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Democractivists ... propagandists or journalists ??


Tucker Carlson: You said this was the beginning of Trump derangement syndrome. Did you sense that at NBC?

Billy Bush: Oh, God. Absolutely. I mean, anything. Remember this, over at ABC News, at the same time when Trump became President, they launched a 70… they built a 75-person investigative unit. I know the guy who was head of it, dedicated to anything negative on Trump. Find stuff on him and get him out.

This is not journalism.

This is not news.

It is activism.

When you’re calling it journalism, it’s total activism.

By the way, when NBC does the shi**y thing that they did, ABC and CBS don’t call it out. They don’t say, Hey, you’re competing with each other. I would want to pound my competitor. ‘Look what you did. That was dirty’ because all of them would have done it, too, probably. You know what I mean? They all shared that mission.

Monday's Inauguration

Monday's inauguration will present more than a few "what's wrong with this picture" (WWWTP) moments. The first being the ceremony taking place inside the splendor and grandeur of the Capitol itself. The very building that just four years ago Trump sent his clueless band of thugs who inflicted a staggering $2.8 million in structural damages in just over three hours. Ironically, many of these thugs were convicted and currently remain in prison. One wonders what they will be thinking come Monday watching Trump, held accountable for nothing, being inaugurated amid all the pomp and circumstance while they languish in prison. However, the most striking WWWTP moment will be Trump, a convicted felon, taking the oath of office pledging to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution. Taking the very same oath that he miserably failed to uphold four years ago when he attempted to overturn the results of an election - an election he knew he had lost.

Traore

He's said to be a great kid, and he fell behind with his ankle injury, but I've been unimpressed with his contributions so far. The plan is to play him more, which is fine. Maybe with more time, he'll start to develop, but right now he doesn't seem like any kind of answer to Iowa's defensive and rebounding issues. Or maybe he is. I'm willing to find out, especially since we know there's not much hope of finding help anywhere else.
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China ahead of US in nuclear power? They have 1st working 4th Generation reactor in operation; US lagging

Our politicians, thinkers, and planners are blowing it. The US built the first molten salt reactor in the 1950s-60s. They are safer a the first one ran for a few years in test mode. Molten salt reactors are one type of 4th generation reactor.

Yet it is China with the first commercial 4th Gen reactor and Russia is building them.

Global warming is worse and all of us need to push our leaders to make this a moon landing type project. Terrapower is building a plant in Wyoming but it is still 3-5 years away. There are a couple of other US companies doing this including a project for small modular reactors for the Defense Dept.

Hundreds rally at People’s March in D.C. to protest Trump

Hundreds of people gathered in damp, chilly weather Saturday for the People’s March, a protest in Washington of President-elect Donald Trump and the GOP’s policy priorities, which organizers say will undermine the rights of women, immigrants, and social and racial minorities.

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Participants started gathering around 10 a.m. at Farragut Square, McPherson Square and Franklin Park, in downtown Washington, with each location focused on specific issues, including democracy, climate, D.C. statehood and bodily autonomy.

Chanting slogans like, “People, people can’t you see, what freedom means for me?” they began marching in a cold drizzle toward the Lincoln Memorial, where they planned to rally until 3 p.m.

The march, two days before Inauguration Day, was a joint effort among civil rights, racial and social justice, and reproductive health organizations. It comes as the extremely cold temperatures projected for Monday have moved Trump’s swearing-in ceremony indoors to the U.S. Capitol Rotunda.

Organizers say they hope that the march will inspire people who have who felt exhausted and resigned, and that protesters can turn their passions, outrage and fears into collective opposition.
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On Saturday, Cassie Dominicis, 33, stood in the crowd at Franklin Park wearing the same pink pussyhat she knitted for the Women’s March in 2017.
That day, she marched in Washington with her mother, describing it as “magical.” She returned this year to be among like-minded people willing to fight back against policies that she said strip rights away from people, especially attacks on the LGBTQ community and abortion access.

“When you have so many millions of Americans voting like you don’t matter... It’s good to be in a big crowd of people that that make you feel like you do matter,” said Dominicis, a financial analyst from Charlotte, North Carolina.

