dorothy shestak

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dorothy shestak

dorothy shestak

@dstar

i dress elders price & cunningham at book of mormon on broadway (IATSE 764 🥰). i keep the spirit of striketober in my heart all the year. #unionstrong

brooklyn เข้าร่วม Eylül 2008
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dorothy shestak
dorothy shestak@dstar·
"i'm pretty much cos-playing as zooey deschanel all the time." #thingsisaidtonight
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Clarence Thomas the Tank Engine
Well see, unfortunately our courts have decided the 4th amendment doesn't actually exist for the most part. I've seen it do some good work but I don't think how it functions today is anything close to the protections the founders imagined and I'm definitely not one to put too much stock into how they thought things should work. However when it comes to actual searches and seizures it gives far less protection than it should and when it comes to the consequences of the modern surveillance state it offers basically no protection at all. When Thomas Jefferson said he expected a revolution and new constitution every twenty years or so he was on to something.
hacker.house@hackerfantastic

I'm not American, but isn't Flock by default a violation of the constitutions 4th amendment?

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Lauren Deutsch
Lauren Deutsch@LaurenCDeutsch·
Following the cream theme, #ootd is this Elizabeth Arden 1950s ball gown. Arden is mostly remembered for her cosmetics line, but she also had a fashion line featuring both couture and ready-to-wear. Her head designer at the time of this dress was Ferdinando Sarmi. #fashionhistory
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Center on Conscience & War
Over the weekend we had 3 clients facing imminent deployment. We worked day and night to keep them home. They completed applications and we issued letter to their command reminding them of their legal obligation. Here are details on each:
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Emily Gallagher
Emily Gallagher@EmilyAssembly·
Over 500 New Yorkers filled the Capitol today to demand that we do not rollback our climate law. They are here, putting their bodies on the line, because they know this is an existential fight.
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NYC-DSA 🌹
NYC-DSA 🌹@nycDSA·
NYC Council members to @GovKathyHochul: "Make corporations pay what they owe." NYC is the 8th largest economy in the world, but we don't have the power to raise taxes on corporations. We need to tax corporations to win an NYC for the many, not the few. cityandstateny.com/policy/2026/03…
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Working Families Party 🐺
Working Families Party 🐺@WorkingFamilies·
It's never been clearer that "we can't afford it" has always been a lie.
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Ryan Grim
Ryan Grim@ryangrim·
Who runs Cuba is not my business or your business. But if my tax dollars are spent to block a NICU from getting fuel, then that is my problem and it should be yours too. Do you know how expensive it is for us to enforce this blockade? We need that money here, and those babies need the power to stay on. This is Erich, he’s 2 months old, and here’s the doctor explaining how they hand pump his ventilator when the power goes out
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Fuck You I Quit
Fuck You I Quit@fuckyouiquit·
Super Fun Fact: If the federal minimum wage had continued to track with the growth in labor productivity as it did in the mid-20th century, the rate would be approximately $24.50 today.
Melanie D'Arrigo@DarrigoMelanie

Fun Fact: Congress made it so the maximum campaign donation amount increases every two years and is indexed to inflation. Congress did not however, index the federal minimum wage to inflation, and it has not increased from $7.25 per hour since 2009.

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Adam Johnson
Adam Johnson@adamjohnsonCHI·
Wow it’s almost like there was a deeply engaged protest movement by college students 2yrs ago that was the largest in 50yrs and the publication you work for—along with every other major outlet—smeared them as antisemites, then they were all systematically kicked out of school.
Thomas Chatterton Williams@thomaschattwill

A lot of the problems in the world right now can be explained by this video. For one thing, it’s a big reason why the US government is so unaccountable to public opinion. These are *college students.* A significant amount of the country is totally checked out and comfortable enough not to think it matters.

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Prison Policy Initiative
Prison Policy Initiative@PrisonPolicy·
Between 2025 and 2026, the number of people detained by ICE on any given day grew by nearly 60%. Thanks to Trump's deportation agenda, expanded immigration detention accounts for almost all of the growth in mass incarceration since last year.
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Aaron Regunberg
Aaron Regunberg@AaronRegunberg·
Our 2028 Democratic nominee needs to go all in on ending the rot of elite impunity, and that must extend not only to Trump officials, the Epstein class, and corporate criminals, but also to the Dems who are hanging out at Harvard when they should be locked up in the Hague.
Jonathan Guyer@mideastXmidwest

How does Tony Blinken reconcile his Gaza legacy? Speaking at the Harvard Kennedy School, former Secretary of State Antony Blinken was asked yesterday about how he sees Gaza — and whether the Biden administration should have cut off arms to Israel. The moderator, New York Times journalist David Sanger, described Gaza as probably the "weakest" part of the diplomat's legacy. "Of course, for me, coulda woulda shoulda, is something that will always be there when it comes to Gaza," Mr. Blinken said. "Given the level of human suffering, given the horrific loss of of life among Palestinian women, men, children — you can't help but ask yourself on a regular basis, could we should we have done something different?" A Harvard student pushed further during the Q&A. He asked the former secretary of state more specifically about the 2024 USAID conclusion that Israel had blocked aid to Palestinians despite Mr. Blinken telling Congress the opposite, overriding experts to continue sending weapons to Israel. "You had opportunities to distance yourself and your administration from arming Israel, which committed what leading Holocaust scholars and human rights agencies call a genocide," the student said. "You rejected them and continued arming Israel. This is your legacy. How do you justify to the countless Palestinians, including thousands of children, that died from your decisions?" The student then read the names of several young children were killed in Gaza. "How do you reconcile with this and how do you reconcile with your legacy?" "This is something that I grappled with and will continue to grapple with for as long as I can see into the future," Mr. Blinken said. "Could we, should we have done things differently such that the suffering that people endured, the loss of the children you just listed and so many others could have been averted. The short answer is: Maybe yes. "We had to make judgments. We had to make judgments in real time about how to try to get to a better place. We made those judgments. People will make their own judgments about what we did and what we didn't do. "But let me just add a few things... and my great friend Samantha [Power] is here and we had this, you know, ongoing discussions in our own administration on the question of the assistance that was getting or not getting to Palestinians in Gaza throughout 2024. I was on this every single day, literally every single day. And we had a series of reports come out suggesting that there was an imminent famine that was about to happen. And then the next report would say actually fewer people are in danger even though people were leading terribly hard and difficult lives. "That didn't just happen. It happened because every single day we were on the Israelis to try to get assistance in, to open more crossing points, to flood the zone. They did that profoundly inadequately. They did that in ways that were not the way I would like to have seen it done, but we got some of that done. "When the report that you referred to came out and this was the product of the so-called NSM, the national security memorandum. If you look at that report, it lays out a lot of the actions that Israel were taking that were of more than deep concern to us. And I think that report actually served a very useful function in motivating the Israelis to do better. Not to do as much as they should have and as we would have wanted, but to do better. And at various points the aid went up, the number of trucks going in went up. The distribution even with the trucks going in was a huge problem. Looting, criminality, etc., all difficult problems that are really hard to control for. "But yes, of course, you couldn't be and I wouldn't be human if I didn't ask myself every day, could we have done things differently. "The one thing I want to suggest to you as well… I believe and look maybe I'm wrong that the nature of the the trauma in Israel, which is, there's no hierarchy of trauma, the trauma in Israel, the trauma among Palestinians, the same. The loss of a Palestinian life, the loss of Israeli life, the same. But on the Israeli side, the trauma was such that I believe the determination across that society to take the actions that they took in Gaza was such that irrespective of what we did, they would have continued to do what they did. And cutting off arms, sure, that was an option. But I don't actually believe that at least in the near term, it would have changed things. "And I also believe it would have led to an even wider war as Israel's enemies, and they were multiple, jumped in and that only would have extended the war in Gaza, not ended the war in Gaza. "We thought that the best way to get to an end, to protect people, to help people, was to get to a ceasefire, with hostages coming out and with aid going in. And you know I fully—more than respect—I empathize with people who felt this so, so deeply. I do remain with a question in my mind about why barely a word was spoken in all those months about Hamas, which was an actor too and is responsible for so much of what happened. "But yes, we all look at it, I certainly look at it, and say maybe we could have done differently. Maybe we could have done better by the people. I wish we could have."

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Cora Harrington
Cora Harrington@CoraCHarrington·
Clothing and textiles are two of the things that make us uniquely human. When you really sit with that and contemplate all the different ways we’ve expressed our humanity through dress over scores of millennia…how could you not be endlessly fascinated?
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Clarence Thomas the Tank Engine
Fuel costs are real but the USPS has been underfunded and forced to pre-fund benefits to slowly kill the agency. It is the only service that guarantees delivery in many places, specifically rural areas. There should be funds for this instead of using it to try to kill the agency.
More Perfect Union@MorePerfectUS

BREAKING: USPS will impose its first-ever surcharge on packages — an 8% fee to cover the rising cost of fuel.

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Fuck You I Quit
Fuck You I Quit@fuckyouiquit·
Every dollar earned below $184,500 a year has a Social Security tax of 12.4%. Everything after that cap is exempt. If we lift this cap on the wealthiest earners, Social Security would be fully funded till 2070. The cap should not exist.
ABC News@ABC

The trust funds for Social Security and Medicaid will run out of money in as little as 8 years, a shorter time frame than previously estimated, according to a report issued Wednesday by the programs' trustees. abcnews.link/r5kTy1r

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Brad Lander
Brad Lander@bradlander·
According to documents filed this morning by the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of NY, ICE has been lying for a year — not only to the public, but to the courts and to prosecutors — about being authorized to make arrests at 26 Federal Plaza and other immigration courts. This is genuinely a bombshell. All courthouse arrests should cease immediately. There should be a Congressional investigation & civil rights actions for every illegal abduction of immigrants trying to follow the rules and appear in court.
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