Why the Left Went Berserk After William Barr’s Notre Dame Speech | The Heritage Foundation:
Rarely does a U.S. attorney general get such blowback for a non-televised speech at a university. Yet that’s what happened last month to Attorney General William Barr.
On Oct. 11, Barr gave a speech at Notre Dame Law School that began with the unremarkable observation that “[f]rom the Founding Era onward, there was a strong consensus about the centrality of religious liberty in the United States.”
By the time he finished that speech, left-wing writers were pounding their keyboards with hair-on-fire indignation. Here’s what Barr said that got them so worked up.
Important stuff you won't get from the liberal media! We do the surfing so you can be informed AND have a life!
Thursday, November 28, 2019
The Atlantic suggests meeting your imperfect Trump-supporting relatives at their level this Thanksgiving – twitchy.com
The Atlantic suggests meeting your imperfect Trump-supporting relatives at their level this Thanksgiving – twitchy.com
"Who’s ready for yet another hot take about how to talk politics with your relatives this Thanksgiving?
We don’t think anything can beat the ACLU’s “conversation starters” (for example, “My pronouns are …”), but The Atlantic is giving it a shot with this take on “how to talk about the truth and Trump at Thanksgiving.”
Read all.
"Who’s ready for yet another hot take about how to talk politics with your relatives this Thanksgiving?
We don’t think anything can beat the ACLU’s “conversation starters” (for example, “My pronouns are …”), but The Atlantic is giving it a shot with this take on “how to talk about the truth and Trump at Thanksgiving.”
Read all.
"To talk politics, in this age, is to talk Donald Trump," writes @DrIbram, "and to talk Donald Trump, on this Thanksgiving, is to talk impeachment." http://on.theatln.tc/PedA1pp
Washington’s Thanksgiving Proclamation | Intellectual Takeout
Washington’s Thanksgiving Proclamation | Intellectual Takeout
"Thanksgiving is a quintessential American holiday.
It is a holiday that in many ways requires some sense of the supernatural – whether we care to acknowledge it or not.
Below you will find our first President’s proclamation of Thanksgiving in which his sense of the hand of Providence upon the American Republic is quite clear. Indeed, his mixing of church and state, of belief and practice is undeniable.
When you read it, consider the tone, humility, and outlook of President George Washington and ask yourself if any of our current leaders match him.
It is, for me, a breath of fresh air, a reminder that while our Founders had many sins, they were at the same time driven to seek the good, the true, and the beautiful.
They were deeply rooted in Western Civilization and understood the symbiosis between belief and practice.
For those who would argue that the Founders believed in a firm separation between church and state, a division of belief and practice, this document is a challenge..."
Read all.
"Thanksgiving is a quintessential American holiday.
It is a holiday that in many ways requires some sense of the supernatural – whether we care to acknowledge it or not.
Below you will find our first President’s proclamation of Thanksgiving in which his sense of the hand of Providence upon the American Republic is quite clear. Indeed, his mixing of church and state, of belief and practice is undeniable.
When you read it, consider the tone, humility, and outlook of President George Washington and ask yourself if any of our current leaders match him.
It is, for me, a breath of fresh air, a reminder that while our Founders had many sins, they were at the same time driven to seek the good, the true, and the beautiful.
They were deeply rooted in Western Civilization and understood the symbiosis between belief and practice.
For those who would argue that the Founders believed in a firm separation between church and state, a division of belief and practice, this document is a challenge..."
Read all.
Tucker Carlson Has Highest Rated Month Ever Amidst Impeachment Drama | The Daily Caller
Tucker Carlson Has Highest Rated Month Ever Amidst Impeachment Drama | The Daily Caller:
As impeachment drama captivates Washington D.C., “Tucker Carlson Tonight” had its highest rated month in program history this month, while Fox News was the most watched cable network for the 41st consecutive month.
Fox News host Tucker Carlson, who co-founded the Daily Caller, has averaged over 3.4 million viewers this month, including 551,000 viewers in the coveted 25-54 age demographic, according to Nielsen Media Research. Fox News saw its primetime viewership increase by 15% this month, while MSNBC saw their viewership improve by 12%. CNN suffered an 11% drop in primetime viewership.
