Ya Gotta ReWrite and ReEdit and Censor the Bible and Koran cuz the Jews Say So . . . .
...And Jews Want Universities & K12 to Scrub and Erase and Burn "the words" of truth
But first, cut cut cut, clear-cur, clear-cut, clear-cut the world, Under the Minyan of Trump the Rapist.
“Clear‐cutting thousands of acres of old growth forest is a wasteful and wanton practice that cannot continue,” said Holly Harris, Earthjustice attorney. “The Tongass is a national treasure, but it is also an economic powerhouse for sustainable industries such as commercial fishing and tourism. This kind of large‐scale industrial old growth logging hurts Southeast Alaskans and compromises the environmental and economic viability of the Tongass.”
“The rainforest of the Tongass should be safeguarded for future generations, not given up for unnecessary clear‐cutting. The best path forward, for both the wildlife and the people who depend on the Tongass, is to protect the rainforest and its old growth trees. Moving ahead with plans to log this amazing wild place is incompatible with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s plan to transition away from old growth logging,” said Alli Harvey, Alaska Representative for Sierra Club’s Our Wild America campaign.
“Export based industrial‐scale clearcuts just don’t make sense on the Tongass, where our thriving fishing and tourism economy is based on healthy streams and abundant wildlife,” said Malena Marvin with Southeast Alaska Conservation Council. “Local people would rather see a small, sustainable wood industry that keeps money circulating in our communities while protecting the resources that support our Tongass jobs, fishing, and hunting.”
“Today’s rulings are yet another punch to the gut for the Tongass National Forest and southeast Alaska,” said Kristen Miller, Conservation Director at Alaska Wilderness League. “Continuing to subsidize sales like Big Thorne threatens the viability of the wildlife and scenery that bring one million people to hike, hunt, fish, kayak and tour America’s Tongass each year. Southeast Alaska’s economy has moved on from timber. Instead of continuing to pour money into massive old growth giveaways like Big Thorne, the Forest Service should be investing in the region’s true economic powerhouses of tourism, recreation and fishing.”
“This decision is disappointing for Southeast Alaska,” said Jim Adams, Policy Director for Audubon Alaska. “The Big Thorne sale bulldozed right over the Forest Service’s own guidelines for protecting deer and goshawk habitat. Selling off old growth trees and destroying important habitat for wildlife while losing millions of taxpayer dollars a year is shortsighted and foolish.”
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And the scum always rises from the pig feces-blood-aborted fetuses POND. Trump, addressing DOJ attorneys, says that those who fight him in court are 'scum'
"So, people with gender dysphoria can't be honest, humble, or have integrity. You think that's demeaning to people with gender dysphoria?" U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes asked a DOJ attorney on Wednesday during a hearing on the service member ban.
"I can't answer that question," he responded.
Boebert stands by ‘pimp cane’ comments about Texas Representative Al Green, even as she faces censure — What Boebert said was “pimp cane” in referencing Rep. Al Green, a 77-year-old Black congressman from Texas, who shook his cane at the president before being removed from the chamber.
That phrase has led to a censure resolution against her.
So, this fucking Cunt-Tree was so primed for DOGE Raped.
Already, the Department of Education is moving forward with a proposal to get rid of nearly half its workforce, the Department of Veterans Affairs is targeting a reduction of 80,000 employees and the Social Security Administration has offered voluntary buyouts ahead of a reduction in force.
The outlined changes are in service of Trump's vision of drastically reducing the size and scope of the federal government — an effort that has been led so far by Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).
Tens of thousands of employees on probationary status — typically those new to government or who have recently started in a new role — have been fired, though these terminations have been challenged in court and the administration has been ordered to issue sweeping job reinstatements.
Trump-towns.
Oh, Klein, again, more Jews on Goy-ionsts.
The specter of economic displacement is rising in the U.S., with eerie echoes of the Hoovervilles that defined the Great Depression. Today, growing homelessness, stagnant wages, and declining affordability are converging with the political landscape shaped by Project 2025—a proposed policy overhaul that threatens to exacerbate these challenges. If implemented, the consequences could accelerate the emergence of "Trumpvilles"—tent encampments of economically displaced individuals—driven by policies that weaken social safety nets, restrict worker protections, and amplify economic inequality.
As Ezra Klein discusses in his podcast entitled “Is Trump ‘Detoxing’ the Economy or Poisoning it?” Trump’s economic strategy and his administration appears willing to push the economy into ‘a period of pain, maybe even a recession,’ in pursuit of long-term economic dominance.
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NO MORE KLEIN’S, please.
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The university sent us this statement regarding the Education Department's investigation:
We take this complaint seriously. We have recently reviewed all of our practices and believe that the University of Oregon is in compliance with the law.
We have continued to review policies and practices in light of the administration’s executive orders and look forward to working with the Office for Civil Rights to resolve this complaint.
he PhD Project’s annual conference is set to start next week in Chicago. A spokesperson for the organization did not say how many universities have pulled their support for attendees, or if they’d seen an uptick in requests to cancel registrations.
Fansmith said that initiatives to recruit a more diverse applicant pool shouldn’t be viewed as discriminatory—especially in academic fields that have struggled to diversify. Only 35 percent of doctoral candidates in business, and 26 percent of business school faculty, are people of color, according to a 2023 report from the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business.
“There's lots of admissions initiatives seeking to put institutions in front of groups of students so they become aware of the programs they offer. Those are not discriminatory,” Fansmith said. “The reason these programs exist is because there are categories of students who are underrepresented in many fields… it would be a shame to see schools walk away from them.”
