Mead Point Contract
/502 Indian Field Road, current price, $5.495 million, reports a contract. Marked down from $5.995, 67 days on market.
Greenwich, Connecticut real estate, politics, and more.
Greenwich, Connecticut real estate, politics, and more
502 Indian Field Road, current price, $5.495 million, reports a contract. Marked down from $5.995, 67 days on market.
no one to see here, move along, move along
Require landlords, not renters, to pay a broker’s fee, and surely those landlords will simply eat the cost rather than pass them on to tenants, right? Right? No one on the City Council ever worked a real job or studied even basic economics, so results like these continue to astonish them.
Keeping as close an eye as anyone on New York City's luxury rental market, Douglas Elliman broker Keyan Sanai is convinced that landlords will be hiking rents by hundreds of dollars a month as a result of a new law on broker fees.
Will that prompt a new stampede to suburban markets like Connecticut? No chance, Sanai says, noting sky-high occupancies in New York City today, five years after the COVID-19 pandemic drained apartment buildings in what turned out to be a short-lived outbound migration.
Under the new Fairness in Apartment Rentals Expenses Act that took effect in New York City on Wednesday, landlords must cover fees that tenants had previously been paying brokers for available rental listings. Landlords that fail to do so can be forced to pay restitution by state regulators, and can be sued for noncompliance.
Sanai, a Manhattan-based broker for Douglas Elliman, says many listings on Zillow's StreetEasy website and others suddenly became more expensive overnight as the new rules took effect — in the midst of the prime lease season that runs through September.
"The data's there — 1,000 listings fell off StreetEasy within 24 hours," Sanai said. "Every single landlord is baking it in, in some capacity. The question is, what percentage are they baking in?"
While renters will save moving costs up front by not having to pay a broker fee, Sanai believes that they will pay more over time as rents reset to higher rates, particularly those who stay more than a few years in the same apartment. Still, he believes the vast majority of New York City renters will just pay more rather than contemplate a move out of the city, noting occupancies have stayed high despite overall rent inflation and other costs of living in the past few years.
Manhattan had the sixth hottest rental market in the country heading into the spring and summer apartment hunting season, according to Rent Cafe analyzing data from Yardi Metrix. The Stamford-Bridgeport corridor was tied with Brooklyn for eighth place on the study.
"There's a couple of things you can bet on with absolute certainty," Sanai said. "You can bet on the fact that New York City will always come back."
Sanini will be proved wrong about the city’s prospects if the voters put a socialist/communist in office, as seems likely; at least, that’s what “the Experts” say, and when have they ever been wrong? Still, stopped clock and all that, and their prediction seems at least plausible, because how much punishment is the middle class willing to endure?
CHARLES BREYER, D.O.B. NOVEMBER 3 1941. HIS PORTRAIT, THOUGH OBVIOUSLY GROSSLY OUTDATED, WOULD SEEM TO STILL CAPTURE THE PERSONALITY OF THIS SMUG OCTOGENARIAN
WASHINGTON — A federal judge on Thursday ordered the Trump administration to “return control” of thousands of National Guard troops that had deployed to Los Angeles to quell anti-ICE riots to the state of California.
Senior San Francisco US District Judge Charles Breyer issued the order after hearing arguments from attorneys for Trump’s Justice Department and California Gov. Gavin Newsom after the Democrat had sued the feds over dispatching roughly 4,000 Guard members to protect officers carrying out immigration enforcement operations.
“At this early stage of the proceedings, the Court must determine whether the President followed the congressionally mandated procedure for his actions. He did not,” Breyer wrote in his order.
“His actions were illegal—both exceeding the scope of his statutory authority and violating the Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. He must therefore return control of the California National Guard to the Governor of the State of California forthwith.”
“That’s the difference between a constitutional government and King George.”
Brett Shumate, the head of the DOJ’s Civil Division, disputed Breyer’s characterization of the president’s order throughout the 70-minute hearing, arguing that the commander-in-chief had “delegated” the federalizing of the Guard through California’s adjutant general, as legally required.
Shumate also claimed that Newsom was merely a “conduit” for that order as it passed through the chain of command from Trump to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to the state Guard.
“There’s no consultation requirement, pre-approval requirement,” he argued. “There’s one commander-in-chief of the armed forces.”
The underlying statute that Trump invoked permits a president to call up the National Guard when threatened by an invasion of a foreign nation, “rebellion or danger of a rebellion” against the government or if law enforcement is unable “to execute the laws of the United States.”
Breyer’s line of questioning focused on how orders for the federalization of National Guard forces “shall be issued through the governors of the States.”
While Breyer took issue with the deployment of the National Guard, he appeared more inclined to let stand Trump’s order sending around 700 US Marines to the Golden State to assist with the federal immigration crackdown.
“I don’t understand how I’m supposed to do anything with the Marines, to tell you the truth,” the judge responded, quibbling with Espiritu over whether their involvement violated the Posse Comitatus Act.
Breyer did not immediately issue a ruling, but said he hoped to put one out “very soon.”
In a brief filed with the California court before the hearing, the Justice Department stated: “Courts did not interfere when President Eisenhower deployed the military to protect school desegregation. Courts did not interfere when President Nixon deployed the military to deliver the mail in the midst of a postal strike. And courts should not interfere here either.”
CONTRA, JUDGE BREYER:
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (WBRC) - In 1965, the federal government made a rare and decisive move. It sent National Guard troops into Alabama — not by invitation, but by federal order.
President Lyndon B. Johnson federalized the Alabama National Guard to protect marchers traveling from Selma to Montgomery. The deployment came after Alabama Governor George Wallace refused to ensure the demonstrators’ safety, despite a federal court order affirming their right to march.
Barry McNeely, historian at the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, said the moment laid bare the limits of state authority when challenged by the federal government.
“When we think of Alabama, outside of the Selma to Montgomery March and Bloody Sunday, probably one of the most iconic things from the civil rights movement was when George Wallace stood in the schoolhouse door at the University of Alabama,” McNeely said. “That was performative. They both knew where the power lay in that situation. Wallace wanted to make a political scene, even though he didn’t have the authority to usurp the federal government.”
Once the court upheld the demonstrators’ right to march, federal troops were mobilized under presidential command. The National Guard, no longer under Wallace’s control, escorted the marchers to the steps of the state capitol.
“It would have been ludicrous to assume they would’ve had safe passage without that intervention,” McNeely said.
The federal action was grounded in the Insurrection Act of 1807, which allows the president to deploy troops if a state obstructs the enforcement of federal law. But it was also a clear exercise of constitutional supremacy.
“These are the moments when federal and state governments have to work together,” McNeely said. “And sometimes they don’t agree. But in any argument between the two, the federal government is going to win out. That’s the Supremacy Clause.”
McNeely said the decision wasn’t just about politics or precedent — it was about public safety.
“There were long days and nights ahead on the road to Montgomery,” he said. “And the President had to consider not just his party or political allies, but how to protect people’s lives.”
This wasn’t the first time a president used federal power to overrule a state. President Dwight D. Eisenhower sent troops to Arkansas to enforce school integration. President John F. Kennedy placed the National Guard on standby during protests in Birmingham.
“Johnson simply followed the pattern of federal power being used when state leaders refused to act,” McNeely said.
Julian Borgerin Jerusalem June 12 2025 14:56 EDT
Israel has threatened to destroy Tehran’s nuclear programme before, ultimately holding back in absence of Washington’s support
Targeted assassinations Tehran pic.twitter.com/0lJLCKSRxg
— Mossad Commentary (@MOSSADil) June 13, 2025
JUST IN — There are now initial reports of explosions at two of Iran’s main nuclear facilities. https://t.co/vYVKbg4FJ8
— Charlie Kirk (@charliekirk11) June 13, 2025
🚨BREAKING: Israel has launched a preemptive strike on Iran. Massive explosions are being reported in Tehran.
— Benny Johnson (@bennyjohnson) June 13, 2025
Israel has declared a state of emergency.
pic.twitter.com/zWlaMZvDQW
BREAKING: Israeli official says the military is preparing for 'days of battle' amid strikes on Iran
— The Spectator Index (@spectatorindex) June 13, 2025
UPDATES Awww,
🚨 Breaking: Ali Shamkhani, Supreme Leader Khamenei's right hand man, was eliminated pic.twitter.com/pvYzWwV498
— Dr. Eli David (@DrEliDavid) June 13, 2025
🚨CONFIRMED: Iran's Top Two Nuclear Scientists Assassinated In Israeli Airstrike
— Shelley G (@ShelleyGldschmt) June 13, 2025
- Mohammad Tehranchi, President, Azad University, theoretical physicist, laser specialist.
- Fereydoon Abbasi, former head, Atomic Energy Organization & MP. pic.twitter.com/O0ls9PyuhS
Context:
BREAKING 🔴
— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 12, 2025
For the first time in two decades, the UN’s nuclear watchdog has officially declared that Iran is violating its nuclear obligations. pic.twitter.com/0izcWmDPug
BREAKING 🇮🇷 : Iran's Parliament Speaker Qalibaf calls IAEA cooperation "counterproductive," vows to boost enrichment with advanced machines, open a new facility, and cut nuclear program oversight.
— Zaid Ahmd (@realzaidzayn) June 12, 2025
An interesting “live action’ reporting on all this by Ed Morrissey over at HotAir, updated as the evening wore on and the news kept coming in.
The Robinson Report
You might not agree with the “ABOLISH ICE” message these protesters brought to a federal courthouse in Portland, Maine, but if you’re reading this newsletter, you likely contributed to its occurrence through your taxes.
That’s because Presente! Maine, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit behind Sunday’s pro-illegal immigration rally, is almost entirely funded by state and federal taxpayers, including through no-bid contracts awarded by Governor Janet Mills (D), according to public documents reviewed by The Robinson Report.
Since the pro-illegal immigration, anti-President Donald Trump group formed in 2022, it has received substantial government funding, including $419,724 in 2022 and $1,424,520 in 2023, according to the most recent publicly available Form 990 tax documents. Those levels of self-reported government funding would amount to basically the entire budget for the organization in those years.
Contract documents from Maine’s Department of Administrative and Financial Services (DAFS) provide further details about the flow of taxpayer money into the left-wing activist organization.
The contracts show that, beginning months before Gov. Janet Mills 2022 re-election, the Mills Administration pumped hundreds of thousands of dollars from federal COVID-19 allocations into the young organization.
Those contracts were awarded through a no-bid, non-competitive process based on the theory that untrained nonprofit employees would somehow become valuable public health assets. In practice, the contracts paid community organizers to enroll Maine residents in MaineCare and other welfare programs.
One of the largest sources of taxpayer funding for Presente! Maine was the Community Health Outreach Worker (CHOW) program, the same initiative through which the Mills Administration funded Gateway Community Services, a nonprofit accused by a former employee of fraudulently billing Medicaid for at least five years.
Coincidentally, Presente! Maine received all its no-bid contracts from the Mills Administration at the same address as Gateway Community Services: 501 Forest Ave in Portland.
A sample of the no-bid contracts the Mills Administration gave to Presente Maine
Like Presente Maine, Gateway Community Services received significant taxpayer funding beginning in early 2022 to help predominantly migrant communities sign up for various welfare programs.
Under the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (NVRA)—commonly known as the “Motor Voter Act”—as well as Maine Title 21‑A, § 181, government welfare offices are required to offer welfare enrollees assistance with registering to vote when they sign up for benefits.
In other words, the Mills Administration awarded taxpayer funds to both organizations under the same "public health" program, located at the same address in Portland. The contracted work described would effectively increase voter registration among welfare recipients in Maine’s cities.
This is the peaceful left. pic.twitter.com/lg3RaU8Twr
— Johnny Midnight ⚡️ (@its_The_Dr) June 10, 2025
375 Round Hill Road, $6.5 million (April contract). It started at $7.250 million in April 2024, and I’m surprised it took so long to find a buyer; gorgeous home.
And you’re a big doo-doo head, too!
Fight back on their level. I was once in one of those horrible commie “struggle sessions” when a mouth-breathing participant wrathfully accused me of “using big words”. “So”, I responded, “you’re saying I’m a sesquipedalian?”
He didn’t get it, but I thought it was pretty funny.
Anyway, back to the Capitol:
Civility has left the building
The outburst from Rep. Salud Carbajal was immediately followed by a call for decorum as lawmakers from the House Armed Services Committee were questioning Hegseth about the Department of Defense's Fiscal Year 2026 budget request.
Tensions started escalating on Capitol Hill as Carbajal asked Hegseth a series of yes or no questions, beginning with the deployment of the National Guard and U.S. Marines in Los Angeles to quell the unrest generated by anti-ICE protests.
"Let's call it for what it is. It's political theater. Hegseth, are the Marines in Los Angeles ordered to protect property by any means necessary?" Carbajal asked him.
"Sir, I would say the ICE officers and police officers being attacked is not political theater," he responded, before Carbajal cut him off and said "just yes or no?"
"The National Guard and Marines have the full authority to protect federal ICE agents," Hegseth continued.
"Yes or no? Can you just say yes or no? This isn't Fox anymore. Just yes or no," Carbajal said.
At one point, Carbajal told Hegseth that "Kindergartners can give me a yes or no" and asked him, "Do you think political allegiance to Trump is a requirement for serving our nation, either in uniform or a civilian in the department?"
"Congressman, you know what a silly question that is," Hegseth responded.
"You know what? I'm not going to waste my time anymore. You're not worthy of my attention or my questions. You're an embarrassment to this country. You're unfit to lead. And there's been bipartisan members of Congress that have called for your resignation. You should just get the hell out and let somebody competently lead this department," Carbajal concluded.
UPDATE: None of this is improving the image of Democrat politicians. Really, a United States Senator?
BREAKING: California Democratic Senator @AlexPadilla4CA just crashed DHS Secretary Noem’s press conference in LA and was forcibly removed. pic.twitter.com/Q2sUWiImAM
— Bill Melugin (@BillMelugin_) June 12, 2025
Governor Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass condemned Padilla’s removal despite his childish outburst:
“This is outrageous, dictatorial, and shameful,” Newsom said on social media. “Trump and his shock troops are out of control. This must end now.”
6 Verona Drive, Riverside, priced at $1.9 million and surely going for more.
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