As impeachment drama captivates Washington D.C., “Tucker Carlson Tonight” had its highest rated month in program history this month, while Fox News was the most watched cable network for the 41st consecutive month.
Fox News host Tucker Carlson, who co-founded the Daily Caller, has averaged over 3.4 million viewers this month, including 551,000 viewers in the coveted 25-54 age demographic, according to Nielsen Media Research. Fox News saw its primetime viewership increase by 15% this month, while MSNBC saw their viewership improve by 12%. CNN suffered an 11% drop in primetime viewership.
Thanksgiving, Socialism, and Free Enterprise | International Liberty
Thanksgiving, Socialism, and Free Enterprise | International Liberty
Thanksgiving, Socialism, and Free Enterprise
Thanksgiving, Socialism, and Free Enterprise
"...But capitalism had to be learned.
One of the first European settlements in North America, the Plymouth Plantation in Massachusetts, was based on socialism.
And it was real socialism, with common ownership of the means of production.
Unsurprisingly, it was not a rousing success.
Indeed, it was a miserable failure.
Here’s Larry Reed’s analysis of what happened.
We should never forget that the Plymouth colony was headed straight for oblivion under a communal, socialist plan… Land was held in common. Crops were brought to a common storehouse and distributed equally. For two years, every person had to work for everybody else (the community), not for themselves as individuals or families. Did they live happily ever after in this socialist utopia? Hardly. The “common property” approach killed off about half the settlers. Governor Bradford recorded in his diary that everybody was happy to claim their equal share of production, but production only shrank. Slackers showed up late for work in the fields, and the hard workers resented it. …The disincentives of the socialist scheme bred impoverishment and conflict until, facing starvation and extinction, Bradford altered the system. He divided common property into private plots… Communal socialist failure was transformed into private property/capitalist success, something that’s happened so often historically it’s almost monotonous.
And here are some excerpts from a column that Professor Ben Powell wrote back in 2004..."
Read all.
Read all.
Op-ed: Navy corruption and the Gallagher case
Op-ed: Navy corruption and the Gallagher case
"In this partisan environment, people were quick to judge President Donald J. Trump’s reinstatement of anchors to my brother, Special Warfare Operator Chief Edward “Eddie” Gallagher.
Out of the woodwork came former military attorneys, indignant Pentagon officials and your typical Washington establishment types.
Their views were mainly the same.
The president’s actions were a moral hazard!
What message will it send our troops?
What of good order and discipline?
I have one question for these people: Where in the hell were you the past year and a half?
Eddie’s case and court-martial trial revealed a massive cancer within the military justice system, doing irreparable damage to troop morale that may last decades.
I didn’t hear a damn thing from these harbingers of moral decency when that was exposed.
Read all!
"In this partisan environment, people were quick to judge President Donald J. Trump’s reinstatement of anchors to my brother, Special Warfare Operator Chief Edward “Eddie” Gallagher.
Out of the woodwork came former military attorneys, indignant Pentagon officials and your typical Washington establishment types.
Their views were mainly the same.
The president’s actions were a moral hazard!
What message will it send our troops?
What of good order and discipline?
I have one question for these people: Where in the hell were you the past year and a half?
Eddie’s case and court-martial trial revealed a massive cancer within the military justice system, doing irreparable damage to troop morale that may last decades.
I didn’t hear a damn thing from these harbingers of moral decency when that was exposed.
- Where was their outrage when the Naval Criminal Investigative Service agents dragged my brother’s kids in the street at gunpoint in their underwear? (A fact NCIS denied to this very publication until under oath admitted that, yes, they did drag my nephews nearly naked into the streets of San Diego when Ed wasn’t home).
- Where were these critics when investigators admitted Eddie’s entire pretrial imprisonment was based on a lie, forcing him to spend eight months in a sex offender brig for nothing?..."
Read all!
Lunch video-----WKRP Turkey Drop
Mr. Carlson swears turkeys can fly... tell that to the Pine Dell Shopping Mall!
