(C) Daily Kos This story was originally published by Daily Kos and is unaltered. . . . . . . . . . . TWENTY REASONS This Was The BEST WEEK EVER and Indictment is ONLY ONE OF THEM: Saturday's GNR [1] ['This Content Is Not Subject To Review Daily Kos Staff Prior To Publication.'] Date: 2023-06-10 Justice is freaking sweet. It is about time this happened and I am going to ENJOY every freaking minute of “find out” season. But the indictment is not the only amazing thing that happened this week. It was actually a great week for many reasons. Below are 20 of the reasons this week was full of joy. Let’s start with the big one: 1. JUSTICE!!!! Trump charged in classified documents case, second indictment in months A seven-count indictment has been filed in federal court naming the former president as a criminal defendant. The charges include willful retention of national defense secrets, obstruction of justice and conspiracy, which carry the potential of years in prison if Trump is found guilty. The willful retention charge is a violation of a section of the broad Espionage Act, though spying is not among the charges against the former president. It is the second time he has been criminally charged since March, when he was indicted in state court in New York on 34 counts of falsifying business records related to hush money payments from 2016. Trump, who has denied wrongdoing in both cases, is the only former president ever charged with a crime. and don’t forget Smith is separately investigating efforts by Trump and others to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, as well as the involvement of Trump and his close aides in events surrounding the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol. Trump and many of his advisers are also under investigation by the Fulton County, Ga., district attorney in connection with efforts to block Biden’s election victory. what happens next? Trump has said he has been summoned to self-report to the U.S. District Court in Miami at 3 p.m. Tuesday Trump will be brought before a federal judge and may be asked to enter a plea at a formal arraignment. A judge will set release conditions after hearing from prosecutors and the defense. Could a trial happen before the 2024 election? That is a question that will depend largely on the federal judge assigned the case. Trump’s defense will probably want to delay trial until after the election, and prosecutors might want to push for the case to be resolved well before the winner of the GOP presidential nomination is decided next summer. Trump and his lawyers already face a March trial date in a New York state fraud case, and could face further criminal charges in investigations brought by state prosecutors in Georgia and the special counsel’s office into whether Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election result violated the law. Twice-Indicted Trump Still Has No Clue What the ‘Rule of Law’ Means After a lifetime of surviving close calls and acting with impunity, could it be that Donald Trump is finally about to be held accountable for his actions? Media reports indicate that Trump has been indicted once again—this time in relation to the Mar-a-Lago classified documents investigation. The news is also historic in itself: this time, Trump will be a federal defendant, having been charged by the Justice Department. It seems very clear that Trump took classified documents and then refused to return them. Moreover, early reports are that this will be a “speaking indictment,” which means details of the charges will be included in the indictment and entered in the public domain. The more serious nature of these charges could cause political problems for Trump in a way that the Bragg indictment did not. Donald Trump admits on tape he didn’t declassify ‘secret information’ Former President Donald Trump acknowledged on tape in a 2021 meeting that he had retained “secret” military information that he had not declassified, according to a transcript of the audio recording obtained by CNN. “As president, I could have declassified, but now I can’t,” Trump says, according to the transcript. CNN obtained the transcript of a portion of the meeting where Trump is discussing a classified Pentagon document about attacking Iran. In the audio recording, which CNN previously reported was obtained by prosecutors, Trump says that he did not declassify the document he’s referencing, according to the transcript. the tape is significant because it shows that Trump had an understanding the records he had with him at Mar-a-Lago after he left the White House remained classified. The transcript of the audio recording suggests that Trump is showing the document he’s discussing to those in the room. Several sources have told CNN the recording captures the sound of paper rustling, as if Trump was waving the document around, though is not clear if it was the actual Iran document. “Secret. This is secret information. Look, look at this,” Trump says at one point, according to the transcript. “This was done by the military and given to me.” “Well, with Milley – uh, let me see that, I’ll show you an example. He said that I wanted to attack Iran. Isn’t that amazing? I have a big pile of papers, this thing just came up. Look. This was