Sunday, August 20, 2017
The NFL doesn't have the guts to bench unpatriotic players (Bringing down America)
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| Colin Kaepernick Scum Man |
A National Football League player
refused to stand for the national anthem Saturday during a preseason
game -- and in doing so he disrespected the military and the nation.
Oakland Raiders running back Marshawn Lynch was
spotted by an Associated Press photographer sitting atop an orange
cooler before the start of the preseason game against the Arizona
Cardinals.Mr. Lynch is apparently a disciple of former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick – a notorious anti-American rabble-rouser.
I suspect this will not be the last episode of anti-American activity at NFL games."I'd rather see him take a knee than stand up, put his hands up and get murdered," Lynch told comedian Conan O'Brien in 2016.
It was Kaepernick who sparked a national protest against the alleged police violence by taking a knee during the Star-Spangled Banner. Soon, a number of college, high school and professional athletes joined his cause.
“If you’re really not racist then you won’t see what he done, what he’s doing, as a threat to America, but just addressing a problem that we have,” Lynch told Associated Press.
Raiders coach Jack Del Rio told SFGate.com that Lynch's disrespectful behavior is not an issue for the football team.
“He said, ‘This is something I have done for 11 years. It’s not a form of anything other than me being myself,’” Del Rio said. “I told him I very strongly believe in standing for the national anthem. But I respect him as a man and he can do his thing."
Well, that doesn't speak very well of Coach Del Rio's character either. The coach respects a man who disrespects the country?
I suspect this will not be the last episode of anti-American activity at NFL games. So I recommend head coaches take immediate action to deter such behavior.
If you ride the bench during the Star-Spangled Banner, you should ride the bench for the rest of season.
It would be a gutsy move -- but unlikely -- considering the lack of courage and patriotism in the National Football League.
Todd Starnes is host of Fox News & Commentary. His latest book is “The Deplorables’ Guide to Making America Great Again.” Follow him on Twitter @ToddStarnes and find him on Facebook.
US Army mum on whether bases will keep Confederate names (Bringing down America)
Debate is heating up throughout the country over
what to do with Confederate statues and memorials. But it appears, at
least for now, that 10 major U.S. Army bases will keep the names of
Confederate soldiers.
The Army refused to answer
questions last week on whether those bases – including Fort Bragg in
North Carolina, Fort Hood in Texas, and Fort Benning in Georgia – will
keep their names, the Charlotte Observer reported.
All 10 U.S. military bases named for Confederate soldiers are located in the South.Prior to this month’s violence in Charlottesville, Va., the most recent time the names of Army bases were strongly debated was in 2015, after the slaying of nine black church members in Charleston, S.C.
At that time, Army Col. Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman, told Time there was “no discussion” regarding changing the names.
Base names are based on “individuals, not causes or ideologies,” public affairs chief Army Brig. Gen. Malcolm Frost said in 2015, adding that each base “is named for a soldier who holds a place in our military history.”
The other seven Army bases named for Confederate soldiers are Fort Rucker in Alabama; Fort Gordon in Georgia; Camp Beauregard and Fort Polk in Louisiana; and Fort A.P. Hill, Fort Lee and Fort Pickett in Virginia.
Boston Free Speech Rally Ends Early as Counter Protesters Fill the Streets (Bringing down America)
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| Police tussle with counterprotesters near a “Free Speech” rally Saturday, Aug. 19, 2017, in Boston. An estimated 15,000 counterprotesters marched through the city to historic Boston Common. |
A number of rally participants left the Boston Common ahead of the planned speeches Saturday and video shows police officers pushing back demonstrators.
Police ramped up security measures ahead of the rally in an effort to avoid a repeat of last week’s violence in Charlottesville, Virginia.
Officials say extra security cameras and barriers were installed in the area and hundreds of officers were deployed.
The city had also banned people from carrying weapons and backpacks.
