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Auto Painting Des Moines

So, kind of a weird question, but...

My wife's car needs a new bumper cover. I can get a primered one shipped for around $100, but I can't find one that's already painted that will ship (there's one in Irving, TX that's pickup only). Does anyone know of a good paint shop in Central Iowa that will paint an individual part?

I've contacted 3 or 4 places, but they will only do vehicles or parts you buy from them, and they don't have what I need.

What a time to be a woman

Does anyone ever wonder how much some of these fat instasluts make when all they do is make slutty videos and go on only fans?

What in the world would these heifers or even the better looking ones would have been doing 10-20 years ago.
Would they have been druggies working some corner somewhere.
Now some are probably millionaires and haven’t had to do anything in life.
Women power!

Is Diversity Really "Our Strength?"

For those who don't know, Edina is one of the wealthiest suburbs in America, with the bad luck of neighboring Minnedishu. Why should any normal person, have to go to their gym to workout and experience this? When I lived in Edina, the idea of something like this occurring there was about as likely as a Carnival Cruise Liner sailing off the edge of the planet.

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Democrat frontrunner in tight Senate race drops racial slur during House hearing!

The Democrat frontrunner in what could be one of the most closely watched Senate races this year uttered a racial slur during a Thursday House Budget Committee hearing, something he says was unintentional.

Rep. David Trone, D-Md., dropped the disparaging term for Black people while speaking during the hearing about tax policy with Shalanda Young, the director of the Office of Budget and Management, who was testifying before the committee.

"So this Republican jigaboo that it’s the tax rate that’s stopping business investment, it’s just completely faulty by people who have never run a business," he said. "They’ve never been there. They don’t have a clue what they’re talking about."

When reached for comment, Trone admitted to Fox News Digital he used the term, but said he misspoke while meaning to use a different word.

"Today while attempting to use the word ‘bugaboo’ in a hearing, I used a phrase that is offensive. That word has a long dark terrible history. It should never be used any time, anywhere, in any conversation," Trone said.

Earlier this week, Trone faced heat for other comments he made at a candidate forum earlier this month in which he declared his support for granting citizenship and voting rights to the millions of illegal immigrants residing in the U.S.



Two major newspaper chains dropped the AP. What will it mean for readers?

Since the Mexican American War of 1846, newspapers large and small have turned to the Associated Press for reporting from places inaccessible to their own reporters.
With more than 200 bureaus around the globe, the AP remains the biggest brand name among what came to be known as the wire services, transmitting its articles and images to news outlets for a licensing fee. Some smaller papers came to rely so heavily on its content that “AP” was its single most frequent byline.


But now, two major American newspaper chains have said they will no longer use the AP for news. Gannett, the publisher of USA Today and more than 200 local newspapers, and McClatchy, which publishes the Miami Herald and Kansas City Star among more than two dozen other newspapers, said this week that they were ending their content relationship with the AP.



In memos to staff and public statements, executives with both companies described it as a cost-saving move — in the “millions” of dollars, according to McClatchy brass — and said they will have no trouble filling the news gap.
“We create more journalism every day than the AP,” Gannett executive Kristen Roberts said in a Tuesday memo obtained by the Wrap.
But some media observers — including staff members at the affected newspapers — warned that the decision will cut off a vital source of reliable reporting that their readers have come to depend on.
“It’s a loss,” Ilana Keller, a content planner and reporter at the Gannett-owned Asbury Park Press in New Jersey, told The Post. “As our reporting staff got smaller and smaller, we relied more on more on wire services to help fill in the gaps, and losing that is incredible.”



Margot Susca, an American University journalism professor and author of “Hedged: How Private Investment Funds Helped Destroy American Newspapers and Undermine Democracy,” said she is worried about what might now fill those pages.
“The Associated Press is one of the most reliable organizations that provides … national and state coverage,” she said emphasizing the role “objective reporting” plays in an election year.
“For anyone who cares about news in a functioning democracy,” she added, “this is just another nail in the coffin.”
In an emailed statement, AP spokeswoman Nicole Meir said the news service hopes Gannett and McClatchy will continue to use its content news services and that conversations with both chains are ongoing, suggesting the publishers’ decisions could be part of a contract negotiation strategy.



“We appreciate that these are difficult decisions to make and deeply understand the challenges the news industry faces,” Meir said in the statement. “At the same time, this would be a disservice to news consumers across the U.S. who would no longer see fact-based journalism from the AP.”

McClatchy did not respond to a request for comment. Gannett spokesperson Lark-Marie Anton told The Post that the decision to drop AP news “enables us to invest further in our journalism.”
At a journalism conference in Atlanta on Wednesday, Gannett CEO Mike Reed expanded on this idea. According to two attendees, Reed said that AP content was not as well read as locally-produced stories; as such, it made better financial sense to save the money and hire local reporters to produce more of what readers want. (Indeed last year, Gannett sparked a mini-controversy by posting job openings for reporters dedicated to covering Taylor Swift and Beyoncé.)