him,” Trump says, according to the transcript. “They presented me this – this is off the record, but – they presented me this. This was him. This was the Defense Department and him. We looked at some. This was him. This wasn’t done by me, this was him.” Trump continues: “All sorts of stuff – pages long, look. Wait a minute, let’s see here. I just found, isn’t that amazing? This totally wins my case, you know. Except it is like, highly confidential. Secret. This is secret information. Look, look at this.” “Secret” and “confidential” are two levels of classification for sensitive government documents. Trump was recorded saying he knew he had a classified document. Former President Donald J. Trump declared at a meeting in July 2021, six months after leaving the White House, that a document in front of him was “classified” and “highly confidential,” according to a person briefed on the matter. The recording is expected to be a key piece of evidence in the case against him that the special counsel Jack Smith brought this week, with seven counts related to his possession of reams of classified material. Mr. Trump then said the document was “classified,” and a woman in the room replied, “Now we have a problem,” according to the person familiar with the recording. “As president, I could have declassified them, now I can’t,” Mr. Trump was recorded saying, according to the person familiar with its contents. He then reiterated something was “classified” as he and one of the women in the room talked over each other, according to the person familiar with its contents. “Isn’t that interesting? It’s so cool,” Mr. Trump said, adding, “You probably almost didn’t believe me, but now you believe me.” x Prosecutors will play this, and all of Trump's other damaging statements, for the jury. They will convict his with the words coming out of his own mouth. https://t.co/QckSm5tFSf — Joyce Alene (@JoyceWhiteVance) June 9, 2023 How Trump’s Big Mouth Could Be His Undoing in Classified Docs Case Donald Trump hasn’t done himself any favors in loudly and publicly fighting accusations he illegally swiped classified documents from the White House, with the former president’s own words likely to foil his defense, legal experts say. “The short answer is, no—it’s not a good idea,” Daniel P. Meyer, a national security partner at Tully Rinckey PLLC's Washington, D.C. office, told The Daily Beast. 49-page Trump indictment contains 38 separate counts The 49-page indictment unsealed Friday against former president Donald Trump and a key aide contains 38 separate charges, consisting of at least seven distinct types of crimes. The first 31 counts listed in the indictment, and the bulk of the crimes in the indictment, charge Trump with willful retention of national defense information — a violation of the Espionage Act that pertains to whether individuals broke the rules for the handling of classified documents. Nauta moved 64 boxes for Trump after May subpoena, indictment says In the time between when the subpoena was issued and when Trump’s attorney conducted a review of the boxes in the storage room on June 2, 2022, Nauta moved approximately 64 boxes on behalf of his boss from the storage room at Mar-a-Lago to Trump’s residence. Feds say Trump repeatedly tried to obstruct the investigation Once he realized he was being investigated, former president Donald Trump “endeavored to obstruct the FBI and grand jury investigations and conceal his continued retention of classified documents,” the indictment unsealed Friday said. According to the indictment, Trump suggested that his lawyer mislead the FBI about what classified papers he still possessed and directed a loyal aide, Walt Nauta, to move boxes to conceal them from Trump’s own lawyer. x Most problematic for Trump from a legal team perspective is that he has not yet been able to retain defense counsel specializing in national security law/espionage act. Todd Blanche is an excellent criminal lawyer, but not a national security lawyer. — Hugo Lowell (@hugolowell) June 9, 2023 x Trump implying that he fired his two lawyers (Rowley and Trusty). But they've issued a joint statement saying they resigned. They along w/ Parlatore couldn't brook Boris Epshteyn's authority. — Harry Litman (@harrylitman) June 9, 2023 Worried about that judge? Here is some comfort from Joyce Vance Before everyone gets too spun up about reports Judge Cannon has been assigned to the Trump case, a little law. I used to be an appellate chief in the 11th Circuit (where Florida is) and I litigated a few appeals where we asked the court of appeals to order a judge to recuse. Altho a judge's behavior in court generally doesn't form the basis for recusal, the 11th Circuit has ordered "reassignment" where a judge leans so heavily for a defendant they call their objectivity in the eyes of the public into question. This is from US v. Martin This is persuasive authority that Judge Cannon must step aside if the case falls to her as a permanent assignment. Her court & certainly the 11th won't tolerate the damage it would do to their credibility if she failed to voluntarily recuse. It is not clear Cannon is permanently assigned to the case. If she is, it's extremely unlikely it stays with her and as a last resort, DOJ will