How are they stealing passwords that I DON'T even know???
06.12.2025 05:53 β π 2 π 1 π¬ 0 π 0@rcinnc1.bsky.social
Left a hellious hole behind, anyone here wanna meet up at the library? RESIST UNITE FIGHT - Letβs take care of one another. No sex bots, MAGA, crypto, DMs. GO Duke Nation! π
How are they stealing passwords that I DON'T even know???
06.12.2025 05:53 β π 2 π 1 π¬ 0 π 0Laws aren't real. They exist solely on account of buy-in from society's participants. Once one side disengages, you no longer reside in a society based on laws. You live in a society based on power and armed force. I am begging folks to accept this so we can get moving.
06.12.2025 04:19 β π 696 π 229 π¬ 22 π 7@Acyn Hannity: You put a post on X after this happened and said there's a massive cover-upβ¦ they don't want you to know who it is because it's either a connected anti-Trump insider or an inside job. Bongino: I was paid in the past for my opinions. One day I will be back in that space but that's not what I'm paid for now. Iβm paid to be your deputy director and we base investigations on facts.
oh my god, he admit it x.com/Acyn/status/...
05.12.2025 15:25 β π 1725 π 355 π¬ 60 π 52The voice of America ladies and gentlemen β¦ on a Murdoch outlet
06.12.2025 04:36 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Thank you. π€
06.12.2025 04:31 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0@jjindc.bsky.social what say you about possible flight dates?
06.12.2025 04:20 β π 3 π 1 π¬ 1 π 0@jjindc.bsky.social what say you about possible flight dates?
06.12.2025 04:20 β π 3 π 1 π¬ 1 π 0NEW: Judge Guaderrama rapped the administration for the "blatant lawlessness" of of the deportation and ordered the man's return by Dec. 12. The admin said it had a "tentatively scheduled" flight on Dec. 4, but it fell through.
www.politico.com/news/2025/12...
It happened again: The Trump administration has admitted illegally deporting a man to Guatemala despite an immigration judge's order that he was likely to be tortured there.
A judge has ordered the administration to facilitate his return by next week.storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.us...
The President of the United States sets the golden standard folks β¦ "nobody stood up and objected, nobody smiled, and nobody rolled their eyes.β
06.12.2025 04:15 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0Thereβs no telling how many similar stories are not being told for fear of retaliation.
By now, everyone should realize Trump is not going after violent criminals or the worst of the worstβhe is terrorizing everyone, including U.S. citizens, and their loved ones.
I am calling for Wilmerβs immediate release from NWIPCβhe has NO criminal convictions, he poses no threat to the community, and he urgently needs appropriate medical care since ICE is denying him the treatment he requires.
I am grateful for Wilmerβs willingness to let me share his story.
My constituent, Wilmer, was mauled by an ICE attack dog despite the fact that, as he has consistently explained, he was not resisting arrest or trying to fleeβhis wife and young children, all U.S. citizens, were forced to watch helplessly as Wilmer was violently attacked and dragged away.
06.12.2025 02:41 β π 7386 π 3863 π¬ 557 π 325βMetro Nashville is suing the federal government, saying new U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) rules could force hundreds of Nashville families back into homelessness or life-threatening situations.β www.wsmv.com/2025/12/06/l...
06.12.2025 02:49 β π 677 π 260 π¬ 22 π 7JUST IN: Chief Justice John Roberts puts temp. hold on 4th Circuit ruling in immigration judges' challenge to policy limiting their speech re: work matters. Trump admin wants case sent to MSPB & out of district court. Doc: www.documentcloud.org/documents/26...
05.12.2025 19:26 β π 34 π 24 π¬ 5 π 0DOJ also invokes 'leading jurist' standard to argue that if DC Circuit Judge Greg Katsas found Boasberg's order ambiguous, no one can be guilty of violating it. Doc: storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.us...
