American Automotive Policy Council.
 

WEIRTON, W.Va. (WTRF) — The future of the proposed transformer manufacturing facility in Weirton is facing uncertainty after union leaders learned that the project is facing major challenges.

Earlier this week, union leaders with the United Steelworkers say they met with company officials with Cleveland-Cliffs to talk about plans for the transformer facility in Weirton.





What they thought was going to be a meeting to discuss bringing back workers to the idle mill turned into unexpected news of an indefinite delay for the project.

United Steelworkers staff representative John Saunders says the reason for the pause in plans is because of financial issues and the uncertainty surrounding tariffs.

He says the change in plans leaves a lot of questions about what’s next.

...
 

Louisiana lawmakers are asking Congress to bring back a $1 billion federal program that allows schools, child care programs, and food banks to purchase locally grown produce and protein.

The Local Food for Schools Cooperative Agreement Program and Local Food Purchase Assistance Cooperative Agreement Program, both administered through the U.S. Department of Agriculture, were axed in March as part of the Trump administration’s move to reduce federal government spending.

Louisiana Agriculture Commissioner Mike Strain said some small and mid-sized farms had already started planting and planning for their crops to be bought by schools or food banks through the defunded initiatives.

“[If they are lost], it would be detrimental for the schools, it would be detrimental for those small farmers because they really rely on this,” Strain said.

Louisiana will lose out on more than $18 million from the food-buying programs over the next three years, according to federal data. State Sen. Patrick McMath, R-Covington, authored Senate Concurrent Resolution 20 to urge Congress to put the funding back, specifically for schools.
 

Louisiana lawmakers are asking Congress to bring back a $1 billion federal program that allows schools, child care programs, and food banks to purchase locally grown produce and protein.

The Local Food for Schools Cooperative Agreement Program and Local Food Purchase Assistance Cooperative Agreement Program, both administered through the U.S. Department of Agriculture, were axed in March as part of the Trump administration’s move to reduce federal government spending.

Louisiana Agriculture Commissioner Mike Strain said some small and mid-sized farms had already started planting and planning for their crops to be bought by schools or food banks through the defunded initiatives.

“[If they are lost], it would be detrimental for the schools, it would be detrimental for those small farmers because they really rely on this,” Strain said.

Louisiana will lose out on more than $18 million from the food-buying programs over the next three years, according to federal data. State Sen. Patrick McMath, R-Covington, authored Senate Concurrent Resolution 20 to urge Congress to put the funding back, specifically for schools.
When you wake up and realize YOU are the socialist you decry.
 
Well sure, but I feel completely owned, so I guess he won?
I went to his Twitter page and he's also a right-wing radio blowhard talk show host, and far from being contrite he's still ridiculing liberals and making fun of all of the FAFO people flooding his board pointing out how Dear Leader killed his business. He's now claiming that Trump has "joined" Leftists and Libertarians in killing small businesses like his. He also says that he "tried" to run for POTUS himself in 2016 but nobody would vote for him (gee, I wonder why?) so you can't blame him for what's happening in the country. To be honest, from reading his twitter page he sounds like a really weird, oddball dude. In other words, a perfect Trumper.
 
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