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tripscan

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tripscan [2025/09/29 09:59]
47.128.113.7 old revision restored (2025/09/04 03:02)
tripscan [2025/09/29 13:26] (current)
47.128.40.194 old revision restored (2025/08/04 19:08)
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-The legal fight is far from over. Dozens of cases related to spending and appropriations are still being litigated. And the administration’s proposed pocket recission — which would cancel funding close enough to the end of the fiscal year that Congress is effectively powerless to stop it — is sure to be challenged in court, too. +Fed-up Italian farmers set up mountain turnstiles to charge access to Instagram hot spots [[https://tripscan36.org/|трипскан вход]]
-[[https://tripskan39.cc/|tripscan top]]+
  
-House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries called the move a “brazenly unlawful scam” and referred to Trump as a “wannabe King.” And the top Democrat on the Senate spending panelSen. Patty Murraysaid Congress should reject the “ridiculous, illegal maneuver.+If Carlo Zanella, president of the Alto Adige Alpine Clubhad his waytravel influencers would be banned from the Dolomites.
  
-“Republicans should not accept Russ Vought’s brazen attempt to usurp their own power. No president has a line-item veto—and certainly not a retroactive line-item veto,” the Washington state Democrat said last week.+He blames them for the latest Italian social media trendwhich has lured hundreds of thousands of tourists to the mountain range in northern Italy, with many traipsing across private land to get that perfect shot.
  
-And the move has met some resistance from members of the president’s own partyTop Senate appropriator Susan Collins called it a clear violation of the law,” while Alaska SenLisa Murkowski argued that Congress alone bears the constitutional responsibility for funding our government, and any effort to claw back resources outside of the appropriations process undermines that responsibility.”+In response to the influx, frustrated local farmers have set up turnstiles, where tourists must pay 5 euros (nearly $6) to access several “Instagrammable” spots, including the Seceda and Drei Zinnen (Three Peaks) mountain ranges. 
 + 
 +Photos showing lines of up to 4,000 people a day, have been popping up on social media in recent weeks. But rather than deter people from coming, the images have acted as a magnet. 
 + 
 +The media’s been talking about the turnstiles, everyone’s been talking about it,” says Zanella. “And people go where everyone else goes. We’re sheep.” 
 + 
 +Italian law mandates free access to natural parkssuch as the Alps and Dolomites, but the landowners who set up the turnstiles say they have yet to receive any official pushback from authorities. 
 + 
 +Georg Rabanser, a former Italian national team snowboarder who owns land in a meadow on Seceda, told the Ladin-language magazine La Usc he and others started charging tourists to cross their land to make a point. 
 + 
 +“So many people come through here every day, everyone goes through our properties and leaves trash,” he says. “Ours was a cry for help. We expected a call from the provincial authorities. But nothing. We only read statements in the newspapers. Gossip; nothing concrete. We haven’t even received warning letters. So we’re moving forward.”
  
tripscan.1759132754.txt.gz · Last modified: 2025/09/29 09:59 by 47.128.113.7