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COMMS
Speaker Kevin McCarthy
@SpeakerMcCarthy
It's Memorial Day weekend—a time to reflect on the freedom that has been fought for and given to each and every one of us.
It's also a reminder that politicians in Washington should be working just as hard to preserve that freedom for the next generation.
May 27, 2023, 10:25AM
https://truthsocial.com/@SpeakerMcCarthy/posts/110441105889576088
Who threw their white hat in, on the left?
27MSM heads
3 steps
DeSantis signs27 billsinto law in marathon session
Most of the new laws will go into effect on July 1, the first day of the fiscal year.
lorida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed 27 new laws in Tallahassee after a busy legislative session with hundreds of bills passed by the Legislature.
Most of the new laws signed Thursday will go into effect on July 1, the first day of the fiscal year.
Criminal justice and law enforcement
House Bill 537 excludes offenders of heinous crimes from being eligible for gain-time and incentive gain-time to reduce supervision time and requires the court to impose additional conditions on dangerous offenders.
HB 667 requires a court to determine whether taking the deposition of a minor under the age of 16 who is a victim of a sexual crime is appropriate. The bill also requires a victim to be notified of specified information when contacted by those acting on behalf of the defendant in a criminal proceeding.
HB 1307 creates criminal penalties for the possession, installation, use, or aiding in the use of a contaminant device designed to be inserted into retail fuel dispensers for the purpose of altering, manipulating or interrupting its normal function. Criminal penalties also apply to anyone who modifies a vehicle's factory-installed fuel tank with the intention of using it to hold or transfer fuel. The bill allows for the forfeiture of vehicles and other equipment used for retail fuel theft.
Senate Bill 50 adds current judicial assistants and their spouses and children to the list of specified personnel and family members who are exempted from public record requirements for identification and location information. HB 1215 is a similar bill that relates to the exemption of public records of investigators and inspectors and their families.
HB 535 authorizes travel expenses for members of law enforcement in cases of bereavement and increases the amount of money paid toward the funeral costs of officers who are killed in the line of duty. The bill also authorizes the use of state motor vehicles to attend the funeral of a state law enforcement officer killed in the line of duty.
SB 232 protects vulnerable persons and specifies the conditions under which a person commits exploitation of a person over the age of 65 years. The bill provides criminal penalties and authorizes a person who is in imminent danger of exploitation to petition for an injunction for protection.
Psychology
HB 33 creates the Psychology Interjurisdictional Compact and provides for the recognition of psychology licenses in compact states, as well as authorizing a compact state to require a license. The bill also designates a state commissioner and the employees of the commission as state agents for the purpose of applying sovereign immunity.
HB 35 further adds to HB33, and provides an exemption from public records requirements for information held by the Department of Health or the Board of Psychology pursuant to the Psychology Interjurisdictional Compact and exempts public meeting requirements for certain meetings. SB 218 revises the definition of the term "telehealth provider" to include people who are licensed as genetic counselors.
Business
HB 761 prohibits certain telephone sales calls and outlines the conditions that could lead to civil actions for text message solicitation.
HB 7063 is a taxation bill that revises provisions related to tourist tax reimbursement, exemptions for religious and educational property and homestead exemptions, as well as certain surtaxes that are found to be unconstitutional.
HB 487 revises eligibility for plans of deferred compensation established by a chief financial officer. Injured employees can be ordered by a CFO to get an evaluation by an expert medical advisor in order to decide on compensation claims. The bill also revised certain laws around funeral insurance and revised the procedures around procuring a bail bond agency license.
SB 346 is a bill related to public construction and requires that certain contracts provide a detailed list of all expenditures in order to complete projects with local government entities. A date of completion must be given within five days of submitting the list, and the final completion date must be at least 30 days after the contracted items have been delivered. The bill also stipulates that final payment will be withheld until services have been fulfilled.
