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Rubio-backed bill to make Daylight Saving Time permanent passes Senate, heads to House

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Rubio-backed bill to make Daylight Saving Time permanent passes Senate, heads to House

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The Senate handed a invoice by unanimous consent Tuesday that may make Daylight Saving Time (DST) everlasting.

The bipartisan “Sunshine Safety Act of 2021” was launched by Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and cosponsored by a bipartisan group of senators, together with James Lankford, R-Okla.; Roy Blunt, R-Mo.; Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I.; Ron Wyden, D-Ore.; Cindy Hyde-Smith, R-Miss.; Rick Scott, R-Fla.; and Ed Markey, D-Mass.

DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME: LAWMAKERS DEBATE THE NEED FOR TIME CHANGE AS CLOCKS SPRING FORWARD SUNDAY

The invoice is now headed to the Home. If handed, it is not going to go into impact till November 2023.

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“The excellent news is that we are able to get this handed. We do not have to maintain doing this stupidity anymore. Why we might enshrine this in our legal guidelines and hold it for thus lengthy is past me,” Rubio stated Tuesday on the Senate flooring. “Hopefully, that is the yr that this will get accomplished. And pardon the pun, however that is an concept whose time has come.”

Modeled after an identical regulation that handed in Florida 2018, such laws was first launched by Rubio within the Senate in 2018 and once more in 2019, however the present model is the primary to not die in committee. Fifteen different states have handed related legal guidelines, resolutions or initiatives, however they require a change in federal statutes to be enacted.

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and members of Congress maintain a information convention on the advantages for veterans uncovered to burn pits on the VFW Constructing on April 13, 2021, in Washington, D.C.
(Paul Morigi/Getty Photos)

“The decision to finish the antiquated observe of clock altering is gaining momentum all through the nation,” Rubio stated. “Research have proven many advantages of a year-round Daylight Saving Time, which is why the Florida legislature voted to make it everlasting in 2018. I am proud to reintroduce this bipartisan invoice to make Daylight Saving Time everlasting, and provides our nation’s households extra stability all year long.”

Whitehouse, who cosponsored the invoice, echoed Rubio, saying, “Individuals’ existence are very totally different than they have been when Daylight Saving Time started greater than a century in the past. Making Daylight Saving Time everlasting will finish the biannual disruptions to day by day life and provides households extra daytime to take pleasure in after work and faculty.”

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Based on a ballot performed final October, 75% of Individuals wish to keep away from switching between DST and normal time, although there isn’t any settlement on which is preferable.

There have been different efforts to make Daylight Saving Time Everlasting.

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., speaks during a Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing in Washington, D.C., on Wed., April 28, 2021. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., speaks throughout a Senate Judiciary Committee affirmation listening to in Washington, D.C., on Wed., April 28, 2021. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Name/Bloomberg by way of Getty Photos)

Congress early final century accepted a invoice to finish Daylight Saving Time. President Woodrow Wilson vetoed the laws. However then one thing extraordinary occurred. Congress has solely executed 112 profitable veto overrides within the historical past of the republic. Certainly one of them was over Daylight Saving Time. Congress overrode Wilson’s veto and time was up for Daylight Saving Time.

President Franklin Delano Roosevelt sprung clocks forward by an hour for “Conflict Time” throughout World Conflict II. However clocks reverted to their previous settings after the battle. 

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However Congress accepted the Uniform Time Act in 1966. It solidified the boundaries of the 4 “time zones” throughout the U.S. It additionally declared that the U.S. would shift to Daylight Saving Time on the final Sunday in April. The nation would revert to Normal Time on the final Sunday in October.

The usswitched clocks forward for practically two years when OPEC slashed manufacturing, prompting the oil shocks of the Nineteen Seventies. Lawmakers then up to date the regulation in 1986, altering when the nation would transfer between Daylight Saving Time and Normal Time. A 2005 vitality invoice condensed the interval the nation dwells on Normal Time. In actual fact, Daylight Saving Time is extra normal within the U.S. than “Normal Time.” U.S. clocks spin to Daylight Saving Time for about eight months out of the yr in comparison with simply 4 months on Normal Time.

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Trump says Israel should hit Iran’s nuclear facilities, slamming Biden’s response

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Trump says Israel should hit Iran’s nuclear facilities, slamming Biden’s response

Former President Trump on Friday said that Israel should attack Iran’s nuclear facilities while mocking President Biden’s answer earlier this week on the subject.  

