Search result for "智慧农业OBV筹码集中度RSIVOL数据2025年12月24日25日".
  • Stop Race Horse Cruelty and Death.
    On average, 24 horses die each week at US racetracks. Horses have become 4-legged pharmacies. The weak anti-doping rules that exist are rarely enforced putting both animal and jokey in grave danger every time they step into a starting gate.
    64 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Russell Dexter
  • Members of Congress: Occupy CONGRESS and do not leave until a budget agreement has been reached
    We call on our Senators and Representatives to OCCUPY CONGRESS 24/7 until a budget agreement has been reached and your job has been done. Remain in the Capitol building and/or your offices and be prepared to work until an agreement has been forged.
    86 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Barbara Broide
  • Remove Donald Trump From Office
    In the short amount of time since his inauguration, Donald Trump has repeatedly shown that he is incapable of performing the duties of the President of the United States. Based on Amendment 25, Section 4 of the Constitution, he should be removed from office.
    41 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Peter Gibson
  • Tell Bureau of Land Management: Deny CO2 Extraction on Federal Land in Huerfano County
    Carbon dioxide (CO2), a greenhouse gas pollutant, is pumped from beneath the Sheep Mountains where it has safely existed for 25 million years. The gas goes by pipeline to Texas and New Mexico to be used for Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR).
    95 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Joseph Edes
  • BAN BLINDING HEADLIGHTS
    #banblindingheadlights New cars should not be sold with blinding L.E.D. or H.I.D. headlights, and all cars that were sold in the last 25  years with these dangerous lights should be recalled and fixed. The person or people for inventing LED headlights should be put in prison. 
    145 of 200 Signatures
    Created by Jeff Fowler
  • LMSD- Teach Antisemitism Responsibly
    Dear Kerry Sautner and LMSD Board members,  We are deeply troubled by the Lower Merion School Board’s plan to partner with the Weitzman Organization  and the Anti Defamation League for antisemitism training.  Both organizations rely on the highly controversial International Holocaust Remembrance Association (IHRA) working definition of antisemitism which infamously conflates antisemitism with antizionism and is opposed by advocacy groups from across the ideological spectrum from Alliance Defending Freedom, a Christian legal advocacy group, to the ACLU, to SPLC Action Fund- an affiliate of the Southern Poverty Law Center, to PEN America, a nonprofit organization that defends free expression, not to mention Jewish groups like Bend the Arc, T’ruah, the Nexus Leadership Project — a coalition of academics and activists, and even explicitly pro-Israel groups like Americans for Peace Now and J Street.  This widespread condemnation of the IHRA definition of antisemitism stems from concerns that its overly broad language equates protected academic freedom and political expression with antisemitism.*   Disseminating an antisemitism curriculum in our district that is based on the IHRA definition would not only be legally dubious, it would send a highly problematic message to our children that some aspects of history should not be taught, some questions should not be posed, and some discussion topics should be silenced.  This is in stark contrast to the values the board seeks to uphold.   We urge the board to reconsider these partnerships, and at a minimum allow a discussion on antisemitism to be informed by experts in the field with diverse political and ideological backgrounds.    Thank you. *https://www.thefire.org/news/groups-across-ideological-spectrum-unite-opposing-antisemitism-awareness-act
    114 of 200 Signatures
    Created by Naomi Barton
  • Support S. 1627, American Renewable Energy & Efficiency Act
    Please support and co-sponsor S. 1627, the American Renewable Energy and Efficiency Act. This far-sighted bill would bring our nation's haphazard energy policy into the 21st century by encouraging greater use of modern, clean, safe, and cost-effective renewable energy and energy efficiency technologies. In the process, the bill would create more than 400,000 jobs; through efficiency measures, save consumers more than $90 billion through 2030; quadruple renewable energy production by 2025; and reduce carbon dioxide emissions equivalent to 120 coal-fired power plants. Again, please support and work for speedy enactment of S. 1627.
    1,129 of 2,000 Signatures
    Created by Michael Mariotte
  • QuitGPT - Stop using ChatGPT
    ChatGPT is Trump's biggest donor, and ICE uses ChatGPT. It's time to Quit. Commit to: • Stop using ChatGPT entirely • Cancel any paid subscriptions you have • Share the boycott with friends & on social media
    2,838 of 3,000 Signatures
    Created by Quit GPT
  • Ban tethering of dogs
    Ban unsupervised tethering of dogs.
    38 of 100 Signatures
    Created by Barbara Nozzi
  • Stop Mandatory Overtime for All Employees
    Over the last two decades, American workers have been clocking more and more hours on the job, and they now work more hours than workers in any other industrialized country. Annual work hours are 4% higher than they were in 1980, amounting to an extra 1 hour and 30 minutes at work per week, on average (ILO 1999). The cumulative rise in time on the job is even higher, of course, for families. In 1998 the typical middle-income, married-couple family worked six more weeks a year than did a similar family in 1989 (Mishel et al. 2001). Workers are also clocking more overtime hours. Almost one-third of the workforce regularly works more than the standard 40-hour week; one-fifth work more than 50 hours. Hourly manufacturing workers, the only group tracked by government statisticians, are putting in 25% more overtime than they were a decade ago.1 In virtually every industry within the bellweather manufacturing sector, overtime had reached a record by the end of the 1990s. The growth in overtime work, while helping to drive the healthy growth in output in the U.S., has unhealthy social costs. It is taking its toll not only on workers, but on their families, communities, and, ultimately in many cases, patients, customers, and employers. Families burdened by longer work hours are more likely to find it difficult to balance the conflicting demands of work and family. More hours spent at work mean less time with the family, less time to help a child with homework, less time for play, less time for housework, and less time for sleep. These sacrifices can translate into increased risk for accidents and injuries; greater chronic fatigue, stress, and related diseases; reduced parenting and family time; and diminished quality of goods and services – a serious public concern particularly in the health care sector. The social costs associated with the growth in work hours and persistent overtime are particularly worrisome when the long hours are involuntary. The tenuous balance between work, family, and other non-work activities is thrown off most when overtime is mandatory (also referred to as “compulsory” or “forced”). Mandatory overtime hours are those above the standard work week (usually 40) that the employer makes compulsory with the threat of job loss or the threat of other reprisals such as demotion or assignment to unattractive tasks or work shifts. Given that overtime can have detrimental effects on workers and their families, mandatory overtime is a serious public policy concern, yet current law does not address it. The Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA), which regulates overtime, currently imposes no limits on overtime hours, nor does it prohibit dismissal or any other sanction for declining overtime work. Rather, the FLSA merely requires that payroll employees (who are not “exempt” from the overtime requirements of the FLSA) be paid an overtime premium of at least one-half of regular rate of pay for each hour worked over 40 during a work week. With the rise in household work hours and overtime, there is a growing need for limits on involuntary overtime. Labor laws such as the FLSA need to be amended to protect workers against excessive work hours and mandatory overtime and to protect the public from the dangers of an overburdened, stressed workforce. Employees should have the legal right to refuse overtime after having worked a certain number of hours – without fear of job loss or other sanctions. Amendment of the FLSA can preserve the right of workers to work long hours if they choose to do so, but ensure workers the right to refuse mandatory overtime. The use of mandatory overtime also prohibits the creation of new job openings and furthering unemployment allowing employers to use up their current work force instead of spending money to create new positions filling the hours mandatory overtime is presented in the first place.
    222 of 300 Signatures
    Created by sam fani
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