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#pillen — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #pillen, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Hey ihr Lieben #chronischkrank Menschen da draußen,
    wie organisiert ihr eure #Pillen und #Tabletten, falls ihr welche nehmen müsst? Ich hab in all den Jahren einfach nachwievor keine praktikable Lösung für mich gefunden und verwende gerade einfach Schraubgläser 😅 (ich muss 2-3 täglich ca 10 versch Kapseln einnehmen).

    Problem:
    A) meist sind die Fächer eh zu klein für mich
    B) jeden einzelnen Tag im vorhinein abzufüllen ist mir viel zu viel Arbeit

    Habt ihr Ideen? 🙏

    Boost erwünscht 😊

  2. #Pillen wieder für die nächsten 2 Wochen gepackt....

  3. Über 20 Psychopharmaka, viele Nebenwirkungen, wenig Wirkung. In diesem Beitrag teile ich meine Erfahrungen mit Antidepressiva – ehrlich, ungeschönt, und mit der Frage: Was, wenn Hilfe selbst zur Belastung wird?
    #antidepressiva #medikamente #pillen #psychopharmaka #nebenwirkungen #depression
    schindlerpatrick.de/2025/07/10

  4. So, #Pillen wieder für die nächsten 14 Tage aufgefüllt.

  5. Seems that #Nebraska (Red State)
    ruled by #Pillen (Republican)
    will be among the first #MAGA States to enjoy the '#Trump era"

    After giving Tax Cut to bilionaries, Nebraska MAGA Republicans increased taxes
    and persecuted the immigrant workforce
    then they pocket all the money
    now the State goes >bankrupt<
    (they do not care they will buy lands & farm wen people get broke).

    This is exactly what Trump is doing to all American States.
    But ... MAGAs haven't listened before, and will not listen now.

  6. Also einen Teil der Heizungspillen für die kalte Jahreszeit wurde nun schon geerntet 😉
    #heizung #pillen #warm

  7. Hohe #Temperaturen können die Wirkung von Medikamenten verändern und sie beschädigen. #Arzneimittel wie #Pillen, #Salben oder #Zäpfchen sollten vor direkter #Sonneneinstrahlung und #Hitze geschützt werden, da ihre #Wirkstoffe sonst abgeschwächt oder verändert werden können. Besonders Vorsicht ist bei blutdrucksenkenden Mitteln, #Schmerzmitteln wie #Ibuprofen und #Asthma-Sprays geboten, da Hitze ihre Wirkung verstärken oder beeinträchtigen kann.

    #Medikamente #Gesundheit

    deutschlandfunk.de/hitze-kann-

  8. Hohe #Temperaturen können die Wirkung von Medikamenten verändern und sie beschädigen. #Arzneimittel wie #Pillen, #Salben oder #Zäpfchen sollten vor direkter #Sonneneinstrahlung und #Hitze geschützt werden, da ihre #Wirkstoffe sonst abgeschwächt oder verändert werden können. Besonders Vorsicht ist bei blutdrucksenkenden Mitteln, #Schmerzmitteln wie #Ibuprofen und #Asthma-Sprays geboten, da Hitze ihre Wirkung verstärken oder beeinträchtigen kann.

    #Medikamente #Gesundheit

    deutschlandfunk.de/hitze-kann-

  9. Hohe #Temperaturen können die Wirkung von Medikamenten verändern und sie beschädigen. #Arzneimittel wie #Pillen, #Salben oder #Zäpfchen sollten vor direkter #Sonneneinstrahlung und #Hitze geschützt werden, da ihre #Wirkstoffe sonst abgeschwächt oder verändert werden können. Besonders Vorsicht ist bei blutdrucksenkenden Mitteln, #Schmerzmitteln wie #Ibuprofen und #Asthma-Sprays geboten, da Hitze ihre Wirkung verstärken oder beeinträchtigen kann.

    #Medikamente #Gesundheit

    deutschlandfunk.de/hitze-kann-

  10. Hohe #Temperaturen können die Wirkung von Medikamenten verändern und sie beschädigen. #Arzneimittel wie #Pillen, #Salben oder #Zäpfchen sollten vor direkter #Sonneneinstrahlung und #Hitze geschützt werden, da ihre #Wirkstoffe sonst abgeschwächt oder verändert werden können. Besonders Vorsicht ist bei blutdrucksenkenden Mitteln, #Schmerzmitteln wie #Ibuprofen und #Asthma-Sprays geboten, da Hitze ihre Wirkung verstärken oder beeinträchtigen kann.

