Sorta Blogless Sunday Pinup – 4th Of July

Patriotic Pinup

Happy Sunday! Another fantastic day in the Once and Future Nation of America. The Sun is shining, the bunnies are munching the lawn (lots of them), and Liberty is remembered. This pinup is by Dillon, no help necessary.

What is happening Ye Olde Blogosphere? The Fine 15

  1. Watts Up With That? notes Australians to see shock energy price spikes
  2. Greenie Watch covers the Czech Republic reversing the end of coal
  3. 357 Magnum advises to avoid bringing a fishing pole to a gun fight
  4. Ace Of Spades delves into Federalism
  5. American Power discusses the Left killing the pro-choice coalition
  6. Blazing Cat Fur covers Mattel going Woke and banning 400 words from Scrabble
  7. Blogs For Victory notes America the uniquely free
  8. Climate Depot covers the Aussie ambassador blaming rapes on ‘climate change’
  9. Cold Fury discusses the EPA Supreme Court decision
  10. Common Cents Blog says to bring all the kids to a 4th of July parade
  11. DC Clothesline notes COVID vaccines can cause Type 1 diabetes
  12. Gatestone Institute discusses the Woke Inquisitors coming for free thinkers
  13. Geller Report notes Trump still winning in the polls despite the silly J6
  14. Gen Z Conservative highlights CNN promoting a potentially illegal practice post-Dobbs
  15. And last, but, not least LMAO covers some well placed, fabricated sources at USA Today

As always, the full set of pinups can be seen in the Patriotic Pinup category, or over at my Gallery page (nope, that’s gone, the newest Apache killed access, and the program hasn’t been upgraded since 2014). While we are on pinups, since it is that time of year, have you gotten your Pinups for Vets calendar yet? And don’t forget to check out what I declare to be our War on Women Rule 5 and linky luv posts and things that interest me. I’ve also mostly alphabetized them, makes it easier scrolling the feedreader

Don’t forget to check out all the other great material all the linked blogs have!

Anyone else have a link or hotty-fest going on? Let me know so I can add you to the list. And do you have a favorite blog you can recommend be added to the feedreader?

Two great sites for getting news links are Liberty Daily and Whatafinger.

Read: Sorta Blogless Sunday Pinup – 4th Of July »

Texas Supreme Court Rules Abortion Ban Law Is Constitutional

The original death merchant judge had to know his BS ruling would crash quickly

Texas can enforce 1925 abortion ban, state Supreme Court says

The death merchants will try anything to continue to kill the unborn, instead of recommending that people use contraception and have responsible sex

These insane people thinking killing a fetus is health care. Not for the fetus. And almost 90% of abortions are elective, because people are irresponsible.

A hearing is scheduled on July 12 to decide on a more permanent restraining order. The case will eventually be heard on its merits, though effectively the trigger law set to take effect in about two months will ensure abortion is banned in Texas regardless of whether the 1925 law is enforced.

So, it doesn’t matter, but, you know the death merchants will judge shop to find one to end the trigger law, then they’ll lose at the Texas Supreme Court, then they’ll try to file in federal court, and eventually be smacked down because the Supreme Court ruled.

Read: Texas Supreme Court Rules Abortion Ban Law Is Constitutional »

Bummer: Climate Crisis (scam) Is Seen In Your Menu

These hysterical, deranged, phrenetic climate cultists really are almost flat earthers, thinking that things on Earth should never ever change. And the crap they come up with to write about is very, very silly

You Can Spot Climate Change in Old Restaurant Menus

Vancouver, British Columbia, is nothing short of a seafood paradise. Situated at the mouth of the formerly salmon-rich Fraser River, the city overlooks Vancouver Island to the west, and beyond that, the open Pacific Ocean. Long before it had a skyline or a deepwater port, this was a bountiful fishing ground for the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh peoples, who still depend on its waters for cultural sustenance. Today, tourists come from all over the world to taste local favorites, such as salmon and halibut, fresh from the water. But beneath these waves, things are changing.

