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166
Off-Topic / Donald Trump pays tribute to passengers of United flight 93 who 'took charge and
« on: September 11, 2020, 10:48:46 am »Message ID: 1338975
Donald Trump pays tribute to passengers of United flight 93 who 'took charge and changed the course of history forever' by overpowering hijackers before jet reached Washington at ceremony in Shanksville - as Pence and Biden mourn in NYC

* Donald Trump delivered a sobering, patriotic speech at a memorial service in Shanksville, Pennsylvania
* The president paid tribute to those who died on Flight 93 during the September 11th attacks
* 'The heroes of Flight 93 are an everlasting reminder that no matter the danger, no matter the threat, no matter the
    odds, America will always rise up, stand tall, and fight back,' he said
* Meanwhile, Joe Biden and Mike Pence marked the 19th anniversary at a memorial ceremony at Ground Zero
* This year's September 11 memorial was altered in order to adhere to safety precautions around COVID-19
* Mourners gathered at the 9/11 museum where they listened to a pre-recorded reading of the names
* A military flyover expected to take place on Friday has been canceled following backlash
* City officials announced an F-18 jet was scheduled to conduct a flyover on the Hudson River on Friday
* The idea drew criticism on social media, with many calling the event 'insensitive' and 'tasteless'

President Donald Trump on Friday vowed that America will always 'rise up' and 'fight back' when under attack as he paid tribute to the 40 people who died on United Flight 93 when they brought down the plane in a field in Shanksville, Pennsylvania.

In a sobering and patriotic speech at the national memorial, Trump praised the '40 towering patriots' who he said 'took charge and changed the course of history forever' as al Qaeda hijackers were flying the plane toward Washington.

'The heroes of Flight 93 are an everlasting reminder that no matter the danger, no matter the threat, no matter the odds, America will always rise up, stand tall, and fight back,' the president said.

'The only thing that stood between the enemy and a deadly strike at the heart of American democracy was the courage and resolve of 40 men and women.'

'Our sacred task, our righteous duty, and our solemn pledge, is to carry forward the noble legacy of the brave souls who gave their lives for us 19 years ago,' he said.

'In their memory, we resolve to stand united as one American nation, to defend our freedoms - to uphold our values - to love our neighbors - to cherish our country - to care for our communities - to honor our heroes - and to never forget.'

After he spoke, he and first lady Melania Trump laid a wreath at the Flight 93 Memorial, which contains the names of those who died. A bag piper played 'Amazing Grace.'

During his remarks, the president also paid tribute to the members of the military that lost their lives in the wake of the terrorists attacks.

'More than 7,000 Military Heroes have laid down their lives since 9/11 to preserve our freedom,' Trump said.

'No words can express the summit of their glory or the infinite depth of our gratitude. But we will strive every single day to repay our immeasurable debt and prove worthy of their supreme sacrifice.'

Trump also offered words to the unit the country on its day of mourning.

'We were united by our conviction that America was the world's most exceptional country, blessed with the most incredible heroes, and that this was a land worth defending with our very last breath. It was a unity based on love for our families, care for our neighbors, loyalty to our fellow citizens, pride in our flag, gratitude for our police and first responders, faith in God - and a refusal to bend our will to the depraved forces of violence, intimidation, oppression and evil,' he said.

'When terrorists raced to destroy the seat of our democracy, the 40 of flight 93 did the most American of things, they took a vote and then they acted,' Trump added.

Trump's visit kicked off a day of memorial services expected to take place at the memorial sites of the 9/11 attacks in Pennsylvania, New York City and at the Pentagon in Washington, as well as across the country. 

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden is expected to visit the Shanksville memorial later in the afternoon, after attending the 9/11 Memorial & Museum's annual commemoration at Ground Zero in New York, along with Vice President Mike Pence.

The president and first lady Melania Trump also observed a moment of silence aboard Air Force One at 8.46am, marking the time the first plane hit the World Trade Center 19 years ago.

It was a different display in Lower Manhattan at the Ground Zero ceremony, where public officials were not part of the program. Biden nonetheless consoled family members in the audience.

While Trump and Biden's visit will not overlap, Pence and Biden's did. In a rare moment of detente, Biden was seen approaching Pence after arriving at the ceremony and tapping him on the shoulder to say hello.

Wearing masks, the current and former vice president then shared an elbow bump - the popular COVID-era handshake replacement - as did Biden and second lady Karen Pence.

Although the candidates and country will be focused on the commemorations, the political significance of their visits to Shanksville is hard to ignore, with Pennsylvania being a crucial battleground state.

Biden however, insisted that he would steer clear of politics on a national day of mourning.

'I'm not gonna make any news today. I'm not gonna talk about anything other than 9/11,' he told reporters. 'We took all our advertising down, it's a solemn day, and that's how we're going to keep it, OK?'

Victims' relatives gathered for split-screen remembrances, one at the September 11 memorial plaza at the World Trade Center and another on a nearby corner, set up by a separate organization.

The Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers Foundation objected to the memorial's decision to forgo a longstanding tradition of having relatives read the names of the dead, often adding poignant tributes. 

Memorial leaders said they made the change as a coronavirus-safety precaution on the 19th anniversary of the deadliest terror attack on U.S. soil.

At the September 11 Memorial and Museum, mourners stood silently as they listened to a pre-recorded reading of the names - a plan that organizers felt would avoid close contact at a stage but still allow families to remember their loved ones at the place where they died.

But some felt the change robbed the observance of its emotional impact.

The Tunnel to Towers Foundation arranged its own, simultaneous ceremony a few blocks away, saying there was no reason that people couldn't recite names while keeping a safe distance.

Reverence for the dead 'requires that we read these names out loud, in person, every year,' said foundation chair Frank Siller, whose brother Stephen was a firefighter.

The readers stood at podiums that were wiped down between each person.

Biden offered condolences to a woman he spotted crying in the crowd of hundreds, Amanda Barreto, who lost her aunt and godmother in the attacks.

Barreto, 27, said Biden 'wanted to let me know to keep the faith' and 'wanted me to say strong,' telling her he understood what it meant to lose a loved one. His first wife and their daughter died in a 1972 car crash, and his son Beau died of brain cancer in 2015.

Biden didn't speak at the ceremony, which has a longstanding custom of not allowing politicians to make remarks.

He also told the reporters traveling with him what the day means to him: 'It means I remember all my friends that I lost.'

'It takes a lot of courage for someone that lost someone to come back today,' Biden continued. 'I know from experience, losing my wife, my daughter, my son, you relive it, the moment as if it's happening. It's hard.

'It's a wonderful memorial, but it's hard. It just brings you back to the moment it happened, no matter how long, how much time passes. So I admire the families who come.'

Trump's Full Speech At The Flight 93 National Memorial 

Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you, David, very much. It's a great honor to be with you. Nineteen years ago, on this day, at this very hour, on this field, 40 brave men and women triumphed over terror and gave their lives in defense of our nation. Their names and their stories are forever inscribed on the eternal roll call of American heroes. Today, we pay tribute to their sacrifice, and we mourn deeply for the nearly 3,000 precious and beautiful souls who were taken from us on September 11th, 2001. To the family members of Flight 93: Today, every heartbeat in America is wedded to yours. Your pain and anguish is the shared grief of our whole nation. The memory of your treasured loved ones will inspire America for all time to come. The heroes of Flight 93 are an everlasting reminder that no matter the danger, no matter the threat, no matter the odds, America will always rise up, stand tall, and fight back.

To every 9/11 member all across this nation: The First Lady and I come to this hallowed ground deeply aware that we cannot fill the void in your heart or erase the terrible sorrow of this day. The agony renewed, the nightmare relived, the wounds reopened, the last treasured words played over and over again in your minds. But while we cannot erase your pain, we can help to shoulder your burden. We promise that unwavering love that you so want and need, support, devotion -- and the very special devotion -- of all Americans. On that September morning, when America was under attack, the battle turned in the skies above this field. Soon after taking off from Newark, New Jersey, radical Islamic terrorists seized control of United 93. Other hijacked planes struck the North Tower of the World Trade Center, and then the South Tower, and then the Pentagon. The terrorists on Flight 93 had a fourth target in mind.

It was called: our nation's capital. They were just 20 minutes away from reaching their sinister objective. The only thing that stood between the enemy and a deadly strike at the heart of American democracy was the courage and resolve of 40 men and women -- the amazing passengers and crew of Flight 93. Donald and Jean Peterson were grandparents traveling to vacation in California. Deora Bodley was a student headed back to college. Richard Guadagno was returning from celebrating his grandmother's 100th birthday. Lauren Catuzzi Grandcolas was three months pregnant with her first child. Every passenger and crewmember on the plane had a life filled with love and joy, friends and family, radiant hopes and limitless dreams. When the plane was hijacked, they called their families and learned that America was also under attack.

