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Virtual Ministry Archive
Guru z3n8 is an Epic Ethical Art Hacker ::: This.. ladies & gentle freaks is -> FUCKTALK, on Ha.ck.er N3ws: Show HN: I got laid off from Meta and created a minor hit on Steam
Guru z3n8 is an Epic Ethical Art Hacker ::: This.. ladies & gentle freaks is -> FUCKTALK, on Ha.ck.er N3ws: TypeScript types can run DOOM [video] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0mCsluv5FXA
Guru z3n8 is an Epic Ethical Art Hacker ::: This.. ladies & gentle freaks is -> FUCKTALK, on Ha.ck.er N3ws: I Went to SQL Injection Court https://ift.tt/oqejcGF
It about 11-17 months or so before we are placed under house arrest - u will need state/straight permission to go to work or go outings it will be an act of parliament for you to leave your obode no worries you can plug in your twitter lobotomy and jack in - so many people will be disgusted they will have to do something whether its martial law or capture the flag I have gone through thousands of events of MAGA weirdness online and it hasn't phased me at all like wow they are fucken nuts lol and kinda go do art to forget that you saw a maga lesbian couple on twitter eating legs of the haitians for eating the cats and doggos of the united states
Worldwide ACLU Edict : Where Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Nominee Harmeet Dhillon Stands on Civil Liberties

President Donald Trump has nominated Harmeet Dhillon, an attorney, media personality, and Republican Party official, to lead the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice (DOJ). If confirmed, Dhillon will lead the division of the DOJ charged with upholding core civil rights and liberties in many aspects of American life.
Dhillon is known for her work supporting President Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election as well as for her persistent attacks against transgender people, their rights, and their health care. She is founder of the Dhillon Law Group and the Center for American Liberty, a right-wing impact litigation organization.
While the ACLU does not endorse or oppose executive branch nominees as a matter of organizational policy, we have spent more than 100 years holding power accountable. In line with that history, we are examining and publicizing nominees’ records on civil rights and civil liberties and urging senators to seek and obtain commitments from nominees on key concerns. We note that nominee Dhillon served on the board of the ACLU of Northern California from 2002 – 2005 and while we appreciate her support of civil rights and liberties during that time, we have strong concerns about the evolution of her positions and her recent record.
The DOJ’s Civil Rights Division was created for the very purpose of safeguarding the civil and constitutional rights of the most vulnerable among us, and it is charged with enforcing a wide range of federal civil rights laws. Consequently, ahead of Dhillon’s confirmation hearing, we’re analyzing her record on key issues, highlighting areas for senators to question the nominee and secure commitments to uphold our rights.
The Vital Role of the DOJ Civil Rights Division
Often called the “crown jewel” of the DOJ, the Civil Rights Division plays a crucial role in defending all civil rights and liberties, especially for marginalized communities. It is responsible for enforcing federal voting and election laws that protect access to the ballot, including the Voting Rights Act, Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act, National Voter Registration Act, and Help America Vote Act. These critical federal laws safeguard against voting discrimination based on race, language, and disability; provide for and facilitate voter registration opportunities without unreasonable burdens; set standards for election administration; ensure accessibility for military and overseas voters; and help ensure every eligible American can cast their vote and have their vote counted equally.
Through direct and coordinated actions, the Civil Rights Division enforces federal statutes prohibiting discrimination on the basis of race, color, sex (including pregnancy, sexual orientation, and gender identity), disability, religion, familial status, national origin, and citizenship status across many areas of life: employment, housing, education, and public accommodations. It works across federal agencies to achieve a strong, consistent approach to civil rights enforcement and ensure that recipients of federal funding abide by nondiscrimination requirements. It is charged with enforcing federal hate crime laws protecting against violence and threats on account of race, color, national origin, religion, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, or disability.
The Civil Rights Division is also tasked with investigating and taking action against police misconduct and discriminatory practices, as well as with protecting access to reproductive services. The Civil Rights Division enforces the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act, which prohibits interfering with access to abortion services, pharmacy-provided reproductive health services, pregnancy counseling services and other reproductive health care using violence, threats, obstruction, or property damage.