Climate change is an intensifying reality for the marine species that live near Vancouver and for the people who depend on them. In a new study, a team from the University of British Columbia (UBC) shows one unexpected way that climate effects are already manifesting in our daily lives. To find it, they looked not at thermometers or ice cores, but at restaurant menus.

“With a menu, you have a physical and digital record that you can compare over time,” explains William Cheung, a fisheries biologist at UBC and one of the study’s authors. Cheung has spent his career studying climate change and its effects on the world’s oceans. He has contributed to several of the landmark reports of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, but along with John-Paul Ng, an undergraduate student at UBC, he wanted to find a different way to both study and communicate those changes.

What would the menu have looked like in 1700, while in the depths of Little Ice Age? How about during the Medieval Warm Period?

The team gathered menus from hundreds of restaurants around the city, as well as from restaurants farther afield in Anchorage, Alaska, and Los Angeles, California. Current menus were easy to find, but digging into the history of Vancouver’s seafood proved a bit trickier. Doing so required help from local museums, historical societies, and even city hall—which the researchers were surprised to learn has records of restaurant menus going back more than a century—to compile their unusual data set. In all, they managed to source menus dating back to the 1880s.

As warming intensifies, the species in high enough abundance to make it to menus are continuing to change. As Cheung and Ng’s work predicts, local cool-water species such as sockeye salmon will continue to decline on Vancouver menus. (In 2019, British Columbia saw its lowest salmon catch in 70 years.)

In their place, southerly species are moving in. One of the most notable of these new arrivals isn’t a fish, but Humboldt squid, which have begun appearing in both fishers’ nets and in restaurants across the city.

And? This in no way proves anthropogenic causation, just that the climate changes. It’s nothing unusual. It happens. We don’t have to burn witches or heretics.

Read: Bummer: Climate Crisis (scam) Is Seen In Your Menu »

If All You See…

…is the symbol of an evil fossil fueled vehicle maker, you might just be a Warmist

The blog of the day is Not A Lot Of People Know That, with a post on the Obama/Biden EPA power grab getting blown up.

Had the perfect photo for mixing fishing and Go USA! for the Independence Day weekend

Read: If All You See… »

New York Quickly Passes Law Banning Concealed Carry From “Sensitive Location”

They probably think their being passively aggressive towards the Supreme Court decision

NYC’s iconic Times Square among ‘sensitive locations’ where guns to be banned in New York

The Crossroads of the World is among the “sensitive places” where guns could be banned as lawmakers seek to strengthen New York’s gun laws in response to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling overturning a century-old concealed carry law.

New York’s Democrat-controlled Legislature is poised Friday to approve sweeping new firearm restrictions that would bar carrying concealed weapons in a host of places including Times Square as well as subways, buses, government buildings, houses of worship, schools, libraries, playgrounds, parks and zoos, homeless shelters and polling places.

Gov. Kathy Hochul called the Legislature back to Albany for an “extraordinary session” on Thursday to respond to last week’s U.S. Supreme Court ruling striking down a long-standing law limiting who can carry a concealed handgun in public.

The statute required gun owners to demonstrate “proper cause” to get a license to carry a handgun in public, which the conservative majority on the court determined to be unconstitutional.

Under the new legislation released by the governor’s office around 3 a.m., guns will be barred from “sensitive places” such as Times Square and mass transit and firearms will not be allowed in private businesses unless owners explicitly state that they welcome firearms on their property.

Businesses will have to post a sign indicating that armed patrons are welcome.

Quite a few states with concealed carry ban permit holders from many of the same places. Here in NC cannot carry in schools, government buildings. Some states will ban in churches and zoos and parks, counties will often ban at libraries, cities may ban in parks and certain places. So, NY is going just a little bit further than most. One would think that the subway is a place where people really need CCW to protect themselves from all the criminality. Same with many parks.

The big one is that private businesses must post their intent to allow CCW holders to enter while carrying. Because most won’t bother, mostly because most won’t know the rule. In most states private companies must post if you may not carry in the business. So, this NY law will mean concealed carry will be banned in most businesses across the entire state. Those few who are truly paying attention will post a “sure, go ahead and carry” sign, if they are gun rights supporters. Most won’t have any idea. Which means that CCW holders, who tend to be law abiding, won’t carry often because they cannot bring it anywhere. In a city like Albany they can at least lock it in a car. In NYC, they won’t usually have that ability, so, it will stay at home.

