Leigh
oddleighenough.bsky.social
Leigh
@oddleighenough.bsky.social
East coaster now in beautiful Utah. Pfp is late, lamented Toby. Although he thought he was a dog, he was the best cat ever.
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no one has even bothered trying to convince us there’s a threat from Venezuela. no weapons of mass destruction. nothing. just a war of choice because why not.
US operations against Venezuela to begin within days.

Covert ops the first move.
www.reuters.com
November 22, 2025 at 9:48 PM
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these people basically just take luxury government jets and go to fancy events like make a wish kids while their minions flashbang your elderly neighbors
November 23, 2025 at 4:26 AM
Come out Virginia
Don’t make me wait
Catholic girls start much too late
Sooner or later it comes down to fate
I might as well be the one
Cuz only the good die young
November 23, 2025 at 4:01 AM
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Brandy you're a fine girl
What a good wife you would be
But my life my love and my lady
Is the See
November 23, 2025 at 3:41 AM
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Sometimes I'm right and I can be wrong
My own beliefs are in my song
The butcher, the banker, the drummer and then
Makes no difference what group I'm in

I am everyday Papal, yeah, yeah
November 23, 2025 at 3:30 AM
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An honor and dream come true to perform alongside Yo-Yo Ma, presented by Celebrity Series at Boston Symphony Hall. 💜

🎼Ave Maria (Bach/Gounod)
November 22, 2025 at 6:29 PM
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There are going to be prominent Democrats and mainstream media voices who insist that we have to "turn the page" and "forgive and forget" and they should all be roundly ignored, if not mercilessly mocked.
It’s crazy to think about the crimes we’re going to learn about after this regime ends.

We’re already hearing about Watergate level crimes every week. Imagine what will come out after it’s over.

We’re going to need a full accounting of all that’s been done in violation of the constitution.
November 22, 2025 at 10:46 PM
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Criminals increasingly concerned about being held accountable for crimes

www.rawstory.com/doge-employe...
November 23, 2025 at 1:46 AM
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It rocks that the online voice of the US government is "computer-damaged reactionary virgin."
November 21, 2025 at 4:16 PM
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Journalist challenge: Use “Machine Learning” when you mean machine learning and “LLM” when you mean LLM. Ditch “AI” as a catch-all term, it’s not useful for readers and it helps companies trying to confuse the public by obscuring the roles played by different technologies. 🧪
November 22, 2025 at 4:50 PM
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Look, if you’re interested in reading something dishy about a difficult, dramatic person, yalereview.org/article/work...
My Harrowing Months as Patricia Highsmith’s Assistant
Elena Gosalvez Blanco recalls her time as Patricia Highsmith's assistant in the novelist's final months.
yalereview.org
November 22, 2025 at 2:06 PM
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David Cassidy with cat.
It's a late 60s/early 70s bubblegum music kind of #Caturday
November 22, 2025 at 2:05 PM
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This hack's partner is the hack at vanity fair who hired his best friend who's the hack who was fucking every source she could while cheating on the hack who was her then boyfriend
Shawn McCreesh, who wrote today's misty water-colored nostalgia story about Jeffrey Epstein's "Lost New York" at NYT, told St. John's j-school students last year that journalism is great because “It gives you this all-access pass to interact with these people we would otherwise never come across.”
Shawn McCreesh ’15 Shares His Journey to The New York Times
The St. John’s University Division of Mass Communication held a virtual panel featuring New York Times political feature writer and St. John’s alumnus, Shawn McCreesh, as part of the Journalist Series...
www.torchonline.com
November 22, 2025 at 1:59 PM
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This is, indeed, the only relevant piece of new information in the Ryan Lizza substack post

And it is relevant!!! I have a lot of questions for my former employers at NYMag!!!!!!!
okay so here’s the actual bad part of the article

“oh it never affected my coverage” horse and also shit

and what the fuck is Lizza doing sitting on this while RFK takes a buzz saw to American health so he can sell substack subscriptions

ghouls, the lot of them
November 22, 2025 at 1:29 PM
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Getting caught up on overnight discourse.
November 22, 2025 at 1:25 PM
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good morning, logging on to catch up on what i missed on a serene autumn saturday morning
November 22, 2025 at 12:54 PM
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👋
i promise i don’t mean to high horse this but if you’re thinking about giving lizza ten bucks there are a lot of good independent journalists whose work you could subscribe to for a month instead
November 22, 2025 at 1:05 PM
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Love how people on this website try and bring *reason* and *logic* and *object permanence* to discussions about American politics.
November 22, 2025 at 4:30 AM
It me. I am the left. I am spiraling.
If you were wondering how Fox is playing Mamdani/Trump:

