Showing posts with label Scott Walker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scott Walker. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

CNN: GOP Candidates Call Our Coverage Liberal! Bullshit! We Just Don't Do "Softball" Interviews!

Republicans go to this annoying conservative agitator's program for "fair" coverage. 

Expect that seriously annoying conservative agitator to respond to CNN.

CNN's Brooke Baldwin and SiriusXM radio host Michael Smerconish aimed at Loserville. They said that Republicans who declared their intent to run, go to that annoying conservative agitator's program.

They seem to have this fixation to go to that right wing carnival. That carnival barker is claiming that he's doing the job the rest of the junk food media won't do.

I know one thing that the media won't do, kiss ass and then turn around claiming others do it.

This annoying conservative agitator will pull down their pants and give them head service. He will be giving them blow jobs.
CNN dares Sen. Marco Rubio and other Republicans to face an interviewer who will call them on their bullshit.
The world's most annoying conservative agitator is proud of getting first dibs on Republican presidential candidates.

Most media analysis consider that agitator's show is the worst in cable news. Me and S. Baldwin agree with that assertion. 

He is a name dropping, name calling, ass kissing, condescending asshole. I figured that since he's devoted to damaging Republicans in the 2016 presidential elections, he might want to hear some honest opinion again.

You have the right to criticize the president regardless of the good or bad he has done. But quite frankly, you can't give him credit for anything good, period. Even in the wake of an economy rebounding, the killing of Osama bin Laden, the lower prices in fuel and stable relationships with our allies, you seem to credit George W. Bush and Republicans. That's your opinion and your right to do so.

But clearly, ignoring Obama's achievements is certainly a reason for most in the junk food media to label you the worst cable news host ever to exist.

You don't do hardball interviews with Republican candidates. We already know that the Republican rely on you for their talking points.

You spend a majority of your program name calling and attacking a person's character. You encourage Republicans to the same at their peril.

Many in the junk food media consider The Stallmigos: Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) and Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) as agitators. They can't be taken seriously by many in the media or world powers.



Sunday, March 08, 2015

Protests After Madison Police Shot And Kill Unarmed Man!


The death of a Madison man has sparked outrage. Once again an unarmed man was killed by police after a confrontation. The police officer who shot him is a veteran. He is on paid administrative leave which is standard procedure. He's getting his union rep, his lawyer, and his psychologist.

We here at Journal de la Reyna send our condolences to the family of Tony Robinson. He was the suspect that was unarmed.

These events call for more training, the use of body cameras and the potential usage of non lethal weapons in the case of individuals who are low level criminals. Those who the law enforcement arrest for minor offenses (i.e. marijuana possession, jaywalking, soliciting, prostitution, traffic citations and unpaid fines).

The AP reports that the fatal shooting of an unarmed black 19-year-old by a white police officer, who authorities say fired after he was assaulted, prompted protesters Saturday to take to the college town's streets with chants of "Black Lives Matter." The city's police chief said he understood the anger, assuring demonstrators his department would defend their rights as he implored the community to act with restraint.

Tony Robinson died Friday night after being shot in his apartment following a confrontation with Officer Matt Kenny, who had forced his way inside after hearing a disturbance while responding to a call, authorities and neighbors said.

Madison Police Chief Mike Koval said Kenny was injured, but didn't provide details. It wasn't clear whether Robinson, who died at a hospital, was alone.

"He was unarmed. That's going to make this all the more complicated for the investigators, for the public to accept," Koval said of Robinson. The department said Kenny would not have been wearing a body camera.

Several dozen protesters who gathered outside the police department Saturday afternoon held signs and chanted "Black Lives Matter" — a slogan adopted by activists and protesters nationwide after recent officer-involved deaths of unarmed blacks — before walking toward the neighborhood where the shooting took place.

The shooting came days after the U.S. Justice Department said it would not issue civil rights charges against Darren Wilson, the white former Ferguson, Missouri, officer who fatally shot 18-year-old Michael Brown, who was black and unarmed, after a struggle in the street last August.
The racist right already trashing the name. 
Federal officials did however find patterns of racial profiling, bigotry and profit-driven law enforcement in the St. Louis suburb, which saw spates of sometimes-violent protests in the wake of the shooting and a grand jury's decision not to charge Wilson.