challenge her participation and win. and this is bad for the whole corrupt party (don’t let anyone tell you otherwise) x “G.O.P. donors are exhausted by constant hysterical appeals to give money to Mr. Trump to stop Democrats from destroying the nation.” @maggieNYT https://t.co/K3QdMlPkyW — Mara Gay (@MaraGay) June 9, 2023 Let yourself celebrate this: We’ve come a long way A year ago, the January 6 committee was preparing to start its hearings. There was little, if any, certainty that the process would succeed, and less that our legal system was up to the task of holding Trump accountable. There were some early signs that DOJ had begun grand jury proceedings, but the Trump-spun narrative of a witch hunt had taken hold, and many people believed that the former president who inspired an insurrection would walk away clean. . We are in a much different position a year later, with the former president now indicted. The Attorney General, who said in a January 2022 speech that he was committed to following the evidence no matter where it led has fulfilled a part of his commitment, even if these first steps involve the surprise detour into Trump’s abuse of his access to classified documents and other sensitive material. . We are an America that is in a much better place than we were a year ago. Yes, it’s still fraught. But the rule of law seems to be gaining strength. . Our republic has shown surprising resiliency in the face of not only a corrupt president but a political party that was willing to shield him. We are not the healthy, vibrant democracy, the shining city on the hill that can speak with authority to other nations about improving democracy at home and abroad, but we are still here. And we are in the moment that will determine whether we continue to grow stronger and what our future looks like. . Nonetheless, this is a moment to take stock and to realize how far we’ve come from the fragility that shook the country in January of 2021. We’re entitled to a small moment of self-congratulation to appreciate everything that we have accomplished, and to double down on the commitment to preserve an American Republic from succumbing to a dangerous cult leader with fascist tendencies. . The American dream has always been aspirational, in the sense that there is always more work to do to extend its promise to include all of us. Women, Black people, immigrants, people who follow different faiths or none at all, people who were formerly incarcerated, and on and on. We, like always, have much important work ahead of us as a country to make sure we have a more perfect union. The good news is, we have fought our way back from a struggle it looked like we might not survive. We have the strength and the grit to restore ourselves. The next few weeks will tell an important story. Tonight, we go to sleep knowing no man is above the law. We still live in a rule of law country where even a former president can be prosecuted for violating the law. . We’re in this together, Joyce What are the other great news stories from this week? Well, please remember that Trump has bad news coming from elsewhere too and that grew this week” 3. The Supreme Court Decision in Allen v Milligan was HUGE I did NOT see this coming and I could not be happier! Surprise! The Supreme Court just handed down a significant victory for voting rights The Supreme Court did something genuinely shocking on Thursday. It handed down a 5-4 decision in Allen v. Milligan that preserves longstanding safeguards against racism in US elections, strikes down a gerrymandered congressional map in Alabama, and all but assures that Democrats will gain at least one congressional seat in the next election from that state. Indeed, Chief Justice John Roberts’s opinion for the Supreme Court repeatedly chastises Alabama’s lawyers for their aggressive efforts to rewrite longstanding law in order to render much of what remains of the Voting Rights Act an empty husk. As Roberts writes in a particularly pointed swipe at those lawyers, “the heart of these cases is not about the law as it exists. It is about Alabama’s attempt to remake our [Voting Rights Act] jurisprudence anew.” Roberts’s opinion was joined in full by all three of the liberal justices, and was joined almost entirely in full by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, What was the decision and why was it so important? The future of the Voting Rights Act (VRA) was on the docket in Allen v. Milligan, a redistricting case out of Alabama. Despite the case’s straightforward nature and direct application of past case law, the VRA appeared to be at risk before the U.S. Supreme Court. But this week, the Supreme Court released a 5-4 opinion in the case, ruling in favor of the pro-voting groups. A landmark federal law, fairer districts for Black Alabamians and voting rights efforts across the country emerged unscathed. Almost exactly 10 years ago, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote a majority opinion gutting Sections 4 and 5 of the landmark VRA. “Our decision in no way affects the permanent, nationwide ban on racial discrimination in voting found in [Section] 2,” he wrote at the time. Despite that, a case directly challenging Section 2 wound up before the U.S. Supreme Court