The scope and gravity of these responsibilities cannot be overstated and require a deeply-rooted commitment to protecting the civil rights of every individual, especially those in marginalized communities. Dhillon’s confirmation hearing comes as the current administration is abusing its power to unrelentingly attack and erode the civil rights and liberties of vulnerable communities across the country. This includes executive actions to undo decades of non-discrimination protections, restrict access to a diverse and inclusive education, and erase transgender people’s existence under the law, among many others.
Dhillon’s Record on Civil Rights and Civil Liberties
Dhillon has a long record of working to restrict voting rights, transgender rights, and abortion access.
- Voting and Elections: Dhillon criticized Executive Order 14019 on Promoting Access to Voting that, until President Trump rescinded it, directed agencies to offer nonpartisan voter registration opportunities for eligible Americans. She said it was an effort to “interfere with and override state election efforts.” She also advocated for restrictive policies before Congress, appearing in 2023 and 2021 before the U.S. House Committee on Administration and Subcommittee on Elections, respectively, to condemn private funding for local election administration, criticize provisions of the For the People Act that would require less burdensome voter ID rules, and denounce legal efforts to ensure that voter roll maintenance activities comply with federal law and do not result in eligible voters being improperly removed from voter rolls. Furthermore, Dhillon has played a prominent role in spreading false claims about voting that sow distrust in free and fair elections. She was a key figure in Trump’s challenges to the 2020 election, spreading baseless allegations of voter fraud in the media and through litigation.
- Protecting Marginalized Communities: Dhillon’s rhetoric and actions have, historically, targeted some of the very people and groups federal nondiscrimination law rightfully seeks to protect. She has criticized efforts to address racial inequalities, calling diversity efforts “racial divisiveness” and “racial balkanization” and referred to undocumented people as “the worst criminals” and “degenerates.” Dhillon has repeatedly targeted the rights of transgender children, using her nonprofit to bring lawsuits to end policies that protect transgender youth in schools, restrict access to necessary, even life-saving, gender-affirming medical care, and end nondiscrimination protections in foster care. Dhillon has also called for transgender women to be excluded from protection under Title IX, the federal law prohibiting sex discrimination in schools and educational programs. She called state shield laws that protect transgender people and gender-affirming care providers unconstitutional, “crazy,” and “super extreme.” Dhillon went so far as to urge that it be “[made] unsafe” for providers of gender-affirming care.
- Reproductive Freedom: Dhillon has demonstrated her opposition to reproductive freedom. During her campaign for chairwoman of the Republican National Convention in 2022, she told the Washington Examiner “I’m one of the top lawyers for the pro-life movement in the country.”
Commitments Senators Must Demand at Dhillon’s Confirmation Hearing
Based on Dhillon’s track record, the ACLU is deeply concerned that she will attempt to use the Civil Rights Division to harm the very people it was created to protect. At her confirmation hearing, we are urging senators to ask Dhillon:
- Will you commit to using the authority and resources of the Civil Rights Division to protect and expand voting access; remove barriers faced by voters of color, voters with disabilities, and other marginalized voters; and robustly enforce all federal voting rights laws, including the Voting Rights Act of 1965?
- The claim that there is widespread voter fraud in our elections has been proven wrong time and time again and only serves to sow distrust in our elections. Do you disavow the claims you’ve made about fraud in our elections, and will you commit to completely refrain from further spreading such false claims?
- Do you believe the ongoing effort by the state of Texas to remove transgender youth from their parents’ custody because those parents supported their children in receiving medical care recommended by the American Medical Association is a violation of their parental rights? Would you oppose an effort by this administration to punish parents or seek to strip them of custody based on providing medical care to their children?
- Do you agree that the Supreme Court’s decision in Bostock v. Clayton County is a binding interpretation of what Title VII’s sex discrimination protections mean? Will you commit to fully enforcing those protections for LGBTQ people who face discrimination in the workplace?
