Tuesday, November 19, 2019

Theft...

Image result for price congestion/Gov cartoon



The MTA claims that the Traffic Mobility Review Board  which will recommend toll prices for drivers entering Manhattan's central business district  isn't required to follow the state's open meetings laws, the New York Post first reported. Government bodies subject to these laws are required to post notices of their meetings and allow members of the public to attend the meetings as well as access and copy meeting minutes.
An MTA spokeswoman told the Post that the panel won't have to follow the open meetings laws because it won't perform a "governmental action subject to the open meetings law."
Congestion Pricing was a major part of this year's state budget and Gov. Andrew Cuomo expects the policy to raise at least $15 billion for MTA capital projects. 
The MTA awarded a $507 million contract to a company called TransCore to design, install and maintain what the MTA calls a "first-of-its-kind" tolling system below 60th Street in Manhattan. 
Sucking the money out of poor people of New York.

Norman...



Compare to the master of Norman Rockwell.

Image result for norman rockwell tell calls

Shoot...

Imagine...



The country is witnessing one of only a handful of times in its history that Congress has gone through with public hearings on whether to impeach a president.

And yet, the overwhelming majority of Americans across parties say nothing they hear in the inquiry will change their minds on impeachment, according to a new NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll.
Half of Americans said they approve of the impeachment inquiry.  Respondents are also split on whether they think Trump should be impeached and removed from office. 

But 65% of Americans say they can't imagine any information or circumstances during the impeachment inquiry where they might change their minds about their position on impeachment. 

Sunday, November 17, 2019

Fallen...

Image result for Saudi oil collapsing carton

The value of Saudi Arabia’s state-owned oil giant has fallen below the $2tn target after a tepid response from international investors to its stock market flotation.
Saudi Aramco will sell up to 1.5% of the world’s most profitable company. This would value the company at between $1.6tn and $1.7tn.

The IPO was initially expected to be the largest market debut of any company, offering up to 5% of the company.

 After a series of delays, Aramco’s IPO will offer a far smaller stake.

A Bloomberg poll of international money managers found the majority put Aramco’s valuation at between $1.2tn and $1.5tn.

Prices of oil has deteriorated in the past few years with no hope for recovery.  Climate change, electric cars and renewable energy, gave no chance for oil to be anywhere in the coming 10 years. 

Stents...

Image result for stents cartoon

Stents and coronary artery bypass surgery are no more effective than intensive drug treatment and better health habits in preventing millions of Americans from heart attacks and death, a large study is shedding new light on a major controversy in cardiology.
Researchers have fiercely debated for years how best to treat people who have narrowed coronary arteries but aren’t suffering acute symptoms.
The standard treatment has been to implant stents—wire mesh tubes that open up clogged arteries—or to perform bypass surgery, redirecting blood around a blockage.    
Those procedures are performed even though these patients either have no symptoms or feel chest pain only when they climb a few flights of stairs or exert themselves in some other way.
The study is the largest and among the most rigorous research yet to suggest that while stents and bypass surgery can be lifesaving for people who are having heart attacks, they aren’t necessarily better than cholesterol-lowering drugs and other changes in health habits for most people with chronic, or stable, coronary artery disease, which affects about 9.4 million Americans.
Just a thought.

Saturday, November 16, 2019

Lock...

Image result for Hillary 2020 cartoon

Resist..

Image result for Hillary 2020 cartoon



Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Tuesday said "many, many, many people" were pressuring her to consider a 2020 presidential bid, but held that it is "absolutely not in my plans."
"I, as I say, never, never, never say never and I will certainly tell you I'm under enormous pressure from many, many, many people to think about it," Clinton told BBC Radio. "But as of this moment, sitting here in this studio talking to you, that is absolutely not in my plans."

After Trump tweeted last month that Clinton should enter the race to "steal it away from Uber Left Elizabeth Warren," Clinton shot back in a tweet: "Don't tempt me."

Overreach...

Friday, November 15, 2019