Then they faced the most fateful moment of their lives. Through the heartache and the tears, they prayed to God, they placed their last calls home, they whispered the immortal words, 'I love you.' Today, those words ring out across these sacred grounds, and they shine down on us from Heaven above. When terrorists raced to destroy the seat of our democracy, the 40 of Flight 93 did the most American of things: They took a vote, and then they acted. Together, they charged the cockpit, they confronted the pure evil, and in their last act on this Earth, they saved our capital. In this Pennsylvania field, the 40 intrepid souls of Flight 93 died as true heroes. Their momentous deeds will outlive us all.

In the days and weeks after 9/11, citizens of all faiths, backgrounds, colors, and creeds came together, prayed together, mourned together, and rebuilt together. The song 'God Bless America' became a rallying cry for the nation. We were united by our conviction that America was the world's most exceptional country, blessed with the most incredible heroes, and that this was a land worth defending with our very last breath. It was a unity based on love for our families, care for our neighbors, loyalty to our fellow citizens, pride in our great flag, gratitude for our police and first responders, faith in God, and a refusal to bend our will to the depraved forces of violence, intimidation, oppression, and evil. In New York, Arlington, and Shanksville, people raced into the suffocating smoke and rubble. At Ground Zero, the world witnessed the miracle of American courage and sacrifice. As ash rained down, police officers, first responders, and firefighters ran into the fires of hell. On that day, more than 400 first responders gave their lives, including 23 New York City police officers, 37 Port Authority workers, and 343 New York City firefighters.

Today, we honor their extraordinary sacrifice and every first responder who keeps America safe. With us today is David DeMato, a retired Chicago police officer and a current officer of the Navy Reserves. On 9/11, he drove from Chicago to Ground Zero. As David says, 'While the sights and smells of working at Ground Zero will forever be etched in my mind, what is more profound is the way this country came together afterwards. The police officers and firemen were revered as the heroes they truly are; the military was appreciated in a manner not seen in decades; and common people found new meaning in values like friendship, kindness, and selflessness.' Thank you, David. Such beautiful words. And thank you to every member of law enforcement who risks their lives to ensure our safety and uphold our peace. This morning, we also remember the 183 people who were killed in the attack on the Pentagon and the remarkable service members who crawled straight through the raging blaze to rescue their comrades. We express our undying loyalty to the nearly 6 million young men and women who have enlisted in the United States armed forces since September 11th, 2001. More than 7,000 military heroes have laid down their lives since 9/11 to preserve our freedom.

No words can express the summit of their glory or the infinite depth of our gratitude. But we will strive every single day to repay our immeasurable debt and prove worthy of their supreme sacrifice. America will never relent in pursuing terrorists that threaten our people. Less than one year ago, American warriors took out the savage killer and leader of ISIS, Al-Baghdadi. Soon after, our warriors ended the brutal reign of the Iranian butcher who murdered thousands of American service members. The world's top terrorist, Qasem Soleimani, is dead. Here in Shanksville, this community locked arms and hearts in the wake of tragedy. With us today is Chuck Wagner, a heavy equipment operator who lives just a few miles away. Very soon after the attack, Chuck helped search for the black box. He was so changed by what he experienced that he joined with several members of his church to become what they call 'Ambassadors' for the 40 men and women on Flight 93. Chuck and his neighbors learned about each person, cared for their families, and each day, rain or shine, they took shifts standing vigil over their final resting place. Long before this place was a national memorial, back when it was marked by a simple wooden cross, Chuck and his fellow Ambassadors were always here waiting to tell visitors about those we lost. Nineteen years later, Chuck says his life is devoted to three things: his family, his church, and preserving the memory of the men and women of Flight 93.

To Chuck, his wife Jayne -- (applause) -- thank you very much. Thank you very much. To Chuck and his wife Jayne, thank you so much for being here. And to the over 40 Ambassadors with us today, please stand and receive America's thanks. And this is a very deep thanks. Please. (Applause.) Thank you very much. Also with us is Marine veteran Jason Thomas, from Long Island. On September 11th, Jason had just retired from the Marines. But he immediately put back on his uniform and raced into the nightmare of ash and debris. At Ground Zero, he found a fellow Marine, Dave Karnes. Together, they began to call out: 'United States Marines! United States Marines! If you can hear us, yell, tap. Do whatever you can do. We're the United States Marines.' Soon they heard a shout for help. Two police officers were trapped beneath 20 feet of rubble. Jason and Dave dug for hours on end knowing that, at any moment, the wreckage could come down on them, crushing them alive. At one point, someone told Jason to stop. Jason replied, 'I'm a Marine. I don't go back. I go forward.' That day, Jason helped save the lives of those two officers. For years, Jason said nothing about what he did on 9/11. He did not even tell his five children. But when he saw the rescue recounted on TV, he decided to meet those officers.

One of them gave him a gift: a steel cross made from a beam that Jason helped lift to free them from the hell on Earth. As Jason said about the cross, 'It means a lot. It's a symbol of what we are as Americans. Because that day, we all came together and stood as a nation, as Americans. It didn't matter what race you were, what religion you were. It didn't matter. We all came together to help one another. I'd die for this country. I'd die for this country.' Jason, thank you very much for bearing witness to the character of our nation. Jason, thank you very much. (Applause.) Thank you very much. Thank you, Jason. The men and women of Flight 93 were mothers and fathers, sons and daughters, husbands and wives. Nothing could have prepared them for the dreadful events of that morning.

But when the moment came, when history called, they did not hesitate, they did not waver. Forty towering patriots rose up, took charge, made their stand, turned the tide, and changed the course of history forever. Our sacred task, our righteous duty, and our solemn pledge is to carry forward the noble legacy of the brave souls who gave their lives for us 19 years ago. In their memory, we resolve to stand united as one American nation, to defend our freedoms, to uphold our values, to love our neighbors, to cherish our country, to care for our communities, to honor our heroes, and to never, ever forget. Thank you. God bless you. God bless the heroes of Flight 93. God bless all of the families. 9/11 -- we'll never forget. God bless you all, and God bless America. Thank you very much. (Applause.)

Pence went on to the Tunnel to Towers Foundation ceremony, where he read the Bible's 23rd Psalm, and his wife, Karen, read a passage from the Book of Ecclesiastes.

'For the families of the lost and friends they left behind, I pray these ancient words will comfort your heart and others,' said the vice president, drawing applause from the crowd of hundreds.

In short, the anniversary of 9/11 is a complicated occasion in a maelstrom of a year, as the U.S. grapples with a health crisis, searches its soul over racial injustice and prepares to choose a leader to chart a path forward.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8722731/Planned-9-11-military-flyover-2500ft-NYC-prompts-outrage.html

167
Off-Topic / Black Lives Matter protester is arrested in Washington state after calling polic
« on: September 09, 2020, 10:46:50 am »Message ID: 1338790
Black Lives Matter protester is arrested in Washington state after calling police 'pigs' and saying he wants to 'take their heads off with a hand saw'

* Jeremy Logan says he was driven away by plain-clothes cops in an unmarked van
* Logan says he was arrested on a 2013 drugs warrant which was only now fulfilled
* Spokane County sheriff hit back and insisted the arrest was not a 'political issue'

A Black Lives Matter protester was arrested and bundled into a van on a seven-year-old warrant after calling police 'pigs' and saying he wanted to 'take their heads off with a hand saw'.

Jeremy Logan says he was driven away in an unmarked van and kept in custody for more than a day while on his way to a protest in Spokane, Washington.

Logan, the chair of a local Democratic Socialists of America branch, told HuffPost that he was arrested on a 2013 drugs warrant which has only now been fulfilled.

Spokane County Sheriff Ozzie Knezovich hit back in a lengthy press conference where he insisted that Logan's arrest was 'not a political issue'.

However, the Republican sheriff admitted that officers had been monitoring Logan's online rhetoric in the lead-up to his arrest.

Logan said he was arrested on August 30 after plain-clothes officers grabbed him and told him he was under arrest on a warrant.

He says that up to eight plain-clothed men handcuffed him and bundled him into an unmarked van before driving him to city police.

Logan was wearing a shirt with the slogan ACAB or 'All Cops Are B***ards', which he says was 'not taken lightly' by the arresting officers.

Two friends witnessed the arrest and told HuffPost that it was 'scary'. Logan was released a day later when his father paid a $500 bond.

Logan said the 2013 warrant related to unpaid fines relating to a failure to appear in court on drugs charges.

Responding to the claims, Sheriff Knezovich gave a press conference in which berated HuffPost's coverage and highlighted examples of Antifa violence.

He said that the arresting officers did have badges around their necks when they detained Logan, who he said had joined the recent CHAZ protests in Seattle.

Knezovich pointed out Logan's Facebook posts, calling them 'threatening, 'violent' and 'ISIS-like' after Logan spoke about 'taking these pigs' heads off with a saw'.

'So why was he arrested? He was a convicted felon with a warrant and yes, he knew he had the warrant, and yes, he had been contacted before,' the sheriff said.

