1. Media coverage of the PowerPoint detailing a plan to overthrow democracy and install Trump for a second term characterized it as "extreme," and "wild," & cast doubt whether its recommendations were "seriously.. considered"
2. Regardless of whether the PowerPoint itself played a central role in Trump's thinking, the plot to overthrow democracy it describes tracks closely with Trump's PUBLIC STATEMENTS
8. For sustained fact-based coverage of what transpired on January 6 — and how the strategy to undermine democracy has intensified since — check out my newsletter, Popular Information.
@amazon 2. The six Amazon workers would have probably never been able to afford a space flight. But they were people with families that loved them and dreams for the future.
One victim was a single mom with a one-year-old son.
@NRSC 2. During the 2020 presidential campaign Trump promoted many contests to win a meal with Trump and there is no evidence anyone actually ever got to eat with Trump
@NRSC 3. My reporting about the contests for meals with Trump during the campaign got some attention so the Trump campaign leaked "proof" of 3 people who "won"
NONE OF THEM SHARED A MEAL WITH TRUMP
Only one of them had a meal at all and Trump wasn't there!
1. @KelloggsUS claims the company still reflects the values of founder W.K. Kellogg but the way the company treats its employees today is the polar opposite
W.K. Kellogg said: "I will invest my money in people"
3. As the Great Depression gripped the country in 1930 W.K. Kellogg reduced shifts from 8-hrs to 6-hrs so that he could hire people who had been laid off
He also increased hourly pay so that workers would still bring home roughly the same amount of money
2. An obscure provision in Michigan law says once you collect signatures for a ballot initiative the legislature can pass the initiative before it appears on the ballot and it automatically becomes law and cannot be vetoed
3. And that's exactly what Trump's allies in Michigan are doing. They are collecting signatures to make it harder to vote and then are going to try to jam that through the legislature.
In this way, they can bypass the governor and the voters
2. The "teacher loyalty" bill would prohibit, in most circumstances, "any doctrine or theory promoting a negative account or representation of the founding and history of the U.S."
This includes "teaching that the United States was founded on racism"