Back during COVID times, I briefly worked for the Salt Lake Tribune and became all-too-familiar with Utah senator Mike Lee's antics, like when he called Joe Biden a would-be autocrat for mandating vaccines. So, it's no surprise that the Republican politician is back in the news for some other terrible stance: privatizing public lands. Esquire political columnist Charles P. Pierce has some choice words for the "konztitooshunal skolar" in a new article below. – Chris Hatler, deputy editor Plus: |
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He wants to take your public lands away. It is not, let's be clear, to increase housing. |
Senator Mike Lee, the famous "konztitooshunal skolar" from the state of Utah, is making a strong run at the long-vacant throne of Rick Santorum as the most colossal dick in American politics. Last week, he decided to make a ha-ha funny about an episode of domestic terrorism that claimed the life of a Minnesota state legislator, her husband, and her dog, and nearly took the life of another member of the state legislature. Now, he's stanning for a provision in the Big Plug Ugly—one that already was stripped from the House bill that would open up 250 million acres of public lands across the west to eventual despoilment and waste. |
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It's tough to classify Model/Actriz, but when I first heard them, I was instantly gripped by their driving, pulsing, intense sound. They formed in 2016 and released their first album, Dogsbody, in 2023 to strong reviews. Their new record, Pirouette, is dramatic and polished, leaning more heavily into dance and pop influences and taking in to account some of the lessons they learned while touring in support of their debut. Music is my first love. Style, clothing, and fashion came later. One of my great joys in life is bridging the two. |
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It lifted the entire canoe out of the water, and then we dropped back down. Imagine going over a boulder when you're whitewater rafting: You hit it, thud it, and bounce up quickly. But instead of us running into it, it came from under us and toppled the canoe sideways. We didn't have the stability to stay in anymore. Ryan fell one direction towards the back, and when the canoe plopped back down, I fell forward, out the front. I thought, Okay, we've got to start swimming to the rocks immediately. I got maybe one stroke in, and that's when it grabbed my leg and dragged me down. |
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