We woke up to a baby chick this morning. Itās the first time we have ever used an incubator and hatched a check, I was not sure it would work. So many things go wrong - or not as expected - when farming, it is truly magical when something actually works. I promised Lynn after the dairy cow āno more animalsā - whoops.
Sassy the horse is not the only one who wears a saddle anymore.
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We took the producers to Busch Gardens and this moment with the penguins was too cute!
Weād sworn off ducks ⦠until this happened.
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A good ruling. "Go after the bad ones" turned into a sycophant witch hunt.
Federal Judge Halts Immigration Raid Tactics in Los Angeles
https://archive.ph/hIK1L
"A federal judge blocked Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents from stopping and detaining people based solely on their skin color without probable cause and denying detainees the right to a lawyer.
...'
Possibly the best, and least reported, news of the week appeared in Mondayās New York Times, below the headline, āI.R.S. Says Churches Can Endorse Candidates From the Pulpit.ā Itās another Trump promise, fulfilled.
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The Johnson Amendment is a 1954 statute that says nonprofit organizations ā501c3ās, including churchesā may not endorse or oppose political candidates if they want to keep their tax-exempt status.
It was introduced by then-Senator Lyndon B. Johnson, mostly to stop some Texas nonprofits from attacking him during a campaign. It passed quietly, with no debate, and over time, it became a kind of political muzzle for religious groups: preach all you want, but you canāt stump.
In theory, the rule applied to all tax-exempt nonprofits, but in practice, the IRS almost never enforced it, especially against churches. It was more of an effective threat than an actual hammerā used selectively, inconsistently, and often politically. For years, conservative churches complied but argued that the rule...