SB 708 reduces the time that someone can respond to an estoppel letter, which validates lease terms for a third party, from 14 days to 10 days, allowing a mortgage provider to send a corrected letter if the first was not used. The bill also prohibits a mortgage provider from refusing to accept outstanding funds that were included in an estoppel letter.
SB 1068 prohibits political subdivisions from withholding the issuance of a development permit or other use approval to a drone delivery service. The bill also prohibits enacting or enforcing ordinances that prohibit a drone delivery service based on the service’s drone port. Drone ports are also exempt from the Florida Fire Prevention Code and the Florida Building Code with the exception of a stairwell if the building is taller than one story.
HB 645 amends the Unmanned Aircraft Systems Act, and adds several state definitions of a "critical infrastructure structure" which includes water and wastewater treatment plants, gas refineries, seaports, airports, dams and military installations. A 60-day prison term and a possible $500 fine will apply to anyone who willfully operates a drone over such facilities or infrastructure.
SB 1154 revises the Labor Pool Act and provides that workers are provided fresh drinking water and bathroom facilities. The bill also states that an aggrieved worker alleging a violation of the labor pool law must give written notice of the violation, and allow the labor pool the opportunity to rectify the alleged violation.
SB 1318 is a bill that defines the term crew and exempts a spaceflight entity from liability for the injury or death of a crew member that is the result of spaceflight activities. The new law also requires that a spaceflight entity have its crew sign a warning statement.
HB 49 authorizes certain entities to preserve and restore abandoned and historic cemeteries and creates Historic Cemeteries Program Advisory Council.
HB 155 dissolves the Tampa Bay Area Regional Transit Authority, requires the agency to close its affairs and transfer pending activities and also requires that all records held by the authority be forwarded.
SB 1002 provides that vehicle repair shops and its employees are prohibited from offering an inducement to a customer in exchange for making an insurance claim for windshield replacement or repairs. The bill further prohibits a claimant from being forced to use a particular business to repair their vehicle’s glass.
HB 847 removes the authority of a local government from requiring a permit for floating vessel platforms and only allows for a one-time permit for those floating platforms if the owner self-certifies with the exemption criteria. Local governments can also establish restricted areas within 500 feet of sewage pump stations located at a public or private nonresidential marina.
HB 1595 codifies the powers, duties, and obligations of a sheriff. The bill also revises the process of appealing a funding reduction to the operating budget of a municipal law enforcement agency, and requires that there is an elected sheriff in each Florida county, while prohibiting the sheriff’s duties from being transferred to another officer or office.
HB 721 revises the standards for paying out paid family leave insurance in the Sunshine State.
HB 1087 makes changes to the Child Support Program. To receive services from the program, families can send an application or are automatically referred to the service because a parent is receiving cash or food assistance. Payments can also be deferred if the parent obligated to pay child support participates in job training.
addresses several issues related to the agriculture industry, and revises the powers and duties of the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. Included in the bill is the removal of a law that prohibits a person from testing milk-fat content, and pasteurizing milk.
https://justthenews.com/nation/states/center-square/desantis-signs-27-bills-law-marathon-session
27
Nov 01, 2017 1:56:06 AM EDT
Anonymous ID: grTMpzrL No. 147450817
Not everything can be publicly disclosed because so much ties back to foreign heads of state. Much will be revealed, we want transparency but not at a cost we can’t recover from.
Time and date stamp
May 27, 2023, 10:25AM
Jul 25, 201 mirror 1025
Jul 25 is 725 = may 27
3501
Jul 25, 2019 8:09:23 PM EDT
Q !!mG7VJxZNCI ID: a07484 No. 7190003
Possible China monitored [MUELLER] hearing?
Possible China analyzing likelihood of POTUS re_ELEC 2020?
Possible China taking STEPS [think propaganda] to harm POTUS re: 2020?
Possible China in sec_comms w/ D candidate(s) running for President re: re-institute US piggy-bank?
Possible China in sec_comms w/ former D_party senior officials re: re-institute US piggy-bank?
Possible China put extreme [threatening?] pressure on NK the day of the [MUELLER] hearing (coincidence?) should hearing swing to POTUS?
