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Wednesday, September 3, 2025
Trump to Award Mayor Giuliani the Medal of Freedom
Rep. Jerrold Nadler Will not be Running for Re-Election
Nadler, 78, has been considered one of the leading liberal voices in Congress, saying that he is responding to the call for generational change that has recently been dividing his party.
He recently told The New York Times of his plans, provided that they didn’t reveal them until Monday. He said that he hesitated to step aside at this time, while, in his view, President Donald Trump stands as a threat to the foundations of democracy, according to The Times. But he told them that he believes it is time for the changing of the guard.
“Watching the Biden thing really said something about the necessity for generational change in the party, and I think I want to respect that,” Nadler said, adding that a younger successor “can maybe do better, can maybe help us more.”
Saturday, August 16, 2025
Diane Coleman’s Last Review: Life After, “A Wonderful Film.”
https://notdeadyet.org/diane-colemans-last-review-life-after-a-wonderful-film/
Ian McIntosh, Executive Director Not Dead Yet:
To the best of my knowledge, one of the last tasks Founder, President and CEO of Not Dead Yet (NDY), Diane Coleman completed, days before her sudden passing last November, was to watch Reid Davenport’s Life After.
Diane intended to write a fulsome review. And although she could not publish her thoughts in time, she left one of sorts, complete in its brevity, in an email to the film’s creators, saying that Life After is: “a wonderful film”.
In this arena and in our community, there’s no higher praise. As Diane’s successor, serving as the Executive Director of NDY, and as a self-confessed cinephile, having seen the documentary several times now, I can confirm that like everything else Diane weighed in on: Of course, she’s right. Life After is a wonderful film for too many reasons to expand upon here and now.
But Multimedia Films, the production house for Life After, notes on its website a synopsis of the documentary, which in part reads: