Sale south of the Village
/(Bicyle not included; it was stolen immediately after this picture was taken)
27 Tait Road, $2.8 million on a $2.9 million ask. That’s a lot of money, either way.
It's morning in Argentina, while our former president gets lost in the jungle
/Get the government out of the way as Milei did, and this can happen in the USA, too. https://t.co/dO5dbkqM6Q
— Tara Servatius (@TaraServatius) November 17, 2024
Watch: Joe Biden wanders through Amazon rainforest after climate change speech
Joe Biden wandered into the Amazon rainforest after giving a speech warning of the dangers of climate change.
Wearing an open-necked blue shirt, dark slacks and his trademark Aviator sunglasses, the 81-year-old outgoing US president turned away from the podium and ambled into greenery.
RELATED:
In addition to the high taxes and the out-of-control inflation, the burden of regulations under the Biden administration amounts to $15,000 a year per family.
— Insurrection Barbie (@DefiyantlyFree) November 14, 2024
That is a staggering number. pic.twitter.com/hUGozhvM9i
While Daniel Penny is on trial in the same city
/Knife-wielding maniac goes on random NYC stabbing spree, leaving 2 men dead and one woman critical
Two men were killed and a woman was left clinging to life by a knife-wielding maniac who went on an “unprovoked” random stabbing spree in Manhattan Monday morning, Mayor Eric Adams and cops said.
The alleged madman – a homeless man, 51, with eight past arrests – was identified and apprehended by cops thanks to the help of a good Samaritan cab driver, said NYPD Chief of Detectives Joe Kenny.
Police have no other suspect, Adams said during a Monday afternoon briefing.
“Today, we have three innocent New Yorkers, just going about their lives, who were the victim of a terrible, terrible assault,” he said.
“It is a clear, clear example of the criminal justice system, mental health system that continues to fail New Yorkers.”
And this, from the current trial of Daniel Penny: Alvin Bragg’s
Witnesses in subway chokehold trial testify victim was acting erratically
Witnesses in Daniel Penny case praise his actions, but ... - MSN
Daniel Penny's defense team is relying on the testimony of mothers and other female witnesses aboard the New York City subway when he put Jordan Neely in a chokehold in an effort to subdue his ...
Witness in Daniel Penny trial proves no good deed goes unpunished
6 days agoGonzalez (in the tan trousers) jumped in to help Daniel Penny restrain Jordan Neely until police arrived. Juan Vazquez. And it was the fear of losing his freedom, Eric Gonzalez said, that made him ...
Witnesses in subway chokehold trial testify they were scared for their ...
Nov 8, 2024Witnesses testified they were scared for their lives and thanked Daniel Penny for intervening. The former marine is charged with Manslaughter after putting Neely in a chokehold on a crowded train.
nypost.com
May 18, 2023The witness also said Jordan Neely was threatening other subway riders the day of his death, and made riders fear for their lives. AP. Penny seized Neely around the neck following the
And what's a one-acre lot off Cognewaugh worth?
/We’re about to find out. 37 Barton Lane, Cos Cob, priced at $1.275 million, is reported pending after 28 days on the market. The land lies in the R-2 zone, but an acre is still a perfectly good-sized lot, and the maximum FAR allowance is 3,920 sq. ft., so there should be room for a builder to turn a profit here.
Mentioned here last week when it first appeared on the MLS, it's already pending
/169 Old Church Road, $1.950 million, 7 days. On November 8th I wrote, “Sold “as is”, it’s not unfair to say that it’s worth whatever an acre of land of Old Church is worth, and no more.”
We’ll soon discover exactly what a one-acre lot on this street is worth.
Contract on Valleywood
/26 Valleywood Road, asking $1.795 million, but it was on the market for 152 days so the selling price may be lower. 1928 home on a popular (if busy) street, updated. No back yard to speak of, but a very nice garden, as shown in this video from a prior, 2022 listing (when these sellers paid $1.465).
