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Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Showing posts with label Held Hostage By The NRA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Held Hostage By The NRA. Show all posts

Sunday, October 8, 2017

The United States' most notorious SERIAL KILLER!





Guns, for hunting, target practice and self protection are fine. If you need a machine gun for protection, however, you have bigger problems than the government taking away your guns.









Friday, October 6, 2017

DEAR REPUBLICAN POLITICIANS AND THE NRA






Aussies Get It

Editorial, from the Sydney Morning Herald:
"It is incomprehensible to us, as Australians, that a country so proud and great can allow itself to be savaged again and again by its own citizens. We cannot understand how the long years of senseless murder, the Sandy Hooks and Orlandos and Columbines, have not proved to Americans that the gun is not a precious symbol of freedom, but a deadly cancer on their society.
We point over and over to our own success with gun control in the wake of the Port Arthur massacre, that Australia has not seen a mass shooting since and that we are still a free and open society.
We have not bought our security at the price of liberty; we have instead consented to a social contract that states lives are precious, and not to be casually ended by lone madmen. But it is a message that means nothing to those whose ideology is impervious to evidence."





Thursday, October 5, 2017

The Las Vegas DOMESTIC TERROR ATTACK is the 338th mass shooting in 273 days of 2017



Matt Taibbi | The Gun Lobby Is Down to Its Last, Unconvincing Excuse 
Guns and ammo on the floor of the NRA convention in Louisville, Kentucky, in May 2016. (photo: Mark Peterson/Redux) 
Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone 
Taibbi writes: "According to some sources, this is the 338th mass shooting in 273 days of 2017, meaning America is now a place where at least once a day, someone shoots four or more people." 
READ MORE

Las Vegas rips apart the "good guy with a gun" justification, leaving only a flawed constitutional take to justify the madness

