(Guest opinion) Carol Hawkins: It’s time to transition off fossil fuels

Colorado faces a difficult choice, transition off fossil fuels to renewable sources of energy or continue to jeopardize our environment and health. Transition, will cause economic and social disruption for workers and communities. Consequently, any “just transition” requires solutions that mitigate the negative consequences while simultaneously eliminating the deadly pollution caused by burning fossil fuels. I have lived in Weld County since purchasing my house in 2017. I lived in Maine at the time, near the end of an ”unexpected journey” watching my partner die from Alzheimer’s. I decided to move back to Colorado where I had family and a history of living in the state since the early 1970s. I wanted familiar surroundings. I searched online and found the perfect bungalow, my retirement home, in Ault, a rural town in a good location between Greeley and Fort Collins. I had no idea of the influx of fracking about to come. Shortly after moving, I received a forced pooling notice. I went from grief and PTSD to a sense of doom. Fracking! What did this mean for my quiet life and my health? The facts about fracking and the impacts were easy to find, but fighting the frack hasn’t been easy. Weld County, otherwise known as “Welled” County, remains the most polluted and fracked in the state. My neighbors, many who work in oil and gas, are mostly working class, and others are first-time home owners looking for affordable housing or long-time residents. Local government is staffed by those who appear unaffected by fracking. When wells were drilled next to the Highland School campus, located in the middle of town, I called the Ault Town Office and Weld County Oil and Gas to question why the drilling was so close to the school when SB 181 called for 2, 000-foot setbacks. The Ault Town Office said that they had no knowledge of drilling near the school, although it was happening just down the street, and the Weld County Oil and Gas Office laughed off my reference to SB 181 with the comment “those rules are easy to get around.” And I’ve come to learn that he is right. All you have to do is look at the loopholes. One is home rule, the other is reverese setbacks. I then turned to the state and began to protest permits, but soon learned that state regulators and the governor support the fossil fuel industry. However, outside of Colorado, a global consensus calls for a “just transition” away from fossil fuels. The planet is heating, driven by greenhouse gases from extracting and burning fossil fuels like oil and fracked gas. Agreements from COP28 called for net-zero emissions by 2050. Current research, developed by analyzing efforts toward a “just transition” around the world, provides principles that guide policy development: governmental support, dedicated funding streams, strong and diverse coalitions, and economic diversification to address the short-term impacts and long-term needs that workers and communities. Colorado must come together around this framework of principles for a “just transition,” but the transition from fossil fuels to renewables will still disrupt existing economies, and some communities may face economic hardship due to the loss of jobs and tax revenue from the fossil fuel industry. However, we must make the hard choice to experience the gains from a clean energy economy and healthy environment. Colorado’s current environmental damage and health impacts are not sustainable and challenge communities reliant on oil and gas to make the hard choice we need a “just transition” off of fossil fuels. Stop the permits and clean up the mess while supporting displaced workers and disproportionately impacted communities, like Ault. Carol Hawkins is a retired English professor who moved back to Colorado from Maine in 2017. She was served a forced pooling notice in 2018 and has been part of the resistance to fracking ever since. Her focus centers on health impacts and damage to our environment, with a particular interest in health care and job training for displaced oil and gas workers, along with support for disproportionately impacted communities like hers in Ault.
https://www.timescall.com/2025/11/19/guest-opinion-carol-hawkins-its-time-to-transition-off-fossil-fuels/

Sarah Leonard says city in ‘good place’ for next Visit Longmont CEO

During her time with Visit Longmont, Sarah Leonard tried to champion Longmont’s best features. From its excellent breweries to its convenient location along the Front Range, Leonard made sure to listen to what Longmont fans loved about the city. Leonard served as the chief executive officer of Visit Longmont, the destination marketing organization for the city, from early 2023 until earlier this month. On Dec. 1, Leonard will become the CEO of Visit Estes Park, which promotes the amenities of the Estes Park region. As CEO of Visit Longmont, Leonard guided the nonprofit through decisions aimed at making Longmont a true tourist destination. One of those decisions was the sponsoring the Ice Climbing and Dry Tooling World Cup, which was held at Longmont Climbing Collective in February. The event attracted athletes from around the world. By sponsoring and spreading the word about the event, Visit Longmont helped bring the ice climbing competition to Longmont for the first time. Longmont Climbing Collective, which has a five-year deal to host the competition, is already gearing up for next year’s World Cup weekend. “I just think that is the right size, the right vibe,” Leonard said of the competition. “Teams came and spent time at our hotels and also at our short-term rentals.” Another recent addition to the city’s tourism sector was the Longmont Tourism Improvement District. The special district places an additional fee on lodging businesses in the city, and the revenue will fund marketing programs and tourism improvements for Longmont. Visit Longmont spearheaded the formation of the district, talking to hotel partners about the program early last year. The Longmont City Council approved the establishment of the LTID in August. The proposed 2% tourism improvement district fee is estimated to raise an additional $450,000 annually. While the district is still in its infancy, Leonard believes that the revenue generated by the LTID will strengthen Longmont’s reputation as a vibrant place to visit. “It all goes into a pool for destination marketing, which makes, I think, Longmont more competitive,” Leonard said. “When we bring in new visitors who stay overnight, they’re spending more time and then more money supporting our local businesses. That can benefit everyone.” Leonard also presided over Visit Longmont during the birth of its mascot, Monty the Longmonster. Monty was chosen by locals to be the face of the city and can be spotted at community events. Leonard anticipates staying involved in Longmont’s activities going forward, citing “great collaboration” between the northern Colorado destination marketing organizations. Reflecting on what makes Longmont stand out as a tourist destination, Leonard highlighted the city’s museum, evolving food scene and diverse population. “Having that infusion of culture is really appealing to both visitors and residents,” she said. Applications for Visit Longmont CEO are open for another week. Leonard said she hopes the next leader of the nonprofit will take advantage of the new events coming to the region, such as the Sundance Film Festival. “Longmont is in such a good place for the next person to really take it to the next level, because it has so many exciting things going on,” she said.
https://www.timescall.com/2025/11/19/sarah-leonard-leaves-city-in-good-place-for-next-visit-longmont-ceo/