    #Medikamente #Gesundheit

    deutschlandfunk.de/hitze-kann-

  11. American democracy is in a fragile place.

    If you haven’t figured that out by this point, you haven’t been paying attention.

    The dangers are coming from all sides.

    🔸Donald Trump has just survived his second apparent assassination attempt.
    🔸The governor of Ohio has had to call in the state police to monitor a spate of bomb threats to local schools after falsehoods about Haitian immigrants eating cats and dogs in the area began circulating.
    🔸That’s aside from all the usual mass shootings, Proud Boy marches and the rest of it.

    ⭐️But inside this fomenting turmoil,
    🧨the most dangerous spot in the whole country,
    🧨the rock on which the American state may well founder, is the quiet congressional district of #Omaha, Nebraska, the very heart of the American heartland.

    Omaha is dangerous, not in itself, but due to the entirely weird position it inhabits inside the #electoral #college.

    In one of those strange freaks of American politics, Nebraska has a ❇️ split electoral college vote,

    and for the past few elections the city of Omaha has reliably voted Democrat.

    The other two electoral districts vote solidly Republican.

    Ordinarily, this little hiccup in the system wouldn’t matter much.

    But 2024 represents a uniquely precarious moment.

    As it stands -- once you remove the settled Democrat and Republican states -- the most direct path to a Kamala Harris victory is by way of #Wisconsin, #Michigan and #Pennsylvania.

    With those three states, she would receive
    👉exactly 270 electoral college seats, the number she needs to win.

    In that case, she would win 💥if, and only if,
    💥she holds that one electoral college vote in the congressional district of Omaha, Nebraska.

    The Omaha congressional district hasn’t mattered much due to a kind of bipartisan #detente, a balance of power.

    Nebraska is not the only state that splits its electoral system by district.

    So does Maine.

    And Maine, while mostly Democratic, has a similarly reliable Republican constituency,
    which will almost certainly give its electoral college seat to Trump.

    If Nebraska changes its system to give Trump an advantage, Maine has said it will reciprocate in order to cancel out any attempt to shift the balance of power.

    Largely for this reason, the inclination to change the law has been muted in Nebraska -- even though Republicans control the statehouse.

    Having a contested electoral college seat also makes Nebraska slightly more worthy of attention from both national parties,
    meaning the current division is, to some small degree, in the interests of Nebraskans on the whole.

    Yet that state of detente may be set to unravel.

    The Maine legislature has now gone out of session

    And last Friday, #Jim #Pillen, the governor of Nebraska, made a public statement:

    “I strongly support statewide unity and joining 48 other states by awarding all five of our electoral college votes to the presidential candidate who wins the majority of Nebraskans’ votes,” he said.

    “As I have also made clear, I am willing to convene the Legislature for a special session to fix this 30-year-old problem before the 2024 election. However, I must receive clear and public indication that 33 senators are willing to vote in such a session to restore winner-take-all.”

    ➡️ Pillen is effectively deflecting the electoral college question onto the state senators,
    ♦️but he is also opening the door to the possibility of the switch, which could alter the course of the election.

    Republicans would not even need to switch the electoral college seat to win. ❗️

    They only need to muddy the waters.

    If, for example,
    🔹the Nebraska legislature ensured that their electoral college votes were in dispute,
    🔹and the courts had not decided the matter by 6 January,
    🔹and no one had reached the threshold of 270,
    ♦️that state of affairs would automatically trigger a #contingent #election.

    In a contingent election, another abstruse mechanism of the US electoral system,
    each state delegation
    -- whether it’s California or Wyoming
    -- gets a #single #vote, which means that the Republicans would always win.
    (This possibility is the subject of a book I wrote with Andrew Yang, "The Last Election".)

    The sheer boredom of what I’m describing here -- the banal technicalities of the complex legal structures in place -- may, on the surface, seem less frightening than assassination attempts and bomb threats and cooked pets and armed militias.

    But don’t misunderstand:
    🔥this is the real danger America faces.

    👉The complexity is the trap.

    The complexity makes it easy for people to believe that somehow they haven’t been tricked
    -- that a functioning democratic system, however bizarre, is still in place
    --even when it clearly isn’t anymore.

    theguardian.com/commentisfree/

  12. American democracy is in a fragile place.

    If you haven’t figured that out by this point, you haven’t been paying attention.

    The dangers are coming from all sides.