s of this writing, the death toll in Las Vegas is 59, with over 527 injured, making it easily the deadliest gun massacre in modern U.S. history. (Characteristically, there have been some deadlier ones in the distant past, including in St. Louis in 1917 and Colfax, Louisiana, in 1873, but they're often left out of coverage because the victims were all black.)
According to some sources, this is the 338th mass shooting in 273 days of 2017, meaning America is now a place where at least once a day, someone shoots four or more people. After incidents like this, electing Donald Trump looks like a relatively minor symptom of our clearly worsening national insanity.
This latest window into our blood-sick culture may mark the end of an era. Las Vegas should push the gun lobby down to its last excuse, when it comes to justifying the marketing of military-grade weapons.
We're still in the "NRA has yet to respond" period of the story, a dependable trope in the weirdly inflexible script of these massacre tales. This "deafening NRA silence" period usually coincides with news from Wall Street showing sharp upticks in the share prices of arms manufacturers. (We've already seen thisthis week.)
Gun stocks always bounce in advance of surges in gun sales, which are driven by fears in prepper country of hardcore gun control legislation that, of course, never actually comes.
Such fears similarly always inspire periods of intense fundraising for pro-gun politicians and groups like the NRA. After the Sandy Hook massacre of 20 children, for instance, donations for the NRA went up 350 percent over the previous year. We'll surely see a similar surge after Las Vegas.
So the more horrifying the gun disaster, the more gun companies and gun lobbyists profit. From here the logic of concentrated benefits and dispersed costs comes violently into play. Aggressive, well-funded lobbying by an industry that claims a $49 billion impact to the national economy always trumps the relatively disorganized horror and revulsion of ordinary voters.
The dirty little secret here is that while politicians in both parties can score points with voters through verbal support for gun control, anti-gun voters tend not to punish them for not following all the way through.
George W. Bush is a classic example of a politician who had it both ways. He claimed moderate status on the issue by pledging to sign an extension of Bill Clinton's assault weapons ban if it passed Congress. But surprise, surprise, that bill never made it to his desk, and the ban expired in 2004.
Politicians tend to be very lucky when it comes to having to take brave public stands on gun issues. There are almost always just enough pro-gun converts in Congress to prevent gun control votes from having real meaning. Harry Reid, for instance, is a name Nevadans should be recalling this week, as he repeatedly aided the NRA in efforts to scuttle that same assault weapons ban.
Within the Beltway, everyone knows this game is mostly about money. The NRA, like the financial services industry or Big Pharma, is an easy source of campaign cash, and all politicians have to do to get it is master the art of selling purely commercial lobbying as heartfelt ideological advocacy.
This is relatively easy when we're talking about hunting rifles, gets dicier when the issue turns to concealed weapons, and then becomes an exercise in pure political whoring and pseudo-intellectualism once it comes to making up justifications for selling military-grade weapons to Internet shoppers.
Las Vegas is going to provide a major rhetorical challenge on that front. After all, the gun lobby's consistent response has been to argue that such killings would be avoided, or at least reduced, if more people were armed.
"The only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun," NRA chief Wayne LaPierre infamously said after Newtown.
But the shooter in Las Vegas, 64-year-old Stephen Paddock, was on the 32nd floor of a casino building, a quarter-mile away from the bulk of his victims down in a concert venue on the ground. Unless the NRA plans on advocating for carry licenses for F-16s or surface-to-surface missile systems, it's hard to see how the "good guy with a gun" argument is going to fly this time.
That leaves exactly one argument the industry can use, a pure intellectual gymnastics stunt that emphasizes fealty to the sacred text, i.e., the Constitution.
The NRA, which proudly sells "Because You Can't Fist Fight Tyranny" t-shirts, will eventually come around to arguing, even if only by implication, that massacres like Las Vegas are just the price we must pay to ensure that the individual is never left defenseless against government repression.
When the industry isn't letting its guard down and marketing AR-15s to morons gearing up for the coming zombie apocalypse (this is a real thing in the gun sales world), this is the narrative gun manufacturers use to sell to ardent collectors.
Just like cigarette companies told smokers they were hunky Marlboro Men, gun manufacturers sell a thrilling image to gun owners, telling them they're bulwarks against new-world-order tyranny. The NRA even once ran an ad using Tianamen Square images. Gun activists have even been sued for using stills from schlock resistance movies like The Patriot and Braveheart.
And why not? Absent some incipient end-of-democracy apocalypse scenario, assault weapons collectors would just be a bunch of yahoos wasting their disposable incomes on products that, like the Dinty Moore beef stew cans gathering dust in their bunkers, will never be used. Unless you're collecting all those guns for a reasonit's just weird.
As gun control advocates are quick to point out, the actual Second Amendment argument is probably a canard anyway, given that it protects the rights of citizens to bear arms within the context of a "well-regulated militia." Jurists for ages interpreted that term as pertaining to groups, not individuals.
Former Supreme Court Chief Justice Warren Burger, a conservative nominated by Nixon, was one of those jurists. He said Second Amendment arguments were a "fraud" and believed the "right to bear arms" belonged to the states, not individuals.
But relentless propaganda to the contrary has led to a series of legal decisions that define things differently, putting the law on industry's side. In the 2007 case District of Columbia v. Heller, Antonin Scalia – a humorless monster of a judge whose two great pleasures in life appeared to be killing birds and making unsubtly racist arguments against affirmative action – wrote the Second Amendment "protects an individual right to possess a firearm unconnected with service in a militia."
Still, Scalia was explicit in Heller that even he was in favor of certain limitations. "We think that limitation is fairly supported by the historical tradition of prohibiting the carrying of 'dangerous and unusual weapons,'" he wrote.
He also described gun ownership as a right Americans exercised not for opposing tyranny but for "traditionally lawful purposes, such as self-defense." But most gun owners continue to understand their rights as primarily resting on the constitutional freedom-fighter argument. Polls consistently show that majorities of gun owners believe the purpose of the Second Amendment is "protection against tyranny."
So we're down to that – we need to put up with this, because it's gun enthusiasts who will come to the rescue if this ever happens in America.
Here's my question about that. Where were all these heroic tyrannophobe gun owners during the unprecedented expansion of police and surveillance powers that took place after 9/11?
Answer: nowhere. We didn't hear them shrieking about habeas corpus becoming a joke in the Bush years, or torture and extrajudicial assassination becoming standard practices. We didn't hear them protesting the vast expansion of the classification of government documents, or complaining about the widespread abuse of material witness statutes, the national security letter provision of the Patriot Act, or a hundred other problems.
Nor did they ever protest aggressive new domestic enforcement policies like stop-and-frisk and predictive policing, for the obvious reason that those programs were mostly directed against minorities in poor neighborhoods.
The NRA has at least shown occasional consistency on these issues, among other things joining with the ACLU in a lawsuit against the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 (FAA). That was one of George Bush's final gifts to the world, a law that allowed for the virtually unlimited collection of email, text and phone data.
But for the most part, conservative pols who sucked up NRA money and helped weapons makers avoid lawsuits and other restrictions – Devin Nunes is a great example – have been wholly unconcerned with the ramifications of such laws until, ironically, tools like FISA or the NSA's section 702 surveillance program were rumored to have been used against noted gun liberty enthusiast Donald Trump.
The tyranny argument, the gun lobby's last excuse, is a joke. People aren't buying up military-grade weapons in preparation for some new-world-order Anschluss into flyover country.
Americans are just bored and crazy and insecure and like to calm their nerves by shooting bottles, Kim Jong-un paper targets, and, pretty regularly now, crowds full of innocent human beings. It's madness, and there aren't enough highly paid pseudo-intellectual gun lobbyists in the world to justify it anymore. Can we finally at least drop the pretense that this is about anything but money? 