Exclusive: AEW Champion ‘Hangman’ Page Thinks 2025 Has Been His Best Year

As he prepares for his sixth appearance at “Full Gear,” reigning AEW World Champion “Hangman” Adam Page has reflected on his success throughout the year. Page became a two-time AEW World Champion when he defeated Jon Moxley at “AEW All In: Texas” back in July. He also found peace with his past rivalry with Swerve Strickland, who helped him pull off the win over Moxley. Speaking to Newsweek Sports, Page said he might look back on 2025 as the best year of his in-ring career to date. “You know, if it wasn’t, I don’t know which one it would be,” Page said. “Yeah, this probably has been the best year of my career, and I had that feeling before when I won the world championship for the first time. I thought at the time it would end up being remembered by me or anyone else as the best year of my career. It was kind of almost a depressing feeling being 30 or however old I was, like, ‘This is as good as it gets,’ but it’s somehow gotten better this year. So, probably yes, this has probably been the best year of my career.” A big part of the storyline leading up to Page’s victory at “All In: Texas” was the journey to finding himself once again. Page’s intense feud with Strickland drove him to turn heel at one point. “Hangman” said he wasn’t exactly convinced that he’d ever return to being AEW’s top face. “No, not really,” Page said. “Since the day I lost the world championship, I kind of thought genuinely that might be it, that I might never regain it. I really believed that I wouldn’t do it again. So, no, I didn’t anticipate that happening this year. Once I was able to maybe make peace within myself about what happened between Swerve and I and countless other things surrounding it, I kind of noticed things turning around for me professionally.” More News: Injured WWE Raw Talent’s Status Receives Update AEW’s Locker Room Morale Page has been with AEW since the company’s infancy back in 2019. “Hangman” discussed whether or not there is more togetherness with the current locker room than in years past. “More or less,” Page said. “It’s kind of hard to compare things like that. Our locker room is so big. There’s so many people that work in AEW. It is difficult to compare to the first year because at the time the locker room was much smaller. “Your relationships you may have had may have been a little stronger, may have been a little more personal because of you all leaning on each other, but as far as the morale, the feeling of we’re all working towards something together, ultimately, it does echo how AEW felt in its infancy. I’m proud of it, not just in my part, really. I’m more proud of all the other people that come together and continue to make AEW special.” Feud With Samoa Joe Samoa Joe was once an ally of Page in the fight against the Death Riders. Things changed when “Hangman” finally reclaimed the AEW World Heavyweight Championship. Joe challenged Page for the gold in a losing effort at “AEW WrestleDream.” While Joe pretended to embrace “Hangman,” he delivered a clothesline to the titleholder. He then had his stablemates Powerhouse Hobbs and Katsuyori Shibata of The Opps attack Page to solidify the heel turn. Page admitted that he wasn’t anticipating Joe to be one of his contenders given “The Samoan Submission Machine” was focused on the trios division. “It’s not really something I saw coming so much,” Page said. “He was trios champion. He had been involved with Death Riders, and they’re still a thing after I beat Jon Moxley for the championship. They were kind of out of sight, out of mind for me in that they continued the battle with the Death Riders. “Whatever they wanted from the Death Riders, they hadn’t gotten it yet, Joe in particular. As far as title contenders, I’m never someone to shake my head or not consider someone like Samoa Joe, but he wasn’t someone at the forefront of my mind. I do think he showed his colors a little in what he did after our last pay-per-view.” Joe’s Recent Retirement Comments Joe has been telling reporters that unless something draws his interest, he will likely retire once his current AEW deal expires, which isn’t exactly on the horizon. “Hangman” revealed whether or not he is surprised that Joe is open about his retirement window. “No, it’s not [surprising],” Page said. “The thing about Joe and so many others like Joe, who have been around for a long time, it’s hard to imagine someone like that not existing in AEW or just in wrestling in general, but I can understand it. As I’ve gotten a little older and had a family myself, I’m starting to now kind of feel the years catching up to me. People maybe watching live, or you watch it on television; you don’t see it, but we have a shelf life. We can only do this for so long. I don’t know in his mind where he’s at in that journey, but I can certainly understand the thought process.” What Does Full Gear Mean to Page? Page has only missed one “Full Gear” event, and that was back in 2022. He’s had many memorable moments at the pay-per-view, including his first AEW world title win over Kenny Omega in 2021. The fan favorite talked about whether or not “Full Gear” holds more meaning to him than some other shows. “For me personally, yeah, maybe a little bit,” Page admitted. “I’ve had a lot of things happen at Full Gear. I won my first world championship at Full Gear against Kenny. I had a Texas [deathmatch] with Swerve at Full Gear, and this year I’ll be defending the championship now in my second reign against Samoa Joe. “So, I’ve had a lot of stuff happen with Full Gear with me. It does hold a special place with me, but also just because of the name of the pay-per-view. I don’t know how much or not the pay-per-view was named after me, but in AEW’s infancy on ‘Being The Elite,’ I had kind of a storyline going on with Pac where I was doing the Full Gear challenge, and they ended up naming the pay-per-view after that essentially.” AEW’s Future As AEW heads into 2026, the company will look to continue to find ways to ensure its business is growing. “Hangman” believes the talent will continue to put on heavily praised performances going into the new year. “Just continuing to build on the momentum that we have,” Page said. “I think AEW is as strong as it’s ever been. I think AEW shows the bar is consistently raised every single week. It has gotten really difficult and challenging to not just meet that bar but to raise it. So, the in-ring action is out of this world. It’s at its pinnacle of professional wrestling, and I can’t imagine what it would be in the coming years.” The women’s division also has Page optimistic about the future of AEW. The top male titleholder in the company is happy to see a new women’s tag team title enter the fray. “I think our women’s division is the best that it’s ever been right now,” Page said. “It’s only going to continue to get better. That’s something that I’m proud of AEW for, and I’m proud of all the people who’ve worked hard to make that happen.” Recently, history was made during a special edition of “AEW Dynamite.” For the first time, women competed in the violent “Blood & Guts” match. Page said it’s the result of the female talent stepping up and delivering for the fans when they’re called upon. “When given those kinds of opportunities, they show out,” Page said. “I am proud of the entire division. They’ve been great this year.” What to Expect at AEW Full Gear Page is set for his next AEW World Championship defense, and it will be a rematch against Joe at “Full Gear 2025” on Nov. 22. “Hangman” believes there could be a key difference this go-around. “I’d hate to think after everything Joe fought for and fought against with the Death Riders, I’d hate to think that he’s going to rely on the same tactics,” Page said. “But I do think that he’s someone who now, admittedly, in the twilight years of his career, is maybe looking at doing whatever it takes regardless of how he feels about those actions to win this world championship one more time. So, that is what I’m looking for.” More News: WWE Championship Changes Hands in Monday Night Raw Shocker Absent WWE Star Resurfaces Backstage During Live Event Former WWE Star’s TNA Wrestling Deal Expiring Soon.
https://www.newsweek.com/sports/wrestling/exclusive-aew-champion-hangman-page-thinks-2025-has-been-his-best-year-11057582

