14
   

Monitoring Biden and other Contemporary Events

 
 
Bogulum
 
  5  
Reply Sat 13 May, 2023 01:05 pm
@Frank Apisa,
Frank Apisa wrote:

Bogulum wrote:

Hey, I don’t have all the options for replies to a post. For instance the “quote” button is gone. All that’s available are ‘reply’ and ‘report’.
Anyone know why that is?


Wonder if it could be because you are a newby, Snood.

I want Snood back!


Fixed it in preferences. I want me back, too! I’m still tossing about, trying to find all the threads I was in. They really need to fix that glitch.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Sat 13 May, 2023 04:32 pm
@Walter Hinteler,
Welcome to the Ukraine, recruit.
0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  5  
Reply Sun 14 May, 2023 09:16 am
Quote:
John Kennedy’s comments about Mexicans ‘eating cat food’ came as he urged the US military to enter country to ‘stop the cartels’

US senator denounced as ‘profoundly ignorant man’ over remarks on Mexico

Mexicans “would be eating cat food out of a can and living in a tent behind an Outback” Steakhouse restaurant if it were not for their nation’s proximity to the US, and their country should be invaded because of the presence of drug cartels there, the US senator John Neely Kennedy said.

The Louisiana Republican’s racist remarks drew a strong condemnation from Mexico’s foreign affairs secretary, Marcelo Ebrard, who called Kennedy “a profoundly ignorant man”. Mexico’s president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, meanwhile, urged the 37 million Americans of Mexican descent – along with other Latinos in the US – “not to vote for people with this very arrogant, very offensive and very foolish mentality” in the future.

Kennedy’s rant came on Wednesday during a Senate appropriations subcommittee hearing that in part focused on the Drug Enforcement Administration’s budget. Kennedy told DEA administrator Anne Milgram that she and other members of the Biden White House should pressure López Obrador to let US military and law enforcement officials storm into his country “and stop the cartels”.

“Make him a deal he can’t refuse,” Kennedy said, an apparent allusion to the famous line from the classic mobster film The Godfather. Kennedy also said: “Without the people of America, Mexico, figuratively speaking, would be eating cat food out of a can and living in a tent behind an Outback.”

Kennedy’s comments about the US’s neighbor to the south built on prior Republican statements exalting the idea of using the American military to crack down on Mexican cartels. Mexican cartels press most illegal fentanyl into counterfeit pills which are designed to look like Xanax, oxycodone, Percocet and other prescription medications, or they mix it into other drugs, including cocaine and heroin.

Many of the 70,000 overdose deaths registered in the US annually involve people who took fentanyl without knowing it.

In a response on Thursday to Kennedy, Ebrard said numerous Mexican government officials and citizens have died in the name of stopping fentanyl from crossing into the US. “He doesn’t know that or pretends like he doesn’t,” Ebrard said.

Ebrard added that Kennedy should contemplate why people in the US can obtain fentanyl simply by going out to certain streets or logging on to certain websites online. “It’s a fallacy to argue in favor of sending an armed force to Mexico when in the United States you have fentanyl circulating everywhere,” said Ebrard, who has previously noted that it is mostly Americans who are arrested for trafficking fentanyl in the US.

Kennedy delivered his tirade against Mexico in a southern American accent that many of his detractors have likened to the voice of Looney Tunes character Foghorn Leghorn. As the Louisiana politics and culture news outlet Gambit reported, it is widely believed that Kennedy maintains the drawl to come off as folksy, despite his holding degrees from the University of Vanderbilt in Virginia and Oxford University in the UK.
blatham
 
  2  
Reply Sun 14 May, 2023 01:12 pm
@Walter Hinteler,
Possibly the stupidest Kennedy ever. Why earth Cheryl Hines married him I do not not not understand.

CNN loves ratings. Anyone know Chis Licht at CNN. Pitch the idea of Kennedy debating Trump but with Larry David as the moderator. I'd sure as hell watch it.
BillW
 
  3  
Reply Sun 14 May, 2023 02:03 pm
@blatham,
I have a far less view of Oxford now!
0 Replies
 
Rebelofnj
 
  4  
Reply Sun 14 May, 2023 05:10 pm
@blatham,
blatham wrote:

Possibly the stupidest Kennedy ever.


A reminder that Robert Kennedy Jr. is a longtime anti-vaxxer and conspiracy theorist. We have the worst luck in the current Kennedys.

It is a shame that Amy Kennedy (by marriage) lost the 2020 election against Rep. Jeff Van Drew. She seemed more level headed.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Sun 14 May, 2023 06:25 pm
https://i.imgur.com/k3HMHm7.jpeg
0 Replies
 
NSFW (view)
bobsal u1553115
 
  3  
Reply Mon 15 May, 2023 09:00 am
https://i.imgur.com/1PL6cwd.png

We can't track down the informant': James Comer says he lost top witness in Biden investigation


"Rep. James Comer (R-KY) revealed on Sunday that Republicans had lost track of a top witness in the investigation of President Joe Biden and his family.

