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Readers sound off on Mamdani and Medicare, troops in L.A. and poor paper delivery

Readers sound off on Mamdani and Medicare, troops in L.A. and poor paper delivery

Yahooa day ago

Flushing: Re 'Why I am the best candidate for mayor' (op-ed, June 8): Zohran Mamdani is a disingenuous, phoney-baloney socialist. He does not support the New York City Organization of Public Service Retirees' four-year battle to keep our earned public Medicare along with its Medigap Part B supplement, GHI Senior Care. Mamdani would prefer to have Henry Garrido, president of DC 37, endorse him. Garrido, along with Mayor Adams, is hell-bent on throwing NYC retirees into the fires of Medicare Advantage.
Mamdani forsook his chance to appear at the NYCORGPSR Mayor's Forum on April 17 at the CUNY Graduate Center to not displease Garrido. Apparently, his socialist platform ends when it comes to currying favor with a mean-spirited and despotic union president. NYCORGPSR has not endorsed Mamdani because he shows no palpable evidence or interest in supporting Medicare — not just for NYC retirees but for all who are Medicare-eligible. We retirees are fighting the good fight for all older Americans and the disabled. We are fighting against Project 2025, which will force all into Medicare Advantage by an AI-assisted default option.
Mamdani is no friend to seniors, the disabled, 9/11 first responders or the caregivers who need and who have worked for the benefits of traditional Medicare, as mandated by Lyndon Johnson in 1965. I would suggest that Mamdani school himself in protecting and advancing the agenda of health care for all New Yorkers instead of bowing down to the likes of Garrido, who has betrayed not only NYC retirees, but NYC employees as well, with a new health plan contract that will diminish their health benefits by 10%. Lisa Flanzraich
Flushing: I'm not a fan of Scott Stringer, but I just want to thank him for having the guts to call President Trump a schmuck on TV, something many of us would love to say to his face. Every time I hear it, it makes my day. Keep it up, Scott. H. Manuel DaSilva
White Rock, British Columbia: Apparently, without any tariff relief in return from the Trump administration, Alberta's government has lifted its ban on U.S. liquor imports. Maybe Alberta can also import Trump's new personal brand of his very own bottled used bathwater to sell to his Canadian fans? Trump can also claim that his fine product has been aged for 100 years. Indeed, it competes with some of the finest wines for sale out there! Sure, his supporters and worshipers everywhere know the number is simply not possible, but who's going to dare question His Holiness? Frank Sterle Jr.
Plainview, L.I.: Journalism the racehorse may now have finished second to Sovereignty in both the Kentucky Derby and the Belmont Stakes, but journalism itself may finish 'out of the money' (about $500 million) if Trump's executive order to cease direct funding to NPR and PBS to stop their news coverage is enforced because our Congress does not oppose it constitutionally. Richard Siegelman
Brooklyn: I must say, I'm appalled that Trump so hastily sent National Guard troops to Los Angeles. After the Jan. 6 incident, I didn't realize he knew how. I can only surmise that Trump was in need of a bigger diversion to keep our minds focused on something other than the fact that he gave Elon Musk permission to gather all the security information on anyone in the United States. Did he not know that included him? I'm wondering if Musk kept copies of all this information. The saga continues. Mary Whitaker
Delray Beach, Fla.: Trump sends in the National Guard to L.A. to help quell what he claims are attacks by protesters against the police, ICE agents and federal buildings and other property. Yet, he had no problem when the Proud Boys and his other supporters were beating up and spraying with bear spray the Capitol Police officers on Jan. 6 and causing destruction to the U.S. Capitol Building. He's OK with that. He's such a hypocrite. Barry Rudd