This time, however, her mother isn’t with her. While others march, her mother, who now lives in Wisconsin, will be going to a farmer’s market.
“It’s just tough for her to even face,” she said.
At Farragut Square, Cynthia Hatfield, 75, of Asheville, North Carolina, said that the issue that touches her most is climate change. The town had been badly damaged by Hurricane Helene last year.
“But COVID, the election ... it feels like everything is changing at once, politics as well as climate," she said.

Hatfield grew up in D.C. but said she hadn’t visited for many years. “I am putting my body where my heart is,” she said.
Though her home only suffered minor damage from the hurricane, Hatfield said she knows it will take her community years to rebuild.
At 75, she says she advocates for climate action not for herself, but for generations to come.
“We might not see the results of us holding these actions in our lifetime, but if we continue generation after generation holding the hope that we can have a change, the planet will survive,” she said.


Elsewhere, Leah Hernandez, 20, carried a sign reading: “Immigrants are the backbone of our country.”

A first-generation American, she says she’ll never forget the horrifying period of her childhood when her father was nearly deported to El Salvador — the country he had fled.

“If immigrants have come here for centuries, why is it a problem whenever people are trying to seek asylum here and seek peace and make a living for their family while also contributing to our society?” she said. “They’re contributing members and I feel like it’s very important to recognize those who are working very hard to make this a better place for all of us.”


https://www.washingtonpost.com/poli...agnet-trump-inauguration_inline_collection_12

One of the groups behind the demonstration is the Women’s March, which drew more than 1 million people to protest in D.C. and elsewhere the day after Trump’s first inauguration in 2017. That demonstration is widely considered the country’s largest single-day protest. While organizers don’t anticipate that Saturday’s event will come close to those numbers, they emphasized that beating a history-making day of protests is not the goal.
“If the prerequisite were that we shouldn’t get out or shouldn’t take action … unless it can be bigger than the biggest thing that ever was, no one would ever take action,” said Rachel O’Leary Carmona, the executive director of Women’s March.

Marching is one of the “easiest entry points” for first-time protesters or people who are interested in becoming more involved, said Tamika Middleton, the managing director of Women’s March. Organizers were encouraging protesters to dress warmly and to pack hand and feet warmers, small backpacks and “your feminist spirit, your defiance to injustice, and your demands to protect our freedoms,” according to the People’s March website.


The diverse range of issues reflects the goal of this march as providing a big tent for protesters — one that seeks to attract people who champion liberal views on a host of issues. Leaders have specifically pointed to Project 2025 — a Heritage Foundation-led blueprint for a second Trump presidency that he has disavowed but that involved veterans of his first administration — as a threat to democracy and civil and human rights.

You may live in Iowa's top 5 best counties. Here's which ranked highest and why.

In a state with 99 counties, which are the best to live in?

Niche, which provides users information and ratings on schools and where to live, ranked which Iowa counties are the best to live in.

It’s part of the site's 2024 Best Places to Live rankings that can be narrowed down to more specific searches that to benefit families, people looking to purchase a home or other interests.

Rankings were determined based on categories such as public schools, the cost of living, economic growth, demographics and more.

What is Iowa's best county to live in?​

A biker passes by the blooming Redbud trees on 6th Street on Monday, April 15, 2024, in Ames, Iowa.


Congratulations to central Iowans.

Story County ranked No. 1.

Niche described the county as a place where most residents are homeowners, have access to lots of bars, coffee shops and parks and that the public schools are highly rated.

Several factors received an A grade from Niche, which is the highest ranking that can be achieved. Those factors were public schools, nightlife, commuting, jobs, health and fitness and good for families — each an umbrella for other measures. For example, good for families considers measures such as access to outdoor activities, crime rates and the percentage of households with children under 18.


Just a few of the cities that make up Story County are Ames, Story City, Nevada and Maxwell. Story County has a population of 98,537, according to the 2020 U.S. Census.

More:Can't stop sneezing? Iowa has some of the nation's highest pollen counts, allergy triggers

What are the top five best counties to live in Iowa?​

People fish along the Iowa River on Memorial Day, Monday, May 29, 2023, at the Coralville Lake in Johnson County, Iowa.


Three of the five counties were in central Iowa and the two remaining are from eastern Iowa. According to Niche, those are:

  1. Story County
  2. Dallas County
  3. Johnson County
  4. Polk County
  5. Scott County
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