YubNub Social YubNub Social
    Advanced Search
  • Login

  • Night mode
  • © 2026 YubNub Social
    About • Directory • Contact Us • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

    Select Language

  • English
Install our *FREE* WEB APP! (PWA)
Night mode
Community
News Feed (Home) Popular Posts Events Blog Market Forum
Media
Headline News VidWatch Game Zone Top PodCasts
Explore
Explore Jobs Offers
© 2026 YubNub Social
  • English
About • Directory • Contact Us • Privacy Policy • Terms of Use • Android • Apple iOS • Get Our App

Discover posts

Posts

Users

Pages

Group

Blog

Market

Events

Games

Forum

Jobs

RetroGame Roundup
RetroGame Roundup
2 yrs ·Youtube Gaming

YouTube
Commodore Amiga -=Chopper Duel=- v1.1
Like
Comment
Share
Pet Life
Pet Life
2 yrs ·Youtube Pets & Animals

YouTube
Couple On Vacation Finds Dog Paralyzed Under Tangled Vines | The Dodo
Like
Comment
Share
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
2 yrs ·Youtube General Interest

YouTube
Why the Titanic Had a Fake Chimney
Like
Comment
Share
The First - News Feed
The First - News Feed
2 yrs

CHURCH VS. STATE (Full Special)
Favicon 
www.thefirsttv.com

CHURCH VS. STATE (Full Special)

Once upon a time, Judeo-Christian values were instilled across all parts of America’s institutions. Over the years, an erosion of those values has taken place under the guise of church vs state. Now, putting the Ten Commandments in classrooms feels controversial. Should it be? In this special, Mike Slater dives into the meaning of church vs state, as declared by America’s founders, to decide what role Judeo-Christian values should play in modern society. Featuring special guests Michael Knowles, William Wolfe and Latham Watts.
Like
Comment
Share
The First - News Feed
The First - News Feed
2 yrs

IT BEGINS: Mainstream Media Turns on Old Joe
Favicon 
www.thefirsttv.com

IT BEGINS: Mainstream Media Turns on Old Joe

Dana Loesch reacts to the media trying to cover their own butt by doing a complete about-face from defending Biden to asking questions about his fitness for office.
Like
Comment
Share
One America News Network Feed
One America News Network Feed
2 yrs

Kentucky Convicted Felon Kills 4, Injures 3 at Birthday Party Before Taking Own Life
Favicon 
www.oann.com

Kentucky Convicted Felon Kills 4, Injures 3 at Birthday Party Before Taking Own Life

A convicted felon fatally shot himself while escaping the police after killing four people at a birthday party in Kentucky.
Like
Comment
Share
NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
2 yrs ·Youtube News & Oppinion

YouTube
Lidia Curanaj: Democrats are desperate
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Wire Feed
Daily Wire Feed
2 yrs

Fox Host Says Democrats, Biden Allies Refusing To Defend President: ‘Not A Single Potential Guest’
Favicon 
www.dailywire.com

Fox Host Says Democrats, Biden Allies Refusing To Defend President: ‘Not A Single Potential Guest’

No Democratic lawmakers or allies of Joe Biden wanted to defend the president’s decision to stay in the presidential race, according to Fox News host Shannon Bream. Bream announced during her show Fox News Sunday that her team spent “days” reaching out to Democrats who were all “unable or unwilling” to defend Biden’s decision. The Fox host said dozens of lawmakers and Biden campaign allies turned down the opportunity to appear on her show. “Now, before we get to our guests, I want you, the viewers at home, to know something. Our team has spent days reaching out to dozens of lawmakers and Biden advocates and allies,” Bream said. “We’ve had numerous interactions with the Biden/Harris campaign, but not a single potential guest was either able or willing to join us on today’s show to defend the president and his decision to stay on the ticket.” “We will be having a conversation without that voice, which we have been working around the clock to avoid,” she added. SHANNON BREAM: Our team spent days reaching out to dozens of lawmakers, Biden advocates, and allies, but not a single guest was willing or able to come on to defend Joe Biden. pic.twitter.com/qKxBpV0NsL — Trump War Room (@TrumpWarRoom) July 7, 2024 Biden has suffered a widespread exodus of support among elected officials, donors, and others in his own party after a June 27 presidential debate with former president Donald Trump. During the debate, Biden appeared feeble and, at times, confused and incomprehensible in a performance that has raised questions over the president’s mental acuity and the effects of age on the 81-year-old president. A growing number of Democratic lawmakers have called on Biden to exit the presidential race to make room for a new nominee, likely Vice President Kamala Harris. Rep. Lloyd Doggett of Texas was the first to publicly call for Biden to step aside last week. “Recognizing that, unlike Trump, President Biden’s first commitment has always been to our country, not himself, I am hopeful that he will make the painful and difficult decision to withdraw,” Doggett said in a statement. Reps. Raúl Grijalva of Arizona, Seth Moulton of Massachusetts, Mike Quigley of Illinois, and Angie Craig of Minnesota have since joined Doggett against Biden’s reelection bid, according to Axios. The backlash to Biden’s debate performance has been fueled by the president’s struggling poll numbers against Trump in battleground states for the 2024 election. Trump is leading Biden in all seven battlegrounds from 0.6 points in Michigan to 5.8 points in North Carolina, according to Real Clear Politics polling averages.
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Wire Feed
Daily Wire Feed
2 yrs

