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15 votes
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In Iceland, traditionally a land of cat lovers, bans and curfews are redefining the human relationship with domestic cats
7 votes -
Adolescents in the US are chronically sleep-deprived, in part because most schools start too early. This summer, California will become the first state in the nation to require later start times.
24 votes -
Judge blocks Texas investigating families of trans youth
18 votes -
California imposes sweeping ban on pumping river water in San Joaquin Valley, Bay Area
11 votes -
Inside Toronto's skyscraper boom
4 votes -
German state elections show populism in decline on left and right
9 votes -
Californian critics blast Poseidon desalination plan as crucial vote looms
4 votes -
Big Telecom convinces Missouri lawmakers to block funding for broadband competition
5 votes -
'Unprecedented' water restrictions ordered for millions in Southern California
17 votes -
Greenland offers a roadmap for how to get Inuktut taught in Nunavut's schools
3 votes -
Texas is quietly using redistricting lawsuits to launch a broader war against federal voting rights law
5 votes -
Four Canadian provinces push ahead with plan to build small nuclear reactors to supply power
17 votes -
Uber reaches deal to list all New York City taxis on its app
7 votes -
Suburbia is subsidized - [Strong Towns Ep7]
20 votes -
Local school districts are caught in the middle of the culture wars as the right tries to gain control
10 votes -
Texas Governor Greg Abbott orders state agencies to investigate gender-transitioning procedures as child abuse
22 votes -
Furries are leading the war against a book-banning Mississippi Mayor
14 votes -
A fight over the right to repair cars turns ugly
12 votes -
Crow-plagued California city turns to lasers and boomboxes to clear the air
12 votes -
Why Galesburg has no money
8 votes -
California’s overflowing coffers hand Newsom ‘every politician’s dream’
8 votes -
Nebraska will spend $500M to claim South Platte River water from Colorado
5 votes -
Ontario passes the Working for Workers Act
10 votes -
Stacey Abrams is running for Georgia governor in 2022
16 votes -
How a New Hampshire libertarian utopia was foiled by bears
26 votes -
Helsinki City Council says it will no longer serve meat at seminars, staff meetings, receptions and other events to reduce capital's carbon footprint
6 votes -
Restrictive Californian zoning laws worsened the supply chain crisis
8 votes -
Bill 2 is "the most transphobic bill ever proposed in Quebec," activist says
5 votes -
Dave's Redistricting Application
6 votes -
A secretive hedge fund is gutting newsrooms
8 votes -
California to enforce 'gender neutral' toy aisles in large stores
15 votes -
A case study in NIMBY entitlement: The former mayor of Beverly Hills is so mad about duplexes
12 votes -
An unprecedented California program is already fulfilling its promise to house the most vulnerable
11 votes -
Gov. Gavin Newsom abolishes most single-family zoning in California
21 votes -
Gavin Newsom signs bills aimed at creating more affordable housing in California
12 votes -
California Governor Gavin Newsom beats back GOP-led recall
29 votes -
Dutch cities want to ban property investors in all neighborhoods
30 votes -
Mayor suggests Helsinki declare itself an English-language city – Juhana Vartiainen says too many highly skilled foreigners shun Finnish capital because of difficult language
13 votes -
After data is posted on conspiracy site, Colorado county's voting machines are banned
12 votes -
California Gubernatorial Election
So I’m curious if there are any other Californians here looking at the ballot for the recall of Governor Newsom and scratching their heads like me. A group of Trump supporters got up enough votes...
So I’m curious if there are any other Californians here looking at the ballot for the recall of Governor Newsom and scratching their heads like me. A group of Trump supporters got up enough votes to hold a recall of the governor, and we have to vote in the next few weeks. The ballots arrived this week and there are 2 votes we have to make: 1) Should we recall the governor? And 2) Which of these 46 (not joking!) people should replace him. Unfortunately, of the 46 possible replacements, I’ve heard of 2 of them: Caitlyn Jenner and Angelyne. Neither appear to have any relevant experience. (I’ll give Ms. Jenner the benefit of the doubt that she’d at least give a voice to an underserved portion of the population, though.)
This opinion piece from the LA Times makes the point that if the recall succeeds, there are no viable Democratic candidates despite the state leaning Democrat by a 2 to 1 margin. (
Furthermore, I can’t find any place that even has statements from each of the candidates like our elections usually do.Found it!)I don’t know how likely the recall is to succeed, so it may be a non-issue, but I’m a little concerned that there could be some dumb situation where not enough people take it seriously and only people who are pissed that they have to wear masks vote and we end up with some far right talk show host as our governor for the next year and a half or more. Anyone else have a strategy here?
22 votes -
New York governor Andrew Cuomo to resign after investigation finds he sexually harassed multiple women
16 votes -
Want to get rid of San Francisco's most toxic monument to racism and segregation? End single-family zoning.
14 votes -
Greenland stops oil and gas exploration – natural resources minister Naaja Nathanielsen said the environment and climatic impacts had been assessed as being too high
23 votes -
California’s ambitious fiber-Internet plan approved unanimously by legislature
13 votes -
Billionaire Phil Anschutz and his wife are suing Colorado for a tax refund. How much they want is a secret.
8 votes -
New vote totals show tighter Democratic race for New York City mayor
5 votes -
Judge tears Florida’s social media law to shreds for violating First Amendment
16 votes -
Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen lose out as French voters shun local elections: Abstention rate estimated at 68%, and exit polls suggest Le Pen’s National Rally failed to get expected support
13 votes -
Plans for an artificial island to house 35,000 people and protect the port of Copenhagen from rising sea levels have been approved by Danish MPs
8 votes