Other high-profile deaths of black suspects at the hands of police officers have prompted nationwide protests, including that of Eric Garner, who died in July after New York City officers put him in a chokehold and a video showed him repeatedly saying, "I can't breathe." A Cleveland police officer in November fatally shot 12-year-old Tamir Rice, who had been pointing a pellet gun at a playground. A Milwaukee police officer who fatally shot Dontre Hamilton last April was found to have acted in self-defense, but was fired for ignoring department policy regarding mental illness.

Koval struck a conciliatory tone Saturday while addressing the potential for more protests in Madison, saying he understood the community's distrust after "this tragic death."

"For those who do want to take to the street and protest," Koval said, his department would be there to "defend, facilitate, foster those First Amendment rights of assembly and freedom of speech." The promise echoed as a stark contrast to Ferguson, where an aggressive police response to protesters after Brown's death drew worldwide attention.

Koval also asked protesters to follow what he said was the lead of Robinson's family in asking for "nondestructive" demonstrations.

The chief said he had gone to Robinson's mother's house overnight and spoken with his grandparents and expressed sympathy to his family Saturday, saying, "19 years old is too young."

Family members at community meeting later read a statement prepared by Robinson's mother, Andrea Irwin.

Matt Kenny, the officer on paid leave.
"I can't even compute what has happened," Irwin's statement said. "I haven't even had a chance to see his body."

Koval said Kenny, a more than 12-year veteran of the Madison department, also shot and killed a suspect in 2007, but was cleared of wrongdoing because it was a "suicide by cop-type" situation. In that shooting, Kenny responded to a 911 call of a man with a gun and shot the man twice after police said he pointed the gun at officers. It turned out to be a pellet gun.

A picture of Kenny on the Madison department's website shows him with a police horse he trains, alongside a short first-person bio in which he says he served nine years in the U.S. Coast Guard before joining the department.

Kenny has been placed on administrative leave pending results of an investigation by the state's Division of Criminal Investigation.

A 2014 Wisconsin law requires police departments to have outside agencies investigate officer-involved deaths after three high-profile incidents within a decade — including one in Madison — didn't result in criminal charges, raising questions from the victims' families about the integrity of investigations.

Madison, about 80 miles west of Milwaukee, is the state capital and home to the University of Wisconsin's flagship campus. About 7 percent of the city's 243,000 residents are black. Neighbors said Robinson's apartment is in a two-story gray house on Williamson Street, known to many as Willy Street.

Chief Koval said police responded to a call about 6:30 p.m. Friday of a person jumping into traffic. A second call to police said the man was "responsible for a battery," Koval said.

Kenny went to an apartment and forced his way inside after hearing a disturbance. Koval said the officer fired after being assaulted by Robinson; Koval said he couldn't say how many shots were fired because it is part of the investigation.

The agitators of the racist right will use this.
One of Robinson's neighbors, Grant Zimmerman, said Robinson would run between his apartment and his roommate's mother's house across the street "all the time, even in the middle of traffic."

Wisconsin's online courts database shows that Robinson, a 2014 graduate of Sun Prairie High School, pleaded guilty to felony armed robbery in October and was sentenced in December to three years' probation. A police report said he was among four teenagers arrested in a home invasion in which the suspects were seen entering an apartment building with a long gun. They ran with electronics and other property and three of the four were captured. A shotgun and a "facsimile" handgun were recovered, according to the report.


Koval declined to discuss Robinson's background Saturday, saying he thought it was inappropriate.

"I'm not here to do a character workup on someone who lost his life less than 24 hours ago," Koval said.

A neighbor, Doris King, told the Wisconsin State Journal she asked Robinson about his involvement in the robbery because it seemed out of character for him.

"He felt he was under a lot of pressure from the others to do what he did," she told the newspaper. "He told me he would never do anything like that again."

Williamson Street appeared quiet Saturday evening. At least one Madison Police officer stood in front of the building where the shooting took place.

Wednesday, March 04, 2015

Ben Carson: I'm Going Need Some Make Up! I'm Getting Into The Clown Car....

Dr. Ben Carson said Monday that the U.S. military should have limited oversight in war. (Photo by Richard Ellis/Getty Images)
God's told me too... I'm considering it, Benjamin Carson.

The insurgency will have at least one enter the arena, former neurosurgeon Benjamin Carson formed a presidential exploratory committee. He is a Black Republican who gained fame by insulting President Barack Obama at the National Prayer Breakfast. He's been a fixture on Loserville. He had to quit when he was temped to form a presidential campaign.

