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Low-hanging fruit won't fix this aviation mess

Low-hanging fruit won't fix this aviation mess

Yahoo3 days ago

In the weeks leading up to Memorial Day, U.S. Rep. Sam Graves issued 'straight talk' newsletters on his support for law enforcement and his opposition to government waste. He praised the 'big, beautiful tax cut bill,' called for a more secure border and requested investigation into cancer cases at a local school.
There's no harm in taking positions that align with voters in your district, but it's worth asking if something important is flying under the radar.
Put it this way: If you're flying into Newark Liberty International Airport (or any airport for that matter), how concerned are you about the border or tax cut extensions until the wheels touch the ground?
On two occasions within the last month, air traffic controllers lost radio and radar contact with flights at Newark for 90 seconds. Following a fatal in-flight collision in Washington, the Newark outages serve as a terrifying reminder of the rickety state of aviation infrastructure in the country.
As chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, Graves has enormous clout that should be directed toward fixing this mess. Now it comes as good news that the massive federal spending bill that moved through the House contains $12.5 billion in badly needed modernization to the nation's air traffic infrastructure.
It shouldn't have taken this long.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy is blaming the Biden Administration for doing little to fix problems in the aviation industry. This is not as off-base as it sounds.
Put it this way: If you're flying into Newark, are Biden's electric vehicle charging stations going to do anything for you when the tower loses radio contact?
Biden lavished a lot of money on U.S. infrastructure, but much of that investment seemed to go to the green agenda instead of fixing problems with the Federal Aviation Administration. It's a fair point that merits discussion.
But the problem for Duffy is he's the transportation secretary right now, not Pete Buttigieg. The problem for Graves is he's chairman of the transportation committee, not the border czar or ways and means chairman.
As chairman of the committee devoted to transportation, Graves should be demanding answers from those who are in position to make things safer for Americans right now. Low-hanging rhetorical fruit won't fix this mess.

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The Highground raises funds with its 15th annual Honor Ride
The Highground raises funds with its 15th annual Honor Ride

Yahoo

time19 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The Highground raises funds with its 15th annual Honor Ride

NEILLSVILLE — In a day that many spent in leisure, The Highground was one of several organizations that put the focus back on Veterans this past Memorial Day. 'The Highground's actually been around since the early '80s and it started out as a memorial park,' explained Liz Hamilton, who said her role was mainly in marketing and social media for The Highground but that she wore many hats including as an event photographer. 'It was started by a Vietnam veteran, and it was just started as a way to honor and remember the sacrifices that our Veterans made through all wars — so we started with World War I, then a World War II tribute and we have a Korean War tribute [as well as] a national Native American tribute is on site and Gold Star tribute.' Other memorials are on site, including the Dove Effigy mound, a 'living memorial' to pay homage to those who were prisoners of war or went missing in action. The mound contains soil from all counties in Wisconsin as well as hundreds of other locations throughout the country. With the expansions it has received throughout the years, Hamilton said that The Highground is now the second largest Veterans park in the United States, behind the memorial parks in Washington, D.C. The scale certainly impresses, but The Highground goes beyond memorials in providing programs and support for Veterans in the area. These efforts come in the form of education, such as with their Vets & Guitars program. They also come in the form of various retreats and other programs that help Veterans deal with what has been labeled as 'unseen wounds,' including post-traumatic stress disorder. Hamilton noted that Veterans also deal with a disproportionately high rate of homelessness as she described efforts by The Highground to assist those who have found themselves unhoused. 'We work with a company out of [The Twin Cities] and we also work with some local communities like the Wisconsin Veterans' Home in Chippewa Falls,' explained Hamilton, 'And we do what we call a winter clothing drive that actually goes through March or April. We take those donations wherever we hear that there's a need for that.' Other assistance comes in the form of its Community and Military Outreach, or CAMO program that offers a variety of workshops to the community and specifically to Veterans. 'We kicked it off this year …[CAMO] had a financial workshop where people could come and get financial advice; we did a mental health expo too. We have a couple of other things that are planned for this year,' she said. A significant amount of what is provided, however, requires financial support; this has led to numerous fundraising initiatives in the form of rides throughout the year. These include the Memorial Day Honor Ride that took place last Monday, the fifteenth year the event has taken place. The event started in 2010 as The Highground Fun Run with bikers taking a trip from Hudson to The Highground, and has from that point. The event now makes thousands of dollars to assist The Highground with its programming, with hundreds of riders participating. There are now several independently-organized routes led by experienced ride leaders, with each path taking riders on scenic routes throughout the area. Riders at the end take a ride throughout Neillsville together, in honor of those who fought for their country but never made it home. It is one of many rides to help raise funds for The Highground that happen throughout the year, with the rides going back decades in some cases. 'We also have The Heroes' Ride [in August], which is our bicycle tour; that is actually the longest and largest fundraiser at The Highground. It was started by a bunch of wonderful volunteers and it's in its 41st year; it's a multi-route ride like the Honor Ride,' said Hamilton. 'Then we have the Ride to Remember, which is specifically honoring the MIAs and the KIAs (missing in action/killed in action); that one is in its 25th year.' Hamilton said that she couldn't help but find the emotional significance of the rides powerful. As the photographer for many of the events, she has seen the solidarity of the Veteran community as they come together for a common cause. 'To be involved in those, it's inspiring and a little emotional because of the fact that there are so many Veterans out there that are willing to help each other. Most of these rides are led by volunteers, so our route leaders — they start early and they volunteer their time on the side and they do this solely to give back to the Veteran community and The Highground,' she said. 'It's a pretty amazing place and a pretty amazing thing to be involved in.'