Staten Island: If Trump actually cared about violence against law enforcement, he wouldn't have pardoned every single one of the dirtbags who attacked the officers who defended our Capitol on Jan. 6. Violence against police is permitted so long as you're doing it for him. Michael Rosenkrantz
Ormond Beach, Fla.: The progressive left has moved farther away from the values and beliefs of most Americans than ever with its position on supporting biological men in women's sports, bathrooms and locker rooms, its stance on open borders and interfering with the attempts by ICE to make our country safe, its support of DEI policies and identity politics, and its resistance to our attempts to make government more efficient and less corrupt. The left has taken this assault against America to a higher level with its attempts to normalize the rioting, destruction of property and assaulting police we saw in the George Floyd protests and those we're now watching in Los Angeles. Politicians who encourage this for their own selfish interests and anarchists who feed the flames of and participate in these destructive acts don't seem to have any clue that Americans reject lawlessness. We always have and always will. Charles Michael Sitero
Bronx: Protesting because of the deportations are one thing, but assaulting police, burning cars and looting is not protesting. It is criminal behavior. Sympathy has gone out the window because of that. What does waving another country's flag gonna do? If any of those people really respect the country that has given them a chance of living better than what they ran from, that is a nasty way of showing it. Burning the American flag is another form of disrespect that is showing the world that you are unhappy with America and need to go back to the country of the flag you wave. Arlana Solomon Girven Walker
Somers, N.Y.: Voicer Marc H. Lavietes is way off-base comparing Yankee Stadium to Citi Field. I am a baseball traditionalist too. If you don't like the 'digital noise' at Citi Field, don't go. The Mets engage with their fans throughout the game as well. Marc, you are sounding like an old, 'get off my grass' baseball fan. I've been to both ballparks and I can certainly converse when they play the music. And the best is Francisco Lindor's walk-up song, 'My Girl,' getting the fans to complete the verse. So good. And you don't like them pandering to young children? We want them to become baseball fans! And lastly, the Mets do put a very, very competitive team on the field. They actually have the best record in the National League and a better record than the Yankees. My advice: Take a seat! Michael Gold
Hauppauge, L.I.: As a retired Catholic physician, I have spent more than 40 years dedicated to keeping my patients healthy and alive. I am incredulous that the assisted suicide bill has gone as far as it has through the legislative process in this state. Those who vote to approve this bill, and the physicians who participate, will need more than just our prayers to be forgiven for this heinous act. Enrico Mango
Somers, N.Y.: Is it the tip amount that our Daily News carrier has decided to use to measure the distance from our front door to leave the paper? Two more inches and it would be in the street. Previously, it was always thrown very close to our front door since I'm a disabled Korean War veteran of 94. I simply can not go out that far each day to retrieve the paper. I give $50 at Christmas and recently, $20 on my renewal. Please let me know if the tip is inadequate and I'll try to be more generous. If the tip is adequate and the paper continues to be street-located, regretfully, I will have to cancel my subscription. R. LaGravinese
Brooklyn: To Voicer Morris D. Fried: You're confusing Jewish religious law with the laws of the Israeli government. Robert Braunstein

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Trump revokes California's nation-leading electric vehicle mandate
Trump revokes California's nation-leading electric vehicle mandate

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time26 minutes ago

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Trump revokes California's nation-leading electric vehicle mandate

President Donald Trump moved Thursday to eliminate California's nation-leading vehicle emissions standards, upending strict rules that had become a template for states across the nation to realize their greenhouse gas ambitions. Trump signed three Congressional Review Act resolutions rolling back a trio of California's rules at a White House signing ceremony, delivering on his Day 1 executive order to quickly roll back electric vehicle mandates around the country. 'We officially rescue the US auto industry from destruction by terminating California's electric vehicle mandate, once and for all,' Trump said at a Oval Office signing alongside House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.), Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, Energy Secretary Chris Wright and EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin. The president, in a wide-ranging speech before the signing, used the moment to hit on a range of issues, including inflation, his disdain for windmills and his recent fallout with Tesla CEO Elon Musk. 'Now we know why Elon doesn't like me so much,' Trump quipped, before saying that Musk never asked him to save EV rules and that their break was over other 'smaller things.' While the Trump administration has also gone on the offensive against federal vehicle standards, California's regulations aimed at phasing out gas-powered passenger vehicles and heavy-duty diesel trucks — which are followed by a dozen other states — have drawn the stiffest opposition from the auto and fossil fuel industries. 'Worse than unachievable, these EV mandates were going to be harmful,' said John Bozzella, president and CEO of the Alliance for Automotive Innovation. 'Harmful to auto affordability, to consumer choice, to industry competitiveness and to economic activity.' The move takes place against the backdrop of worsening relations between Trump and Gov, Gavin Newsom, with the president ordering the military to quell unrest in Los Angeles over immigration raids. It also comes as Tesla CEO and former White House adviser Elon Musk clashed with Trump last week over electric vehicle policies. Trump's signature revokes the Golden State's unique permission to exceed federal vehicle pollution standards, which it's used for decades to set nation-leading rules. A dozen other Democrat-led states have opted to follow California's rules, representing one-third of the U.S. auto market. California's regulations aim to require automakers to sell increasing percentages of zero-emission vehicles, culminating in a 2035 target of all new-car sales being electric or otherwise carbon-free. Trump had targeted California's rules in his first term and on the campaign trail for his second term. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin asked Congress to revoke them using the Congressional Review Act, which allows Congress to overturn rules passed in the waning days of the previous administration. The request triggered a debate among Republicans about whether to stretch congressional norms by using the CRA to roll back California's rules, which Senate Parliamentarian Elizabeth MacDonough and the nonpartisan Government Accountability Office have said aren't subject to the law. In addition to the rules for passenger vehicles, Thursday's signings roll back California's authority to enforce zero-emission sales targets for commercial trucks and higher standards for heavy-duty diesel engines. The fight over whether Congress acted lawfully will now head to the courts. California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Attorney General Rob Bonta said last month they would sue immediately after Trump signs the resolutions. The outcome of that court case will have widespread implications, as Democratic leaders seek to wean drivers and industry off fossil fuels and hit lofty greenhouse gas emissions reduction goals. But the question is especially acute for California, which has struggled for decades to reduce the nation's worst smog in the Los Angeles area and Central Valley and comply with federal air quality standards under the Clean Air Act. Failure to reach those standards could result in sanctions and withholding of federal highway funds, which both Republican and Democratic administrations have floated in the past. Trump's EPA threatened sanctions against the state in 2019, just days after the agency revoked an earlier version of its electric vehicle rules. 'It is hard to imagine that they will not threaten sanctions,' said Ann Carlson, who was head of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration under former President Joe Biden. 'The president clearly has it out for California, and Los Angeles is obviously in his sights.' EPA said in a statement when asked about the possibility of sanctions that it will enforce the Clean Air Act. 'EPA will continue to implement the Clean Air Act as provided in law and will continue to hope that California can get into attainment after decades of nonattainment,' the agency said. EPA could develop its own plan for California to meet federal standards, though air quality experts say that's unlikely because the agency would have to take unpopular steps like restricting driving. California Air Resources Board spokesperson Lindsay Buckley said in a statement that without the waivers, the state will need to find an alternative to reach compliance. CARB chair Liane Randolph told state lawmakers during a hearing last month that she's 'confident California will prevail in litigation,' but that could take years, during which the rules are not enforceable. Randolph suggested that the state could consider approaches like district emissions rules for 'indirect sources' like warehouses that attract commercial trucks, incentives to encourage EV purchases and putting more funding towards public transit.

19 US Military Members Share Thoughts On Donald Trump
19 US Military Members Share Thoughts On Donald Trump

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time27 minutes ago

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19 US Military Members Share Thoughts On Donald Trump

