meltinggoldanddippingthingsinit:

wildlythoughtfulsquid:

eldritch-augur:

bitterbitchclubpresident:

the bill is one line:

Terminate the EPA on dec 31st, 2018.

you can contact the reps who authored this bill.

ask them what happens to the data the agency collects? what about the current employees? what about the EPA’s powers? What’s their plan?

Matt Gaetz FL ®

Pensacola Office

4300 Bayou Blvd., Suite 13

(850) 479-1183

Pensacola, FL 32503

Thomas Massie KY ®

Northern Kentucky Office

541 Buttermilk Pike

Suite 208

Crescent Springs, KY 41017

Phone: (859) 426-0080
Fax: (859) 426-0061
Hours: Monday-Friday 9:00AM-5:00PM

LaGrange Office

108 W. Jefferson Street

LaGrange, KY 40031

Phone: (502) 265-9119
Fax: (502) 265-9126

Steven Palazzo MS ®

Hattiesburg Office
641 Main Street, Suite 142
Hattiesburg, MS 39401
Phone: (601) 582-3246

Pascagoula Office
3118 Pascagoula St., Suite 181
Pascagoula, MS 39567
Phone: 228-202-8104
Fax: 228-202-8105

Biloxi Office
970 Tommy Munro Drive
Suite D
Biloxi, MS 39532
T: (228)864-7670
F: (228)864-3099

Washington, DC Office
2349 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
T (202) 225-5772

Barry Loudermilk GA ®

Washington, DC Office

329 Cannon House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
Phone: 202-225-2931
FAX: 202-225-2944

Woodstock District Office

9898 Highway 92, Suite 100
Woodstock, GA 30188
Phone: 770-429-1776
FAX: 770 -517-7427

Cartersville District Office

135 West Cherokee Avenue, Suite 122
Cartersville, GA 30120
Phone: 770-429-1776

Galleria District Office

600 Galleria Pkwy, Suite 120
Atlanta, GA 30339
Phone: 770-429-1776
Fax: 678-556-5184

it would be best if constituents from these districts called! ask some questions and let them know we are not ok with this!

Please please please call these reps and the reps in your own state. We NEED to maintain protection for these species, as it is the only way to preserve the ecosystems that we DIRECTLY DEPEND ON for carbon sequestering, clean water, and clean air!!

FUCK THIS. FUCK TRUMP, THIS CAN’T HAPPEN.

RESIST FIGHT BACK.

Save the EPA. Call your representatives.

tubaterry:

simonalkenmayer:

If you’re discouraged about the election results

Don’t be. You’re hearing media do what it does: harp on one person’s lack of enthusiasm and make it seem that that one opinion is held by thousands.

This race went precisely as I thought it would. Precisely.

And it was absolutely a massive success.

So let me tell you why, so that you feel better and can easily put down the annoying crowing that republicans are going to do, because they managed to cling to a few things.

If the votes fall as I believe they will, the democrats will have retaken the house by some 30 seats. This is impressive and somewhat unique in our country’s history. The GOP, upon taking the house originally, jerrimandered these districts in impressively screwball ways. Wherever that rigging has been overturned, the districts have gone blue. Which is, of course, why they did it. Democrats have the house now, 30ish flips in republican rugged districts. 15 of those being female candidates.

That is absolutely impressive.

A few key candidates to whom many people were paying close attention did not perform as people desired. Abrams, O’Rourke, Gillum. Well…I’m not surprised. Abrams faces absolute state wide fraud. Her opponent being the person also in charge of voter registration, withholding some 50k votes of which 70% were black. Voter intimidation. This is blatant corruption. And yet still…her race was very close. So too with Beto. Ted Cruz was a presidential candidate! When he took Texas, he did so with a wide margin. Last night in Texas he was fighting tooth and nail. Gillum’s goobenatorial race for Florida was a figurative dead heat. 99% of the vote in—49% Gillum, 49.7% DeSantis. These are CLASSICALLY and FULLY republican regions in which Trump took the presidency by huge margins. That these races, with all those challenges, were as close as they were PROVES that something unprecedented happened.