‘This Was A Fisheries Killer:’ The Fisherman Who Fought Chevron Deference All The Way To The Supreme Court
Favicon 
www.dailywire.com

‘This Was A Fisheries Killer:’ The Fisherman Who Fought Chevron Deference All The Way To The Supreme Court

The following is an edited transcript of an interview with Daily Wire editor-in-chief John Bickley and Jerry Leeman, CEO of the New England Fishermen’s Stewardship Association, on an Extra edition of Morning Wire. In a landmark ruling last week, the Supreme Court overturned Chevron deference, stripping federal agencies of what had become increasingly unilateral power to interpret and enforce policies without checks and balances. The ruling was a result of a lawsuit, Relentless Incorporated vs. Commerce Department, involving government overreach in the fishing industry. We talked with the founder of an influential fishermen’s association, who filed an amicus brief in that case, about what he says is a long pattern of government intrusion that’s destroying whole industries. * * * JOHN: Joining us now is Jerry Leeman, New England Fishermen’s Stewardship Association Founder & CEO, who filed an amicus brief in the case that ended up overturning Chevron deference. Welcome, Jerry. First, tell us about your background. How long have you been in the fishing industry? JERRY: I was raised in Harpswell, Maine by a commercial fishing family – lobstering and ground fishing, seining, urchining, scalloping, shrimping, back when the state of Maine had it. I’ve been in all the fisheries. Since 2000, I have spent 23 years at sea. Fishing 220-240 days a year, multi-species trawling. I’ve been networked in all the major fishing ports here: Portland, Maine, Gloucester, Boston, Mass, New Bedford, Mass. And I’ve covered a lot of the region’s territory. JOHN: In terms of progress and decline, what have you seen in this industry as a whole over the decades you’ve worked in it? JERRY: I’ve been seeing decline steadily since 2000. We don’t even see new participants really getting into the fisheries. We’ve moved the goalposts too far. And now with these restrictions and quotas, now you’re forcing people to buy fish in order to catch fish. And the problem is the price that you pay to catch a fish is less than the market value once you’ve retrieved it. So most times when you go to buy a lease quota, you’re only buying it just for the sake of keeping the vessel active. You’re not actually making any financial gain. If anything, it’s a financial burden. JOHN: Now this brings us to the case in which you filed, an amicus brief: Relentless Incorporated vs. Commerce Department. It’s now the case that overturned Chevron deference. It came in response to a new federal law requiring government observers on fishing vessels. What sparked your involvement in the case?  JERRY: Well, we’ve just been watching what’s been taking place over the years and now that they’re pushing for fishing vessels to pay for observers aboard our vessels, which if you do the breakdown, now they’re going to account for the fisheries to pay more towards observers than we’re actually paying our crews, which does not make for a viable business. JOHN: So this really was a question of whether or not you can actually keep business open if this policy were to be enacted. JERRY: This was a fisheries killer. LISTEN: Catch the full interview with Jerry Leeman on an Extra edition of Morning Wire JOHN: So, what was the thinking from the government here, that this would actually be viable? JERRY: It’s just more overreach and overwatch. I mean, we have less fishermen every year and yet now they want 100% coverage? We haven’t even broken any rules or laws. So why are we having to pay to have somebody watch us around the clock? I mean, our arguments were pretty easy. I mean, look at how many truck drivers are in America. How would we feel if we put an observer in each truck and then made those truck drivers pay to feed those observers, maintain them, babysit, and pay them more than what they’re paying their crews? It’s preposterous. Daniel Grill/Tetra Images JOHN: Is this part of a pattern that you’ve seen from the Commerce Department related to the fishing industry? JERRY: Oh, this is something that’s been taking place for quite a while now, and this is a good first step in the right direction. JOHN: You said “first step.” Are there some other things you believe need to be overruled or overturned in terms of policies? JERRY: I think some of these policies that have been dictated to the fisheries didn’t have a logical excuse, as far as the economics of the fisheries viability, which has been detrimental. If you talk to fishermen and recreational fishermen up and down the coast, nobody seems to see a problem in our biomass, but yet our surveys that keep coming back are depleting our allowable catches. And then on top of that they’re requesting us to pay for observers. These are people that come straight from college with little to no experience at sea. And here in New England, we have variable weather. I mean, it’s not very nice out there in the winter months. So now you have somebody that doesn’t even know if they get seasick trapped on a vessel with us for 10 days and then it’s our responsibility to monitor them and to keep them safe. It was a lot of overreach. JOHN: What do you think the role of the federal government should be with the fishing industry? JERRY: Well, we’re a big part of our food securities. Up here in New England, this has been a major part of this country’s food banks. And now we’re removing it from the populace. 