Might we see a new lawsuit based on the sign issue? You bet. The Supreme Court may have killed off the rule about proper cause, but, this law would make it almost impossible to conceal carry anywhere. What if they consider one of the big lakes a “park”? Can’t carry on your own boat. This could be more restrictive than before

The bill will also overhaul the state’s permitting process by requiring applicants to undergo 15 hours of in-person training at a firing range and an in-person interview. They must also provide their social media accounts and contact information for household members.

Licenses will have to be renewed after three years and an appeals process will be set up.

I personally do not have an issue with the training and renewals. Here in NC it’s 8 hours and 5 years. The social media part might create another lawsuit. An illegal shooting almost never ever happens from a CCW holder.

Republicans pushed back on the new regulations, railing against the fact that the bill was released in the middle of the night and arguing it goes far beyond just addressing concealed carry permits.

“This is more unconstitutional than what was just struck down.” GOP Sen. Andrew Lanza said during the floor debate.

The Senate passed it on a 43-20 party line, now it has to pass it in the House, before going to Hochul, who will sign it. And then lawsuits will start.

Read: New York Quickly Passes Law Banning Concealed Carry From “Sensitive Location” »

New Hot Idea: Tax Credits To Fight Gas Prices And ‘Climate Change’

Tax credits? Like letting you keep more of your own money? On your tax returns?

How tax credits can help fight soaring fossil fuel prices — and climate change

st greta carAs Americans prepare to celebrate the Fourth of July, people in highway rest stops and grocery stores across the country this weekend will be feeling the pain of near record-high gas prices and soaring inflation.

President Biden has proposed a tax holiday that would suspend the federal gas tax for three months. But a far better solution — for people and the planet — would be for Congress to provide direct support to families and enact key tax credits that will help Americans save money in the near term, while also providing greater economic and energy security in the future.

High prices may be taking a toll on consumers, but this is just a preview of the damage that unmitigated climate change will take on the economy — and our wallets. Without further emissions reductions, the annual economic damages from climate change could reach 1 to 3 percent of U.S. GDP — or up to 10 percent in the worst-case scenario — by the end of the century. To put that in perspective, in 2020 the entire food and agriculture sector made up about 5 percent of U.S. GDP.

Could. But, won’t, not in Reality Land.

A successful clean energy tax credit package should include several key components.

First, it should use direct pay to help drive down project costs and widen the pool of entities eligible for tax credits. Direct pay is a critical reform that reduces the need for private tax equity investors in projects and allows groups without a sufficient tax liability, including nonprofit and tax-exempt entities such as rural electric cooperatives (co-ops) and public power utilities, to access these tax credits. These entities serve almost 30 percent of retail utility customers in the U.S.; in a joint letter to Congress last year, the associations representing rural electric co-ops and public power utilities stated how direct pay is a needed reform to ensure federal tax credits work for all electricity providers.

Ah. Buying voters  at companies with taxpayer money

Second, it should include measures that reduce energy costs for households. For example, to make EVs more affordable and accessible to lower-income households — and to make those households less reliant on fluctuating gasoline prices — Congress should provide incentives to make sure EV charging is available to residents in multi-family housing, at workplaces and at homes, and for people purchasing used EVs. They should provide tax credits for energy efficiency, which can reduce home energy bills year-round (including during dangerous heat waves and snowstorms, when failing to pay the bill could be deadly). And they should use measures such as direct pay to ensure that low- and moderate-income communities get better access to rooftop solar.

I’m missing where this brings down gas prices. Is it about giving small credits to offset that high cost of purchasing an EV, along with the auto insurance that is 10-25% higher, which means lower use of fossil fuels, so the price comes down for the lower and middle class folks who cannot actually afford an EV?