Knezovich continued: 'But he [Logan] also upped the ante by making threats and his rhetoric was increasingly violent.

'It's a response to the fact that you had an individual that had a warrant and we identified he had a warrant. He was escalating in his rhetoric and we removed him from the street.'   

'Logan is not the victim here. He is a felon who had a warrant,' the sheriff said, saying that officers had been looking for Logan since before the Facebook posts. 

'America is the victim of Antifa's agenda and the media's continued pushing of a false narrative that these people don't exist,' he said. 

The sheriff also insisted that his office had taken action against right-wing extremists in the past as well as left-wing protesters.

Knezovich has also criticized Antifa on Twitter, saying the movement 'isn't about race, they don't care about BLM, it's about the overthrow of our government'.

'They are violent and have shown America what life will look like if they succeed,' he said on Monday.

President Trump has linked Antifa to the wave of protests which erupted in the wake of George Floyd's death in Minneapolis in May. 

Trump said that the US would designate Antifa as a 'terrorist organization', although in reality it has little formal structure.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8713797/Black-Lives-Matter-protester-arrested-Facebook-posts.html

168
Off-Topic / True crime author Shanna Hogan, 38, dies three days after falling into her pool,
« on: September 09, 2020, 10:27:32 am »Message ID: 1338788
True crime author Shanna Hogan, 38, dies three days after falling into her pool, leaving behind an 18-month-old son and husband

* Shanna Hogan died on September 1, three says after falling into her pool
* Her husband Matt LaRussa says he came home to find her unresponsive
* She had been swimming with their 15-month-old Zander, he said
* Zander was unharmed but Shanna could not be woken up
* She was taken to the hospital where she was put in the ICU with brain swelling
* The family took her off life support and have now donated her organs
* They are asking for $100,000 to help LaRussa pay her medical bills and raise Zander on his own

True crime author Shanna Hogan died last week, two days after apparently tripping and falling into her family pool.

The 38-year-old had been at home in Phoenix, Arizona, when her husband Matt LaRussa says he came home to find her unresponsive.

She had been swimming with their 15-month-old son Zander, he said, who was unharmed.

Matt says he pulled his wife of 20 years from the water and gave her CPR. 

She was taken to the hospital but had suffered such severe brain damage that she did not recover and on September 1, was pronounced dead.

He announced her death on Facebook and said the family had opted for her organs to be donated.

'I am so broken by losing Shanna my best friend for almost twenty years.

'But I know the her gifts have already save 4 people and I know their will be more people she will save.

'I would give anything in the world to have her back and hold her for ever, but that was not our story. I am so thankful for the 20 years.

'And have so many memories that I will never forget and be sure to teach our son who Shanna was nd to be a great man. I will never forget her,' he wrote.

Now, he is trying to raise $100,000 on a GoFundMe account to pay for her medical bills and to 'raise Zander without a mother'.

Hogan was a New York Times bestseller and celebrated true crime author who was best known for her book, Picture Perfect: the Jody Arias Story.

In 2013, Arias was convicted of murdering her boyfriend Travis Alexander five years earlier.

Hogan became an expert on the crime and was regularly asked to comment on it on true crime shows.

She had several other true crime books which she sold on Amazon. 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8714063/True-crime-author-Shanna-Hogan-38-dies-two-weeks-tripping-falling-pool.html

169
Off-Topic / BREAKING: This Epic Video of MAGA Dance Party is Going VIRAL
« on: September 09, 2020, 09:52:26 am »Message ID: 1338786
BREAKING: This Epic Video of MAGA Dance Party is Going VIRAL

(Gateway Pundit) – On August 22, a violent Black Lives Matter mob confronted a group of Trump supporters in Beverly Hills.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NnzPEyTpByU&feature=share&fbclid=IwAR1m2zl2I4oIsDg1FZ5fw1BstuTPWcal7YCZOG9yb_pJtXjO0Tjhg8QJCM0   

At least one Trump supporter was beat by the mob in the street.

The Trump Unity Bridge supporters did not respond with violence.

Instead, a viral video shows the Trump Unity Bridge hold a dance off.

The Trump group turned the riot into a MAGA YMCA dance off.

Several readers sent this to us this weekend.

The video has over 200,000 views in two days.

thegatewaypundit.com/2020/09/going-viral-trump-unity-bridge-turns-black-lives-matter-confrontation-maga-ymca-dance-party-video/


170
Off-Topic / Re: Some fall shows coming back late
« on: September 02, 2020, 07:59:02 am »Message ID: 1337886
Try www.tvguide.com for upcoming fall schedule!

171
Off-Topic / Re: Movies
« on: August 30, 2020, 11:19:54 am »Message ID: 1337461
Not here!

They are use county fair grounds for drivin movies & concerts!

172
Off-Topic / Surge in Americans buying tiny $30K pop-up backyard offices as people move to wo
« on: August 27, 2020, 10:31:18 am »Message ID: 1337164
Surge in Americans buying tiny $30K pop-up backyard offices as people move to working remotely during the coronavirus pandemic

* Prefabricated backyard offices have become the newest trend for Americans working at home during the pandemic
* Studio Shed, based in Colorado, sells small home offices and other spaces for an average of $20,000 to $30,000
* Similar backyard offices have been seen in California, Pennsylvania, Colorado and other states
* Several areas do not require permits for home add-ons under 200sqft, making the pop-up backyard offices more
   accessible for the millions of Americans working from home during the pandemic

Americans are now paying up to $30,000 to install a pop-up home offices in their backyards as a number of people continue to work from home during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The outbreak of the coronavirus in January and implementation of lockdown orders in March shuffled millions of citizens from bustling offices to working remotely in their homes.     

The move proved difficult for several people as many families were forced to balance a multitude of factors, including child care, as the search for a private, quiet work space led many to temporarily claim bedrooms or basements. 

Some home-sellers have tried to entice buyers by saying their residence 'provides a nice backdrop for Zoom calls'.

But as industries have increasingly pushed employees to work from home, some have found success with professionally made, stand-alone backyard offices.

According to Studio Shed, a Colorado-based company that builds prefabricated backyard structures, business in recent months has boomed exponentially.

'Recently, we have seen a massive surge in the 80- to 120-square feet option, which is a perfect office size or home gym or kid’s study area,' Mike Koeing, Studio Shed co-founder, told Yahoo Finance.

Studio Shed has been constructing tiny offices, bedrooms, music studios, 'man caves' and other spaces that cost an average of $20,000 to $30,000 since 2008.

Studios can be designed online with a 3D design tool or delivered as a kit with instructions. They can include options for interior design, insulation and electricity.

Koeing said the shift from independent offices to working remotely caused sales to spike 14-fold compared to what the company made last year.

'We were already seeing some very good growth having started in 2008 just seeing these shifts in the way people work and wanting to spend more time at home and maybe not commute, but starting in March it’s just been growing significantly,' said Keoing.

Most of the demand for Studio Shed's home offices have primarily come from the West Coast, but Koeing said they've noticed a significant increase of customers on the East Coast.

'As soon as March and April hit we definitely saw that Eastern part of the country grow, that market is up a couple hundred percent over last year,' said Koeing.

March and April coincides the two-month span where New York City emerged as a virus epicenter and was inundated with thousands of cases.

Much of America watched as New York City's morgues overflowed, hospitals became overrun, front line workers pleaded for PPE supplies on social media and one of the most buzzing cities went quiet.

Nearby states like New Jersey were also hit and temporarily shuttered as a result.

As of August, New York City has amassed more than 238,000 cases and 23,000 deaths. New York State recorded 436,000 cases and 32,000 deaths.

Depending on where the shed is built, many places do not require permits for add-on dwellings under 200sqft, which further pushed the emerging trend's popularity.

Koeing told CNN Business that Studio Shed sold five times as many home office units in May, June and July compared to the same months last year.  It's on pace to sell 10 times more units this month that August 2019.

Other companies like Modeco Construction in Canada, a prefabricated building company, and Bantam Built, a tiny house company, have also seen a surge in sales.

Sheds Unlimited, based in Pennsylvania, serves customers from South Carolina to Maine and the spike in requests has pushed delivery time to up to 13 weeks.
The company traditionally made storage sheds and garages, bud administrator Janelle Stoltzfus said they've seen a number of sheds being repurposed as office space.

'We have had a lot of people looking for home offices,' said Janelle Stoltzfus. 'They've asked us to install shelves so they have a place to work.'

Erin Miller, a layout designer and copy editor for Centennial Colorado, told CNN Business that having to share an office space with her husband while working from home became difficult.

'Let's just say that our styles are not 100% the same,' said Miller.

Subsequently, Miller ordered a 10-by-16 foot shed in May and it was fully finished by early July.

The shed doesn't require a permit where she lives and was able to complete the project in a few weeks.

'We did need to permit the electrical but that was quite manageable, requiring only two inspections,' said Miller.

Miller's pop-up shed has room for a desk, an extra table, printer, file cabinet, a bookcase and an additional 80sqft of room.

