In plea papers, Goltz admitted that on Nov. 21, 2022, he posted the lawyer’s name and a home address and telephone number on social media, writing: “It would be a shame if someone got to this children.” On the same date, in response to another post referring to other Maricopa County officials, he wrote: “Someone needs to get these people AND their children. The children are the most important message to send.” https://apnews.com/article/texas-ma...na-officials-ba9e8669f5571221ec62611f720142b5 This is why Republicans want women to give forced births, so they can threaten to kill them later and use it as leverage.
“Florida students will now be required to get their parents’ consent before using a nickname in schools, a move that critics say targets the LGBTQ+ community and could extend well beyond,” People reports. “The rule would impact everyone from students who prefer using a shorthand nickname (‘Tom’ versus ‘Thomas,’ for instance), to those who prefer a different name altogether, including transgender students (who have already been the target of numerous pieces of legislation in Florida in recent months).” “But even if a transgender student did get permission from their parent to use a different name, teachers would still not be obligated to use that student’s preferred pronouns.”
Hey what's the current death toll so far out there on the Permian btw since we had this discussion(?). Another one of your useless rants. >>> Case closed.
What discussion? You ranted and ran away and now you are back asking a question pretending as if pleading ignorance is a substitute for facts. Typical 'dream' bullshit post from you as usual.
I quoted an article, you went on a unhinged rant pretending you have more information while all you did was huff and puff and whine as usual. No different than your post on abortion which you blamed on illegal immigrants ignoring the fact that the GOP doesn't make any exceptions when it comes to forcing children to give birth.
A 24-year-old died laying cable in the Texas heat. His mom is suing. When the ambulance picked up 24-year-old Gabriel Infante, his internal body temperature was nearly 110 degrees Fahrenheit. It was heat stroke, and emergency responders rushed him to the hospital. Infante had been at work, laying fiber optic cables on a 101-degree day in San Antonio, when he’d started acting confused and dizzy. He’d fallen twice, and his best friend had started pouring water over him, trying to cool him off. Hours later, Infante would die at the hospital — a victim of extreme heat and, a lawsuit filed by his mother alleges, failure by his construction company to keep its workers safe in the hazardous June weather. He was one of hundreds of people to die of heat-related causes last year. His mother’s lawsuit, filed last month in Bexar County, Tex., accuses B Comm Constructors of negligence, saying the company failed to protect its employees from the heat hazard or to implement protocols to prevent heat-related illness. His mother is seeking $1 million in damages. The suit also alleges that a foreman at the job site dismissed Infante’s symptoms, suggesting he was on drugs, even after an emergency responder said he was exhibiting signs of heat stroke. Rather than calling an ambulance immediately, the foreman first suggested calling the police, the lawsuit alleges. The suit accuses B Comm of creating “an extreme degree of risk” for workers, including by not having a first aid procedure, not adjusting work schedules in response to the high temperature and not providing a shaded rest area. The Post reported last week. In Texas, the Republican-led legislature this session voted to take away local governments’ ability to set regulations for workplace issues, effectively voiding heat-safety rules in Austin and Dallas that required water breaks. Gov. Greg Abbott (R) signed the bill into law last month. https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2023/07/22/texas-heat-death-lawsuit/
This is just one death that made it to the front page, most serious complications don't make the news.