AMERIKA

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GandalfSivi
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#14576 Re: AMERIKA

Post by GandalfSivi »

Truba wrote: 25/06/2025 23:09 kako moze valjat covjek koji želi defundirati policiju
a dolazi iz stranke koja u policiju uposljkava ljude bez drzavljanstva

ovdje se na forumu digne kuka i motika kad se zaposli neki srbijanac za savjetnika ili neka bezvezna pozicija

zamisli gradonacelnik banje luke zaposljava migrante iz srbije bez papira u drzavnu sluzbu
tebi je to dobro?
da ne spominjemo ostale stvari

to što on nije republikanac ne znaci da je dobar covjek i dobar amerikanac
bolji bi ja bio amer da me tamo prime od njih 50%
Opet gluposti pises. Covjek ne zeli defundirati policiju, nego zeli da se policija bavi ozbiljnim kriminalom, dok se za beskucnistvo i mentalne bolesti zaposljavaju socijalne sluzbe.

Dalje, niko ne zaposljava ljude bez potrebne dokumentacije u policiji, ovo je jedna od vecih gluposti koje sam procitao. Hem se moraju zavrsiti akademije, hem se mora proci kompletna procedura, hem se mora dobiti posao, sve sa potrebnim dokumentima. Jedini koji zaposljavaju ljude bez potrebne obuke je tranutno ICE koji je odlucio da deputize bounty hunters (tamo sve od zla oca i gore matere).

Tvoje ostale rasizme ne bih komentarisao…
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GandalfSivi
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#14577 Re: AMERIKA

Post by GandalfSivi »

Rob_Atl wrote: 25/06/2025 23:52 Nek se sad republikanci cude kako su demokrate izabrali ovog, isto sto su se demokrate cudile kako su republikanci izabrali Trumpa opet.
Jedan se zalaze za dzaba autobuse, drugi izvodi vojsku na ulicu :)
aratet
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#14578 Re: AMERIKA

Post by aratet »

Samo što ih neće on plaćati.
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HarTar
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#14579 Re: AMERIKA

Post by HarTar »

Američki senator Lindsey Graham:

Ovo je moja vanjska politika kada je u pitanju Izrael: Bog blagosilja one koji blagosiljaju Izrael.
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sinuhe
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#14580 Re: AMERIKA

Post by sinuhe »

Mark Twain je putovao Svetom zemljom prije 140 godina samo da bi opisao njome zaluđene ljude.
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GandalfSivi
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#14581 Re: AMERIKA

Post by GandalfSivi »

HarTar wrote: 26/06/2025 21:56 Američki senator Lindsey Graham:

Ovo je moja vanjska politika kada je u pitanju Izrael: Bog blagosilja one koji blagosiljaju Izrael.
Od sviju barem njega najvise razumijem. Ovi vojni lobiju mu placaju zesce cifre od kako je usao u politiku, davno dusu djavolu prodao. Bilo kakav rat je dobar rat. Ali ima ovih drugih koji to fakat iz neke ideologije guraju, a ni sami nisu sigurno kakva im je to tacno ideologija.
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Truba
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#14582 Re: AMERIKA

Post by Truba »

/amerikanac-priznao-da-je-ubio-i-razapeo-svecenika-planirao-ubiti-14-pastora-u-10-saveznih-drzava

https://www.avaz.ba/vijesti/globus/9823 ... nih-drzava

Hehe sada igram igru.. pogodi vjeru i naciju prije citanja zanimljivih vijesti
U 99% slucajeva pogodim kad vidim ime sliku i djelo
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GandalfSivi
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#14583 Re: AMERIKA

Post by GandalfSivi »

Ono kad bolesniku brojis krvna zrnca. Bolest…
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Sanjarko
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#14584 Re: AMERIKA

Post by Sanjarko »

Truba wrote: 27/06/2025 22:17 /amerikanac-priznao-da-je-ubio-i-razapeo-svecenika-planirao-ubiti-14-pastora-u-10-saveznih-drzava

https://www.avaz.ba/vijesti/globus/9823 ... nih-drzava

Hehe sada igram igru.. pogodi vjeru i naciju prije citanja zanimljivih vijesti
U 99% slucajeva pogodim kad vidim ime sliku i djelo
stara vijest
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skupljac_zeljeza
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#14585 Re: AMERIKA

Post by skupljac_zeljeza »

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Velkoski
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#14586 Re: AMERIKA

Post by Velkoski »

je l' vrijeme da se blue stateovi odvoje :mrgreen:
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jeza u ledja
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#14587 Re: AMERIKA

Post by jeza u ledja »

Guverner Californie je nedavno zaprijetio kako ce prestati uplacivati u federalni budzet, nakon cega je Trump (ili mescini Bessent) odgovorio nesto tipa to bi bilo klasicno izbjegavanje placanja poreza i kao takvo podlozno pravnom gonjenju.