Possible acts were taken in effort to diminish (lessen) D_blow?
Possible acts were taken in effort to 'change the narrative'?
Define 'False Flag'.
Q
fuck I wish I knew how to box/outline these so you can see it clearly
considering trump is always five steps ahead, 3 steps is something
2 post(s) found containing "5 steps".
https://operationq.pub/?q=5+steps
>Jul 25, 2019 8:09:23 PM EDT
based on the above Q drop
Time and date stamp of today
May 27, 2023, 10:25AM
Jul 25, 201 mirror 1025
Jul 25 is 725 = may 27
matches Q 3501's time stamp mirrored
o7
Another confirmation
May 27, 2020
5 27 = 7 25
Jul 25, 2019 8:09:23 PM EDT
4335
May 27, 2020 3:07:11 PM EDT
Q !!Hs1Jq13jV6 ID: 128aa1 No. 9334514
'Quarantine' is when you restrict the movement of sick people.
'Tyranny' is when you restrict the movement of healthy people.
Q
Trump: Took back the waters of the Unites States
mp4
Good News: SCOTUS Rules Against the Regulators By reaffirming the property rights of a husband and wife, the High Court struck a blow for Liberty over statism.
Yesterday was a good day for American Liberty, and we have our Supreme Court’s 5-3-1 conservative majority to thank for it.
As The Wall Street Journal reports, “The Supreme Court limited the Environmental Protection Agency’s authority over wetlands in a decision with broad ramifications for the environment, agriculture, energy and mining.”
To read that lead sentence from the Journal, one would think this to be a clash of titans — say, the energy industry against the regulatory state. But it wasn’t that at all. No, the High Court didn’t green-light the construction of a federal dam for wiping out the last of the snail darters — though we’d have been just fine if it did. Instead, the Court ruled on behalf of a lowly husband and wife, Michael and Chantell Sackett, who for 16 freakin’ years have been battling the bureaucratic brigades in order to build a home on land that they owned. Dry land that they owned. Dry land that the Environmental Protection Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers have claimed is in fact a wetland and therefore subject to the whims of the regulatory commissars.
“Don’t believe the cries that the 5-4 decision will despoil America’s precious wetlands,” say the Journal’s editorial page editors. “The majority simply stopped a regulatory land grab.” Indeed they did. The editors continue:
The Clean Water Act (CWA)authorizes EPA to regulate only “navigable waters” in interstate commerce. Yet the EPA said the Sacketts’ property was connected to a wetland some 30 feet away, which was connected to a ditch that connected to a non-navigable creek that connected to a lake. Follow that?
Americans anywhere in the country could have their backyard declared a wetland, but they wouldn’t know it until the EPA swoops in and threatens enormous penalties for pouring herbicide on weeds. EPA advises landowners to solicit the Army Corps’ opinion before doing anything with their property. But 75% of the time the Corps claims jurisdiction.
In fact,all nine justices ruled in favor of the Sacketts, although the Court split 5-4 on the actual scope of federal power.Still, it was a win.
In writing the majority opinion, Justice Samuel Alito took up the joint causes of Liberty and limited government. And he did so by asking a simple question about regulatory overreach — and by separating the occasional good work of the regulatory state from the trampling of individual rights that occurs when it runs amok.
“By all accounts,” wrote Alito, “the [Clean Water] Act has been a great success. Before its enactment in 1972, many of the Nation’s rivers, lakes, and streams were severely polluted, and existing federal legislation had proved to be inadequate. Today, many formerly fetid bodies of water are safe for the use and enjoyment of the people of this country.”
Alito continued: “There is, however, an unfortunate footnote to this success story: the outer boundaries of the Act’s geographical reach have been uncertain from the start. The Act applies to ‘the waters of the United States,’ but what does that phrase mean? [Does it mean] ditches, swimming pools, and puddles?”
Indeed, where does the long arm of the regulatory state end and where do our rights as individual Americans begin?
