tz posts days 47-50 (day 46 was taken down)
[day47] a little devotion duo for today! — @lovelyhsiao
[day48] princess... — @lovelyhsiao
[day49] kogal (^_−)−☆ — @lovelyhsiao
[day50] I missed drawing my clown Zam.... — @neyloooo

seen from Australia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Singapore
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from Poland
seen from United States
seen from Singapore
seen from Germany
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Italy
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Macao SAR China

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States

seen from Maldives
seen from United States
seen from China
tz posts days 47-50 (day 46 was taken down)
[day47] a little devotion duo for today! — @lovelyhsiao
[day48] princess... — @lovelyhsiao
[day49] kogal (^_−)−☆ — @lovelyhsiao
[day50] I missed drawing my clown Zam.... — @neyloooo
Some stickers I made of myself and @eaudecrow
Welcome to the Forty-Eighth Day
There are at least 35 legal cases that have blocked the Trump administration's abuses of power, at least temporarily.
Let's talk about another one: NCN v. OMB.
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is the part of the federal government that does the most actual implementing of policy. They are the federal government's human resources, accounting, information technology (ꞮT), and quality assurance (QA) departments all rolled into one. They handle the hiring and firing of government employees, their benefits and pay, their procurement and computer tech support, giving departments and agencies their money to spend, and measuring whether government programs are working as they're supposed to.
When Donald Trump started his administration by signing dozens of executive orders, it was largely the OMB carrying out his orders.
Biden's OMB Director had stepped down, and Trump's OMB Director wasn't yet confirmed by the Senate, so Matthew Vaeth was Acting Director of OMB in the early days of Trump's second term. So when Trump signed dozens of executive orders in his first week in office demanding massive changes to how the federal government was to be run, it was Vaeth he was ordering around.
On Monday, Jan 27th, Vaeth issued Memo M-25-13 entitled "Temporary Pause of Agency Grant, Loan, and Other Financial Assistance Programs" (read it here, if you want). In a nutshell, the Memo called for a pause of all federal funding until it could be determined which federal funding was compatible with Trump's executive orders and which was not. The stated goal of the Memo was "ending 'wokeness' and the weaponization of government" and to stop "equity, transgenderism, and green new deal" policies. The Memo specified that "The temporary pause will become effective on January 28, 2025, at 5:00 PM."
Four nongovernmental charity organizations quickly filed a lawsuit in hopes of preventing the Memo from going into effect: The National Council of Nonprofits (NCN), the American Public Health Association (APHA), and the Main Street Alliance (MSA), and Services and Advocacy for *GLBT Elders (SAGE). They sued OMB and Vaeth, saying that "In practice, the Memo purports to eradicate essentially all federal grant programs" that "will have a devastating impact on hundreds of thousands of grant recipients," and that "the Trump Administration ... must do" its work "within the confines of the law. It has not." (pp.2–3) They called for "a temporary restraining order to maintain the status quo until the Court has an opportunity to more fully consider the illegality of OMB’s actions."
The same night (Jan 28th) that the lawsuit was filed, Judge Loren Alikhan of the DC District Court first granted an administrative stay preventing OMB from stopping all that federal spending for a few days (until 5:00pm Feb 3rd), giving OMB a chance (and a deadline) to try to argue that the Memo didn't break any laws. Then, on Feb 3rd, after she heard OMB's argument and found it lacking, she granted the temporary restraining order (TRO) that the charities requested. Then, on Feb 25th, the TRO was strengthened into a Preliminary Injunction (PꞮ). The Memo couldn't be implemented at least until the trial was over. The government could spend their money.
The Trump administration hasn't yet filed any appeals of any of these decisions against them. But they did try to only release some of the federal funds, and keep others blocked. The charities hammered them on that, and the Trump administration has been ordered to defend their behavior March 7th (yesterday). As of this writing, I haven't heard what came of that deadline yet.
Case Status: Trump blocked while trial continues.
You can read the court documents from the case, if you want. Or you can read the New York Times' summary of the case.
* Sometime, I need to share the story of why SAGE says GLBT and everybody else says LGBT. It's kind of a bittersweet story. Remind me in the comments, especially if it's no longer March of 2025.
2025-03-08
☆──── 『 48 out of 366 』 ────☆
his laugh is the most adorable thing I’ve ever heard ᕦ(ò_óˇ)ᕤ i really love him so much and I’m truly grateful for him, to be able to brighten my days (not to sound cheesy). I remember when I was watching this live I was really tired, but I was grateful that he took the time out of his day to say hi to his fans! please continue being the brightest ray of sunshine haechan! ( ◠‿◠ )
-nel ♡
best view ever
100daysoflanguages 48/49
48 : Learn 1 new grammatical concept/make a post and explain a grammatical concept if you learned everything related to grammar.
grammar masterpost. Se avete altre richieste fateci sapere.
49 : Read 2 pages from a book in your target language.
Libri qui. Oggi condivido queste due pagine del libro “La Tigre della Malesia” di Emilio Salgari
You can find the whole book in the link I left you. If not, feel free to write us.