94% of the product that is now consumed is foreign product. So why are we restricting U.S. harvesters from providing wild, local, heart-healthy product that’s environmentally friendly and sustainable? Meanwhile, we’re purchasing product from other nations that do not abide by our rules and regulations. This has been something that’s been going on for a while. Now we have less fishermen than we had in colonial days. And this was just one more further step in pretty much cutting the throats of the entire fishing fleet. JOHN: What do you hope to see in the coming years from both the federal government and state governments? How can they help the industry thrive again? JERRY: Well, a lot of it has to do with the data that we receive. I mean, it’ll be good to have knowledgeable fishermen who have spent their entire lives, decades at sea, using these equipment to garner the best data available using the science teams. So, this guess on modeling based on multiple surveys would be more accurate, which would allow us to develop better marketing strategies, put together working fisheries and education to be applied to the future. I mean, right now, we teach fisheries management in college. We don’t teach fisheries. JOHN: What do you mean by that – that we don’t teach fisheries? JERRY: Well, we teach how fishing management works based on surveys, allocations, and statistical committees. But as far as using trawl gear, migrational patterns of our stocks, and how to harvest these things responsibly and sustainably, mending is a big part of trawling, we don’t really teach that as well. We have no educational classes on getting fundamentally educated employees to get the job done safely in a manageable, environmentally friendly way. JOHN: What’s the solution for that? Who should provide that education? JERRY: It’s going to have to be from the fisheries that are pre-existing, and right now we have an aging fleet, so we’re on a ticking time bomb as far as passing that knowledge on to the next generation. That has been the forefront of my arguments — you only know what you know and how do you know it? The fishermen that came before us learned from the fishermen in their region based on time and effort. And that’s something that has been passed down through families and multiple vessels and skippers to their mates who passed that knowledge over time and effort to their mates. And that’s how, collectively, we’ve moved along and advanced ourselves. But now we have so very few people left. And we don’t teach these things. I mean, back in the 80s and 90s, a lot of schools used to offer programs with marine trades. And that’s something that went away about 25 years ago. And now what we’re left with is a crippled fleet. JOHN: Do you have hope that the industry will bounce back? JERRY: I think there is time to still salvage that knowledge and pass it onto the next generation, which will go back to the food securities of this nation. I mean, it’s one thing to say we have it, but we have to be able to harvest it to provide it to the U.S consumer, and to do so in a responsible, sustainable way, so this way our food securities of the nations are here for longevity. JOHN: Well, Jerry, thank you for talking with us – and for taking the steps you did to protect your industry. JERRY: Thank you very much.  *** LISTEN: Catch the full interview with Jerry Leeman on an Extra edition of Morning Wire
Like
Comment
Share
Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
2 yrs

CAROL PLATT LIEBAU AND FRANK RICCI: Chevron Capsized By The Fishing Industry, Protects All Americans
Favicon 
dailycaller.com

CAROL PLATT LIEBAU AND FRANK RICCI: Chevron Capsized By The Fishing Industry, Protects All Americans

The U.S. Supreme Court has made all of us a little freer by limiting the power of the executive branch.
Like
Comment
Share
Showing 21476 out of 56670
  • 21472
  • 21473
  • 21474
  • 21475
  • 21476
  • 21477
  • 21478
  • 21479
  • 21480
  • 21481
  • 21482
  • 21483
  • 21484
  • 21485
  • 21486
  • 21487
  • 21488
  • 21489
  • 21490
  • 21491

Edit Offer

Add tier








Select an image
Delete your tier
Are you sure you want to delete this tier?

Reviews

In order to sell your content and posts, start by creating a few packages. Monetization

Pay By Wallet

Payment Alert

You are about to purchase the items, do you want to proceed?

Request a Refund