    🔸Donald Trump has just survived his second apparent assassination attempt.
    🔸The governor of Ohio has had to call in the state police to monitor a spate of bomb threats to local schools after falsehoods about Haitian immigrants eating cats and dogs in the area began circulating.
    🔸That’s aside from all the usual mass shootings, Proud Boy marches and the rest of it.

    ⭐️But inside this fomenting turmoil,
    🧨the most dangerous spot in the whole country,
    🧨the rock on which the American state may well founder, is the quiet congressional district of #Omaha, Nebraska, the very heart of the American heartland.

    Omaha is dangerous, not in itself, but due to the entirely weird position it inhabits inside the #electoral #college.

    In one of those strange freaks of American politics, Nebraska has a ❇️ split electoral college vote,

    and for the past few elections the city of Omaha has reliably voted Democrat.

    The other two electoral districts vote solidly Republican.

    Ordinarily, this little hiccup in the system wouldn’t matter much.

    But 2024 represents a uniquely precarious moment.

    As it stands -- once you remove the settled Democrat and Republican states -- the most direct path to a Kamala Harris victory is by way of #Wisconsin, #Michigan and #Pennsylvania.

    With those three states, she would receive
    👉exactly 270 electoral college seats, the number she needs to win.

    In that case, she would win 💥if, and only if,
    💥she holds that one electoral college vote in the congressional district of Omaha, Nebraska.

    The Omaha congressional district hasn’t mattered much due to a kind of bipartisan #detente, a balance of power.

    Nebraska is not the only state that splits its electoral system by district.

    So does Maine.

    And Maine, while mostly Democratic, has a similarly reliable Republican constituency,
    which will almost certainly give its electoral college seat to Trump.

    If Nebraska changes its system to give Trump an advantage, Maine has said it will reciprocate in order to cancel out any attempt to shift the balance of power.

    Largely for this reason, the inclination to change the law has been muted in Nebraska -- even though Republicans control the statehouse.

    Having a contested electoral college seat also makes Nebraska slightly more worthy of attention from both national parties,
    meaning the current division is, to some small degree, in the interests of Nebraskans on the whole.

    Yet that state of detente may be set to unravel.

    The Maine legislature has now gone out of session

    And last Friday, #Jim #Pillen, the governor of Nebraska, made a public statement:

    “I strongly support statewide unity and joining 48 other states by awarding all five of our electoral college votes to the presidential candidate who wins the majority of Nebraskans’ votes,” he said.

    “As I have also made clear, I am willing to convene the Legislature for a special session to fix this 30-year-old problem before the 2024 election. However, I must receive clear and public indication that 33 senators are willing to vote in such a session to restore winner-take-all.”

    ➡️ Pillen is effectively deflecting the electoral college question onto the state senators,
    ♦️but he is also opening the door to the possibility of the switch, which could alter the course of the election.

    Republicans would not even need to switch the electoral college seat to win. ❗️

    They only need to muddy the waters.

    If, for example,
    🔹the Nebraska legislature ensured that their electoral college votes were in dispute,
    🔹and the courts had not decided the matter by 6 January,
    🔹and no one had reached the threshold of 270,
    ♦️that state of affairs would automatically trigger a #contingent #election.

    In a contingent election, another abstruse mechanism of the US electoral system,
    each state delegation
    -- whether it’s California or Wyoming
    -- gets a #single #vote, which means that the Republicans would always win.
    (This possibility is the subject of a book I wrote with Andrew Yang, "The Last Election".)

    The sheer boredom of what I’m describing here -- the banal technicalities of the complex legal structures in place -- may, on the surface, seem less frightening than assassination attempts and bomb threats and cooked pets and armed militias.

    But don’t misunderstand:
    🔥this is the real danger America faces.

    👉The complexity is the trap.

    The complexity makes it easy for people to believe that somehow they haven’t been tricked
    -- that a functioning democratic system, however bizarre, is still in place
    --even when it clearly isn’t anymore.

    theguardian.com/commentisfree/

  13. American democracy is in a fragile place.

    If you haven’t figured that out by this point, you haven’t been paying attention.

    The dangers are coming from all sides.

    🔸Donald Trump has just survived his second apparent assassination attempt.
    🔸The governor of Ohio has had to call in the state police to monitor a spate of bomb threats to local schools after falsehoods about Haitian immigrants eating cats and dogs in the area began circulating.
    🔸That’s aside from all the usual mass shootings, Proud Boy marches and the rest of it.

    ⭐️But inside this fomenting turmoil,
    🧨the most dangerous spot in the whole country,
    🧨the rock on which the American state may well founder, is the quiet congressional district of #Omaha, Nebraska, the very heart of the American heartland.