Option key secrets: Get more from your Mac with these hidden shortcuts

Scratch beneath the surface of macOS and you’ll find all manner of clever little tricks that aren’t apparent on first look. The Option key demonstrates this perfectly: it brings a host of extra functionality to your Mac every time you press it, whether you’re perusing an app’s menu or are typing in a document. Here, we’ve put together 10 of our favorite ways to use the Option key to bring more power to your Mac. But you shouldn’t stop here-there are far more things that the Option key can do than what we’ve listed in this article. Often, the best course is to simply experiment by pressing Option in your app of choice and seeing what it does. No doubt Apple has hidden all manner of useful tools and shortcuts that are just waiting to be discovered. Manage files and folders The Option key can come in handy when you want to get a better hold on files and folders on your Mac, and many of these extra features can be found in the Finder. For example, hold Option and press the up or down arrow key inside a Finder folder to move to the first or last item. Normally, clicking the triangular arrow icon next to a folder in Finder will open it. If you hold Option while doing so, Finder will open that folder and any sub-folders inside it, saving you a little bit of time if you want to dive deep into some nested locations. There are also things you can do with files. In the Preview app, if you click the File menu while pressing Option, the Duplicate function turns into Save As, in case you want to change the file format. And in the Finder, if you want to move a file rather than copying it, first copy it, then press Command-Option-V in its destination folder (rather than simply Command-V). The reverse is also true: hold Option while dragging and dropping a file to copy it instead of moving it. Typing tricks Want to type out some special characters? You could look them up and copy them online, or you could use the Option key. Hold it while typing any symbol or alphanumeric character to get a special one instead: Option-A gives you å, while Option-3 produces £. There are many more possibilities. And just like how the Option key can send you to the top and bottom items in a Finder folder, it can also be used to swiftly move through text. Hold Option and press the left or right arrow keys to move along one word at a time in any text or word processing app. This is much faster than holding the arrow key and moving just one character at a time. In a word-processing app, try holding Option and Shift, then moving the arrow keys left or right; this will highlight whole words at a time. You can also press Option and Delete to remove words rather than individual letters. Window management The Option key comes in handy when you want to resize an app window. Instead of resizing it from one edge and then another, you can shift multiple edges at once. Just hold the Option key and grab a side or corner of the window and start resizing. When you do this with a vertical or horizontal edge, the opposite side will mirror the movement of the edge you’re holding. When you do it with a corner, you can resize all four sides at once. If you want to make an app window fill your screen without going into fullscreen mode, just hold Option and double-click any of its four corners-this will make it expand to your maximum screen dimensions. Do this on a side instead of a corner and both corresponding edges will stretch to the edges of your screen. For example, double-click a vertical window edge while holding Option and both the left and right sides will expand to the full width of your display. Doing any of these actions without holding Option will just stretch the side or corner you click on and no others. Dock items Got an app that’s frozen and not responding? Instead of waiting for it to resume normal service, right-click its icon in your Mac’s Dock, hold Option, then select Force Quit to close it down right away. This menu item is normally hidden, but Option reveals it. When an app is open, right-click its Dock icon and hold Option to see other menu choices. The Hide menu item changes to Hide Others, for example, allowing you to make other windows disappear but keep the one that’s currently in the foreground (you won’t see this choice if the app in question is not open). And if you want to relaunch the Finder, there’s a quick trick to doing so: hold Option and left-click its Dock icon to refresh it. Do Not Disturb The Option key can help you banish notifications by enabling Do Not Disturb mode. It lets you silence the distractions with a single click, with no need to rummage around in System Settings menus. Just hold Option and click the time and date in the top-right corner of your Mac’s display to enable Do Not Disturb; hold Option and click it again to disable it. If you let Focus modes show their statuses in the menu bar, you’ll see the Do Not Disturb icon appear when you switch it on. Hidden menu bar info While we’re dealing with the top edge of your screen, the Option key adds a bunch of extra functionality to icons housed in the menu bar. For instance, Option-click the volume icon and you can change your input devices without opening System Settings (normally, you can only adjust output devices from the menu bar). Do the same with the Wi-Fi icon and you’ll see extra data like your IP address, MAC address, country code, and more. Similarly, Option-click the Bluetooth icon to see addresses and firmware versions of your connected Bluetooth devices. And if the Stage Manager icon is in your menu bar, Option-clicking it will instantly enable and disable it. Some of these icons won’t appear in your menu bar by default, and you’ll need to enable them by opening System Settings and finding the Control Center section in the sidebar. Here, select either Show in Menu Bar or Show When Active from the dropdown menu next to each item. Menu magic Each Mac app has its own set of menus that live, unsurprisingly, in the menu bar. When these menus are open, you can hold the Option key to see new tools and choices. To take one example, open Finder and click the Go menu, then hold Option. You’ll see Library appear, which is normally hidden from view. In other apps, clicking the File menu and holding Option might change Duplicate to Save As, Close Window to Close All, and more. What you see will vary from app to app, so try different ones to see what happens. Click the Apple logo in your screen’s top-left corner, then hold Option to change About This Mac to System Information. The System Information app gives you more in-depth data on your computer, such as its battery cycle count, technical firewall settings, and more. The additional menu options apply to the right-click menu, too. Try right-clicking a file and holding the Option key; Open With changes to Always Open With, for example, letting you set your default apps in a few quick seconds. Toolbars and right-click menus We’ve talked about menu bars that live outside an app’s main window, but what about the buttons and menus inside an app? Well, there’s a lot the Option key can do here, too. Look at the toolbar in Preview. There, holding the Option key will change the direction of the rotate button, so you can rotate an image clockwise instead of counterclockwise. Sticking with Preview, right-clicking and dragging on an image will draw a selection box. Hold Option while you’re doing this and each edge of the selection box will move in sync; dragging the box to the right will also move its left edge outwards, for example. Switch scroll bar settings If you open the System Settings app and go to Appearance in the sidebar, you can change how app scroll bars work. You can choose to have the scroll bar jump to the next page when you click an empty portion of it, or for the page to move down to where you clicked. But there’s no need to adjust this in the System Settings app. You can do it directly in any app you’re currently using. Just hold Option and click the scroll bar to flip between these two settings. For example, if clicking an empty part of the scroll bar normally jumps to the next page, holding Option when you do it will move to where you clicked. This works if your settings are the other way around, too. System Settings The System Settings app is a one-stop shop for configuring your Mac, but it’s not the only way to tweak things to your liking. If your Mac has a row of function keys, you can combine the Option key with your function/media keys to get a fast way to access Mac settings without needing to root around in System Settings first. To change your Mac’s brightness settings, hold Option and press the brightness up or brightness down button in the function row to go straight to the Displays section in System Settings. Likewise, holding Option and pressing the volume keys will open System Settings at the Sound page. Note that all of these options work whether or not System Settings is already open.
https://www.macworld.com/article/2860932/hidden-option-key-secrets-get-more-from-your-mac-with-these-hidden-shortcuts.html

