U.S. News

HumbleHobo , in 7 Republican AGs write to Target, say Pride month campaigns could violate their state’s child protection laws
@HumbleHobo@beehaw.org avatar

This is infuriating as fuck that Republicans are just allowed to abandon any presumption of governing and just subject citizens to these endless campaigns of outrage that always seem to end up putting some group of people in the crosshairs. I am really tired of politicians being allowed to waste tax dollars on this meaningless bullshit. You should not be allowed to go after any specific group of citizens for pursuing “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness”.

I want these cruel crooks to be punished for their constant culture war battles.

Aviandelight , in Nebraska woman charged with disposing of fetus following illegal abortion sentenced to 90 days in jail
@Aviandelight@mander.xyz avatar

While a agree with the legal charges I still feel really bad for these two women. What made them so desperate that they chose these actions? Was this really a case of terrible decision making or even malicious intent? I don’t think we’ll ever really know and I hate that the pro-birthers use these sorts of cases as ammunition.

prole ,
@prole@beehaw.org avatar

I think it’s incredibly unlikely that this was done with malicious intent.

Aviandelight ,
@Aviandelight@mander.xyz avatar

In my heart I don’t think that was the case either. This whole thing just screams desperation and bad decisions/lack of good options.

Stumblinbear , in Nebraska woman charged with disposing of fetus following illegal abortion sentenced to 90 days in jail
@Stumblinbear@pawb.social avatar

Authorities alleged Celeste Burgess had a medication abortion, and that it violated the state’s prohibition of abortion after 20 weeks. Celeste Burgess was around 28 weeks pregnant when her pregnancy ended, court documents allege.

Jessica Burgess, 42, was charged with the same offenses as her daughter, plus a felony count of performing an abortion beyond 20 weeks and a felony count of performing an abortion as someone other than a licensed physician.

You know that most western countries disallow abortion after 17 weeks (sans risk to the mother) right? The mother was also only given a felony for performing an abortion while not being a doctor, not for the abortion itself.

This also occurred two or three years ago, long before the states abortion laws were restricted

ozoned OP ,
@ozoned@beehaw.org avatar

You know that all western countries aren’t the same right? Like how lots have universal healthcare, better social protections, GDPR, etc right?

I feel awful for anyone in this situation that feels they have no other choice.

I’m not a doctor, nor do I have any medical background, but sacrificing a healthy life for something that isn’t doesn’t make logical sense to me, but again I’m in the US, fighting in the US, and posting in the US NEWS. Not other western countries.

I also find it suspect you lump in all western countries as if that’s easily defined and the laws are easily molded together as if they’re all under 1 law structure. Even in the States alone that’s not feasible.

And did I say this was due to Roe overturned? If you don’t think we’ll see more more stories like this, then I wish I lived in your world.

Should be a cautionary tale to protect your data. Especially when it comes to your health information thrown over channels you think are “private”.

prole ,
@prole@beehaw.org avatar

I know right? This was happening before Roe was repealed, and several states pushed strict abortion bans. Imagine how much worse it is now.

I’m sure that’s the point you were trying to make.

Phroon , in US Federal Reserve launches "FedNow" - the long-awaited instant payments service, modernizing the US banking system

Digging deeper, the Federal Reserve says this about it:

The FedNow Service went live on July 20, 2023. It is available to depository institutions in the United States and enables individuals and businesses to send instant payments through their depository institution accounts. The service is a flexible, neutral platform that supports a broad variety of instant payments. At the most fundamental level, the service provides interbank clearing and settlement that enables funds to be transferred from the account of a sender to the account of a receiver in near real-time and at any time, any day of the year. Depository institutions and their service providers can build on this fundamental capability to offer value-added services to their customers.

So it’s a system your bank uses to send your money to other people’s accounts at other banks. In my mind it’ll kinda be like bill pay, you’d go to your bank’s website to do it.

ericjmorey ,

It’s more of a protocol/standard which can be used to build applications and interfaces. Bill pay will likely be an application and your bank’s website will likely have some interface that uses FedNow. But there will be many other applications and interfaces.

GeneralRetreat , in US Federal Reserve launches "FedNow" - the long-awaited instant payments service, modernizing the US banking system

Wait… why doesn’t the USA have a system like this already?

I always found cryptobro preaching about instant cash transfers perplexing, but this explains a lot.

ericjmorey ,

Financial institutions have been happy with the fees generated by not having this system in place. And the Fed is explicitly not allowed to compete with its member banks.

JillyB ,

Isn’t ACH a service by the fed? If this is a service for financial institutions, I don’t expect them to make it free. I don’t see how this changes much except maybe making Zelle obsolete or at least changing the back end of it.

ericjmorey ,

It will likely reduce money transfer fees overall and decrease average processing time dramatically.