 http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/46139-the-gun-lobby-is-down-to-its-last-unconvincing-excuse




Progressive Breakfast: The "Center-Left" Had Its Chance; It's Time For Something New







MORNING MESSAGE

Richard Eskow
The "Center-Left" Had Its Chance; It's Time For Something New
The global political project known as "centrism" continues to collapse. But what about the "New Labour"/"New Democrat" phenomenon of the "center-left" that once seemed to offer so much hope? Can it survive? More importantly, should it?

Tell Lawmakers To Vote NO! On House Budget

The House GOP is pushing through a budget that slashes Medicare, Medicaid, and other vital services. Call your representative today at (888) 516-5820 and tell them to vote NO! on the House budget.

GOP Seeks to Ram Tax Cuts Through Budget Resolutions

GOP budget kicks off effort on tax cuts. Yahoo Finance:“House and Senate Republicans will take their first concrete steps Thursday toward enacting a major U.S. tax cut by advancing budget resolutions for fiscal 2018 – and it only gets harder from here… Republicans are eager to enact a budget – normally an optional exercise – because it will include language allowing them to ram through a separate GOP-only tax bill without Democratic votes in the Senate. The House plans to vote on its budget resolution Thursday, as does the Senate Budget Committee, with a full Senate vote planned in two weeks. Republicans hope to produce a joint budget later this month.

‘Monopoly Man’ Crashes Equifax Hearing to Protest Forced Arbitration

‘Monopoly Man’ crashes ex-Equifax CEO’s Senate hearing. NY Post:“Rich Uncle Pennybags photo-bombed the beleaguered former CEO of Equifax at a Senate hearing on Wednesday. A woman dressed as the Monopoly mascot appeared just over Richard Smith’s shoulder as he testified before the Senate Banking Committee investigating the breach that exposed the personal data of 145 million Americans. Dressed in a morning suit, top hat and bow tie, the protester twirled a fake gray mustache as Smith spoke, apparently unaware that she was even there. Afterward, when she approached and tried to hand Smith a bag of fake money, he hurried off. Public Citizen, an advocacy group that monitors government accountability, claimed responsibility for the stunt. The Monopoly ‘man’ turned out to be Amanda Werner, who also handed out Monopoly-style ‘Get out of jail free’ cards to protest plans she says weaken protections for consumers seeking action against banks and financial institutions.”

