Contracts reported

180 Round Hill Road, $6.4 million asked. Long ago — 2005 —-the then owners of this property listed it for $5.250 million, and we agents came, shrugged, and moved on. The house was eventually sold via foreclosure to these owners in 2020 for $2 million. It’s been completely redone, and expanded from 3,268 sq. ft. to 5,920, and this time, the price seems reasonable.

9 Dorchester Lane, Riverside, $5.995 million.

(Okay, that’s a picture of the house that was on the land when it sold in June last year for $1.550. Its replacement is shown below.)

Insane, or simply retarded? (UPDATED)

Hello? Can you hear me now? Hello?

Gavin Newsom proposes 'insane' move against Elon Musk as he attempts to defy Trump with electric car rebates that excludes Tesla

Gavin Newsom is plotting to defy Donald Trump while stiffing key MAGA ally Elon Musk, as California plans an electric vehicle rebate program that intentionally leaves out Tesla.

The California governor is planning to introduce a state tax rebate on purchasing electric cars if the Trump administration eliminates the federal tax cut. 

Newsom even bragged that his policies have made Tesla and Musk 'so damn successful.'

The new rebates could exclude Tesla and other automakers with a large market share in an effort to promote more competition, the governor's office said. But that is subject to negotiation with the state Legislature. 

Tesla holds 55% of California's EV market share, down from 64% a year ago. Hyundai and BMW are the next two biggest EV sellers in the state, at just 6.4% and 5.5%, respectively. 

Musk, whose company is the only one that actually manufactures EVs in the Golden State, clearly felt singled out and slammed Newsom's proposal.

'Even though Tesla is the only company who manufactures their EVs in California! This is insane,' he wrote on X. 

A Musk fan posted a video to the social media site showing Newsom actually gloating about being responsible for Musk and Tesla's riches. 

'It's one of the reasons guys like Elon Musk and others have become so damn successful,' Newsom said in October. 'It's because we've set price signals, we've created markets, we've created opportunities for investments. We're the number one manufacturer for a reason. We continue to be the envy of the world.'

Noisome knows, or his handlers must have told him, that his threat is toothless beca8use (a) his bankrupt state can’t afford another government handout program; and (b) a thing called the United States Constitution stands in his way. No matter, he’s just shoring up his base, getting ready for his presidential drive in 2028, and needs to achieve no more than that.

Interesting that, for all the media’s shrieking about Trump being a threat to democracy, it’s their California matinee idol who keeps coming up with anti-democratic schemes to deny citizens their constitutional rights and freedoms. Like this assault on the First Amendment, for instance.

UPDATE: CALIFORNIA IS A THIRD-WORLD NATION — CORRUPT, INCOMPETENT, AND UNCONCERNED: They’re STILL Counting Votes, but Four Million Are Still Missing.

While I was out ...

Five more sales were reported

  • 7 Cherry Blossom Road (Greenwich/Banksville border): $6.7 million achieved on a $6.895 listing price. Built in 2023, it took a while to find a buyer.

  • 25 Upper Cross Road, $4.250 million, it asked $5.875 million when it was listed in September 2021. The seller had paid $5.475 million for this 10-acre Conyers Farm building lot just three months before, so this abrupt changing of the mind was costly.

Understand, these public servants are the same people who themselves haven't been able to provide shelter for their citizens

Amish Volunteers Built 100+ 'Tiny Homes' for Hurricane Victims but Guess What Happened Next...

After Hurricane Helene which left untold thousands of western North Carolina (WNC) residents homeless, volunteer Amish carpenters showed up to build temporary shelters, but the heartwarming story has a bitter ending.

There are a couple of stories here that the mainstream media hasn't reported on much. The first is that FEMA, for whatever reason, has not been up to the task after Helen destroyed or damaged approximately 100,000 homes in WNC, impacting more than 200,000 people. People are living in trailers or even tents all these weeks later — and as temperatures drop. 

WNC resident (and X user) Margo reported last month that her area had "56 passenger bus load groups of skilled Amish carpenters coming down from Lancaster PA weekly to help build tiny homes for Cabins for Christ." Margo was doing her bit, looking for help finding room to lodge all of the volunteers. "We are bringing our own supplies and would be 100% self-sufficient," she posted, "Just need a place under [a] roof to sleep and house our volunteers from Monday night through Friday night every week."

And Another Thing: According to another X user, Scott Presler helped make sure all those volunteers voted early in Pennsylvania before they trekked down to North Carolina. Is this a remarkable time for conservatives or what?

That's the kind of spirit that helps make America great. Then there's all the hard work those Amish carpenters accomplished after they arrived.

Teamed up with Cabins 4 Christ, the Amish volunteers have been working five-day shifts before swapping out for the next team of volunteers. Nobody seems to know how many tiny homes have been built. But I used my paid research assistant, ChatGPT, to do some investigating for me. For whatever it's worth, ChatGPT claims that "In disaster relief efforts, such as the recent North Carolina project, Amish carpenters often build small cabins in as little as 5 days."

If a small team can build a home each week, and there are hundreds of volunteers working for almost four weeks, they must have built more than a hundred quality cottages by now. All on their own dime. If you know anything about Amish carpentry, you might safely assume those little cottages are well-built.