With Zohran Mamdani, Everything That Has Already Failed Is New Again

Manhattan Contrarian ^ | 17 Nov, 2025 | Francis Menton Posted on by MtnClimber Our newly-anointed Mayor-elect, Zohran Mamdani, vows that he is a Socialist, and that he intends to implement an explicitly Socialist suite of policies. OK, the guy is only 34 years old. He was born on October 18, 1991, just a couple of months before the final collapse of the Soviet Union on the day after Christmas that year. He lacks the personal experience that we senior citizens have of reading every day for decades of the horrors of life in Brezhnev’s Soviet Union, or Mao’s China. But could a student really learn so little in fancy schools like Bronx Science and Bowdoin College that he could graduate in the 2010s and not know about this history? Shockingly, yes. And yet it gets worse. Socialism a la Mamdani does not involve the classic prescription of “seizing the means of production.” We have essentially nothing in today’s New York City in the way of “means of production” that you could usefully seize. There is almost no heavy industry or even light manufacturing left in New York City. Go into the big office buildings where people make high incomes and you will find literally nothing to seize that will enable you to produce what they produce. It’s just a bunch of standard-issue laptops. The high earners are making the money off their wits. So the “Socialist” policies advocated by Mamdani are different, more akin to the standard progressive playbook of a greatly expanded handout state financed by higher income taxes on the high earners. Of the various policies that Mamdani has advocated, the three that I think are most significant in their potential impact on the City are: (1) raising income taxes on high earners, (2) having the City as developer build 200, 000 new publicly-owned “affordable” housing units, and (3) “defunding” and/or downsizing the police department. To Mamdani and his twenty- and thirty-something acolytes, all this stuff seems so terribly new and fresh and creative. But the funny thing is that all of these policies have been tried before in New York. They were all implemented well before Mamdani was born, and then reversed by the time he was a little kid. In each case the reversal occurred because the policy had abjectly failed. I seriously doubt that Mamdani knows anything about the history. So let’s have a review. Raising the income tax rate on the highest earners Here are three sources that, taken together, give the history of top income tax rates in New York State all the way from 1919 (when the State income tax was first imposed) to 2024: this one from the State Tax Department covers 1919 to 1997; this one from the Fiscal Policy Institute covers 1976 to 2007; and this one, again from the State Tax Department, provides the most recent data. As relevant here, at the State level the top rate moved up through the single digits in the 1940s and 50s, until it hit 10% in 1959 and then they started to go really crazy. From 1961 to 1968 the top rate was 14%, and then it went to 15% from 1969 to 1977. After 1977, they started to back off, with the top rate dropping to 10% by 1981, and then by smaller increments through the 80s and 90s until hitting a low of 6. 85% by 2000. Since then, they have mostly kept the 6. 85% rate on incomes under $2 million, but have added some new premium rates on incomes above that level, up to a current top rate of 10. 9% on incomes over $25 million. And then there is the additional New York City income tax. It was first instituted in 1966, with a top rate of 3. 876%, and the rates have fluctuated modestly since then around an average of about 4%. The current top rate is actually the same 3. 876% as when the tax first began. During his eight years as Mayor, Bill de Blasio constantly tried to get the State Legislature to raise the top rate for high earners, but he never succeeded. Thus the combined top State/City income tax rate hit almost 19% in the 1970s. At this same time, the top federal rate was 70%. In those days, State and City income taxes were fully deductible from federal. So if you earned a dollar, paid 19 cents to the State and City, and then paid 70% of the remaining 81 cents to the feds, you ended up with only about 24 cents of the dollar for yourself. The top federal rate then came all the way down to 28% by the 1986 Tax Reform Act, before beginning its inexorable rise once again when President George H. W. Bush broke his pledge of “Read my lips: no new taxes.” New York City building “affordable”/low income housing as developer In 1935, New York City created the New York City Housing Authority as a vehicle to build what was then called “low income” housing. Construction did not really get going until after World War II. In total, NYCHA built about 180, 000 units of housing, almost all from the 1950s to early 1980s. The NYCHA units were all were built on the pure socialist model, with the City acting as owner and developer, providing the financing (through tax exempt bonds), and then renting the apartments to tenants at rents set by statutory formulas based on tenant income, rather than by a housing market. In the mid-1970s, the construction of NYCHA buildings hit a big roadblock when the City had a financial crisis, nearly defaulting on its debt in 1975. The deal to keep the City out of bankruptcy dramatically reduced its ability to continue to take on large amounts of debt for public housing. Construction of NYCHA projects slowed, but continued into the 80s at a lower pace, until the 1986 Tax Act. That law set limits on the amount of debt that a municipality could take on and qualify for tax exempt status on the interest. Since the 1986 Tax Act took effect, there has been very little further NYCHA construction. Essentially, the City ran out of other people’s money for this purpose. Size of the New York City Police Department According to this New York Times piece from December 6, 1981, the New York Police Department reached a then-peak of some 30, 911 officers in 1970, and maintained approximately that strength until 1975. That was the year that the City’s financial crisis hit, and hiring for the Department was completely suspended. By 1978 