13
   

Monitoring Biden and other Contemporary Events

 
 
goldberg
 
  -2  
Reply Tue 1 Jun, 2021 09:46 pm
@glitterbag,
If hadn't been for BLM, I wouldn't have become a centrist. On that note I should thank BLM supporters. I wouldn't have been able to figure something out if BLM hadn't gained currency.
0 Replies
 
glitterbag
 
  1  
Reply Tue 1 Jun, 2021 09:46 pm
@goldberg,
I didn't know you were beaten up by a girl. I guess it was only a matter of time.
goldberg
 
  -2  
Reply Tue 1 Jun, 2021 09:49 pm
@glitterbag,
No way. I wouldn't kick a girl in the stomach or even punch her in the face like some black men did. Such crass acts are deplorable.
glitterbag
 
  2  
Reply Tue 1 Jun, 2021 09:52 pm
@goldberg,
No I'm sure you wouldn't, I thought you said the girl beat you up.......because you did say a girl beat you up.
goldberg
 
  -2  
Reply Tue 1 Jun, 2021 10:00 pm
@glitterbag,
A girl once walked up to me and kissed me, with my body pressed against the wall. You could share this secret of mine with the New York Times and help the Times write an article based on this. I even come up with the title of this article for you. How about" A Former Liberal Became a Centrist after a Kiss"
goldberg
 
  -2  
Reply Tue 1 Jun, 2021 10:06 pm
I seem to be suggesting that I will be a liberal again after Emma Watson kisses me. Noooooooooooooooooooo. let's boogie, J. K. Rowling. A tranny is running after us.
0 Replies
 
goldberg
 
  -1  
Reply Tue 1 Jun, 2021 10:14 pm
I don't why why would some liberals upbraid J. K. Rowling for refusing to support trans rights. You can't coerce people to countenance something against their will.
oralloy
 
  -3  
Reply Tue 1 Jun, 2021 10:22 pm
@goldberg,
Progressives are deranged nutcases.

I refuse to accept their attempts to award themselves the mantle of liberalism. They betray the principles of liberalism. True liberals would uphold the Bill of Rights.
glitterbag
 
  1  
Reply Tue 1 Jun, 2021 10:31 pm
@goldberg,
I don't know why why either.
BillW
 
  2  
Reply Tue 1 Jun, 2021 10:34 pm
@glitterbag,
I think you've hit a very raw moment or two in the boys life? Maybe you ought to kinda take it easy on him and pull a few punches...............








....................naugh, never mind - punch away!
goldberg
 
  -1  
Reply Tue 1 Jun, 2021 10:40 pm
@oralloy,
Something like that. Progressives are gutting our values. Their policies are hollowing out America's economy, say the Democratic Party's infrastructure plan. It's a recipe for debt debacle.

The real underlying issue facing America is the immigration crisis. You don't need more low-skilled foreign workers who only know how to make low-margin goods or even more beneficiaries of a welfare state. America needs bright minds and educated immigrants.

It would be wise to recast supply chains by bringing American companies' production lines to elsewhere other than just some Asian nations. Yet it doesn't make sense to bring it back to America simply because you want to create more jobs for the poor. You know automation or artificial intelligence is the future, not to mention The Internet of Things (IoT) . You are making a rod for your own back when you bring in floods of low-skilled foreign immigrants.
0 Replies
 
goldberg
 
  -1  
Reply Tue 1 Jun, 2021 10:43 pm
I'm going back to read the novel. You guys have fun here.
0 Replies
 
goldberg
 
  -1  
Reply Tue 1 Jun, 2021 10:49 pm
Will be back weeks later. Hoooooo.
0 Replies
 
oristarA
 
  1  
Reply Wed 2 Jun, 2021 12:56 am
@goldberg,
goldberg wrote:

A girl once walked up to me and kissed me, with my body pressed against the wall. You could share this secret of mine with the New York Times and help the Times write an article based on this. I even come up with the title of this article for you. How about" A Former Liberal Became a Centrist after a Kiss"


How about "Rude Kiss Kicks Liberal into Centrist"?
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  3  
Reply Wed 2 Jun, 2021 02:46 am
HCR wrote:
Today, more than 100 scholars who study democracy issued a letter warning that “our entire democracy is now at risk.” The letter explains that the new election laws in Republican-led states, passed with the justification that they will make elections safer, in fact are turning “several states into political systems that no longer meet the minimum conditions for free and fair elections.”

If we permit the breakdown of democracy, it will be a very long time before we can reverse the damage. As a nation spirals downward, the political scientists, sociologists, and government scholars explain, “violence and corruption typically flourish, and talent and wealth flee to more stable countries, undermining national prosperity. It is not just our venerated institutions and norms that are at risk—it is our future national standing, strength, and ability to compete globally.”

The scholars called for federal action to protect equal access to voting and to guarantee free and fair elections. Voting rights should not depend on which party runs the state legislature, and votes must be cast and counted equally, regardless of where a citizen lives. They back the reforms in the For the People Act, which protects the right to vote, ends partisan gerrymandering, and curbs the flood of money into elections.