3-400% voter turnout increases for a midterm election. Mostly with the youth.

But let’s talk about what it means to have the house.

Now I know you’re probably concerned about the federal judgeships that are about to pop up for consideration, and it’s true that the Senate was needed to stop approvals of those candidates, but…

Control of the house means that Democrats now take hold of some critical committees. These committees are the very ones that will be overseeing corruption allegations. Ways and Means, energy and Commerce, Financial Services, Intelligence, appropriations, foreign affairs, armed services, judiciary, transportation and infrastructure, and…government reform.

How do you feel now?

The worst political fallout of a GOP controlled government, the worst sound bites that weren’t Trump’s, the worst slaps across the face? All came from footage of those very same committees. Those committees now belong to Democrats.

Massive policy shifts also occurred in many classically conservative states—legalizing marijuana votes, Florida giving the vote back to former criminals who’ve served their time thus giving the vote back to a HUGE portion of the African-American Community that has been held in check by a racist and classicist policing method, then there were upsets in many small ways too.

I promise you…this is all excellent and it will have truly important and forceful impact. In 2020, if we can keep that same enthusiasm and rage, the entire government will shift. But that can only happen if we keep moving forward, if the candidates who won keep their noses to the grindstone and push back hard, if you and I and everyone on the ground continues to talk about this and force out bigots and greed.

Do not be discouraged. I promise you…this was an amazing election. Don’t focus on a few bright stars and think that all is lost because they fell. There is a great deal happening here, and one thing I know from being at sea—when a wave is building, there is first a terrifying shift, as the water level begins to rise. The ship will first dip, surrounded by walls of water, and then of a sudden, the swell. The ship raises and passengers suddenly realize that they are much higher than before, with an incredible view. Then the wave crests and takes the ship with it.

We didn’t see a wave crest tonight. So what? That means it’s a much larger wave than we realized. It will crest in the future. But only if that fluid pressure is maintained.

This is good. It is. So long as everyone keeps working. This is good.

Calm down. Have a glass of champagne. A cup of tea. When they Trumpet all their noise…say nothing. Nothing needs to be said. You’re higher than you were with an excellent view of the ending. So relax. Don’t fret.

Some VERY IMPORTANT other shit that’s going down thanks to voters:

* Medicare expansion in Nebraska

* Colorado abolished slavery (no more “except as punishment for a crime”)

* Colorado (and a couple others) voted to create independent redistricting commissions, hopefully reducing gerrymandering.

* Colorado also voted by a significant margin to limit predatory payday lending.

* Florida has re-enfranchised felony voters

* Florida finally requires unanimous jury decisions for convictions for felonies

* Michigan legalized marijuana, Missouri and Utah legalized it for medicinal use

* Washington state now requires police to take mental health training and de-escalation training

This is far from the whole list.  

Voting is more than just about your federal representatives.  Local shit gets decided.  Local shit normalizes things, allows them to grow.  Vote and spread good shit around.

Hey there! I’m currently an intern at a place that has me do a lot of busy-work/menial tasks. I mostly work alone doing very simple things, so I get bored very easily with no one to talk to and my work not heavily occupying my mind. I’ve started listening to music/podcasts, but there’s only so much of that I can handle. Do y’all have any tips for things to keep my mind occupied while I work? Or even podcast recs that are very mentally stimulating? Thanks!

a-marathon-not-a-sprint:

yournewapartment:

The Bechdel Cast! Amazing feminist podcast that looks at popular movies under the lens of the Bechdel Test. I am actually so into this podcast that I drove two an half hours last night to see them do a live recording of their take on The Princess Diaries. And it was AMAZING.