this term. But yesterday, June 8, 2023, Roberts made good on his promise. In a 5-4 opinion, the Supreme Court affirmed a lower court’s decision that Alabama’s congressional map diluted the voting strength of Black voters, thereby blocking the map. Allen v. Milligan centered on whether the state of Alabama violated Section 2 of the VRA when it enacted a congressional map that created one rather than two majority-Black districts. In January 2022, a three-judge panel found that Alabama’s congressional map likely violated Section 2. Remember, the casecentered on whether. In January 2022, a three-judge panelthat Alabama’s congressional map likely violated Section 2. The majority opinion is written by Roberts and joined by Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson and joined in part by Justice Brett Kavanaugh. The Court resoundingly endorsed the Gingles test, a criteria to determine racial vote dilution in redistricting maps, rejected Alabama’s attempt to rewrite the law and explicitly recognized that Section 2 of the VRA applies to redistricting and is constitutional. Get the full opinion breakdown here. What the Supreme Court’s surprise voting rights ruling means for 2024 Democrats’ chances of winning back control of the House of Representatives in 2024 just got a big boost from the most unlikely of places: the conservative-dominated Supreme Court. The decision is a surprise victory for the Voting Rights Act, which was used to bring the challenge to the Supreme Court despite being repeatedly gutted by the high court. It could also provide a roadmap for additional challenges to racially gerrymandered congressional maps across the South, including in Louisiana, which similarly has only one majority-Black congressional district out of six seats, despite Black voters making up a third of the Louisiana electorate, and in South Carolina, where a separate challenge to Republican redistricting efforts will be heard by the Supreme Court. Those redistricting challenges could create additional minority-majority districts that would likely favor Democrats, meaning a raw gain for Democrats in the House of anywhere from two to four new congressional seats, according to some elections analysts. Additional court decisions in places where redistricting is being contested, like Georgia and Texas, could add to that seat gain — and help erase the current Republican margin in the U.S. House. x New by @Redistrict: "The landmark decision in Allen v. Milligan could reverberate across the Deep South, leading to the creation of new Black-majority, strongly Democratic seats in multiple states."https://t.co/UWpkk6pv7o — Cook Political Report (@CookPolitical) June 8, 2023 x For now, we are making five House race rating changes. #AL01: Solid R to Toss Up#AL02: Solid R to Toss Up#LA05: Solid R to Toss Up#LA06: Solid R to Toss Up#NC01: Toss Up to Lean D Our full House Race Ratings chart: https://t.co/TZpFmVY7sH — Cook Political Report (@CookPolitical) June 8, 2023 Last November, the Supreme Court heard a nightmarish case that threatened to destroy a significant portion of the United States’ social safety net. Had the defendants’ arguments in Health and Hospital Corporation v. Talevski prevailed before the justices, federal Medicaid law could have been rendered practically unenforceable — leaving patients with no resource if they were unlawfully denied care or abused by their health providers. But the Court rejected that approach in a 7–2 decision. It’s also Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson’s first majority opinion in a case with this kind of sweeping policy stakes. 5 The Murder Rate Is Suddenly Falling The first five months of 2023 have produced an encouraging overall trend for the first time in years. The United States may be experiencing one of the largest annual percent changes in murder ever recorded, according to my preliminary data. It is still early in the year and the trend could change over the second half of the year, but data from a sufficiently large sample of big cities have typically been a good predictor of the year-end national change in murder, even after only five months. Murder is down about 12 percent year-to-date in more than 90 cities that have released data for 2023, compared with data as of the same date in 2022. Big cities tend to slightly amplify the national trend—a 5 percent decline in murder rates in big cities would likely translate to a smaller decline nationally. But even so, the drop shown in the preliminary data is astonishing. The S&P 500 rallied Thursday to end the day in a bull market, marking a 20% surge since its most recent low, reached on October 12, 2022. That brings to end the bear market that began in January 2022. Buoyed by gains in big technology stocks, the broad-based index closed at 4,293.93 and crossed the threshold that separates a bear market from a bull market — that’s investor-speak for a period of time marked by rising stock prices and optimism on Wall Street. Markets have remained surprisingly resilient over the past nine months, as 2022 losers like tech and media have bounced back from a disastrous year on hope that the worst is over for those industries. President Biden on Wednesday vetoed a Republican-led resolution that would have struck down his controversial plan to forgive more than $400 billion in student loans. 