Lawsuit seeks to end new law signed by Greg Abbott banning water breaks after Texas heat wave deaths
Lawsuit seeks to end new law signed by Greg Abbott banning water breaks after Texas heat wave deaths
The only thing holding the state back is voter apathy.
Don’t forget the rampant voter suppression.
I’m a leftist in a red area. I waited 5 minutes to vote. There were dozens of voting booths, just as many volunteer workers, and it’s a relatively unpopulated area. There were also three or four voting locations within a 15 minute drive.
My buddy lives downtown. The entire city only had a few voting locations. It was a two hour wait, for like six voting booths. It was also outside of downtown proper, and was a 30 minute walk away from the nearest rail line.
They know that people won’t want to wait longer than their lunch break. They know that people in the city don’t have cars, and will rely on the train to get where they’re going. Yeah, voter suppression is in full swing.
Because they have not experienced the cruelty of what they are supporting. . . yet. The moment they do, they’ll cry and whine that it’s affecting them.
See Florida stopping permanent alimony and the blow back from Republicans that are shocked it’s affecting them.
I could probably manage to be a temporary moderator with how much I'm online lately. I certainly like to report alt right assholes, so blocking them or removing their content isn't far off.
Don't know that I can say I can do it long-term, however. Especially if it becomes very big.
I'm realizing that I myself am probably going to end up being a moderator ... Ugh
I used to mod on reddit back in like 2012 and I knew how much time it took and I got way too consumed with it, but I think the priority isn't that moderators are vigilant 24 hours a day, but that users who harm the community are actively removed within a reasonable amount of time. Also the sub I used to mod went from like 6k to 10k users while I was there. There are maybe 25 people max on !politics 🤣🤣
Go leave a comment on the thread and I'll sort of wrap it up tonight with a proposal for 3 of us to approach Ernest about adding us as mods.
Maybe you'd like to explain then.
"Once HB 2127 goes into effect in September, local ordinances mandating water breaks for workers outdoors in cities across the state, which the Observer writes contributed to a "significant decrease in annual heat-related illnesses and heat deaths," will be overturned and localities will be barred from passing new ones."