good evening once again. i m stephanie ruhle. less than two hours ago, the house passed a bipartisan plan to head off a disastrous default, which the treasury warned could come as soon as monday. the bill clear the house at a critical time for our economy, with the risk of recession still a concern. 314 members voted in favor of the bill. 117 voted against it. among the no votes, 71 republicans, including members of the freedom caucus. they were not alone. 46 democrats were also in the no column. but before the vote took place, several members from both sides went to the floor to make the case for the bill. thank goodness for joe biden s legislative skill, we will not go over the edge. and they are prepared to take us over the edge. the bill contains spending cuts that takes a step towards the right direction to restoring fiscal sanity in washington. we need to avoid a default that would stop checks to our seniors, benefits to our veterans. house democrats were c
themselves with threats until they are the targets? i refer to new york city councilwoman her dad was an elevator mechanic so it s not clear why hers doesn t go all the way to the top. last week and she urged businesses not to dial 911 when faced with criminal activity. that s great advice, who should they call? dominoes and hope the delivery guy is packing heat? maybe you can scald the mugger with hot cheese. days before a ghoul stabbed a veteran emt worker to death, she released a public safety guide urging merchants to call 311, not 911 to seek mental health services and engage in community mediation rather than call the cops. that will work. 311, what s your emergency? my store is being bum-rushed by 100 juvenile delinquents and they are destroying the place. could you get a psychologist out there to talk to them? they advise merchants to give the person causing harm the chance to correct their beh behavior. say no, stop, or that is not okay. you re supposed to say the
While most high school students will be preparing for their final exams and wrapping up their school year this June, Orcas Island teens Dagney Kruger and Else Ranker will be sailing in the Race to Alaska (R2AK) competition. Joined by Bryce Lutz (19) and Willow Gray (18) from Bellingham, the team of four will compete in the first leg of the race on June 9, sailing 40 miles from Port Townsend to Victoria B.C., crossing two sets of shipping lanes and an international border. From there, the team will aim to complete the 710-mile journey from Victoria to Ketchikan, Alaska, starting June 12. The team, which is officially named the “Juvenile Delinquents” referencing their plans to skip their final weeks of school, are excited for the multi-day journey and to go above and beyond high school dinghy racing.
While most high school students will be preparing for their final exams and wrapping up their school year this June, Orcas Island teens Dagney Kruger and Else Ranker will be sailing in the Race to Alaska competition.
Residents of the upscale Camden Harbor View Apartments in Long Beach say they are fed up with relentless crime, run-ins with the homeless, and now juvenile delinquents. “These kids don’t care. They are looking for trouble,” one tenant, Kimberly, told KTLA. “One hit me with a skateboard.” Surveillance cameras have captured some of the incidents, […]