13
   

Monitoring Biden and other Contemporary Events

 
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  4  
Reply Fri 25 Mar, 2022 08:33 am
https://i.imgur.com/ipYkzAG.jpg
0 Replies
 
Frank Apisa
 
  4  
Reply Fri 25 Mar, 2022 09:25 am
@MontereyJack,
MontereyJack wrote:

pure extreme right crap as always. everything hunter might have done in his entire life pales in comparison to the damage trump did in any single day of his presidency, and every single day since the electorate booted him out.


AMEN to that!
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Fri 25 Mar, 2022 01:27 pm
@Builder,
If Hunter somehow added "dodginess" to Joe Biden - Butthead Jr dumped a burning garbage truck on the Orange Shitgibbon's own monster dumpster fire.

https://altdriver.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2021/02/garbage-truck-bursts-into-flames-e1612452903750.jpg
Rebelofnj
 
  4  
Reply Fri 25 Mar, 2022 06:10 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
It is not at all a coincidence that the long dead story about Hunter Biden’s laptop is back on conservative news outlets, just as news reports show the texts of Justice Thomas's wife demanding to overturn the 2020 election, as well as the Russian Government supporting Fox News host Tucker Carlson.

Carlson (plus many far-right figures) are even repeating Russian talking points and still supportive of Putin's government.
Quote:
After President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia claimed that action against Ukraine was taken in self-defense, the Fox News host Tucker Carlson and the conservative commentator Candace Owens repeated the assertion. When Mr. Putin insisted he was trying to “denazify” Ukraine, Joe Oltmann, a far-right podcaster, and Lara Logan, another right-wing commentator, mirrored the idea.

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/23/technology/russia-american-far-right-ukraine.html
bobsal u1553115
 
  3  
Reply Fri 25 Mar, 2022 06:13 pm
@Rebelofnj,
And why haven't we heard "What about her e-mails" regarding Ginny???????
0 Replies
 
Builder
 
  -3  
Reply Fri 25 Mar, 2022 06:22 pm
@Rebelofnj,
Quote:
It is not at all a coincidence that the long dead story about Hunter Biden’s laptop is back on conservative news outlets....(snip)


That would be because the MSM has finally had to confirm the existence of the laptop hard drive, and the legitimacy of the contents of the emails.

Your current prez was on the take as the "Big Guy" and getting a flat ten percent of all of Hunter's "incentive" income from Ukraine, Russian, and Chinese sources.

That also confirms the claims that the Biden family is completely compromised now, and also was then.

Not at all surprised that you're still in denial, though.

You'd then have to admit that #45 was correct in his assertions, and Joe lied through his teeth at their debate, pre-election.
Rebelofnj
 
  4  
Reply Fri 25 Mar, 2022 07:07 pm
@Builder,
Just to clarify, the nature of how the NY Post got the emails and laptop was strange and demanded speculation (from repair shop to Giuliani to The Post).

Not even Fox News (except for Tucker Carlson) didn't want to give full coverage.
https://www.mediaite.com/tv/exclusive-fox-news-passed-on-hunter-biden-laptop-story-over-credibility-concerns/

Same with the Wall Street Journal.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/25/business/media/hunter-biden-wall-street-journal-trump.html

NBC tried to get access to the emails from The NY post but were repeatedly denied, which ultimately led to the Laptop story dying quickly.
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2020-election/here-s-what-happened-when-nbc-news-tried-report-alleged-n1245533

The New York Post can't really shame the MSM for not following the Hunter Biden story when The Post and members of Trump's team actively stopped the other news outlets from verifying the story.
Below viewing threshold (view)
hightor
 
  4  
Reply Sat 26 Mar, 2022 03:57 am
Quote:
Plenty on the desk for the last ten days to refresh your memory.

Interesting how this clown turns to the Hunter Biden story to redirect attention from his canard about Ukrainian bio weapons labs!
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  4  
Reply Sat 26 Mar, 2022 04:10 am
HCR wrote:
In confirmation hearings this week for her elevation to a Supreme Court seat, the highly qualified and well-respected Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson endured vicious attacks from Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee, who vow to reject her confirmation despite the fact that her record is stronger than those of recent Republican nominees and that 58% of Americans want her to be confirmed. (In contrast, only 42% of Americans wanted Justice Amy Coney Barrett confirmed.)