Inace mi je sega kako su najvece platise u budzet upravo gradovi koje Trump ima na meti.


Helem, pokusaj odvajanja neke drzave bi vjerovatno bio docekan trupama. Svakako su vec u Los Angelesu.
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Jack Be Nimble
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#14588 Re: AMERIKA

Post by Jack Be Nimble »

@Rob_Atl

Kako si? Cujem da se u GA vise ne moze na spam spam bez vozacke. Ako ti treba kakve logistike, javi, organizovacemo nesto.
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Hame_
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#14589 Re: AMERIKA

Post by Hame_ »

Mislim da ovu budalu Trumpa, Demokrate neće dirati tim nekim... čime već. Trpi i šuti do novih izbora.

Jebaće ga Musk i tako ti bogati.

A i to je pitanje, ako im je u interesu - sve je u parama naravno. Tramponja ih valja, a ovi bogatiji od njega gledaju sada sa strane i gube pare - prema tome Tramponja bi trebao najebat uskoro. Ako ne najebe, najebaće bogati - onda ispade Tramp bolji nego Sanders :mrgreen:

18+
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Američka politika je - Para vrti gdje burgija neće. I to je sasvim O.K. .
Rob_Atl
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#14590 Re: AMERIKA

Post by Rob_Atl »

Jack Be Nimble wrote: 01/07/2025 00:54 @Rob_Atl

Kako si? Cujem da se u GA vise ne moze na spam spam bez vozacke. Ako ti treba kakve logistike, javi, organizovacemo nesto.
Nema mi druge nego upload licnu :lol: . Sad sam bas privjerio, kapak! :(
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jeza u ledja
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#14591 Re: AMERIKA

Post by jeza u ledja »

Napokon nesto pametno od Demokrata:
California Rolls Back Its Landmark Environmental Law

Gov. Gavin Newsom and state lawmakers scaled back a law that was vilified for its role in California’s housing shortage and homelessness crisis.

California leaders on Monday rolled back a landmark law that was a national symbol of environmental protection before it came to be vilified as a primary reason for the state’s severe housing shortage and homelessness crisis.

For more than half a century, the law, the California Environmental Quality Act, has allowed environmentalists to slow suburban growth as well as given neighbors and disaffected parties a powerful tool to stop projects they found objectionable.

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed two bills, which were written by Democrats but had rare bipartisan support in California’s divided State Capitol, that will allow many development projects to avoid rigorous environmental review and, potentially, the delaying and cost-inflating lawsuits that have discouraged construction in the state.

Democrats have long been reluctant to weaken the law, known as CEQA, which they considered an environmental bedrock in a state that has prided itself on reducing pollution and protecting waterways. And environmentalists took them to task for the vote.

But the majority party also recognized that California’s bureaucratic hurdles had made it almost impossible to build enough housing for nearly 40 million residents, resulting in soaring costs and persistent homelessness. In a collision between environmental values and everyday concerns, Democrats chose the latter on Monday.

“If we can’t address this issue, we’re going to lose trust, and that’s just the truth,” Mr. Newsom, a Democrat, said in a news conference. “And so this is so much bigger in many ways than the issue itself. It is about the reputation of not just Sacramento and the legislative leadership and executive leadership, but the reputation of the state of California.”

Discussions about changing the environmental law have repeatedly surfaced at the State Capitol over the past decade, only to be thwarted by opposition from environmentalists and local governments. This year was different.

Mr. Newsom threatened to reject the state budget unless lawmakers rolled back CEQA, which is pronounced SEE-kwa. Democrats were also aware that voters nationwide had blamed the party last year for rising prices.

“This has created a different political environment,” said Mark Baldassare, survey director for the Public Policy Institute of California. “Voters have been telling us in our polling for quite a while that the cost of housing is a big problem, but maybe for the elected officials the election itself was a wake-up call.”

Mr. Newsom is nearing the end of his second and final term in office having made little progress on housing and homelessness, which were central to his first campaign in 2018. He has been skewered for the prevalence of homeless encampments throughout California and for a dip in population, driven in part by people seeking lower-priced homes in other states.

The governor, who may run for president in 2028, recognized that Democrats had to shift course on pocketbook issues.