Other than that, ask your supervisor for more work! Supervisors love to see initiative, and it’s likely they’ll be impressed that you’re trying to take on more responsibility, even as an intern. – Mac

Speaking as someone with ADHD, you may consider seeing someone–it sounds like podcasts help capture that part of your attention span that goes wandering while you’re doing monotonous tasks. Getting a diagnosis can help you approach your boss and explicitly be like “hey, I’m having trouble maintaining an optimum level of engagement, can we work out some accommodations?”

Roleplaying podcasts can help, they’re really epic. Two popular ones are Critical Role and The Adventure Zone. I also like things like 99% Invisible (which is about design) and The Beerists, which is about craft beers (with really vivid descriptions of flavor, mouthfeel and booziness). Freakonomics is always really fascinating, too, and has a good backlog to work through.

If your work leaves one hand free, you may also consider the use of a stim toy or a notepad to doodle on. A pen with a koosh ball at the end can help give you something to fiddle with under the table in meetings.

I’m suing the U.S. government for causing the climate change crisis, and I’m 22.

deadcatwithaflamethrower:

thebisquid:

mostlysignssomeportents:

My name is Kelsey Juliana and I’m suing the United States government
for causing and accelerating the climate change crisis. I’m 22 years old
and I’ve been a climate activist for more than half of my life.

I know that young people like me, and others who have yet to be born,
have a right to a safe climate system. The constitution guarantees all
Americans the right to life, liberty, and property. But how is anyone
supposed to live a life of freedom amid a climate crisis? My own
government is violating my constitutional rights by its ongoing and
deliberate actions that cause climate change and it’s not right.

I, along with 20 other young people from around the country, filed a lawsuit against the federal government in 2015, called Juliana v. United States.

We’re not asking for money. Instead, we’re asking the court to order
the government to develop and implement a National Climate Recovery Plan
based on the best available science.

This plan should end the reign of fossil fuels and quickly
decarbonize our atmosphere so that we can stabilize our climate system
before it’s too late.

The longer we go without climate recovery, the more we risk allowing our climate to spiral completely out of control.

And the climate is spiraling out of control, no matter how many
politicians claim we’re experiencing normal fluctuations or, worse, a
“hoax.” All of the expert witnesses in our lawsuit say that we are
currently—already—in the “danger zone” and an “emergency situation” with
only 1°C of planetary heating. Allowing the planet to heat up any more
is not safe for our species, as well as so many others. And according to
the Trump administration’s most recent environmental impact statement,
the planet could heat as much as 7°F before the end of this century. We
cannot allow this to happen because we simply will not survive.

We originally filed our lawsuit against the Obama administration.
That administration tried to have the case dismissed, but the judge
ruled in our favor and found that we should be allowed to go to trial.

In 2017, the Trump administration inherited the lawsuit and it has
done everything in its power, employing every conceivable tactic, to
deny my fellow plaintiffs and me our right to present our case in court.
This administration is so fiercely attempting to silence our voices.

At this point, every level of the federal judiciary—the U.S. District
Court, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, and the Supreme Court—has
denied the Trump administration’s efforts to have the case thrown out.
Yet it will not halt its efforts to avoid standard legal procedures and
confront us, the nation’s youth, in court.

Our trial is officially scheduled to begin on October 29, 2018 in Eugene, Oregon.

What we’re asking for could change everything.

My fellow plaintiffs and I want you with us as we head into the
courtroom to confront the United States government for knowingly
violating our constitutional rights. Supporters will hold rallies in
every state around the country, so if you can’t be with us in Eugene, find your local rally here.

Get regular updates by following @youthvgov on social media.

You can learn more about this case and get regular trial updates by tuning in to the No Ordinary Lawsuit podcast here.

Lastly, if you have the means, click here to make a donation to Our Children’s Trust, the nonprofit organization that supports our lawsuit and many others like it around the country.

https://boingboing.net/2018/10/23/our-childrens-trust.html

@deadcatwithaflamethrower @thebibliosphere @glumshoe

Boosting!