'That will probably be outfitted with a sofa, chair and rug, to allow me to also use the space during non-work hours to read, relax or visit with friends,' she said.

Although the new space has attracted the attention of Miller's teenage children, she said the prefabricated space provided a much-needed haven.

'My commute to work is a bit longer,' she said. 'Out the back door and across the grass instead of just down a flight of stairs, but the space is welcoming.'

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8670191/Surge-Americans-buying-tiny-30K-pop-backyard-offices.html

173
Off-Topic / More than one million Americans filed for unemployment last week even as parts o
« on: August 27, 2020, 10:22:29 am »Message ID: 1337163
More than one million Americans filed for unemployment last week even as parts of the economy start to rebound amid the pandemic and government financial aid dries up

* Initial claims for state unemployment benefits totaled 1.006 million for the week ended August 22, compared to 1.104
   million in the prior week
* The reopening of businesses in May helped to pull down claims from a record 6.867 million in March, when nonessential
   were shut due to coronavirus
* Before the coronavirus pandemic, claims had never topped 700,000 in a week
* More than 14.5m are collecting traditional jobless benefits, up from 1.7m in 2019

The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits hovered around one million last week, suggesting the labor market recovery was stalling amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and government financial aid drying up.

Initial claims for state unemployment benefits totaled a seasonally adjusted 1.006 million for the week ended August 22, compared to 1.104 million in the prior week, the Labor Department said on Thursday.

The reopening of businesses in May helped to pull down claims from a record 6.867 million in March, when nonessential establishments were shuttered in an effort to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

Claims dropped below 1 million early this month for the first time since the pandemic started in the United States. Before the coronavirus pandemic, they had never topped 700,000 in a week.

More than 14.5 million are collecting traditional jobless benefits - up from 1.7 million a year ago - a sign that many American families are depending on unemployment checks to keep them afloat. 

The pandemic has had a devastating impact on the American economy. Businesses closed and Americans stayed home to avoid infection. Economic activity plummeted and employers slashed more than 22 million jobs in March and April.

Since then, the job market and the economy have been rebounding as businesses slowly reopened.

Home sales and prices have been strong. Employers added nearly 9.3 million jobs in May, June and July - but that hiring surge replaced just 42 per cent of the jobs lost in March and April.

Until July 31, the unemployed were receiving an extra $600 a week in federal money on top of regular state unemployment benefits, part of an extraordinary lifeline extended to help them through the crisis.

The loss of that money is putting the squeeze on many families.

'My income is basically cut in half,' said Taylor Love, 34, an unemployed massage therapist in Austin, Texas. 'Paying our mortgage is going to be a struggle. We´re going to have to dip into what little savings we have.´

After passing a massive financial rescue package in March, congressional Republicans and Democrats have been unable to agree on more aid.

President Donald Trump signed an executive order August 8 offering a stripped-down version of the expanded unemployment benefits.

At least 39 states have accepted or said that they would apply for federal grants that let them increase weekly benefits by $300 or $400.

A summertime resurgence of cases in the South and West forced many businesses to close again in July. The data firm Womply reports that business closures have mostly stabilized in the past four weeks.

Still, 70 per cent of Texas bars and 71 per cent of California health and beauty shops were closed as of mid-August, Womply found.

Economists also worry that without additional government help the economy's recovery will fade.

'I really want Congress to come up with a benefits package,' said Jacob Hanson, an unemployed temp worker in Seattle. 'Everyone needs a hand right now. The situation is pretty ridiculous.'

Businesses have exhausted government loans to help with wages, while a weekly unemployment supplement expired in July. Economists attributed a sharp rebound in activity to the government's financial support and some are dialing back lofty growth estimates for the third quarter. 

Last week, nearly 608,000 people applied for jobless aid under a new program that extends eligibility for the first time to self-employed and gig workers, up from 525,000 the previous week.

That figure isn't adjusted for seasonal trends, so it's reported separately.

Altogether, the Labor Department said that 27 million people are receiving some form of unemployment benefits, though the figure may be inflated by double-counting by states.

Though new COVID-19 infections have subsided after a broad resurgence through the summer, many hot spots remain, especially at college campuses that have reopened for in-person learning.

A separate report from the Commerce Department on Thursday confirmed the economy suffered its deepest contraction in at least 73 years in the second quarter.

Gross domestic product plunged at a 31.7 per cent annualized rate last quarter, the government said in its second estimate. That was revised from the 32.9 per cent pace reported last month.

The economy slipped into recession in February.

Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics,  said: 'The risk of permanent damage to the labor market remains high which will slow the pace of recovery. The return to pre-pandemic levels of prosperity is set to be an uncertain and prolonged process.'


174
Off-Topic / Hurricane Laura kills three in Louisiana including girl, 14, when trees fall on
« on: August 27, 2020, 10:14:07 am »Message ID: 1337162
Hurricane Laura kills three in Louisiana including girl, 14, when trees fall on their homes amid 150mph winds as 700,000 are left without power - and those who didn't evacuate are told 'write down your name and keep it in a ziplock bag in your pocket'

* Hurricane Laura made landfall in southwest Louisiana as an 'extremely dangerous' Category 4 hurricane
* It came ashore near the small town of Cameron and wreaked havoc in Lake Charles in early hours of Thursday
* According to Louisiana Gov Bel Edwards, a 14-year-old girl was killed when a tree fell on her home 
* More than 700,000 homes and businesses are without power in Texas and Louisiana as of Thursday morning
* Louisiana officials said in statement that rescue efforts cannot and will not begin until after hurricane passes
* 'Please evacuate and if you choose to stay and we can't get to you, write your name, address, social security number
    and next of kin and put it a ziplock bag in your pocket,' the statement reads
*  Laura's 150mph winds made it the strongest hurricane to strike the US this year and in Louisiana since 1856 
* The storm surge could penetrate inland from between Freeport, Texas, and the mouth of the Mississippi River
* Officials in TX and LA issued mandatory evacuation orders for more than half a million people on Tuesday


Hurricane Laura has killed three people, including a 14-year-old girl, after trees fell on their homes when the Category 4 storm system smashed into Texas and Louisiana with 150mph winds, leaving 700,000 without power as people who did not evacuate are told to write their names on a piece of paper and 'put it in a ziplock bag' in their pockets. 

The hurricane made landfall at 1am with the strongest winds that Louisiana has seen since 1856 and warnings that the storm could rip apart buildings and penetrate up to 200 miles inland.

The hurricane's first reported fatality was a 14-year-old girl in Leesville, Louisiana, who died when a tree fell on her house, a spokeswoman for Governor John Bel Edwards said.

'We do expect that there could be more fatalities,' the spokeswoman, Christina Stephens, said on Twitter.

Just hours later, two more fatalities were reported in Louisiana. One 60-year-old man was killed when a tree fell on his home. Another man died when a tree fell on his home in Jackson Parish.

Gov Edwards also warned Louisiana residents to stay inside until the threat of the storm is completely over.

'Now is not the time to go sightseeing. The threat #Laura poses to Louisiana is far from over,' Edwards tweeted Thursday morning. 'Stay home, continue to heed warnings from local officials and monitor your local news to stay informed,' he added.

Laura reached land near the small town of Cameron around 30 miles from the Texas border, where officials went door-to-door pleading with people to flee the path of the storm amid fears the entire parish will be inundated.

In a statement, the Vermilion Parish Sheriff's Office in Louisiana warned that anyone choosing not to evacuate 'must understand that rescue efforts cannot and will not begin until after storm and surge has passed and it is safe to do so'. 

'Please evacuate and if you choose to stay and we can't get to you, write your name, address, social security number and next of kin and put it a ziplock bag in your pocket. Praying that it does not come to this!' the sheriff's office said.

The Beauregard Parish Sheriff's Office said in a statement they are 'experiencing very high call volume at this time and understand the dire situation the parish is currently in'.

The sheriff's office is asking residents to 'limit calls to things or situations of the highest level of emergency'.

Footage showed torrents of rain flying sideways past street lights in Lake Charles, and streets covered with water closer to the coast, while glass fell from shattered windows and parts of a casino roof were torn away.

The windows of the city's 22-floor Capital One Tower were blown out, street signs were toppled and pieces of wooden fence and debris from collapsed buildings lay scattered in the flooded streets, video footage on Twitter and Snapchat showed.

Louisiana Gov Edwards tweeted Thursday morning that a massive chemical fire has broken out at a plant in Lake Charles.

'There is a chemical fire in the Westlake/Moss Bluff/Sulphur area. Residents are advised to shelter in place until further notice and close your doors and windows,' Edwards tweeted.

'If you are in the Westlake/Moss Bluff/Sulphur area, shelter in place, close your windows and doors and Turn Off Your  Air Conditioning Units. There is a chemical fire. Stay inside and wait for additional direction from local officials,' he added.

Video footage on Twitter showed thick black smoke billowing into the sky over the wind-torn landscape near Interstate 10.