“We’ve got to get out of our own damn way,” he said last week.

The changes are, by any measure, a pivotal moment for the environmental movement, and they may have implications beyond the borders of the nation’s most populous state. California has long been at the vanguard of pioneering environmental measures, and other Democratic-run states could similarly look for ways to encourage more housing construction.

Environmentalists flooded a legislative hearing room on Monday, saying the sweeping changes could hurt sensitive ecosystems and make it too easy to build manufacturing sites that could cause more pollution. Some Democratic lawmakers expressed concern that the legislation could threaten habitat for certain species of butterflies, bears and bighorn sheep.

“Jeopardizing those whole ecosystems, I think, is a risk that we don’t want to take,” said State Senator Catherine Blakespear, a Democrat.

With its requirements for extensive review and public disclosure of potential environmental ramifications, CEQA was viewed as the strictest measure of its kind in the nation.

As governor, Ronald Reagan, a Republican, signed the environmental act into law in 1970 at a time when his party was much more aligned with environmental protections than it is today. It reflected a consensus among the state’s leaders over the need to protect a vast array of wildlife and natural resources — forests, mountains and coastline — from being spoiled by rising smog, polluted waterways, congestion and suburban sprawl.

But CEQA has been described even by some environmentalists as a good law that produced unintended consequences. The law was initially written to apply principally to government projects; a 1972 court decision expanded it to apply to many private projects as well.

One of the bills signed on Monday will exempt from CEQA high-density projects as long as they are not on environmentally sensitive or hazardous sites. The other bill will create sweeping changes that are aimed at accelerating legal review and that will exempt numerous types of development projects, from farmworker housing to child care centers. The legislation will also make it easier to rezone areas to allow for more housing in some cities.

The changes could, for instance, make it easier to convert a vacant shopping center into condos and apartments by reducing government hurdles.

Republicans have long blamed CEQA for California’s problems, arguing that it was bad for the state’s business climate. It was notable that Democrats, led by Mr. Newsom, moved the party away from the kind of measure that has long been central to Democratic thought.

“It is so critically important for California to show that we can get things done to make people’s lives better and more affordable,” said State Senator Scott Wiener, a Democrat who wrote the bill to exempt several types of projects from environmental review.

California legislators have become increasingly motivated to combat the state’s housing shortage as homelessness and the cost of living have become serious concerns for residents. In recent years, the Legislature has passed hundreds of bills to expedite housing production, and has tried to push cities to build more homes, usually tinkering around the edges of the environmental act.

“The crisis has metastasized to such a level that our constituents are demanding it,” said Assemblywoman Buffy Wicks, a Bay Area Democrat who wrote the bill to encourage more high-density housing projects.

Christopher S. Elmendorf, a property law professor at the University of California, Davis, who has closely followed the CEQA battles in the State Capitol, said the reforms were “huge,” the biggest since the mid-1970s.

Mr. Elmendorf said he viewed Mr. Newsom’s shift partly as a testament to how much housing has risen as a priority for California voters. But it also reflects a broader reckoning for Democrats nationwide after Donald Trump’s re-election in 2024. Democrats are re-evaluating whether they are aligned with the needs of the electorate, he said, which has opened the door for considering positions that were once off-limits.

Opponents of construction projects — neighborhood groups, rival businesses, unions — frequently seized on CEQA provisions to delay or, in some cases, kill all kinds of projects, including housing, office buildings and homeless shelters.

Recent cases have come to symbolize what critics of the environmental law saw as its unintended consequences. In San Francisco, it was used to delay, but ultimately not derail, a bike path. In Berkeley, a neighborhood group used it to block the University of California from expanding the size of its student population, contending it would lead to noise, trash and traffic; the Legislature stepped in and passed a bill overriding a court decision. Another group in Berkeley won a court order blocking construction of a new dorm because students would create “social noise” pollution; the Legislature again passed an overriding law.

As in Berkeley, previous efforts to change CEQA had largely been piecemeal, responding to the crisis of the moment and often with the backing of powerful labor unions. When the Sacramento Kings threatened to move out of the state, the Legislature granted an exemption for the construction of a new arena. Similar exemptions were given for stadiums in San Francisco and Los Angeles, as well as for a major renovation of the State Capitol.

Matt Lewis, spokesman for California YIMBY, which supports the new legislation, said a law that had initially been intended to prevent projects like new freeways from plowing through neighborhoods had over the years been “Frankensteined” into a tool to block housing development. And the act, ultimately, has harmed the environment by limiting denser housing, which reduces pollution, he said.

