Google’s head of diversity is slammed for saying ‘Jews have insatiable appetite for war and killing’ in 2007 blog post which argued they should have more ‘compassion’ because of the Holocaust
Un-American, anti-Semites. Remember who they are.
Un-American, anti-Semites. Remember who they are.
This man is making border policy decisions, foreign policy decisions, economic policy decisions, security decisions, etc.
This man is making almost uniformly bad decisions.
Don’t look at me.
I voted for Trump.
Too many male dummies. You can’t make it up. Democrat priorities.
I have been surprised by Kyrstin Sinema. She seems to be a centrist with principles and guts.
I like her.
The highest paid man in the federal government should be investigated and required to testify under oath about his actions during the pandemic.
Delusion as a basis for security policy.
Democrats.
Can it get worse?
Related:
Biden Compares Capitol Riot to the Tulsa Race Massacre to Set Up His ‘Domestic Terror’ Agenda
Race as a weapon used by government to divide people. Democrats are experts in this kind of demagoguery.
Delusion is truth. Insanity is sanity.
“…It’s already been a big week for President Joe Biden to show off his commander in chief and race relations credentials, but two separate polls show that the public finds his actions weak and ineffective.
In one timed for Memorial Day, voters by a margin of 43%-32% said that Biden was a weaker chief compared to recent presidents.
Worse, it found that most feel Biden is “less aggressive” with foreign leaders in pushing American interests first.
And in another timed for Biden’s trip to Tulsa, Oklahoma, today for ceremonies on the 100th anniversary of the so-called Tulsa massacre, voters 39%-28% said race relations have turned worse since Biden took office.
Both polls, conducted by Rasmussen Reports, were poor grades on timely issues for Biden and likely a surprise to a White House that has made efforts to focus on military and race issues.
Biden, for example, has played up issues important to black people, such as reparations and police reform, but Rasmussen found that former President Barack Obama’s vice president hasn’t had much of an impact.
Black people, for example, generally believe that nothing’s changed since former President Donald Trump left Washington. Some 36% said race relations are “about the same,” slightly more than the 34% who said “better,” and 50% said “life for young black Americans” is the same.
In Tulsa today, Biden is expected to empathize with black people killed in the massacre and offer additional spending programs to aid black businesses.
In the Memorial Day survey, Rasmussen didn’t offer a better picture for the president. And in that one, partisan divisions were clear. For example, 75% of Republicans said Biden was a weaker commander in chief and 78% also said he was less aggressive on the foreign stage…”
“…You can’t be cowed by these organizations, or particularly by woke corporations from doing the right thing. And so my view was throughout this whole time, we have to protect our girls, it is discriminatory to force them to compete against biological males,” DeSantis continued. “And so if the price of having a tournament is that I have to deny equal opportunity to hundreds of thousands of young girl and women athletes throughout Florida, I am much more willing to stand with the girls. And to hell with these events…”

Related:
Fauci emails discuss ‘gain of function’ experiments
Fauci decided on his own to express his political preferences. Now he will pay the price. Choose sides and you will be subject to scrutiny. Often, it is not a pretty process.
It’s almost as if anything Trump said or did has to be changed no more matter how good, how effective the policy is.
Pure stupid.
One of the best videos opposing Critical Race Theory that you’ll ever see. 👏🏼🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/cXOfheV0kJ
— Robby Starbuck (@robbystarbuck) June 1, 2021
George Will, Peggy Noonan, and other estimable friends bear a heavy responsibility in the disaster that has now been riveted on the backs of the American people and the world.
“…Trump did not incite anything, except a peaceful demonstration after a very questionable election result. None of the 18 lawsuits that directly challenged the constitutional or legal integrity of the vote or the vote-counting system were adjudicated. They were not heard for technical reasons. Neither was the case launched by the attorney general of Texas with the support of 18 other states alleging failure by several of the swing states to follow the constitutional requirement to ensure fair presidential election results.
There were no problems in 44 states, but in six swing states, there were extraordinary anomalies where voting or vote-counting had been altered with questionable constitutional legality, supposedly to accommodate voters inconvenienced by the COVID-19 pandemic, which made a number of key results practically unverifiable. If 42,000 votes were switched in Pennsylvania, Georgia, and Wisconsin, it would have given Trump victory in the Electoral College.
The 2020 election, next to that of 1876 which was resolved by an agreement between the candidates after a partisan vote in a congressional commission, was the most dubious presidential result in American history. The real issue here is that the Trump-haters, like George Will, want to charge Trump falsely with seeking an insurrection after losing an unexceptionable election, when he was merely expressing the anger of his partisans over a dubious vote-counting process, aggravated by the abdication of the judiciary from its constitutional co-equal role with the legislative and executive branches.
On the same television program, Will said that on January 6 he urged his employees in Georgetown to go home, as if the malcontents at the Capitol would be trolling through Georgetown afterward and singling out George Will and his helpers for their five years of anti-Trump vitriol. A man of Will’s influence has an ethical and professional obligation to avoid the willful propagation of defamatory nonsense. He said on the same program that for the first time in American history many members of Congress are afraid of their own voters. They were elected because those same voters agreed with what they said: they all found Trump the preferable candidate.
The Biden Administration has been a disaster on every score and Donald Trump has not simply gone away like a dreadful meteor as Will and other Trump-haters predicted. Those who generally approved of Trump’s policies but couldn’t bear him now have to wear the odium of having helped elect Biden, as well as the cold terror that Trump will be back.
When I first knew George Will, he was a champion of the Reagan Revolution. I accept that Trump is much harder to warm to than Reagan, but in policy terms, he is Reagan’s continuator, after seven terms of indifferent or inept government. Trump’s revolution is just as necessary and just as worthy of support as Reagan’s, though his public persona is much less amiable. George Will, Peggy Noonan, and other estimable friends who are normally sensible bear heavy responsibility in the disaster that has now been riveted on the backs of the American people and the world. As Bill Clinton might say, I feel your guilt. As the ghastly current jargon goes, you own this debacle. Donald Trump isn’t the problem, you are.
A presidential election result that was highly questionable, despite the frenzied efforts of an air-tight media pretense that all the late drops of unverifiable heavy Biden votes in a few key states were squeaky clean, and which the judicial system at every level refuses to judge for process reasons (a divided Wisconsin Supreme Court said the challenge in that state had to start at the lower courts and work up—impossible given those deadlines), naturally leaves the 75 million voters who supported the ostensibly losing candidate upset. That they would demonstrate is understandable, and when the speaker of the House and mayor of Washington refused the capitol police chief’s request for reinforcements, some hooliganism was predictable.
If January 6 is to be memorialized, it should be as an event illustrative of the strength of American democracy—that it can endure such strains and continue quite normally.
I hope we’re still on speaking terms. Smashing hijacked civilian airliners into large and famous buildings is a more egregious and sanguinary act of war than was the attack on Pearl Harbor—or the events of January 6…”


An admission of total failure. Failure of parents, teachers, politicians. Failure also to recognize and admit failure in teaching and take steps to change.
Jerusalem Imam Yousef Makharzah said that the Muslims will shatter the heads of America and the infidels and conquer Rome. He made his remarks in a Friday sermon that was aired on Hizb ut-Tahrir’s Al-Waqiyah TV (Lebanon).

“…President Biden’s infrastructure plan includes $20 billion to pour landfill into major access roads to cities, to eliminate racist community divides, reduce CO2 emissions, and revitalize inner cities by ensuring people who work in cities are incentivized to live near their workplaces…”