Now that he's in the game, is Carson trying to avoid the "Shucky Ducky".

Herman Cain, a former Republican presidential candidate had to drop out after he was being accused by numerous women for sexual harassment and alleged affairs. 

Carson, is almost as goofy as Cain. 

Carson is a smart man. But why does he always say some dumb shit?

Of course, he's not a fan of the LGBT community. He's gotten a lot of flack comparing gay marriage to humans having sex with animals. He's gotten a lot of airplay on that annoying conservative agitator's program.

Now that's he's announced he's jumping into the clown car, what will the insurgent say that may jeopardize Republicans chances at winning the nomination.

Obviously the racist right hates this news.

They don't want another goofy "token" as their candidate. So I am saying that the conservatives who aren't keen to Black will find comfort in the Constitution Party. How about the Prohibition Party and America First Party? Maybe the Independent America Party?

So another Black Republican?

I bet Alan Keyes is jealous! Because he's going to make noise about it.

Saturday, February 28, 2015

The King of The Nuts (Again)!

Son of a nut, Rand Paul wins the CPAC straw poll again!

Sometimes, I wonder why CPAC even matters. They end up getting a straw poll winner but end up with a candidate that not even conservative enough for them. Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) won the straw poll for the third time.

Obviously, the Republicans and the insurgency loves Wisconsin governor Scott Walker, but every damn time the CPAC straw polls comes out, here comes Paul as the winner of the straw poll, yet again! 

This is a good thing for the controversial stallmigo. He can brag that he's the most conservative candidate for the Republicans. But you ask his supporters, what has he done while in the senate?

He's been in the U.S. Senate for nearly four years and during his time, he's accomplished nothing. 

I can't really tell you what bills he introduced or sponsored since his time in the U.S. Senate. I'll have to find out what major bill or accomplishment Paul's done. 

Paul and fellow Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) are bombastic agitators who in my opinion belong on AM radio. They are not looked as serious candidates for the Republican nomination. 

I couldn't support these nutbags. They will never have the opportunity to be inside the White House.

Paul, the son of former congressman and presidential nominee Ron Paul is just as annoying as his daddy. The Paul supporters flood every conservative/libertarian event and buy the votes. 

They advocate this notion that a relatively no accomplished lawmaker surge to the top. 

I don't have nothing against Paul for winning, but seriously? 

Does this win says something about CPAC? 

Friday, February 27, 2015

CNUTS 2015

Republican governor of Wisconsin Scott Walker wows the crowd at CPAC 2015. The governor will play to the base with this "I don't know who Obama is"... nonsense. He's thinking about putting on the makeup and getting into the clown car.

The American Conservative Union hosts the annual Conservative Political Action Conference.

CPAC gets major attention.

So far it's off to a great start. Obviously the racist right will continue their march to obscurity. The conservative agitators and Republican lawmakers head to the Sheraton Hotel in Washington, DC to contemplate a strategy for 2016.

Some of the low lives who came. Make sure you pay close attention to what they say. Because you want to play a drinking game when you listen to them.

Donald Trump



That annoying conservative agitator.



Governor Scott Walker of Wisconsin.



Stallmigo Ted Cruz (R-TX)



Dr. Benjamin Carson.



Newt Gingrich.



That former governor of Alaska



Governor Bobby Jindal of Louisiana.



Phil Robertson of A&E's Duck Dynasty



The word vomit. Remember each of these lawmakers and agitators share one thing in common: They say the same shit that annoying conservative agitator says. It's like listening to AM radio. They would be out of business once Obama leaves office.

Obama (Barack, Obamacare)
The President 
Radical Islam
Liberal
Benghazi
Mullahs
Iran
Muslim Brotherhood
Islamic State
Detached
Poverty
Benjamin Netanyahu
The Left
Joe Biden
Nancy Pelosi
Harry Reid
Cult
47 50 Million On Food Stamps
Weak
Hitler
Ronald Reagan
Energy Independent
Drill (for oil)
Vacations
Putin
9/11
Doomed To Repeat It
Under This President...
Keystone XL pipeline
Surrender
Israel
Amnesty
Doesn't Love America
Impeachment
Hillary Clinton
Lawlessness
Repeal
Establishment
Eric Holder
The Courts
Definition between a man and a woman

You gotta hand to the nuts, they're dropping right outta of the damn tree! They are Obama obsessed agitators and have no chance at ever winning an election. But if they actually nominate one of these nuts or embrace these agitators of the junk food media, they're going to lose.

But of course, if they want to go after President Barack Obama, do your thing!

Cause you've already lost the Black vote. How many others will the Republicans jeopardize in their quest for the White House?

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Seriously, This Is Real: A Quarter Of Republicans Think Obama Hates America!

The carnival barkers think President Barack Obama hates America. Sometimes you got to laugh at the Republicans and conservative agitators. They proven to be even more stupider than I've thought.

The dog whistle is blowing and the lips are moist.... Republicans are looking for their opportunity to take back the White House. But since they're still stuck on the past as they continue to trash President Barack Obama instead of throwing out better ideas.

Thumb through a check and cash it out. The Republican Party is morally bankrupt.

Saying that our American president hates his country is pretty much the definition of "hating" your country. You can disagree with the president on policy. But the relentless name calling and pseudo-patriotism by some in the junk food media makes you really think less of them rather the president.

This is the type of stuff that makes you cynical of politicians, the media and of course America.

It all began with that simpleton Rudy Giuliani speaking at a Republican donors rally for potential clown car candidate Wisconsin governor Scott Walker. He stated openly that President Obama doesn't love America like most of them. Of course, this became the click bait that will not go away.

Republicans are split on whether they want to support the comments or throw Giuliani back to the waste bin of failed politicians.

Many Republicans like Representatives Darrell Issa (R-CA), Mo Brooks (R-AL) and Louie Gohmert (R-TX) are very supportive of that simpleton. Even a 13 year old claimed that Giuliani was on point.

The Huffington Post/YouGov has the goods on Republicans and their opinion of Obama loving America.



Pitiful.

This is the country we live in.....

Seriously, what the fuck? You telling me that 85% of Democrats, 11% of Republicans and 42% of independents believe Barack Obama loves America.

That means if you add 42 (I) + 11 (R) = 53. You divide it by 2 and you have 26% of Americans roughly a quarter of Americans believe that the first Black president hate America.

Americans are similarly divided along party lines on whether they think Obama believes the U.S. is exceptional, and on whether he's more or less patriotic than most people. Republicans overwhelmingly say he's less patriotic, while Democrats say he's as patriotic or more, and independents are split.

Even sad that even Democrats say this stuff too. I mean Kentucky, Oklahoma, West Virginia, Arkansas, and Mississippi Democrats who are White question the president. These Democrats vote Republican regardless of the situation.

This stuff kicks off at the Conservative Political Action Conference. The CPAC event is going to be held at the Sheraton Hotel in Washington, DC and among the speakers are the usual nuts and a few politicos. The American Conservative Union hosts their straw poll on who's the potential Republican presidential nominee in their opinion.

The nut farm includes speakers:

That annoying conservative agitator of Loserville and iHeartRadio Media.
The former Alaskan governor, activist and reality star
Benjamin Carson, former neurosurgeon
Wayne LaPierre, NRA vice president and spokesman
Newt Gingrich, former House Speaker and 2012 presidential candidate
Sam Brownback, governor of Kansas
Mark "Rat Face" Levin, conservative agitator from Cumulus Media.
Bobby Jindal, governor of Louisiana
John Bolton, former United Nations ambassador
Tom Cotton, U.S. Senator from Arkansas (Stallmigo)
Rand Paul, U.S. Senator from Kentucky (Stallmigo)
Donald Trump, real estate mogul and reality star
Marsha Blackburn, U.S. Representative from Tennessee
Brent Bozell, activist and TV critic
Ann Marie Buerkle, former U.S. Representative from New York
Jeb Bush, former governor of Florida
Ted Cruz, U.S. Senator from Texas (Stallmigo)
Carly Fiorina, former U.S. Senate candidate and business mogul
Laura Ingraham, conservative agitator from Courtside Media
KT McFarland, conservative activist
Oops, former governor from Texas
Marco Rubio, U.S. Senator from Florida (Stallmigo)
Rick Santorum, former U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania and 2012 presidential candidate
Tim Scott, U.S. Senator from South Carolina (Stallmigo)
Scott Walker, governor of Wisconsin

This is the tentative list of nuts in the farm. Who will be the most controversial?

It will be covered.

Betcha that most of these agitators and politicos will question the president's patriotism, birth certificate and religion!

Pathetic.

Thursday, February 19, 2015

Giuliani: Obama _______ America!

Does Giuliani hate America?

The failed presidential candidate from the 2008 Republican primaries comes out swing his wig at the president. Mr. 9/11 himself, Rudy Giuliani comes out saying that President Barack Obama hates America.

In fact, he doesn't love America. A common theme among the racist right when it comes to their crazed obsession with the president.

For someone who advocated police brutality, profiling of Muslim residents and dressing in drag, Mr. 9/11 is trying his hardest to garnish attention. Long faded from the spotlight, this agitator emerges out of the cesspool to claim the most ridiculous things about the president.

Speaking at a rally for potential clown Scott Walker, the former New York mayor made the remarks at a gathering of donors who support this narrative that the president hates America.

“I do not believe, and I know this is a horrible thing to say, but I do not believe that the president loves America,” Giuliani said during the dinner at the 21 Club, a former Prohibition-era speakeasy in midtown Manhattan. “He doesn’t love you. And he doesn’t love me. He wasn’t brought up the way you were brought up and I was brought up through love of this country.”

With Walker sitting just a few seats away, Giuliani continued by saying that “with all our flaws we’re the most exceptional country in the world. I’m looking for a presidential candidate who can express that, do that and carry it out.”

Tuesday, February 03, 2015

Righties Want Scott Walker To Jump Into The Clown Car!

The insurgency and the agitators of the conservative media want Wisconsin guv to jump into the clown car.

The Wisconsin governor who managed to win three elections is now thinking about putting on the makeup and jumping into an already crowded clown car.

Republican Scott Walker is the new thing since sliced ham (i.e. perennial loser Mitt Romney). The controversial governor has won his bid in 2010. He survived a recall election in 2011. He handily beat the Democratic nominee in 2014 after talk he was down for the count.

Walker is the conservatives golden child.

Walker was at the Iowa Freedom Forum and he managed to drive up the emotion bars by saying that those evil LIBERAL agitators threaten him and his family. He stuck to his guns when he rolled back union bargaining rights for those in the public sector. He would take his ambitions to cut taxes and drug test low incomes to the state house. With a Republican majority, he managed to throw down.

Unemployment in Wisconsin is 5.4%. Pretty impressive numbers. But hell, population growth is extremely low. People are leaving the RUST BELT for the SUN BELT. That creates a demand for jobs. That's what people forget to talk about.

Walker is another pathetic candidate. I do sense the halo over this clown's head though....

What's your take on Walker and the possibility of him running?

Friday, January 30, 2015

Not Happening!

The comedy writers are disappointed that he's not running again. The Republicans are happy as well.

Breathe a sigh of relief, he's not running. That's right!

Perennial loser Mitt Romney will stay out of the limelight. He won't jump into the clown car again.

Thank the world. The 2012 presidential nominee for the Republicans will let the other clowns run inside the car. Some righties were not happy about a potential third run for the perennial loser.

So the former presidential nominee and his vice presidential nominee are out of the game.

Congressman Paul Ryan (R-WI) will continue to be a headache for President Barack Obama. The perennial loser will continue to be the gadfly news agitators turn to for insight. Despite him being a failed candidate, he's an old fart. 

Why would you want that old fart to run again? 

The clown car may be filled with more than 15 candidates. And with the exception of Jeb Bush and Wisconsin's Republican governor Scott Walker, the rest of them pretty much suck. And I mean they really suck and it's almost an embarrassment for any of them to run.

The Democrats will treat the Republican president like the Republicans did President Barack Obama.

Good riddance to the perennial loser.

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Some Righties Want Kasich To Get Into The Clown Car!

Some of the Republican faithful want John Kasich to put the makeup on and jump into the clown car.

After a landslide victory against the Democratic nominee for Ohio guv, Republican John Kasich is being floated around by the junk food media as the next clown to get into the car.

The current guv of the all important swing state of Ohio is thinking about it.

Kasich a former congressman and agitator on Loserville decided to run against Ted Strickland during the 2010 Insurgency Wave. He was testing the water during his final leg of hosting his gig on talk radio and Loserville. He would get Rupert and Chief Roger's blessing to run. In 2010, on a narrow victory, Kasich won.