And K12, in Oregon? [After two weeks of tumult, school board members in Woodburn — where 87% of students are Latino, the highest of any Oregon school district — have reversed themselves and supported a resolution expressing support for the privacy and rights of immigrant and refugee students.
The reversal, which passed on a 3-1 vote, with school board chair Noemi Legaspi abstaining, came after two hours of contentious testimony during which speaker after speaker castigated the board for rejecting the resolution at their previous meeting on Feb. 25.]
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All dissidents and Indians and BIPOC and Palestinians are good if, well, dead.
Tribes and Native American students sue over Bureau of Indian Education firings
The resolution that the board passed Tuesday is similar to those passed by other school districts in Oregon in recent months, including Portland, Beaverton and Salem. It says that all children in Woodburn have the right to attend public school, regardless of their immigration status, and that the district supports Oregon’s status as a sanctuary state, meaning that school employees may not aid federal immigration enforcement efforts. The resolution also specifies that immigration officials may not enter school buildings beyond the front office or remove a student from school unless they have a court order to do so.
Several dozen Woodburn students were so upset about the previous vote that they walked out of school to protest; others brought their concerns directly to the school board, where they and others were asked to submit all their testimony ahead of the meeting.
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Three tribal nations and five Native American students say in a lawsuit that the Trump administration has failed its legal obligations to tribes when it cut jobs at Bureau of Indian Education schools.
Firings at two colleges as part of the administration’s cuts to federal agencies, with the help of Elon Musk, have left students and staff with unsafe conditions, canceled classes, and delayed financial aid, according to the lawsuit Friday.
Lawyers at the Native American Rights Fund filed the suit in federal court in the nation’s capital against the heads of the Interior Department, the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Office of Indian Education Programs on behalf of the Pueblo of Isleta, the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation, and the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes. The tribes allege they were not consulted when the federal government laid off several employees at the two colleges under the purview of the BIE.
[White KKK, Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum walks to the House Chamber before of President Donald Trump addresses a joint session of Congress at the Capitol in Washington.]
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These fucking misanthropic Jews:
Meta on Wednesday won an emergency arbitration ruling to temporarily stop promotion of the tell-all book Careless People by a former employee, according to a copy of the ruling published by the social media company.
The book, written by a former director of global public policy at Meta, Sarah Wynn-Williams, was called by the New York Times book review “an ugly, detailed portrait of one of the most powerful companies in the world”, and its leading executives, including CEO Mark Zuckerberg, former chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg and chief global affairs officer Joel Kaplan.
If the news is so old, one might ask why is Meta going nuclear on Wynn-Williams? For one thing, its author was a senior executive who was in the room, and on the corporate jet, when stuff happened—and she claims that things were worse than we imagined. Yes, Meta’s reckless disregard in Myanmar, where people died in riots triggered by misinformation posted on Facebook, was previously reported, and the company has since apologized. But Wynn-Williams’ storytelling paints a picture where Meta’s leaders simply didn’t care much about the dangers there. While the media has written about Zuckerberg’s obsession with getting Facebook into China, Wynn-Williams shares official documents that show Meta instructing the Chinese government on face recognition and AI, and says that the company’s behavior was so outrageous that the team crafted headlines to show what the company would have to deal with if their plans leaked. One example: “Zuckerberg Will Stop at Nothing to Get Into China.” While making blanket statements that the book can’t be trusted, Meta hasn’t denied all these allegations specifically. (In general, when a company tries to dismiss charges as “old news,” that translates to a confirmation.)
In Spain people huddled together at movies
and heating simply didn’t exist.
After so much bloodshed, it was a peace
that dawned in dirty rags, just as we
Spaniards had none of it for five years.
And an entire penniless continent
wormy with history and the black market,
suddenly looked much more like home.
“Every year is a little bit different, but what’s clear is that the ocean continues to rise, and the rate of rise is getting faster and faster," Josh Willis, who researches sea level rise at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said in a statement.
After reporting on sea level rise — which stokes increased flooding and storm damage while threatening coastal infrastructure from sewage plants to water supplies — over the past decade, the most common responses I receive on the topic (beyond the unprintable) are either essentially "that's barely any sea level rise" or "stop sensationalizing sea level rise." It's true that four inches of sea level rise over the last few decades may not be concerning or noticeable to some people. And just four inches itself, occurring in a temporal vacuum, doesn't spell a serious problem. The problem, however, is it's not stopping at four inches.
In a previous report authored by top researchers at a diversity of U.S. agencies — the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), NASA, the Department of Defense, and beyond — scientists project sea levels will rise by some 10 inches to a foot along the U.S. coast over just the next three decades. And again, it won't stop there, either. The U.S. could see several feet of sea level rise by the century's end. (Different longer-range sea level rise scenarios are shown later in this story.)
Musk-Adelson-Altman-Fink-Schwarzman-Zuckerberg-Ellison-Thiel-Trump and Company. Fucking fools.
"The ice sheets are just getting warmed up."
So Boeboett ,the mindless, got censored. Good news for all on that note !
As for Oregon, the Forest Service believes that they had the right to
"Safegaurd the land" so they can lease it out to create revenue.
Until a buncha people got together and put years of volunteer work into action, the clear cutting was horrible .The forest land was cut to raw earth and the big shots didn't care.
Now all the activists are playing power games.. They don't seem to care.