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Breaking911
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Local officials say The Black Daggers, the official U.S. Army Special Operations Command Parachute Demonstration Team, parachuted into Vanderbilt Stadium ahead of the Commodores match-up against Ole Miss to deliver the game ball - WSMV
is that nashville?
get well lil fighter!
anons got your back, red texting that notable stuffs
keep us posted baker senpai
dubs and 17
checkq em
checkq this out: article is called "Fact-checking President Trump’s wild Daily Caller interview"
and its WaPo article
http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2018/11/16/fact-checking-president-trumps-wild-daily-caller-interview
and checkq this out:
“You have 17 people — half, many of them worked for Hillary Clinton, some on the foundation. The Hillary Clinton Foundation.”
This is false, as we have documented previously. Five members of the Mueller team contributed to Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign. One of those people, attorney Jeannie Rhee, represented the Clinton Foundation in a 2015 lawsuit over Clinton’s use of her private email server. Aaron Zebley, a former counterterrorism FBI agent and assistant U.S. attorney, made no contributions to Clinton but represented a Clinton aide at one point.
In other words, no member of the Mueller team worked for Hillary Clinton and only one had a connection to the Clinton Foundation.
nod to anons ?
breaking down CA fire Q posts 2467 and 1762
got these two so far
CA budget cuts past 12-months re: Fire & Prevention?
https://www.sierrastar.com/news/local/article152191682.html
Governor Brown proposes $50 million cuts in battle against tree mortality
Thousands of dead and dying trees in the foothills below Shaver Lake. Gov. Jerry Brown’s updated budget, released last week, cuts funds for local tree mortality efforts from $52.7 million to just $2 million. This is less than 4% of the funds allotted in January of this year. File Photo Fresno Bee
Critics of Gov. Jerry Brown’s revisions to the 2017-2018 state budget say he’s proposing to cut millions of dollars desperately needed to fight fires and fund tree mortality projects across the state.
CalFire would also see a huge cut if the Governor’s budget is approved, critics said. Funding for the extended fire season, increased firefighter surge capacity, Conservation Corps fire suppression crews, and aerial assets is set to be slashed by nearly half - from $91 million to $41.7 million.
“The drought may be officially over, but the tree mortality crisis is not,” said Jim Patterson, Assemblyman (R-23rd). “Trees are still dying and the need to fund local efforts is greater than ever. Now is not the time to slash and burn these vital programs.”
Richard Bagley, President of the 168 Fire Safe Council, said the drastic cuts threaten to undermine the ongoing work within mountain communities statewide.
What happens when CA is in serious debt and lost priority aid from the FED gov due to sanctuary status (illegal)?
https://www.sfgate.com/politics/article/SF-preparing-in-case-Trump-cuts-federal-funds-10607210.php
Should Trump follow through on his stated intention, it could have a major and immediate impact on the city of San Francisco, which receives around $1 billion annually from the federal government, according to city Controller Ben Rosenfield.
Of that money, $478 million comes directly from the federal government. The balance comes from the federal government via the state of California. The city’s current budget is $9.6 billion.
Most of the welfare programs provided by the city’s Human Services Agency are paid for in part with federal dollars, including the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program, known as TANF, but also food stamps. The new Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing receives $30 million annually for supportive housing and other services, among other federal funds.
By far, the biggest hit to the city would be the elimination of reimbursements it receives for Medicaid, which provides free or low-cost health coverage to low-income people.