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Overriding a Texas governor’s veto can be impossible. Lawmakers are trying to change that.


cross-posted from: lemmy.world/post/30170441

Lawmakers can override the governor’s vetoes only during the session in which the bills are rejected, according to experts’ interpretation of the law. But typically, governors veto bills after sine die – the last day of session.

In 2023, Gov. Greg Abbott vetoed a nearly record-breaking 76 bills and one budget item— widely seen as his way to punish members for failing to pass his priority bills. Just two bills were vetoed during the session, in the window that lawmakers could have voted to override them.

Now, some lawmakers want to change that process. A proposal by Sen. Brian Birdwell would amend the Texas Constitution to allow legislators to briefly meet after the regular session ends to reconsider bills that passed by more than two-thirds of members.



The ‘Invasion’ Invention: The Far Right’s Long Legal Battle to Make Immigrants the Enemy


in reply to Tony Bark

Steve miller is the epitome of a putrid looking man. I feel I should have to be compensated every time I’m accosted by his visage.
This entry was edited (6 months ago)

in reply to Child_of_the_bukkake

Indeed. There are no leftist oligarchs, pretty much by logic and definition, which is a significant disadvantage in electoral oligarchy.

If populism is ever associated with right wing politics it is typically by design of the oligarchs.

in reply to ZombiFrancis

"Right-wing populism" = The people are useful idiots for getting fascists into power.


Merz says Israeli actions in Gaza 'no longer justified'


He added he planned to hold a call with Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu this week to tell him "to not overdo it," though for "historical reasons," Germany would always be more guarded in its criticism than some European partners.

"But if lines are crossed, where international humanitarian law is really being violated, then Germany, the German chancellor, must also say something about it," Merz said.

in reply to Vittelius

"No longer justified", "don't overdo it", "IF lines are crossed"!

Please tell me it's not only the pro-Palestine protesters in Germany who find this language absurd.

I spent a weekend dealing with a couple of Germans and I must say that in some things there is some kind of mental barrier and some kind of guilt pride that got smeared in my face more than once in 2 days, but we really need you to be better than this and I want to have faith you can be.

(There were also Israelis, but I stopped talking to them the second they introduced themselves as such.)

in reply to biofaust

German brains started malfunctioning as soon as you criticize Israel's actions, and they easily end up justifying Nazi atrocities, in support of Israel. Kinda explains those past Nazi rallies where people from all walks of life were chanting Heil.
in reply to atk007

It got worse, if possible.

At some point I got in an elevator with them and one of them was judging me for getting in the elevator skipping one person in the queue (to my defense Romero's zombies move faster) and even the position I took in the elevator which was "not efficient".

Jokingly, I commented of all that sounding "so German" and immediately him and his colleague started saying "oh the Italian now will start saying..." and then bursted in the most chilling collection of German=Nazi stereotypes I ever heard.

I could only stare at them and wait for the elevator to end its run.

in reply to biofaust

In some minds "Never again" means "We must never do what we did in WW2 again". It should mean "We can never allow what we did in WW2 to happen again".
in reply to biofaust

It is absurd, and complicit at this point. I think most people who are informed about what's happening in Gaza would agree on this. But it's not much of a topic in public discourse here and quite a few people still believe that the IDF is fighting against terrorists, so there's not enough pressure against this. Especially amongst the conservatives.
in reply to Vittelius

German politicians are now in the Delay, Distract & Dissemble stage.

I'm not sure it's at all possible for them to actually Act, even in the face of pictures of children dead from starvation.


in reply to silence7

Working as intended


-Republicans after being bought out by big oil and gas.

in reply to silence7

Most of lithium batteries is aluminum with some copper and the magic black paste on either side of the electrode foil. Not sure if the foil is mostly copper or if its copper coated aluminum.


Trump’s foreign policy is not so unusual for the US – he just drops the facade of moral leadership


in reply to IndustryStandard

Let's not pretend this is normal for the US to pull a complete 180 on all our allies overnight, at the whole of a fucking moron who thinks he can bully others into giving him what he wants, only to realize that he caused all this chaos for nothing. Just because we were fairly isolationist 150 years ago before the US was globally relevant
in reply to ExtantHuman

Pulling 180s on allies is what the US is known for. Have you not learned from the Kurds?
in reply to IndustryStandard

And that's why the brunch liberals hate him. Not because they're particularly against tax cuts for the rich and warmongering. Cutting safety nets for the poor. Stuff like that.

youtu.be/VAFd4FdbJxs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VAFd4FdbJxs


in reply to floofloof

This cool microscope, is Harvard going to keep it for themselves or are they planning to share the equipment with the rest of the scientific community


Scenes of horror in Gaza as Palestinian child tries to escape the flames after school attack


Horrifying images have emerged from Israel's latest attack on a school-turned-shelter in Gaza City, with a video purporting to show a young girl scrambling for safety after the classroom she was sleeping in was engulfed by flames.