the number of officers was down to 24, 670, and by the time of the article in late 1981 it was 22, 170. Mayor Ed Koch, who took office in 1978, began a re-hiring program when finances permitted in the early-1980s. By 1990 (when Mayor David Dinkins took office) the number of officers was back up to about 28, 000, and by 1993 (when Rudy Giuliani replaced Dinkins) it was about 37, 000. The all-time high of about 40, 000 was reached in 2000, toward the end of Giuliani’s time. Since then, the number has gradually declined to a current figure of about 33, 000. Outcomes associated with these policies Population Many are currently warning Mayor-elect Mamdani that he risks serious flight of the high-earning taxpayers if he implements significant tax rate increases on the top brackets. For myself, I don’t think that large numbers can or will leave suddenly. Instead, the consequence of such policies is gradual relative decline, as people slowly make decisions to relocate as family and job circumstances permit. Nevertheless, the history of New York’s population in the 1970s and 80s gives a serious indication of how rapid the population consequences of bad tax policy can be. Here is a Wikipedia entry with census data for New York City for the recent decades. In 1960 New York City’s population hit a then-record of 7, 781, 984. In the following decade, the State upped its top rate to 14%, and in 1966 the City instituted its own approximately 4% rate. By 1970, the population had inched up to 7, 894, 862. The late 1960s also saw the beginnings of a surge in crime (see next section). At the end of the 60s, the State pushed its top tax rate up a final point to 15%. And in the 1970s, the population of New York City fell off a cliff. By 1980, the City’s population was down to 7, 071, 639 a loss of more than 10% of the population in that single decade. Hugh Carey had become Governor in the late 1970s, and the start of the decline in top tax rates in the late 1970s and early 1980s was very much a program on his part to correct what he perceived as New York having become completely uncompetitive in its tax rates. The decline in tax rates continued under Governor Mario Cuomo (taking office in 1983), who again perceived that lower taxes were necessary to keep New York competitive. And sure enough, the City’s population began to recover, reaching 7, 322, 564 by 1990, and then 8, 008, 278 by 2000 (as tax rates continued their decline through the 1990s). By 2020 the City’s population had reached 8, 804, 190. Meanwhile, New York State income tax revenues surged during the 1980s even as the top rates declined dramatically. To be fair, the biggest cause was external to the state: when the feds lowered their top rate from 70% to 28% by the 1986 Tax Act, that unleashed a gusher of previously-suppressed capital gains realizations, on which New York State collected its share. Still, it is hard not to see the wildly uncompetitive income tax rates of the 1970s as a prime cause, along with the crime surge, in the major population decline. Crime Here from a source called Vital City is a chart of New York City’s number of murders and murder rate from 1800 to 2023. You can see that the murders began their sharp increase in the mid-1960s, which was before the decline in the number of police. So it is not possible to attribute the initial increase in crime to matters of policing. Other factors likely involved were a lax attitude toward law enforcement beginning in the 1960s (Mayor Lindsay!), a surge in welfare dependency, and a large influx of poor people from the South. You may have other favorite causes to cite. But it is also clear that the sharp decline in crime in the 1990s did not begin and continue until the numbers of police got back to high levels and the City again got serious about enforcing the laws. Note that, to his credit, the peak in manpower and the re-introduction of serious enforcement began under Mayor David Dinkins (beginning 1990), although it intensified under Mayor Giuliani (1994 through 2001) and continued under Mayor Bloomberg (2002-2014). City-developed affordable housing Today, some 40 years after the City’s construction of public housing ground to a halt when the money ran out in the mid-1980s, Mamdani proposes to get back into that business. Meanwhile, NYCHA is in the middle of an ongoing and unfixable crisis. There are probably close to a hundred posts on this website about the unworkable economics of NYCHA. For a relatively recent example, try this one from June 2025. The problem of NYCHA is the fundamental flaw of the socialist model: they have no plan, and never had a plan, to replace and renew the original capital investment when it wears out. Forty to sixty years after construction, the buildings need everything: new roofs, new windows, new plumbing, new electrical, fixing the facade, etc., etc., etc. NYCHA is going around with its cup out demanding something like $78 billion from some combination of State and federal taxpayers. But nobody has any real idea where any substantial part of the money will come from, or if it comes at all. That’s to fix the existing buildings. And Mamdani wants to double the number of units. It couldn’t be crazier. Conclusion From decades of experience, we know exactly where these policies lead. Can anybody really be poorly-informed enough to try again going down the exact same path? Well, I guess, yes. Their fancy educations have taught them exactly nothing. If there is any thinking behind this at all, I suppose that it is, that wasn’t real Socialism. This time we’re going to do it right! (by implementing the exact same policies that have failed in the past and been abandoned due to failure) TOPICS: Society KEYWORDS: communism; islam Click here: to donate by Credit Card Or here: to donate by PayPal Or by mail to: Free Republic, LLC PO Box 9771 Fresno, CA 93794 Thank you very much and God bless you. 1 posted on by MtnClimber To: StAntKnee; texas booster Manhattan Contrarian ping 2 posted on by MtnClimber (For photos of scenery, wildlife and climbing, click on my screen name for my FR home page.) Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by.
https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/4353346/posts