But Kim Delfino, a lobbyist for several environmental groups, said the law would allow the destruction of coastal habitats, forests, deserts and grasslands, and called it the “worst bill” for declining species that she had seen in 25 years of advocacy.

“It blows a hole in our efforts to protect habitat,” she told lawmakers on Monday. “Make no mistake, this will be devastating.”

Still, Robert Rivas, the speaker of the State Assembly, framed the vote as a social issue for Democrats during a news conference after the vote.

“Affordable housing is the civil rights struggle of our time here in California,” he said, “and today we take a transformative step forward in that fight.”

Ben Metcalf, managing director of the Terner Center for Housing Innovation at the University of California, Berkeley, said the changes will speed up the building process because projects in the urban core will be able to skip environmental review, which can take several months. He said it remained unclear how much that will increase total housing production, especially given the inflated costs of construction, insurance and interest rates.

“It’s probably not the full solution,” he said of the changes.

In 2016, Gov. Jerry Brown also proposed exempting urban housing from CEQA. But that attempt failed under opposition from unions, environmental groups and other organizations. Mr. Metcalf, who at the time was leading California’s housing department under Mr. Brown, said that the political winds had shifted in the past nine years.

He said that California’s moves could inspire other Democratic-led states to weaken their environmental regulations to address their housing shortages. Massachusetts, New York, Minnesota and several other left-leaning states have laws much like CEQA.

“I could certainly see it emboldening other governors: ‘If they can do it in California, we can do it, too,’” he said.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/30/us/c ... -ceqa.html
sumirprimus
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#14592 Re: AMERIKA

Post by sumirprimus »

kolikovas je strah ICE.a? nasih "amera"?
da nece doci i po vas, zarad necega, politickog, stava ,komentara na drustvenim mrezama i slicno? jer vidim da hoce i da udju u proces oduzimanja dzravljanstava?
Rob_Atl
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#14593 Re: AMERIKA

Post by Rob_Atl »

Ako si cist i papiri uredni nemas se cega plasit. Ne mogu oni tebe hapsit zbog posta na facebook, naravno osim ako nekom ne prijetis, a to hoces li reci nesto protiv administracije ti ne mogu nista. Da bi ti oduzeli drzavljanstvo moras biti u nekoj od teroristickih organizacija ili da si lagao na papirima pri dobijanju drzavljanstva. To su 2 najveca razloga sto je i realno da ti oduzmu jel. A ovo sve ostalo smo zasticeni 1 amandmanom, koliko jos to ne znam :lol: .
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jeza u ledja
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#14594 Re: AMERIKA

Post by jeza u ledja »

sumirprimus wrote: 01/07/2025 13:23 kolikovas je strah ICE.a? nasih "amera"?
da nece doci i po vas, zarad necega, politickog, stava ,komentara na drustvenim mrezama i slicno? jer vidim da hoce i da udju u proces oduzimanja dzravljanstava?
Ne vjeruj svemu sto pise na internetu.
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Jack Be Nimble
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#14595 Re: AMERIKA

Post by Jack Be Nimble »

sumirprimus wrote: 01/07/2025 13:23 kolikovas je strah ICE.a? nasih "amera"?
da nece doci i po vas, zarad necega, politickog, stava ,komentara na drustvenim mrezama i slicno? jer vidim da hoce i da udju u proces oduzimanja dzravljanstava?
To je samo za one koji su dosli ilegalno pa onda dobili drzavljanstvo ili se rodili ovdje, a roditelji ilegalno usli. 14. amadman daje pravo drzavljanstva bilo kome da se rodi na tlu SAD, to republikanci zele da promjene.
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Jack Be Nimble
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#14596 Re: AMERIKA

Post by Jack Be Nimble »

Al recimo da dodju po nas, ne znam ni gdje bi isao. Sigurno negdje u EU ili Japan, jer tamo ima posla za mene.
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Velkoski
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#14597 Re: AMERIKA

Post by Velkoski »

ti si mi nekako za el salvadora
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Jack Be Nimble
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#14598 Re: AMERIKA

Post by Jack Be Nimble »

Velkoski wrote: 01/07/2025 17:30 ti si mi nekako za el salvadora
Ili za Sudana, samo ne u Srbiju :D
Rob_Atl
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#14599 Re: AMERIKA

Post by Rob_Atl »

Znaci pizde u senatu su ipak glasale za OBBB, sad ide nazad u House :skoljka: .
melac
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#14600 Re: AMERIKA

Post by melac »

Amerika se vise ne razlikuje od rusije, ni po cemu.
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