top hashtags

sixers online

Tim Scott Capes For Trump...hard.

This is pathetic. It's so embarrassing. He's gone to the sunken place. He's all in. He's trying to be vice President and will obviously say anything. He can't straddle whatever line is left. He's Stephen from Django. I honestly believe Trump could say the n bomb in his presence privately and he would still stay.

Login to view embedded media and

Industry Rituals Thread

This is tragic. How I interpret him trying to take his own eye out is that they got to him and its hard for him to live with it. If you walked away from it and lost your career, angry and bitter are the normal emotions. But if they got to you and you still lost your career, then you might not as a man be able to handle that mentally and you harm yourself. Just my supposition.

Rapper Houston

Login to view embedded media

Walmart Is Going To Charge You A Subscription If You Want To Use The Self-Checkout


From the article:
"If you want to use the self-checkout lane at some Walmart stores, you might need to fork out $12.95 per month, or $98 per year, for a Walmart+ subscription. That’s because some Walmart stores are limiting some self-checkout lanes to Walmart+ subscribers and drivers of its Sparks delivery service."

Excuse Me Reaction GIF by One Chicago

Lyft And Uber Say They Will Leave Minneapolis After City Council Forces Them To Pay Drivers More

Lyft and Uber say they will leave Minneapolis after city council forces them to pay drivers more​

Associated Press
Thu, March 14, 2024 at 6:33 PM

Ride-hailing drivers celebrate in Minneapolis, Thursday, March 7, 2024, immediately after Minneapolis City Council members voted to pass a measure that would increase wages to drivers of ride-hailing companies, including Uber and Lyft, to an equivalent of more than $15 an hour. Opponents say this may increase costs to customers and increase fears that Uber and Lyft will follow through on their threats to leave the area altogether. (AP Photo/Trisha Ahmed)


Ride-hailing drivers sit in the audience of the city council chambers in Minneapolis, Thursday, March 7, 2024, as council members discuss a measure that would increase wages to drivers of ride-hailing companies, including Uber and Lyft, to an equivalent of more than $15 an hour. Opponents say this may increase costs to customers and increase fears that Uber and Lyft will follow through on their threats to leave the area altogether. (AP Photo/Trisha Ahmed)


1 / 2

Ride Hailing Drivers Minneapolis​

Ride-hailing drivers celebrate in Minneapolis, Thursday, March 7, 2024, immediately after Minneapolis City Council members voted to pass a measure that would increase wages to drivers of ride-hailing companies, including Uber and Lyft, to an equivalent of more than $15 an hour.

Opponents say this may increase costs to customers and increase fears that Uber and Lyft will follow through on their threats to leave the area altogether. (AP Photo/Trisha Ahmed) ASSOCIATED PRESS MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Lyft and Uber said they will cease operations in Minneapolis after the city's council voted Thursday to override a mayoral veto and require that ride-hailing services increase driver wages to the equivalent of the local minimum wage of $15.57 an hour.

Lyft called the ordinance “deeply flawed,” saying in a statement that it supports a minimum earning standard for drivers but not the one passed by the council.
“It should be done in an honest way that keeps the service affordable for riders,” Lyft said.
“This ordinance makes our operations unsustainable, and as a result, we are shutting down operations in Minneapolis when the law takes effect on May 1.”


Uber did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but news outlets reported that it issued a similar statement saying it would also stop service that day. Both companies promised to push for statewide legislation that would counter the Minneapolis ordinance, and state House Republicans proposed a bill Thursday that would preempt local regulations of ride-hailing services.

The City Council first passed the measure last week in a 9-4 vote despite Mayor Jacob Frey’s promise to veto it. The measure requires ride-hailing companies to pay drivers at least $1.40 per mile and $0.51 per minute for the time spent transporting a rider — or $5 per ride, whichever is greater — excluding tips. In the event of a multi-city trip, that only applies to the portion that takes place within Minneapolis. Critics of the bill say costs will likely spike for everyone, including people with low incomes and people with disabilities who rely on ride-hailing services. Supporters say the services have relied on drivers who are often people of color and immigrants for cheap labor. “Drivers are human beings with families, and they deserve dignified minimum wages like all other workers,” Jamal Osman, a council member who co-authored the policy, said in a statement. “Today’s vote showed Uber, Lyft, and the Mayor that the Minneapolis City Council will not allow the East African community, or any community, to be exploited for cheap labor,” Osman added. “The Council chooses workers over corporate greed.” Democratic Gov Tim Walz, who vetoed a bill last year that would have boosted pay for Uber and Lyft drivers, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that he was concerned because so many depend on those services, including disabled people. He said he believed the companies would pull the plug, “and there’s nothing to fill that gap.” Walz added that he hopes the Legislature will seek a compromise that both includes fair pay for drivers and dissuades the companies from leaving. Seattle and New York City have passed similar policies in recent years that increase wages for ride-hailing drivers, and Uber and Lyft still operate in those cities.

Best Flowers For Your Yard?

Trying to help my mom get some good flowers in the yard to encourage butterflies, bees, and the light. All pollinators. As mentioned in another thread awhile back, I am going to attempt a garden over there to see if it does better. This is outside of my small indoor garden I am still working on and testing. I want to make sure their yard encourages the right wildlife to show up and I read the best way to do this is to start with flowers.

What flowers are best overall?

Texas Proving Again Why Voting Matters: Republican Judge Rules That The Minority Business Development Agency Must Also Assist Whites

Remember, these racists are ELECTED. Just complaining on the internet won't keep them out of office!

Login to view embedded media
Federal judge orders minority-business agency opened to all races
The ruling sides with White plaintiffs in finding the Minority Business Development Agency’s presumption of disadvantage is unconstitutional

March 6, 2024

mbda_318px.jpg
A federal judge in Texas has ordered a 55-year-old federal agency created to help minority-owned businesses to open its doors to all races, a ruling that potentially imperils dozens of government programs that also presume racial minorities are inherently disadvantaged.

In a 93-page opinion rendered Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Mark T. Pittman ruled that the Minority Business Development Agency’s presumption that businesses owned by Blacks, Latinos and other minorities are disadvantaged violated the Constitution’s guarantee of equal protection. He permanently enjoined the agency’s business centers, which have assisted minority-owned businesses in accessing capital and government contracts, from extending services based on an applicant’s race.

“If courts mean what they say when they ascribe supreme importance to constitutional rights, the federal government may not flagrantly violate such rights with impunity. The MBDA has done so for years. Time’s up,” wrote Pittman, who was appointed to the bench by President Donald Trump in 2019.


The decision marks the latest blow to government affirmative action programs in the wake of the Supreme Court’s landmark rulings against Harvard and the University of North Carolina last June. The high court’s finding upended race-conscious college admissions and sparked a broad legal offensive against affirmative action and diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs in the private and public sectors. Within weeks, a federal judge in Tennessee struck down a provision of the Small Business Administration’s 8(a) Business Development program that equated race with social disadvantage as unconstitutional, forcing the agency to overhaul it


Legal experts said Tuesday’s ruling could have even more profound implications for how the government provides aid to historically disadvantaged groups

rest of article

Black Ohio Dentist Will Not See You If You Wear Bonnets And Slippers😳

Sooooo, a fellow podcaster( Black woman) who posted about this, agrees with the dentist. She believes if we want others/ whites to respect us, we should respect ourselves first. The dental practice has the right to do this, she says.

Before telling y’all what I told her, what are your thoughts on this?🙄

Trending