Deadline to Renew DACA Status Today

Deadline Looms For Thousands Of DREAMers. NPR:“The clock is winding down for thousands of immigrants who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children. The Trump administration has stopped accepting new applications for the program known as DACA, or Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, that protects nearly 700,000 so-called DREAMers from deportation. Thursday is the deadline for thousands of current DACA recipients to renew their status for what could be the last time. That’s touched off a scramble across the country. The Department of Homeland Security says more than 100,000 DACA recipients have applied to renew their temporary, two-year work permits ahead of the deadline. Many have gotten help from pop-up legal clinics across the country, including a series of recent events hosted by the City University of New York. In a classroom in midtown Manhattan, lawyers from CUNY’s Citizenship Now! project and volunteers from the local legal community helped DACA recipients fill out their renewal applications. After they finished the applications, representatives from a local nonprofit called the New Economy Project were waiting to cut checks covering the $495 application fee.”

$10B for Trump Border Wall

House Panel OKs $10B for Trump border wall. The Hill:“The House Homeland Security Committee approved Wednesday a border security bill that includes $10 billion for a border wall… The bill includes the $10 billion in border wall funding, $5 billion to improve ports of entry and adds 5,000 agents to both the Border Patrol and Customs and Border Protection. The legislation would also authorize the federal government to reimburse states up to $35 million for use of National Guard assets to reinforce border security. The legislation will head to the House floor amid debate over whether border security provisions should be attached to potential legislation to protect recipients of the rescinded Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program. Democrats criticized the bill as a political stunt to appease President Trump, who proposed the border wall as a central point of his campaign.”

NRA Stokes Racial Divide

How the NRA made the gun a symbol of tribal identity. American Prospect:“Unknown at this point is whether the massacre at Las Vegas will cause some rethinking of the NRA’s agenda of weapons proliferation as a marker of tribal identity, seeing as those killed and wounded by Paddock were fans of an art form, country music, which is often the music of choice by members of that very tribe. Singer-songwriter Rosanne Cash, daughter of one of country music’s most beloved figures, the late Johnny Cash, took to the op-ed page of the liberal New York Times to call upon her fellows in the Nashville-centered music community to ‘stand up to the NRA.’ But as the ongoing battle over monuments to Confederate luminaries reveals, the dislodging of tribal symbols comes hard. As it is with the Dixie flag, so now it is with the gun and its accoutrements, even in their most lethal forms. Leaders of the NRA may be evil, but they’re not stupid. When it comes to hearts and minds, they know how to win the support they need. Reason rarely triumphs over the symbols of identity—at least not without a large measure of bloodletting.”
Progressive Breakfast is a daily morning email highlighting news stories of interest to activists. Progressive Breakfast and OurFuture.org are projects of People's Action. more »

MASSterList: Rate shock | Inspect this, please | Lion’s den





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By Jay Fitzgerald and Keith Regan
10/05/2017

Rate shock | Inspect this, please | Lion’s den

Happening Today
SJC hearing, Capital bonding, Airbnb protest, IMF chief at Harvard
-- Cannabis World Congress & Business Exposition comes to Boston for the first time, bringing its marijuana trade show and conference for the legalized cannabis industries, Hynes Convention Center, 900 Boylston St., Boston, 8 a.m.
-- The Supreme Judicial Court will hear arguments in six cases, John Adams Courthouse, Courtroom One, Second Floor, Pemberton Square, Boston, 9 a.m.
-- National Grid and Vionx Energy are joined by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to introduce an energy storage project developed with Holy Name Central Catholic Junior/Senior High School and WPI, Holy Name High School, 144 Granite St., Worcester, 10 a.m.
-- Gov. Charlie Baker attends the 34th annual Trooper George Hanna Memorial Awards for Bravery, along with Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito, Attorney General Maura Healey, Public Safety and Security Secretary Daniel Bennett and others, House Chamber, 10 a.m.
-- House Committee on Bonding, Capital Expenditures and State Assets holds a public hearing on a bond bill filed by the Baker administration seeking authorization for $3.795 billion over the next five years for capital needsstatewide, Hearing Room B-1, 10:30 a.m.
-- U.S. Rep. Michael Capuano is a guest on ‘Boston Public Radio,’ WGBH-FM 89.7, 12:30 p.m.
-- Gov. Charlie Baker joins Roxbury Community College President Dr. Valerie Roberson at the college's campus improvement celebration, 7 Elmwood St., Roxbury, 1:30 p.m.
-- Community Labor United, Chinatown Community Land Trust and Chinese Progressive Association hold demonstration and march to protect Chinatown and other communities from Airbnb and other short-term rental companies, Quincy School, 885 Washington St., Boston, 3 p.m.
-- Senate President Stanley Rosenberg, who graduated from UMass-Amherst and represents Amherst, attends the annual A+ Awards ceremony, Student Union Ballroom, 280 Hicks Way, Amherst, 5 p.m.
-- U.S. Rep. Niki Tsongas hosts an annual U.S. Service Academy and Military Career Forum to highlight opportunities to attend the academies, participate in university ROTC programs and serve in the armed services, 50 Father Morissette Boulevard, Lowell, 6 p.m.
-- International Monetary Fund managing director Christine Lagarde will make a public address and then talk with Lawrence Summers, the former Harvard president and top official in the Clinton and Obama administrations, and Kennedy School professor Nicholas Burns, Kennedy School, Cambridge, 6 p.m.
-- Gov. Charlie Baker, Mayor Martin Walsh, U.S. Rep. Michael Capuano, CNN's John King and others gather for the Codman Square Health Center's 20th Anniversary benefit Men of Boston Cook for Women's Health, Gala Tent, 637 Washington St., Dorchester, 6 p.m.
-- Attorney General Maura Healey participates in a moderated Harvard Institute of Politics conversation about her office's work on the opioid crisis, Kirkland House - Junior Common Room, 95 Dunster St., Cambridge, 7:30 p.m.
Today's News
Uncertainty over fed subsidies may mean health rate spikes as high as 30 percent
It all seems like a distant, abstract, policy-wonk issue: The uncertainty over future federal subsidies for ObamaCare health insurance coverage. But it won’t be a distant, abstract, policy-wonk issue to thousands of Massachusetts people who buy their insurance over the Massachusetts Health Connector and find out their premiums next year will rise at double-digit rates, sometimes by as much as 30 percent. The BBJ’s Jessica Bartlett and SHNS’s Colin Young at the Salem News have the details.
State troopers headed to Puerto Rico
The Baker administration is sending 69 State Police officers and 13 police cruisers to Puerto Rico to help maintain curfews and perform other security duties on the hurricane-stricken island, reports Jacob Carozza at the Globe.
Boston Globe
Sterling paramedic fired after ‘porch monkeys’ post
