Quote from: Jane on July 12, 2020, 01:24:05 PMFrom DR TCB:QuoteI believe the Arizona bar owners will lose their lawsuit.I think/hope so.I'm not so sure they will lose. There was no due process and no evidence presented just an executive order. Forcing someone to close their business is the same as taking their property without due process, you are taking their income and that can't be returned to them. Many will have to close forever and they all still have to pay their overhead. I don't think a lot of these orders are constitutional, but people are going along with them for the most part. I'm glad someone is finally taking the issue to court.
From DR TCB:QuoteI believe the Arizona bar owners will lose their lawsuit.I think/hope so.
I believe the Arizona bar owners will lose their lawsuit.
The antibodies test required a blood sample
Quote from: cillaliz on July 12, 2020, 01:36:37 PMQuote from: Jane on July 12, 2020, 01:24:05 PMFrom DR TCB:QuoteI believe the Arizona bar owners will lose their lawsuit.I think/hope so.I'm not so sure they will lose. There was no due process and no evidence presented just an executive order. Forcing someone to close their business is the same as taking their property without due process, you are taking their income and that can't be returned to them. Many will have to close forever and they all still have to pay their overhead. I don't think a lot of these orders are constitutional, but people are going along with them for the most part. I'm glad someone is finally taking the issue to court. Wouldn’t a health crisis such as the current pandemic be considered sufficient cause?
Covid testing vibes for DR Vixmom!
Quote from: cillaliz on July 12, 2020, 01:36:37 PMQuote from: Jane on July 12, 2020, 01:24:05 PMFrom DR TCB:QuoteI believe the Arizona bar owners will lose their lawsuit.I think/hope so.I'm not so sure they will lose. There was no due process and no evidence presented just an executive order. Forcing someone to close their business is the same as taking their property without due process, you are taking their income and that can't be returned to them. Many will have to close forever and they all still have to pay their overhead. I don't think a lot of these orders are constitutional, but people are going along with them for the most part. I'm glad someone is finally taking the issue to court. If the bars don't follow safety precautions are they liable for someone dying from covid? Actually I think people throwing covid parties knowing they are sick should be liable for any deaths. Of course that is a different issue.
The Duke and Wallis Simpson were more shallow and blind than I had previously thought.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Vibes for a successful Kritzerland show tonight! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Places!
Quote from: bk on July 12, 2020, 01:18:52 AMIn the astonishing and hard to believe category - the house I grew up in and that features in all three Kritzer books, which my father paid just under 10,000 bucks for sometime in the mid-1940s (prior to my birth certainly and most likely prior to my brother's, before 1944 - the house was built in 1938 and maybe they even got it when it was new. The last price it sold for was 36,000 bucks so that had to be in the mid 1970s or thereabouts, maybe even towards the end of that decade, since the neighborhood was terrible in those days. The same people apparently still live there, since there's been no sales listed since. Today, the estimate for the house is 1.3 million dollars. I mean, if the absurdity of that isn't perfectly clear, nothing ever will be. It's listed as a three-bedroom two bathroom house. That means they had to turn what was our den into a bedroom. There are only six rooms in the entire house - a dining room (unless they turned THAT into a bedroom), a tiny kitchen and porch area, a living room, and what they call the three bedrooms - that's IT, all 1600 sq. feet of it - 1.3 MILLION dollars. The world has gone completely insane as have the idiots who would actually pay that, because ANYONE who would pay that would then tear it down and spend ANOTHER two million to construct a monstrosity. How does anyone live in Los Angeles anymore.Our family home in Seattle was built around 1952 for, I believe, somewhere around 20+ thousand. After our parents died, we sold the house in about 1970 for about $40+ thousand.Today, that house is worth about 2 million.
In the astonishing and hard to believe category - the house I grew up in and that features in all three Kritzer books, which my father paid just under 10,000 bucks for sometime in the mid-1940s (prior to my birth certainly and most likely prior to my brother's, before 1944 - the house was built in 1938 and maybe they even got it when it was new. The last price it sold for was 36,000 bucks so that had to be in the mid 1970s or thereabouts, maybe even towards the end of that decade, since the neighborhood was terrible in those days. The same people apparently still live there, since there's been no sales listed since. Today, the estimate for the house is 1.3 million dollars. I mean, if the absurdity of that isn't perfectly clear, nothing ever will be. It's listed as a three-bedroom two bathroom house. That means they had to turn what was our den into a bedroom. There are only six rooms in the entire house - a dining room (unless they turned THAT into a bedroom), a tiny kitchen and porch area, a living room, and what they call the three bedrooms - that's IT, all 1600 sq. feet of it - 1.3 MILLION dollars. The world has gone completely insane as have the idiots who would actually pay that, because ANYONE who would pay that would then tear it down and spend ANOTHER two million to construct a monstrosity. How does anyone live in Los Angeles anymore.
Oh my, DR Jrand69. I fear for the reaction you're going to get when David Lynch gets wind of this development.
Quote from: elmore3003 on July 12, 2020, 04:23:29 AM~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Vibes for a successful Kritzerland show tonight! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~SUPER DITTO!!~~~
DR John is there a particular brand of gluten-free pasta you found tastes as good as regular pasta?Alas, not that I can eat pasta right now.
Spending a little bit of Sunday with Huck Finn and the AMTSJ production of Big River.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YwcvShqLOM8