So, what exactly is an executive order? 

Executive orders have a long history going back to George Washington, and include the Emancipation Proclamation and Franklin Roosevelt’s creation of Japanese internment camps. The Constitution gives the president executive power but doesn’t define executive orders or memorandums. But executive orders generally are aimed at governing actions by officials and agencies, according to an explanation in this useful primer from the Congressional Research Service.

So, what exactly is an executive order? – MarketWatch

hmmmm

Audi #DriveProgress Big Game Commercial – “Daughter” 

The best part about this ad is all of the whiny, sackless bitches on the internet who are blubbering about how this ad is so wrong or unfair, like equality for women is a personal attack on their less-than-manly asses. Feeling inadequate much, boys? Oi…

(Psst, losers…. Thou doth protest too much. Real men don’t feel weak when women are empowered.)

Boston bids goodbye to Paul Pierce 

BOSTON – Boston sports fans might be storming the streets by the end of Sunday night. During the day, however, they stood on their feet as they said goodbye to one of their heroes. Paul Pierce played his 560th and final game at TD Garden Sunday afternoon as a member of the visiting Los Angeles Clippers. But he sure wasn’t sent off like a visitor. Instead, he was sent off in style, like the Celtics icon that he is.

Pierce Delivers Goodbye Message for the Ages | Boston Celtics

Awwww…. Glad to see boston showing the love. Pierce is a heck of a guy and a heck of a team player.

Police Escort Congressman After Rowdy California Town Hall 

Congressman Tom McClintock, a Republican from California, on Saturday faced a rowdy crowd at a packed town hall meeting in Northern California, and had to be escorted by police as protesters followed him shouting “Shame on you!”

McClintock was constantly interrupted and booed as he defended his party’s national agenda during the hourlong event at a theater in downtown Roseville, the population center of his sprawling congressional district, the Sacramento Bee reports (http://bit.ly/2k8fQHQ).

Hundreds of protesters stood outside chanting “Vote him out,” while those inside the theater held signs that read “Resist,” ”Dump Tom McTrump,” and “Climate change is real.”

Police Escort Congressman After Rowdy California Town Hall – ABC News

hmmmm

Eric Trump’s business trip to Uruguay cost taxpayers $97,830 in hotel bills 

Secret Service and embassy staffers provided security for the “VIP visit” to a coastal resort town.

Eric Trump’s business trip to Uruguay cost taxpayers $97,830 in hotel bills – The Washington Post

Fuck that. Those useless little mooches better start paying their own way. It does not serve the interests of the country at all to pay for their security. It is a courtesy extended by the American people, one which -if this is how these spoiled self-absorbed shitheads are going to roll- one which should be rescinded immediately.

If little Eric can’t afford his own security then he really can’t afford to make the trip in the first place. Loser.

Facebook Users Are Marking Themselves as ‘Safe’ From Kellyanne Conway’s Made-Up Terror Attack

Inept fabulist and Counselor to President Trump Kellyanne Conway continued her campaign of foisting verifiably false information onto members of the press yesterday when she claimed a terrorist attack had taken place in Bowling Green. Now she’s the butt of a great many jokes on Facebook.

Facebook Users Are Marking Themselves as ‘Safe’ From Kellyanne Conway’s Made-Up Terror Attack

Twit,

In the bleak midwinter, Standing Rock Episcopal ministry is changing

[Episcopal News Service] Episcopalians in and around the Standing Rock Sioux Nation Reservation are seeing their ministry change as the camps formed by water protectors along the Missouri River protesting the Dakota Access Pipeline are slowly closing.

The temperature in the area may have climbed to 40 degrees on Jan. 30 but it is still the bleak midwinter in North Dakota and March can be the state’s snowiest month, according to the National Weather Service. Tribal officials have said that the harshness of the winter is making the camps unsafe and they are worried about the protectors’ safety when spring melts the snow and the Missouri runs high.

The effort to close the camps began before Jan. 24 when Donald Trump called for the rapid approval of the pipeline’s final phase. The Cannon Ball tribal district Jan. 19 asked the protectors to leave and the entire tribal council supported that move the next day. However, tribal leaders also point to the president’s efforts in urging their supporters to redirect their advocacy.

However, he said in a Jan. 30 interview with Episcopal News Service, the tribe is telling people that the winter has been so harsh that remaining in the camps can be fatal in a land where wind chills have reached as low as -60 degrees. The tribe also wants debris in the camp removed. People took good care of the camps, Floberg said, but a Dec. 5 blizzard inundated the area, collapsing and burying tents and other flimsy structures – debris that the tribe wants to ensure that spring floods do not sweep into the river.

These days, the ministry is changing. Floberg and some members of St. James Episcopal Church in Cannon Ball, the closest town to the camps, recently discovered a military-style tent in Oceti Sakowin filled with what he estimated is 100,000 pounds of food. It is mostly flour, beans and macaroni, which Floberg said can be salvaged. However, they also found canned vegetables that most likely have frozen and may not be usable. The food cache grew over the months as people coming to the camps brought food donations, Floberg said. The salvageable food is being donated to people living on Standing Rock and on the nearby Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation.

 

….The changes in their ministry has been guided by listening to what the tribal council is saying and what Chairman Dave Archambault II is saying, and then trying to figure out how Episcopalians can assist. “It’s when the tribe is engaged outside of itself that we step in to stand with Standing Rock and make clear our position of support for what they have decided to do,” he said.

“When it comes to internal decisions being made within the tribe, the Church doesn’t weigh in on whether the tribe should do this or that,” Floberg said. Episcopalians who are tribal members will weigh in on those issues and “we expect their good conscience to guide them.”

Floberg and others are staunch in their desire to support the tribe’s decisions. However, Floberg said, it is difficult to serve all of the community when some members are frustrated with the camps, others are frustrated with tribal decisions and others are frustrated by those who are frustrated.

For instance, can people in the camps still come to St. James in Cannon Ball to fill their water cans if the church supports the tribe’s decision that the camps should close?

“Is that supporting the camp to remain open when the tribe has asked it to close or is it simply responding to basic human need? After all, we’ve heard it: Water is life,” Floberg explained.

“Right now, until Feb. 19, our position can be rather clear. If water is needed and we have that resource available, we’ll make it available to those who need water. … We believe we can be faithful to standing with Standing Rock while at the same time wanting the tribe to understand the Church always will respond to humanitarian need.”

In the bleak midwinter, Standing Rock Episcopal ministry is changing

hmmm

After Trump, Black Lives Matter And Pipeline Protests, New Bills Would Raise Penalties For Protest 

In North Dakota, a lawmaker has introduced a bill that would allow motorists to run over and kill any protester obstructing a highway as long as the driver did not do it intentionally.

After Trump, Black Lives Matter And Pipeline Protests, New Bills Would Raise Penalties For Protest : NPR

Americans seem to love these unamerican politicians these days.

Trump executive order: US judge temporarily halts deportations

Protests break out at major US airports as refugees and some visa-holders are denied entry.

…The ruling from federal Judge Ann Donnelly, in New York, prevented the removal from the US of people with approved refugee applications, valid visas, and “other individuals… legally authorised to enter the United States”.

The emergency ruling also said there was a risk of “substantial and irreparable injury” to those affected.

Her ruling is not on the constitutionality of Mr Trump’s executive order.

Trump executive order: US judge temporarily halts deportations – BBC News

hmmm