8 The House GOP stalls out Paralysis, limbo, stalemate — any of them describe the state of the House of Representatives this week. On Wednesday, Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) sent the House home until Monday after spending an entire day talking with a group of far-right conservatives who held up all floor action over their dissatisfaction with the debt limit bill signed into law last week, among other grievances. This is a significant challenge to McCarthy’s leadership and his ability to govern and run the House. While it’s not as dire as the motion to vacate — the procedural maneuver by which a single House Republican could trigger a vote to depose McCarthy as speaker — supporters of the rebels say that their tactic of bringing the chamber to a halt by voting against House rules could be just as damaging. x Is this what they mean by Divided Congress — Republicans literally fighting with themselves⁉️#RepublicansInDisarray Republicans staged a rebellion against Speaker McCarthy, forcing him to cancel votes for the rest of the week… ❌ A vote to begin contempt proceedings against… pic.twitter.com/Mmb7T0Qpkv — Christopher Webb (@cwebbonline) June 8, 2023 In the House, a spectacular flameout A week ago, Speaker Kevin McCarthy was king of the world. “Tonight we all made history,” he announced after the bipartisan debt deal sailed through the House. “There’s a whole new day here,” he proclaimed. He then proceeded to do the legislative equivalent of slipping on a banana peel, pulling down the drapes, knocking over a fully laden buffet and face-planting into the wedding cake. Just six days after his triumph, a small band of right-wing zealots who opposed the debt deal used parliamentary tactics to bring proceedings on the House floor to a halt, in the first protest of its kind in more than two decades. They shut down the House for a couple of hours, then for the entire day, then for the next day. After 6 p.m. on Wednesday, House GOP leaders surrendered to the saboteurs with a whip notice: “Members are advised that votes are no longer expected in the House this week. … Thank you all for your patience.” 9 Lauren Boebert Gifted Her Dem Opponent a New Attack When Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) was caught on video missing a critical vote last week to prevent a default on the debt—and then tried to spin her absence as an act of conscience—she didn’t only earn widespread derision and gawking on social media. The archconservative congresswoman also gifted her leading Democratic rival, Adam Frisch, a moment that crystallized his case against her for the 2024 election: that she simply isn’t showing up for the job she was elected to perform. 10 Steve Bannon May Still Go Down for a Pardoned Crime When President Donald Trump pardoned Steve Bannon in the closing hours of his presidency, it seemed like the right-wing media personality—and once chief strategist for Trump—had successfully evaded any repercussions for his involvement in a scheme that sent some of his partners to prison. Double jeopardy laws, of course, prevent someone from being prosecuted twice for the same crime. But there’s a curious reason why Bannon can’t raise the double jeopardy defense before his upcoming state court trial and make the case disappear: New Yorkers saw this coming. “The law changed in New York, specifically because Trump started handing out pardons. New York State took the position that these people need to be answerable to crimes they committed in New York State,” explained Diane Peress, an adjunct lecturer at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. Bannon, who has 356 days to prepare for a New York trial, is accused of quietly enriching himself with donor money from a nativist GoFundMe campaign to build Trump’s Mexico border wall. The case is essentially the exact same one as the federal proceedings two years earlier that, before trial, fell apart when Trump swooped in and saved him. But in New York now, it’s only considered double jeopardy when a person has been fully prosecuted twice. That is, when someone was indicted and pleaded guilty—or, at the very least, had a jury sworn in. But lately, a different Marjorie Taylor Greene has emerged—one who’s found favor with Speaker Kevin McCarthy and scorn from the conservative allies who once adored her. And according to a text message Greene sent to Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) on Friday, Greene may be even more done with certain MAGA influencers than they are with her. Exactly who is the most upset is open for debate. The far-right instigators who spent years cheering Greene on as a martyr of their cause now say she’s lost the plot. They’re fuming about her support for McCarthy’s debt limit deal, which passed last week on a bipartisan basis, and her coziness with McCarthy in general, which was illustrated in January when she supported him for speaker on all 15 ballots. In the past week, former Trump administration official-turned-podcaster Steve Bannon led the charge, calling for Greene to be primaried by a more right-wing candidate who is “REAL MAGA.” 12 Chris Licht Is Out at CNN Mr. Licht was fired after