Pres. Trump Tweets ‘Many Decisions Made’ After Camp David Nat’l Security Meeting
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| President Donald Trump waves as he boards Air Force One at Hagerstown Regional Airport in Hagerstown, Md., Friday, Aug. 18, 2017, following a national security meeting at Camp David. |
The president indicated on twitter Saturday that a new strategy for the war in Afghanistan could soon be revealed.
Defense Secretary James Mattis has confirmed military options presented to President Trump for the region, range from a full withdrawal to a troop increase.
Vice President Mike Pence and National Security Advisor H.R. Mcmaster also attended the meeting in Maryland.
Saturday, August 19, 2017
Baltimore Mayor Had Statues Removed (Bringing down America) Baltimore’s Confederate Statues Under Tarps, Police Guard On City Lot
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| Catherine E. Pugh, Democratic Politician :-) |
BALTIMORE
— It was “in the best interest of my city,” Mayor Catherine Pugh said
Wednesday, as she explained why she ordered Confederate monuments
removed under the cover of darkness, days after violence broke out
during a rally against the removal of a similar monument in neighboring
Virginia.
“I
said with the climate of this nation,” Ms. Pugh said later, “that I
think it’s very important that we move quickly and quietly.”
With
no immediate public notice, no fund-raising, and no plan for a
permanent location for the monuments once they had been excised — all
things city officials once believed they would need — the mayor watched
in the wee hours on Wednesday as contractors with cranes protected by a
contingent of police officers lifted the monuments from their pedestals
and rolled them away on flatbed trucks.
After
the violent clashes in Charlottesville, Va., many city leaders and even
some governors around the country have urged the removal of Confederate
monuments in their jurisdictions — a typically bureaucratic process
that, in cities like New Orleans and Charlottesville, have been met with
legal delays that helped feed tensions surrounding their removal.
But,
in an interview here, Ms. Pugh suggested the tense political climate
had turned her city’s statues into a security threat and she said that
her emergency powers allowed her to have them removed immediately.
“The
mayor has the right to protect her city,” she said. “For me, the
statues represented pain, and not only did I want to protect my city
from any more of that pain, I also wanted to protect my city from any of
the violence that was occurring around the nation. We don’t need that
in Baltimore.”
In
recent days, cities and resident from Gainesville, Fla. to Lexington,
Ky., called for their Confederate monuments to come down on the heels of
the weekend’s violent clashes between white supremacists and
counterprotesters over a Robert E. Lee statue that is set for removal in Charlottesville.
David
Goldfield, a professor of history who studies Confederate symbols at
the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, said the removal of the
monuments in Baltimore was likely to be part of a “rolling cascade” of
cities and states ridding themselves of, or at least relocating, similar
statues.
”You’re
going to see another wave of these removals.” Mr. Goldfield said. “The
fact that it’s done fairly expeditiously is not surprising because if
you do it quickly the opposition can’t build up, and the confrontations
that we’ve had, not only in Charlottesville but elsewhere, will not
materialize.”
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| Is this where all America History ends up at, the junkyard? |
Conservative student transfers out of BU because of death threats
Nicholas Fuentes, an 18-year-old student who
attended the “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Va., this past
weekend, said that he's received death threats for months over his
conservative viewpoints -- enough for him to decide it's time to leave
Boston University.
Fuentes said he made the decision
to abandon his Political Science degree a month ago after being
constantly threatened over his conservative views. He said no longer
felt safe on campus, and will not return for the fall semester.
Still, despite the intensity of the backlash he's
received, he has absolutely “no regrets” about taking part in the
controversial white-nationalist movement.“I went to represent this new strain of conservatives, of people in the right wing who are opposed to mass immigration and multiculturalism,” Fuentes told Fox News on Thursday. “For a long time, this existed on the fringes. I thought it was a political victory – we exposed the removal of Confederate statues, and this disenfranchised group of white males.”
A Boston University spokesman confirmed to Fox News that the student had indeed left the school earlier this week and that "the safety and security of our students is our highest priority."
While the ideology of the movement, he contended, used to be associated only with older men in America “like Pat Buchanan and Samuel Francis,” he believes a significant wave in the younger generation have been captivated by the ideology.
