visibility from buying more stock and selling stocks. Many everyday investors now are bowing to hold the line and keep sending the message to the hedge funds of wall street and those they see us trying to rig the system. And coming up, we will have a lot of reaction, get analysis, lou dobbs, dan bongino tonight, but first, its after 9 00 p. M. And our nations capital, and that probably means that joe biden is likely fast asleep. Its been an exhausting few days for joe. He signed a record 40 Executive Orders and actions into law after just nine days in office. In other words, he has tripled the amount of Executive Orders signed by trump, obama, and bush combined at this point in their presidencies. Now, instead of the unity that was promised, joe is literally acting unilaterally to enact every aspect of his radical socialist agenda, and he is doing it all with the stroke of a pen and its consequences are severe. It is so bad, even the New York Times Editorial Board ever so gently and ev
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Court upholds limits on Flathead Forest roads in grizzly territory
MTN News
Posted at 4:35 PM, Jun 28, 2021
and last updated 2021-06-29 19:17:02-04
MISSOULA â Federal land and wildlife managers failed to safeguard grizzly bears when they sidestepped road density limits in the Flathead National Forest Plan. But other parts of the plan can stand, according to a federal court ruling.
On Friday, less than a month after hearing oral arguments, Missoula federal district judge Donald Molloy issued a 64-page ruling finding the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) hadnât done its duty in analyzing how parts of the new Flathead National Forest Plan â specifically those related to road density and closings â could affect threatened grizzly bears.
Court upholds limits on Flathead Forest roads in grizzly territory
MTN News
and last updated 2021-06-28 18:35:18-04
MISSOULA â Federal land and wildlife managers failed to safeguard grizzly bears when they sidestepped road density limits in the Flathead National Forest Plan. But other parts of the plan can stand, according to a federal court ruling.
On Friday, less than a month after hearing oral arguments, Missoula federal district judge Donald Molloy issued a 64-page ruling finding the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) hadnât done its duty in analyzing how parts of the new Flathead National Forest Plan â specifically those related to road density and closings â could affect threatened grizzly bears.
A challenge to the Flathead National Forest Plan by several environmental groups was heard on Thursday before Federal Judge Donald Molloy in the U.S. District Court in Missoula.