During an interview on Fox News, host Maria Bartiromo asked Comer about evidence he had of Biden's alleged corruption.

"You have spoken with whistleblowers," she noted. "You also spoke with an informant who gave you all of this information. Where is that informant today? Where are these whistleblowers?"

"Well, unfortunately, we can't track down the informant," Comer replied. "We're hopeful that the informant is still there. The whistleblower knows the informant. The whistleblower is very credible."


https://www.rawstory.com/james-comer-informant/
Region Philbis
 
  2  
Reply Mon 15 May, 2023 09:34 am
@bobsal u1553115,

Laughing

bless his heart...
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Mon 15 May, 2023 10:57 am
@Region Philbis,
They've sent their best man out after him ...



"heh-eh-eh-eh-eh-eh!"
0 Replies
 
thack45
 
  3  
Reply Mon 15 May, 2023 11:43 am
It's 2020 all over again... Trump's band of election deceiving, Keystone Cop attorneys had so much evidence that they couldn't even get it through the door. I do recall at a point they had a star witness too, one who they undoubtedly wished would have disappeared...






https://media.tenor.com/rDrFcSJcfmgAAAAd/melissa-carone.gif
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Reply Mon 15 May, 2023 03:53 pm
@Region Philbis,
Or as my grandmother might opine: Bless his heart, he don't mean no harm, what with his pointed little head and all.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  5  
Reply Tue 16 May, 2023 02:54 am
Quote:
On Saturday, May 13th, President Joe Biden spoke to the graduating class at Howard University, a historically Black university in Washington, D.C. In his speech about “excellence, leadership, and truth and service,” Biden singled out white supremacy “as the most dangerous terrorist threat to our homeland.”

Biden called for Americans to reject political extremism and violence, and to protect fundamental rights and freedoms for women to choose and for transgender children to be free. He called for affordable healthcare and housing and the right to raise your family and retire with dignity. He urged the graduates to “stand with leaders of your generation who give voice to the people, demanding action on gun violence,” and to stand “against books being banned and Black history being erased…. To stand up for the best in us.”

While Biden based his remarks on former president Trump’s declaration after the August 2017 Unite the Right Rally that “there are very fine people on both sides,” there were plenty of examples from just this week that he could have used.

Last night, Hunter Walker of Talking Points Memo broke the story that the digital director for right-wing representative Paul Gosar (R-AZ) appears to be Wade Searle, a devoted follower of white supremacist leader Nick Fuentes. Fuentes has openly embraced Nazism and Russian president Vladimir Putin’s authoritarianism, and he is one of those to whom the alt-right Groypers look up.

Although Fuentes calls the Groypers “Christian conservatives,” historian of the far right in the U.S. Nicole Hemmer told Walker: “The Groypers are essentially the equivalent of neo-Nazis…. They are attached to violent events like Jan. 6. Nick Fuentes, as sort of the organizer of the Groypers, expresses Holocaust denialism, white supremacy, white nationalism, pretty strong anti-women bigotry, he calls for a kind of return to Twelfth Century Catholicism. They’re an extremist group that is OK with violence.”

Walker has also identified an intern in Gosar’s office as another Fuentes follower.

A February study by the Public Religion Research Institute, a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that conducts independent research on religion, culture, and public policy, found that the so-called Christian nationalism at the heart of those like Fuentes is closely linked with a willingness to commit violence to make the U.S. a white Christian nation. The PRRI poll showed that nearly 20% of those who sympathize with Christian nationalism agreed they were “willing to fight” to take the nation back to what they incorrectly believe it always was.

Maria Cramer of the New York Times noted yesterday that while no one actually knows much about Daniel Penny, a white man who was recently charged with choking Jordan Neely, a homeless Black man, to death on a subway in New York, right-wing politicians and supporters have rallied around Penny. They seem to see him as a symbol of a powerful man who took matters into his own hands to restore order—although the events that led to the choking are still unclear—much as they lionized Kyle Rittenhouse after he killed two people and wounded another at a Black Lives Matter rally in 2020. Florida governor Ron DeSantis tweeted: “We must defeat the Soros-Funded DAs, stop the Left’s pro-criminal agenda, and take back the streets for law abiding citizens.”

Historian Thomas Zimmer explained the danger: “All strands of the Right—leading Republicans, the media machine, the reactionary intellectual sphere, the conservative base, the donor class—are openly and aggressively embracing rightwing vigilante violence,” he wrote. “This sends a clear message: It encourages white militants to use whatever force they please to “fight back” against anything and anyone associated with ‘the Left’ by protecting and glorifying those who have engaged in vigilante violence—call it the Kyle Rittenhouse dogma.”

In Washington this weekend, about 150 masked members of the white supremacist group Patriot Front marched toward the U.S. Capitol, chanting, “life, liberty, victory.”

Professor of journalism at New York University Jay Rosen noted on MSNBC on May 11, the day after CNN gave Trump the space to hold what amounted to a political rally, that journalists could better cover this moment in our history by focusing not on the horse race strategy, but on the consequences for the country if Trump wins again. How will American life change? Who will benefit? Who will suffer? He says the question should be “not the odds, but the stakes” as a principle for better campaign coverage.

