A sitting President can be indicted. https://t.co/JECqQ1YqD1
— Eric Holder (@EricHolder) February 27, 2019
Category: Politics As Usual
Happy Hour: Sonny Stitt & Barry Harris – Just Friends …
Newspaper drought makes it worse
the decline of local newspapers and the “nationalization” of political news are polarizing vote choice: Voters were 1.9% more likely to vote for the same party for president and senator after a newspaper closes in their community. https://t.co/f5LQNv6bBg via @ConversationUS
— The Editorial Board (@johnastoehr) February 25, 2019
It’s about time
Labour Party prepared to back second Brexit vote https://t.co/OzmZcfvBhQ pic.twitter.com/gI1aALBPwj
— The Hill (@thehill) February 25, 2019
Will Beto run?
You can’t play Hamlet too long on this stuff or you miss your moment:
Beto O'Rourke is days away from a 2020 decision. Here are six questions that loom over him. https://t.co/CnAVhIv2E5
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) February 25, 2019
Restoring the norms
I like Jennifer Rubin, except when she starts lecturing Dems on the need to run a centrist:
Democratic norms depend on voluntary compliance and respect for our constitutional system. Since president has undermined norms and institutions it regrettably, now may be necessary to put in place concrete protocols such as the ones listed above.
https://t.co/uX7HGejS8r— Jennifer Truth Over Phony Balance Rubin 🇺🇦🇮🇱 (@JRubinBlogger) February 24, 2019
Nest egg for when he goes to prison?
How thoughtful!
Kushner Cos looking at federally backed loans to finance new billion+ dollar purchase of thousands of apartments, as one does https://t.co/pBDL0eAJCv via @TPM
— Josh Marshall (@joshtpm) February 24, 2019
Child car seats are safe, but not with winter coats
Parents want to do anything they can to protect their children. During the Nebraska winters, that means putting them into a warm winter coat. If travel is involved, it also means strapping them into a car seat as tightly as possible. Unfortunately, these two safety measures do not always mix. Those warm coats are typically very bulky, compromising the safety of any car seat.
“Even though the straps of a car seat are often tight when a parent places them into the seat, they do not usually remain that way,” says Thomas T. Inkelaar of Inkelaar Law. “While winter coats are bulky, they are not firm. After just a few minutes, that material flattens, leaving too much space between the straps and the child.”
That is the danger that comes with placing a child in a car seat while they are wearing a heavy winter coat. A car seat is only safe if the straps are tight enough to hold the child in the seat during an accident, or even an abrupt stop.
So, what can parents do to keep their child warm and safe while in the car? Safety experts recommend placing the child into the seat without their coat. Once a child is snuggly strapped in, parents can put a blanket across them, or even place the child’s jacket on backwards.
Perhaps most importantly though, parents need to remember that Nebraska has recently passed specific laws pertaining to child car seats. As of January 1, 2019, children under the age of two must sit in a rear-facing seat in the backseat. Older children under the age of eight must also remain in the back seat in a booster seat with child restraints. The only exception to the law is when the parent or caregiver has a note from a physician stating a child cannot sit in a booster seat due to their weight or medical condition.
Parents that do not follow this law will only face a fine of $25. The dangers of not placing a child in an appropriate seat however, are great. Parents that disregard the law could face consequences much worse if their child is injured while in the vehicle.
No one wants Trump’s rose
Kind of bad for the country, innit?
Too clever by half
This means he can’t pump his GoFundMe, and he says he’s out of money:
