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@cdarwin Yes, it will be a bloody story, just not in the way he thinks.

When the GOP’s guy is actually calling for the forced expulsion of more than 20 million people and threatening to use the power of the state to persecute and imprison his enemies, we need all hands on deck to shut this shit down, including the very few Republicans who aren’t in the death cult.

1/ At least 100,000 tons of Russian fuel is estimated to have been destroyed in Ukrainian drone attacks. The attacked fuel depots were built underground for protection but were rebuilt on the surface to save money. Now they may have to be buried again. ⬇️

#gripe Come ln, LA Times. Has there ever been a case of decreasing competition which lowers prices? How about a monopoly?!?! #journalism

#Florida is reportedly 💥sending police officers to the homes of people who signed a #petition supporting an #abortion #rights ballot #initiative.

Florida Governor #Ron #DeSantis’s administration has begun ❌investigating thousands of verified signatures that helped to put a state constitutional amendment protecting the right to abortion on the ballot in November.
The amendment would overturn Florida’s current six-week abortion ban.

Petition organizers collected about 100,000 more signatures than they needed, surpassing the 900,000 that are required by the state and ensuring that their policy would be on the ballot.
Now the Department of State’s spokesperson Ryan Ash claims that his agency has “uncovered evidence of illegal conduct with fraudulent petitions.”

Supervisors in Hillsborough, Orange, Palm Beach, Osceola, Alachua, and Broward counties have been requested to gather around 36,000 signatures for state review, according to the Tampa Bay Times.
One supervisor with 16 years of experience told the Times that the state’s request was entirely unprecedented.

Not only had the state requested signatures that had already been verified, but they did so for a validated petition, not a rejected petition, which are typically the basis of fraud investigations.

newrepublic.com/post/185704/fl

@HopelessDemigod
Yeah, radio is magical, and part of why I find it so much fun is that we still don't understand the mysteries of propagation. Yes, we understand exactly how radio "works" (in outer space, in a vacuum) but not the vagaries of terrestrial propagation.

From time to time I've encountered this kind of thing and I love it.

One time I was climbing up I-15 from Los Angeles to Cajon Pass and something started breaking the squelch on my radio. KH-this and KH-that... What? Waitaminute. I pulled over and started working guys on a repeater (2 meters) from LA to Hawaii. Crazy. Tropo-ducting, of course. Signals were quite solid.

Another time I was in Florida late at night, 20 meters was stone dead. So I switched to PSK and listened at 14070. Here was an inaudible signal but my computer could copy it from a guy on Reunion Island. We conversed fine, but no audible signal. The next night we did it again. Hahaha. Low power at both ends. Love it when that happens.

Russian cyops propaganda is being funneled through the conservative media network. No surprise when you hear Russian talking points but

“a scheme to create and distribute content to U.S. audiences with hidden Russian government messaging,”

news.yahoo.com/news/pro-trump-

@Nick2E0LUN You might consider a discone. I've built them, easy, no critical dimensions. No significant gain but they work broadband.

@randahl Ah, so a high-testosterone male is more objective? Hmm. That's not my experience, but whatever.

@skribe @RickiTarr
Indeed. As a genealogist for almost 40 years, having studied and deciphered countless European church records I concur. European church records are where you find Christenings, weddings, and deaths recorded. There were no censuses like in the USA so they are invaluable keys to connecting families. Christenings usually list witnesses, which are surprisingly useful at uncovering previously unknown family members. These records also often show occupations and place of burial. Really useful. Learning to decipher these records is a bit of an art because church scribes used mostly standardized set of abbreviations. Everything is handwritten, of course.

When I began, I was shocked when I scanned down death records. I was shocked at the ages listed. 71 years, 54 years, 2 years, 1/2 year, 3 years, 34 years, 4 years, 2-1/2 years, 47 years, 3 years, 3/12 years, 6 years, 3 years, 1 year, 7/12 years, 12 years, on, and on, and on. The majority of deaths were children under the age of 6. So yeah, losing children to disease and whatever else was par for the course.

We live in very different times today. We're shocked when a child dies. 150 years ago and farther back, it was standard procedure for children to die so having several children was a basic requirement if you intended to pass your genes on to the future. One of my wife's ancestors from the late 1600s had ten children and his wife died in childbirth. So he remarried and had ten more children. Apparently, as a little joke, he named his first child John and his last child 40 years later John. This little stunt had me scratching my head for a long while. Two Johns 40 years apart that are actually brothers. Haha. Well played there Mr. Hendrick von Zellen.

Another reason to have lots of kids was to have "hands". A farmer needs workers. Grow your own.

But yeah, in modern times it's no longer necessary to crank out ten kids. This is the first time in a million years of hominid history where the need for lots of kids is gone and is actually undesirable. The religions that demand that you have a lot of kids made sense in the old days. Today, humans have become a pestilence, choking the planet. If we continue as we are now, by 2046 we will have fished out the oceans. No more seafood in any significant quantity. This is a scenario not imagined by the Middle Eastern shepherds that created the West's dominant religions. A new order is required.

@Dtl Perhaps the commercial source should be asked where they obtained this magnetic carbon, an impossible substance.

Perhaps they can also supply you with some transparent aluminum.

@IAmDannyBoling Brian Kemp BRAGGED about signing a law (opposed by 70% of people in the state) to allow people to carry guns without a license or background check. The blood is on his hands. cbsnews.com/news/georgia-gun-b

@Free_Press Yes, well, here in blood red West Virginia, there are no small number of people that believe bad weather is the fault of the weather forecasters. If we stopped forecasting the weather, things would get better.

@Bronwyn I don't even want to think about this, much less do it.

@Free_Press This is horrible. I hope the Russians know that if they persist in this adventure, the same and worse will befall them.

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