In an 11-second clip shared on the messaging site Telegram, a young girl can be seen trying to make her way out of a burning classroom following a deadly Israeli strike on the Fahmi Al-Jargawi girls' school.

Health officials told reporters they had recovered the severely burned bodies of 31 people, including children, after the late-night strike.

in reply to IndustryStandard

This is violence against us all. This is pure evil. Israel has decided to march around like nazis, and we’re all forced to go along with it. How do we escape this moral black hole? Are we already past the event horizon?
This entry was edited (6 months ago)
in reply to SGGeorwell

in reply to Deflated0ne

Now I’m wondering how one goes about boycotting federal taxes.
in reply to Confused_Emus

Go to HR. Ask for a W-4. Change your withholding to $0.00.

Congrats. You're no longer paying taxes. You will still owe taxes. They'll come for you eventually. Maybe. If the country lasts long enough.

in reply to Confused_Emus

I converted a couple W4 jobs to 1099 and have stopped paying quarterly.

For the remaining W4 jobs I set a stupidly high allowance so that it reduced withholdings super low (I was wary of claiming EXEMPT because I didn't meet the koala-fications, but I feel like I could argue high allowance was a typo or miscalc).

I'm paying thousands less per month in federal taxes now. After a couple years of this and filing I obviously owe quite a bit, but they put me on a payment plan and at this rate it'll take over 10 years to pay back assuming I don't keep adding to the balance each year.

If/when they forcibly try to come for it, I'll hopefully delay, deny, dispose. That is even if they exist AND I'm still in the US by then.



Turkey and the F-35: Why the Return of the Fighter Jets Isn’t So Simple


in reply to Ash_Bones

While interesting, this article seems to assume we still live in a democracy with separate but equal powers.

Section 1245 of the NDAA explicitly prohibits the transfer of F-35 aircraft to Turkey as long as the country remains in possession of the S-400. Unlike CAATSA, this law does not provide the president with discretion to suspend the restriction unilaterally.


Trump will just do it regardless of the restrictions. Who would check him?

Congress will likely not do anything to check his powers if he violates the law on the books. I'm guessing the new bill mentioned won't go anywhere either, especially since Trump would need to sign it.

The courts probably will stop him, but Trump will just go appeals surfing until he finds a pliable maga judge.

DoJ/FBI will agree to not arrest individual contractors or military staff shipping parts and support to Turkey since the king's decrees take precedent over laws apparently.

in reply to Ash_Bones

Turkey is pretty deep into their KAAN program. Why are they still trying to get F35's?



in reply to dwazou

Trump promised to round up criminal immigrants. We always knew Republicans considered scientists and academics their enemies. I suppose we shouldn't be surprised that he's declared them criminals.
in reply to jballs

We always knew Republicans considered scientists and academics their enemies.


It's in the Party platform I think.

IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH


in reply to schizoidman

It's so weird. There's still so much shame in Germany for what they did during the second world war, yet now they are actively supporting genocide again and have propaganda laws concerning Israel, as Israel and zionism are now under the anti-antisemitic law. Well done Germany, I guess you never change.
in reply to Lord Wiggle

Germany has always been a big supporter of Zionism: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haavar…

This is from before the Holocaust started, so I doubt the underlying reason for their support is guilt for the Holocaust.

This entry was edited (6 months ago)
in reply to wpb

Germany is ashamed for committing genocide 80 years ago yet now they are doing it again by sending weapons to Israel. And they are covering it up by criminalizing news about it.

I'm not saying their guilt is the reason for doing it again, I'm saying it makes no sense as they always said they would do anything to prevent it to ever happen again.

in reply to Lord Wiggle

There's no shame, there's guilt pride. They are jumping right to that, not giving you an option of telling them they haven't repented yet or maybe that they are repenting the wrong way, or not repenting at all.

It seems really rare to meet an ashamed German.

They are not ashamed of Namibia, just like Belgium is not ashamed of Kongo. That whole "genocidal colonialism is past us" thing was wishful thinking, it was quickly assumed to be already fulfilled and now Europeans judge you for reminding them what their ancestors did and what their nations are doing now, just by Israel's hands or Turkey's or someone else.

in reply to schizoidman

I can't find anything from the article warranting this headline.


Man who posted deepfake images of prominent Australian women could face $450,000 penalty


Sensitive content

in reply to FistingEnthusiast

What about deepfakes of non prominent women? Surely the law should apply equally to all.
in reply to JeeBaiChow

Very much so

Sadly, it often takes a case like this before the legal system takes notice

Don't let "perfect" be the enemy of good when the wheels are turning



Is there a Lemmy server/way that doesn't require allowing javascript of a million other servers?