    Omaha is dangerous, not in itself, but due to the entirely weird position it inhabits inside the #electoral #college.

    In one of those strange freaks of American politics, Nebraska has a ❇️ split electoral college vote,

    and for the past few elections the city of Omaha has reliably voted Democrat.

    The other two electoral districts vote solidly Republican.

    Ordinarily, this little hiccup in the system wouldn’t matter much.

    But 2024 represents a uniquely precarious moment.

    As it stands -- once you remove the settled Democrat and Republican states -- the most direct path to a Kamala Harris victory is by way of #Wisconsin, #Michigan and #Pennsylvania.

    With those three states, she would receive
    👉exactly 270 electoral college seats, the number she needs to win.

    In that case, she would win 💥if, and only if,
    💥she holds that one electoral college vote in the congressional district of Omaha, Nebraska.

    The Omaha congressional district hasn’t mattered much due to a kind of bipartisan #detente, a balance of power.

    Nebraska is not the only state that splits its electoral system by district.

    So does Maine.

    And Maine, while mostly Democratic, has a similarly reliable Republican constituency,
    which will almost certainly give its electoral college seat to Trump.

    If Nebraska changes its system to give Trump an advantage, Maine has said it will reciprocate in order to cancel out any attempt to shift the balance of power.

    Largely for this reason, the inclination to change the law has been muted in Nebraska -- even though Republicans control the statehouse.

    Having a contested electoral college seat also makes Nebraska slightly more worthy of attention from both national parties,
    meaning the current division is, to some small degree, in the interests of Nebraskans on the whole.

    Yet that state of detente may be set to unravel.

    The Maine legislature has now gone out of session

    And last Friday, #Jim #Pillen, the governor of Nebraska, made a public statement:

    “I strongly support statewide unity and joining 48 other states by awarding all five of our electoral college votes to the presidential candidate who wins the majority of Nebraskans’ votes,” he said.

    “As I have also made clear, I am willing to convene the Legislature for a special session to fix this 30-year-old problem before the 2024 election. However, I must receive clear and public indication that 33 senators are willing to vote in such a session to restore winner-take-all.”

    ➡️ Pillen is effectively deflecting the electoral college question onto the state senators,
    ♦️but he is also opening the door to the possibility of the switch, which could alter the course of the election.

    Republicans would not even need to switch the electoral college seat to win. ❗️

    They only need to muddy the waters.

    If, for example,
    🔹the Nebraska legislature ensured that their electoral college votes were in dispute,
    🔹and the courts had not decided the matter by 6 January,
    🔹and no one had reached the threshold of 270,
    ♦️that state of affairs would automatically trigger a #contingent #election.

    In a contingent election, another abstruse mechanism of the US electoral system,
    each state delegation
    -- whether it’s California or Wyoming
    -- gets a #single #vote, which means that the Republicans would always win.
    (This possibility is the subject of a book I wrote with Andrew Yang, "The Last Election".)

    The sheer boredom of what I’m describing here -- the banal technicalities of the complex legal structures in place -- may, on the surface, seem less frightening than assassination attempts and bomb threats and cooked pets and armed militias.

    But don’t misunderstand:
    🔥this is the real danger America faces.

    👉The complexity is the trap.

    The complexity makes it easy for people to believe that somehow they haven’t been tricked
    -- that a functioning democratic system, however bizarre, is still in place
    --even when it clearly isn’t anymore.

    theguardian.com/commentisfree/

  14. American democracy is in a fragile place.

    If you haven’t figured that out by this point, you haven’t been paying attention.

    The dangers are coming from all sides.

    🔸Donald Trump has just survived his second apparent assassination attempt.
    🔸The governor of Ohio has had to call in the state police to monitor a spate of bomb threats to local schools after falsehoods about Haitian immigrants eating cats and dogs in the area began circulating.
    🔸That’s aside from all the usual mass shootings, Proud Boy marches and the rest of it.

    ⭐️But inside this fomenting turmoil,
    🧨the most dangerous spot in the whole country,
    🧨the rock on which the American state may well founder, is the quiet congressional district of #Omaha, Nebraska, the very heart of the American heartland.

    Omaha is dangerous, not in itself, but due to the entirely weird position it inhabits inside the #electoral #college.

    In one of those strange freaks of American politics, Nebraska has a ❇️ split electoral college vote,

    and for the past few elections the city of Omaha has reliably voted Democrat.

    The other two electoral districts vote solidly Republican.

