ADVERTISEMENT

  • Poll
Biden Announces 100% TARIFF on Chinese-made Electric Vehicles

Do you favor or oppose raising the tariff from 25% to 100% on Chinese EVs?

  • Strongly favor. I would raise it even higher or maybe ban Chinese EVs altogether.

    Votes: 14 29.2%
  • Strongly favor.

    Votes: 9 18.8%
  • Somewhat favor.

    Votes: 9 18.8%
  • Somewhat oppose.

    Votes: 5 10.4%
  • Strongly oppose.

    Votes: 5 10.4%
  • Strongly oppose. I woud lower the current 25% tariff.

    Votes: 6 12.5%

As well as a tariff increase from 25% to 100% on EVs, levies will rise from 7.5% to 25% on lithium batteries, from zero to 25% on critical minerals, from 25% to 50% on solar cells, and from 25% to 50% on semiconductors.

Tariffs on steel, aluminium and personal protective equipment – which range from zero to 7.5% – will rise to 25%.

Biden’s car tariffs are largely symbolic because Chinese EVs were virtually locked out of the US by tariffs imposed by Donald Trump during his presidency. However, lobby groups have suggested there is a future threat as Beijing seeks to use exports to compensate for the weakness of its domestic economy.

The Alliance for American Manufacturing has said the introduction of Chinese cars to the US market would be an “extinction-level event” for its carmakers.

more here

  • Haha
Reactions: Here_4_a_Day

Biden has an issue with black voters

Had no idea Biden had lost that much support. Trump has doubled his support with this demographic.

Biden’s support among Black voters so far is 7 percentage points lower than it was at the same period in 2020, according to an NBC News average of national polls since April 1. Meanwhile, former President Donald Trump’s support from Black voters has increased by 9 percentage points. But Biden still has the majority of support among Black voters, at 69% vs. Trump’s 18%.

Trust vs POA

My in-laws aren't in the best of health; MIL is in an independent living cottage (needs to be in assisted living) and FIL has dementia and is in a TX State Veterans home.

My MIL has a medical and fiduciary POA for my FIL, but it's only a VA form which doesn't do squat outside of the VA. She has one checking account and two savings account, two of which are joint with her incapacitated husband. I'm listed as joint account owner on one account and need to get on the other two. To prevent a TL;DR post, I am the executor of their wills and both my wife and her sister want me to control their parents finances up either/both deaths. The biggest issue is if my MIL passes first, my FIL will have steady income (around $5k per month) until his death with zero outgoing.

A financial POA will get me on all their bank accounts. My question is, is that good enough or should I help them establish a trust now with me as a the trustee?

"Technical Glitch"

Bally's Atlantic City Refuses To Pay 72 Year Old $2 Million Jackpot Due To "Technical Glitch"

The house always wins...

A 72 year old woman who hoped to take her winnings to 'buy a trailer' for her son is being told by Bally's in Atlantic City that the $2 million jackpot she claims she won was invalid and the result of a 'technical glitch'.

As a result, Bally's - along with game manufacturer IGT - are refusing to pay the money out.

Gambler Roney Beal told 6ABC in an Action News Investigation that "at the end of February, she went to Bally's and dumped hundreds of dollars into a Wheel of Fortune machine".

Then, according to her, the unthinkable happened. She hit a $1.2 million jackpot - with a 2x multiplier. "And it went off, says, 'you're a winner' and gold coins popped out. This very nice guy says, 'Oh my God, you hit, you hit!' He said, 'Lady you're a millionaire.' And I'm like, 'Oh my God!'"

After the slot went off, she hit the 'service' button - and that's when the machine displayed a "tilt" message.

Beal told ABC: "That's when the sentences came up 'tilted'. When the man came over to talk to me he said, 'Lady, get it in your head, you won nothing.'"

The casino told her the machine had a 'reel tilt' which voided her win. She said the slot attendant asked her to "spin it off" but she refused. "He had it rolling real slow. He had it opened and then he is pushing it," she told ABC.

The attendant then offered her $350. Her attorney, Mike Dicroce, said: "They fooled with the machine before anybody else had the opportunity to take a look at this."

"You invite somebody to your business. They pay the money, they win, you're supposed to pay. That didn't happen," he added, claiming he has gone to the New Jersey Game Enforcement Division over the incident.

He has asked to "preserve the machine and casino floor videos for an independent forensic review," the report says.

A similar incident happened in 2000, he said: "IGT took the position that look even though aesthetically these symbols came up it wasn't a win because the computer says it wasn't a win." In that case, a jury decided IGT had to pay the $1.3 million jackpot.