The Westlake police are still investigating the incident a representative said by phone, and authorities were blocking traffic on the interstate and Highway 90 in the meantime.

Hurricane Laura is now pushing inland while the Gulf Coast faces storm surges and 10 inches of rain coupled with a high tide, the National Hurricane Center (NHC) says - while tornadoes could form at the edges of the weather system.

Its center was moving north, about 20 miles north of Fort Polk, Louisiana. Damaging winds extended outward as far as 175 miles. The hurricane is predicted to become a tropical storm later in the day.

The National Hurricane Center (NHC) warned that high water levels would persist along the Gulf Coast for several hours as Laura moved north and then northeast.

Texas officials lifted evacuation orders at 11am but they are urging residents who evacuated to allow them more time to assess roadways and clear debris.

'There are several areas throughout our region who have no power at this time. Electrical crews need first priority. It is dangerous to drive on the roadways that have not been cleared. Downed power lines with live wires, downed trees and other random debris could cause you to get injured,' an update from Jefferson County's Office of Emergency Management reads.

The city of Galveston has also lifted its evacuation order. Officials said the city 'did not sustain wind or storm damage, and water is receding in low-lying areas that experienced street flooding'.

Houston also reported being spared from much of the impact of Hurricane Laura.

The Louisiana National Guard shared images of guardsmen working to clear roadways and assess damages from Hurricane Laura in Lake Charles.

Despite the hurricane weakening, Ken Graham, the director of the National Hurricane Center, warned that Laura is expected to remain a hurricane until it nearly reaches Arkansas.

'We expect Hurricane Laura to still be a hurricane even when you get up to Shreveport, right on the Arkansas border,' Graham told CNN.

White House officials said President Donald Trump will visit the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) later today to be briefed on Hurricane Laura.

In a press statement, the White House said: 'As we begin to assess the damage, please continue to heed the warnings and instructions of your state and local officials as storm hazards will persist long after the storm has passed.

'Trump is committed to deploying the full resources of the Federal Government to rescue those in distress, support those in the region affected, and restore disruptions to our communities and infrastructure,' the statement reads.

More than 700,000 homes and businesses were without power in Texas and Louisiana, as near-constant lightning provided the only light for some and debris flew into windshields and an RV toppled over in torrential rain. According to poweroutage.us, more than 138,000 are without power in Texas and 570,000 in Louisiana.

Officials said some stragglers were pleading for help after earlier refusing to evacuate - but 'there ain't no way to get them'.

In Cameron Parish, where Laura came ashore, Nungesser said 50 to 150 people refused pleas to leave and planned to endure the storm, some in elevated homes and even recreational vehicles. The result could be deadly.

'It's a very sad situation,' said Ashley Buller, assistant director of emergency preparedness. 'We did everything we could to encourage them to leave.'

Drawing energy from the warm Gulf of Mexico, the system arrived in 'full beast mode' as the most powerful hurricane to strike the US so far this year and its effects are expected to be felt in Texas, Mississippi and Arkansas.

With hours of violent weather ahead, officials said the extent of destruction likely wouldn't be clear until daybreak, when search and rescue missions will begin.

Hurricane Laura blew parts of the Golden Nugget Casino's roof as it tore through the city of Lake Charles on Thursday.

Texas Gov Greg Abbott said major evacuations along coastal Texas ahead of Hurricane Laura 'no doubt saved lives'.

'The early reports are that there were no deaths,' Abbot said told CNN. 'One reason for that is because people did heed the warnings to evacuate.'

At 150mph, the hurricane's winds were the strongest to make landfall in Louisiana since the Last Island Hurricane of 1856, said meteorologist Philip Klotzbach of Colorado State University.

Hurricane Katrina came in at 125mph, although the 2005 storm which caused up to 1,800 deaths and $125billion  of damage was worse when measured by pressure.

The winds took Laura close to the threshold of a Category 5 storm, the highest on the Saffir-Simpson scale and defined as sustained winds of 157mph or more.

'This is one of the strongest storms to impact that section of coastline,' said David Roth, a forecaster with the National Weather Service (NWS).

The NWS continued: 'We worry about that storm surge going so far inland there because it's basically all marshland north to Interstate 10. There is little to stop the water.'

'It felt like we were experiencing an earthquake with dozens of aftershocks,' said CNN correspondent Gary Tuchman on the ground in Lake Charles, a city of 80,000 people.

'It sounded like a combination of a Boeing 747 going down a runway and a freight train going down the track - it was so loud for hours.'

There were gusts of 137mph in downtown Lake Charles and 127mph in Cameron, a WWLTV meteorologist said, with 95pmh winds in the Lacassine wildlife refuge and 73mph in Port Arthur, Texas.

Torrential rain was also lashing Baton Rouge while flash floods were expected to continue in Alexandria, Opelousas and Pineville into the morning. 

NBC reporter Jay Gray was nearly knocked over by the wind this morning as he told Good Morning Britain viewers that 'the intensity of this early band from this storm is as strong as any that I've seen in recent memory,' before the broadcast was cut off for his safety.

The storm grew nearly 87 per cent in power in just 24 hours to a size the National Hurricane Center called 'extremely dangerous', making it the powerful hurricane to strike the US so far this year.

'It looks like it's in full beast mode, which is not what you want to see if you're in its way, University of Miami hurricane researcher Brian McNoldy said.

The storm surge could penetrate inland from between Freeport, Texas, and the mouth of the Mississippi River, and could raise water levels as high as 20 feet in parts of Cameron Parish, the NHC said.

Rescuers warned that floodwater may be contaminated with sewage or contain dangerous insects or animals. 

'Some areas, when they wake up Thursday morning, they're not going to believe what happened,' said Stacy Stewart, a senior hurricane specialist.

'What doesn't get blown down by the wind could easily get knocked down by the rising ocean waters pushing well inland.'

People were today urged to take cover in a 'reinforced interior room away from windows', ideally 'under a table or other piece of sturdy furniture', to shield themselves from the 'life-threatening conditions'.

'To think that there would be a wall of water over two stories high coming on shore is very difficult for most to conceive, but that is what is going to happen,' said NWS meteorologist Benjamin Schott at a news conference. 

'The word 'unsurvivable' is not one that we like to use, and it's one that I've never used before,' Schott said of the storm surge.

The National Weather Service in Lake Charles warned that some communities will be 'uninhabitable for weeks or months'.

Forecasters also warned hurricane-level winds could also blow as far as 200 miles inland to Shreveport, Louisiana, with hurricane warnings in place from San Luis Pass, Texas, to Intracostal City, Louisiana. 

The center of Laura is forecast to move over northwestern Louisiana Thursday, across Arkansas Thursday night, and over the mid-Mississippi Valley on Friday.

After that, the storm will move eastwards with threats of flash flooding in the Ohio and Tennessee Rivers and the mid-Atlantic states on Friday and Saturday. 

Ocean water topped by white-capped waves began rising ominously as the monster neared land on Wednesday afternoon.

In the largest US evacuation since the pandemic began, more than half a million people were ordered Tuesday to flee from an area of the Gulf Coast along the Texas-Louisiana state line.

More than 420,000 residents were told to evacuate the Texas cities of Beaumont, Galveston and Port Arthur.

Another 200,000 were ordered to leave the low-lying Calcasieu and Cameron parishes in southwestern Louisiana, where forecasters said as much as 13 feet of storm surge topped by waves could submerge whole communities.

Flash flood watches were issued for much of Arkansas, and forecasters said heavy rainfall could move to parts of Missouri, Tennessee and Kentucky late Friday and Saturday.

Forecasters in Little Rock, Arkansas said the remnants of the hurricane could bring up to six inches of rain and flash flooding affecting homes and businesses.

Strong winds are also expected to affect Mississippi until Thursday evening while the tornado warnings also cover parts of the state. 

Laura's arrival comes just days before the August 29 anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, which breached the levees in New Orleans, flattened much of the Mississippi coast and killed as many as 1,800 people in 2005.

Laura also imperiled a center of the US energy industry. The government said 84 per cent of Gulf oil production and an estimated 61 per cent of natural gas production were shut down. Nearly 300 platforms have been evacuated.

When Hurricane Harvey struck in 2017 there were oil and chemical spills, along with heavy air pollution from petrochemical plants and refineries.

While oil prices often spike before a major storm as production slows, consumers are unlikely to see big price changes because the pandemic has already decimated demand for fuel.

Laura passed Cuba and Hispaniola, where it killed nearly two dozen people, including 20 in Haiti and three in the Dominican Republic.

The deaths reportedly included a 10-year-old girl whose home was hit by a tree and a mother and young son crushed by a collapsing wall.

The Atlantic storm season, which runs through November, could be one of the busiest ever this year, with the NHC predicting as many as 25 named storms. Laura is the 12th so far.

Photos:
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8668663/Hurricane-Laura-continues-gain-strength-Category-5-storm-making-landfall.html

175
Off-Topic / Re: Garden
« on: August 27, 2020, 09:56:15 am »Message ID: 1337158
In Southern California, we get very little rain.

