Current Events 3.2
1) In the house of representatives they voted overwhelmingly Thursday to slap stringent - new screening procedures on refugees from Syria seeking resettlement. The bill would require that the director of the FBI, the secretary of the Department Homeland Security and the director of national intelligence confirm that each applicant from Syria and Iraq poses not threat. The measure received significant support from democrats. The senate is expected to take up the measure after Thanksgiving recess.
Obama's response was a request for an explicit authorization of force against the Islamic State. The Obama administrative repeatedly said it would undermine American leadership in a region where Republicans have side it is lacking, and would undercut Washington's ability to command a coalition against the security threats in Syria.
2) On Thursday the Austin City Council voted to ease regulations for building garage apartments. The two primary benefits of the decision are that it provides less expensive housing and is a way to also provide supplemental income. The objection District 9 Council Member Kathie Tovo raised is that allowing garage apartments could override some neighborhood plans that had decided against
them. The similar point made by Tommy Ates was that because he lived in a garage apartment he know that it is an affordable way to live. District 3 council member Sabino "Pio" Renteria says that he also leases a backyard cottage to a tenant on his own property, which helps him remain in his longtime home. I think that people having a garage apartment is okay because it let's people to have a home in the neighborhood they want without having to spend as much money.
3) Leslie Pool is the Austin City Council member that serves my neighborhood.
4) Federal regulators on Thursday approved a genetically engineered salmon as fit for consumption, the salmon would now be the first genetically altered animal to reach U.S. supermarkets and dinner tables. One of the arguments made by the consumers and environmental groups was that if the genetically engineered fish were to escape into the oceans it could alter other wild salmon. The approval took so long because it was fist approval of it's kind and was wary of a political backlash. Ronald Stotish, the chief executive of AquaBounty said he was delighted and somewhat surprised by the approval after all this time.
One conclusion of the graph that went with the story is that the number of genetically modified foods is going up significantly and is at 115 products that are now GMO products, when in 1992 there were zero.
5) Don Zimmerman proposed a resolution that would block Austin's governments from spending money to help Syrian refugees resettle inside the city. Council member Greg Casar responded by saying "If council made any statement, it would be to express our support for families fleeing bloody conflict in Syria and refugees from all parts of the world." Mayor Steve Adler responded by saying "That's the kind of city we are and I want the rest of the world to know. Helping those in need and ensuring the safety of Austinites are not mutually exclusive goals." In Travis County, 1,225 refugees arrived in the 2013 fiscal year. The Facebook post from Sid Miller shows a mass of refugees and another depicting a cluster of snakes that says "Can you tell me which of these rattlers won't bite you?Sure some of them won't, but tell me which ones so we can bring them into the house." Texas Democrats accused Miller of fanning "the flames of fear and xenophobia."
6) Raphael Holiday was executed for setting a fire that killed his 18-month-old daughter and her two young half-sisters at an East Texas home 15 years ago. This would be Texas's 13 execution of the year. It has accounted for half of all executions in the U.S. so far this year. Lawyer Gretchen Sween argued that Holiday's court-appointed attorneys abandoned him after the justices in June refused to review his case. Holiday's attorney died an appeal saying the conviction and some trial testimony were both improper.
7)
Extra Credit
them. The similar point made by Tommy Ates was that because he lived in a garage apartment he know that it is an affordable way to live. District 3 council member Sabino "Pio" Renteria says that he also leases a backyard cottage to a tenant on his own property, which helps him remain in his longtime home. I think that people having a garage apartment is okay because it let's people to have a home in the neighborhood they want without having to spend as much money.
3) Leslie Pool is the Austin City Council member that serves my neighborhood.
4) Federal regulators on Thursday approved a genetically engineered salmon as fit for consumption, the salmon would now be the first genetically altered animal to reach U.S. supermarkets and dinner tables. One of the arguments made by the consumers and environmental groups was that if the genetically engineered fish were to escape into the oceans it could alter other wild salmon. The approval took so long because it was fist approval of it's kind and was wary of a political backlash. Ronald Stotish, the chief executive of AquaBounty said he was delighted and somewhat surprised by the approval after all this time.
One conclusion of the graph that went with the story is that the number of genetically modified foods is going up significantly and is at 115 products that are now GMO products, when in 1992 there were zero.
5) Don Zimmerman proposed a resolution that would block Austin's governments from spending money to help Syrian refugees resettle inside the city. Council member Greg Casar responded by saying "If council made any statement, it would be to express our support for families fleeing bloody conflict in Syria and refugees from all parts of the world." Mayor Steve Adler responded by saying "That's the kind of city we are and I want the rest of the world to know. Helping those in need and ensuring the safety of Austinites are not mutually exclusive goals." In Travis County, 1,225 refugees arrived in the 2013 fiscal year. The Facebook post from Sid Miller shows a mass of refugees and another depicting a cluster of snakes that says "Can you tell me which of these rattlers won't bite you?Sure some of them won't, but tell me which ones so we can bring them into the house." Texas Democrats accused Miller of fanning "the flames of fear and xenophobia."
6) Raphael Holiday was executed for setting a fire that killed his 18-month-old daughter and her two young half-sisters at an East Texas home 15 years ago. This would be Texas's 13 execution of the year. It has accounted for half of all executions in the U.S. so far this year. Lawyer Gretchen Sween argued that Holiday's court-appointed attorneys abandoned him after the justices in June refused to review his case. Holiday's attorney died an appeal saying the conviction and some trial testimony were both improper.
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Extra Credit