just 13 months. It was also a hammer blow to Mr. Licht, a successful television producer with little experience managing a large organization who had pledged to remake CNN as a fair-minded voice for viewers disenchanted with the partisan scrum of cable news. Even as his troubles mounted — plunging ratings, a Don Lemon scandal and a much-criticized town hall with former President Donald J. Trump — Mr. Licht told associates that he was certain that Mr. Zaslav, whom he considered a mentor, would defend him. These groups are not good news, but the SPLC calling them out for what they are is GREAT news The Southern Poverty Law Center is for the first time labeling Florida-headquartered Moms for Liberty and 11 other right-wing “parents' rights” groups as extremist groups in its annual report, released Tuesday. Moms for Liberty and the other organizations are being designated as “anti-government extremist groups,” based on longstanding criteria, explained SPLC Intelligence Project Director Susan Corke. Corke said the grassroots conservative groups are part of a new front in the battle against inclusivity in schools, though they are drawing from ideas rooted in age-old white supremacy. 14 Mike Pence is already struggling in the presidential race Former Vice President Mike Pence, who took part in a CNN town hall Wednesday night after declaring his 2024 bid, is already finding a far rockier road to the White House than Biden. He’s polling at just 4% in the national polls, while Biden entered the 2020 race as the polling front-runner. Pence looks to be much more on the Quayle path than the Biden one. Pence is about 50 points behind the man he served under (former President Donald Trump, the current front-runner for the GOP nomination), who is averaging 54% nationally. Twitter’s U.S. Ad Sales Plunge 59% as Woes Continue. In internal forecasts, the company projected that ad sales would keep declining, handing a tough challenge to its new chief executive. 16 Millennials Just Keep Voting They are voting at higher rates than younger adults once did, helping the Democratic Party. In the 2018 elections — the midterms of Donald Trump’s presidency — turnout among younger voters surged. Almost twice as many people in their late 20s and early 30s voted that year as had done so in the midterms four years earlier. And they strongly backed Democratic candidates, helping the party retake control of Congress. At the time, it was not clear whether the newfound political engagement of younger adults would last beyond Trump’s presidency. So far, though, it has — and it’s emerging as one of the biggest stories in American politics and a major advantage for the Democratic Party. It’s true that people often become somewhat more conservative as they age (and millennials are following this pattern, as my colleague Nate Cohn explained). But the more significant factor is that generations tend to have distinct ideologies. People are shaped by the political zeitgeist during their adolescence, as research by Yair Ghitza, Andrew Gelman and Jonathan Auerbach has shown. Americans who came of age during the Depression and New Deal, for example, leaned Democratic for their entire lives. Those who grew up during the Reagan era (many of whom are part of Generation X) lean to the right. In recent decades, major news events, including the Iraq war, the financial crisis, Barack Obama’s presidency and the chaos of Trump’s presidency, appear to have created a progressive generation. For four straight national elections dating back to 2014, Democrats have won at least 60 percent of the vote among 18- to 29-year-olds. It’s longest such run of success since at least the 1970s, when Catalist’s data begins. 18 Rectal Cancer Patients Could Be Spared the Effects of Radiation Rectal cancer researchers have pulled off a daunting feat, demonstrating in a large clinical trial that patients do just as well without radiation therapy as with it. The results, revealed Sunday at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology and in a paper in the New England Journal of Medicine, could give more than 10,000 patients every year in the United States the option to forgo a cancer treatment that can have serious side effects. A Texas sheriff’s office has recommended that a San Antonio-area district attorney file criminal charges following an investigation into the transportation in the fall of 49 asylum seekers from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts, allegedly on direction from Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R). 20 Eric Swalwell is on our side x MAGA GOP doesn’t like when I quote their own. pic.twitter.com/ezItdBkC1J — Eric Swalwell (@ericswalwell) June 8, 2023 On The Lighter Side This is the time for hard work. What can you do? I am so lucky and so proud to be in this with all of you 💓💚💛🧡✊🏻✊🏽✊🏾✊🏿✊❤️🧡💛💚 [END] --- [1] Url: https://www.dailykos.com/story/2023/6/10/2174257/-TWENTY-REASONS-This-Was-The-BEST-WEEK-EVER-and-Indictment-is-ONLY-ONE-OF-THEM-Saturday-s-GNR Published and (C) by Daily Kos Content appears here under this condition or license: Site content may be used for any purpose without permission unless otherwise specified. via Magical.Fish Gopher News Feeds: gopher://magical.fish/1/feeds/news/dailykos/