Senator Ben Sasse (R-NE) explained: “Judge Jackson has impeccable credentials and a deep knowledge of the law,” but she “refused to embrace” the judicial philosophy of originalism, which would unravel the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision protecting abortion rights, as well as most of the other civil rights protected since the 1950s.

Indeed, the hearings inspired Republicans to challenge many of the civil rights decisions that most Americans believe are settled law, that is, something so deeply woven into our legal system that it is no longer reasonably open to argument. The rights Republicans challenged this week included the right to use birth control, access abortion, marry across racial lines, and marry a same-sex partner.

These rights, which previous Supreme Courts said are guaranteed by our Constitution, are enormously popular. Seventy percent of Americans support same-sex marriage. Eighty-nine percent of Americans in 2012 thought birth control was morally acceptable, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that as of 2008, 99% of sexually active American women use birth control in their lifetimes. Even the right to abortion remains popular. According to a 2021 Pew poll, 59% of Americans believe it should be legal in most or all cases.

So how do today’s Republicans square overturning these established rights with the fact that we live in a democracy, in which the majority should rule, so long as it does not crush a minority?

A 2019 speech by then–attorney general William Barr at the University of Notre Dame offers an explanation.

In that speech, Barr presented a profound rewriting of the meaning of American democracy. He argued that by “self-government,” the Framers did not mean the ability of people to vote for representatives of their choice. Rather, he said, they meant individual morality: the ability to govern oneself. And, since people are inherently wicked, that self-government requires the authority of a religion: Christianity.

Barr quoted the leading author of the Constitution, James Madison, to prove his argument. “In the words of Madison,” he said, “‘We have staked our future on the ability of each of us to govern ourselves…’.”

This has been a popular quotation on the political and religious right since the 1950s, and Barr used it to lament how the modern, secular world has removed moral restraints, making Americans unable to tell right from wrong and, in turn, creating “immense suffering, wreckage, and misery.” “Secularists, and their allies among the ‘progressives,’” he said, “have marshaled all the force of mass communications, popular culture, the entertainment industry, and academia in an unremitting assault on religion and traditional values.” The law, Barr said, “is being used as a battering ram to break down traditional moral values” through judicial interpretation, and he called for saving America by centering religion.

Madison never actually said the quotation on which Barr based his argument. It’s a fake version of what Madison did say in Federalist #39, in 1788, which was something entirely different. In Federalist #39, Madison explained how the new government, the one under which we still live, worked.

Answering the question of whether the new government the Framers had just proposed would enable people to vote for their representatives, he said yes. “No other form would be reconcilable with the genius of the people of America; with the fundamental principles of the Revolution; or with that honorable determination which animates every votary of freedom, to rest all our political experiments on the capacity of mankind for self-government.” Madison said nothing about personal morality when he talked about self-government, though. Instead, he focused on the mechanics of the new national government, explaining that such a government “derives all its powers directly or indirectly from the great body of the people, and is administered by persons holding their offices during pleasure, for a limited period, or during good behavior.”

He went on to say (and the capitalization is his, not mine): “It is ESSENTIAL to such a government that it be derived from the great body of the society, not from an [small] proportion [of people], or a favored class of it….”

In his 2019 speech, Barr also expressed concern that people in the United States misunderstood the First Amendment to the Constitution, which expressly forbids the government from establishing a national religion or stopping anyone from worshiping a deity—or not—however they choose. In Barr’s hands, the First Amendment “reflects the Framers’ belief that religion was indispensable to sustaining our free system of government.” To support that argument, he cites a few lines from Madison’s 1785 pamphlet objecting to religious assessments that talk about how Madison defined religion.