A lawsuit filed today in New York by Noelle Dunphy, a woman who says Trump ally Rudy Giuliani hired her in January 2019 to manage his media presence, documents the sordid world she observed in her two years working for Giuliani. He promised her a salary of $1 million a year but said he couldn’t pay her until his divorce was final and, ultimately, paid her only small amounts of cash. In her account, he seemed to become obsessed with her, forcing her into sex and trying to dominate her. She is suing Giuliani, his companies, and 10 unidentified individuals over “unlawful abuses of power, wide-ranging sexual assault and harassment, wage theft, and other misconduct” and is asking for $10 million in compensation and damages.

The story of her time with Giuliani, whom she describes as a chronically alcoholic sexual abuser prone to racist and sexist outbursts, is bad enough—and she claims to have recordings—but her other allegations are politically incendiary. She claims to have heard Giuliani say that he was selling presidential pardons for $2 million a pop, splitting the proceeds with Trump, and that Giuliani told her on February 7, 2019, “about a plan that had been prepared for if Trump lost the 2020 election.” Specifically, Giuliani told Ms. Dunphy that Trump’s team would claim that there was ‘voter fraud’ and that Trump had actually won the election…. That same day, Giuliani had Ms. Dunphy sit in on a speakerphone conversation about a potential business opportunity involving a $72 billion dollar gas deal in China.”

Also of note is her claim that, since part of her job was managing emails, Giuliani gave her access to his email account. The system stored at least 23,000 emails on her own personal computer, including “privileged, confidential, and highly sensitive” emails from, to, or concerning Trump, his children Donald Trump Jr., Ivanka Trump, and Eric Trump; Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner; Trump’s lawyers and advisors; media figures including Rupert Murdoch, Sean Hannity, and Tucker Carlson; and so on.

There are a number of stories in the news today that wrap up long-standing issues. John Durham, the special counsel picked by Trump loyalist attorney general William Barr to undermine the FBI investigation into whether Russia interfered in the 2016 election, released a report today finding fault with the categorization of the FBI’s initial investigation into the Russia attempt to swing the 2016 election to Trump.

Representative George Santos (R-NY) has pleaded guilty to charges of theft in Brazil, but insists he is not guilty of the federal charges against him for financial crimes. He says he will not resign from Congress.

As predicted by everyone who correctly attributed the high cost of eggs late last year to the deadly avian flu and price gouging, there are now so many eggs on the market that the wholesale price is $0.94 a dozen, down from $5.46 a dozen six months ago.

The number of migrants at the southern border has dropped 50% since the end of the pandemic restriction known as Title 42 on May 11.

And finally, Representative James Comer (R-KY), chair of the House Oversight Committee, yesterday told Fox News Channel personality Maria Bartiromo that the committee has lost track of a top witness to alleged wrongdoing by the Biden family. “Well, unfortunately, we can’t track down the informant,” Comer said. “We’re hopeful that the informant is still there. The whistleblower knows the informant. The whistleblower is very credible.”

hcr
0 Replies
 
glitterbag
 
  2  
Reply Wed 17 May, 2023 05:01 am
@snood,
Test for Snood: Let me know if you can see this, please?
bobsal u1553115
 
  2  
Reply Wed 17 May, 2023 06:10 am
https://image.caglecartoons.com/274633/600/durham-report.png
0 Replies
 
Bogulum
 
  3  
Reply Wed 17 May, 2023 07:17 am
@glitterbag,
Yes
0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  3  
Reply Wed 17 May, 2023 10:44 am
Since it's a "contemporary event" and because the Coronavirus thread is closed, I post here that five people have gone on trial in Germany over an alleged far-right plot to kidnap the health minister and overthrow the government in protest against Covid-19 restrictions.

According to the prosecution, they wanted to "trigger civil war-like conditions in Germany by means of violence … to cause the overthrow of the government and parliamentary democracy".

The trial, eagerly awaited anyway, had a remarkable moment even before the official start of the trial. One of the defendants held up a piece of paper on a file before the trial began. In Cyrillic script it read: "With our brother. For peace and friendship. War against fascism."

To whom this message was addressed remained unclear. According to the indictment, however, the group wanted to ask Russian President Vladimir Putin to recognise the new government they were planning.
revelette1
 
  5  
Reply Thu 18 May, 2023 07:12 am
@Walter Hinteler,
So the whole world is basically going through this horrible far-right phase? Or are the US far-right nuts spreading to other countries?
hightor
 
  6  
Reply Thu 18 May, 2023 07:29 am
@revelette1,
Maybe it's that the Western democracies are now faced with challenges that were absent during the first few decades following WWII – population increases, OPEC, the proliferation of military small arms, immigration, and the multiplying effects of climate change. People automatically blame the parties in power, or, in this case, the inability of liberal states to respond quickly and effectively to anything, along with the fear of higher taxes.
 

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