Senate GOP maps July 4 "stretch" goal
Senate GOP maps July 4 "stretch" goal

Axios

time30 minutes ago

  • Axios

Senate GOP maps July 4 "stretch" goal

Senate Majority Leader John Thune on Monday sketched an ambitious timetable for passing a compromise budget bill, telling members of the Finance Committee they need to move quickly to meet a July 4 deadline for President Trump's signature. Why it matters: Pens need to be put down soon. Thune (R-S.D.) is signaling to his conference that debating and drafting will need to end in order to meet their deadline. "The leadership is going to try to hit the president's goal of getting this done by July 4, which means things are going to have to move much faster," Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) told reporters. Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), said the target was for the Finance Committee to get a draft out by the end of the week, describing that as "a stretch goal." Zoom in: There are still deep concerns in the GOP conference about both the ratio of tax and spending cuts, Medicaid spending and which green energy tax cuts to preserve — and for how long. "I didn't hear the leader say no to anybody," Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) said after the meeting. "Part of what we have to do is just come to agreement on, you know, what's core," Tillis said. Zoom out: Senators expect the White House to get more involved and help them resolve their differences in the coming days. Thune met with Trump today. The president also spoke to Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) who claimed Trump"said again, NO MEDICAID BENEFIT CUTS," on X. Johnson, who also said he spoke with Trump, told reporters before the meeting: "I still think that this thing has to be a multi-step process." Between the lines: Senate GOPers have for months been telegraphing some of the policy changes they want to make on taxes. It's long been a goal of Senate Finance Committee Chair Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) to make three provisions of Trump's 2017 tax bill — R&D deduction, bonus depreciation and interest expensing — permanent. They expire after five years in the House version. And there's a desire to lower the $40,000 SALT deduction that blue-state House Republicans fought so hard to include in their version. The bottom line: The Joint Committee on Taxation put its latest estimate at $3.8 trillion for how much the tax cuts in the House-passed bill will cost. That's roughly $20 billion less than their earlier forecast.