    Ordinarily, this little hiccup in the system wouldn’t matter much.

    But 2024 represents a uniquely precarious moment.

    As it stands -- once you remove the settled Democrat and Republican states -- the most direct path to a Kamala Harris victory is by way of #Wisconsin, #Michigan and #Pennsylvania.

    With those three states, she would receive
    👉exactly 270 electoral college seats, the number she needs to win.

    In that case, she would win 💥if, and only if,
    💥she holds that one electoral college vote in the congressional district of Omaha, Nebraska.

    The Omaha congressional district hasn’t mattered much due to a kind of bipartisan #detente, a balance of power.

    Nebraska is not the only state that splits its electoral system by district.

    So does Maine.

    And Maine, while mostly Democratic, has a similarly reliable Republican constituency,
    which will almost certainly give its electoral college seat to Trump.

    If Nebraska changes its system to give Trump an advantage, Maine has said it will reciprocate in order to cancel out any attempt to shift the balance of power.

    Largely for this reason, the inclination to change the law has been muted in Nebraska -- even though Republicans control the statehouse.

    Having a contested electoral college seat also makes Nebraska slightly more worthy of attention from both national parties,
    meaning the current division is, to some small degree, in the interests of Nebraskans on the whole.

    Yet that state of detente may be set to unravel.

    The Maine legislature has now gone out of session

    And last Friday, #Jim #Pillen, the governor of Nebraska, made a public statement:

    “I strongly support statewide unity and joining 48 other states by awarding all five of our electoral college votes to the presidential candidate who wins the majority of Nebraskans’ votes,” he said.

    “As I have also made clear, I am willing to convene the Legislature for a special session to fix this 30-year-old problem before the 2024 election. However, I must receive clear and public indication that 33 senators are willing to vote in such a session to restore winner-take-all.”

    ➡️ Pillen is effectively deflecting the electoral college question onto the state senators,
    ♦️but he is also opening the door to the possibility of the switch, which could alter the course of the election.

    Republicans would not even need to switch the electoral college seat to win. ❗️

    They only need to muddy the waters.

    If, for example,
    🔹the Nebraska legislature ensured that their electoral college votes were in dispute,
    🔹and the courts had not decided the matter by 6 January,
    🔹and no one had reached the threshold of 270,
    ♦️that state of affairs would automatically trigger a #contingent #election.

    In a contingent election, another abstruse mechanism of the US electoral system,
    each state delegation
    -- whether it’s California or Wyoming
    -- gets a #single #vote, which means that the Republicans would always win.
    (This possibility is the subject of a book I wrote with Andrew Yang, "The Last Election".)

    The sheer boredom of what I’m describing here -- the banal technicalities of the complex legal structures in place -- may, on the surface, seem less frightening than assassination attempts and bomb threats and cooked pets and armed militias.

    But don’t misunderstand:
    🔥this is the real danger America faces.

    👉The complexity is the trap.

    The complexity makes it easy for people to believe that somehow they haven’t been tricked
    -- that a functioning democratic system, however bizarre, is still in place
    --even when it clearly isn’t anymore.

    theguardian.com/commentisfree/

  15. American democracy is in a fragile place.

    If you haven’t figured that out by this point, you haven’t been paying attention.

    The dangers are coming from all sides.

    🔸Donald Trump has just survived his second apparent assassination attempt.
    🔸The governor of Ohio has had to call in the state police to monitor a spate of bomb threats to local schools after falsehoods about Haitian immigrants eating cats and dogs in the area began circulating.
    🔸That’s aside from all the usual mass shootings, Proud Boy marches and the rest of it.

    ⭐️But inside this fomenting turmoil,
    🧨the most dangerous spot in the whole country,
    🧨the rock on which the American state may well founder, is the quiet congressional district of #Omaha, Nebraska, the very heart of the American heartland.

    Omaha is dangerous, not in itself, but due to the entirely weird position it inhabits inside the #electoral #college.

    In one of those strange freaks of American politics, Nebraska has a ❇️ split electoral college vote,

    and for the past few elections the city of Omaha has reliably voted Democrat.

    The other two electoral districts vote solidly Republican.

    Ordinarily, this little hiccup in the system wouldn’t matter much.

    But 2024 represents a uniquely precarious moment.

    As it stands -- once you remove the settled Democrat and Republican states -- the most direct path to a Kamala Harris victory is by way of #Wisconsin, #Michigan and #Pennsylvania.

    With those three states, she would receive
    👉exactly 270 electoral college seats, the number she needs to win.