Recently, we asked active and reserve US military members and veterans to share their honest thoughts on Donald Trump and the Trump administration, and they got incredibly candid. Amid Veterans Affairs layoffs, jeopardizing America's relationship with long-standing allies like Canada, and even using the military as a backdrop for Trump's political rallies, here's how veterans and US military members are responding: "Nine-year veteran here. I think Trump is using executive orders to bypass checks and balances among the three branches. Trump's actions make it look like he thinks he is above the law, which is similar to every other dictator in history. It's sad that the judicial and legislative branches don't have more backbone to defend the Constitution against this clown." —Anonymous "I served for over 23 years before retiring. I'm now realizing I may have to pick up arms again because there are too many idiots in the country and in the US military." "I've been Active Duty for 13 years. The way the military has evolved over the years — with all the DEI stuff — has been hard to deal with. I'm glad to see it gone, as I believe that service should be merit-based for promotion. I also like the fact that we project strength now." "I retired from the USAF. I served during the Cold War, when we kept Russia at arm's length because we knew they couldn't be trusted. Two of my sons served; my daughter-in-law is serving in the Air Force, and my son-in-law is in the Army. I have discouraged two grandsons and three strangers from joining the military, and THAT hurts my heart. I never thought I'd do that. A dangerous man is in charge. God help us." —magicalsquid60 "He's the worst president in my lifetime. Him calling veterans 'suckers and losers' says it all!" "I'm a veteran and physician. I just hope that active military members remember that their oath is to the Constitution, not a wannabe dictator. I'm glad I'm at the end of my life, but I feel bad for my son and the younger generations who will suffer for Trump's megalomania. He and his puppets break the Constitution with impunity. And, as a physician, I'm appalled at RFK Jr. being the Secretary of Health." "I believe this country — effectively a plutocracy — is rapidly becoming an oligarchy. Politics aside, I'm mostly dependent on Social Security retirement, VA disability, and subsidized housing, so I'm quite apprehensive about the current administration's attack on all three of those programs. Every day, it seems like we're reverting back to the '50s." "I'm currently serving in the Army Reserve and spent 10 years on active duty. The majority of people I work with are glad Trump won, and so am I. As soldiers, we pray for peace while preparing for war. Finally, someone is in charge who will keep us out of war. Strong men make peace while weak ones start wars." —Anonymous "I have 30 years of active and reserve duty, primarily during the Cold War. We didn't have Trump and the MAGAs when I served, but I imagine that many in service now may agree with their policies. However, many civilians may not realize that military members have it drilled into them that the US military should not get involved in politics on a professional level. I cannot imagine any service member from my generation taking an active part in action against the American public based on orders coming down the Chain of Command. I don't think that aspect of military service has changed. For those afraid that Trump has no guardrails left in his second term, I believe the military can keep him in check if he ever looks to them to support actions against the Constitution, regardless of his justifications. I want to believe that service members won't shrink from standing up to a dictator." "I'm an 80-year-old veteran, and I'm completely appalled by what Trump is committing. I am disgusted, and I feel like our democracy is on the verge of complete collapse." "Never in my life would I have thought I'd ever say the following: Trump, his entire administration, and the entire MAGA cult make me ashamed to be an American! I predict that Trump will declare himself to be the 'Leader of America' for life before the end of his current term. From an Air Force retiree, I fear another civil war is coming." "I voted for President Trump twice and have served a total of 26 years: 16 active and 10 reserve. At 69 years old, I have no regrets serving all that time or voting for him. I'd do it again, actually." —Anonymous "I'm a veteran. I voted for Trump the first time, but I didn't vote for him the last. He's doing exactly what I thought he would do: be a bully. He talks to our allies the way he should be talking to Putin and his thugs. To me, Trump is disgusting and an embarrassment to our great country. Everything he says is a lie. I don't blame our allies for fighting back; Trump is poison to good people, and I'll be glad when he disappears from office." "I'm a 23-year retiree, and I'm embarrassed that I ever served. I feel like I wasted my life in the military. Politicians only care about politicians. I've been shit on by both sides of the aisle, but Republicans have clearly painted veterans to be 'entitled' individuals. We get treated like shit under President Trump." "I'm a Cold War vet, and there is absolutely nothing that the current administration can do to convince me that they are not compromised by Russian agents. Today's military leaders need to make sure that their troops know the difference between an illegal order and a lawful one! I see no reason to trust our current political leaders." —edgynugget757 "As a retiree and veteran, I think Trump is doing a great job, and I hope he keeps it up. For those who say they took an oath to defend the Constitution from foreign and domestic enemies, where were you during the last presidency? Now that was a real clown show. The world was laughing at the United States because of the stumbling, bumbling moron. I don't know any service member who supported Joe Biden or his pathetic Vice President." "I served in the US Army for 33 years under President Reagan, all the way through President Obama. The former Soviet Union has been our enemy since the end of WWII, yet Trump gives them aid and comfort. He pardoned those who partook in an insurrection, and he totally disregards his oath to support the Constitution. I believe he will go down as one of the worst presidents the United States has ever had. I am thankful that I do not currently serve, because I would find it very difficult to obey his orders. I am sad to say that I am extremely disappointed in the American voters for electing a convicted felon, and a person so unworthy to lead this country and represent us on a world stage." "After giving the Air Force four years of my life for my country, I am now ashamed to be an American! Having turned on our most important allies and treating our fellow Americans like numbers by terminating their jobs without can anyone respect a moron like the one we have in charge now? I fear for the future of my grandchildren and can only hope we can last until he is replaced! The sooner, the better!" Lastly: "It appears Trump is consolidating power by forcing qualified people out of their positions and placing MAGA puppets in their stead. As a veteran, I've not seen anything like this in my life. I weep for my country. Trump pardoned January 6 rioters, including those convicted of violent assaults, which undermines the accountability of justice and emboldens extremists to an alarming degree. Our oath was to the Constitution — how do we defend against an unlawful order from this country's leader when he pardons those who have attacked the Capitol? Follow the money. Trump is laying waste to our country while playing golf. I can only pray that our resilience as Americans will get us through the next four years. Stand up!" —purplephone528 If you're an active duty or reserve US military member or a veteran, what are your thoughts on Trump's presidency so far? Let us know in the comments, or you can anonymously voice your thoughts using the form below.

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