Sale prices reported
/Sandy Lane
18 Sandy Lane, listed at $2.095 million, closed Friday at $2.495. Video here, for now.
8 Mortimer Drive, $1.575 asked, $1.625 given.
There's no joy in Mudville, perhaps, but elsewhere ...
/Yes. This here is the single best video on the internet right now… ⚡️🇺🇸
— Benny Johnson (@bennyjohnson) November 17, 2024
pic.twitter.com/sSJBnRagCH
The NYT fact checks RFK Jr: “Other than the U.S. version containing cyanide and arsenic, and still-wet rat turds, the Canadian and U.S. products are identical”
/Spitting out my coffee after reading this NYT "fact check" of RFK Jr. pic.twitter.com/sqL9jaeUR1
— Brad Cohn (@BradCohn) November 17, 2024
"Mr. Kennedy has singled out Froot Loops as an example of a product with too many artificial ingredients, questioning why the Canadian version has fewer than the U.S. version," the Times' report read. "But he was wrong. The ingredient list is roughly the same, although Canada’s has natural colorings made from blueberries and carrots while the U.S. product contains red dye 40, yellow 5 and blue 1 as well as Butylated hydroxytoluene, or BHT, a lab-made chemical that is used 'for freshness,' according to the ingredient label."
My personal opinion of RFK is that he’s a fruit loop himself, and his campaign against childhood vaccines is nuts, but I am enjoying the consternation and panic the threat of his appointment is causing the professional grifters in the Capital;This, from Politico:
Washington’s lobbyists are stunned Trump chose RFK Jr.
They’re holding their fire and hoping Senate allies will block his confirmation as HHS secretary.
Lobbyists expecting a more conventional pick to lead the government’s $3 trillion health agency than Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the brash contrarian President-elect Donald Trump named on Thursday to take charge, are plotting how to stop the Senate from confirming him.
They’re also currying favor in case they can’t.
Kennedy has proposed tighter regulation of the pesticides farmers use to juice their yields, a reexamination of vaccine safety data, a ban on highly processed foods in schools and a remaking of the agencies making the rules around health and food.
That could pose a major threat to a broad swath of American industry’s bottom line. Lobbyists who hadn’t taken the possibility seriously say their phones are blowing up over Trump’s decision, and industry leaders are trying to quickly leverage any connections to Kennedy to mitigate the risk he could pose. More than a dozen who work for companies in RFK’s crosshairs said they’re telling clients to keep their cool. Their attitude is indicative of the confusion gripping Washington’s lobbying corridor, K Street, since Trump’s election earlier this month.
Companies don’t want to start off on the wrong foot with Kennedy by coming out “in an extremely adversarial posture,” said John Strom, special counsel at the law firm Foley and Lardner who advises health industry leaders on policy issues.
“It’s prudent to take a wait and see approach,” he said, echoing lobbyists working across health and food sectors.
One health industry leader, granted anonymity to speak candidly about the appointment, acknowledged they were caught off guard — they had thought Trump would pick former Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal or former Surgeon General Jerome Adams — and hadn’t had any strategic conversations about opposing Kennedy.
“I knew he’d be part of the administration but thought it would be in a new role outside of the Cabinet,” the industry leader said. “We need to strengthen the CDC, and the public health infrastructure, not dismantle it as RFK has suggested.”
…. Companies would prefer to let their allies in the Senate, buttressed by years of campaign contributions and revolving-door hires, sideline Kennedy before they spend political capital to fight him.
If senators bow to Trump’s wishes instead and confirm Kennedy to lead HHS and its agencies, with their immense power over drugs, health insurance, Medicare and Medicaid spending and food safety, among other things, lobbyists don’t want to be on RFK’s bad side.
Other industry advocates figure they can at least slow Kennedy down enough to outlast him. There’s only so much he could do in four years, they believe.
“What they’re proposing to take on is at least a multi-year process,” Strom said.