And she’s vehemently anti-Trump.
via Weasel Zippers
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Conservatives welcome. Libs & RINOs go away. It's all of you destroying the society and conservatives must no longer appease you!
And she’s vehemently anti-Trump.
via Weasel Zippers
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Let’s just cut through the clutter of all the border control proposals, packages, deals and discussions that have marked U.S. politics for the past, oh, let’s say, gazillion campaign seasons, and narrow it down to one consideration and one consideration alone: What can you do for America?
That’s the question that should be first and foremost asked of anyone seeking permanent or semi-permanent entry to America’s soil.
That’s really the only question that matters.
What can you, oh mighty migrant, oh wanna-be refugee, oh hopeful immigrant — what can you bring to the table that betters America?
And if the answer is lame — if the answer is all about what America can provide, what America can offer — slam! Sorry, don’t let the door hit you.
A majority merit-based system is the way to go.
America’s immigration policy should be almost entirely about the U.S. of A., and almost not at all about the plight of the one knocking at our doors. This isn’t so much selfish as safety-conscious.
via Weasel Zippers
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California Gov. Jerry Brown says the world needs ‘brain washing’ on climate change. Sounding indeed brainwashed, Brown said, “The problem … is us. It’s our whole way of life. It’s our comfort … It’s the greed. It’s the indulgence. It’s the pattern. And it’s the inertia.”
I hate to be a party pooper but the totalitarian trio of Stalin, Mao and Pol Pot also said the world needed brainwashing. But I digress.
via CanadaFreePress.Com
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Elderly couple Joe and Claryce Holcombe lost nine family members in Sunday’s tragic church shooting in Sutherland Springs, Texas, but they don’t believe that the story is over for those family members simply because they are no longer here.
In an interview with Faithwire on Monday, Joe discussed the couple’s faith in God and detailed what they believe will be the ultimate reunion.
Despite the couple losing their son and his wife, as well as four grandchildren and three great-grandchildren, the Holcombes have held fast to their faith.
Joe, 86, told the website that he and his wife are “very close to God” and believe that there will be a time when he and his wife are reunited with their lost family members.
“We’re strong,” Joe said. “We’ll be with [son] Bryan and his wife and the whole family one of these days — and we look forward to that.”
When Joe was asked what he’d say to First Baptist Church shooter Devin Kelley had he the chance, he gave an astonishing response.
“I don’t hold any resentment to him,” Joe explained. “I wish he hadn’t of [sic] done it, but all I can say is that he is going to be rewarded for what he did — and he’s not going to like that reward. I don’t hate him by any means; I just feel sorry for him.”
Joe concluded his discussion with Faithwire by issuing a strong profession of faith to those watching the horror unfold in the headlines and wondering where God is amid the horror of the shooting.
“God doesn’t want us to understand him; he wants us to trust him and I think I’d tell them that,” he said. “We don’t understand how God works, but we trust everything He does.”
via TheBlaze.com – Stories
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The GOP’s newly unveiled tax reform legislation would raise taxes on high earners to 45.6 percent, not cap them at 39.6 percent, as its proponents claim, according to an analysis of the proposal by Danny Vinik of Politico.
via CanadaFreePress.Com
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Sociopaths and Leftists share a common behavior trait – projection – accusing someone else of doing exactly what you are doing yourself. The crucial difference between sociopaths and Leftists is that Leftist projection is conscious and sociopathic projection is unconscious. The sociopath has a personality disorder that manifests itself in extreme antisocial attitudes and behavior and a lack of conscience. Let’s compare and contrast the nature of psychological projection with political projection.
via CanadaFreePress.Com
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The Senate Judiciary Committee now says that early drafts of former FBI Director James Comey’s statement on Hillary Clinton’s private server accused the former Democratic Presidential candidate of “gross negligence” – a crime, punishable by law – rather than “extreme carelessness.”
Sources who viewed both documents – the early drafts and the later statement, which Comey delivered in the summer of 2016- say the the former document made reference to the possibility that Clinton might be criminally liable for using a private server, based in her Chappaqua home, to handle classified emails that passed through the Secretary of State’s office.
“There is evidence to support a conclusion that Secretary Clinton, and others, used the email server in a manner that was grossly negligent with respect to the handling of classified information,” the draft said, sources claim.
The version Comey finally delivered, which was penned weeks before the FBI had finished interviewing key witnesses, including top Clinton aides Cheryl Mills and Huma Abedin, said Clinton was merely “extremely careless” in her handling of classified material.
There is a key difference between “negligence” and “carelessness:” the former is a crime, punishable by law. The latter is merely a slap on the wrist – a way to chastize the Presidential candidate without spurring on any further Justice Department action. Clinton could have faced charges, if the FBI concluded that the information she shared could reasonably be “used to the injury of the United States.”
