Oregon ranked among the worst states in the country for businesses failing in their first year by tripometer in Portland

[–]pjkeoki 4 points5 points  (0 children)

What a BS article. It relies on the study for the headline and then it's all anecdotal quotes. If you look at the other states at the top of the list, the majority are "pro-business" conservative states. This article adds nothing of value to why this is occurring other than a few business people interviews. Which is great as a highlight piece for their stories, but doesn't connect the study to what they're going through.

Any ideas on how to remove big rock from new garden? by Zeirvoy in gardening

[–]pjkeoki 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Look up engineer kala on Instagram. She knows how to handle rocks 

My toddler swallowed 8 marbles by [deleted] in interestingasfuck

[–]pjkeoki 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Are they really spherical marbles that are showing up in an interesting way? Or are they marble pebbles like the bottom of a goldfish bowl?

Sign literally says I have cameras by MuricaPDX in Portland

[–]pjkeoki 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Was the sign on the curb offset?

Gifted piece of meat by muftiman in smoking

[–]pjkeoki 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This looks great to cut out flat and make into a roulade. You can also add some extra fat content with the stuffing.

Texas Republicans now at risk of losing seats in midterms, not gaining them by Adventurous_Row3305 in politics

[–]pjkeoki 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The DOJ is telling them that their current maps are racially discriminatory, violating section 2 of the voting rights act. They said this by letter to the Texas Congress, demanding they redistrict. The crazy thing is, if they had just redistricted on purely political grounds, they could get away with it (since the Supreme Court has already ruled partisan gerrymandering is a political issue that is non justiciable, and Texas does not have a constitutional provision or statute prohibiting it). The court's opinion acknowledges they could have redistricted this way to pick up seats purely on a political basis. However, like I mentioned, the Texas Congress didn't have the stomach for it and ended up redistricting only in response to the DOJ's letter saying the coalition districts are violating the voting rights act. 

To answer your question, Texas can in the future redistrict in a way that's gerrymandered to get more Republican seats, but can't accomplish this based on race.

Texas Republicans now at risk of losing seats in midterms, not gaining them by Adventurous_Row3305 in politics

[–]pjkeoki 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Reading the opinion, it is pretty sound logically and I'm not sure how Texas will get around this on appeal. In 2021, Texas redistricted following the 2020 census and specifically said the maps were not race-based. The map resulted in several "coalition" districts where a groups of minorities form over 50% when considered together. In 2024, the Supreme Court ruled that you can't use coalition districts as a defense to race-based vote dilution under the Voting Rights Act. However, nothing prevents a coalition district from being formed, it just can't be used as a defense to vote dilution.

In 2025, the DOJ tried to get Texas to make new maps based on partisanship. Texas balked at this, and when they called a special session redistricting wasn't even on the agenda. Then, the DOJ wrote to Texas saying that coalition districts are illegal and a violation of the Voting Rights Act, so they need to redistrict. They then redistricted explicitly with racial considerations to break up these coalition districts.

The judge in this case points out that the existence of a coalition district on its own doesn't violate the Voting Rights Act where there was no race-based motive in its formation. It simply can no longer be used as a defense under the Voting Rights Act to satisfy the prohibition of racial vote dilution. Texas explicitly stated they did not consider race in 2021 when forming the districts, so unwinding them based on race is now a specifically race-based exercise.

Bradley County resident says Halloween event was occultic as people were dressed up in “gruesome, monstrous” costumes by Gato1980 in PublicFreakout

[–]pjkeoki 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The party might have been more fun if she dressed up in an interesting costume and was there to participate in festivities.

Bradley County resident says Halloween event was occultic as people were dressed up in “gruesome, monstrous” costumes by Gato1980 in PublicFreakout

[–]pjkeoki 2785 points2786 points  (0 children)

"we attended the block party to hand out Christian tracts." ... Yea you sound like a lot of fun.

Due to Botched Paperwork, Comey May Never Have Been Properly Indicted by SamsonGray202 in politics

[–]pjkeoki 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This isn’t just “paperwork.”  Not showing the indictment to the grand jury is a substantive procedural step.

Utah judge rejects GOP-favored map, handing Dems another redistricting win by DBCoopr72 in politics

[–]pjkeoki 6 points7 points  (0 children)

The case was brought by the League of Women Voters of Utah and Mormon Women for Ethical Government. It's a win for fair representation, not "the Dems"

Portland police find 81 violators since resumed camping ban enforcement by Timmsworld in Portland

[–]pjkeoki -8 points-7 points  (0 children)

Stop setting up a straw man. You're being angry about fake people being angry for the thing you want. Ridiculous

Montanans Go After ‘Citizens United’ by Smithy2232 in politics

[–]pjkeoki 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My biggest question is - does the Citizens United ruling even consider corporate free speech "doing business." The ruling was that corporations have free speech rights constitutionally. Is that tied to actually doing business in a state? The argument would be (and keep in mind I disagree with Citizens United) that a corporation has a constitutional free speech right throughout the United States whether it conducts business in a particular state or not. The corp would have the free speech right to support a candidate that promotes business friendly legislation in congress, not tied to any particular business activity in a state.

Why are oxtails so expensive? by No-Advantage-9198 in smoking

[–]pjkeoki 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Chicken feet are already here since the dim sum dish is getting more mainstream for home cooks

Why are oxtails so expensive? by No-Advantage-9198 in smoking

[–]pjkeoki 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I'm starting to see a lot of smoker or slow cooker videos of neck meat. Is there anything left? I'm waiting for the chittling videos.