Have you put a cover over your garden so it won't get drench from the rain?

176
Off-Topic / Donald Trump pardons female suffrage leader Susan B. Anthony who was convicted o
« on: August 18, 2020, 08:02:51 am »Message ID: 1336419
Donald Trump pardons female suffrage leader Susan B. Anthony who was convicted of illegally voting to mark 100th anniversary of 19th amendment giving women right to vote

* President Donald Trump said Tuesday he will pardon Susan B. Anthony, a leader in the women´s suffrage movement
* She was arrested for illegally voting in 1872 when only men could vote
* Trump had teased a big pardon was coming
* Anthony's pardon comes on the 100th anniversary of the 19th amendment, which gave women the right to vote
* Anthony died in 1906 - 14 years before the amendment was ratified so she was never able to legally vote in the
   United States

President Donald Trump said Tuesday he will pardon Susan B. Anthony, a leader in the movement that gave women the right to vote, who was arrested for voting in 1872 at a time when only men were allowed to do so.

'Later today, I will be signing a full and complete pardon for Susan B Anthony. She was never pardoned,' he said at a White House ceremony celebrating the 100th anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution, which gave women the right to vote. It´s also known as the Susan B. Anthony Amendment.

'She got a bargain for a lot of other women, and she didn't put her name on the list. So she was never pardoned for voting,' Trump said.

The president had teased on Monday he would pardon someone 'very, very important' the following day but would not say who it was - other than to rule out former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn and Edward Snowden.

His move comes as voting rights have become a central issue in the 2020 election.

Delays in mail delivery led the U.S. Postal Service to warn all 50 states that some mail-in ballots may not arrive in time to be counted. Democrats have voiced concerns about voter disenfranchisement while President Trump has criticized mail-in voting as leading to election fraud despite numerous studies that state that is not the case.

Trump's pardon also comes as Republicans have expressed concern the party is losing support of women voters, citing the low marks women gave President Trump for his handling of the coronavirus pandemic and race relations.

Anthony was arrested for voting in her hometown of Rochester, New York, in 1872 and convicted in a widely publicized trial of voting when only men were allowed that right. She refused to pay the $100 fine but authorities declined to take further action.

She is long known for her work in the women's rights movement but she also supported the anti-alcohol temperance movement and fought for the freedom of slaves.

Her name has been co-oped by conservatives for the Susan B. Anthony foundation, a group that supports pro-life lawmakers.

Marjorie Dannenfelser, President of Susan B. Anthony List, was at Tuesday's event at the White House.

But there is dispute among scholars and historians at to Anthony's position on abortion and it's difficult to ascertain it given it was a not a huge public issue during her time as a political activist.

In 1869, Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton founded the National Woman Suffrage Association as part of their battle to secure a woman's right to vote.

Anthony gave as many as 100 speeches a year and traveled to numerous states to push for an amendment to be added to the constitution. 

She died on March 13, 1906, before the 19th amendment was ratified.

The 19th Amendment states that 'The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.'

Congress passed it in 1919, and the amendment was ratified on Aug. 18, 1920.

In honor of her work, the U.S. Treasury Department put Anthony's portrait on dollar coins in 1979, making her the first woman to be so honored.

But visiting Anthony´s grave site in Rochester on Election Day has become a popular ritual in recent years.

Thousands turned out in 2016 for the presidential match-up between Trump and Hillary Clinton.

Clinton paid tribute to Anthony on Tuesday.

'The ratification of the 19th Amendment was both an enormous victory & an incomplete one,' she wrote on Twitter. '100 years on, I'm thinking of my mom, who was born the day of its passage in Congress. If she were still with us, she'd urge us to keep going—'lifting as we climb.''

In 2016 and 2018, voters showed up by the dozens to put their 'I Voted' stickers on her headstone.

The Life and Activism of Susan B. Anthony

Susan B. Anthony was born on February 15, 1820 in Adams, Massachusetts, the daughter of Quakers.

She had seven brothers and sisters, many of whom became activists for justice and emancipation of slaves, a cause she herself supported.

She worked as a teacher for many years and became an abolitionist after meeting William Lloyd Garrison and Frederick Douglass, who were friends of her father's.

In 1848, a group of women held a convention at Seneca Falls, New York. It was the first Women's Rights Convention in the United States and began the Suffrage movement.

Anthony did not attend although her mother and sister did.

It was in 1849, Anthony became more involved social issues, including the temperance movement, aimed at limiting or completely stopping the production and sale of alcohol.

In 1851, Anthony met Elizabeth Cady Stanton at an anti-slavery conference and the two women formed a partnership that saw them spend the next 50 years fighting for women's rights.

In 1868, when Congress passed the 14th and 15th amendments which give voting rights to African American men, Anthony and Stanton were angry that women were not included.

They formed the National Woman Suffrage Association, to push for a constitutional amendment giving women the right to vote.

Anthony was arrested in 1872 for voting illegally in her hometown of Rochester – a time when only men had the right to do so. She was fined $100 for her crime.

In 1876, she led a protest at the 1876 Centennial of our nation's independence. She gave a speech—'Declaration of Rights' - written by Stanton and another suffragist, Matilda Joslyn Gage.

'Men, their rights, and nothing more; women, their rights, and nothing less,' she said.

In 1888, she became president of the National American Women's Suffrage Association and led the group until 1900.

In 1905, she met with President Theodore Roosevelt in Washington, D.C., to lobby for an amendment to give women the right to vote.

Anthony died in 1906, 14 years before women were given the right to vote with the passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920.

The U.S. Treasury Department put Anthony's portrait on dollar coins in 1979, making her the first woman to be so honored.


177
Off-Topic / EXCLUSIVE: 'Joe Biden stole Jill from me': Her first husband tells how she CHEAT
« on: August 17, 2020, 10:18:23 am »Message ID: 1336328
EXCLUSIVE: 'Joe Biden stole Jill from me': Her first husband tells how she CHEATED with Democrat candidate he once considered a friend and that they have LIED about how they started dating for years

* Joe Biden and his wife Jill  had an affair that broke up her first marriage, her ex-husband told DailyMail.com in an
   exclusive interview
* Bill Stevenson says that their story about how the presidential candidate fell in love with Jill after a blind date is made
   up
* The way the Bidens tell their story, Joe saw a picture of Jill in March 1975 — after her marriage crashed — and they
   went on a date and have been together since
*But Stevenson claims he and his then wife met Biden in 1972, when they worked on then-New Castle County
  Councilman Biden's first campaign for the Senate
* At the time Biden was married to his first wife Neilia who died with their daughter Naomi in a car crash between the
   election and Biden taking his Senate seat
* 'Jill and I sat in the Bidens' kitchen,' Stevenson said. 'We worked on his campaign'
* Stevenson said he first suspected Biden and Jill were having an affair in August 1974; He was then 26, Jill was 23 and
  Joe was 31
* 'One of her best friends told me she thought Joe and Jill were getting a little too close,' he said
* That October he got confirmation when a man informed him Biden was driving his wife's car and the two of them got
   into a fender bender 
* Stevenson said: 'I asked Jill to leave the house, which she did... I considered Joe a friend. I'm not surprised he fell in
   love with Jill'

Joe Biden and his wife Jill have lied to the world for more than 40 years about how they started dating — they actually had an affair that broke up her first marriage, her first husband claims.

And the whole story the Bidens tell about how the presidential candidate fell in love with Jill after a blind date is completely made up, Bill Stevenson told DailyMail.com in an exclusive interview.

Now Stevenson is about to publish a book that he says will blow the lid off the sham story.

'I don't want to hurt anyone,' Stevenson, 72, said at his home in Wilmington, Delaware, the town Biden has called home for half a century. 'But facts are facts and what happened, happened.'

Stevenson is keeping the title of his book close to his chest.

He said he has not yet decided whether to publish before the election or after. 'It's ready to go,' he said. 'They can print 30,000 copies in 10 days.

'I genuinely don't want to harm Jill's chances of becoming First Lady. She would make an excellent First Lady — but this is my story.

'It's not a bitter book — I'm not bitter because, if it wasn't for my divorce, I would never have met my wife Linda and she's the greatest thing in my life — but it does have facts in it that aren't pleasant to Jill and Joe.

'People ask me how I can go back 40 years, but I am not, I'm going back 72 years to tell my life story,' added Stevenson, who founded The Stone Balloon, a famed live music club near the University of Delaware.

Rolling Stone once called it 'the best kept secret in rock and roll.' Some of the biggest names in music including the Allman Brothers, Metallica, Ray Charles, Run DMC, The Dave Matthews Band, David Crosby, Bonnie Raitt and Hootie and the Blowfish played there during its 30-plus year history.

'The book is about 300 pages long and Jill only takes up about 80 of them,' Stevenson said.

Stevenson married Jill Jacobs in 1970. 'It was February, I believe it was the 7th,' he told DailyMail.com.

