Post by marikaPost by marikaPost by marikaPost by marikaPost by marikaPortland seems to be a perpetual tinderbox, anytime.
Meanwhile, somebody got stabbed at a proud boys anti-Vax rally in
LosAngeles in 2021.
I guess they will not have to rally anymore now that rfk jr will head hhs.
America is such a mess.
The atf workforce is unionized, isn’t it?
I cannot say for sure, but they will
probably not give their appointees the right to negotiate with unions as a
part of their new job.
will get as much low down as I can
I heard the new person replacing the current atf head, is quite interesting
An ex general counsel
That gig was only 9 months, tho he she it was with EEO for a bit longer.
It is said that the person is quite curt and businesslike and
carries an agenda which is no nonsense
Second, the word on the street is that this person is best friends with
*or something like that, with Clarence Thomas' wife who is a member of the
Heritage commission. The Heritage commission is that bunch of folks who
recommended cutting ties with the partnership with the union stuff and
recommended running atf and other sectors like corporations.
I smell a lot of weapons and government jobs contacting out to american
oligarchs coming up
Mostly to musk
Today from Vivek Ramaswamy on X
https://x.com/vivekgramaswamy/status/1858576553723986142?s=61&t=ZCHyRu4DjWNZf_cm3_DB6A
I’m hearing via allies that federal government unions are scrambling to
update their collective bargaining agreements to avoid getting fired. The
prospect of being asked to return to the office 5 days per week like most
working Americans apparently has them “in tears.”
“The trip to Augsburg took eight days. Weather delayed his crossing. From
Rotterdam he took trains taking him through Emmerich, Cologne, Frankfurt,
and Würzburg. He stayed in cheap inns along the way, sharing rooms with
strangers, fearful the entire time of being robbed of the little he had.
During one severely cold night, he sipped a glass of schnapps that a
stranger offered, and he wrote to his parents that he enjoyed the drink,
but suffered from a sore throat, toothache, and earache for the remainder
of the trip.
When he arrived at the Barnickels’ home, he was exhausted, ill, and
homesick. He was worried about his sisters and whether his father had found
any prospects for work.”
Excerpt From
The Mysterious Case of Rudolf Diesel
Douglas Brunt
“AT THE TIME of Rudolf’s arrival, Augsburg was a modest-sized city of
50,000 people. (The population of Berlin at this time was 820,000 and
Munich about 180,000, though these urban centers were experiencing a period
of rapid growth.) Sprawling canals were lined with waterwheels that had
powered early forms of industry for centuries. It was one of Europe’s
oldest cities and had been an important trade route for ancient Rome. The
original name of the city at its founding, Augusta Vindelicorum, was in
tribute to the Roman emperor Augustus.
By the 1800s, it was a place of textile manufacturers and factories,
tobacco mills, and was home to all types of tradespeople.”
Excerpt From
The Mysterious Case of Rudolf Diesel
Douglas Brunt