Comey told Congress, in testimony earlier this year, that he did not believe any prosecutor would pursue actions that qualified as “grossly negligent.” But deciding whether to pursue charges wasn’t technically up to Comey; the FBI was in charge of the investigation, and could recommend prosecution, but ultimately the Attorney General’s office would determine whether to hold Clinton accountable.
Sources close to the Senate Judiciary Committee told The Hill that the committee is now examining whether there was an internal disagreement, within the FBI, over whether to suggest Clinton could be charged.
via Daily Wire
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Over the weekend, here’s what happened in Saudi Arabia:
So, what the hell is going on?
This appears to be the Saudi dynasty’s first move toward standing up to the growing Iranian influence in the region. In the wake of President Obama’s Arab Spring, the Iranian sphere of influence has radically increased, while polarizing the Middle East along Sunni-Shia lines: Iran has crafted a swath of power from Iran through Lebanon, and has aggregated power in Yemen to Saudi Arabia’s south, while Saudi Arabia is now openly allied with Egypt, Jordan and Israel. Saudi Arabia is feeling threatened, as they should.
But just as importantly, the Saudi regime itself may be teetering. Saudi Arabia is already at 12 percent unemployment, and its population is disproportionately young; it is also heavily divided between more moderate Muslims and terror-supporting fundamentalists. In the past, this has raised suspicions that the Saudi government was paying off fundamentalist terror groups to ensure its own survival. Saudi Arabia’s oil industry has also taken a heavy hit in recent years thanks to new technological developments, and the government’s desire to outpace Iranian oil production in order to damage the Islamic Republic economically. Iran knows this, and they’ve been talking about it openly for years. In 2015, Iranian Revolutionary Guard Major General Mohammad Ali Jafari stated, “Al Saud is teetering on the edge of collapse.”
All of this may be exaggerated, but the Saudi regime has an interest in doing three things: making clear to the population that the greatest threat is an external one springing from Iran; re-enshrining support from the American government, through modernization and willingness to fight terrorism; solidifying domestic rule. That appears to be what the Saudis are doing.
The question is whether this will actually lead to war. There’s little question that as Iran rises, the Saudis must grow more active; by the same token, Iran doesn’t want war now, particularly if the United States were to come in on the Saudi side. Saudi Arabia knows that, and may be attempting brinksmanship before the winds of power shift against them.
via Daily Wire
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Mega-church Pastor Carl Lentz of Hillsong, New York, may be yet another one of those trendy pastors who look cool in a pair of tight skinny jeans while preaching about Jesus, and then stands for nothing substantial when pressed against the wall on serious issues.
Though Hillsong, New York, has been flirting with the SJW Gospel for some time now, pastor Lentz’s latest refusal to outright condemn abortion as sinful — a slam-dunk of a theological question that a two-year-old could answer correctly — indicates the congregation is now being led by a spiritually blind man.
Speaking on The View last week before a group of pro-abortion feminists, Lentz did not emphatically defend the unborn when asked by the catty hosts regarding his position, and instead offered an effeminate, watered-down, limp-wristed appeal to relativistic hogwash.
“So, it’s not a sin in your church to have an abortion?” pro-abortion host Joy Behar asked.
Lentz responded: “That’s the kind of conversation we would have finding out your story, where you’re from, what you believe. … I mean, God’s the judge. People have to live to their own convictions. That’s such a broad question, to me, I’m going higher. I want to sit with somebody and say, ‘What do you believe?’”
“So it’s not an open and shut case to you?” Behar asked.
“Some people would say it is,” Lentz responded. “To me, I’m trying to teach people who Jesus is first, and find out their story. Before I start picking and choosing what I think is sin in your life, I’d like to know your name.”
That may be all well and good on the engagement with individual people, and surely, Christ asks we not condemn anyone’s soul. The question of abortion being sinful has nothing to do with the spiritual disposition of the sinner and everything do with the objective nature of the act. Abortion is either a sinful action or it’s not. The only in-between is the culpability of the act, which only God can judge. If the question probed to Lentz were “do you condemn people who have abortions?” then his answer would be correct. That is not the case here, however.
Later, co-host Sara Haines asked Lentz his position on homosexuality and abortion; again, he gave a watery response.
“Hillsong is seen as this hip, progressive church that’s drawn huge millennial crowds, but it’s still evangelical,” Haines said. “So, where do you stand on social issues that young people are particularly passionate about, like gay marriage [and] abortion? Like, how do you address those types of things?”
Lentz replied: “I think our job is still to help people — not necessarily change how they think — but try to point them to what God has said, what we believe the Bible [has] to say. We believe that God is good, that God loves everybody, that Jesus was here to set people free, and that’s still the good news of the gospel.”
LifeNews highlighted that an alarming number of Evangelical pastors, especially the younger generation, have adopted Lentz’s mode of thought.
