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www.rawstory.com

J Edgar Boozer will solve it.

x.com


And House Republican Nancy "Hic!" Mace wants a congressional investigation into the puppy killer's good-for-nothing gigolo, Corey Lewandowski.

Link: Gorgon Accuses Kobold

Graham Platner is miles ahead of AIPAC dinosaur Gov. Janet Mills (D-Maine) in the polls, so she suspended her primary campaign. Janet Mills was recruited to run by none other than US Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY). After she retires, she has my permission to move to Israel. I knew some nice neighborhoods in Ramat Aviv and the oranges in Haifa are delicious: MIGA

"I can just tell you that we should have an all-out assault on the concept that somehow, some way, Graham Platner will squeak through. He has to be exposed," National Republican Senatorial Committee Chair Tim Scott (R-SC) whined: This AIPAC dead-ender is an Oreo

Senate Republicans' primary super PAC, the Senate Leadership Fund, has reserved $42 million in fall ads. A sister nonprofit group, One Nation, is running a suite of ads now totaling $18 million.

@#1 ... MAGAocracy.
Happy 250th. ...

Yeah, that seems to be quite apropos of late.

Denying the right to vote of those whose political opinions may not align with that of MAGA.

Why do Republicans seem to be so focused upon denying the voting ability of those valid voters they disagree with?

U.S. Appeals Court Strikes Down North Carolina's Voter ID Law (2016)
www.npr.org

...The appeals court noted that the North Carolina Legislature "requested data on the use, by race, of a number of voting practices" -- then, data in hand, "enacted legislation that restricted voting and registration in five different ways, all of which disproportionately affected African Americans."

The changes to the voting process "target African Americans with almost surgical precision," the circuit court wrote, and "impose cures for problems that did not exist."

The appeals court suggested that the motivation was fundamentally political -- a Republican legislature attempting to secure its power by blocking votes from a population likely to vote for Democrats....

[emphasis mine]

 

More from the month-old article ...

... Scientists have demonstrated a quantum technique to ensure that someone is in the location they claim to be, physicist Abigail Gookin reported March 18 at the American Physical Society's Global Physics Summit. Called quantum position verification, the technique is based on the concept of quantum entanglement, in which the fates of two far-flung particles are closely linked.

In the future, the technique could be useful for preventing some types of phishing attacks, or for limiting which users can access certain resources. (For example, access to sensitive nuclear weapons infrastructure could be restricted to those in a secure government building.) The method could be part of a future quantum internet that could one day provide various types of ultrasecure communications.

Here's how it works: Two people, called verifiers, each want to confirm that a third person, called a prover, is in a given location. The verifiers, who are on opposite sides of the prover's purported location, each send a random number to the prover, which the prover will use to determine their next step. Meanwhile, one of the verifiers creates a pair of entangled photons, or particles of light. The verifier holds onto one photon, and sends the other to the prover.

The prover and verifier measure their photons simultaneously. Specifically, they measure polarization, the direction in which the electromagnetic waves of the photons wiggle. The random numbers tell the prover what measurement settings to use to determine their photon's polarization. The prover sends the result of their measurement back to the verifiers.

Then, the verifiers compare the prover's result to the result from the measurement of the other photon. Over many repetitions of this photon-measuring protocol, the results should be strongly linked, or correlated. If a sneaky impostor intercepted the photon from another location, the results of the measurements wouldn't be as strongly correlated as expected, thanks to constraints set by the speed of light and quirks of quantum measurements. The verifiers would know that something was fishy.

At the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in Boulder, Colo., scientists created two verifier stations, separated by about 200 meters and connected by optical fibers to a prover in between. The method successfully localized the prover, Gookin, of NIST, and colleagues reported in a paper submitted January 23 to arXiv.org. ...


@#13 ... Were you here when SCOTUS judges were targeted? ...

Specifics needed.

And, while you are looking up those specifics, please allow me to also add these specifics ...

The Judiciary Is Under Attack
www.americanbar.org

... At a Federalist Society event in late 2025, former Department of Justice (DOJ) Chief of Staff Chad Mizelle argued that Congress should impeach federal judges who found the president's policies unlawful. "This [opposition] is a problem of leftist politics" and not the law, he claimed. Adam Lynch, Trump AG Ally "Turns Heads" at Conservative Legal Conference with New Power Grab Ploy, AlterNet (Nov. 7, 2025). His comments came the same week that two senators and one House member demanded the impeachment of D.C. District Court Chief Judge James Boasberg, who has presided over high-profile litigation surrounding the administration's immigration policies, and the same month that a Texas congressman filed articles of impeachment against him. Press Release, Eric Schmitt, US Sen. for Mo., Senator Schmitt Leads Colleagues in Calling for the Suspension, Impeachment of Judge Boasberg (Nov. 17, 2025); Press Release, Brandon Gill, Congressman, TX, Rep. Gill Files Impeachment Articles Against Judge Boasberg Following Arctic Frost Scandal (Nov. 4, 2025). These stories barely made the news.

Just a few years ago, both media and most elected officials would have decried these attacks on a coequal branch of government as unprecedented and dangerous. Now, they are the new norm. ...


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