During his first term, he pissed off the public sector unions by running the SB5 law that stripped collective bargaining rights from the public sector. That was roundly rejected in a referendum ballot sparked by voters.

He would later embrace Obamacare. That pissed off the insurgency.

He embraced the U.S. Justice Department's investigations into the killings of John Crawford and Tamir Rice, pissing off some in the law enforcement and racist right.

He would go golfing with President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden. And you know how the conservative agitators react the president going on a golf outing.

Yeah, he's not loved among the insurgency. He's too RINO for the red meat crowd. He's been a bad governor at best. And its unfortunate I did vote for him. He's not a terrible governor but the actions speak of stupidity and basic showboating.

Sure Ohio has a low unemployment rate. But hell, half of the residents split from the state.

It's leaving the door open for rival states to surpass Ohio in population growth. See when the state fails at growing it loses a U.S. Congressional District.
Kasich is thinking about it. But he hasn't formed an exploratory committee yet.
Kasich knows that Ohio is on the downward trend when it comes to residency. He can brag about the unemployment numbers and a balance budget all he wants, but the state is not popular and people are driven to states where the real jobs are!

Some how, I don't know what to think! Kasich has a candle to hold on! However he and the rest of the clowns are uninspiring, inclusive and too goddamn intrusive.

Given the forward march on marijuana legalization, women demanding equal pay, gay marriage, and calls to raise the minimum wage, I can't see any of these candidates viable against a potential perennial run for Hillary Clinton. Even a Clinton or Biden run is uninspiring for me.

I don't have the buzz of inspiration! They pretty much made me lose faith in democracy. The way they've disrespected the first Black president also makes me think that White presidents aren't going to be any better or worst than the previous predecessors.

The Freedom Summit Conference was being held by Iowa Republican  Congressman Steve "Deport The Vermin" King. He hosted the wackadoodles like that former Alaskan guv, former Arkansas guv, former Texas guv, Louisiana's Piyush "Bobby" Jindal, Wisconsin's Scott Walker, New Jersey's Chris Christie, Stallmigo Ted Cruz, Marco "Amnesty" Rubio, and perennial loser/always last place Rick Santorum in the fold. But absent were establishment politicos Jeb Bush and perennial loser Mitt Romney, both former guvs, Indiana's Mike Pence, and Ohio's Kasich, both current guvs.

The field is extremely weak. I mean given that Jeb Bush is probably the best clown in the whole field,. The fact that former governor Oops, former nutbag Michele Bachmann, perennial losers Romney, Santorum, Jim Gilmore, and the ex-Arkansas guv are thinking about failing again is just sad.

The failed candidates of 2008 and 2012 are really desperate clowns. Obviously the world hates them, but it would be fun to see if they can managed to get enough delegates to nominee. I hope that they eventually win the 270 to become the ring master.

Do you believe that Kasich is the right clown to fit into the car?

Can he become the star of the circus?

Thursday, June 19, 2014

Is Republican Governor Scott Walker In Trouble?

Walker under fire for shady funds.

The controversial Wisconsin governor Scott Walker is mounted up a reasonable amount of problems during his first term as the state's governor. He was risen to prominence by the insurgency.

He faced Democratic nominee, Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, in the general election, where Walker won with 52% of the vote.

Walker survived a recall challenge during his first year.

Walker introduced a controversial budget repair plan which eliminated many collective bargaining rights for most public employees and made over $1 billion in cuts to the state's biennial education budget and $500 million in cuts from the state's biennial Medicaid budget.

The budget cuts led to significant protests at the Wisconsin State Capitol and sparked an effort to recall Walker.

In a special election in June 2012, Walker again faced Tom Barrett in Wisconsin's first and only Gubernatorial recall election and defeated him for a second time, obtaining more than 53% of the vote. Walker is the first and only governor in the U.S. to date to win a gubernatorial recall election

The governor and Republican state lawmakers passing that controversial Union busting law triggered the Occupy Wall Street movement.

The Associated Press reports that newly released documents show prosecutors are alleging Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker was at the center of a nationwide "criminal scheme" to illegally coordinate with outside conservative groups.

The documents were filed as part of an ongoing lawsuit challenging the probe by the conservative group Wisconsin Club for Growth. They were ordered publicly released Thursday by a federal appeals court judge after prosecutors and the Wisconsin Club for Growth did not object.

One of the filings from prosecutors outlines previously unknown details about the investigation that began in 2012 as Walker was facing a recall election.

Prosecutors say Walker, his chief of staff and others who worked for him were discussing illegal coordination with a number of national groups and prominent figures, including GOP strategist Karl Rove.

Now it seems like there's political buzz around Walker. The Republicans believe that he's capable of being in the White House.

He up for reelection again and he's going to be facing a tougher challenger. I know the spineless Democrats probably lined up a candidate strong enough to beat him, right?

We'll see how this goes!

Sunday, June 08, 2014

Your Teens Are Surely In Trouble!

12 year old girls were charged as adults in the stabbing of their former friend.

As I gather my thoughts together on the Beau Bergdahl controversy, I want to deviate.

There was a story about two teenagers who are now charged as adults for stabbing a fellow teen with 19 stabbing wounds.

Their pictures are in the press and the charges could carry them life in the iron college. These two girls are barely of competence and yet their charges are very serious.

They stabbed their fellow classmate over a fictional character known as the Slender Man.

In Wisconsin, Morgan Geyser and Anissa Weier stabbed the victim because of a perception of the girl being associated with Slender Man.

CNN reports that the two girls lured a third girl into a wooded area in Waukesha, Wisconsin, over the weekend and stabbed her 19 times, according to authorities.

The suspects allegedly left the victim to crawl to her own rescue. The three girls, all 12 years old, were friends.

A bicyclist found the wounded girl alive Saturday, lying on a sidewalk in Waukesha, Police Chief Russell Jack said. She was in stable condition at a hospital Monday.
Never heard of the Slender Man.
The girls were trying to impress a certain "Slenderman," according to a criminal complaint. One of the girls encountered the name on a website known as Creepypasta Wiki.

Slenderman is a fictional character and Internet meme that often appears in horror stories, videos and images. One of the suspects told police that Slenderman is the site's supposed leader, and to climb into his realm, a user must kill someone.

On Tuesday morning, a lengthy statement was posted on www.creepypasta.com.

The statement expressed condolences for everyone involved and stressed that the site does not condone or encourage violence in any way. But it also noted that "it's hard to justify pinning blame on an entire genre of writing."

Creepypasta is a play on the term "copypasta," which is derived from the keyboard action "copy-paste." 

Creepypasta is horror fiction written with the Web in mind and, often, comes in a style that makes it look like a news or true crime story.

According to the criminal complaint, the suspects had been planning the attack since February.

They first thought to kill the victim by placing duct tape over her mouth while she was sleeping and stabbing her in the neck, the complaint says.

Next, the plan was to kill her in a park bathroom where there was a floor drain that could make cleanup easier, it continued.

But, finally, the girls decided to carry out the attack in the park while playing a game of hide-and-seek, the complaint says.

It states: "As they left for the park ... (the victim) was walking in front of them and Geyser lifted up the left side of her white jacket and displayed the knife tucked in her waistband. Weier stated she gave Geyser a look with wide eyes and, when asked what that meant Weier stated, 'I thought, dear god, this was really happening.' "

The Slender Man (also known as Slender Man or Slenderman) is a fictional character that originated as an Internet meme created by Something Awful forums user Eric Knudsen (a.k.a. "Victor Surge") in 2009. 

It is depicted as resembling a thin, unnaturally tall man with a blank and usually featureless face, wearing a black suit. Stories of the Slender Man commonly feature him stalking, abducting, or traumatizing people, particularly children.

The Slender Man is not confined to a single narrative, but appears in many disparate works of fiction, mostly composed online.

We here at Journal de la Reyna send our prayers to victim of this senseless tragedy. Hope the best for the young girl who was stabbed by these "friends". 

With friends like this, it's no wonder why I keep to myself a majority of the time.

Sunday, March 31, 2013

The South Rises Again!?


Back to the basics. The South once again stands in the way of progress.

C'mon, you got a nation of overweight and unhealthy adults. Most of these individuals are likely voters who would never support the president or his policies.

The Southern states have the highest mortality and sexual transmitted disease rate. Yet, with the proposals sponsored by "OBAMACARE" to help the poor and those uninsured get coverage, the Republican governors are standing at the doorway. Just like George Wallace!

Would someone tell those ignorant Black conservatives that the Republican Party favors the Confederacy!

I always love it when you hear the hodge podge of Black Republicans saying that the modern day Republicans are the party of civil rights.

