Author Topic: The White House Hunger Games: Closed for business, Coming Soon: Spirit Halloween  (Read 120854 times)

Special Election Day
Go vote, you still have an hour left in most states. As long as you're in line they can't turn you away (unless your state is forgeted up)

Oh also richard Cheney died
« Last Edit: November 04, 2025, 09:40:17 PM by Ladios »

GO SHERRILL

i stay proud of my home state

Mamdani won NYC Mayor, Sherrill won NJ Governor, Spangberg won VI Governor, Prop 50 passed in CA, Prop LL passed in CO, VI state legislature Democrat majority increased by 13 seats and Jay Jones won AG election, PA state supreme court maintains 5-3 dem majority, Dems win seats on Georgia's PSC for the first time in a quarter century, Dems win 2 MI state house and MI state senate seats breaking Rep supermajority, Dems win 3 previously Republican Mayoral races in CT, NJ state assembly dems won 3 gop seats gaining a supermajority, Philly DA reelected.

Crazy what can happen when we aren't using starlink as a service intermediary. (There are 7 days left for the judge on the Rockland County voter discrepancy lawsuit to either dismiss the suit or request more information after Rockland County Board of Elections has refused to provide audit results.)
« Last Edit: Yesterday at 03:50:03 PM by Ladios »


Adding to the list the Philadelphia DA won reelection 🫶


People are sick of living like this

oh my god, for the first time in years, i actually have a little hope

Young Men voted Blue atleast +10 points.
Young Men voted Socialist +40 points.



The wave is coming.


I guess shutting the government down past November to ensure cuts to healthcare for millions wasn't a politically intelligent move, now was it President stuffass?

It wasn't wins all around, of course. In Texas, all 17 propositions passed, which isn't bad on its own but particularly prop 2 and prop 6 enshrine in texas state law further loopholes to prevent millionaires from having to pay taxes as long as they are able to tie up their wealth in stocks or investments (which doesnt prevent them from borrowing against said funds that they can claim they dont have, and yeah boring economics but basically they get all the spending power without needing to contribute to society for it), and prop 15 which is particularly dangerous for lgbt youth of christian extremist parents.

prop 15 which is particularly dangerous for lgbt youth of christian extremist parents

The amendment added language to the state constitution to provide that parents have the right "to exercise care, custody, and control of the parent's child, including the right to make decisions concerning the child's upbringing" and the responsibility "to nurture and protect the parent's child."
Ballot Title: The constitutional amendment affirming that parents are the primary decision makers for their children

on the flip side you could also say it's dangerous for youth who have lgbt extremist parents. could you imagine a parent who would convince their kid they were born the wrong gender or influence their child to undergo hormone therapy or some irreversible life changing surgery? or how about having tribal extremist parents? those would be bad too. my point being it seems your viewing this through such a narrow scope your missing the big picture

Quote from: Jeremy Newman, director of public policy for the Texas Home School Coalition
This is a priority because, currently, the constitutional rights of parents are found only in case law, which is controlled by judges. Those rights could disappear if we have bad judges who make it into office

Quote from: The measure added Section 37 to Article 1 of the Texas Constitution. The following underlined text was added:
To enshrine truths that are deeply rooted in this nation's history and traditions, the people of Texas hereby affirm that a parent has the responsibility to nurture and protect the parent's child and the corresponding fundamental right to exercise care, custody, and control of the parent's child, including the right to make decisions concerning the child's upbringing.

this isn't really different from what many states already have adopted as a 'parent's bill of rights'



although the specifics for each state differ, you can look them up and compare them here
https://parentalrights.org/states/