Third, it should incorporate tax credits that boost manufacturing. This includes providing bonus credit amounts within the primary renewable energy credits (the investment tax credit and production tax credit) for projects that use certain domestically produced materials. Relevant tax credit provisions also include incentives for advanced manufacturing in the U.S. including within the clean energy, clean transportation and industrial sectors. Past drafts of legislation have also included support for domestic transportation and zero-emission vehicle manufacturing.

Basically this is all using the tax code to pick winners and losers.

Read: New Hot Idea: Tax Credits To Fight Gas Prices And ‘Climate Change’ »

Insane: Maryland, Delaware To Allow Non-Physicians To Perform Abortions

This is the kind of overboard insanity from the abortion fanatics that caused the Court to take the case and kill off Roe v Wade. If they had just stayed with Clinton’s “safe, legal, and rare”, instead of treating it like it’s contraception and celebrate it like a child’s birthday

Maryland law expanding who can perform abortion takes effect

A Maryland law taking effect Friday will enable nurse practitioners, nurse midwives and physician assistants who receive special training to perform abortions, as some states seek to expand access to the procedure after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.

Medical professionals other than physicians with the training can begin providing abortions Friday, though it’s unclear how many will immediately be eligible. Delaware, Connecticut and Washington also enacted laws this year allowing non-physician clinicians to perform abortions.

Dr. Kyle Bukowski, the chief medical officer for Planned Parenthood of Maryland, is training non-physician clinicians to perform safe abortions in Maryland. Bukowski, who also has done such training in California, believes providing abortion access is one of the most significant jobs he has done as a doctor.

“It feels so important,” said the board-certified OB/GYN, who also delivers babies. “That is the difference between them finishing school or not; leaving an abusive relationship or not; being able to take care of their kids or not, keep their job or not, and to be able to fully give back somebody their autonomy is probably the most important work that you can do as a doctor or as a medical provider.”

Delaware Gov. John Carney, a Democrat, signed legislation Wednesday to allow physician assistants, certified nurse practitioners and nurse midwifes to perform abortions before viability. The measure includes various legal protections for abortion providers and patients, including out-of-state residents receiving abortions in Delaware.

Viability in this case means right up till birth. Of course, the same Democrats require all sorts of insane licensing just to cut hair. Killing a baby? They’ll let almost anyone do it.

Fourteen states — California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Montana, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Virginia and Washington — now allow non-physicians to provide abortions, said Elizabeth Nash, state policy analyst for the Guttmacher Institute in New York, a think tank that supports abortion rights.

Insane people.

Read: Insane: Maryland, Delaware To Allow Non-Physicians To Perform Abortions »

Dementia Joe Promises Climate (scam) Action Or Something

It’s just another in a long line of deluded hot takes

Biden pledges climate action despite ‘devastating’ Supreme Court ruling

President Biden on Thursday pledged to carry on with climate action despite a Supreme Court ruling that restricted how his administration can respond to worsening global warming.

The president called the ruling curbing the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) power “devastating” but said his administration would continue to look for ways to mitigate global warming.

“The Supreme Court’s ruling in West Virginia vs. EPA is another devastating decision that aims to take our country backwards,” he said in a statement.

“While this decision risks damaging our nation’s ability to keep our air clean and combat climate change, I will not relent in using my lawful authorities to protect public health and tackle the climate crisis,” he added.

Biden said the administration will keep using “lawful executive authority including the EPA’s legally-upheld authorities” to promote clean air and prevent climate change from worsening.

And he will continue to see many of these knocked down by the courts, including the Supreme Court, because Congress did not specifically delegate the authority to create big rules/regulations, which is what the WV vs EPA ruling is about. You want this? Try and convince Congress to pass legislation. Better yet, start yourself. No more fossil fueled trips. He just got back from Europe yesterday and now is going to fly to Camp David. Most of the big wigs pushing this stuff the hardest are the biggest hypocrites

EPA Administrator Michael Regan similarly said in a statement Thursday that he was “committed to using the full scope of EPA’s authorities to protect communities and reduce the pollution that is driving climate change.”

You can blame a lot of this on Congress, for failing to write specific, targeted, detailed legislation, which gives the Executive Branch way too much leeway to do as they will. Democrat and Republican legislation. Stop giving this latitude.

