Tag: Buffalo Sabres
Trainwreck Tonight 289 ‘Spring is the Thing’
-Sabres Locker Clean Out, Expectations for 2024, SabresTwitter vs BillsMafia -Bills OTAs -DHopkins smirk ? -NHL/NBA Playoffs, Bandits OT win -Adam Sandler Hoops and BTC Breathalyzes?!? -@Kody0fficial hired by Barstool?!?! Also available on Apple Pods: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/trainwreck-tonight-289-spring-is-the-thing-sponsored/id1161947471?i=1000609393580
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From Dollard to Buffalo, The Devon Levi Story
The year is 2013. Here in Buffalo the Bills would continue their then historic playoff drought after finishing 6-10, and the Buffalo Sabres would finish their third straight season without a playoff appearance after finishing 5th in the Northeast Division. The BillsMafia again would be looking forward to the NFL Draft, where they’d eventually pick […]
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Trainwreck Tonight 287 | ‘False Hope’ | Sponsored by Outlet Liquor
Crossing Swords Podcast: ‘Heading Into the Final Turn’
FOLKS! This Sabres team, just when you’re out, they pull you back in. Just when you’re in, they kick you out on your keister. We talk about this team with just over 25 games left, the goalie platooning, the organization overall, the playoff conundrum and more. Then we get into tonight’s matchup, on the road […]
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Trainwreck Tonight 282 | Sabres on the Warpath? ft. Ryan Hasenauer of Batavia Downs
What a successful end of the season looks like for the Buffalo Sabres
Folks the Buffalo Sabres have made it to the All-Star break and are still playoff hopefuls. While snapping the 12-year playoff drought would be incredible, it is not playoffs or bust for this team. Playoff possibilities As of today, the Sabres sit three points behind Pittsburgh for the final wildcard spot, but the blue-and-gold hold […]
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‘The bell of stupidity’: Conservative’s Christmas video lampoons Trump’s latest speech

President Donald Trump was supposed to prioritize the economy at a MAGA rally last week — but instead rambled about former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) and other familiar foes.
In a Christmas-themed video, The Lincoln Project's Rick Wilson (a Never Trump conservative former GOP strategist) and journalist Molly Jong-Fast brutally mocked the speech for failing to get the desired economic message across.
Jong-Fast told Wilson, "Let's talk about how positively b----- the whole thing is. It was meant to be a rally on affordability. Here's what was not discussed: affordability. Here's what was discussed: Marjorie Taylor Greene. He calls her Marjorie Traitor Brown."
Wilson, sounding amused, interjected, "And I'm also intrigued by how she's somehow a leftist."
Jong-Fast told the Never Trumper, "It has really been a week for Trump."
Wilson laid out a variety of ways in which Trump and the MAGA movement are having a bad Christmas, from the Epstein files to the economy.
"There is no unringing this bell of stupidity," Wilson told Jong-Fast. "They have f----- it up. They have made a giant mistake."
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Trump Supreme Court battle could be dismantled by Congress members’ own history

New evidence is emerging that could deal a major blow to President Donald Trump's case for stripping birthright citizenship to the children of immigrants.
The president has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to restore “the original meaning” of the 14th Amendment, which his lawyers argued in a brief meant that “children of temporary visitors and illegal aliens are not U.S. citizens by birth," but new research raises questions about what lawmakers intended the amendment to do, reported the New York Times.
"One important tool has been overlooked in determining the meaning of this amendment: the actions that were taken — and not taken — to challenge the qualifications of members of Congress, who must be citizens, around the time the amendment was ratified," wrote Times correspondent Adam Liptak.
A new study will be published next month in The Georgetown Law Journal Online examining the backgrounds of the 584 members who served in Congress from 1865 to 1871. That research found more than a dozen of them might not have been citizens under Trump’s interpretation of the 14th Amendment, but no one challenged their qualifications.
"That is, said Amanda Frost, a law professor at the University of Virginia and an author of the study, the constitutional equivalent of the dog that did not bark, which provided a crucial clue in a Sherlock Holmes story," Liptak wrote.
The 14th Amendment states that "all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside," while the Constitution requires members of the House of Representatives to have been citizens for at least seven years, and senators for at least nine.
“If there had been an original understanding that tracked the Trump administration’s executive order,” Frost told Liptak, “at least some of these people would have been challenged.”
Only one of the nine challenges filed against a senator's qualifications in the period around the 14th Amendment's ratification involved the citizenship issue related to Trump's interpretation of birthright citizenship, and that case doesn't support his position.
"Several Democratic senators claimed in 1870 that their new colleague from Mississippi, Hiram Rhodes Revels, the first Black man to serve in Congress, had not been a citizen for the required nine years," Liptak wrote. "They reasoned that the 14th Amendment had overturned Dred Scott, the 1857 Supreme Court decision that denied citizenship to the descendants of enslaved African Americans, just two years earlier and that therefore he would not be eligible for another seven."
"That argument failed," the correspondent added. "No one thought to challenge any other members on the ground that they were born to parents who were not citizens and who had not, under the law in place at the time, filed a declaration of intent to be naturalized."
"The consensus on the 14th Amendment’s citizenship clause has long been that everyone born in the United States automatically becomes a citizen with exceptions for those not subject to its jurisdiction, like diplomats and enemy troops," Liptak added.
Frost's research found there were many members of Congress around the time of the ratification of the 14th Amendment who wouldn't have met Trump's definition of a citizen, and she said that fact undercuts the president's arguments.
“If the executive order reflected the original public meaning, which is what the originalists say is relevant,” Frost said, “then somebody — a member of Congress, the opposing party, the losing candidate, a member of the public who had just listened to the ratification debates on the 14th Amendment, somebody — would have raised this.”

