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It appears to have passed with a veto-proof majority.
Quote from: bucket on April 12, 2022, 03:57:27 PMIt appears to have passed with a veto-proof majority.She didn't need to sign it and endorse it. There are a lot of dipshit laws that can pass with a veto proof majority in Kansas.
Quote from: MakeItRain on April 12, 2022, 05:00:45 PMQuote from: bucket on April 12, 2022, 03:57:27 PMIt appears to have passed with a veto-proof majority.She didn't need to sign it and endorse it. There are a lot of dipshit laws that can pass with a veto proof majority in Kansas.Perhaps I'm naïve in that I didn't see it as an endorsement so much as a call for Washington to do something about it.
I'm guessing this was something the pubs put together to try and get more ammo for November, and she just went with it. Don't love it, but I also can't imagine how dumb this state would've been with Kobach as gov. Good lord.
Yeah the bill was drafted by Derek Schmidt.
what a rough ridin' joke.https://twitter.com/ReichlinMelnick/status/1517147965353193476
Nearly a year later, the Emiratis continue to fund the housing, plus daily food rations and medicine for thousands in the sprawling, dorm-like compound located in an industrial area south of the capital city. Meanwhile, U.S. officials have refused to process the Afghans who remain there, a procedure that would allow them to enter the United States or be referred to other countries. And indications are that may never happen. The final flight authorized by the U.S. government from the facility departed August 17. The United States ended consular services, according to leaders of private NGOs and the U.S.-based evacuation groups that have continued to monitor the Afghans’ cases. These groups contend that by quietly shutting the door, the Biden administration is straining relations with a key Middle East ally, adding to a global refugee crisis, and perhaps once again leaving average Afghans with broken promises and dangerous futures.Among those caught in a holding pattern are 1,000 Special Immigrant Visa applicants and their relatives. These are Afghans who were employed by U.S. military or civilian personnel during the 20-year war. Most of the rest are considered at-risk and eligible for humanitarian parole. They include those with ties to the former Afghan government, employees of Western NGOs, educators, and about 1,700 religious minorities. Nearly all arrived in Abu Dhabi last year aboard privately chartered aircraft after U.S. military evacuations ended August 30, 2021.