Daniel Radcliffe sent sweet letter to 11-year-old Scot playing new Harry Potter

Daniel Radcliffe revealed he has written a touching letter to the young Glasgow schoolboy who is taking over his role as Harry Potter Daniel Radcliffe has revealed on Good Morning America that he wrote a touching direct letter addressed to Dominic McLaughlin, the Scots child star who has been cast as the new Harry Potter in HBO’S television series reboot. Radcliffe, 36, will forever be known for his role as The Boy Who lived in the Warner Bros’ eight film franchise from 2001 to 2011 alongside Rupert Grint, 37, as Ron Weasley and Emma Watson, 35, as Hermione Granger. However, there is a new trio in town and Dominic McLaughlin is now stepping into his Potter shoes in the HBO series alongside Arabella Stanton, 11, as Hermione and Alastair Stout, 12, as Ron. Speaking about the HBO series, Daniel said he doesn’t expect anyone playing his former role to reach out to him but he knows a few people working on the production. Revealing how he wrote a sweet letter to 11-year-old McLaughlin, who is from the Greater Glasgow area, Radcliffe said: “I wrote to Dominic and sent him a letter and he sent me a very sweet note back.” He added: “I don’t want to be a specter in the life of these children but I just wanted to write to him to say, ‘I hope you have the best time, and an even better time than I did I had a great time, but I hope you have an even better time. “And I do, I just see these pictures of him and the other kids and I just want to hug them. They just seem so young. “I just look at them and say, ‘Oh it’s crazy I was doing that at that age.’ But it’s also incredibly sweet and I hope they’re having a great time.” Radcliffe himself was just 11-years-old when he was cast in Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone in 2001. He played the role of Harry Potter until he was 21-years-old in the final Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part II film in 2011. The young cast of HBO’s Harry Potter series also includes many other familiar Hogwarts characters including Lox Pratt as Draco Malfoy, Alessia Leoni as Parvati Patil, Leo Earley as Seamus Finnigan, Rory Wilmot as Neville Longbottom and Amos Kitson as Dudley Dursley, among others. Join the Daily Record’s WhatsApp community here and get the latest news sent straight to your messages The BBC reported in July that Warner Bros. Studios Leavesden, which is the series’ production home, built a temporary school so the young stars can keep up with their studies amid filming over the next near-decade. Each season of the show is set to cover one of J. K Rowling’s seven books. The Harry Potter series is set to debut on HBO and HBO Max in 2027.
https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/tv/daniel-radcliffe-sent-sweet-letter-36271143

When Can You Play STALKER 2 On The PlayStation 5

It might have taken the long way around an anomaly field, but STALKER 2 has finally found the way home. Exactly one year after its huge (albeit troubled) launch for PC and Xbox Series X|S, STALKER 2 is coming to the PlayStation 5 family tomorrow. To help budding stalkers of the Sony faction prepare for the occasion, Ukrainian studio GSC Game World has unveiled the global release times for STALKER 2 on PlayStation 5. Take these next few hours to stock up on ammunition, medicine, and a few bottles of vodka. Don’t get the wrong idea, it’s for the radiation. STALKER 2 PS5 Release Times Arguably the best open-world post-apocalyptic game in the market today, after a series of patches, STALKER 2 unlocks at 14: 00, Kyiv time. If you happen to be further from the zone, these are your release times: Seattle, USA: 04: 00 New York, USA: 07: 00 São Paulo, Brazil: 09: 00 London, UK: 12: 00 Prague, Czechia: 13: 00 Kyiv, Ukraine: 14: 00 Beijing, China: 20: 00 Tokyo, Japan: 21: 00 Sydney, Australia: 23: 00 Auckland, New Zealand: 01: 00 (D+1) If you want to save some time once the game is out, you can already pre-load STALKER 2 right now. Despite releasing in a somewhat deplorable state, STALKER 2 has been on a redemption arc that would make No Man’s Sky proud. In its most recent update, titled Expedition, the developers have addressed some of the most common complaints with the game since its release. You can find the full patch notes here. Take these next few hours to stock up on ammunition, medicine, and a few bottles of vodka. The AI in STALKER 2 has been one of its most controversial points, as most players felt it did not live up to the A-Life system introduced with 2007’s Shadow of Chernobyl. In the latest version of STALKER 2, factions now actively fight for territory control, in a system reminiscent of STALKER: Clear Sky. Checkpoints, locations, and different points of interest can actively change hands. On top of that, daily routines are now fully in place: groups of stalkers will typically move out of hubs early in the day and make their way home towards nightfall. Following the PlayStation 5 launch, the next milestone in the development of STALKER 2 is the engine update that is now planned for early 2026.
https://www.dualshockers.com/stalker-2-playstation-5-release-times-announced/

