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coal market cartel?

BlackRock, Vanguard, State Street sued by Texas, red states​


  • Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is leading a lawsuit against BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street in federal court, alleging they are “conspiring to artificially constrict” the coal market, according to a Wednesday press release.
  • Paxton and Texas were joined by 10 other Republican-led states in the lawsuit accusing the three largest U.S. asset managers of buying “substantial” holdings in public coal companies and then pushing those companies to reduce their output, according to the Nov. 27 lawsuit.
  • Paxton and the coalition filed the complaint in the U.S. Eastern District Court of Texas and “demanded” a jury trial, according to the filing. Texas was joined in the suit by Alabama, Arkansas, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, West Virginia and Wyoming.
  • The lawsuit alleges the three asset managers allegedly violated the Sherman Act and Clayton Act — which govern antitrust law — as well as state antitrust laws from Texas, Montana and West Virginia.

Democrarrogance

Kamala’s Campaign Is Still Aggressively Shaking Down Supporters For Cash

Kamala’s Campaign Is Still Aggressively Shaking Down Supporters For Cash​


Even after her loss on Nov. 5, Vice President Kamala Harris’ election campaign is still hounding donors for money.

Harris’ campaign has bombarded supporters with fundraising messages following her election day defeat, with the most recent being sent out Sunday night, according to emails obtained by the Daily Caller News Foundation. Each email claims, using slightly different language, that the “Harris Fight Fund” is collecting donations to fund legal efforts and recount initiatives to help Democrats in close congressional races.

“First and foremost, we want to acknowledge the fear, confusion and sadness many of you are feeling at this moment,” one of Harris’ post-election emails reads. “As you read this, there are U.S. Senate and House races that are either too close to call, or within the margin of recounts or certain legal challenges. Can you please rush a contribution to the Harris Fight Fund program today?”

After clicking the donation link contained in the emails, prospective donors are sent to the ActBlue page for the Harris Victory Fund. The first $41,300 in donations from an individual to the Harris Victory Fund are sent to the Democratic National Committee (DNC), according to the fine print of the donation page. Only the next $3,100 in donations from a given individual are deposited into “Harris for President’s Recount Account.” The next $510,000 in donations from an individual donor are earmarked to be disbursed equally among the Democratic Parties in all 50 states and D.C., with any excess funds going to the DNC.

Party committees, like the DNC, can launch recount efforts in support of their candidates, however, are by no means required to spend funds to do so, according to the Federal Election Commission.

The Harris campaign had raised nearly $1 billion as of Oct. 16, however, is now at least $20 million in debt, two sources familiar told Politico. It is unclear if the campaign will be able to use funds deposited into “Harris for President’s Recount Account” to pay off debts.

Sen. Bob Casey speaks with members of the media after arriving to vote on Election Day. (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

Harris isn’t the only losing candidate seeking to rake in cash from supporters.

Pennsylvania Democratic Sen. Bob Casey’s campaign sent a message to potential donors on Nov. 9 asking for cash to “ensure that every last vote in this PA Senate race is counted,” according to an email obtained by the DCNF. The Associated Press, however, called the race for Republican challenger Dave McCormick days earlier on Nov. 7.

After suffering defeat on Nov. 5, the Harris campaign sent an email to supporters the following night asking for more money.

“The outcome of this election is not what we wanted,” the email reads. “I will never give up the fight for a future where every American can pursue their dreams. Where the women of America have the freedom to make decisions about their own bodies. The fight to protect our students and our streets from gun violence. The fight for our democracy.”

Harris’ email ends with an appeal to give Democrats the money to elect candidates “down the ticket to hold the Trump administration accountable.”

The Harris campaign did not immediately respond to the DCNF’s request for comment.

Recruits in action: Dec 20-21 - RESULTS







It is great to be an Iowa Wrestling fan.

Go Hawks!

Ya’ll getting some this holiday season?

I’m a couple hours away from being on vacation for most of rest of the year. Much needed break. It’s probably my favorite time of year for a staycation as they call it. My (no pic) wife will also be around the house. If I play my cards right, there might be some afternoon delight in store.

How about you? You getting some during your time off? What are your plans?