In reality, that pamphlet was Madison’s passionate stand against any sort of religious establishment by the government. He explained that what was at stake was not just religion, but also representative government itself. The establishment of religion attacked a fundamental human right—an unalienable right—of conscience. If lawmakers could destroy the right of freedom of conscience, they could destroy all other unalienable rights. Madison warned specifically that they could control the press, abolish trial by jury, take over the executive and judicial powers, take away the right to vote, and set themselves up in power forever.

Madison was on to something when he warned that there was a connection between establishing a religion and destroying American democracy. At the same time Republican lawmakers are now talking about rolling back popular civil rights in order to serve Christianity, they are also taking away the right to vote and appear to be looking to set a minority into power over the majority.

“This is a fight of good versus evil,” Trump’s chief of staff Mark Meadows wrote to Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas’s wife, Ginni, on November 24, 2020, in a text about overthrowing the will of the voters after Joe Biden had won the presidential election by more than 7 million votes and by 306 to 232 votes in the Electoral College. Referring to Jesus Christ, Meadows continued: “Evil always looks like the victor until the King of Kings triumphs. Do not grow weary in well doing. The fight continues….”

substack
revelette1
 
  3  
Reply Sat 26 Mar, 2022 07:16 am
@hightor,
Excellent article, in fact, I may find the Madison article on religion and print it out for my dad to read. He and I have a huge disagreement on Church and Religion, even though he is a firm democrat in all other respects.
0 Replies
 
revelette1
 
  3  
Reply Sat 26 Mar, 2022 07:21 am
Problem Democrat Joe Manchin Throws His Party a Few Bones

Quote:
the perennial swing-vote senator made it clear on Friday that he’s fine with Jackson:

One has to marvel at Jackson’s foresight in choosing to “spend a great deal of time in West Virginia” over the years.

Manchin’s support in what will likely be a party-line confirmation vote on the Senate floor wasn’t the only bone he threw to his party in today’s news cycle. As Axios reports:

Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) told a group of climate activists and energy executives he’s open to supporting revised Build Back Better legislation narrowly addressing three issues: climate change, prescription drug prices and deficit reduction.


Only hope he don't change his mind with the wind again.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  3  
Reply Sat 26 Mar, 2022 07:58 am
Deniosphere Claimed Putin Funded Anti-Pipeline Efforts, Then Claimed His War Ended Climate "Hoax"
Links at original.

When President Joe Biden only mentioned climate and clean energy a few times in the State of the Union earlier this month, one odd reaction was that this was an indication that fossil fuel prices had driven climate concern off the agenda. “The climate crisis disappearing act” was Ben Zycher’s take, for his Koch-funded employer AEI, and it was echoed by one of the longest-running professional climate disinfo operations, Myron Ebell’s Cooler Heads newsletter. That one-two tap was concerning, but what ended up getting a bit more attention was the GOP’s playing puppet for a Dr. Evil disinfo attack falsely accusing environmental groups of being funded by Putin to oppose pipelines. WashPost’s fact checkers gave it a very serious Four Pinocchios, while Scott Waldman’s coverage called it “the GOP climate conspiracy theory that won't die.”

But having gotten its initial splash, it seems to have died back down, for the time being. It’s hard, after all, to sustain outrage about something that evaporates as soon as you actually spend even the smallest amount of time looking into it. And in that time, the disinfo machine trudged along, making what’s long disproven seem new and fresh enough to ask questions about, until it too is once again debunked, then turning to the next card in the disinfo rolodex to repeat the cycle.

Which brings us back to the idea that Putin’s invasion of Ukraine has pushed aside the possibility that anyone could also still continue to care about climate change. Having entertained the false notion that Putin was funding the environmental movement, conservative disinfo outlets now have decided that no, perhaps the opposite, Putin has struck down the once-mighty Big Green lobby. “Biden Is in Climate Denial,” according to Kimberley Strassel’s WSJ column citing polling about methane gas and the Green New Deal to claim that “Mr. Biden’s climate agenda– no matter how much the liberal press wants to differ– has never been popular.” (Fact check: President Biden won with the support of 81 million Americans who voted for his climate agenda, which did not go near as far or fast as the Green New Deal.)