NBA Announces Punishment for Title Contender for Violating Policy

The NBA has come down hard on the Cleveland Cavaliers for load-managing its two All-Stars, Donovan Mitchell and Evan Mobley, during a game against the Miami Heat on November 12. In a press release on Tuesday, the NBA announced a $100,000 fine against the Cavaliers for sitting Mitchell and Mobley when both were healthy to play. “The NBA announced today that the Cleveland Cavaliers have been fined $100,000 for violating the league’s Player Participation Policy. The violation occurred when the Cavaliers held Donovan Mitchell and Evan Mobley, who are both star players under the Policy, out of the team’s game against the Miami Heat on Nov. 12 for rest. “The Policy, which was adopted prior to the 2023-24 season, is intended to promote participation in the NBA’s regular season.” Cavaliers Could Be in 2026 NBA Finals The NBA implemented its Player Participation Policy in 2023 to address the leaguewide trend of star players participating in load management, particularly in games against weaker opponents, on the second night of back-to-backs or towards the end of the 82-game season. However, the league mandate has not prevented teams from routinely sitting out their best players, as the Cavaliers did on November 12. The Cavaliers last year finished with a 64-18 record, clinching the No. 1 seed in the East. And yet, they were eliminated in the second round by the Indian Pacers, in most part due to untimely injuries sustained by Mobley, Darius Garland and Jarrett Allen. As such, the Cavaliers, the odds-on favorites to represent the East in the 2026 NBA Finals, will likely ramp up their load management this year, to ensure their team is fully healthy entering the postseason next April. NBA’s Load-Management Problem Michael Jordan, who played all 82 games nine times in his career, is among the old heads who are appalled by teams routinely resting star players. During his appearance on NBC Sports’ “MJ: Insights to Excellence” last month, the G. O. A. T. did not hold back on his criticism of modern players and teams. “I never wanted to miss a game because it was an opportunity to prove. It was something that I felt like the fans are there that watch me play. I want to impress that guy way up on top who probably worked his (butt) off to get a ticket or to get money to buy the ticket.” Jordan recalled many nights when he willed himself to play, just so he could help his teammates by being on the floor and serving as a decoy for opponent defenses. “I was going to find a way to get out there, even if I was a decoy,” he recalled. “Well, once I got out there, you never know how pushing yourself you never know what happens, right? “Next thing you know, the emotions, the situation, the need of the team. All those things catapulted me to: ‘I’m going to gut this thing out.’”.
https://heavy.com/sports/nba/nba-punishment-cavaliers/

Congress Moves Quickly to Bring Epstein Files Closer to Sunlight – Liberty Nation News

With a single exception, the House of Representatives on Tuesday, Nov. 18, voted unanimously to pass the Epstein Files Transparency Act and send it to the Senate. The act requires the Justice Department to make public all “unclassified records, documents, communications and investigative materials” related to the late convicted sex predator and accused sex trafficker within 30 days of the bill being signed into law. The Senate gave the American public whiplash when, just hours later, it too fired the bill off to the president’s desk by unanimous consent. Several GOP representatives expressed concern at some of the bill’s language, but it seems the public circus this whole affair has stirred up was too much for those who believe the legislation needed more work. The final vote in the House was 427-1. It is a historic and unprecedented move. These documents pertain to criminal investigations – something normally outside of its purview. That’s what troubles some Republicans. The lone “nay” vote belonged to Rep. Clay Higgins (R-LA), who explained in a post on X: “What was wrong with the bill three months ago is still wrong today. It abandons 250 years of criminal justice procedure in America. As written, this bill reveals and injures thousands of innocent people – witnesses, people who provided alibis, family members, etc. If enacted in its current form, this type of broad reveal of criminal investigative files, released to a rabid media, will absolutely result in innocent people being hurt. [emphasis Higgins’]” A Dangerous Political Exercise House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) and other GOPers expressed similar concerns about the lack of proper protections for some of Epstein’s victims and for many others whose names appear in the Epstein files and, thus, may be assumed to have been involved in the disgraced financier’s crimes even though they were not. There’s also the possible chilling effect the passage of this bill could have on future criminal investigations. Speaking to reporters on Nov. 18, Johnson said, “Who’s going to want to come forward if they think Congress can take a political exercise and reveal their identities? Who’s going to come talk to prosecutors? It’s very dangerous. It would deter future whistleblowers and informants.” The Speaker said he would insist to Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) that language is inserted into the bill that will ensure the privacy of individuals who, for various reasons, are named in the Epstein files but are not implicated in any wrongdoing. These may include witnesses, victims, family members, whistleblowers, and even law enforcement personnel who may have been working undercover during the Epstein investigation. As Higgins further pointed out in his X post: “The Oversight Committee is conducting a thorough investigation that has already released well over 60,000 pages of documents from the Epstein case. That effort will continue in a manner that provides all due protections for innocent Americans.” Higgins added that he would vote for the bill when it returned to the House “[i]f the Senate amends the bill to properly address privacy of victims and other Americans, who are named but not criminally implicated.” He will not get the chance, though. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) asked for unanimous consent and got it without objection. Previously, he had said in a statement, “Republicans have spent months trying to protect Donald Trump and hide what’s in the files. Americans are tired of waiting and are demanding to see the truth. If Leader Thune tries to bury the bill, I’ll stop him.” This has been the line from Democrats for months, even though the name Epstein barely crossed their lips for the four years during which the Biden administration sat on the Epstein files, making no move to release anything. For his part, Thune had reportedly indicated that, because the House so overwhelmingly approved the bill, the Senate is unlikely to alter it to any extent, and the upper chamber is likely to move swiftly. Unanimous consent means no debate, obviously, no changes to the bill, and therefore no need to return it to the House. The Epstein Files and Trump As so many have pointed out – including The Washington Post, a newspaper well-known for its heavy anti-Trump leanings – if the Epstein files implicated Trump in anything that appeared remotely illegal, immoral, or underhanded, that information would have been leaked to the media years ago. Undoubtedly, Trump’s political opponents would have ensured any such revelations were so widely known that almost certainly America’s 47th president would not have been named Trump. After blowing hot and cold on the issue, the president finally signaled his approval of the Epstein bill and asserted that he would sign it even without the kinds of additional protections many Republicans called for. He may believe that this will finally put the whole affair in the rearview mirror. He would be wrong about that. The Epstein files saga is not nearing its end. In fact, this is not even the beginning of the end – it may just be the end of the beginning. What follows, after the president signs the bill and the DOJ reluctantly complies, will be a months-long media feeding frenzy and probably a few lawsuits. Elected Democrats, after they have pored over every word in the documents and come up with nothing they can pin on Trump, will inevitably proclaim that the documents containing the damning evidence have been classified and redacted. Trump’s enemies could be about to fall into a trap of their own making – focusing so much on flogging this particular deceased Equus ferus caballus that even their most ardent anti-Trump cheerleaders get tired of it. But perhaps they believe this is their new secret midterm elections weapon. Spoiler alert: It almost certainly is not.
https://www.libertynation.com/congress-moves-quickly-to-bring-epstein-files-closer-to-sunlight/