"Why would I ever go to a casino again in my life? Any casino? Why, if there is no hope," Beal concluded.
  • Angry
Reactions: TheCainer

In a place with a history of hate, an unlikely fight against GOP extremism

Locals prefer not to talk about the hate that took root here a generation ago, when the Aryan Nations and other militants built a white supremacist paradise among the tall pines and crystal lakes of North Idaho.
Community activists, backed by national civil rights groups, bankrupted the neo-Nazis in court and eventually forced them to move, a hard-fought triumph memorialized in scenes from 2001 of a backhoe smashing through a giant swastika at the former Aryan compound just outside of Coeur d’Alene, the biggest city in the north.

For much of the two decades since, civic leaders have focused on moving beyond the image of North Idaho as a white-power fiefdom. They steered attention instead to emerald golf courses and gleaming lakeside resorts where celebrities such as Kim Kardashian sip huckleberry cocktails.
Now, however, North Idaho residents are confronting that history head-on as a new movement builds against far-right extremism.



This time, activists say, the threat is no longer on the fringes of society, dressed in Nazi garb at a hideout in the woods. Instead, they see it in the leadership of the local Republican Party, which has mirrored the lurch to the right of the national conservative movement during the Trump era on matters of race, religion and sexuality. The bigotry of the past, they say, now has mainstream political cover.
In this ruby-red state, the pushback is being led from within the party. A group of disaffected, self-described “traditional” Republicans has spent the past two years planning to wrest back control from leaders who they accuse of steering the local GOP toward extremism, a charge the officials vehemently deny. A crucial measure of the challengers’ efforts comes Tuesday, Idaho’s primary day.
If the breakaway group can succeed, it would make North Idaho an unlikely setting for something rare: A meaningful internal rebellion against the forces that have driven the Republican Party toward open embraces of far-right rhetoric and policies since Donald Trump first claimed the GOP presidential nomination eight years ago.


The rebels have focused their efforts on precinct committee seats, the building blocks of local party power. On Tuesday, they need to win 37 seats out of 73 to force a change in local party leadership, but they’re hoping for a rout.
“I want a full sweep,” said Christa Hazel, 50, a Republican organizer who has been doxed and harassed since resigning from the party’s central committee in 2017 over concerns about extremism and a lack of transparency. “I want a full referendum on the ugliness, chaos and division.”
Hazel and her allies blame local leaders for ideological fights that have left North Idaho College on the brink of losing its accreditation. Doctors, especially reproductive health specialists, are leaving the area, with one local hospital recently shuttering its maternity ward. Extremism researchers and local media outlets have documented the ties between GOP officials and far-right figures.



The challengers boast prominent GOP names within their ranks and deep pockets from local pro-business donations. Their candidates are pressing the case door to door, while radio ads accuse the incumbent committee leaders of promoting “white nationalists and extremists who want to take over our state.”
The hard-liners dismiss their critics as closet liberals or “RINOs,” Republicans in name only. They argue that the labeling of committee members as racists or extremists is the last resort of elites whose politics no longer match the sensibilities of North Idaho.
“Nothing but the old ‘everyone we don’t like is a racist’ propaganda,” Brent Regan, chairman of the local GOP committee, posted on X. In an emailed response to questions, Regan accused his GOP opponents of engaging in “propaganda,” suggested they had sided with Democrats over Republicans and alleged they were manufacturing concern about racism and extremism that does not exist among voters.
Leaders have repeatedly dismissed portrayals of their stances as hateful or extremist. A statement on the central committee’s homepage says it “rejects all forms of racial, religious, sexual, and political supremacy.”
Those words haven’t reassured some North Idaho residents who remember the devastating consequences of allowing far-right extremism a foothold: pipe bombs and neo-Nazi marches in downtown Coeur d’Alene.


The Aryan Nations showed up in the area in 1974 and stayed until the group crumbled in 2000 amid legal challenges and infighting. The leader, Richard Butler, built a heavily guarded 20-acre compound that served as a national hub for white supremacists. Butler acolytes formed splinter groups that waged a deadly terror campaign with the goal of triggering a race war.
“Coeur d’Alene has this kind of mythical status for extremists because of what Butler did,” said Art Jipson, a University of Dayton professor and expert on white-power movements.
Hazel, the daughter of an FBI agent who worked Aryan Nations cases, recalled learning as a child that her family was on a white supremacist hit list. They lived 3 miles from the compound and her dad sometimes ran kidnapping drills to make sure she stayed vigilant. Every July, Hazel said, her father disappeared to conduct surveillance on the group’s annual summertime gathering.



Still, like many with deep ties to the region, Hazel said she resents the lingering idea of North Idaho as a sanctuary for hate. The region is conservative, she said, and locals are proud of their Christian faith and “live and let live” ethos.
The problem, as she and her allies see it, is that traditional conservatism has become entangled with darker ideologies often held by right-wing “political refugees” who have fled California and other western states and moved here in search of racial and religious homogeneity.
“They want to take us back to some sort of archaic, medieval time,” she said.
The election was days away, and Hazel said she was excited thinking about all the voters she had met who confided that they were also uncomfortable with the stances of the Republican committee. But she was also braced for possible disappointment.
Maybe, she said, voters don’t understand the stakes or don’t care enough to show up. Maybe the mobilization to bring North Idaho back from the extremist brink assumes a decency that’s already obsolete.
“We may have it wrong, that our community has become something we don’t recognize, and there’s a true ugliness that has become acceptable,” Hazel said, squeezing in lunch between back-to-back political events one recent afternoon. “I don’t want to believe that.”



