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oozey mess
Three Goblin Art
sheepfilms
hello vonnie
occasionally subtle
Sade Olutola
YOU ARE THE REASON

Cosmic Funnies
trying on a metaphor

Xuebing Du

tannertan36
styofa doing anything
Cosimo Galluzzi
we're not kids anymore.

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Misplaced Lens Cap
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@blondebrainpowered
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The Faberge egg "The Coronation Egg", 1897, is displayed at an exhibition in the museum Bellerive in Zurich, Switzerland, June 7, 2006.
AP Photo/Keystone, Alessandro Della Bella

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A pair of shoes and embroidered stockings, ca. 1890 by C. Tischer. The shoes are made of dark blue velvet and are embroidered with gilt plate over paper to create abstract floral designs.
Now housed at the FIDM Museum in Los Angeles.
ALL. OF. THIS.
Pillars of Creation
The president told The Wall Street Journal he wants staffing cuts at the office that coordinates intergovernmental intelligence sharing.
Aaron Pellish at Politico:
President Donald Trump has outlined his mandate for incoming acting Director of National Intelligence Bill Pulte: He wants to gut the office. Trump said in a Wall Street Journal interview published Friday he believes the Office of the Director of National Intelligence is too bloated, and has tasked Pulte, who will take over for Tulsi Gabbard, with overseeing staffing cuts. “I’d like to see it smaller. I think there are a lot of people in there that shouldn’t be there,” he told the Journal.
The Journal reported Trump suggested Pulte prioritize firing staff who served during the Biden and Obama administrations. Trump told reporters on Friday he “wouldn’t mind” staffing cuts at ODNI. “I’ve heard that’s way too high for way too long,” he said on Air Force One of the staff levels at the agency. “If he cut, I wouldn’t mind that.” Trump’s vision for ODNI could further alienate Republicans on Capitol Hill, some of whom expressed dismay following the announcement that Trump had tapped a close ally with zero national security experience to lead the government’s intelligence-sharing operation. Trump downplayed Pulte’s lack of national security experience while speaking to reporters at the White House on Thursday. “Bill is a guy that will be able to figure it out very quickly,” he said.
Pulte earned a reputation as a staunch Trump loyalist during his stint as director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency — a role he continues to serve in, in addition to his intelligence community responsibilities — when he recommended that the Department of Justice launch mortgage fraud investigations into some of Trump’s political enemies. The president stressed that Pulte’s appointment will be temporary and that he is considering other candidates to fill the role permanently. He told the Journal that serving on an acting basis “gives you more power” to enact the sweeping changes he hopes to impose. Trump said he expects the person he nominates to permanently succeed Gabbard to continue the staffing cuts he’s asked Pulte to start.
In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Donald Trump told acting DNI head Bill Pulte to make cuts to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. Such a move would weaken national intelligence.

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Acting director David Venturella rescinds Biden-era policy that required agency to report and investigate such deaths
Edward Helmore at The Guardian:
A memo issued by the acting Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) director, David Venturella, has ordered the federal agency to cease reporting the deaths of newly released detainees, in a change that could obscure the full human cost of the Trump administration’s anti-immigration mass detention policies. The move, first reported by the Washington Post, rescinds a 2021 policy implemented by the Biden administration that required ICE to report to Congress and investigate deaths of detainees that occur within 30 days of their release. The goal of the 2021 policy was to ensure that ICE could not avoid accountability for deaths by releasing severely ill people from custody. Detainees with brain damage or suffering from infection, for instance, have died shortly after ICE released them. [...] Deborah Fleischaker, acting chief of staff at the time, said that the policy was “changed to make clear that ICE should not release people simply to avoid deaths in custody”. In the latest memo, Venturella wrote: “ICE is returning to the standard practice of reporting deaths that occur while an individual is in agency custody.”
Cruelty and insanity from ICE: A newly-issued memo by acting director David Venturella orders the agency to stop reporting on the deaths of newly released detainees.
See Also:
LGBTQ Nation: ICE is going to stop reporting when detainees die soon after being released
17-year-old Bianca Passarge of Hamburg dresses up as a cat and dances on wine bottles, June 1958.
Photographer: Carlo Polit
rhubarb . . .
Betty Grable, Lauren Bacall, and Marilyn Monroe on the set of How to Marry a Millionaire, ca. 1953.
Eurythmics - Would I Lie to You, 1985

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Fragile Handle with Care, 2020
Artist: Roman Pankov