Lentz has received a lot of publicity and criticism for his remarks, but he is not atypical. Studies indicate many pastors are hesitant to speak about abortion. A 2016 Pew Research Center poll found that just 29 percent of respondents heard their clergy member speak about abortion during a religious service. Most who did said their clergy spoke out against abortion (22 percent), while a few (3 percent) said their clergy spoke in support of abortion.
via Daily Wire
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In a staggering example of the press lacking any self-awareness, on Monday’s NBC Today, co-host Savannah Guthrie fretted over “a recent poll that said nearly half of people think the media make up stories” and unbelievably turned to disgraced former CBS Evening News anchor Dan Rather to suggest ways in which the news media could “enhance its own credibility.”
Citing a Politico poll from October that found 46 percent of voters “believe the news media fabricate news stories about President Donald Trump and his administration,” Guthrie asked Rather: “The media itself is under fire. And what do you think the media needs to do better to enhance its own credibility? And what do people need to understand about the value of the press?”
The ex-network anchor, who was fired for using fraudulent documents to smear former President George W. Bush in a series of reports ahead of the 2004 election, was shameless as he replied to Guthrie’s softball: “Well, first, those of us who are in the media….we need to do a better job, we need to do our job. Our job is to bear witness, to be honest brokers of information. To be as accurate and fair as we possibly can.”
He then went on the attack against the country’s most vocal media critic:
I think most of the public understands that we’re under attack by very powerful people, including the President, for their own partisan, political, and ideological reasons. They want people – they’re basically saying, “Believe us, believe only your president and believe only the people who are in power. Don’t believe these people out in the press.”
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And what about Rather’s “partisan, political, and ideological reasons” for promoting a phony attack against a sitting Republican president in order to influence an election?
Amazingly, Guthrie never even mentioned Rather’s infamous exit from CBS News. It was the newsman himself who vaguely alluded to his controversial past: “…heavens knows I’ve made my mistakes, have my open wounds from some self-inflicted wounds…”
Rather was on the morning show to promote his new book, What Unites Us, and ended the exchange on this note: “So if we just can keep emphasizing those things about which we agree, keep a civil conversation, I think we’re going to be alright. I’m an optimist by experience and by nature.” Guthrie gushed: “Absolutely, I’m an optimist, too. And the book is right on that tone.”
Here are just a few examples of Rather promoting “civil conversation” over the past year:
Dan Rather’s Grave Diagnosis: President Trump ‘Psychologically Troubled’
Lunacy: Dan Rather Claims ‘Prayer Will Not Be Enough’ to Save Us from Trump’s Evils
Dan Rather: Don’t Be Distracted By Trump’s ‘Trained Monkey’ Act
Rather: White House ‘Flames’ ‘Burning Down’ ‘Very Pillars of Our Democracy’
Disgraced Dan Rather: Those Who ‘Normalize’ Trump Will Answer to the Future
Reality-Denier Rather Blasts Conservatives as ‘Reality Deniers’
Rather was also treated to fawning promotion of his book on NPR’s All Things Considered Friday night, where the liberal hosts applauded him for entering a “new phase” in his career.
The biased exchange with Rather on the Today show was brought to viewers by Brighthouse Financial and Dunkin Donuts.
Here is a excerpt of the November 6 interview:
8:36 AM ET
(…)
SAVANNAH GUTHRIE: Our institutions aren’t perfect, of course. No one will be surprised that you have an impassioned defense of a free press in the book. And I mean, there’s a recent poll that said nearly half of people think the media make up stories. The media itself is under fire. And what do you think the media needs to do better to enhance its own credibility? And what do people need to understand about the value of the press?
[ON-SCREEN HEADLINE: Rather on “What Unites Us”; Anchor’s Take on Political Discourse in the U.S.]
DAN RATHER: Well, first, those of us who are in the media – I prefer the world “press” because we have freedom of the press, but let’s set that aside – we need to do a better job, we need to do our job. Our job is to bear witness, to be honest brokers of information. To be as accurate and fair as we possibly can. So we need to do a better job.
I think most of the public understands that we’re under attack by very powerful people, including the President, for their own partisan, political, and ideological reasons. They want people – they’re basically saying, “Believe us, believe only your president and believe only the people who are in power. Don’t believe these people out in the press.”
And this is a fundamental American trait and value, to understand the press is not perfect, we’re going to make our mistakes, but we’re a check on power. And I think when people stop and think about it, remind themselves of that, they’ll say, “Yeah, with all of their flaws” – and heavens knows I’ve made my mistakes, have my open wounds from some self-inflicted wounds – but I do think people understand about the press.
And such things as the right to vote. You know, there’s always some controversy about should people have a driver’s license and that sort of thing. But we believe in a fundamental right to vote. So if we just can keep emphasizing those things about which we agree, keep a civil conversation, I think we’re going to be alright. I’m an optimist by experience and by nature. It may be a long valley, but we’ll get through it. And have to keep hope alive.
GUTHRIE: Absolutely, I’m an optimist, too. And the book is right on that tone. Thank you so much, Dan Rather, for being with us.
(…)
via NewsBusters – Exposing Liberal Media Bias
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