#MorningMonarchy: December 1, 2017
Inappropriate behaviour, inciting debauchery and credible accusations + this day in history w/the murder of Sergey Kirov and our song of the day by Morrissey on your Morning Monarchy for December 1, 2017.
Inappropriate behaviour, inciting debauchery and credible accusations + this day in history w/the murder of Sergey Kirov and our song of the day by Morrissey on your Morning Monarchy for December 1, 2017.
Manson remains, reconstructing Mithras and open investigations + this day in history w/the death of Paul Walker and our song of the day by No Age on your Morning Monarchy for November 30, 2017.
Fast food nihilism, CRISPR kits and dead head transplants + this day in history w/the murder of Natalie Wood and our song of the day by Ty Segall on your Morning Monarchy for November 29, 2017.
This week on #GoodNewsNextWeek: Oregon finally tells Nestle to GTFO of town; Poland starts down the smokey slope of medical marijuana; New tech lets you test your hair for pesticides.
This week on #GoodNewsNextWeek: Oregon finally tells Nestle to GTFO of town; Poland starts down the smokey slope of medical marijuana; New tech lets you test your hair for pesticides.
Noise cancelling forks, cuddly but dangerous animal stories and burning plastic + this day in history w/the Gandhi riots and our song of the day by Margo Price on your Morning Monarchy for November 1, 2017.
Death by chocolate, serial killer at large and a sort of human bondage pyramid scheme + this day in history w/the "Suicide Solution" suicide and our song of the day by Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings on your Morning Monarchy for October 26, 2017.
New rivers, smaller condoms and bigger waste + this day in history w/the US invades Grenada and our song of the day by Blitzen Trapper on your Morning Monarchy for October 25, 2017.
A federal judge seemed skeptical Monday about the government’s argument that it was within its rights to destroy burial grounds and a ceremonial site sacred to members of the Klickitat and Cascade Native American tribes to widen a highway.
In 2008, the government widened U.S. Highway 26, which runs from the Pacific Ocean over Mount Hood and into the eastern part of the state. The Oregon Department of Transportation took special care not to disturb wetlands that ran along the road and to avoid encroaching on a roadside tattoo parlor.
Oregon cops have been sued by a woman who claims officers arrested her under questionable circumstances, then left her dog in her car for 17 days where she found it dead upon her release from custody.
Tamala Bemis filed the lawsuit in federal court last week against the City of Eugene, officer Brad Hanneman and several unnamed officers.