KLAVAN: CNN Actually Broke A Story About The Deep State. | The Daily Wire
KLAVAN: CNN Actually Broke A Story About The Deep State. | The Daily Wire:
The IG report is coming out. Now, this is the interesting thing, because this entire impeachment charade has been to mask the malfeasance — I have now used the word “malfeasance” twice in one show, which is a record, I think — of the Obama administration. The scandal-free Obama administration, which spied on Donald Trump.
The IG report is coming out. Now, this is the interesting thing, because this entire impeachment charade has been to mask the malfeasance — I have now used the word “malfeasance” twice in one show, which is a record, I think — of the Obama administration. The scandal-free Obama administration, which spied on Donald Trump.
Very worthy read!-----Thanksgiving for Dummies...Sorry, I Mean College Professors
Thanksgiving for Dummies...Sorry, I Mean College Professors
"As every contemporary school child knows, the first Thanksgiving took place in 1621, when our Pilgrim forefathers took a break from slaughtering Indigenous Peoples to invite them to dinner and infect them with smallpox, before embarking on their mission to fry the planet so that the world would end on Jan. 22, 2031...
Consider this description of the Pilgrims' treatment of the Indigenous Peoples:
"They were the worst of conquerors. Inordinate pride, the lust of blood and dominion, were the mainsprings of their warfare; and their victories were strained with every excess of savage passion."
You've probably guessed -- unless you are an American college student -- that that's not a description of the Pilgrims' treatment of Indigenous Peoples at all.
It is a description of some Indigenous Peoples' treatment of other Indigenous Peoples, provided by Francis Parkman, the world's foremost Indian scholar.
It was Indians, not Pilgrims, who let out the "Mohawk war-cry" that made the blood run cold.
This is why the Wampanoag had a lot to celebrate that first Thanksgiving.
They were delighted to have such excellent (European) allies against the terroristic Iroquois and Narragansett.
The Pilgrims also had much to be thankful for.
Of more than 100 passengers aboard the Mayflower, only 44 survived the first winter, felled by scurvy, malnutrition and the bitter cold.
Even the ones who made it did so largely thanks to the friendly Wampanoag, who shared their food with the Europeans and taught them how to till the land.
...The warm relations between Pilgrims and the (mostly) gentle Algonquins doesn't fit the White Man Bad thesis that is the entire point of all history taught in America today.
In fact, as any sane, reasonable person can probably surmise: Some white men were kind, and some were cruel.
Some Indians were neighborly -- and some were bloodthirsty killers.
...Before the first European stepped off Mayflower, the Iroquois' genocidal wars against their fellow Indians had already depopulated large parts of New England.
..."Northern New Hampshire, the whole of Vermont and Western Massachusetts had no human tenants but the roving hunter or prowling warrior," Parkman writes.
The irony of the moron's version of Thanksgiving is that the brave and honorable attributes of the American Indian are drained from all the PC stories.
In the made-up history, Indians are only pathetic.
By contrast, the true story told by Parkman shows both the savagery and superstition, but also the courage and honor.
Thus, for example, the Hurons "held it disgraceful to turn from the face of an enemy when the fortunes of the fight were adverse."
As the Indian captive of the Iroquois was being tortured alive, Parkman reports, he raises his voice in "scorn and defiance."
How's that for machismo?
That's the reason we name our sports teams and military armaments after Indians.
It's a tribute to their honor, intelligence and bravery..."
Read all!
"As every contemporary school child knows, the first Thanksgiving took place in 1621, when our Pilgrim forefathers took a break from slaughtering Indigenous Peoples to invite them to dinner and infect them with smallpox, before embarking on their mission to fry the planet so that the world would end on Jan. 22, 2031...
Consider this description of the Pilgrims' treatment of the Indigenous Peoples:
"They were the worst of conquerors. Inordinate pride, the lust of blood and dominion, were the mainsprings of their warfare; and their victories were strained with every excess of savage passion."
You've probably guessed -- unless you are an American college student -- that that's not a description of the Pilgrims' treatment of Indigenous Peoples at all.
It is a description of some Indigenous Peoples' treatment of other Indigenous Peoples, provided by Francis Parkman, the world's foremost Indian scholar.
It was Indians, not Pilgrims, who let out the "Mohawk war-cry" that made the blood run cold.
This is why the Wampanoag had a lot to celebrate that first Thanksgiving.