Green Irony: Massive US Lithium Source Found - In Fracking Wastewater

The global, government-coerced transition into "green energy" has geologists scouring the Earth for new sources of lithium -- the element that's required for batteries, like those used in electric vehicles.

Now, in a cosmic practical joke on environmentalists, researchers say they've found a lithium mother lode -- in Pennsylvania fracking wastewater.

It turns out that the Marcellus Shale -- a long swath of sedimentary rock in the northeastern United States that holds huge amounts of frackable gas -- holds huge quantities of lithium too. Justin Mackey and other researchers at the National Energy Technology Laboratory in Pennsylvania were pleasantly surprise when they studied the contents of wastewater dredged up in the fracking process at 515 sites in the Keystone State, reports Science Alert.



Long before the frackers showed up, deep groundwater has been dissolving the lithium in the Marcellus Shale for eons. "It's been dissolving rocks for hundreds of millions of years—essentially, the water has been mining the subsurface," Mackey told the University of Pittsburgh's Brandie Jefferson.

When they analyzed the wastewater data, they were stunned by the volume of lithium. The shale "has the capacity to provide significant lithium yields for the foreseeable future" he says. Their detailed findings were published in Scientific Reports.

It's unclear if other fracking hotspots have abundant lithium too. However, even using conservative estimates of how much can be recovered from the wastewater suggests that Pennsylvania alone could cover more than 30% of America's 2024 demand.

Login to view embedded media
The US government is targeting lithium independence, with the Department of Energy specifically aiming for all of the country's lithium needs to be covered by domestic production by 2030. That's causing a mad rush -- and conflicts that pit green energy boosters against environmentalists and American Indians who are litigating to shut down promising sources.

Case in point: the Thacker Pass mine in northern Nevada, which is supposed to be the nation's largest open-pit lithium mine. Indian tribes sued, claiming the mine is too close to the site of an 1865 massacre. Environmentalists sued, saying the mining process will destroy animal habitats and harm groundwater. Now the federal Fish and Wildlife Service is doing a year-long study on the potential impact to a tiny snail.

The United States is way behind other countries. Here's the 2023 lithium production leaderboard according to Investing News Network:

  1. Australia: 86,000 metric tons (MT)
  2. Chile: 44,000
  3. China: 33,000
  4. Argentina: 9,600
  5. Brazil: 4,900
  6. Zimbabwe: 3,400
  7. Canada: 3,400 (tied for 6th)
  8. Portugal: 380
  9. USA: Production numbers withheld, purportedly to protect proprietary company data

Rib wrap experiment...

So, yesterday I had a St. Louis cut rack of ribs to cook for dinner. I cut it in half for an experiment.

Both were seasoned with Malcom Reed's The BBQ Rub and cooked on the Weber Kettle with the FlameTech Smoke and Sizzle accessory (has a built in water pan). Cooked them for three hours spritzing occasionally with just water.

I then removed the more meaty half and wrapped it with all the tricks I could throw at it. Butter, brown sugar, honey, more rub. The other half did not get wrapped and I continued to spritz until done.

After an hour in the wrap I put it back on the smoker to firm up the bark, and slathered some Blues Hog Champion's Blend BBQ sauce on it for the final 15 minutes. The other half was not sauced.

Well what do you know? The dinner table survey said unwrapped was the best. Sometimes the KISS method is the best method?

Town makes asshole parents umpire little league games

This story isn't super recent, but it's genius!

Marco Rubio is a POS

Jjust heard him on Hannity and he was complaining about the Arizona voting processes. Said something to the effect of “You guys are covering this and it’s like covering a Third World country… They keep finding ballots all over the place and the numbers keep changing…”

Such bullshit for him to insinuate there’s election fraud, after all the country has been through. And besides, aren’t they dealing with election changes put in place by the GOP legislature?

Despicable

Donald Trump's Fatal Flaw

In Shakespeare's Tragedies the hero has a fatal flaw. which brings
him down. His downfall is his own fault and he is not a victim of fate.

Donald Trump is a toxic egotist. His puffed-up pride will bring him
down. As a proud person he lives for praise and applause. His
inflated ego is a cancer that prevents decency and common sense.

A conceited Trump looks down on others and tries to manipulate them.
His foolish pride believes he is richer and smarter than anyone. However,
Trump's selfish pride will bring him down when he loses the 2024 election
for U.S. President.
ADVERTISEMENT

Filter

ADVERTISEMENT