So of course …

Old Greenwich sale price reported

24 Meadowbank Road was listed for $2.3 million October 15th, went to highest and best almost immediately, and closed this past Friday for $2.615. Meadowbank floods on a somewhat regular basis, and this particular house’s elevation certificate doesn’t give much hope that it won’t get wet feet, but Meadowbank has always attracted buyers (with Zodiacs?) and, obviously, continues to. And why not? It’s a nice street, in a friendly neighborhood. Its low-lying topography wouldn’t scare me off, either.

Just guessing here, but it wouldn’t surprise me to learn that the winning bid came from a builder.

From the people responsible for conducting the country's foreign affairs and dealing with our allies and enemies alike

Just sayin’ ….

Blinken questioned over reported in-house therapy sessions hosted by State Department after Trump win

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., took aim at Secretary of State Antony Blinken after it was reported that the State Department held therapy sessions for employees who were upset by President-elect Trump’s election victory.

"I am concerned that the Department is catering to federal employees who are personally devastated by the normal functioning of American democracy through the provision of government-funded mental health counseling because Kamala Harris was not elected President of the United States," Issa said in a letter to Blinken last week.

The letter comes after a Free Beacon report earlier this month that detailed two alleged therapy sessions that were held at the State Department after Trump’s victory, with sources telling the outlet that one such instance amounted to an information "cry session."

Here’s the real issue, as I see it:

Issa also raised fears that the sessions could also call into question the willingness of some of the State Department's employees to carry out Trump’s new vision for the agency.

Trump can’t fire them all, unfortunately, so there will be thousands of buried deep staters working covertly and, probably, openly to defeat his policies. Of course, that won’t be any different from any of the other agencies’ workforces, who have been opposing their bosses for literally decades.

‘We are more complicit:’ Biden’s Israel policies spur feds to protest at the White House

A group of federal employees say their knowledge and access force them to speak out against the administration's position in the Israel-Gaza war.

May 15, 2024

Agroup of federal employees congregated outside the White House on Wednesday to protest the Biden administration’s support for Israel, saying they had a unique perspective and responsibility to push the president to change course. 

Organized by Feds United for Peace, which has led previous protests due to what it views as the U.S. government’s complicity in tens of thousands of civilian deaths in Gaza, the protest drew largely from employees working in foreign affairs and international assistance. A few dozen workers participated in the event, though they said they were representing a far larger group who could not, or were afraid to, join themselves. 

One federal employee who works on humanitarian assistance said he was motivated to join the protest because he felt his opinions were not being heard within his agency. 

“Our administration and the political appointees that are running our agencies are essentially ignoring working-level staff, who are technical experts when it comes to issues like famine, humanitarian assistance, conflict remediation,” the employee said. “And there are few outlets for us to express our discontent. So this is what it has come to, where people are literally in the streets now.”

Ann Wright has stayed active with the movement despite resigning as a Foreign Service officer at the State Department in 2003 as a protest against the Iraq war. She has remained an activist since that time and sees it as the duty for federal employees to do the same.  

“I think government employees and their resignation, or when they're challenging, is really, really important because they're the ones that are in the know,” Wright said. “You the public need to think more about what's happening and we as government employees that are in the know are saying, ‘Think, think and act right.’” 

Wright encouraged more employees to follow her path and resign from government service, but to one current employee who works in human rights and national security within the Homeland Security Department, there is more that can be done from the inside. 

“The whole reason I came into this employment is with the purpose of helping American citizens and helping others,” said the employee, a Palestinian-American, adding she does not have reservations about continuing to work inside the administration. “I don't find it difficult and I think it's been really amazing, as a civil servant, to help others.” 

Annelle Sheline spoke at the protest after taking the other path, publicly resigning from her position as a Foreign Service officer at State’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor in March.

Sheline said she tried to accomplish what she could from “the inside,” including drafting or signing multiple cables through the department’s dissent channel, but was ultimately swayed by “conversations with colleagues who would speak with such agony in their voices as they talked about the daily toll of having to show up to work and questioning themselves as to their own complicity in what was happening.” She noted to other participants she has had no remorse about her decision. 

“It is really great when you're on the outside,” she said. “I feel a great sense of relief for having resigned.” 

Most of the employees who gathered on Wednesday declined to give their names and covered their faces with masks, sunglasses and head coverings. Several of the protesters highlighted that trepidation, with one noting it spoke to the “fear around this issue in several federal agencies right now.” 

The Office of Special Counsel, the agency that oversees the federal law spelling out the limited restrictions executive branch employees can face in voicing their personal political views, earlier this year issued new guidance clarifying that federal employees can discuss their opinions of the conflict in the workplace so long as they do not voice support or opposition for any politician or political party.

Feds United for Peace has instructed participants to communicate about their protests only on personal time and not using government resources, including email accounts. OSC’s guidance followed a call from Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., for the agency to investigate any potential Hatch Act violations concerning a letter from an anonymous group of political appointees and career employees in the Biden administration who called for a ceasefire in Gaza.

I was skeptical about this story about Georgetown's Law School, but apparently it's true. Given that school's actions after the election, I don't know why I didn't believe it

See below*

To This:

Georgetown tells pregnant law student to take exam just days postpartum because making an exception “would be inequitable to all the other non-birthing students”

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