Last bread
Agreed. 8chan has become a soft core porn site. We certainly know who the 'boys' are
Last bread
Agreed. 8chan has become a soft core porn site. We certainly know who the 'boys' are
AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka visits China
AFL-CIO President, Richard Trumka, led a delegation to visit Beijing, Xuzhou, and Shanghai.
ACFTU Vice-Chair Chen Hao met Mr. Richard Trumka, on 8 October 2013 in Beijing.Chen said that the relationship between the two union federations has made headway in recent years, with local and industrial unions in both countries maintaining frequent reciprocal visits.Mr. Trumka talked about the TPP and the attitudes of the AFL-CIO towards world trade. The two sides have exchanged the latest information of the trade union movement in both countries, as well as unions' role in the world economic recovery.
In Beijing, the delegation had a roundtable discussion with the ACFTU experts and Chinese academists, and also visited the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security and the State Administration of Work Safety.
Mr. Trumka went down to a mine in Xuzhou and talked with students and teachers in China University of Mining and Technology.
http://en.acftu.org/28746/201405/15/140515082037268.shtml
Children's hospital
>http://www.latimes.com/socal/daily-pilot/news/tn-dpt-me-sb54-hearing-20180927-story.html
An Orange County Superior Court judge determined Thursday that California’s “sanctuary state” protections for undocumented immigrants infringe on Huntington Beach’s local control as a charter city, making Huntington the first city to successfully challenge the controversial law.
Senate Bill 54, authored by state Senate leader Kevin de LeĂłn (D-Los Angeles), in many cases prohibits state and local police agencies from notifying federal officials about the impending release of immigrants in custody who may be deported.
But after an hours-long courtroom debate Thursday, Judge James Crandall sided with Huntington Beach City Attorney Michael Gates’ argument that the law is unconstitutional as it applies to charter cities, which are run by a charter adopted by local voters.
The ruling makes Huntington Beach and all of California’s 121 charter cities exempt from complying with SB54.