They were delighted to have such excellent (European) allies against the terroristic Iroquois and Narragansett.
The Pilgrims also had much to be thankful for.
Of more than 100 passengers aboard the Mayflower, only 44 survived the first winter, felled by scurvy, malnutrition and the bitter cold.
Even the ones who made it did so largely thanks to the friendly Wampanoag, who shared their food with the Europeans and taught them how to till the land.
...The warm relations between Pilgrims and the (mostly) gentle Algonquins doesn't fit the White Man Bad thesis that is the entire point of all history taught in America today.
In fact, as any sane, reasonable person can probably surmise: Some white men were kind, and some were cruel.
Some Indians were neighborly -- and some were bloodthirsty killers.
...Before the first European stepped off Mayflower, the Iroquois' genocidal wars against their fellow Indians had already depopulated large parts of New England.
..."Northern New Hampshire, the whole of Vermont and Western Massachusetts had no human tenants but the roving hunter or prowling warrior," Parkman writes.
The irony of the moron's version of Thanksgiving is that the brave and honorable attributes of the American Indian are drained from all the PC stories.
In the made-up history, Indians are only pathetic.
By contrast, the true story told by Parkman shows both the savagery and superstition, but also the courage and honor.
Thus, for example, the Hurons "held it disgraceful to turn from the face of an enemy when the fortunes of the fight were adverse."
As the Indian captive of the Iroquois was being tortured alive, Parkman reports, he raises his voice in "scorn and defiance."
How's that for machismo?
That's the reason we name our sports teams and military armaments after Indians.
It's a tribute to their honor, intelligence and bravery..."
Read all!
‘The fourth Thanksgiving of the Trump era is upon us’: Here’s WaPo’s take on arguing with relatives – twitchy.com
‘The fourth Thanksgiving of the Trump era is upon us’: Here’s WaPo’s take on arguing with relatives – twitchy.com
"OK, we’re starting to lose track; we’ve had guides on how to talk about President Trump and politics around the Thanksgiving table from the ACLU, a pro-abortion group, MoveOn, and The Atlantic — all left-leaning, of course.
For some reason, conservatives don’t seem to see Thanksgiving as a compulsory gathering for political debate.
It’s just like when the media makes an error — it’s always in one direction, and when Thanksgiving rolls around, it’s always the liberals telling us how to steer the conversation.
"OK, we’re starting to lose track; we’ve had guides on how to talk about President Trump and politics around the Thanksgiving table from the ACLU, a pro-abortion group, MoveOn, and The Atlantic — all left-leaning, of course.
For some reason, conservatives don’t seem to see Thanksgiving as a compulsory gathering for political debate.
It’s just like when the media makes an error — it’s always in one direction, and when Thanksgiving rolls around, it’s always the liberals telling us how to steer the conversation.
Now, at last, the Washington Post has weighed in, asking if we have yet learned to talk politics on this, the “fourth Thanksgiving of the Trump era.”
Read all!
Read all!
The First Thanksgiving, 1621
The First Thanksgiving, 1621
It was not what they had planned. In September of 1620, 102 pilgrims embarked from England aboard the Mayflower (see Aboard the Mayflower, 1620).
Their intent was to establish a settlement in the Hudson River area in the northern reaches of the recently established Virginia Colony.
However, after a sixty-six-day journey they made landfall some 150 miles north of their target (whether by design or mishap is unclear) at the eastern tip of Cape Cod in present-day Massachusetts.
They explored the area for about a month and then sailed further west to the mainland at present-day Plymouth.
It was here that they decided to establish a new homeland.
It was not what they had planned. In September of 1620, 102 pilgrims embarked from England aboard the Mayflower (see Aboard the Mayflower, 1620).
Their intent was to establish a settlement in the Hudson River area in the northern reaches of the recently established Virginia Colony.
However, after a sixty-six-day journey they made landfall some 150 miles north of their target (whether by design or mishap is unclear) at the eastern tip of Cape Cod in present-day Massachusetts.
They explored the area for about a month and then sailed further west to the mainland at present-day Plymouth.
It was here that they decided to establish a new homeland.