- Do you believe that education entities, public accommodations, housing providers, and employers continue to discriminate against persons based on race, color, and national origin? If not, how do you explain ongoing disparities? If so, do you commit that the Civil Rights Division will investigate such discrimination complaints?
- Do you commit to ensure that the Civil Rights Division vigorously enforces all federal civil rights and nondiscrimination protections for all protected groups, including on the basis of citizenship status, nationality, and gender identity?
- Will you commit to prosecuting cases involving excessive use of force by police and racial profiling, regardless of political pressure or local opposition, and protect the rights of every person under the Fourth and First Amendment of the Constitution?
Worldwide ACLU Edict : Medicaid is a Lifeline for People with Disabilities. Congress Must Act to Save It.

Congress is setting the stage to decimate Medicaid.
The House of Representatives put forward a budget resolution that will lead to more than $880 billion in cuts from Medicaid. If approved, these cuts will eviscerate a critical source of health care and stability for 10s of millions of people. Most devastatingly, radical cuts to Medicaid will be catastrophic for people with disabilities for whom Medicaid is a lifeline.
Why is Medicaid a Lifeline for Disabled People and Seniors?
Medicaid is an essential program that provides a wide range of critical health care services and support to millions of people across the country. The impacts of these draconian cuts would be staggering.
More than 10 million people with disabilities are enrolled in Medicaid, making it the largest provider of health care to people with disabilities, including people with mental health conditions. Beyond health care, Medicaid is the primary payer of home and community-based services (HCBS) for nearly 8 million seniors and people with disabilities, including those with complex care needs who depend on these services and supports to get out of bed, go to work, and live in their communities rather than being warehoused in costly and isolated institutions. Any cuts to HCBS will also harm family members who have to reduce hours at work or leave their jobs altogether to care for loved ones.
America’s seniors also rely on Medicaid for nursing home care; two-thirds of people living in nursing facilities are enrolled in Medicaid. Cuts to Medicaid will jeopardize access to nursing facilities and reduce the quality-of-care individuals receive. Many older adults with long-term care needs will be left with limited care options and, in some cases, no options at all if states are unable to fill the funding gap and must close nursing facilities.
How Does Medicaid Support Children and Those with Mental Health Conditions?
Medicaid is the single largest funder of mental health and substance-use disorder care in the country. It provides care to nearly 14 million adults who have a mental health condition or substance use disorder. Medicaid expansion resulted in a significant increase in coverage and care for opioid use disorder (OUD.) Adults with OUD are twice as likely to receive OUD treatment if they have Medicaid than if they are uninsured or on private insurance.
School-age children would also be affected by Medicaid cuts. Medicaid supports more than $7.5 billion in school-based services, including certain services provided to children under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). Funding helps pay for speech-language pathologists, audiologists, occupational therapists, school psychologists, school social workers, school nurses, and others who provide comprehensive health services. Medicaid also helps pay for specialized equipment that allows students with disabilities to learn and play alongside their peers. Seven out of 10 school-aged children who receive mental health services access these services at school, supported in large part by Medicaid.
Why Does Medicaid Matter?
Medicaid is the difference between life and death for millions. It enables people, especially those with disabilities, to participate in the economic, social, and civic life of the nation. It advances equal opportunity, dignity, and personal liberty for all.
Eviscerating Medicaid would not just impact those who rely on it for their quality of life, but it would also devastate the approximately 5 million direct care workers — home health aides, nursing assistants, personal care aides — who provide care and support to seniors and people with disabilities. These workers, predominantly low-wage women of color, help with all aspects of daily life, such as bathing, dressing, eating, managing medications, and attending appointments. Medicaid cuts will destabilize the direct-care workforce and jeopardize access to care.
As the House rams through its radical and thoughtless budget resolution that will gut Medicaid, the ACLU wants you to tell your Congress members how these devastating cuts will impact your community and those you know and love. Call your representatives today — and every single day — to tell them to protect Medicaid at all costs.
