To see a friend William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 6-30-25
Sdc’i ldggn, iwt upch sdc’i hipgi qddxcv jcixa Yjan.
Tpga Ltpktg
Answer to yesterday’s William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit puzzle: To see a friend no road is too long.
Ukrainain Folk Saying
News, Entertainment, Enlightenment
To see a friend William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 6-30-25
Sdc’i ldggn, iwt upch sdc’i hipgi qddxcv jcixa Yjan.
Tpga Ltpktg
Answer to yesterday’s William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit puzzle: To see a friend no road is too long.
Ukrainain Folk Saying
Man who loves wisdom William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 6-29-25
Hc gss o tfwsbr bc fcor wg hcc zcbu.
Iyfowbowb Tczy Gomwbu
Answer to yesterday’s puzzle: A man who loves wisdom brings joy to his father, but a companion of prostitutes squanders his wealth.
Proverbs 29:3
Follow my own feelings William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 6-28-25
N zna jub ybirf jvfqbz oevatf wbl gb uvf sngure, ohg n pbzcnavba bs cebfgvghgrf fdhnaqref uvf jrnygu.
Cebireof
Answer to yesterday’s puzzle: I pay no attention whatever to anybody’s praise or blame. I simply follow my own feelings.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Good neighbor William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 6-27-25
U bmk za mffqzfuaz itmfqhqd fa mzknapk’e bdmueq ad nxmyq. U euybxk raxxai yk aiz rqqxuzse.
Iaxrsmzs Mympqge Yalmdf
Answer to yesterday’s William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit Puzzle: A good neighbor, a found treasure!
Roy Blankenship
Shapiro Seeks To Destroy Middle Class With Budget — Pennsylvania’s 2025-26 budget battle continues in the state legislator this June 26 but let us not forget that the one submitted by Gov. Josh Shapiro calls for spending $2.5 billion more which would cost a family of four $2,000 as per the Commonwealth Foundation.
The government class has no problem with spending increases coupled with service declines.
No one in Harrisburg is sincerely considering imposing efficiencies that would cut spending while improving service.
DOGE needs to come to the Keystone State.
In other Shapiro news, the inimitable Sean Connolly continues to lay the matters of Montgomery County at the feet of the Governor who ruled Montco as head of its Democrat Party and chairman of the county commissioners.
Reparations For Tulsa Riots Ignore History
By Bob Small
A friend of mine in poetry, Lamont B. Steptoe, first told me about the 1921 Tulsa Race “Massacre”, This hadn’t been taught in any history course I had taken, including Black History.
Tulsa Mayor Monroe Nichols says “There is not one Tulsan, no matter their skin color, who wouldn’t be better off today had the massacre not happened…or if generations before us would have done the hard work to restore what was lost.”
This plan was announced on June 1. It’s called Road to Repair to be managed by the Greenwood Trust without requiring City Council approval.
Evanston, Ill., was the first US city to offer reparations.
The Justice Department says there are ‘credible reports’ that law enforcement members participated in the Tulsa arson and murders.
But the first article written about this in 1971, Never A Massacre In Tulsa & Not Hidden paints a different, but still terrible, picture of what had happened 50 years before There were a number of failures of the municipal authorities to take control of the situation, perhaps unsurprising in a city where the Ku Klux Klan had a headquarters.
There were close to a thousand of both races either injured or killed and “thirty-five city blocks were completely looted and burned to the ground.” The Negro community was denied compensation, due to the rioting or civil insurrection clause in their insurance policies.
A white woman had claimed rape by Dick Rowland. A white mob was gathering to raid the county jail and lynch Rowland.
This is the point, if not before, that the authorities needed to take strong direct action. They did not.
The subsequent grand jury led to “the impeachment and conviction of chief of police John A. Gustafson who was suspended and later convicted in a district court trial” “for failure to take proper precautions for the protection of life and property during the rioting . . . and conspiracy to free automobile thieves and collect rewards.”
My idea for reparations is the inclusion of the 1921 Tulsa events, the 1985 MOVE Events, and the toll that reconstruction meted out to the South in all our future Histories.
Quotation is a national vice William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 6-26-25
L rzzo yptrsmzc, l qzfyo ecpldfcp!
Czj Mwlyvpydsta
Answer to yesterday’s William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit puzzle: In the dying world I come from, quotation is a national vice.
Evelyn Waugh
Dodgers’ Dicey Relationship With Immigration Law
By Joe Guzzardi
For an organization that the Federal Bureau of Investigation once probed for possible Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) violations regarding their involvement with human traffickers and document forgers, the Los Angeles Dodgers have adopted high-and-mighty airs. Since no legal avenue exists to travel from communist Cuba to the United States, the Department of Justice wondered how, in 2012, the Dodgers managed to get outfielder Yasiel Puig to Los Angeles.