This entry was edited (6 months ago)
in reply to Ademir

Mentioned elsewhere, and a decent workaround. Doesn't do well with thumbnails, unfortunately.

[edit: someone below suggested removing the thumbnail sampling (I'll probably try via uBlock Origins). Honestly with that and a bit of zoom, might work fine. Will be testing it.]

This entry was edited (6 months ago)


Rate 'rigging' traders say they were scapegoated - now the Supreme Court will decide


The Supreme Court is poised to rule on the cases of two former City traders jailed for rigging interest rates, amid concerns raised by senior politicians that there may have been a series of miscarriages of justice.

If the traders are successful in their application - which is opposed by the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) - it could lead to the quashing of all remaining convictions secured in nine criminal trials.

In criminal trials on both sides of the Atlantic from 2015 to 2019, 19 were convicted of conspiracy to defraud and nine were sent to jail.

As they served time, evidence emerged that central bankers and government officials across the world, including a top adviser at 10 Downing Street at the time, had pressured banks such as theirs to engage in very similar conduct to what they were jailed for – but on a much greater scale.

No central banker or government official was prosecuted.



Australian PM Albanese says Israel’s blockade of aid into Gaza is ‘an outrage’


in reply to Peter Link

No shit sherlock. I do feel that this empty rhetoric is psychological comfort to convince Western elites who are complicit in the genocide, as well as their voters, that they are civilized and moral.
This entry was edited (7 months ago)
in reply to Mrkawfee

Us in Australia are almost universally disgusted by what Israel is doing, and we hold 'Murica in pretty damned low esteem too
in reply to Peter Link

For those unfamiliar with Prime Minister Albanese:

  • Founding member and secretary of Parliamentary Friends of Palestine around 2000^[https://www.crikey.com.au/2024/05/29/protester-prime-minister-anthony-albanese-israel-palestine/]
  • Complicit in the zionist regime's recent invasions and ongoing genocide in Gaza
  • Australia trades with the regime, and arrested port protesters and members of the Maritime Union of Australia, including the leader of the Sydney branch
  • Australia is the sole exporter of the F-35 bomber fuselage
  • Australia repeatedly supported the invasion through UN voting
in reply to eureka

I also lost quite a bit of respect for Penny Wong when she wasn't willing to condemn this at the outset: Israel's order to cut food and water from Gaza difficult to judge from afar, says Foreign Minister Penny Wong

Though to be fair, Dutton was never going to be a better option.

in reply to Echinoderm

Though to be fair, Dutton was never going to be a better option.


Luckily we're not trapped in a two-party dichotomy, Liberal's opinions are slowly mattering less and less and minor candidates are getting more of the pie.

in reply to eureka

Just fyi, you didn't format the link correctly. You have to do [text].(link) without the dot.
in reply to Fisch

Lemmy's web UI formats it as a footnote[^1]^, I didn't realise other apps might not read that formatting:

in reply to eureka

That's interesting, didn't know that. I don't think it's part of the standart markdown format, so a lot of clients will probably not render it.
in reply to eureka

Polls must have shown it's popular to stand with Palestine.

I like the Albanese government but it is very quiet when there is an issue that conflicts with the parties values or donors.



Head of US-backed Gaza aid group resigns, saying he will not abandon ‘principles’


in reply to Peter Link

These trigger happy American mercenaries are going to weaponize food distribution to help with the ethnic cleansing. I'm sure they will also shoot plenty of people in the process.

This is a Western sponsored genocide to protect their imperial interests in the region.



The Debt Is About to Matter Again


“For years, we lived in a world where there was basically zero risk premium on U.S. debt,” Jared Bernstein, the former head of Joe Biden’s Council of Economic Advisers, told me.

“In four short months, Team Trump has squandered that advantage.”

in reply to MuskyMelon

I like how our sovereign credit rating got bumped down a couple weeks ago and legacy media was like “eh”. The double standard is absolutely deafening.
in reply to gravitas_deficiency

There's a historical reason for it, but much of the financial press isn't thinking about how it's different this time.

A bunch of debt rating outlets downgraded the US in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. Everyone said "eh" for a simple reason: where else were you going to go? Everyone's economy was slagging. Many countries tried austerity measures, particularly in the EU, but that didn't work. The US was the best of limited options for a low-risk/low-returns portfolio piece (which is what bonds are), and the downgrade just didn't matter.

Trouble this time is that it's obvious to everyone that the US has created the current situation for itself. Things weren't great for average people before, but you could gussy up the numbers and say things are fine if you didn't look too hard at the details. It now threw away the ability to do that. Nobody else is doing that, because it's dumb as fuck.

So now you get a bond rating downgrade when nobody else has that problem. Suddenly, it matters. The financial press isn't used to this situation and hasn't had to deal with the obvious yet.