Best Black Friday tech deals live — the best tech and PC hardware deals on GPUs, CPUs, SSDs, and more

The official date for Black Friday might be November 28, but many of the top PC hardware retailers online are already hosting blowout Black Friday sales on a number of products. Black Friday is a great time to score PC upgrades of all varieties, including a new monitor, new peripherals, a new SSD or more RAM, or perhaps even a whole new CPU, motherboard, and cooler. Black Friday is more pertinent than ever for PC builders, with an impending NAND apocalypse threatening to skyrocket prices of RAM and SSDs. Indeed, we’re seeing price increases of over 100% on the most popular RAM products, so pay special attention to good deals on memory this year. Amazon: All deals on computers and accessories Amazon: All Gaming GPU Deals Amazon: Up to $500 off Gaming Monitors Newegg: Up to 72% off Black November PC parts Amazon: Desktop and gaming PCs Hottest Black Friday Tech Deals Black Friday Tech Deals Live Save 43% ($129) Crucial T710 2TB Gen5 NVMe SSD: was $299. 99 now $170. 99 at Amazon Read moreRead less▼ A brilliantly fast SSD is now 43% cheaper. Get the 2TB Gen5 NVMe SSD from Crucial for $170. 00, with on-paper sequential speeds of up to 14, 900/13, 800 MB/s. Save 45% ($90) Samsung 24-Inch Odyssey G3 G30D: was $199 now $109 at Amazon Read moreRead less▼ The Samsung Odyssey G3 G30D features a 24-inch VA panel with an FHD resolution. It can achieve a refresh rate of up to 180 Hz and is AMD FreeSync certified for optimal performance. You get both DisplayPort and HDMI input options alongside an audio jack. Save 36% Samsung 32-inch Odyssey G30D 180Hz Gaming Monitor: was $279. 99 now $179. 99 at Amazon Read moreRead less▼ This 27-inch 1080p Samsung gaming screen isn’t much more expensive than an office monitor. But it sports a 180 Hz refresh rate, 1ms response time, and FreeSync variable refresh. It’s a VA panel, which generally means better contrast and deeper blacks than TN or IPS, but viewing angles likely aren’t the best. Save 23% HOTO NEX O1 PRO 3. 6V Screwdriver Set: was $64. 99 now $49. 99 at Amazon Read moreRead less▼ HOTO’s wireless screwdriver has three torque settings, charges over USB-C, and looks surprisingly good. It’s even proven quite durable, as I’ve dropped it off of ladders and my workbench at least a dozen times, and it’s still working flawlessly. Save 38% ($6) Strebito 64 Piece Electronics Toolkit: was $15. 99 now $9. 99 at Amazon Read moreRead less▼ This compact kit includes all the essential tools to get you started with your first / next PC build. You get a precision screwdriver with 48 different bits (slot, Phillips, Pozidrive, Petalobe, Tork, Stand-off driver, Gamebit (for Nintendo consoles), Torx/Torx security, and many others. You also get spudgers and pry tools, tweezers, brush, and a magnetizer/demagnetizer for your screwdriver bits. So it begins. Good morning and welcome to the start of our live coverage of Black Friday, a massive sales event that promises some great PC hardware and tech deals. Whether you’re looking for an update to your CPU, GPU, a new SSD, a monitor, a keyboard, or anything else for that matter. If you’re in the UK, we’re kicking off with a great deal on this Intel Arc GPU. Our readers have been loving this over the weekend, and it’s still live! Save 13% Sparkle Intel Arc B580 Guardian: was £229. 99 now £199. 99 at Overclockers Read moreRead less▼ This Sparkle-manufactured Intel Arc B580 Nitro OC graphics card is ready for 1440p gaming, featuring 20 Xe2 cores and 12GB of GDDR6 VRAM. Get a great GPU with 12GB of VRAM, and a free copy of a great game including the brand new Battlefield 6.
https://www.tomshardware.com/news/live/black-friday-tech-deals-live