United States' only Muslim-majority town, Hamtramck Michigan, BANS Pride flags on public property
Diversity is truly good for our nation. 👆
Originally posted by Impediment
Yoo-hoo is f*cking gross.Hershey’s chocolate syrup and milk. 👆
Agreed. As a kid I also loved Nestle Quick, both the chocolate and strawberry.
Though there's this local dairy farm that puts out their own chocolate milk with added spices, Rosa Brothers iirc, it's ****ing amazing.
I just make my own French style soda's, just get those small bottles of seltzer (better carbonation them the big bottles), put in ice, add syrup or agave (Not honey, it doesn't mix well), some heavy cream (I use non dairy because lactose intolerant), a few coffee stirrer straws to sip out of..
It's as good or better then the coffee shop sodas without paying the exorbitant prices.
Adults talking now;
But Aftergood and other experts said that the Atomic Energy Act (AEA) of 1954 - under which the Department of Energy oversees the U.S. nuclear arsenal - defines a process for declassifying nuclear weapons data, some of the U.S. government’s most closely guarded secrets.Not everyone agrees that the president lacks the power to declassify nuclear data.
David Jonas, who served for 10 years as general counsel for the U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration, the Department of Energy division that oversees the nuclear arsenal,
said Trump had the constitutional authority to declassify all classified documents under the "unitary executive theory," which holds that Congress cannot limit the president’s control over the executive branch.
“The president is the executive branch and so he can declassify anything that is nuclear information,” he said.
Other experts dispute this view.
Elizabeth Goitein, a national security law expert at the Brennan Center for Justice, said the U.S. Constitution gives Congress the authority to limit presidential power related to most national security issues and “there is no question it can legislate in this area.”
“The statute is very clear. There’s nothing that says the president can make that decision,” said a former U.S. national security official familiar with the classification system, who asked to remain anonymous.
While the president can request declassification of FRD materials, “it’s got to go through both DOE (Department of Energy) and DOD (Department of Defense). And it takes forever,” said Thomas Blanton, director of the National Security Archive.
While I'm certainly no constitutional scholar, I do know that the Department of Defence and the Department of Energy are governed directly by the President. This idea that they could block him is nonsense.
The Presidential Records Act is very clear on ths broad powers of the President, and this Atomic Energy Act does not nullify that power.
Meanwhile, the US system kills people. Most insurances won't even cover cancer screenings unless you qualify (Breast cancer exams, colonoscopies), and they are gated by age. Meaning if you get them earlier, sucks to be you.
Lung cancer, pancreas cancer, stomach cancer, most won't get those diagnoses until they start dropping weight, and by then it's in late stages.
We could easily screen everyone for everything if we wanted to. But we don't want to. We want to bleed people dry of their life savings instead.
It's compete BULLSHIT.