    In that case, she would win 💥if, and only if,
    💥she holds that one electoral college vote in the congressional district of Omaha, Nebraska.

    The Omaha congressional district hasn’t mattered much due to a kind of bipartisan #detente, a balance of power.

    Nebraska is not the only state that splits its electoral system by district.

    So does Maine.

    And Maine, while mostly Democratic, has a similarly reliable Republican constituency,
    which will almost certainly give its electoral college seat to Trump.

    If Nebraska changes its system to give Trump an advantage, Maine has said it will reciprocate in order to cancel out any attempt to shift the balance of power.

    Largely for this reason, the inclination to change the law has been muted in Nebraska -- even though Republicans control the statehouse.

    Having a contested electoral college seat also makes Nebraska slightly more worthy of attention from both national parties,
    meaning the current division is, to some small degree, in the interests of Nebraskans on the whole.

    Yet that state of detente may be set to unravel.

    The Maine legislature has now gone out of session

    And last Friday, #Jim #Pillen, the governor of Nebraska, made a public statement:

    “I strongly support statewide unity and joining 48 other states by awarding all five of our electoral college votes to the presidential candidate who wins the majority of Nebraskans’ votes,” he said.

    “As I have also made clear, I am willing to convene the Legislature for a special session to fix this 30-year-old problem before the 2024 election. However, I must receive clear and public indication that 33 senators are willing to vote in such a session to restore winner-take-all.”

    ➡️ Pillen is effectively deflecting the electoral college question onto the state senators,
    ♦️but he is also opening the door to the possibility of the switch, which could alter the course of the election.

    Republicans would not even need to switch the electoral college seat to win. ❗️

    They only need to muddy the waters.

    If, for example,
    🔹the Nebraska legislature ensured that their electoral college votes were in dispute,
    🔹and the courts had not decided the matter by 6 January,
    🔹and no one had reached the threshold of 270,
    ♦️that state of affairs would automatically trigger a #contingent #election.

    In a contingent election, another abstruse mechanism of the US electoral system,
    each state delegation
    -- whether it’s California or Wyoming
    -- gets a #single #vote, which means that the Republicans would always win.
    (This possibility is the subject of a book I wrote with Andrew Yang, "The Last Election".)

    The sheer boredom of what I’m describing here -- the banal technicalities of the complex legal structures in place -- may, on the surface, seem less frightening than assassination attempts and bomb threats and cooked pets and armed militias.

    But don’t misunderstand:
    🔥this is the real danger America faces.

    👉The complexity is the trap.

    The complexity makes it easy for people to believe that somehow they haven’t been tricked
    -- that a functioning democratic system, however bizarre, is still in place
    --even when it clearly isn’t anymore.

    theguardian.com/commentisfree/

  16. Republicans step up effort to change Nebraska voting rules to help Trump

    Congressional Republicans are demanding an 11th-hour change to Nebraska’s presidential voting system in a move that could transform the electoral calculus and tip the race to Donald Trump in the event of a photo finish.

    With polls showing Trump neck-and-neck with Kamala Harris both nationally and in battleground states, senior GOP congressional figures are pressing the Nebraska legislature to 👉replace a system that 👍 allocates electoral votes by districts with the
    👎winner-takes-all distribution that operates in most US states.

    The change would⚠️ increase the number of electors allotted to Trump for winning the solidly Republican state from four to five
    – and raises the possibility that the former president could end up tied with Harris at 269 electoral votes each.

    Such a scenario 🆘 would pitch the ultimate decision on the election into the House of Representatives, which has the constitutional authority to certify the results – meaning the outcome of November’s House election, in which Republicans are defending a wafer-thin majority, could be even more pivotal than usual.

    In a sign of the raised stakes, the South Carolina senator #Lindsay #Graham – a close Trump ally – visited Nebraska this week and urged legislators to find the extra votes needed to revert its electoral college distribution procedure back to the winner-takes-all system it used before 1992.

    Pressure was also ratcheted up by the state’s five US congressional members, who wrote to Nebraska’s governor, #Jim #Pillen, and the speaker of its single-chamber legislature, #John #Arch, who are both Republicans.

    “As members of Nebraska’s federal delegation in Congress, we are united in our support for apportioning all five of the Nebraska’s electoral votes in presidential elections according to the winner of the whole state,” read the Nebraska delegation’s letter, posted on X by GOP House member Mike Flood, one of its signatories. “It is past time that Nebraska join 48 other states in embracing winner-take-all in presidential elections.”