“We have basically been told our whole lives that white people are racist and evil and should be erased,” Fuentes explained. “We have basically been told that it is a crime to be born a white male.”
Expand / Collapse
Mourners surround an impromptu memorial after the
death of a young woman after a "Unite the Right" attendee rammed his
car into counter-protesters.
(REUTERS/Justin Ide)
“The picture the media keeps using is of one person with a Nazi flag, there were more one thousand there who didn’t have Nazi flags,” Fuentes said. “The vast majority of people there were regular, decent people. I didn’t meet a single violent person. Our side is just preservationist.”
CHARLOTTESVILLE WHITE NATIONALIST RALLY BLAMED FOR 3 DEATHS, DOZENS OF INJURIES
Fuentes noted that the Charlottesville rally had been in the works for about three months, and that people joined the fray not only from all over the U.S., but from Canada and various countries in Europe. But after posting on social media about going to the event – which turned tragic after a driver rammed a car into a crowd of counter-protesters, killing a woman – Fuentes’ own firestorm began.
“I suddenly got dozens of messages on Twitter and Facebook telling me to go and kill myself and that if they see me they will beat the sh-- out of me. Stuff of that nature,” he said. “At least 10 to 20 of them were death threats.”
Fuentes said Boston University had given him opportunities to express his political views -- and his support of Donald Trump -- leading up to the November presidential election last year.
CHARLOTTESVILLE AND A 'NEW GENERATION OF WHITE SUPREMACISTS'
“I made a short video presentation about my support for Trump before the election and that caused a major uproar. People wanted to organize a debate between myself and a big Hillary supporter,” Fuentes recalled. “We went to the Dean and they gave us an auditorium, a police officer for security detail, they really made it happen.”
He is now taking a semester off and then intends to start at Auburn University in Alabama in the spring.
“It was one of my first picks after high school,” Fuentes continued, adding that the “friendly territory” of the Deep South will enable him to express his opinions freely without jeopardizing his safety.
TRUMP 'ENTIRELY CORRECT' TO BLAME BOTH SIDES FOR CHARLOTTESVILLE VIOLENCE, WHITE HOUSE SAYS
In addition to studies, he hosts his own YouTube talk show modeled after Trump’s key campaign catchphrase “Make America Great Again,” and highlighted that he mostly has liberal-leaning friends – but the few who are conservative have experienced widespread backlash from their university peers across the country.
“Even worse than the threats I have received,” Fuentes surmised.
And even though he stands staunchly by his beliefs and makes no apology about making his mark in Charlottesville, he doesn’t plan on attending any such rallies in the near future.
“Everyone is a little shaken up,” Fuentes added. “The political climate has become so intense and so violent and toxic.”
Political Left Staff
Steve Bannon exits White House, says the presidency Trump campaigned for is 'over'
Steve Bannon is on his way out at the White House –
but the fiery, anti-establishment conservative who helped Donald Trump
win the presidency says he's getting ready to wage his populist campaign
from the outside.
“If there’s any confusion out
there, let me clear it up: I’m leaving the White House and going to war
for Trump against his opponents -- on Capitol Hill, in the media, and in
corporate America,” Bannon told Bloomberg on Friday.
Still, the outgoing White House chief strategist told The Weekly Standard the
country would see a new kind of presidency without him there. “We still
have a huge movement, and we will make something of this Trump
presidency. But that presidency is over. It’ll be something else. And
there’ll be all kinds of fights, and there’ll be good days and bad days,
but that presidency is over.”Bannon returned to work late Friday at Breitbart News, the populist news site he once ran that rails against the political establishment in both parties.
He spent just over a year formally working for the president. On Friday, his job with Trump came to an end.
STEVE BANNON OUT AT THE WHITE HOUSE
“White House Chief of Staff John Kelly and Steve Bannon have mutually agreed today would be Steve's last day,” White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said. “We are grateful for his service and wish him the best.”
Breitbart announced Friday that Bannon returned as executive chairman. He chaired its evening editorial meeting Friday, the site said.