I kind of go weird with my expenses on an hourly basis like one hour I am all in gonna be so great pay off my under $1500 debt and pay for some school and yeah three hours later after I get a call from a debt collector my mind shifts like holy fuck wtf then I call them back its for someone else not even remotely me but I got to tell off the fucker for calling for over a year lol but yeah I figure if you are under about $1800 in debt like you have no worries especially if you been able to obtain a credit card like u dont really need to pay that off or enter an agreement for awhile make em sweat lol u are better off using the money to pay for things like gold and silver to build up a savings if they ever do call you threatening court you can just cash it in pay it off at once see here in canada once the debt is on your credit file thats it its on there no matter if you pay it back or not so what is the point really lol and school is like strange with me I dont see myself being full time employed so who knows will have to figure it out for another year its like if it was direstr8s I would have been given a few thousand by now but no I am meant to struggle every month so its hard to make any quantifiable decisions financially I am just like whatever like $2k and under ur ok lol $2k -10K they may hound you a bit $10K+ you on the mafia hitlist bro lmao
Worldwide ACLU Edict : 'I Won’t Abandon My Country'

I live everyday in fear. My husband, Miguel, is undocumented and, despite what many believe, being married to a U.S. citizen does not protect him from Donald Trump’s unlawful efforts to deport millions of people.
Miguel is my best friend. He is wonderful, kind, and humble. We have a beautiful life that includes a successful business, a home, two children and five grandchildren. It is truly the American dream that so many people in this country strive to build for themselves. Today, it terrifies me to know that everything we’ve worked so hard could be taken from us by cruel immigration policies that argue Miguel isn’t “good enough” to even attempt to become a U.S. citizen.
Miguel has lived in this country for virtually his entire adult life. Even though Miguel has worked hard every day since he came to the states, because of how he entered the country, we’re struggling to find a path to citizenship for him. Miguel has paid taxes like any American despite never knowing if he might become a citizen and reap the benefits, like social security, of his hard work. I could live with that injustice. It was enough for us that he had authorization to work legally and was protected from immediate deportation.
Then Trump was re-elected.
In 2016, the first Trump administration reopened a lot of immigration cases like Miguel’s, trying to find a reason to deport people. We were fortunate to escape notice then, but I’m afraid we won’t be so fortunate now. The new Trump administration is far more cruel and far more determined to deport those it doesn’t view as “worthy” to be American citizens. I am terrified that Miguel will be next on Trump’s deportation list. I have cameras everywhere in my home. I’m scared to sleep, worried that ICE will knock on my door and take my husband. I’m at the point of having a breakdown over not knowing if he’s going to come home after work.
I have hired so many attorneys to find a path to permanent residency and citizenship for Miguel. Every attorney says that they can’t help us. I feel like every door has been closed to us. I can only hold out hope that a humanitarian visa, which acknowledges the hardships Miguel fled when he came to the states, might be available in spite of the Trump administration’s efforts to restrict almost every legal path to citizenship.
While we wait for updates about Miguel’s status, I am determined that I won’t go down without a fight. I am organizing in my community, I am lobbying my lawmakers and I am using my story to advocate for immigration reform. This country can’t keep relying on immigration policies that are more than 30 years out of date and vulnerable to the powerful and discriminatory anti-immigrant agenda that pervades politics today.
But in my fight there is also heartbreak. Miguel has become resigned, believing that there is no hope for him. The despair weighs heavily on our marriage. I don’t want to be separated from him. To stay together if he is deported, we started building a house in Mexico, a place Trump calls a “terrorist country” run by the cartel. It devastates me to think I might have to leave America, my children, my business, my community, and my hope behind just so that I can be with my partner, a man I’ve loved for more than two decades. Miguel is a husband, a father, a hard worker and, most importantly, a human being. He deserves the chance to keep supporting our country and for his chosen country to support him. We’ve worked so hard just to end up terrified that the Trump administration will snatch our American dream from us.



