Two years later, he said, the couple were working on then-New Castle County Councilman Biden's first campaign for the Senate.

At the time Biden was married to his first wife Neilia who died along with their one-year-old daughter Naomi in a car crash between the election and Biden taking his Senate seat.

'Jill and I sat in the Bidens' kitchen,' said Stevenson, who describes himself as a liberal Republican, although he says he voted for Barack Obama and Biden in both 2008 and 2012. 'We worked on his campaign.

'I gave $10,900 to his first campaign — in cash.'

Stevenson — who appeared with Biden on Delaware Today's 2012 list of the 50 most influential people from the state — said he had originally wanted to work for sitting Republican Senator Caleb Boggs, who was expected to win re-election easily.

'But I had a disagreement with Boggs over corruption in Delaware and he told me: 'Get out of my office. Go work for that joke Biden,' who was then at only about 20 percent in the polls.'

Biden eventually eked out victory by just over 3,000 votes — 1.4 percent — running a campaign juxtaposing his youth and energy with 63-year-old Boggs, who admitted he didn't want to run for a third term and only did so because President Richard Nixon pleaded with him.

Biden, just 29 on election day, became the sixth-youngest US Senator in history.

Stevenson said he first suspected Biden and Jill were having an affair in August 1974. He was then 26, Jill was 23 and Joe was 31.

'I know exactly when it was,' he said. 'Bruce Springsteen was going to play at The Stone Balloon and I had to go to Northern New Jersey to pay him in advance.

'I asked Jill to go with me and she said no — she had things to do, she had to look after Joe's kids, Beau and Hunter. It was kind of a big deal to go meet Springsteen. I had no idea she and Joe were that kind of friendly.

'Then one of her best friends told me she thought Joe and Jill were getting a little too close. I was surprised that she came to me.'

That October he got confirmation. 'I was at work and a guy came in and asked: 'Do you own a brown Corvette?' I said yes, it's my wife's car.

'He said back in May it had crunched his bumper and they told him to get an estimate and he never heard back from them.

'I said: 'Wait a minute. Who is they?' And he said: 'Funnily enough, Senator Biden was driving.'

That was it as far as Stevenson was concerned.

'I asked Jill to leave the house, which she did. Her father was begging me to take her back when he found out what was going on. He asked me to give her a second chance, but I wasn't interested.

'I considered Joe a friend. I'm not surprised he fell in love with Jill. Everyone who meets Jill falls in love with her immediately. It's hard not to.'

But the way the Bidens tell their love story, Joe saw a picture of Jill in March 1975 — after her marriage had crashed.

She was in an advertisement for local parks that he saw while passing through Wilmington Airport with his brother Frank. He told Frank that was the kind of girl he would like to date and Frank said: 'Why don't you then? I know her,' and passed on her number.

In her 2019 autobiography Where The Light Enters, Jill wrote that Joe called her and asked her out. She said she already had a date, but he persisted because he was only in town for one night and she relented.

They went to Philadelphia to see the French movie, A Man And A Woman, ironically about a widowed man falling in love, and then went out to dinner.

Despite him saying he was only in town for a single night, the couple went out the next two nights as well, she wrote.

The New York Times told a slightly different story. It said he didn't know his date was the 'drop-dead gorgeous' woman he had been admiring earlier until he picked her up.

Jill and Joe Biden married at the Chapel of The United Nations in New York in June 1977.

Stevenson first met Jill in August 1969. 'I was leaving for Woodstock the following day,' he said. I was at a car wash and she and her friend came over to admire my 1968 Z28 Chevy Camaro. It was yellow with black stripes, all the rage at the time.

'I was going to my friend's birthday party that night, so I invited them along. There were four good looking girls in that apartment and I thought the more the merrier. The rest is history.'

They married the following year when Jill was only 18. In her book, she described her first husband as 'charismatic and entrepreneurial,' – but did not name him. She said her marriage soon fell apart.

'We were young, and it didn't take long before we grew in different directions,' she wrote.

'I tried to make the relationship work. I thought I could will our marriage back to life. But I had to separate what I thought my family should be from the reality of what this relationship was.

'Before long, I began to see that the breaks were beyond repair,' she added. I wouldn't settle for a counterfeit love. Like a broken spell, the truth of the reality struck me suddenly: I was going to get divorced.'

Stevenson has led a colorful life. He played defensive end for the University of Delaware football team before opening The Stone Balloon.

He was at Studio 54 in New York with Andy Warhol and Lisa Minnelli and met some of the biggest names in rock through his club. He is a multiple gold medal winner at shot put in the National Senior Games.

He also founded a horticultural company called Sticky Pots and invented the SuperStake, a plant support system that he recently sold to Scotts Miracle-Gro. 'They sold a million SuperStakes in Walmart alone last year,' he said.

He hit the headlines himself when he had a heart attack on the streets of Manhattan in 2018. He died for six minutes before he was brought back to life by NYPD officers, ABC News reported.

Since then he has led a campaign to get defibrillators into police cars throughout the country.

'I'd already started the book,' he said. 'I came back from the dead to finish it.'

This isn't the first book that Stevenson has written. He authored a book of the early years of The Stone Balloon, which is now sold on Amazon for an astonishing $395.

'You'll never see that in the $1.99 bin at Barnes & Noble like you see Joe Biden's books,' he quipped.

The Biden campaign did not immediately respond to DailyMail.com's request for comment.

178
Off-Topic / Re: Have you noticed . . .
« on: August 17, 2020, 10:05:40 am »Message ID: 1336326
If you don't want children ever again, please remove your tubes so you can't get pregnant!

179
Off-Topic / Re: A good lesson !!
« on: August 17, 2020, 10:00:22 am »Message ID: 1336325
Never share your wifi password to your neighbors! They might add more to your internet/cable account!

180
Off-Topic / President Trump's Younger Brother Robert Died
« on: August 16, 2020, 11:36:38 am »Message ID: 1336223
President Trump's Younger Brother Robert Died

President pays tribute to his younger brother who has died at age 71: Robert Trump passes away after 'suffering brain bleeds from a recent fall' - just one day after hospital visit from Donald

* Robert Trump, 71, died in hospital Saturday after being visited by the president on Friday afternoon
* Donald Trump, 74, paid tribute to his brother, calling him his 'best friend' and saying: 'Robert, I love you'
* Robert had been admitted to hospital in New York City after reportedly suffering a fall
* He was described as 'very ill' and is believed to have had a brain bleed which left him unable to speak
* Robert was previously hospitalized in June for ten days at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City
* The youngest of the five Trump siblings, Robert was described as low-key, charming and loyal
* He did not come under the pressure that his elder siblings did from their father to join the family business
* Robert initially worked on Wall Street but later joined the Trump Organization, although never at the center
* Eric Trump has paid tribute to his uncle: 'an incredible man' who was 'strong, kind and loyal to the core'

Donald Trump's brother Robert, 71, has died just one day after the president visited him in hospital in New York.

The president said in a statement on Saturday night: 'It is with heavy heart I share that my wonderful brother, Robert, peacefully passed away tonight.

'He was not just my brother, he was my best friend. He will be greatly missed, but we will meet again. His memory will live on in my heart forever. Robert, I love you. Rest in peace.'

Robert, who reportedly took blood thinners, had suffered recent brain bleeds that began after a recent fall, according to a close friend of the family, who spoke to The New York Times.

Over the past few weeks, he had not been able to speak on the phone, according to the family friend.

Rudy Giuliani, the president's lawyer, was among the first to pay tribute to Robert. 

'Robert Trump has a big heart,' he tweeted. 'As a former Mayor I know how much he did to help New Yorkers in need.

'We have lost a really good man. My love, prayers and condolences to the #Trump family.'

Eric Trump then tweeted fond memories of his uncle, describing him as 'an incredible man' who was 'strong, kind and loyal to the core.'

Ivanka Trump followed with a tribute on Twitter on Saturday night saying: 'Uncle Robert, we love you. You are in our hearts and prayers, always.'

Donald Trump Jr tweeted Sunday morning: 'Uncle Rob, we love you and we will miss you. RIP.'

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden shared his condolences Sunday morning in a tweet addressed to Donald Trump saying 'Jill and I are sad to learn of your younger brother Robert's passing'.

'I know the tremendous pain of losing a loved one — and I know how important family is in moments like these. I hope you know that our prayers are with you all,' Biden added.

Robert Trump had no children, but he helped raise Christopher Hollister Trump-Retchin, the son of his first wife, Blaine Trump.

Besides the president, he is survived by his second wife, Ann Marie Pallan, and his sisters, Maryanne Trump Barry and Elizabeth Trump Grau.

His brother Fred Trump Jr. died in 1981.

Robert's death came one day after the president visited him in hospital in New York City, where he was said to be suffering from a serious condition.

Trump had been scheduled to travel to his country club in nearby Bedminster, New Jersey for the weekend, but made a stop in Manhattan first to check in on his sibling.