06.12.2025 00:08 β π 27 π 7 π¬ 3 π 0JUST IN: DOJ files 1-page Noem, Blanche declarations on Alien Enemies Act deportations being investigated by Judge Boasberg as potential contempt of court. Basically a stonewall, saying the legal advice is privileged storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.us... storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.us...
06.12.2025 00:04 β π 322 π 101 π¬ 17 π 6JUST IN: Comey friend/lawyer/adviser Dan Richman files for temporary restraining order barring further govt use of electronic data he shared w/feds. They got warrants for some but not all info & may have pored through all in bid to charge Comey. Doc: www.documentcloud.org/documents/26...
06.12.2025 03:18 β π 60 π 23 π¬ 0 π 0Boat Strike Survivors Clung to Wreckage for 45 Minutes Before U.S. Military Killed Them
βThere are a lot of disturbing aspects. But this is one of the most disturbing.β
theintercept.com/2025/12/05/b...
45 minutes to justify murder β¦
06.12.2025 03:22 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0βShe showed up as scheduled, and when she arrived, officers were asking everyone what country they were from, and if they said a certain country, they were told to step out of line and that their oath ceremonies were canceled.β
www.wgbh.org/news/local/2... @gbhnews.bsky.social
Make sure people you know are aware of this scam.
06.12.2025 01:49 β π 269 π 44 π¬ 8 π 1I received a "Critical Account Security Alert" from "Apple."
It purports that someone tried to charge $143.95 to my account and wants me to log-in with my password.
A quick Google search revealed that "$143.95" has been charged to THOUSANDS of Apple accounts.
I hate being scammed by the lazy.
π½οΈ WATCH: As her health declined during a high-risk pregnancy, Tierra Walker asked doctors for an abortion. They assured her she didnβt need to worry. Then she died of preeclampsia.
Listen to her aunt Latanya Walker recount Tierra's story. More: https://propub.li/3MkJs6L
Congressional Quarterly Almanac β 1987 The Limits of Force Why give in, some asked. Why not break the filibusterers physically, much as Strom Thurmond or Jimmy Stewart were broken? Why didn't Byrd keep the Senate running night and day, in the hope that some Republicans would relent? It simply wouldn't work, members of both parties agreed. First, Republican numbers were too great. βEven if he [Byrd] gets to the defense bill, there are enough senators who will filibuster the bill itself. And an amendment, no matter what it is, will get filibustered,β Quayle said. βSo you really cannot pass a bill if you have a dedicated, hard-core minority that is dead set against itβ¦.β Also, the issues involved were so partisan that defections were unlikely. βIf Byrd kept us up all night, it'd be the same thing. He wouldn't get the votes then, either,β Thurmond said. Another consideration was time. John B. Breaux, D-La., said, βByrd's thought is, βI know they can find enough people to oppose this. Why waste time when I can move on to something else? At least let me be constructive.ββ For instance, after putting the Senate through five cloture votes over 11 days, Byrd pulled the campaign-finance bill from the floor when a major trade bill was ready for debate. Leaders also knew that brute force was a double-edged sword. If Byrd had allowed the Senate to go non-stop to crush a GOP filibuster, Democrats would have had to stay nearby for quorum calls and other procedural moves, or risk losing control of the floor. Republicans, meanwhile, needed only a few speakers working shifts to keep the filibuster going.
One such debate took place during the 1960 civil rights bill filibuster. Eighteen Southerners formed two-man teams and talked non-stop in relays. To thwart them, Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson, D-Texas, kept the Senate going around the clock for nine days. That was a record for the longest continuous session in Senate history (157 hours, 26 minutes), but Johnson ultimately abandoned the bill. Later that year a weaker version passed. Even a two-member minority was able to find strength in numbers, as Democrats Howard M. Metzenbaum of Ohio and James Abourezk of South Dakota did in 1977 when they opposed an energy bill deregulating natural-gas prices. While one senator rested or plotted, the other forced action on one amendment after another. Byrd, then a first-year majority leader, failed to overcome the duo by force β a 37-hour session. Days later, he succeeded through stratagem, orchestrating a series of fatal parliamentary rulings with the presiding officer, Vice President Walter F. Mondale. Even so, the bill that passed was a compromise that met some of the foes' concerns. That classic confrontation was somewhat unusual. Although filibusters were popularly thought of as endurance contests, in the Hollywood mold, Senate majorities historically had not found force an effective way to subdue a minority. The potential gain was not considered worth the losses of time, tempers and pending legislation in many cases. And in the gentlemanly Senate, some tactics for breaking filibusterers were simply off-limits. Floyd M. Riddick, Senate parliamentarian from 1965-74, recalled one incident during a 1950 filibuster of a public-power bill.
Tennessee Democrat Estes Kefauver was several hours into a night-shift filibuster when his aide came to the desk to talk to assistant parliamentarian Riddick. The aide said Kefauver desperately needed to go to the men's room to adjust a urine bag hidden in his trousers. How, the aide asked, could the senator do so without losing the floor? Riddick advised Kefauver to ask for a quorum call. Although one or two rival senators were present, no one objected. βIt was really entertaining, knowing what the situation was, to see him try to walk off that floor,β Riddick told an oral-history researcher in 1978. According to Riddick, Thurmond likewise had to leave the chamber during his record-setting filibuster β despite his advance preparation in the steam room. Then, too, no one objected. βThe Senate is a clubby place,β Riddick said, laughing. βThey're all friendly, you know.β Perhaps not all. In 1908, Wisconsin Republican Robert M. LaFollette Sr. was filibustering late at night, sweating in the 90-degree heat of the chamber and sustaining himself on turkey sandwiches and eggnog. But on tasting one eggnog, he threw it aside and cried that it was drugged. The drink was found to contain a potentially fatal amount of poison, but no culprit was ever fingered. But for many of the best-known filibusterers, the suffering or deprivation was self-induced, not a result of the majority's tactics. Some senators, like Thurmond in 1957, knew their fight was doomed. But the object was to dramatize a point. Thurmond had opposed the decision of his fellow Southerners, led by Richard B. Russell of Georgia, to acquiesce in passage of the 1957 civil rights bill. The legislation was tame enough for the others to accept. And, Thurmond said, Russell figured the victory would help Johnson in his 1960 bid to be the first Southerner since the Civil War to win the Democratic presidential nomination. [Added: From an article titled "'Trivialized' Filibuster Is Still a Potent Tool"]
Back before Politicoβ¦ Yahooβ¦ CNNβ¦ C-Spanβ¦ BNA's Daily Tax & Trade Report(er)sβ¦ and even Roll Call (the newspaper)β¦ there was Congressional Quarterly's ππ»Β indispensableΒ ππ» weekly report.
And its (sometimes ~3" thick) Almanac. Here, an excerpt from 1987, from its review of the filibuster*β¦
#SRules
1/
Halle Berry threw shade at Gavin Newsom, but he returned a presidential serve. π«‘
He vetoed the bill over cost concerns, but promised the necessary menopause care protections are going straight into the next state budget. He dodged the burn with class.
βAs a matter of plain reality, an unarmed speedboat, even if it is carrying cocaine, is not a warship. And none of the 11 people aboard β not merely the two initial survivors, but also the nine people the U.S. military killed in its first strike β were fighting anyone.β
06.12.2025 01:02 β π 157 π 39 π¬ 4 π 2The Trump administration has removed MLK Day and Juneteenth as holidays that include free entrance to national parks, adding the presidentβs birthday instead
06.12.2025 01:30 β π 513 π 303 π¬ 88 π 120KPB Services is providing ICE with "due diligence services and concept design for processing centers and mega centers throughout the United States."
KPB is a subsidiary of Prairie Band LLC, a Holton, Kansas company owned by the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation.
The Supreme Court Friday agreed to decide whether President Donald Trump can unilaterally limit the constitutional right to citizenship granted to virtually every person born in the United States. www.democracydocket.com/news-alerts/...
06.12.2025 00:38 β π 1115 π 481 π¬ 250 π 57