They urged Congress “to do whatever is necessary—including suspending the filibuster—in order to pass national voting and election administration standards that both guarantee the vote to all Americans equally, and prevent state legislatures from manipulating the rules in order to manufacture the result they want. Our democracy is fundamentally at stake.”

“History,” they wrote, “will judge what we do at this moment.”

But in Tulsa, Oklahoma, today, President Joe Biden noted that the events that transpired in the Greenwood district of that city 100 years ago today were written out of most histories. The Tulsa Massacre destroyed 35 blocks of the prosperous Greenwood neighborhood, wiping out 1100 homes and businesses and taking hundreds of Black lives, robbing Black families of generational wealth and the opportunities that come with it.

Biden pointed out that he was the first president to go to Tulsa to acknowledge what happened there on May 31 and June 1, 1921. But, he said, “We do ourselves no favors by pretending none of this ever happened or doesn’t impact us today, because it does.” He drew a direct line from the terrorism at Greenwood to the terrorism in August 2017 at Charlottesville, Virginia, to the January 6 insurrection. Citing the intelligence community, he reminded listeners that “terrorism from white supremacy is the most lethal threat to the homeland today. Not Isis. Not al-Qaeda. White supremacists.”

Victims’ trauma endures, too, and it eventually demands a reckoning when “what many people hadn’t seen before, or simply refused to see, cannot be ignored any longer.” Today, Americans are recognizing “that for too long, we’ve allowed a narrowed, cramped view of the promise of this nation to fester, the view that America is a zero-sum game, where there’s only one winner. If you succeed, I fail. If you get ahead, I fall behind. If you get a job, I lose mine. And maybe worst of all, if I hold you down, I lift myself up. Instead of if you do well, we all do well.” Biden promised to invest in Black communities extensively to unlock creativity and innovation.

Then the president took on the elephant in the room: voting. On Saturday, Biden took a stand against the state voter suppression laws being passed in Republican-dominated legislatures that, as he said, attack “the sacred right to vote.” They are “part of an assault on democracy that we’ve seen far too often this year—and often disproportionately targeting Black and Brown Americans.” They are “wrong and un-American.”

Biden called on Congress to pass the For the People Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, which would restore the voting protections the Supreme Court stripped out of the 1965 Voting Rights Act with the 2013 Shelby County v. Holder decision. He called on “all Americans, of every party and persuasion, to stand up for our democracy and to protect the right to vote and the integrity of our elections.

In Tulsa today, Biden called the Republican efforts to restrict voting a “truly unprecedented assault on our democracy.” He urged voting rights groups to redouble their efforts to register and educate voters, and then he put pressure on Democratic senators Joe Manchin (WV) and Kyrsten Sinema (AZ), who continue to say they will not challenge the Republican use of the filibuster to stop passage of voting rights bills. Biden promised to fight “like heck with every tool in my disposal” to get the For the People and the John Lewis Voting Rights Act passed.

He has asked Vice President Kamala Harris to lead the effort. Today, she released a statement placing today’s fight for voting rights in the context of our history. “[M]any have worked—and many have died—to ensure that all Americans can cast a ballot and have their vote counted,” she said. “Today, that hard-won progress is under assault.” She promised to work with voting rights organizations, community organizations, the private sector, and Congress to strengthen voting rights.

“The work ahead of us is to make voting accessible to all American voters, and to make sure every vote is counted through a free, fair, and transparent process,” she said. “This is the work of democracy.”

substack
0 Replies
 
Mame
 
  4  
Reply Wed 2 Jun, 2021 09:43 am
@oralloy,
oralloy wrote:

Progressives are deranged nutcases.



Who's name-calling now?
oralloy
 
  -3  
Reply Wed 2 Jun, 2021 09:54 am
@Mame,
Criticizing a position isn't really name-calling. The left causes a lot of harm. It is right that they be condemned for it.

Also, I did not direct my condemnation at any specific person.

That said, I have in fact tried to direct name-calling at members of the Biden Administration (fair play after the way Mr. Trump was treated).

You don't see these posts because the moderators are always quick to remove them.
farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Wed 2 Jun, 2021 01:42 pm
@oralloy,
yes but mR Trump;s posse has mostly been indicted or has pleaded guilty
glitterbag
 
  2  
Reply Wed 2 Jun, 2021 03:08 pm
@BillW,
BillW wrote:

I think you've hit a very raw moment or two in the boys life? Maybe you ought to kinda take it easy on him and pull a few punches...............



I did soften it up, he must have been terrified, I have complete sympathy for the frail and bullied.
0 Replies
 
glitterbag
 
  2  
Reply Wed 2 Jun, 2021 03:11 pm
@farmerman,
farmerman wrote:

yes but mR Trump;s posse has mostly been indicted or has pleaded guilty


And Michael Flynn is still angling to lead a coup. Old hatchet face, at DIA they used to refer to his pronouncements as "Flynn's Fun Facts".
0 Replies
 
 

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