While listen to Their to last album, I decided to draw this as a gift for Robert clivilles and David Cole to thank them for all the great music they gave us.
Republican Rep. David Cole of Huntsville was arrested on charges of voting in an unauthorized location, according to Madison County Jail records. The details of the charge were not immediately available in court records, but the arrest comes after accusations that Cole did not live in the district in which he was elected.
Cole, a doctor and Army veteran, was elected to the House of Representatives last year.
Voter fraud is a Class C felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison. The Alabama attorney general’s office is prosecuting the case against Cole, a spokeswoman confirmed.
Rick Parashar was a lot of things to many musicians as we can glean from our illustrious discussions on the players he worked with, but I would suggest he molded the 90's. To be honest, him being connected with the period and those that took the wrong lessons from them should've meant he probably worked with a lot of musicians in the vein of Melissa Etheridge, whose biggest career break occurred in the period Parashar made his name. Sadly, he didn't work with any of them that much, he only helmed Melissa Etheridge's Lucky, which is not a bad album – some parts there are quite good –, yet you keep thinking how him producing her work in the 90's would've sounded like. Then again, were Mrs. Etheridge and her peers really close to the alternative rock of the time.
I’m a doctor. I’m a time lord. I’m from the planet Gallifrey on the constellation of Kasterborous. I’m weird. I’m a weirdo. I don’t fit in and I don’t wanna fit in. Have you ever seen me without this stupid phone box? That’s weird.
the implications of Alito’s reasoning are astounding, and not limited to abortion. He maintains that the Court should protect rights not expressly specified in the Constitution only if they are “rooted in our Nation’s history and tradition.” But virtually all the constitutional rights we enjoy today are more expansive than those recognized by “history and tradition.” Indeed, the framers used such open-ended terms like “liberty,” “due process,” and “equal protection” to permit and even invite such evolution.
If Alito’s mandate to pare back rights to those enjoyed in 1789, when the Bill of Rights was adopted, or even to the late 1800s, when the Civil War Amendments were added, were carried out, many of the rights we take for granted would be in jeopardy. At the framing, no one thought the First Amendment protected subversive speech or “seditious libel,” that the Fifth Amendment guaranteed Miranda warnings, or that the Sixth Amendment gave indigent defendants a lawyer at state expense. The Equal Protection Clause did not prohibit sex discrimination or racial segregation when it was ratified in 1868. Nor did the “liberty” protected by the Due Process Clause include the rights to use contraception, or to choose one’s sexual partner or spouse regardless of gender or race.
Alito says abortion is different because it “destroys … ‘potential life.’” But that distinction has no logical connection to Alito’s reasoning. The rule he announces is that rights not specifically mentioned in the Constitution will be recognized only if they are rooted in history and tradition, not that rights that obstruct potential life are so limited.
David Cole, ‘A Heedless Majority’ (7 May 2022) The New York Review of Books