Message from @Jayde

Discord ID: 463037192500150273


2018-07-01 17:41:50 UTC  

🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

2018-07-01 17:42:03 UTC  

You Delete What You No Longer Need.
You Save What You Do Need.
Q

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/435869520998170624/463036574561468416/DhCPAKQWAAA0QSq.jpg

2018-07-01 17:42:12 UTC  

AUSTIN (KXAN) — This week on State of Texas: lawmakers discuss "red flag" laws and mental health as part of ongoing school safety hearings, a University of Texas pollster examines how Texans feel about the root cause of school shootings and a new look at the significance of the Wendy Davis abortion filibuster, five years later.

House lawmakers consider "red flag" law

With the Santa Fe shooting still fresh in the minds of Texans, House members held a new round of school safety hearings.

On Monday, members started looking at whether Texas should have a "red flag" law. That law would allow family, law enforcement and school officials to request a protective order from a judge to temporarily take guns away from persons deemed "potentially dangerous."

The idea has lawmakers trying to strike a balance between preventing mass shootings and respecting the right to bear arms. Many gun rights activists oppose the proposal, which they perceive as a violation of their Second Amendment rights.

CJ Grisham, the president of Open Carry Texas, attended the hearing at the Capitol, with a handgun visible in a holster on his hip. He criticized the proposal, saying it could hurt the rights of law-abiding gun owners. "You never get good policy when you base it off of emotion," Grisham said.

Probate Judge Guy Herman, however, feels that temporary interventions could stop further violence. "I don't want to see another Santa Fe happen again," Herman said. "There was info out that if it had been given to the right people, maybe we could have stopped that."

Red flag laws aren't the only safety measures on the table. Mental health has also become a major topic of discussion in the efforts to prevent more school shootings.

A group of high school students spoke Thursday before a joint hearing of the House Public Health and Public Education committees. They told lawmakers that mental health resources at school are scarce and hard to access.

2018-07-01 17:42:48 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/435869520998170624/463036765704290314/image.jpg

2018-07-01 17:43:06 UTC  

As a veteran I still Don't quite get the civilians..I wonder if other veterans ever felt that way

2018-07-01 17:43:10 UTC  

Question, did the NSA delete needed phone/txt messages also??

2018-07-01 17:43:30 UTC  

Muh Concern

2018-07-01 17:44:01 UTC  

Good Morning to all ☕

2018-07-01 17:44:06 UTC  

🖐

2018-07-01 17:44:06 UTC  

You have gained a rank @condor, you just advanced to 4 . Thanks for all you do Patriot!

2018-07-01 17:44:10 UTC  

Probably create some enemies, but I think it's good to question Q.

2018-07-01 17:44:16 UTC  

RIO GRANDE CITY, Texas (AP) - A school district in a small Texas border city is letting the federal government review some of its land that could be used for border wall construction.

The Rio Grande City school board this week approved a request from U.S. Customs and Border Protection to come onto district property for survey and site assessment.

School board president Daniel Garcia told The Monitor newspaper in McAllen that federal officials didn't specify the reason for the assessment. Texas congressman Henry Cuellar says he met last week with U.S. officials who informed him they're moving forward with trying to acquire land.

Rio Grande City is in Starr County, which in April confirmed meeting with government officials about wall construction.

2018-07-01 17:44:25 UTC  

Morning @Dina

2018-07-01 17:44:26 UTC  

@Dina g'day

2018-07-01 17:44:29 UTC  

Regardless, these are humans

2018-07-01 17:44:47 UTC  

Not questioning would be foolish

2018-07-01 17:44:55 UTC  
2018-07-01 17:44:56 UTC  

@Dina good morning

2018-07-01 17:45:09 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/435869520998170624/463037354748411905/DhCNPGtWsAIPDcC.jpg

2018-07-01 17:45:10 UTC  
2018-07-01 17:45:20 UTC  

@Jayde the don’t read Q. It’s annoying

2018-07-01 17:45:31 UTC  

if u want to have mind blown about how various global mound sites and pyrminds etc are mathmatically aligned to each other. dig into this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xw9lTB0hTNU'

2018-07-01 17:45:39 UTC  

@V77 what's annoyting

2018-07-01 17:45:42 UTC  

annoying

2018-07-01 17:46:06 UTC  

the Bill to amend section 249 of title 18 to specify lynching as a hate crime H.R. 6086 was introduced by Rep. Bobby L. Rush [D-IL-1], and was introduced on June 13, 2018. It went to Judiciary Committee on the same day. Cosponsors include 36 Reps. Three of which are named above.

2018-07-01 17:46:18 UTC  

Justice department is non partisan tho.

2018-07-01 17:47:01 UTC  

I follow this movement whole heartedly, but asking questions of our leaders is necessary