Hannity (paraphrase): "This scene is profoundly disturbing to Democrat leftists. Here is their Communist hero, shaking hands with the man he has denounced as a despot. The left doesn't know what to think.'
November 22, 2025 at 3:17 AM
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They line up perfectly.
November 22, 2025 at 2:32 AM
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November 22, 2025 at 2:54 AM
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Cry me a river, Cox. The people voted to change the law and eliminate gerrymandering over 7 years ago, in 2018. The legislature has been dorking with it ever since. You and the legislature are bad faith actors.
Utah Gov. Cox says delayed redistricting decision makes it harder for ‘justice to fairly play out’
Utah Gov. Spencer Cox said on Thursday that the slow arrival of the state’s bombshell redistricting decision has limited the Legislature’s ability to appeal the ruling which overrode lawmakers’ authority over redistricting. “It’s OK to disagree with logic of the case. I do very, very strongly. I think it was a mistake,” Cox told the Deseret News. “I disagree with the decision, but the timing plus the decision is what makes it so hard for justice to fairly play out.” On Nov. 10, 3rd District Court Judge Dianna Gibson rejected a new congressional map drawn by legislators in favor of one drawn by nonprofit groups creating a “Democratic-leaning district anchored in the northern portion of Salt Lake.” Judge rejects Utah Legislature’s congressional map, creates Democrat-leaning seat Gibson said this was necessary to follow state law under Proposition 4, a 2018 ballot initiative that required congressional maps to meet a set of anti-gerrymandering criteria meant to encourage fair electoral boundaries. Republican elected officials had attempted to redraw Utah’s U.S. House districts to make them more competitive under Gibson’s orders. They were subsequently angered by the very uncompetitive map selected by Gibson, an unelected judge. ### When did Gibson deliver her decision? State House Speaker Mike Schultz, R-Hooper, immediately vowed to appeal the decision. But the GOP majority has so far been stumped on what to do next because Gibson delivered her decision at the last possible moment. Gibson’s ruling arrived less than 20 minutes before midnight on Nov. 10, the deadline given by Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson to ensure time to prepare Utah’s election system before the candidate filing deadline in early January. Utah Republican leaders say judge crossed a line by selecting own congressional map This comes after the Utah Supreme Court took one year to rule that the Legislature had violated the state Constitution by amending Proposition 4, and after Gibson took two months longer than promised to rule on the state’s previous congressional maps, according to Schultz. This “astronomical timeline” made it impossible for the Legislature to pursue a typical appeals process to the Utah Supreme Court, Schultz said. While the Legislature may pursue an emergency appeal, Schultz said this would prevent the case from being heard on the merits. “This judge structured this in a way to where it takes away the voice of the people and our judicial process in going and filing an appeal in a timely manner to the state Supreme Court,” Schultz said. “We’re confident in our position, but the judge took that away from us by doing that.” ### Are criticisms of the court unfair? Some have criticized the GOP supermajority’s verbal attacks on Gibson, saying they damage the judicial process. On Monday, court administrators highlighted an increase in threats toward “court personnel” which they said endangered “the functioning of the justice system itself.” Katharine Biele, the president of League of Women Voters of Utah — one of the plaintiffs in the redistricting case — said that such rulings are “difficult and complex” and require “the judiciary to be both thoughtful and thorough.” “We are thankful that Judge Gibson took the time to understand redistricting and how it complies with the state constitution,” Biele said in a statement to the Deseret News. “No one, and certainly not the governor should have wanted a hurried ruling without a sound foundation.” Utah Gov. Cox popularity holds strong with GOP, dips among Democrats Cox, a former attorney who clerked for a U.S. District court judge, said that beyond disagreeing with the “logic of the case,” he believes that if Gibson had acted sooner, she could have followed “the normal process” outlined in Proposition 4 by asking the Legislature to redraw the map again if needed. Schultz has framed Gibson’s decision to run out the clock as purposeful, and some lawmakers have come out in favor of impeaching Gibson on grounds that she overstepped her authority by taking control of a legislative process when lawmakers were attempting to follow the law. Cox was hesitant to go so far, but said it was common practice for judges in high-profile cases, particularly those with political stakes, to make sure there is room for a full appeals process, which includes time to prepare arguments for a higher court. “The piece that I’m struggling with — a lot of people are struggling with — is the timing, how long it took,“ Cox said. “I’ve worked for the judiciary, I clerked for a judge on a big decision like this. We always would have made a decision earlier to allow time for an appeal.”
www.deseret.com
November 22, 2025 at 12:33 AM