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Should Canada Be a State? 10 States? 13 States?

Canada is made up of 10 provinces and 3 territories.

I don't imagine Rs would be willing to admit Canada as 10 or 13 states. Most would probably be blue states - you know, the whole universal health care thing, among lefty other issues - since that would hand the Senate to the Dems.

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Immigration drives Iowa's 2024 population growth

Iowa gained 23,074 people from 2023 to 2024, boosted primarily by growth in international migration to the state, according to new U.S. Census data.



Similar to neighboring Midwest states including Illinois and Nebraska, people from other countries moved to Iowa at higher rates than those who came from other places in the United States.


From July 1, 2023, to July 1, 2024, a net of 19,439 people migrated to Iowa from outside the United States — accounting for most of its growth in that period — while a net of 231 people departed Iowa to other states.


Iowa ranks as the country’s 32nd most populous state with a little over 3.2 million people as of July 1, 2024. It previously was ranked as the 31st in population, but gains in other states surpassed Iowa’s growth — with Nevada moving to 31st.


From July 1, 2022, to July 1, 2023, Iowa gained 15,594 people, compared with 4,207 the year prior and 7,472 the year before that.


International migration to the United States was the highest in decades between 2023 and 2024, with a net of 2.8 million people moving from other countries, according to U.S. Census data.


Iowa has experienced this trend over the past few years, with 16,114 people moving to Iowa from other countries in the year ending July 1, 2023, and 10,340 people arriving in the year ending July 1, 2022.


Erica Johnson, the founding executive director of the Iowa Migrant Movement for Justice, said employment opportunities, safety and family members who live in Iowa are the top reasons people are moving to the state from other countries.


“They're pulled to Iowa because we have an economy that needs them, that is hiring essentially for a workforce that depends on them. And because they have family here and because they have heard that Iowa is a comparatively safe and accessible place,” Johnson said.




According to 2021 data from the American Immigration Council, 6.3 percent of Iowa’s population is foreign-born, making up 7.1 percent of the state’s workforce.


Johnson noted the increase in international migrants coming to Iowa helps fill gaps created by people leaving the state.


“It's breathing new life into downtowns in lots of rural communities and supporting schools in some rural places that have been losing populations,” Johnson said.







The departure of young people and recent college graduates to other states — or brain drain, as it’s called — is not a new trend in Iowa. For the last few years, Iowa has seen one of the highest rates of brain drain in the country.


While people still left the state in the past year, Iowa saw a significantly lower departure rate compared with 2023, when a net 3,674 people moved away.


Iowa’s net population gain was calculated by looking at migration both internationally and domestically, as well as birth and death rates. Natural change from births and deaths accounted for a net growth of 3,829 people.

'Non-compliance has consequences': Angry judge orders Fani Willis pay attorneys fees for repeatedly violating open records laws over Jan. 6 committee

A court in Georgia has harshly upbraided Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis and ordered her to pay a substantial sum for repeat violations of Peach State open records laws.

As Law&Crime previously reported, the violation occurred when the prosecutor’s office, in response to an open records request, denied having any documents showing any communications with special counsel Jack Smith or members of the since-defunct House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Late last year, in response to a lawsuit filed by conservative government watchdog group Judicial Watch, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney ordered the district attorney’s office to provide the requested documents and/or offer an explanation for their continued absence — while leaving open possible attorneys fees.

After hearing what Willis and her office had to say, the judge assessed an award of $21,578 in attorneys’ fees and costs for the plaintiffs, according to the court’s latest order, dated Jan. 3 but just released this week.

Related Coverage:
“Fani Willis flouted the law, and the court is right to slam her and require, at a minimum, the payment of nearly $22,000 to Judicial Watch,” Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton said in a press release. “But in the end, Judicial Watch wants the full truth on what she was hiding — her office’s political collusion with the Pelosi January 6 committee to ‘get Trump.’”




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In the underlying lawsuit, Judicial Watch accused Willis of making “likely false” representations about the retention of the documents in question.

In sum and substance, the court agreed with the plaintiffs, finding that Willis had both procedurally lost the case by refusing to respond and violated the law on the merits by repeatedly lying about the existence of at least some of those requested documents.

The court’s order is withering in its appraisal of how Willis and her underlings violated the Peach States Open Records Act (ORA).