Over at the Washington Examiner, Stephen Moore took a crack at the narrative as well, with an op-ed headlined “the end of the climate change legend.” The piece by Moore, former advisor to one-term President Trump who now stalks the GOP party like an obsessive ex plotting a come-back while dampening the party’s prospects in the suburbs it needs to win against moderates who take climate change seriously, claims that “we’ve now discovered with certainty that climate change is a political albatross around the neck of the Democratic Party.” And because three makes a trend and Steve Milloy’s tweets that “the climate agenda is dead” doesn’t count because he always says that, there’s Viv Forbes’ in the rightwing Spectator. He’s advancing Nigel Farage’s message of “Power not poverty,” and claiming at the outset of the op-ed that “the green fairy-tale is over.”

EDIT

https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2022/3/23/2087600/-After-Putin-Funded-Climate-Advocacy-Disinfo-Liars-Shift-To-Claiming-Putin-Killed-Climate-Advocacy#view-story
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Sat 26 Mar, 2022 08:07 am
https://image.politicalcartoons.com/261439/600/criminal-suck-up.png
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Sat 26 Mar, 2022 08:08 am
https://image.politicalcartoons.com/261422/600/gop-whine-pairing.png
0 Replies
 
revelette1
 
  2  
Reply Sat 26 Mar, 2022 08:13 am
I don't know how many people are watching President Biden over in Poland, he gave a good talk, later he is making a speech, now he is visiting refugees. Is it making anyone else nervous, thinking some Russian or nut is going to kill him?
Walter Hinteler
 
  2  
Reply Sat 26 Mar, 2022 08:22 am
@revelette1,
revelette1 wrote:
Is it making anyone else nervous, thinking some Russian or nut is going to kill him?
In Warsaw? Well, everything seems possible, but I don't think so.

The Kremlin again raised the spectre of the use of nuclear weapons in the war with Ukraine - that's what making me again a bit nervous. (Only dogs that bark do not bite.)
revelette1
 
  2  
Reply Sat 26 Mar, 2022 10:04 am
@Walter Hinteler,
I wasn't thinking of an official attack by a military, but an assassination. Perhaps I watch too many movies. Smile But it just doesn't seem as farfetched to me.
izzythepush
 
  2  
Reply Sat 26 Mar, 2022 10:24 am
@revelette1,
Such an action is classed as a war crime.

That's why the Kremlin kicked up such a fuss when Sen Lindsey Graham was stupid enough to suggest it.

Putin is doubly paranoid about being overthrown, he is said to watch the footage of Gadaffi being roughed up by the mob over and over again.
revelette1
 
  2  
Reply Sat 26 Mar, 2022 10:53 am
@izzythepush,
I hate clarifying myself, I begin to feel like I'm wrong and keep on insisting, but, lol, I only meant, a lone assassin on his or her own taking Biden down. Would have been a perfect place with the whole world blaming Putin. And would give him the perfect cover, "I am not stupid enough to do it with the whole watching..." Likewise, a lone assassin.

But never mind, I watch too much TV.
 

Related Topics

Obama '08? - Discussion by sozobe
Let's get rid of the Electoral College - Discussion by Robert Gentel
McCain's VP: - Discussion by Cycloptichorn
Food Stamp Turkeys - Discussion by H2O MAN
The 2008 Democrat Convention - Discussion by Lash
McCain is blowing his election chances. - Discussion by McGentrix
Snowdon is a dummy - Discussion by cicerone imposter
TEA PARTY TO AMERICA: NOW WHAT?! - Discussion by farmerman
 
Copyright © 2024 MadLab, LLC :: Terms of Service :: Privacy Policy :: Page generated in 0.17 seconds on 11/26/2024 at 12:48:16