UFODivebomb ,

Not really. ACH is more of a protocol for non-realtime payments. This is for realtime. While there is a fed ACH the largest ACH provider in the US is The Clearing House LLC. Which, as the name suggests, is a private company.

sat012e , in US Federal Reserve launches "FedNow" - the long-awaited instant payments service, modernizing the US banking system

Terrible name for it.

601error ,
@601error@lemmy.ca avatar

They need an app called FedUp

TheTrueLinuxDev , in Bipartisan senators unveiling measure to ban stock ownership by lawmakers, administration officials

Something like this requires a constitution amendment…

98codes , in US Federal Reserve launches "FedNow" - the long-awaited instant payments service, modernizing the US banking system

Zelle: “Fuck.”

ericjmorey ,

They’ll likely use Fed Now for their service in the future.

Powderhorn Mod , in US Federal Reserve launches "FedNow" - the long-awaited instant payments service, modernizing the US banking system
@Powderhorn@beehaw.org avatar

Extremely important word in the lede: “eventually.” This won’t be something consumers can use for quite some time. Notable absences from participating banks include Bank of America.

queue OP ,

Should I edit the post?

Powderhorn Mod ,
@Powderhorn@beehaw.org avatar

No need … I just wanted to point out that “launches” doesn’t mean what everyone assumes as a hed verb here. Their error, not yours.

omarciddo , in A Black Man Was Elected Mayor in Rural Alabama, but the White Town Leaders Won’t Let Him Serve

Even taking into account that we’re talking about the rural South, a rightfully elected Black man being denied the ability to serve due to the color of his skin, in a town that is overwhelmingly Black (85%) is absolutely mind-boggling.

sibloure ,

I used to live in this general area and I’m really not surprised. The culture is toxic and depressing. So grateful I was able to get out.

dingus , in Atlanta City Leaders Are Subverting Democracy to Save Cop City
@dingus@lemmy.ml avatar

Almost everywhere in this country the city officials are in bed with the local police. Sometimes literally.

I live in the northwest, in a very progressive city. Quickly after the murder of George Floyd the city council tried to act like they gave a damn and claimed to have a plan on the way to prevent local police from using tear gas at protests. Then the George Floyd protests got bigger, which made city officials nervous, so they took it back, because they wanted the police to have bigger guns to protect themselves from unhappy citizens.

City officials are always way more willing to let the cops brutalize the citizens as long as it means some cops protect them from the citizens they claim to represent.

middlemuddle , in A Black Man Was Elected Mayor in Rural Alabama, but the White Town Leaders Won’t Let Him Serve

Jesus, that man is a hero. The bigots don’t deserve that level of man as their mayor, but he clearly desires to represent everyone, as a mayor should. The fact that this has been going on for so long is extremely depressing to hear. I hope the feds get involved immediately and help set things right.

drwho , in Universal Studios might have invoked the wrath of California's Tree Law
@drwho@beehaw.org avatar

They’ll just get fined, and it’ll be a small fraction of their daily revenue.

Idrunkenlysignedup ,

I posted this elsewhere, but according to a quick Google it’s up to $18k per tree and from the images I found, it’s 5 trees. $90k is couch cushion money to Universal. They DGAF about fines.

Dankenstein , in U.S. Gun Deaths Dropped Slightly in 2022 — But Were Still High

A total of 48,117 people died of gunshot wounds last year, according to the CDC data, the second highest single-year tally on record. That’s a 1.5 percent decrease from 2021, when 48,830 people died of gunshot wounds.

The data comes from the CDC’s WONDER database, which collects mortality information from death certificates at the state level. The estimates are provisional, and are likely to change slightly before final figures are released in December. While the data is not yet final, it provides the most comprehensive and accurate accounting of gun deaths in America.

The other stats, which I think are more interesting, are further down:

Suicides accounted for the largest share of gun deaths in 2022. According to the data, 26,993 people died by gun suicide last year, accounting for 56 percent of all gun deaths. That’s a 2.5 percent jump from 2021.

A total of 19,592 people died by gun homicide in 2022, accounting for 41 percent of gun deaths. That amounts to a 6.5 percent drop from the previous year.

I didn’t see anything in the article that suggested why this occurred but the last paragraph seems to allude firearm accessibility:

Wintemute of U.C. Davis said widespread gun ownership and easy access to firearms “remains a major determinant of firearm mortality,” while strong gun access laws are associated with low gun death rates.

The second to last paragraph states which States have the highest/lowest gun deaths which directly relate to the highest/lowest gun ownership rates and lax/comprehensive firearm regulations but I kinda figured that would be the case.

It’s nice to see that total gun-related deaths are down but sad to see that suicide rates are up.

housepanther , in Montgomery County, Maryland Council passes rent stabilization bill: law will cap annual increases at 6%
@housepanther@lemmy.goblackcat.com avatar

This is a neoliberal answer, which is to say a non-answer, to a serious problem. Rent increases still outpace salary increases so it still puts the renter one or two paychecks away from homelessness. The problem will not get solved this way.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • [email protected]
  • All magazines