From Scott Croteau at MassLive: “A Sterling paramedic has been fired after authorities said she posted racist remarks on Facebook about the New England Patriots players while they kneeled during the national anthem before a game. Linda Kimball, an on-call paramedic for the Sterling Fire Department, was fired following a town investigation and a closed hearing with the fire chief and town administrator, Sterling Fire Chief David Hurlbut Jr. said Wednesday.” 
 As offensive as her “porch monkeys” rant was on Facebook, this is now a pretty obvious case of government punishing speech.
MassLive
WBZ labor dispute leads to cancellation of mayoral debate
Mayor Marty Walsh avoids another debate, thanks to a local labor skirmish. From Meghan Irons at the Globe: “A local union representing dozens of behind-the-scenes workers at WBZ-TV has shut down a face-to face debate between Mayor Martin J. Walsh and City Councilor Tito Jackson. The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 1228, sent a letter to both men this week urging them to boycott Tuesday’s proposed debate until the television station and its parent company, CBS Boston, agree to higher wages for longtime employees.” Walsh and Jackson said they would not cross picket lines, so WBZ canceled the televised showdown.
Boston Globe
Boston’s unhappy voters
Speaking of the mayor’s race: Mayor Marty Walsh may hold a commanding lead in polls in Boston’s mayoral race. But that doesn’t mean voters are happy with conditions in the city. A new MassINC survey for WBUR shows that residents are “dissatisfied” with public schools, cost of housing, race relations, traffic, level of crime, amount of gun violence, and gang activity. As David Bernstein notes at WGBH: “When attitudes toward the T are one of the high points (in a survey), you know there’s trouble.”
WGBH
So how’s that new auto inspection system going?
There’s yet more trouble to report on the state auto-inspection front: “Hundreds of Bay State service stations were still unable to perform inspections three days after the disastrous rollout of an updated testing system left shop owners and motorists seeing red, officials said. ‘This is the third day that it hasn’t been working and we’re still turning away a lot of customers, it’s getting ridiculous,” said Vicky Mantis, whose father, George Mantis, owns ALFA Auto Fuel in Roslindale.”
Boston Herald
Not so fast, Amazon bidders: Suffolk Downs investors say they’re owed millions
This may complicate things. From Greg Ryan at the BBJ: “Politicians are pushing Suffolk Downs as a possible future home for an Amazon.com Inc. headquarters. But a handful of investors say they have some unfinished business involving the property. Seven former minority owners of Suffolk Downs, including five local investors, have accused the developer Richard Fields and his firm of withholding $2.6 million they say they're owed from the sale of the property earlier this year. The investors filed a lawsuit in Suffolk County Superior Court last week.”
Meanwhile, Tim Logan of the Globe reports that Boston itself has multiple options beyond the oft-cited Suffolk Downs property to dangle to the e-tailer, including Widett Circle, the Beacon Yards in Allston and even a cluster of properties in the heart of downtown near South Station. 
BBJ
Stonehill College dean not exactly impressed with Setti Warren’s headline-chasing antics
Stonehill College’s Peter Ubertaccio, writing at WGBH, starts out assessing whether the upcoming gubernatorial election will be more like the 1970 or 1974 gubernatorial races. But then he veers off onto the subject of today’s Democratic gubernatorial candidate Setti Warren and his media battling spokesman and their recent shots at Gov. Charlie Baker and NECN host Sue O’Connell. Ubertaccio concludes: “It’s a flashback to earlier in the summer when Team Warren, seemingly angry at the press coverage of the Governor, tweeted that WGBH host Jim Braude was soft on Baker because ‘rich guys look out for each other.’”
Fyi: Ubertaccio compares Charlie Baker to former Republican Gov. Frank Sargent. That made us think of another comparison: How Setti Warren’s increasingly shrill and silly campaign to unseat an incumbent reminds us of Baker’s first shrill and silly campaign to unseat an incumbent in 2010.
Fyi II: At BlueMassGroup, Charley on the MTA isn’t impressed with Ubertaccio’s characterization of Baker as a politically attractive management type.
WGBH