The president was seen leaving the heliport after flying in from New Jersey.

Hospital security guards were seen blocking off access to a street outside the medical center ahead of the president's visit earlier this afternoon.   

Trump was wearing a protective face mask as he arrived at New York Presbyterian Weill Cornell Medical Center in Lennox Hill late Friday afternoon.

Robert had been admitted to the hospital and was described as 'very ill', however details of his illness are still not officially confirmed.

During a White House press briefing after his visit to his brother's bedside, the president said his brother was 'having a hard time' but did not elaborate on why he had been hospitalized.

Robert, the youngest of the five Trump siblings, was previously hospitalized for ten days at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York in June.

He was admitted to the neurosciences intensive care unit where he was treated for a 'serious condition', the Daily Beast reported.

Around the same time, Robert had filed a lawsuit against his niece Mary Trump, seeking to block her from publishing a tell-all book on the president.

Mary is the daughter of the brothers' eldest sibling, Fred Trump Jr, who struggled with alcoholism and died in 1981 at the age of 43.

Robert filed for an injunction claiming the explosive book, 'Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World's Most Dangerous Man', violated the terms of a confidentiality agreement she signed nearly two decades ago.

In a statement to The New York Times in June, he accused his niece of attempting to 'sensationalize and mischaracterize' their family relationship for her own financial gain.

'I and the rest of my entire family are so proud of my wonderful brother, the president, and feel that Mary's actions are truly a disgrace,' Robert said.

The explosive memoir was eventually released last month after a judge agreed to lift a temporary restraining order preventing Mary from publicizing or distributing her work.

The judge said the confidentiality clauses in the 2001 agreement, 'viewed in the context of the current Trump family circumstances in 2020, would offend public policy as a prior restraint on protected speech'.

The younger Trump had openly voiced his support for his brother over the years.

In an interview with Page Six ahead of the 2016 presidential election, Robert said he supported his brother's campaign '1,000 per cent'.'

He was later seen celebrating Donald's victory at the New York Hilton where the then president-elect delivered his acceptance speech.

Robert also spoke out in support of his brother during a brief, but rare interview at LAX airport last December, when Trump had been at the center of an impeachment trial.

When asked how his older sibling was doing, he told the cameraman: 'I think he's doing fantastic,' before getting into the his car.

Robert had also held a senior position in the family business, but unlike his brother, he has generally maintained a low public profile.

He previously served as an executive for Trump Organization where he managed the real estate portfolio outside of Manhattan.

In 2016 Robert told Page Six that he was 'gainfully retired'.

He was married to socialite Blaine Trump for 25 years until their 2007 divorce, and until his death served on the board of directors of ZeniMax Media.

The couple's split was widely reported in the tabloids following reports that Robert had been living with his mistress - and now wife - for two years.

Prior to his death, he was based in Long Island where he lived with wife Ann Marie Pallan, his former secretary, who he reportedly married in March.

Despite their split, Robert was said to have remained on good terms with his ex-wife, who reportedly attended Trump's inauguration in 2017. 

Robert also has two older sisters.

Elizabeth Trump Grau, 78, is a retired executive from Chase Manhattan Bank, and Maryanne Trump Barry, 83, is a retired federal judge. 

As the youngest of the five Trump siblings, Robert was shielded from the pressures placed on the eldest, Fred Jr, and then Donald.

He was never groomed to take over the family real estate company, and was considered by those who knew him to be the inverse of the brash, self-promotional brother who eventually did.

After graduating from Boston University, he first went to work on Wall Street, instead of immediately joining the family business.

But he eventually went to work for his brother as a senior executive at the Trump Organization.

'You could consider him the quietest of Trumps,' said Michael D'Antonio, a Trump biographer.

'He was glad to stay out of the spotlight.'

Jack O'Donnell, a former Trump Organization executive who worked closely with the Trump family, told the New York Times that Robert was someone with a natural ease and good humor that his older brother lacked.

'He was dignified, he was quiet, he listened, he was good to work with,' O'Donnell said.

'He had zero sense of entitlement. Robert was very comfortable being Donald Trump's brother and not being like him.'

The pair were not always close.

In 1990, a year after Trump had put Robert in charge of the opening of the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey, Trump furiously attacked Robert over problems with the slot machines.

People who knew him said Robert was devastated by the fight with Trump, and the rift between them took years to heal, the New York Times said.

He reconciled with his brother when Trump decided to run for president, according to a person close to the family.

The soft-spoken, easygoing brother who backed the president until the end: Robert Trump shunned the spotlight in later life until he threw his support behind Donald and protected the family when he sued niece Mary over tell-all book
President Donald's younger brother, Robert Trump, a businessman known for an even keel that seemed almost incompatible with the family name, died Saturday night at the age of 71.

The youngest of the Trump siblings had remained close to the 74-year-old president and, as recently as June, filed a lawsuit on behalf of the Trump family that unsuccessfully sought to stop publication of a tell-all book by the president's niece, Mary. 

Robert Stewart Trump was born in 1948, the youngest of New York City real estate developer Fred Trump's five children.

The president, more than two years older than Robert, admittedly bullied his brother in their younger years, even as he praised his loyalty and laid-back demeanor.

'I think it must be hard to have me for a brother but he's never said anything about it and we're very close,' Donald Trump wrote in his 1987 bestseller 'The Art of the Deal.'

'Robert gets along with almost everyone,' he added, 'which is great for me since I sometimes have to be the bad guy.'

Both longtime businessmen, Robert and Donald had strikingly different personalities.

Donald Trump once described his younger brother as 'much quieter and easygoing than I am,' and 'the only guy in my life whom I ever call "honey."'

Robert began his career on Wall Street working in corporate finance but later joined the family business, managing real estate holdings as a top executive in the Trump Organization.

'When he worked in the Trump Organization, he was known as the nice Trump,' Gwenda Blair, a Trump family biographer said. 'Robert was the one people would try to get to intervene if there was a problem.'

In the 1980s, Donald Trump tapped Robert Trump to oversee an Atlantic City casino project, calling him the perfect fit for the job.

When it cannibalized his other casinos, though, 'he pointed the finger of blame at Robert,' said Blair, author of 'The Trumps: Three Generations that Built an Empire.'

'When the slot machines jammed the opening weekend at the Taj Mahal, he very specifically and furiously denounced Robert, and Robert walked out and never worked for his brother again,' Blair said.

People who knew him said Robert was devastated by the fight with his brother, and the rift between them took years to heal, the New York Times said.

He reconciled with his brother when Donald decided to run for president, according to a person close to the family.

A Boston University graduate, Robert Trump later managed the Brooklyn portion of father Fred Trump's real estate empire, which was eventually sold.

Once a regular boldface name in Manhattan's social pages, Robert Trump had kept a lower profile in recent years. 'He was not a newsmaker,' Blair said.

He was married to socialite Blaine Trump for 25 years until their 2007 divorce and was active on Manhattan's Upper East Side charity circuit.

The couple's split was widely reported in the tabloids following reports that Robert had been living with his mistress - and now wife - for two years. 

In early March of 2020, he married his longtime girlfriend, Ann Marie Pallan, and they lived together in Long Island.

Despite their split, Robert was said to have remained on good terms with his ex-wife, who reportedly attended Trump's inauguration in 2017.

In 2016 Robert told Page Six that he was 'gainfully retired'.

He avoided the limelight during his elder brother's presidency, having retired to the Hudson Valley. But he described himself as a big supporter of the White House run in a 2016 interview with the New York Post.

'I support Donald one thousand percent,' Robert Trump said.

He was later seen celebrating Donald's victory at the New York Hilton where the then president-elect delivered his acceptance speech.

Robert also spoke out in support of his brother during a brief, but rare interview at LAX airport last December, when Trump had been at the center of an impeachment trial.

When asked how his older sibling was doing, he told the cameraman: 'I think he's doing fantastic', before getting into the his car.

Robert Trump had no children, but he helped raise Christopher Hollister Trump-Retchin, the son of his first wife.

The eldest Trump sibling and Mary's father, Fred Trump Jr., struggled with alcoholism and died in 1981 at the age of 43. 

The president's surviving siblings include Elizabeth Trump Grau and Maryanne Trump Barry, a retired federal appeals judge.

Authors Michael Kranish and Marc Fisher described Robert Trump as soft spoken but cerebral in 'Trump Revealed: The Definitive Biography of the 45th President': 'He lacked Donald´s charismatic showmanship, and he was happy to leave the bravado to his brother, but he could show flashes of Trump temper.' 

Donald Trump statement on Robert's death
'It is with heavy heart I share that my wonderful brother, Robert, peacefully passed away tonight.

'He was not just my brother, he was my best friend. He will be greatly missed, but we will meet again. His memory will live on in my heart forever.

'Robert, I love you. Rest in peace.'

Photos
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8631955/Donald-Trumps-brother-dies-New-York-hospital-one-day-visit-president.html













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