Democrapists ... the official party of child abusers


Trump Responds to Biden’s Decision to Commute Sentences of 37 Prisoners on Federal Death Row – Including Child Rapists and Killers​

Don't anyone dare make comments regarding any pardons Trump may make!

Biden commutes 1,500 sentences and issues 39 pardons in biggest single-day act of clemency in history​



Joe Biden has issued the single largest act of clemency in modern history, commuting the sentences of roughly 1,500 people and issuing 39 presidential pardons, the White House says.

With just 40 days left in the White House, the president announced on Thursday that he is lessening the sentences of thousands of prisoners who were released and placed on home confinement for at least one year during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Biden, who faced backlash after pardoning his own son Hunter from his federal crimes earlier this month, also issued pardons for US citizens convicted of non-violent crimes such as drug offenses, who have shown “successful rehabilitation.”

The president said his administration will continue reviewing clemency petitions to “advance equal justice” and “provide meaningful second chances,” before President-elect Donald Trump is inaugurated on January 20, 2025.

“America was built on the promise of possibility and second chances,” Biden said in a statement released by the White House on Thursday.

He continued: “As president, I have the great privilege of extending mercy to people who have demonstrated remorse and rehabilitation, restoring opportunity for Americans to participate in daily life and contribute to their communities, and taking steps to remove sentencing disparities for non-violent offenders, especially those convicted of drug offenses.”

Presidents can issue pardons – removing a punishment after a court decision – and commutations – a reduction in punishment for a crime – as they see fit for federal convictions, but not for state crimes.

According to the White House, Thursday’s pardons include a nurse who led emergency response teams during natural disasters; a pilot who helps fellow church members who are in poor health; and an addiction counsellor who helps young people and dissuades them from joining gangs.

As infections surged at the peak of the coronavirus pandemic, one in five prisoners contracted the virus, according to a tally kept by the Associated Press. Some inmates were subsequently released and place on home confinement in a bid to curb the spread.

The incumbent president’s historic issuing of commutations and pardons dwarfs those granted on a single day by former President Barack Obama, with a combined total of 330, shortly before leaving office in 2017, which now marks the second largest single-day act of clemency.

It follows Biden issuing a broad pardon for his son Hunter Biden for “offenses against the United States which he has committed or may have committed or taken part in during the period from January 1, 2014 through December 1, 2024.”

In June, Hunter, 54, was convicted of three federal gun charges related to his purchase of a firearm in 2018. Three months later, he pleaded guilty to nine federal tax charges in September.

Biden claimed that his hand was forced as Hunter had been “selectively, and unfairly, prosecuted” by the Department of Justice. The president previously stated he would not get involved in his son’s criminal cases.

The Democrat had been facing mounting pressure from advocacy groups to pardon broad swaths of people, including those on federal death row, before the Trump administration takes over in January.

The Biden administration is also said to be mulling preemptive presidential pardons for Trump critics who may face retribution, particularly those who investigated the president-elect’s effort to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.

Comprehensive Thread: It is NOT the drag queens and trans you need to be worried about...

Edit: Thread updated to be the catchall since there seems to be a lot of this coming to light...​

Dozens Of CA Priests Accused Of Child Sex Abuse​

June 29, 2022 Christianists, Crime


San Francisco’s NBC News affiliate reports:
Dozens of Northern California Catholic priests and church employees – some still working, others retired or deceased – are being publicly accused for the first time of sexually abusing children in their care. The allegations suggest startling new depths to the decades-long scandal that continues to rock the church and its followers.
Those new accusations – and many more – have surfaced in a wave of lawsuits washing over Catholic institutions across the state, including every Northern California diocese from Fresno to Santa Rosa. Some of the new filings allege cover-ups that protected accused predators and silenced victims.
The new names are absent from internal lists of suspected abusers that most Northern California Catholic dioceses have released in recent years.

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Wonder if Fran is more relaxed without the family dynamic this year

All frustrations aside, the team seems to be playing loose and is probably a few scores or stops away from being in the top 25.

I wonder if his kids being elsewhere somehow helps Fran with just getting back to focusing on coaching. Let's be honest, any of us who've coached our own kids in youth sports, it's impossible not to spend a little extra mental energy focused on your owns kids' performance.

