Today, DHHS will publish its final ruling on the definition of the term “French Dressing.”
In a 14-page draft document, they say they plan to follow the Association for Dressings and Sauces’s advice to drop the legal definition.
According to their economic analysis, the federal government reforming the definition of “French Dressing” is not expected to have an impact on the economy.
The “227 distinct pourable products sold as ‘French dressing’” will not have to rename.
This is my uncut video of the moment the Oath Keepers stack breached the Capitol East side.
(Footage available to license)
Rhodes will be an interesting case. I photographed him on the Capitol East side; he was generally speaking to several men, but he did not appear to go inside or physically get involved with the action.
"And when I say 'we' I am not talking about 'we members of congress.' I am talking about 'we the people'" she says, commending those who voted out Trump.
She adds there "wasn't enough courage" to convict Trump on impeachment.
DC Congresswoman @EleanorNorton pointed out that DC's local police department worked to defend the Capitol "yet House Republicans fight DC by fighting against the DC statehood bill only a few months after the attack."
To be clear, the problem of exonerative language blaming situations or tools for actions committed by people is not exclusive to government acts, nor to guns.
With narrow exceptions perhaps like self-driving cars, a person crashes a car.
Truckers are calling for a boycott of Colorado after mandatory minimum sentencing meant trucker Rogel Lazaro Aguilera-Mederos, 23, got 110 years for an accident that left four dead.
He had no drugs/alcohol and government agrees it was an accident.
Prosecutor Kayla Wildeman is absolutely ecstatic about the conviction of Aguilera-Mederos.
After achieving a 110-year prison term for the 23-year-old truck driver whose brakes failed (no drugs/alcohol), she calls a brake shoe trophy a “special gift.”
Chief Deputy District Attorney Trevor Moritzky, who apparently gave Wildeman the brake shoe trophy, gave a misdemeanor plea deal (90 days jail) to a cop in 2017 who “brutally raped” an intoxicated arrestee in the back seat of his police car.
Robert J. Contee, who has since become Chief of Police, once voted to overrule the firing of a DC officer who admitted to drunkenly attempting to solicit sex work and pointing his MPD-issued Glock at the sex worker when they refused, @DCist reports.
Out of 24 cases in which MPD officers were found by MPD’s Disciplinary Review Division to have committed crimes and recommended for firing, the Adverse Action Panel blocked all but three firings.
The cops got “an average of a 29-day suspension without pay. These officers amassed disciplinary records for domestic violence, DUIs, indecent exposure, sexual solicitation, stalking, and more. In several instances, they fled the scenes of their crimes.”