For the first few months the majority of the expedition remained cloistered aboard ship where many succumbed to mal-nutrition and disease.
It is estimated that half of their number died by the following Spring.
With the return of favorable weather the remaining adventurers abandoned their ship and moved ashore to establish a settlement in the wilderness.
They were aided by two members of the local Native American tribes.
To the astonishment of the Pilgrims, both of these Good Samaritans spoke English.
One, Squanto, a member of the Pawtuxet tribe, had been kidnapped by English adventurers a few years earlier and taken to England. He was subsequently able to achieve his release and return to his homeland
It is estimated that half of their number died by the following Spring.
With the return of favorable weather the remaining adventurers abandoned their ship and moved ashore to establish a settlement in the wilderness.
They were aided by two members of the local Native American tribes.
To the astonishment of the Pilgrims, both of these Good Samaritans spoke English.
One, Squanto, a member of the Pawtuxet tribe, had been kidnapped by English adventurers a few years earlier and taken to England. He was subsequently able to achieve his release and return to his homeland
The Pilgrims' first corn harvest was successful and in November the group's leader, Governor William Bradford, called for a feast to celebrate their good fortune. Hunters were sent into the wilderness to hunt game for the event.
Members of the local Native American tribes were invited and brought deer meat to add to the menu.
The celebration lasted for three days
Members of the local Native American tribes were invited and brought deer meat to add to the menu.
The celebration lasted for three days
"...for three days we entertained and feasted."
Edward Winslow was among the group of Pilgrims present at the first Thanksgiving. He describes the scene:
"Our harvest being gotten in, our governor sent four men on fowling, that so we might after a special manner rejoice together after we had gathered the fruit of our labors.
They four in one day killed as much fowl as, with a little help beside, served the company almost a week.
They four in one day killed as much fowl as, with a little help beside, served the company almost a week.
At which time, amongst other recreations, we exercised our arms, and many of the Indians coming amongst us, and among the rest their greatest king Massasoit, with some ninety men, whom for three days we entertained and feasted, and they went out and killed five deer, which they brought to the plantation and bestowed on our governor, and upon the captain and others.
And although it be not always so plentiful as it was at this time with us, yet by the goodness of God, we are so far from want that we often wish you partakers of our plenty."Navy SEAL Eddie Gallagher Thanks Trump: You Are a True Leader
Navy SEAL Eddie Gallagher Thanks Trump: You Are a True Leader:
Navy SEAL Eddie Gallagher thanked President Donald Trump for intervening in his case on Sunday and prohibiting the Navy from pulling his Trident pin and essentially kicking him out of the SEALs.
“President Donald Trump, you have my deepest gratitude and thanks. You stepped in numerous times and showed true moral fiber by correcting all the wrongs that were being done to me. You are a true leader and exactly what this military and this nation needs. God bless you and your family,” Eddie Gallagher said in a statement to Fox News’s Pete Hegseth.
Navy SEAL Eddie Gallagher thanked President Donald Trump for intervening in his case on Sunday and prohibiting the Navy from pulling his Trident pin and essentially kicking him out of the SEALs.
“President Donald Trump, you have my deepest gratitude and thanks. You stepped in numerous times and showed true moral fiber by correcting all the wrongs that were being done to me. You are a true leader and exactly what this military and this nation needs. God bless you and your family,” Eddie Gallagher said in a statement to Fox News’s Pete Hegseth.
The True Story of Thanksgiving
The True Story of Thanksgiving - The Rush Limbaugh Show
"...What the History Books Never Told You: The True Story of Thanksgiving.”
...“On August 1, 1620, the Mayflower set sail. It carried a total of 102 passengers, including forty Pilgrims,” now known as Pilgrims, “led by William Bradford.
...During the first winter, half the Pilgrims — including Bradford’s own wife — died of either starvation, sickness or exposure.”
They endured that first winter.
“When spring finally came,” they had, by that time, met the indigenous people, the Indians, and indeed the “Indians taught the settlers how to plant corn, fish for cod and skin beavers” and other animals “for coats.”
But there wasn’t any prosperity.
...“This is important to understand because this is where modern American history lessons often end. Thanksgiving is actually explained in some textbooks as a holiday for which the Pilgrims gave thanks to the Indians for saving their lives, rather than what it really was.