But despite these recent efforts to beef up newsrooms — Gannett also recently pledged $2 million to building up operations at the Indy Star — there’s widespread skepticism about its intentions for its local news empire.
“It’s a pattern of we’re being told, 'Oh, we’re going to do whatever we can to save money so we can reinvest it in the newsrooms, and we’re not seeing that,” said Mike Davis, another Asbury Park Press reporter who is acting unit chair of the union that represents the paper. Last year, hundreds of journalists at Gannett newspapers in several states went on strike to protest the company’s newsroom cuts.
“The lowest earner in our unit has been here for 33 years, and makes $39,000,” Davis said. “We’ve had jobs open for almost two years and we haven’t filled them.”

Tim Franklin, senior associate dean of Northwestern’s Medill journalism school and director of its Local News Initiative, said it’s fair for staff to be skeptical.


“The big question is, is this going to be reinvested back in local newsrooms?” he said, adding that doing so would be “good journalism and good business practice.”
Susca thinks Gannett’s recent history speaks for itself, noting that the chain’s total staff has shrunk by 47 percent in the past three years.
“For Mike Reed to say that Gannett wants to provide robust local news, when over the course of four years that company has cut more than half of his staff as the largest newspaper chain in America, it’s laughable,” she said.

Both companies have struggled financially in recent years. In 2019, Gannett merged with GateHouse Media under New Media Investment Group, a subsidiary of private equity firm Fortress Investment Group, in a deal that left Gannett saddled with debt. McClatchy was sold to hedge fund Chatham Asset Management in a 2020 bankruptcy auction.


“Certainly I hear people say that these are bad years for newspapers, but it’s never a bad year for executive pay,” Susca said. In 2021, for example, Reed earned $7,741,052 according to SEC filings, while the company continued to lay off employees.
Gannett said it will continue to license the AP’s election data and its stylebook, a set of language and grammar guidelines for newsrooms.
The AP said U.S. newspaper fees account for around 10 percent of its annual income and that the loss in revenue from Gannett and McClatchy would not drastically impact its finances.

Lev Parnas Testimony 🔥

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Lev Parnas: "I found precisely zero evidence of the Bidens' corruption in Ukraine. No credible source has ever provided proof of criminal activity, not the FBI, CIA nor the NSA. No respectable Ukrainian official has ever said that the Bidens did anything illegal, including former President Poroshenko and former prosecutor general Yuriy Lutsenko. Even when CEO Burisma Mykola Zlochevsky was offered a deal by Rudy Giuliani in exchange for information on the Bidens, he provided none, because there is none. The only information ever pushed on the Bidens in Ukraine has come from one source and one source only: Russia and Russian agents. The impeachment proceedings that bring us here now are predicated false information spread by the Kremlin."

Quarterfinal matches most looking forward to-

125 - Ayala of course. Spratley (Okie St) has had two good wins so far. Close match in dual

Davis (PSU) v. Figueroa (ASU) - Fig has looked tough so far, can he do it? I think Davis is first #1 to go down this weekend.

133 - Vito (COR) v. Orine (NCSt) - I think this match could possibly be a 10-9 type match!! Hoping these guys let it fly like I think they will.

141 - Woods v McNeil (UNC) I think Woods gets early TD and riding time and hangs on to win 5-4

149 - Lovet (NE) v. Swiderski (ISU) these two don't seem to back down from anyone, see Vito v. Orine above

157 - Franek v. Teemer (ASU) hopefully Franek can get that first ankle pick TD and hold on to win. Franek has superior defense but I fear holding on for a win is going to bite him soon. Be nice to get 2 TD's and build a lead. Jared seems to do better with unfamiliar opponents

Andonian (VT) v. Scott (COR) could be a 12 - 12 match!!!

165 - Caleindo v. Ramirez (COR) I think this match will be high scoring as well and hopefully that favors Mike!

Hamiti (WI) v. Carr (ISU) wow I think Carr wins but 165 has some studs in it.

174 - Lewis (VT) v. Starocci (PSU) - this is the one that all fans will be waiting to see. Star going for his fourth but definitely not 100%. Can Mekhi finish the deal. Star is a gamer and wont go down easily. If Lewis does pull it off that certainly helps Kennedy on the backside. I think Lewis wins it.

184 - ?? Bathroom I like Keck (UNI) but 184 is weakest weight in my opinion.

197 - Brooks (PSU) v. Buchanan (OU) Brooks looks unbeatable

HWT - Davidson (MI) v. Bastida (ISU) love the way the HWTs are scoring points, looking forward to semis, but can Davidson score upset? Bastida is looking like he could challenge Kerk?