Much has been made of the Supreme Court’s seemingly solid conservative majority, and it’s been the cause of much teeth-gnashing and garment-rending on the Left. Their angst, though, has been largely focused on rulings involving the culture wars — rulings on abortion and affirmative action and religious liberty, for example. But this under-the-radar ruling, in favor of private property, strikes as big a blow against Big Government and in favor of little people as any other.
In his 1998 book The Noblest Triumph: Property and Prosperity Through the Ages, the late British-born American author Tom Bethell argued that the concept of private property is inextricably linked to the foundational institutions of Western civilization, especially those of justice and liberty. “When property is privatized and the rule of law is established, in such a way that all including rulers themselves are subject to the same law,” he wrote, “economies will prosper and civilizations will blossom.”
On the other hand, Bethell argued, the welfare states of the Western world “were built on the premise that property … is no longer sacred” and can thus be taken from some and given to others. This redistributive mindset is the foundation of all the awful -isms in politics — leftism, socialism, communism, Marxism, progressivism — and it’s how Democrats win votes. They promise to rob rich Peter to pay poor Paul. Those who doubt this need only harken back to the 2008 presidential campaign, when Barack Obama told Joe “The Plumber” Wurzelbacher and everyone else within earshot, “I think when you spread the wealth around, it’s good for everybody.”
That’s right. Democrats believe it’s “good for everybody” when the government snatches away what’s rightfully ours — just as the EPA for 16 years snatched away the private property rights of the Sackett family.
Yesterday’s Supreme Court ruling, though, which endeavored “to identify with greater clarity what the [Clean Water] Act means by ‘the waters of the United States,’” was a much-needed defense of private property rights and a good punch in the nose of Big Government.
Hopefully, Sackett v. EPA will send a message to those on the Left that there are limits to the power of the regulatory state and the unelected bureaucrats who routinely wield it against us.
https://patriotpost.us/articles/97598-good-news-scotus-rules-against-the-regulators-2023-05-26
Three year delta
4325
May 26, 2020 11:05:02 PM EDT
Q !!Hs1Jq13jV6 ID: 428d6b No. 9326604
f768deaef22da979abcfb73c9175b54d71fcf891666c5449c1969c07c3cc8920.png
[D]s in coordination w/ [D]&[F] assets have launched [as known] a full-scale insurgency attack against the people of the United States in an effort to regain power by any means necessary.
All assets deployed.
[Current landscape]coordinated and deliberate events to impact [rig] P_election.
WAR.
The future of our Republic is at stake.
Survival as a Nation.
We Rise or We Die.
We, the People.
Q
>>9326604
we're in for one hell of a show
Kash Patel
@Kash
The Jan 6 DNC "Pipe Bomber"- the FBI has video footage of the individual, ID confirmable, and a license plate from surveillance footage that tracked him to Virginia… and not one arrest.
Congress- Subpoena ALL documentation the FBI has on this and see if it doesn't lead to a government confidential human source file
May 27, 2023, 10:42 AM
https://truthsocial.com/@Kash/posts/110441172931834411
TheStormHasArrived
@TheStormHasArrived17
@realDonaldTrump is blowing Ron away in every poll, yet they are hilariously pushing the narrative that DeSantis is the only one who can beat the Democrats.
We are laughing in their faces! 🤣
May 27, 2023, 11:12 AM
https://truthsocial.com/@TheStormHasArrived17/posts/110441291642734092
https://rumble.com/embed/v2nriz4/?pub=4
>>18911869, >>18911870 Del. Stacey Plaskett Democrat Congresswoman Went to Jeffrey Epstein’s Home
NOTABLE
This is what a swamp creature looks like.
[Current landscape]
Listen and learn about the waters of the United States of America
Then read this
The Clean Water Act (CWA)authorizes EPA to regulate only “navigable waters” in interstate commerce. Yet the EPA said the Sacketts’ property was connected to a wetland some 30 feet away, which was connected to a ditch that connected to a non-navigable creek that connected to a lake. Follow that?