...That all happened, but that’s not — according to William Bradford’s journal — what they ultimately gave thanks for.
...“All of the land they cleared and the houses they built belong to the community as well.”
Everything belonged to everybody and everybody had one share in it.
They were going to distribute it equally.”
That was considered to be the epitome of fairness, sharing the hardship burdens and everything like that.
...“Bradford, who had become the new governor of the colony, recognized that” it wasn’t working.
It “was as costly and destructive…”
His own journals chronicle the reasons it didn’t work.
...“What Bradford and his community found,” and I’m going to use basically his own words, “was that the most creative and industrious people had no incentive to work any harder than anyone else…
“For young men that were most able and fit for labor and service did repine that they should spend their time and strength to work for other men’s wives and children without any recompense,'” without any payment, “‘that was thought injustice.’
...“So what did Bradford’s community try next?
...Every family was assigned its own plot of land to work and permitted to market its own crops and products.
And what was the result? ‘
This had very good success,’ wrote Bradford, ‘for it made all hands [everybody] industrious, so as much more corn was planted than otherwise would have been.’ …
...The first Thanksgiving was William Bradford and Plymouth Colony thanking God for their blessings.
That’s the first Thanksgiving.
Nothing wrong with being grateful to the Indians; don’t misunderstand.
But the true meaning of Thanksgiving — and this is what George Washington recognized in his first Thanksgiving proclamation."
"...What the History Books Never Told You: The True Story of Thanksgiving.”
...“On August 1, 1620, the Mayflower set sail. It carried a total of 102 passengers, including forty Pilgrims,” now known as Pilgrims, “led by William Bradford.
...During the first winter, half the Pilgrims — including Bradford’s own wife — died of either starvation, sickness or exposure.”
They endured that first winter.
“When spring finally came,” they had, by that time, met the indigenous people, the Indians, and indeed the “Indians taught the settlers how to plant corn, fish for cod and skin beavers” and other animals “for coats.”
But there wasn’t any prosperity.
...“This is important to understand because this is where modern American history lessons often end. Thanksgiving is actually explained in some textbooks as a holiday for which the Pilgrims gave thanks to the Indians for saving their lives, rather than what it really was.
...That all happened, but that’s not — according to William Bradford’s journal — what they ultimately gave thanks for.
...“All of the land they cleared and the houses they built belong to the community as well.”
Everything belonged to everybody and everybody had one share in it.
They were going to distribute it equally.”
That was considered to be the epitome of fairness, sharing the hardship burdens and everything like that.
...“Bradford, who had become the new governor of the colony, recognized that” it wasn’t working.
It “was as costly and destructive…”
His own journals chronicle the reasons it didn’t work.
...“What Bradford and his community found,” and I’m going to use basically his own words, “was that the most creative and industrious people had no incentive to work any harder than anyone else…
“For young men that were most able and fit for labor and service did repine that they should spend their time and strength to work for other men’s wives and children without any recompense,'” without any payment, “‘that was thought injustice.’
...“So what did Bradford’s community try next?
...Every family was assigned its own plot of land to work and permitted to market its own crops and products.
And what was the result? ‘
This had very good success,’ wrote Bradford, ‘for it made all hands [everybody] industrious, so as much more corn was planted than otherwise would have been.’ …
...The first Thanksgiving was William Bradford and Plymouth Colony thanking God for their blessings.
That’s the first Thanksgiving.
Nothing wrong with being grateful to the Indians; don’t misunderstand.
But the true meaning of Thanksgiving — and this is what George Washington recognized in his first Thanksgiving proclamation."
History for November 28
History for November 28 - On-This-Day.com
John Bunyan 1628, Berry Gordy, Jr. 1929 - Founder of Mowtown Records, Gary Hart (Hartpence) 1936
Randy Newman 1943 - Singer, songwriter, Judd Nelson 1959 - Actor ("The Breakfast Club," "St. Elmo's Fire," "Making the Grade"), Anna Nicole Smith 1967 - Model, actress
1520 - Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan reached the Pacific Ocean after passing through the South American strait. The strait was named after him. He was the first European to sail the Pacific from the east.
