Michael R Smith
4K posts

Michael R Smith
@MicSpaceRider
Space & Technology Fan, Harley Enthusiast for 40+ years, retired young.

AOC and Jasmine Crockett are beating Vance and Rubio in a new presidential poll. AOC & Jasmine — 53% Vance & Rubio — 47%


Vancouver Has Created an Entire Tax-Funded Economy Around Homelessness Vancouver officials confirmed this week that the city now spends between $100,000 and $220,000 per homeless person annually—making homelessness one of the city’s fastest-growing public sectors. What began as a crisis has since evolved into a fully integrated economic ecosystem, complete with multiple layers of administration, overlapping services, and a level of coordination typically reserved for major infrastructure projects—minus the visible results. “We’re making historic investments,” said one official, standing near an encampment that has also been making a long-term investment in the same location. “The situation is complex.” The exact cost depends on how it’s calculated. Divide total spending by the entire homeless population and the number appears manageable. Divide it by those actually living on the street, and it begins to resemble a mid-level executive salary. City insiders say the flexibility is intentional. “It allows us to communicate progress while maintaining urgency,” one source explained. Residents say they’ve noticed a different trend. “I’ve seen more programs, more funding, more announcements,” said one taxpayer. “Just not fewer tents.” Officials emphasized that the issue is not a lack of resources, but the need for more coordination, more investment, and more time—confirming plans for a new multi-agency task force to study why current spending levels have yet to produce measurable change. The task force is expected to cost $50 million. “Solving homelessness isn’t cheap,” officials added. “Managing it, apparently, isn’t either.”


Last year, we announced the Department of Health is processing all requests to change gender designation on birth certificates within 3 business days, down from as much as a 10 month wait. This week, I signed a bill ensuring Washingtonians can change the sex designation on their state IDs and birth certificates without fear of violating their privacy. Washington state is committed to protecting the rights of transgender and gender diverse people. That includes their legal right to reflect their gender on these documents. Thanks to prime sponsor Sen. Pedersen.



I didn’t think this would stimulate as much conversation as it did. Most people are okay with waiting 10-15 minutes for 10-20% charge because it gives them a chance to grab food, use the bathroom, etc. Does Supercharging need to be as fast as pumping gas?