    A two-thirds majority of the Republican-led chamber is needed to change the system. ⭐️Only 31 or 32 of the 50-seat body are thought to be in favour, meaning the spotlight is being focused on the state senator #Mike #McDonnell, a former Democrat who turned Republican this year but swore he would never support winner-takes-all.

    Local media reports have depicted McDonnell as wavering amid speculation that Trump may soon contact him personally.

    The issue is potentially vital because 💥some pollsters have predicted that Harris is on course to win exactly the 270 electoral votes needed to capture the White House by winning the three northern swing states of #Pennsylvania, #Michigan and #Wisconsin, where recent polling has shown her with small but consistent leads.

    🔥However, she would fall short by just one if a winner-takes-all distribution was adopted in Nebraska, whose second congressional district
    – encompassing the state’s largest city, #Omaha, and its suburbs
    – together with its single electoral vote is expected to fall to Harris, as it did to Joe Biden in 2020.
    theguardian.com/us-news/2024/s

  17. Trump ramps up push for Nebraska to change electoral vote allocation

    Donald #Trump spoke by phone this week with a Nebraska state senator as part of a ⚠️ last-minute push to change how the state allocates its electoral votes
    -- 💥and block the easiest path Vice President Kamala Harris has to win the White House.

    
State Sen. Merv #Riepe (R) said he spoke briefly by phone with Trump on Wednesday
    in the presence of Nebraska Gov. Jim #Pillen (R)
    during a visit by Sen. Lindsey #Graham (R-S.C.),
    who encouraged Republicans in the state’s unicameral legislature
    ❌ to change to a statewide "winner-take-all" electoral vote system.

    
“I want the law changed. I’ve made no qualms about it,” said Graham,
    an ally of Trump, who said he traveled to Nebraska at the request of Sen. Pete Ricketts (R-Neb.), the former governor.

    “They were open-minded. I said:

    ‘Listen, it’s your decision to make. 🔸It comes down to one electoral vote.
    🔸I want you to understand what that one vote would mean.’”

    
Nebraska is one of two states that 👉award some of its electoral votes by congressional district,
    ❇️which has given Democrats a good shot at winning a single vote from the #Omaha area,
    despite the overwhelming statewide Republican lean.

    ⭐️With that vote, Harris can secure the 270 electoral votes needed to win the White House,
    as long as she also wins her three strongest battleground states
    — Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania.

    washingtonpost.com/politics/20

  18. #Pillen für die nächsten 14 Tage gepackt......🤪

  19. #Egotronic feat.
    #Koks & #Pillen #Berlin
    #TenGermanBombers

    Ich bin ja immer so spontan wie eine Wanderdüne ind Zeitlupe, die bekifft ist.
    Aber ich habe nicht vergessen es mir anzuhören ;-)

    😎 ✌️

    Sehr geil. Ich suche nachher meine England Trikots raus.
    Ich wusste gar nicht welche Bedeutung die haben können!
    :awesome:

    yt.artemislena.eu/watch?v=r9PN

  20. #Egotronic feat.
    #Koks & #Pillen #Berlin
    #TenGermanBombers

    Ich bin ja immer so spontan wie eine Wanderdüne ind Zeitlupe, die bekifft ist.
    Aber ich habe nicht vergessen es mir anzuhören ;-)

    😎 ✌️

    Sehr geil. Ich suche nachher meine England Trikots raus.
    Ich wusste gar nicht welche Bedeutung die haben können!
    :awesome:

    yt.artemislena.eu/watch?v=r9PN

  21. #Egotronic feat.
    #Koks & #Pillen #Berlin
    #TenGermanBombers

    Ich bin ja immer so spontan wie eine Wanderdüne ind Zeitlupe, die bekifft ist.
    Aber ich habe nicht vergessen es mir anzuhören ;-)

    😎 ✌️

    Sehr geil. Ich suche nachher meine England Trikots raus.
    Ich wusste gar nicht welche Bedeutung die haben können!
    :awesome:

    yt.artemislena.eu/watch?v=r9PN

  22. 𝗧𝗵𝗶𝗷𝘀 𝗕𝗼𝗲𝗿𝗺𝗮𝗻𝘀 𝗯𝗲𝗴𝗮𝗮𝘁 𝗯𝗹𝘂𝗻𝗱𝗲𝗿 𝗶𝗻 𝘃𝗹𝗶𝗲𝗴𝘁𝘂𝗶𝗴: '𝗪𝗮𝘇𝗶𝗴 𝘃𝗮𝗻 𝗱𝗲 𝗽𝗶𝗹𝗹𝗲𝗻'