1963 - U.S. President Johnson announced that Cape Canaveral would be renamed Cape Kennedy in honor of his assassinated predecessor. The name was changed back to Cape Canaveral in 1973 by a vote of residents.
Wednesday, November 27, 2019
2 polls show massive surge in black voters supporting Trump - WND
2 polls show massive surge in black voters supporting Trump - WND:
President Trump received only 8% of the black vote in 2016, but two major pollsters find he now has the support of about 34% of black likely voters.
An Emerson poll had black support for Trump at 34.5% and a Rasmussen poll at 34%
President Trump received only 8% of the black vote in 2016, but two major pollsters find he now has the support of about 34% of black likely voters.
An Emerson poll had black support for Trump at 34.5% and a Rasmussen poll at 34%
The Bee or not?-----Nation's Progressives Give Thanks That They Have So Much To Be Angry About This Year | The Babylon Bee
Nation's Progressives Give Thanks That They Have So Much To Be Angry About This Year | The Babylon Bee
"U.S.—In honor of Thanksgiving week, the nation's progressives have begun to give thanks that they have so much to be angry and offended about this year.
"Thank you, unspecified deity who may or may not exist, for giving us so much stuff to be outraged about," said Staci Walder, 42, of Portland, as she prepared her vegan, kale-wrapped turkey.
"Thank you, unspecified deity who may or may not exist, for giving us so much stuff to be outraged about," said Staci Walder, 42, of Portland, as she prepared her vegan, kale-wrapped turkey.
"I'm truly humbled that you've blessed me with the Trump presidency, the patriarchy, the laws of economics, and biological facts to rage against."...
Many progressives partake in an annual tradition of writing down all the things they're thankful to be mad about:
Many progressives partake in an annual tradition of writing down all the things they're thankful to be mad about:
- White people
- Pronouns
- Personal responsibility
- Satire that does not affirm their viewpoint
- Billionaires
- Old tweets
- 32-ounce sodas
- Plastic straws
- People who hold a steady job
- Appropriating other cultures
- Excluding other cultures
- Bush
- Obama
- Trump
- Babies
- Kanye West
- America
"We should live our lives as though it's Outrage Thanksgiving every day."
Only more money can fix this!!!--Expect eco-libs to jump on this bigtime!-----‘Climate change is a disability rights issue’ | Watts Up With That?
‘Climate change is a disability rights issue’ | Watts Up With That?
“Global environmental change should be considered a disability rights issue”...and Dr Amy Dunham (Rice University, USA) argue in their recently published Letter in Science...
The researchers believe that climate change and the resulting loss of ecosystem services will affect the world’s disabled populations disproportionately by exacerbating inequalities and increasing marginalization..."
“Global environmental change should be considered a disability rights issue”...and Dr Amy Dunham (Rice University, USA) argue in their recently published Letter in Science...
The researchers believe that climate change and the resulting loss of ecosystem services will affect the world’s disabled populations disproportionately by exacerbating inequalities and increasing marginalization..."
Facts:
- University of Konstanz researchers publish high-profile Letter on the topic of climate change in Science...change should be considered a disability rights issue, climate scientist and first author Dr Aleksandra Kosanic, an Associate Fellow of the University of Konstanz’s Zukunftskolleg, writes...
- More research urgently required..."
Read all.
Impeachment backfire? Democratic anxiety soars over rampant impeachment opposition - TheBlaze
Impeachment backfire? Democratic anxiety soars over rampant impeachment opposition - TheBlaze:
Democratic lawmakers are becoming increasingly worried about the Republican-led anti-impeachment campaign, especially those most vulnerable to losing their seats in the upcoming election.
Politico reported over the weekend that vulnerable Democrats are "watching in horror" as Republican interests sow impeachment opposition in their home districts. The anxiety has caused many Democrats to demand increased support from their party leadership.
Democratic lawmakers are becoming increasingly worried about the Republican-led anti-impeachment campaign, especially those most vulnerable to losing their seats in the upcoming election.
Politico reported over the weekend that vulnerable Democrats are "watching in horror" as Republican interests sow impeachment opposition in their home districts. The anxiety has caused many Democrats to demand increased support from their party leadership.
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