Property tax on a paid-off home is the government making you rent your own land. I'm with the Governor:
We must save Florida homeowners from out of control property taxes.
🚨 BREAKING: FLORIDA LEGISLATURE FORMALLY APPROVES ABOLISHING PROPERTY TAXES for most primary homeowners statewide
Both chambers RESOUNDINGLY pass Gov. Ron DeSantis’ proposal, SENDING IT TO VOTERS for approval this November
LET’S GO!!! ☀️👏🏻
Needs 60% of voters this fall.
Florida is MAKING HISTORY!
The homestead exemption will surge up to $250K to start, and a schedule will set its elimination in the future
However, MOST homeowners will already get effective 0 taxes under the proposal.
DO IT NATIONWIDE!
Cast Away (2000) underwent one of the most unusual production schedules in Hollywood history.
Filming was halted for nearly a year so that Tom Hanks could physically transform for the role of Chuck Noland, losing around 50 pounds and growing out his hair and beard to realistically portray a man stranded alone on a remote island for years.
During the break, director Robert Zemeckis used the time to film What Lies Beneath (2000). When production resumed, Hanks’ dramatic transformation added an authenticity that makeup alone could never achieve.
The dedication paid off. Hanks earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor, and Cast Away became one of the most memorable survival dramas ever made.
The removal of a baby due to a miscarriage is NOT an abortion.
There is a difference between a child not surviving in the womb and intentionally murdering a child in the womb. It is offensive to conflate the two, but I wouldn’t expect any less from the abortion movement.
Congressman @realBrandonGill left this ab*rtion advocate SQUIRMING during a hearing. This video has since gone viral.
"Folks, PLEASE pay attention to every second of this. It is worth your time." – @dbongino
A baby at 18 weeks gestation.
Not a “clump of cells”
A unique and developing human being with little toes, eyes, and fingers.
No child should be aborted.
🚨🚨About Callais: The Supreme Court just issued a seismic decision on voting rights and racially based redistricting. It’s complicated, so stick with me.
Callais was a case out Louisiana, where a group of white plaintiffs sued for racial discrimination after the state drew a new minority-majority congressional district. That district was drawn in compliance with a federal court order that found that Louisiana’s previous congressional districts violated Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act by denying black voters the opportunity to select a candidate of their choice.
It had been widely anticipated that the Supreme Court would find the entirety of Section 2 unconstitutional. They did not do that. They did, however, severely limit its current legal application consistent with the Constitution’s prohibition on racial preferences and the text of the statute itself.
The Court held that the mere “disparate impact” of a racial minority not being able to elect a candidate of its choice does not justify race being used to redraw districts. It found that neither the Constitution nor Section 2 prevent maps from being drawn for partisan advantage. Instead, a plaintiff must show that the state intentionally discriminated on the basis of race in drawing its maps. It shifts from a “we aren’t getting the candidates of our choice elected” framework that focuses on results to requiring actual proof of intentional discrimination.
This holding very likely will have a substantial impact on the ongoing legal battle over Mississippi Supreme Court redistricting, and carries broad implications for all redistricting efforts moving forward.
This is the hand of a 17-week-old unborn baby.
Not “just a clump of cells”
A living, developing human child with tiny fingers and toes.
Every child is worthy of life.