“The populist-nationalist movement got a lot stronger today,” said Breitbart News Editor-in-Chief Alex Marlow. “Breitbart gained an executive chairman with his finger on the pulse of the Trump agenda.”
Ben Shapiro, a former writer at Breitbart News, predicted Bannon will go back to the site and "declare himself the conscience of the nationalist populist movement that he helped build.”
"He's going to use that power to smash the president when he thinks the president is wrong," Shapiro told Fox News anchor Sandra Smith.
A source close to Bannon told Fox News there is “no way” the outgoing adviser will go to war against Trump himself. He will “100 percent have POTUS’ back,” the person said.
Another source close to Bannon, reached Friday, suggested Breitbart is gearing up for a fight now that its leader is no longer restrained by his job in the White House.
“Winter is here,” the person told Fox News.
Kurt Bardella, a former Breitbart staffer who now criticizes the outlet and President Trump, speculated Bannon would “continue to use his weapon of choice, Breitbart, to attack his adversaries inside the West Wing.”
Targets, Bardella said, could be Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump, chief economic adviser Gary Cohn as well as congressional Republicans like Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell.
Bannon has also sparred with national security adviser H.R. McMaster and his deputy, Dina Powell.
“In many ways, I think Steve will feel liberated,” Bardella said.
He added, “Now, he will be able to operate openly and freely to inflict as much damage as he possibly can on the 'globalists' that remain in the Trump administration.”
Bannon submitted his resignation in writing on Aug. 7, Fox News learned.
Bannon told The Weekly Standard he spoke with the president and Chief of Staff John Kelly last week about resigning on Aug. 14, his one year mark working for Trump. But the events in Charlottesville last weekend delayed his departure.
“I’d always planned on spending one year.... I want to get back to Breitbart,” he said.
Bannon said he feels “jacked up” as he returns to the conservative news site.
“Now I’m free,” he said. “I’ve got my hands back on my weapons. Someone said, ‘it’s Bannon the Barbarian.’ I am definitely going to crush the opposition. There’s no doubt.”
He added, “I built a f---ing machine at Breitbart. And now I’m about to go back, knowing what I know, and we’re about to rev that machine up. And rev it up we will do.”
Earlier this week, Trump briefly addressed the speculation about Bannon's future during a wide-ranging Q&A with reporters at Trump Tower.
“I like Mr. Bannon, he’s a friend of mine,” Trump said, though downplaying his impact in the 2016 campaign. “I like him. He’s a good man.”
The president added, “We’ll see what happens with Mr. Bannon.”
PBS Poll Says Majority of Americans Favor Leaving Confederate Monuments in Place
| Next the Abraham Lincoln Memorial,when and where will it stop? |
In the wake of the violence in Charlottesville that began in response to a rally protesting the removal of a Confederate monument, a surprising new poll shows that only 27 percent of Americans support the removal of such monuments.
The PBS NewsHour/NPR/Marist poll found that a large majority of Americans, at 62 percent, think that the statues should stay. This information comes in spite of calls to remove even more monuments are being made after the violent clash that left one 32-year-old counter-protestor dead. Al Sharpton said in a PBS interview that he thinks the Jefferson Memorial in Washington, D.C., should also be abandoned in light of Thomas Jefferson’s history as a slave owner. Also, included in recent lists is the iconic Mount Rushmore which Vice News’s Wilbert L. Cooper says the U.S. President’s represented there are “problematic” by today’s standards.
Horace Cooper of the group Project 21, which is an initiative of the National Center for Public Policy Research to promote the views of African-Americans, says that the majority represented in this poll includes a large number of African-American men and women who do not want the removal of Confederate monuments. According to Cooper, the monuments serve as a reminder of our history and also as a warning to future generations of the injustices that should never once again plague our nation.
President Trump has remained staunch in the face of criticism on his view regarding the movement to do away with Confederate Monuments saying, “This week it’s Robert E. Lee. I noticed that Stonewall Jackson is coming down. I wonder if George Washington is next week and is it Thomas Jefferson the week after? You have to ask yourself, where does it stop really?”
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