The New York Times Editorial Board criticizes former President Trump for pardoning rioters involved in the January 6th event, arguing it signals approval of violence as political expression and dismisses accountability. Meanwhile, California Attorney General Bonta joins 18 states in a lawsuit against Trump's efforts to undermine birthright citizenship guaranteed by the 14th Amendment. In other news, the Winter Fancy Food Show is set to return to San Francisco in 2027, albeit under a new name, and the Warriors face critical challenges after a heavy defeat.
It loudly proclaims, from the nation's highest office, that the rioters did nothing wrong, that violence is a perfectly legitimate form of political expression and that no price need be paid by those who seek to disrupt a sacred constitutional transfer of power.
18 states' attorneys general and a slew of immigrants' rights groups including the ACLU and Asian Law Caucus are suing the Trump administration over their effort to flout something that is plainly guaranteed in the 14th Amendment.
In a rare win these days for SF Travel and the Moscone Center, the Winter Fancy Food Show is returning to SF in 2027, but it will be called the Winter FancyFaire starting next year.
After a blowout, 40-point loss to the Celtics at the Chase Center Monday night, the Warriors are heading into a make-or-break stretch to save their season.
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