Nation of Law, not Nation of Men. Dumbest justice on the court.

Read: Dementia Joe Promises Climate (scam) Action Or Something »

If All You See…

…is an ocean that is getting close to boiling from carbon pollution, you might just be a Warmist

The blog of the day is Jihad Watch, with a post on a “genderfluid puppy” starting work at the DOE.

Read: If All You See… »

Florida Judge Blocks 15 Week Abortion Ban, Says It’s Unlikely To Survive Appeal

Apparently, it doesn’t invade privacy if abortions are blocked at 24 weeks, but, does at 15 weeks

Florida Judge Will Temporarily Block 15-Week Abortion Ban

In a welcome but likely brief victory for supporters of abortion rights, a judge in Florida blocked a state law banning abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy on Thursday, the latest in a flurry of activity in state courts and legislatures following the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.

The Florida law, scheduled to take effect on Friday, violates privacy protections in the State Constitution, ruled Judge John C. Cooper of the Second Judicial Circuit Court in Tallahassee, handing a defeat to Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, who enacted the restrictions in April.

But in a complication emblematic of the chaotic past week of legal and legislative action in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision, the temporary statewide injunction Judge Cooper issued from the bench will not be binding until he signs a written order. The delay will leave Florida’s 15-week ban in place for a short time — perhaps a few days, because of the Fourth of July holiday — until the paperwork is completed.

Through Thursday, Florida allowed abortions until 24 weeks of pregnancy, making the state a refuge for women seeking the procedure from across Southeastern states with tighter restrictions. More than 79,000 abortions were performed in Florida last year.

Still, even once Judge Cooper’s ruling kicks in, it is expected to be fleeting: The state said on Thursday it would appeal, and the judge acknowledged that the appellate court was unlikely to keep his temporary pause in place for very long.

So, Judge Cooper knows his ruling will mostly likely be reversed, hence, he knows that his ruling was a bad one. That it didn’t have a legal basis, a Florida Constitution basis. The Constitution states

SECTION 23.?Right of privacy.—Every natural person has the right to be let alone and free from governmental intrusion into the person’s private life except as otherwise provided herein. This section shall not be construed to limit the public’s right of access to public records and meetings as provided by law.

What about the right to life in Section 2 for the unborn? Also, there’s that part about “except as otherwise provided herein”, which covers things like limiting the time to get an abortion, criminalizing things like insider trading, stealing cars, murder.

Ron DeSantis vows to appeal abortion ban ruling to state supreme court: will ‘withstand all legal challenges’

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Thursday announced his intention to appeal a court ruling that would block abortions after 15 weeks.

The Florida legislature passed the law, known has House Bill 5, and DeSantis signed it in April. The law bans most abortions after the 15th week of pregnancy unless the health of the mother is threatened or unless the baby has a “fatal fetal abnormality,” according to the Washington Post.

Leon County Circuit Judge John Cooper announced that he would issue a temporary injunction against the state abortion ban, calling it “unconstitutional.” The judge did not draw on last week’s Supreme Court decision that overturned Roe v. Wade, but instead referenced from the state constitution’s language regarding privacy.

I am impressed that a judge actually referenced the state constitution. That is very rare. People, including lawyers and judges, seem to forget they exist.

“I’m not here to litigate abortion,” Cooper said. “I’m here to litigate the right to privacy in Florida. I’m not here to litigate Roe v. Wade.”

Why is the judge litigating? That’s what the lawyers do.

DeSantis spokesperson Bryan Griffin told the Tampa Bay Times that the administration believed that the governor will appeal the decision up to the Supreme Court and that the law would “withstand all legal challenges.”

“The Florida Supreme Court previously misinterpreted Florida’s right to privacy as including a right to an abortion, and we reject this interpretation,” Griffin said. “The Florida Constitution does not include – and has never included – a right to kill an innocent unborn child.”

We’ll see how this goes. Regardless, this is where abortion should be, in the states.

Read: Florida Judge Blocks 15 Week Abortion Ban, Says It’s Unlikely To Survive Appeal »

Pirate's Cove