Denver suburb officially changes name from “Swastika Acres” to “Old Cherry Hills”

It’s been 111 years since a subdivision of the Denver suburb of Cherry Hills was given the name of “Swastika Acres,” and now, finally, the name has been changed to “Old Cherry Hills,” thanks to an official act of the local council.
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Colorado’s net neutrality law will deny grant money to ISPs that engage in network discrimination

ISPs want it both ways: they want to be receive billions in indirect public subsidies (access to rights of ways that would cost unimaginable sums to clear) and direct public subsidies (grant money) but still be able to run their businesses without regard to what the public actually wants (a neutral internet, supported by 87% of Americans, in which your ISP sends you the bits you request, as quickly and efficiently as it can).
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Denver’s legendary Tattered Cover bookstore “breaks up” with Audible

The Tattered Cover is one of the nation’s great independent bookstores, ranking with New York’s Strand, Portland’s Powell’s, and Salt Lake City’s Weller Books; now in an open letter, the store has “broken up” with Amazon division Audible, the largest player in the audiobook market, citing the company’s mandatory DRM, proprietary formats, algorithmic opacity, and diversion of local book sales into the pockets of distant investors in a massive, uncaring corporation.
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Emboldened by the LA teachers’ “blue state” victory, Denver’s teachers declare strike

Just days after LA teachers declared victory in their strike for better classroom conditions and limits on charter schools, their colleagues in Denver — another “blue state” — have voted to walk off the job, with a very similar set of demands.
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This month, the climate-denyingist red state AGs lost their jobs to Dems: time to sue the US government

Republican state AGs were in the majority…until this months election, when the majority flipped, with the most climate-denying AGs (in Michigan, Colorado, Wisconsin and Nevada) losing their jobs to Dems who ran on strong environmental platforms.
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GOP Congressman introduces legislation to restore and protect Net Neutrality

Rep. Mike Coffman [R-CO] — one of the signatories to the Democrat-led bid to overrule the FCC and restore Net Neutrality — has introduced The 21st Century Internet Act, which amends the 1934 Telecommunications Act to add a new category of regulated service that ISPs will fit into, sidestepping the legal wrangles over earlier Net Neutrality efforts, which hung up on trying to squeeze the internet into categories that were set in the Marconi era.
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Colorado cop corrects would-be dog-slaughtering Illinois officer about drug-sniffing after marijuana legalization

When I read Macon County, IL K-9 trainer Chad Larner’s claim that marijuana legalization would necessitate euthanizing 275 Illinois drug-sniffer dogs that couldn’t be retrained and who would be driven mad by the pervasive smell of legal weed, I thought, “Gosh, I hope some cops from a legal weed state like Colorado show up to explain that this guy is full of shit.”
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The teachers’ strikes are spreading

From Labor Notes, a weekly report-card of teachers’ strikes, which are spreading from state to state, with North Carolina — the laboratory for gerrymander-fueled Republican takeover — next in line for a wave of school closures.
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Colorado Senate Republicans introduce legislation to fire, imprison striking teachers

SB18-264 — AKA the Prohibit Public School Teacher Strikes Bill — was introduced by Colorado Senator Bob Gardner [R-12/303-866-4880/@senbobgardner] and Representative Paul Lundeen [R-19/303-866-2924/@paul_lundeen]; it allows school districts to seek court injunctions banning public school teachers from striking, so that they can be held in contempt should they withdraw their labor, and be imprisoned for contempt.

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