Joe Manchin torches Democrats on the way out the door

Joe Manchin torches Democrats on the way out the door​


As Joe Manchin prepares to leave Congress after nearly 15 years, the West Virginia senator — who left the Democratic Party and registered as an independent earlier this year — is further distancing himself from his former party, calling the Democratic brand “toxic.”

“The D-brand has been so maligned from the standpoint of, it’s just, it’s toxic,” Manchin told CNN’s Manu Raju in an interview that aired Sunday, citing the shift as the reason why he left the party.

Adding that he no longer considers himself a Democrat “in the form of what Democratic Party has turned itself into,” Manchin — who has long been a pivotal swing vote in the Senate — said the party’s brand has become about telling people what they can and can’t do, blaming progressives for the change.

“They have basically expanded upon thinking, ‘Well, we want to protect you there, but we’re going to tell you how you should live your life from that far on,’” Manchin added.

Manchin cast progressives — a small number of lawmakers within the party who he claims have an outsize influence — as being out of touch with the majority of Americans.

“This country is not going left,” he said.

The former West Virginia governor-turned-senator shared that he was a lifelong Democrat because the party used to focus on kitchen-table issues such as “good job, a good pay,” but claimed Democrats are now too worried about sensitive social issues, such as transgender rights, while taking “no responsibility at all” for the federal budget during the election.

But Manchin said Republicans don’t take responsibility for the national debt either, criticizing them further for lacking common sense on the issue of guns.

“They’re too extreme, it’s just common sense,” Manchin said. “I’m not going to ban you from buying it, but you’re going to have to show some responsibility.”

“So the Democrats go too far, want to ban. The Republican says, ‘Oh, let the good times roll. Let anybody have anything they want,’” Manchin added. “Just some commonsense things there.”

When asked about incoming House Progressive Caucus Chair Greg Casar’s remarks that Democrats would have won the election if the party was more like outgoing caucus Chair Pramila Jayapal and less like Manchin, the senator told Raju: “For someone to say that, they’ve got to be completely insane.”

“The people in America voted,” Manchin said. “They had that opportunity, you know, to vote with Kamala Harris and with Donald Trump. Donald Trump, there’s not much hasn’t been said. You know exactly what you’re getting. He hasn’t made any bones about it.”

He added: “You might say, ‘That’s too far right.’ OK. If that’s the case, then why did they go too far right when Kamala was trying to come back to the middle a little bit?”

Instead, Manchin blamed Vice President Harris’ loss on her inability to cast herself as a moderate candidate after championing progressive issues during her first presidential run in 2019.

“If you try to be somebody you’re not, it’s hard,” Manchin said. He declined to endorse the vice president ahead of the election.

While he dodged questions on whom he voted for in November, Manchin shared he likes Trump and gets “along fine” with him. He added that during the Army-Navy football game last weekend, he told the president-elect, “I want to help any way I can.”

“I want you to succeed,” Manchin said he told Trump. “Every red-blooded American should want your president to succeed, whether you vote for him or not, whether the same party or not, whether you like him or not.”

Manchin is ready for a third party​

Before Manchin left the party earlier this year, the senator considered jumping into the presidential race to challenge Joe Biden in the Democratic primary and debated a run again after the president ended his campaign.

But Manchin told Raju that while he saw an “avenue” in people not wanting a repeat of Biden versus Trump and instead looking for a centrist candidate, he didn’t believe he had a chance of making it on the ballot in all 50 states.

Sharing that he had tried to explore a run with the centrist group No Labels, Manchin said he realized that “I have no chance of winning if I can’t participate in all 50 states.”

“So why would I put myself through that, or anyone else, and go down in history books as a spoiler?” Manchin added. No Labels ultimately abandoned its plans to form a third-party presidential unity ticket for the 2024 election.

But Manchin stressed there is an appetite for moderates in Congress and the White House, highlighting the significance of centrist voters.

“The centrist-moderate vote decides who’s going to be the president of the United States. And when they get here, they don’t govern that way. Neither side does. They go to their respective corners,” Manchin said. “So if the center had a voice and had a party that could make both of these — the Democrat, Republican Party — come back, OK, that would be something.”