Lion’s den: Ex-Equifax chief the latest to get the Liz Warren treatment
A day after she ripped into the chief executive of Wells Fargo, U.S. Sen. Elizabeth was served the former chief executive of Equifax on a platter. She didn’t waste much time ripping into him too, saying at a hearing that company executives should be held “personally accountable” for the massive data breach at Equifax and that the company should be subject to “severe financial penalties,” reports the Globe’s Victoria McGrane. What can you say? She’s right. The company blew it, big time.
Boston Globe
Of ‘empty gestures’ and the NRA …
U.S. Reps. Katherine Clark and Seth Moulton carried through on their vows not to participate in a House moment of silence yesterday for Las Vegas shooting victims, saying the ceremony was merely an ‘empty gesture’ without accompanying action on gun control, reports Kristin LaFratta at MassLive.
Separately, U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren said that Congress is being “held hostage” by the National Rifle Association and called on colleagues to implement new gun control measures, reports Amanda McGowan at WGBH. The Globe’s Yvonne Abraham and Joan Vennochi, in their own ways, also take on the NRA lobbying juggernaut in columns this morning. But the Herald’s Adriana Cohen is praising President Trump for not buckling to the anti-NRA crowd.
The personal touch: Moulton appeals to Ryan one-on-one but gets nowhere
Traditionally, a far more effective way of getting legislation passed in Congress, compared to sit-ins, tweets and other forms of megaphone protest, is old-fashioned one-on-one meetings with power brokers. But even that didn’t work for U.S. Rep. Seth Moulton, who said he recently approached House Speaker Paul Ryan and asked if any gun-control measures were possible, reports the Globe’s Travis Andersen. Ryan’s reported response, according to Moulton: “He just gave me that kind of non-answer, like, ‘Oh no, I don’t really think so. Because, you know . . . there’s no way to do a little, because then everybody wants a lot.’ ”
Greater Boston makes short list of World Cup host cities
From Steve Watkins at the BBJ: “Greater Boston has made the short list of potential World Cup host cities for the 2026 event. Gillette Stadium in Foxboro, with a capacity of 65,892, is among a group of 32 sites selected by a joint North American bid committee to be presented to international soccer governing body FIFA early next year. The full list includes 25 U.S. cities, four in Canada and three in Mexico.”
BBJ
While cannabis commission gets earful in Holyoke, cannabis industry gets a 'no' in Lawrence
Two of the five members of the new Cannabis Control Commission traveled to Holyoke for the first in a planned series of listening sessions – and they sure got an earful from supporters, detractors and confused local officials, Bera Dunaus of the Hampshire Gazette reports. Several speakers urged the commission to craft regulations to ensure small growers and business people are able to compete in the new marketplace. 
The city of Lawrence, meanwhile, became the latest community to say no to recreational pot shops, Keith Eddings reports in the Eagle-Tribune.
Koh’s shock-and-awe display doesn’t deter Matias
There are still some Democrats mulling whether to run for the U.S. House seat to be vacated by retiring U.S. Rep. Nike Tsongas. So maybe that partly explains why Dan Koh, a Democrat who’s made clear he’s running for the Third District seat, announced in a press release yesterday that he’s raised over $805,000 in just one month since he filed to explore a run. "I am humbled by the outpouring of support I have received,” Koh said in a statement. The Globe’s Joshua Miller and the Herald’s Dan Atkinson have more.
The ploy certainly made little impression on state Rep. Juana Matias, who announced yesterday she’s indeed running for Tsongas’s seat, reports Jim O’Sullivan at the Globe.
Hold on: Stoughton selectman wants resignation mulligan
On second thought ... A day after saying he would resign from the Board of Selectmen because he was unable to control his temper while discussing the tactics of a group pushing a recall of the entire board, Peter Brown said he was reconsidering his decision, Tom Relihan of the Enterprise reports. Brown, who must submit a written resignation letter to make the move official, says he’ll take a few days to think it over. A recall election is scheduled for Dec. 5. 
Enterprise
Some DAs not happy with Senate’s justice reform package
Suffolk County DA Dan Conley may be showing signs of bending on some key measurers within the Senate’s ambitious criminal-justice reform bill. But others are voicing concerns about measurers tucked into the bill, reports the Globe’s Joshua Miller.
Boston Globe

He’s back! Sandy Tennant raises funds for Beth Lindstrom
You were missed, Sandy. From Frank Phillips at the Globe: “Sandy Tennant, once considered the colorful bad boy of the state GOP, is back at the table — at least to help a longtime friend raise money for her campaign to oust US Senator Elizabeth Warren. Tennant, whom Governor Charlie Baker once removed as a fund raiser because of his raffish reputation, is hosting a fund raising event for Beth Lindstrom at his Swampscott home Wednesday night.”
Boston Globe
Mass. bakery gets some ‘love’ after FDA chiding
The Food and Drug Administration came down on Concord-based Nashoba Bakery for incorrectly listing ‘love’ as an official ingredient in its granola, a move that seems to have caused a positive backlash for the business, the Associated Press reports at WBUR. The business says it has listed love among its ingredients for nearly two decades but will comply with the FDA directive and remove it.
WBUR



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