“Most basically, by operation of law Defendant acknowledged violating the ORA when she defaulted,” McBurney writes. “But actual evidence proves the same: per her Records Custodian’s own admission, the District Attorney’s Office flatly ignored Plaintiff’s original ORA request, conducting no search and simply (and falsely) informing the County’s Open Records Custodian that no responsive records existed.”

To date, Willis has since admitted that documents responsive to the Jan. 6 committee do, in fact, exist. Her office continues to maintain there were never any communications with the special counsel’s office. Initially, and for over a year, Willis claimed no such records — in response to either request — were anywhere to be found.

“We know now that that is simply incorrect: once pressed by a Court order, Defendant managed to identify responsive records, but has categorized them as exempt.” McBurney continues. “Even if the records prove to be just that — exempt from disclosure for sound public policy reasons — this late revelation is a patent violation of the ORA. And for none of this is there any justification, substantial or otherwise: no one searched until prodded by civil litigation.”

But, the court explains, Willis’ office, in fact, also had at least one responsive document that was not exempt — a letter Willis wrote to the Jan. 6 committee chair. Notably, this letter was the focus of Judicial Watch’s lawsuit — the nonprofit came into possession of the document after Willis denied the letter even existed.

Finally, after defaulting, Willis provided the letter directly — attached to a memo filed in response to a court order directing her to do so.

The judge glaringly recounted this turn of events:

In this memo, Defendant announced that there still were no records responsive to one set of Plaintiff’s requests (communications with former Special Counsel Jack Smith) but that there were in fact records responsive to Plaintiff’s second set of requests (communications with the United States House January 6th Committee) — but those were exempt from disclosure. Defendant, despite these reservations, did gamely attach to her memo a copy of the letter she wrote to the Chairman of the House Committee that (1) does not appear to be covered by any of the exemptions identified in the memo and (2) had already been identified by Plaintiff as a responsive record that was wrongly withheld.
“Somehow something had changed,” the judge angrily went on. “Despite having previously informed Plaintiff four separate times that her team had carefully searched but found no responsive records, now there suddenly were — but they were not subject to disclosure under the ORA.”

The district attorney’s office eventually provided some key admissions about how all of this transpired.

“Plaintiff’s deposition of Defendant’s Records Custodian shed some light on this mystery: he admitted that there was no search for records back in August 2023,” the court order goes on. “Just a ‘no, go away.’ He further clarified that, when Plaintiff did not go away but instead sued, there still was no organized, comprehensive examination of the District Attorney’s Office’s records.”

In a footnote, McBurney further criticizes the DA’s office for the sum of their efforts to comply with the law. The judge observes: “Even after litigation began, Defendant’s Records Custodian initially merely asked certain employees if they thought they had any responsive records; there was no rigorous review of e-mails or case files.”

The lawsuit was filed in March 2024; by April of last year, Willis was in default. The legal process has played out slowly since then; the formal default verdict was entered in December.

After the prosecutor was found in default, Judicial Watch filed a separate motion asking for the court to appoint a special master in order to scour the agency’s files for the documents. Willis has until Jan. 16, to respond to that motion.

For now, her office has a bill to pay — due on Jan. 17.

“The ORA is not hortatory; it is mandatory,” McBurney lectured. “Non-compliance has consequences. One of them can be liability for the requesting party’s attorney’s fees and costs of litigation.”

Donald Trump's pick to be the US's new Surgeon General shot dead her father aged 13

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...s_campaign=1490&ito=social-twitter_mailonline

Glamorous Dr Nesheiwat is famous in the US as a medical expert on Fox News and has often talked about how losing her father at a young age inspired her career in medicine.

But The New York Times last night revealed that when she was 13 she accidentally shot dead her father at the family home in Orlando, Florida.
In her memoir, Beyond The Stethoscope, Dr Nesheiwat describes how the loss of her father inspired her to chose medicine as a career, but does not mention her role in his death.

She wrote: ‘When I was 13 years old I helplessly watched my dear father dying from an accident as blood was spurting everywhere. I couldn’t save his life. This was the start of my personal journey in life to become a physician.’
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California Homeless Grift Exposed (with details)

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1) start a charity
2) get public money to build apartments
3) charge low rates for 5 years
4) after five years refuse to pay back the public
5) begin charging market rates
6) profit

Who makes out?

Developer, lender, local politician, “charity worker” with fat salary and benefits.

Who goes back to being homeless in 5 years? The intended beneficiary.

That’s the grift ladies and gentlemen. All of a sudden, this headline makes sense.

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