@CherylB2121@Jensen_Utah@phil_lyman Park a plane on the tarmac and use it for "detention" until full, then fly it to your choice of destination. Return plane and repeat.
🚨 Well done, Utah!
You crushed it, our last #SaltLakeBlake post just blew past 200K views thanks to you. Let’s do it again with this one. If you’re in Utah or #CD2, RESHARE immediately
Utah deserves better than a rubber stamp
Let’s keep it going #utpol
@strat0manc3r@UtahFlatRanger Just curious, what specific skills are lacking in new grads you're looking for? If it's cutting edge type knowledge they likely won't have it, but might be enticed to learn. Grads are wanting more $ than I made when I retired from manufacturing.
@Cody_Hubman@Jensen_Utah@SaveStandard Depends on where you are and how long they're in school. In our area most kids are home before sunset, except those participating in after school activities, like sports. And those who get home late live far from school, and it's only a few days - typically less than 2 weeks.
@MoskitoByte1@Jensen_Utah@SaveStandard The start times are often based on the parents input and wants. Many that I've talked to rely on the fact that they can send their kids to the stop before they leave, so shifting the start time impacts when they get to work, and whether it's dark when they get off the bus.
@Jensen_Utah@Cernovich The thing is, primaries are one way for the parties to decide who best reflects the party's position. Not foreign governments, or members of the other parties. If you aren't a party member your opinion shouldn't matter until the general.
@Jensen_Utah@mastaprincess@the_bald_ninja@SaveStandard That's always the best option, if available. But for those where it isn't, accommodation needs to be made, and it's still best if kids aren't staggering to the bus stop in the dark.
@Jensen_Utah@SaveStandard The concern I have is the kids getting on the bus in the dark instead. Too many are crossing dark roads to get to the bus stop.
I looked at the 7am time slot a few years back, and standard time has the least dark days over the school year.
James Madison described the powers of the federal government as “few and defined” and those reserved to the states as “numerous and indefinite.”
We’ve been dangerously drifting from that understanding since the 1930s.
The drift has been most evident in areas now most fraught with waste, fraud, and abuse.
If we honored the Constitution’s limits on federal power, there’d be very little waste, fraud, and abuse in our national government.
Share if you’d like to see a “constitutional reset,” in which any government function that’s not obviously and necessarily federal under the Constitution would be returned “to the states respectively, or to the people,” as the Tenth Amendment specifies.