While speaking at a campaign event in Fayetteville, North Carolina, he said when Biden was asked about Israel attacking Iran, the president answered, “’As long as they don’t hit the nuclear stuff.’ That’s the thing you wanna hit, right? I said, ‘I think he’s got that one wrong. Isn’t that what you’re supposed to hit?’” 

Trump went on to say that nuclear proliferation is the “biggest risk we have.” 

TRUMP SLAMS THE BIDEN ADMINISTRATION’S RESPONSE TO HURRICANE HELENE

Former President Trump on Friday during a campaign event in Fayetteville, N.C., said that Israel should attack Iran’s nuclear facilities while mocking President Biden’s answer earlier this week on the subject.  (AP Photo/Karl B DeBlaker)

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The former president said he rebuilt the “entire military, jets everything, I built it, including nuclear” while he was president. “I hated to build the nuclear, but I got to know firsthand the power of that stuff, and I’ll tell you what: we have to be totally prepared. We have to be absolutely prepared.”

He said when Biden was asked about Israel and Iran: “His answer should have been “‘Hit the nuclear first, worry about the rest later.’”

Trump made similar comments in an interview with Fox News on Thursday, telling correspondent Bill Melugin Biden’s response on Israel attacking Iran was the “craziest thing I’ve ever heard. That’s the biggest risk we have. The biggest risk we have is nuclear.” 

TRUMP NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISORS MOCK BIDEN’S WARNINGS TO ISRAEL TO STICK TO ‘PROPORTIONAL’ IRAN RESPONSE

Rockets over Israel this week

Many rockets, fired from Iran, are seen over Jerusalem from Hebron, West Bank, Tuesday. The Israeli army announced that missiles were fired from Iran towards Israel and sirens were heard across the country, especially in Tel Aviv.  (Wisam Hashlamoun/Anadolu via Getty Images)

He continued, “I mean, to make the statement, ‘Please leave their nuclear alone.’ I would tell you that that’s not the right answer. That was the craziest answer because, you know what? Soon, they’re going to have nuclear weapons. And then you’re going to have problems.” 

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Former deputy director of national intelligence Kash Patel, who served under Trump, said this week: “Iran launched a war into Israel, so to say that the Israelis who are defending themselves and our hostages shouldn’t attack sites in Iran that could kill them – especially when you’re the one who gave Iran $7 billion as a commander in chief and then allowed them to acquire nuclear materials – is wildly political.”

Biden speaking to reporters

Biden told reporters this week that he and the other members of the G-7 were in agreement that Israel should have a “measured” response to Iran.  (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

Following Tuesday’s attack by Iran on Israel, Biden told reporters at Joint Base Andrews, “the answer is no,” of Israel potentially targeting the country’s nuclear program. 

He added that he and the other members of the G-7 all “agree that [Israel has] a right to respond, but they should respond proportionally,”

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Trump blames immigrants as if that were a policy position. It's racist

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Trump blames immigrants as if that were a policy position. It's racist

On Friday, we learned that the U.S. added 254,000 jobs in September, bringing the unemployment rate down to 4.1%. When President Obama was elected, the Great Recession had pushed the rate to 7.8%. President Trump inherited a rate of 3.6%, and he gave President Biden a mishandled pandemic and 6.4% unemployment.

Opinion Columnist

LZ Granderson

LZ Granderson writes about culture, politics, sports and navigating life in America.

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The next president is likely going to inherit an economy that is strong, even if many Americans aren’t feeling that way. The next president will also bring with them a narrative about the economy. In the case of Trump, it’s a story we’ve heard far too many times: Blame the minorities.

Over the eight years of the Obama administration, wages went up and unemployment reached historic lows, but the subprime mortgage crisis that began in 2007 left a lasting mark on housing. How could it not, when home ownership fell to its lowest point since 1965? Construction slowed, but demand for housing did not, and that’s how we ended up with the affordability crisis we have now.

Trump wants voters to blame desperate migrants for the shortage of affordable housing, but it was his friends on Wall Street who began this cycle.

Just as it was his intentional downplaying of the pandemic during the first few months — something he said he did to prevent panic — that left Americans misinformed and sent the economy into a tailspin. Instead of preparing us, Trump told us to blame China. That rhetoric sparked a wave of anti-Asian hate crimes.

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During the Obama administration, more than 2.5 million immigrants were deported. That’s more than any other administration had forced out before, and Americans were still losing their homes — because that housing crisis was caused by corporate greed, not by illegal immigration.