Positive Aspect of Trump Era

The racial polarization of the parties is narrowing. People of color are less and less, rock solid Democrats. Republicans aren't just whites. To me, that's a good thing, even if it may be for frustrating reasons, and bad news if you're dreading another Trump presidency. Politics are already extremely nasty, but at least it's less and less of an appearance of a "race war".

Sparked by today's morning newsletter:


Race and Politics​


We’re covering the rightward shift among voters of color.

After Donald Trump won the presidency in 2016, many political scientists and pundits came forth with a simple explanation. Trump had won, they said, because of white Americans’ racial resentment.

These analysts looked at surveys and argued that the voters who had allowed Trump to win were distinguished not by social class, economic worries or any other factor but by their racial fears. “Another study shows Trump won because of racial anxieties — not economic distress,” as a typical headline, in The Intercept, put it.

I never found this argument to be persuasive. Yes, race played a meaningful role in Trump’s victory, given his long history of remarks demeaning people of color. But politics is rarely monocausal. And there were good reasons — including Barack Obama’s earlier success with Trump voters — to believe that the 2016 election was complex, too.

Eight years later, the “it’s all racial resentment” argument doesn’t look merely questionable. It looks wrong.

Skewed polls?​

Since Trump’s victory, a defining feature of American politics has been the rightward shift of voters of color. Asian, Black and Hispanic voters have all become less likely to support Democratic candidates and more likely to support Republicans, including Trump.
In each group, the trend is pronounced among working-class voters, defined as those without a four-year college degree. (The Democrats’ performance among nonwhite voters with a college degree has held fairly stable.)
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oakImage-1710967519509-articleLarge.png


If anything, Democrats’ weakness among voters of colors appears to have intensified since 2022. Among white voters, President Biden has about as much support as he did four years ago, Nate Cohn, The Times’s chief political analyst, has pointed out. But Biden’s support among Black, Hispanic and Asian voters has plummeted. (My colleagues Jennifer Medina and Ruth Igielnik focused on the Latino shift in a recent article.)

This chart compares the 2020 results with the findings from the most recent New York Times/Siena College poll:
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Credit...By The New York Times | Sources: Catalist (2020) and New York Times/Siena College poll (2024)
As John Burn-Murdoch, the chief data reporter at The Financial Times, wrote last week: “I think this is simultaneously one of the most important social trends in the U.S. today, and one of the most poorly understood.”
This newsletter is the first of a two-part series about the development. Today, I hope to convince you that the trend is real and not simply, as some Democrats hope, a reflection of inaccurate poll numbers. In part two, I’ll look more closely at the likely causes.

Young populists​

It’s true that polls are not the same as elections, and Biden may improve his standing by November. With far more campaign cash than Trump, Biden will have a chance to frame the election as a choice between the two, rather than a referendum on the country’s condition.
But the evidence for the trend is much stronger than the 2024 polls. A decade ago, many Democrats assumed that the extremely high levels of support they received from voters of color during Obama’s presidency would continue. They haven’t. In 2022, for instance, the party’s disappointing performance among nonwhite voters helped Republicans win the national popular vote in House elections. This year, Biden may need to improve on the party’s 2022 showing — which would be vastly different from what polls now show — to win re-election.
“There’s been a lot of whistling past the graveyard about this,” Nate Silver wrote in his newsletter about the trend. “Dems ought to invest more time in figuring out why this is happening instead of hoping that the polls are skewed.”

The most helpful frame is social class. In many ways, the rightward shift of voters of color is surprising, given this country’s history of racial politics. I certainly did not expect the Trump era to feature a narrowing of racial polarization.

But when viewed through a class lens, the shift makes more sense. In much of the world, working-class voters, across racial groups, have become attracted to a populism that leans right while sometimes including left-wing economic ideas, such as trade restrictions. This populism is skeptical of elites, political correctness, high levels of immigration and other forms of globalization.


Today’s populists “are more diverse than the stereotypical ‘angry old white men’ who, we are frequently told, will soon be replaced by a new generation of tolerant Millennials,” Roger Eatwell and Matthew Goodwin, two British scholars of politics, have written. Indeed, Democrats today particularly struggle with young voters of color, Nate Cohn has explained.

The old racial-resentment story about Trump’s victory was alluring to many progressives because it absolved them of responsibility. If Trump’s appeal was all about racism, there was no honorable way for Democrats to win back their previous supporters.

The true story is both more challenging and more hopeful. The multiracial, predominantly working-class group of Americans who have soured on mainstream politics and modern liberalism are not all hateful and ignorant. They are frustrated, and their political loyalties are up for grabs.

Round 2 Scouting - Crookham

Looking to Round 2, how does Teske match up with Crookham? Crookham beat Vito twice this year. Top 20 recruit. Looks like he redshirted last year. How would you gameplan him for Teske? As a starting point, do you try to keep it close and get a takedown at the end? Or do you let it fly with this guy? I’m thinking let it fly because that’s what Teske does best but what does anyone else think?
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