Sports Illustrated, in a weekly magazine article titled “Inside the Underbelly,” wrote that it obtained a large dossier of information that was originally provided to the FBI. The dossier included videotapes, photographs, confidential legal briefs, receipts, copies of player visas and passport documents, internal emails, and private communications among franchise executives. The evidence pointed to how smugglers access underground pipelines to ferry prospects from Cuba to Haiti or Mexico—waystations to MLB riches. The Dodgers, with their extensive scouting operations throughout the Caribbean, were prominently featured in the FBI dossier, which described efforts to circumvent federal and MLB laws. Puig, for example, paid Florida businessman Gilberto Suarez $2.5 million from his $42 million Dodgers bonus to help him travel from Mexico, where he had been holed up in a cheap seedy motel, to Los Angeles. The DOJ found evidence of shredded documents and large-scale forgeries. The criminal activity reached its peak when Cuban Jose Abreu testified under oath before a grand jury that, prior to his arrival in Miami from another smuggler’s route through Haiti, he ate his fake passport and washed it down with a Heineken. “I knew I could not arrive in the U.S. with a false passport,” Abreu said before signing his $68 million contract with the Chicago White Sox.
The recent dust-up outside of Dodger Stadium consisted of a relatively small group of malcontents, unemployed agitators, and immigration activists. The gathering was responding to an NBC News report that quoted Eunisses Hernandez, a Los Angeles City Council member, who alleged that she received calls early in the morning stating that “federal agents were staging here at the entrance of Dodger Stadium. We got pictures of dozens of vehicles and dozens of agents.”
The Department of Homeland Security immediately responded to deny that Immigration and Customs Enforcement had plans to take removal action in or around Dodger Stadium. DHS replied via X: “This had nothing to do with the Dodgers. CBP vehicles were in the stadium parking lot very briefly, unrelated to any operation or enforcement.” In the meantime, the Dodgers boasted that they blocked ICE from entering their grounds.
Prohibiting federal law enforcement from entering and conducting lawful business constitutes a federal crime; “The current policy allows ICE agents to enter public areas without permission.” Independent journalist Ali Bradley provided the backstory, reporting: “CBP teams went to Hollywood Home Depot to make apprehensions. They did, and we’re going to transfer the illegal aliens to transport vans off Sunset Boulevard, but when things escalated outside of Home Depot, they went to an open parking lot at Dodger Stadium to make the consolidated transfer. Agents say no one came over and told them to leave.”
In his book “Baseball Cop: The Dark Side of America’s National Pastime,” Eduardo Dominguez, a decorated Boston police officer, a FBI agent and then a MLB Department of Investigations task force member documented his ongoing efforts to alert MLB executives to the trafficking crimes that brought Cuban players to their teams. Aiding and abetting and human trafficking are federal crimes, and cases could potentially be made against major league teams that sign Cuban players. MLB ignored Dominguez’s warnings but instead attempted to suppress his well-received book’s publication. MLB desperately sought to prevent public access to the book and hired law firm Clare Locke to threaten Dominguez and his publisher with defamation lawsuits if the book were published. Later fired, Dominguez said that he could not understand how MLB was so dismissive of a federal investigation’s findings.
The Dodgers are more than just a baseball team—they are a politically progressive, DEI-focused multibillion-dollar business that acts in what it perceives as its best interests, including misrepresenting what occurred with ICE. MLB operates as a collective $79 billion industry, with the Dodgers representing a $6.9 billion segment of that market. In a word salad announcement, the Dodgers pledged $1 million—an infinitesimal fraction of the team’s value—to assist illegal immigrant families who claim to be adversely affected by ICE operations. The Dodgers and MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred maintain in-house legal counsel and have immediate phone call access to the nation’s most experienced outside attorneys. They should rely on that legal expertise to assess the validity of DHS immigration removal operations when they occur.
Meanwhile, the Dodgers’ fan base should recognize the reality of their team’s transformation. The Dodgers are no longer the romanticized “Boys of Summer“–they are multimillion-dollar athletes employed by billionaire corporate executives who show criminal disregard for federal immigration laws.
Joe Guzzardi is an Institute for Sound Public Policy analyst. Contact him at jguzzardi@iffsp.org
Carnival Cruise Was Needed Break
By Tevin Dix
I went on a weekly long cruise know as Carnival Cruise Celebration. The cruise started out in Miami. During the week we stopped at Aruba, Bonaire and Curacao aka the ABC islands.
The first stop was at Aruba. I spend the entire day at the beach with my family. The next day we stopped at Bonaire and I participated in an off-roading dune buggy tour. It was so fun driving through puddles of mud, dirt and rock. Everybody was going so fast that we created a little sandstorm I felt like I was in Mad Max. The next day we stopped at another island called Curacao where I went underwater helmet diving. I went 30 feet into the ocean with a helmet. I had a tube connected to my helmet for me to breathe. As I was underwater I was surrounded by an army of fish. This was a great experience.
There was a lot to do and plenty of great food on the trip. My favorite things were the arcade and Guy Fieri’s Burger joint. I loved waking up to an ocean view. Dinner service was great. I liked that employee’s entertained us every night with a song. One night my family and I went to this Chinese & Mexican restaurant and the food was phenomenal.
This was my sixth time on Carnival cruise. I remember my parents taking my siblings and I on a cruise for the first time in 2004. The last time I was on a cruise was back in 2015 and the ship was out in New Orleans. I remember experiencing Bourbon Street the night before going on the ship.
In the end, I had a great time. I don’t plan on cruising for a while, but there’s so many places in the world I would like to visit.
Tevin Dix is a resident of Haverford Township.
Quotes found on the Internet William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 6-25-25
Sx dro nisxq gybvn S mywo pbyw, aeydkdsyx sc k xkdsyxkv fsmo.
Ofovix Gkeqr
Answer to yesterday’s William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit puzzle: Quotes found on the Internet are not always accurate
Abraham Lincoln