Trump fared well in 2016 by blaming desperate Black and brown people as the root cause of housing problems and any other economic issue, neatly avoiding any context about Wall Street’s role. And because this helped get him to the White House the first time, I understand why there’s a temptation for his campaign now to couch this rhetoric as policy — to claim, for instance, that deporting people will ease the housing shortage or that disaster relief money for victims of Hurricane Helene was diverted to migrants at the border.

But it’s not policy.

It’s just racist.

And we need to just call it out for what it is.

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This week, the Trump campaign sent out a press release that read “Kamala’s Open Border Jeopardizes FEMA’s Hurricane Response.” It was in response to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas reiterating that the Federal Emergency Management Agency may not have enough funds to make it to the end of hurricane season in November. The agency initially raised concerns at the beginning of the season in June, and the Biden administration overhauled aspects of FEMA relief to get funds out quicker. From Hurricane Katrina in 2005 through 2021, FEMA has spent more than $12 billion a year. From 1992 to 2004, it was $5 billion.

It was weather, not immigrants, that forced more than 3.3 million Americans out of their homes in 2022, nearly half that number for more than a month. However, the Trump campaign didn’t mention climate change, perhaps because the former president still thinks it’s a hoax. But the data show more funds were needed in response to the sweeping damage caused by natural disasters, not because of any trend in immigration.

And yet, the Trump campaign’s press secretary said: “FEMA has run out of money for the rest of hurricane season because Kamala Harris used the funds for free giveaways to illegal immigrants.”

That’s not true.

During the vice presidential debate, Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio) took every opportunity he could to fault migrants and immigration for economic issues, echoing his boss. For his part, Trump’s comments about immigrants “poisoning the blood of our country” echoed Adolph Hitler. No wonder Vance compared Trump to Hitler in 2016 before switching allegiances.

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Now the two of them are floating “mass deportation” as a solution … to problems caused by corporate greed. Never mind that deportations would aggravate many problems, including food costs and housing shortages.

In 2019, more than half the farmworkers in the country — 450,000 — were immigrants. In addition to the billions it would cost for the Trump-Vance deportation plan, what do you think would happen to food prices if they had their way? And to housing availability if a huge percentage of construction workers were deported? In Texas, half of the industry’s laborers undocumented.

Blaming Black and brown people might be red meat on the campaign trail, but it just isn’t sound economic policy.

It’s just racism.

@LZGranderson

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Video: Biden Cautions Israel on Striking Iranian Oil Fields

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Video: Biden Cautions Israel on Striking Iranian Oil Fields

new video loaded: Biden Cautions Israel on Striking Iranian Oil Fields

transcript

transcript

Biden Cautions Israel on Striking Iranian Oil Fields

President Biden said Israel should consider alternative ways of retaliating against Iran, a day after he said the United States was “in discussion” about the possibility of Israel striking Iran’s oil fields.

“The Israelis have not concluded how they’re — what they’re going to do in terms of a strike. That’s under discussion. I think there are — if I were in their shoes, I’d be thinking about other alternatives than striking oil fields.” Reporter: “At this point, you still haven’t spoken to Netanyahu. Is it fair to say that you have little personal influence over what he decides to do?” “No, look, our teams are in contact 12 hours a day. They’re constantly in contact. I’ve already had my presidential daily brief. We’ve already had interface between our military, our diplomats. It’s in constant contact. They are trying to figure out — it’s the high holidays as well — they’re not going to make a decision immediately. And so we’re going to wait to see when they want to talk. The Israelis have every right to respond to the vicious attacks on them, not just from the Iranians, but from everyone from Hezbollah to Houthis — anyway. But the fact is that they have to be very much more careful about dealing with civilian casualties.” Reporter: “So how should they respond? You expressed concerns about attacks on Iranian oil facilities. How should they respond?” “That’s between me and them.” Last night you said that there’s still a lot to do to avoid an all out war in the Middle East. Firstly, aren’t we pretty close to that definition already. And secondly, what can you really do to stop that happening. There’s a lot we are doing. The main thing we can do is try to rally the rest of the world and our allies into participating the French are and in Lebanon and other places to tamp this down. But when you have proxies as irrational as Hezbollah and the Houthis, and it’s a hard thing to determine. Did you have any worries that Netanyahu may be trying to influence the election. And that’s why he has not agreed to a diplomatic solution. No administration has helped Israel more than I have. None none. And I think Bibi should remember that. And whether he’s trying to influence the election, I don’t know. But I’m not counting on that. You’ve said many times recently that you want to speak to him, that you plan to plan it and say, I want to. You don’t want to. No, I didn’t say that. You’re making it sound like I’m seeking a speaking. I’m assuming when they make their adjustment, how they’re going to respond, we will then have a discussion.

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