    Thijs Boermans (27) laat zijn volgers deze week meegenieten van een prachtige trip door Zuid-Afrika met Anna Nooshin (37). De terugreis verliep echter minder idyllisch, zo deelt hij in zijn podcast 'Borrelpraat'. Hij bezorgde de stewardessen een flinke klus na de landing...

    rtlnieuws.nl/entertainment/art

    #ThijsBoermans #blunder #pillen

  23. 𝗧𝗿𝗶𝗺𝗯𝗼𝘀 𝘄𝗮𝗮𝗿𝘀𝗰𝗵𝘂𝘄𝘁 𝘃𝗼𝗼𝗿 𝗹𝗲𝘃𝗲𝗻𝘀𝗴𝗲𝘃𝗮𝗮𝗿𝗹𝗶𝗷𝗸𝗲 𝘅𝘁𝗰-𝗽𝗶𝗹𝗹𝗲𝗻

    De afgelopen weken zijn meerdere xtc-pillen ontdekt met daarin een gevaarlijk grote hoeveelheid MDMA. Het Trimbos-instuut waarschuwt dat mensen die zo'n pil slikken, eraan kunnen overlijden. Er is een zogenoemde Red Alert verstuurd om voor de pillen te waarschuwen.

    rtlnieuws.nl/nieuws/nederland/

    #TrimbosWaarschuwt #LevensgevaarlijkeXtc #Pillen

  24. Am 11.12.23 wird Jörg Schaaber sein zuletzt erschienenes Buch "#Pillen-Poker: Wie uns die #Pharmaindustrie schadet und was man dagegen tun kann" in der Volkshochschule #Bielefeld vorstellen. Beginnen wird die Veranstaltung um 19 Uhr. Wir freuen uns auf Euer Kommen! 💊💊

    vhs-bielefeld.de/programm/gesa

  25. CW: Nebraska Pol / US Pol

    NE Bill LB662 is introduced to prevent people from lawsuits against farms for their byproducts impeding on their quality of life.

    Also, NE's new Governor (Pillen) has prior lawsuits against him for his farm's byproducts impeding on the quality of people's lives.

    law.justia.com/cases/nebraska/

    #NE #NELeg #Nebraska #Pillen

  26. 𝗔𝗯𝗼𝗿𝘁𝘂𝘀𝗽𝗶𝗹𝗹𝗲𝗻 𝗶𝗻 𝗮𝗽𝗼𝘁𝗵𝗲𝗸𝗲𝗻 𝗻𝗶𝗲𝘂𝘄𝗲 𝘀𝗽𝗹𝗶𝗷𝘁𝘇𝘄𝗮𝗺 𝗶𝗻 𝗱𝗲 𝗩𝗦

    In Amerikaanse staten is dit weekend geprotesteerd bij apotheken tegen het verstrekken van abortuspillen. Bij een kleine honderd filialen van apothekersketens CVS, Walgreens en Rite Aid waren manifestaties, waar gemiddeld tien tot twintig mensen op af kwamen. De acties zijn het nieuwste voorbeeld van de verharding van de abortusdiscussie in het land.

    nos.nl/l/2462584 #nieuws #nos #abortus #pillen #apotheken

  27. Verborgen camera in loods toont hoe vier mannen bezig waren een grote lading pillen in een auto te laden

    Een geheime camera in een loods in Koudekerk aan den Rijn leverde eind december 2021 resultaat op

    hbpmedia.nl/verborgen-camera-i

    #OpenbaarMinisterie #aanhoudingen #camera #drugs #loods #pillen #verborgen

  28. Medikamentenfälschung ist ein großes Problem. Ein neues Verfahren nutzt Material aus der Süßwarenbranche, um etwa Nutzer von Pillen vor Kriminellen zu schützen.
    Mit Candycode Medikamente fälschungssicher machen
  29. @ReginaMuehlich
    ich finde, es wird so und so zu viel Pillen genommen. Entschuldigen Sie jetzt, Ich das so schreibe. Sollte nicht Ihre Arbeit diskreditieren. Doch finde ich wirklich Menschen nehmen sich zu viel Pillen. Es gibt ein Buch in das können wir alle nicht #tuten. Das ist das #Buch wann wir #gehen müssen. Daher nicht so viele #Pillen. Denn in dem Buch steht das fest und da helfen auch keine Pillen mehr. Doch trotzdem Ihnen Persönlich viel #Glück #Gesundheit und Kraft weiterhin.