When asked by Raju whether he thinks it’s time for a third party, Manchin said he believes so.

The senator added the third party would be called the “American Party” and would serve as a space for moderate Democrats and Republicans. But he shared he would not be its leader.

“I’ll be out there rooting. I’ll be the best cheerleader they’ve ever had,” Manchin said.

The outgoing senator will be succeeded by West Virginia GOP Gov. Jim Justice, a flipped seat that will give Republicans control of the chamber, along with a GOP majority in the House.

Asked whether he’ll miss the Senate, Manchin said, “I don’t think so.”

The senator, who once famously said the chamber “sucks,” said the sentiment stands but contended the House “sucks worse.”

“Those poor guys. I feel so sorry for them over there,” Manchin said. “They can’t move. They are in dead heat.”

But as he reflects on his career in politics, Manchin looks at the past 40-plus years fondly.

“It’s been an honor of a lifetime to serve the people of my great state and to be able to contribute to my great country,” Manchin said.

This article has been updated.

Olympic Spotlight: Enneking All-Time Leader in Wins for Iowa Soccer

14th-ranked Iowa soccer (13-1-3, 8-1-1) picked up two more shutout wins last week, beating #24 Washington (9-5-2, 6-4) 1-0 and following it up with a 4-0 win over Oregon (5-10-2, 1-7-2). Even more impressive, Macy Enneking set a school record for the Hawkeyes, picking up her 39th win, most ever at Iowa.

Enneking has been the backbone of the Hawkeye defense for her entire tenure, leading Iowa to a Cinderella Big Ten Tournament Championship in 2020 and a similar run in 2023. Now, as part of one of Iowa's best teams in history, she's etched her name in the school record books.

You can read about all things Hawkeye soccer, as well as field hockey, volleyball, and swimming in this week's Olympic Spotlight here.

Arrogant Kamala Harris told union president she’d win election ‘with or without you’ — before crushing loss

Arrogant Kamala Harris told union president she’d win election ‘with or without you’ — before crushing loss​


Not a winning attitude.

A union leader revealed that Vice President Kamala Harris stormed out of a meeting on the campaign trail, arrogantly telling him she didn’t need his support because she’d “win with you or without you” — just before her crushing loss to Donald Trump.

Teamsters President Sean O’Brien recalled the episode on “The Tucker Carlson Show” Monday as he discussed his union’s historic decision not to endorse a presidential candidate for the first time in nearly 30 years.

O’Brien said Harris finally agreed to sit with the Teasmstars for a roundtable after President Biden dropped out of the race, just to only answer a quarter of their 16 questions. Other candidates, including Trump, answered them all.

“On the fourth question, one of her operatives or one of her staff slips a note in front of me — ‘This will be the last question.’ And it was 20 minutes earlier than the time it was going to end,” O’Brien told Carlson.

“And her declaration of the way out was, ‘I’m going to win with you or without you,’’ he recalled.

Carlson quipped, “Damn. I thought I was arrogant. That’s really arrogant.”

O’Brien said he contacted Biden’s former Secretary of Labor Marty Walsh to talk about the vice president.

“Let me ask you a question, Marty. Excuse my French. Who does this f–king lady think she is?” he remembered asking Walsh, who is now the head of the NHL Players’ Association.

The union president said he had met Biden before he ended his reelection bid and was concerned at his decline — saying the Democrats’ initial plan to run the 82-year-old for a second term “kinda looked like elderly abuse.”

“We had Biden in there and you could just clearly tell he was not the man he was. It was kinda sad,” O’Brien said, adding that Biden was a good president for workers.

Weeks before the election, O’Brien announced that for the first time since 1996 the Teamsters would not be endorsing a presidential candidate after years of a relatively reliable alliance with Democrats.

In fact, the union revealed its 1.3 million members overwhelmingly supported Trump over Harris 59.6% to 34%.

Before Biden withdrew, he’d held a steady lead of 44.3% to Trump’s 36.3%.

The Teamsters backed the Biden-Harris ticket in 2020 and endorsed Hillary Clinton over Trump in 2016.

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