Common sense but true: Don't let people who hate America move here
Common sense but true: Don't let people who hate America move here

New York Post

time30 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Common sense but true: Don't let people who hate America move here

I pledge allegiance, to the flag . . . I heard those strange words for the first time at Riverside Elementary School in 1976, as a First Grader who had just moved to the United States with my family. I learned quickly how to say the words, but it took me much longer to learn what they mean. Like Jefferson, Franklin, and Washington, I was born English but chose to become an American. I took US history in middle and high school, got a degree in history, and later taught American history to 8th and 11th graders. But though I knew the names and dates, nothing taught me to love my country like spending half my life outside of it, including 23 years as a US diplomat in Africa, Asia, and Europe. The singularity of American freedom and opportunity is best proven through comparison. Like many other Americans who came here legally and became citizens, nothing rankles me more than seeing disrespect, ingratitude, and even homicidal violence from some who have been granted the opportunity to come here — or allowed to remain despite coming illegally. You'd figure the least they could do would be to obey our rules and respect our culture and values. Watching Columbia University and other supposed elite institutions become hot-beds of radical protest and support for antisemitism and terrorist violence has been painful. It's bad enough when the ill-informed youth are home-grown, but when foreign students here on visas are leading the charge, it's too much to take. So, we shouldn't – and we don't have to. Secretary of State Marco Rubio's recent announcement that he will interpret our visa laws to keep out those who would steal our secrets, undermine our democracy, or obstruct our foreign policy abroad, is cheering news. Law enforcement officials at the scene of the terror attack in Boulder. AP Photo/David Zalubowski He's suggesting nothing new – our immigration law already contains many ineligibilities both statutory and discretionary, which he can wield. All across the developed West, the same crisis is playing out: who gets to decide who comes in, and who stays? Does our citizenship have any value? Do we ask nothing in exchange? The global Left does not believe in borders. They think anyone, anywhere should be allowed to live where they want. When they get there, the Left believes they should get all the rights of citizens – health care, education, welfare, and even the vote. For them, under no circumstances should a foreigner – invited or not, criminal or not – ever be evicted. This is a recipe for national suicide, and it's a choice we should reject. On Sunday, an Egyptian illegal immigrant attempted to kill several American Jews in Boulder, Colorado by burning them alive. It appears the man entered the US with a tourist visa in 2022, which would have allowed him to come for six months tops. He overstayed, like maybe half a million other foreigners do every year and then claimed asylum so he wouldn't be kicked out. He was given a work permit while he waited years for his immigration case to work through the system. This kind of 'defensive' asylum claim is the easiest ploy for someone, even with no credible case, to remain here. Millions of aliens are waiting in processing backlogs, most of them with cases that don't qualify. Millions more entered illegally over land and were released by DHS when Joe Biden was president, with the administration encouraging them to all claim asylum. Soliman is in the country illegally. AP As Lora Ries and I argued in a recent Heritage report, it's time we reformed our asylum and refugee process so that it prioritizes American interests, brings in a finite number of people that we can accommodate and assimilate, and ends the farce of mass economic migration based on fraud. At the same time, the State Department is right to use the wide discretion they already have under immigration law to more carefully screen those coming in on visas, for whatever purpose. Anyone likely to be coming to foment political unrest should be denied — particularly students, who will stay for years. If visitors or students become undesirable after they get here, they should be sent home. Actively working against American basic values or foreign policy should be a negative factor in applications for legal permanent residence. The process should be real, not a rubber stamp. The bar for citizenship should be the highest of all — requiring not just a basic knowledge of civics, English, and history, but a proven love of this country, or at the very least no evinced hatred for it. We have enough domestic strife without importing the squabbles of the Middle East and the rest of the world. And though terrorism is the worst case of allowing in, or letting remain, people who harbor ill will towards our country or its people, every week brings examples of Americans robbed, raped, killed by drunk drivers, and even murdered by people who would not have been here if we had properly guarded our borders and enforced our laws. Just over a year ago, our Heritage Foundation Center for Border Security and Immigration started this visual map showing just a few examples of these preventable crimes. What started as a few spots has turned into a solid mass in some areas – like Massachusetts, whose governor seems to care more about the rights of illegal aliens than her own voters. No foreign national has a right to a US visa. Once they arrive, each visitor must do what he said he was coming here to do, and obey our laws. Some will learn to value this country enough to want to become Americans. Many of these will find a way, and they are welcome. But to preserve this unique society so many still want to join, we need to start according our country the singular value it deserves. Simon Hankinson is a senior research fellow in The Heritage Foundation's Border Security and Immigration Center.

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