Tell me what civil rights has a member of the modern Republican Party supported?

They're still stuck in the previous centuries with all this stupid rhetoric.

Healthcare cost are high because of the uninsured and we're paying for it.

What makes it so ridiculous is that Republicans want most Americans to stop being dependent. Obamacare (aka the Affordable Health Care Act) is a way to make uninsured citizens obtain coverage.
South Carolina governor Nikki Haley and Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal attending the White House governor's dinner. They both oppose the healthcare exchange sponsored by Obamacare.
But in the world of talk radio and conservative agitating, it's talk about death panels, higher taxes, government rationing and "Obama lookin' out for the brothas"!

The Republicans strongly oppose Obamacare. They've tried to fight it by repealing it. They've taking it to the U.S. Supreme Court and continue to misinformed their constituents about the law.

The Associated Press reports that as more Republicans give in to President Barack Obama‘s health-care overhaul, an opposition bloc remains across the South, including from governors who lead some of the nation’s poorest and unhealthiest states.

“Not in South Carolina,” Gov. Nikki Haley declared at the recent Conservative Political Action Conference.

“We will not expand Medicaid on President Obama’s watch. We will not expand Medicaid ever.”

Widening Medicaid insurance rolls, a joint federal-state program for low-income Americans, is an anchor of the law Obama signed in 2010. But states get to decide whether to take the deal, and from Virginia to Texas – a region encompassing the old Confederacy and Civil War border states – Florida’s Rick Scott is the only

Republican governor to endorse expansion, and he faces opposition from his GOP colleagues in the legislature. Tennessee’s Bill Haslam, the Deep South’s last governor to take a side, added his name to the opposition on Wednesday.

Mississippi governor Phil Bryant.
Haley offers the common explanation, saying expansion will “bust our budgets.” But the policy reality is more complicated. The hospital industry and other advocacy groups continue to tell GOP governors that expansion would be a good arrangement, and there are signs that some Republicans are trying to find ways to expand insurance coverage under the law.


Haslam told Tennessee lawmakers that he’d rather use any new money to subsidize private insurance. That’s actually the approach of another anchor of Obama’s law: insurance exchanges where Americans can buy private policies with premium subsidies from taxpayers.

Yet for now, governors’ rejection of Medicaid expansion will leave large swaths of Americans without coverage because they make too much money to qualify for Medicaid as it exists but not enough to get the subsidies to buy insurance in the exchanges. Many public health studies show that the same population suffers from higher-than-average rates of obesity, smoking and diabetes – variables that yield bad health outcomes and expensive hospital care.

“Many of the citizens who would benefit the most from this live in the reddest of states with the most intense opposition,” said Drew Altman, president of the non-partisan Kaiser Family Foundation.

So why are these states holding out? The short-term calculus seems heavily influenced by politics.
Haley, Haslam, Nathan Deal of Georgia and Robert Bentley of Alabama face re-election next year.

Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant is up for re-election in 2015. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal is term-limited at home but may seek the presidency in 2016. While they all govern GOP-leaning states, they still must safeguard their support among Republican voters who dislike large-scale federal initiatives in general and distrust Obama in particular. Florida’s Scott, the South’s GOP exception on expansion, faces a different dynamic. He won just 49 percent of the vote in 2010 and must face an electorate that twice supported Obama.

A South Carolina legislator put it bluntly earlier this year. State Rep. Kris Crawford told a business journal that he supports expansion, but said electoral math is the trump card. “It is good politics to oppose the black guy in the White House right now, especially for the Republican Party,” he said.

Whit Ayers, a leading Republican pollster, was more measured, but offered the same bottom line. “This law remains toxic among Republican primary voters,” he told The Associated Press.

At the Tennessee Hospital Association, president Craig Becker has spent months trying to break through that barrier as he travels to civic and business groups across Tennessee. “It’s really hard for some of them to separate something that has the name `Obamacare’ on it from what’s going to be best for the state,” he said, explaining that personality driven politics are easier to understand than the complicated way that the U.S. pays for health care.

President Barack Obama greets Tennessee governor Bill Haslam.
Medicaid is financed mostly by Congress, though states have to put in their own money to qualify for the cash from Washington. The federal amount is determined by a state’s per-capita income, with poorer states getting more help. On average in 2012, the feds paid 57 cents of every Medicaid dollar. It was 74 cents in Mississippi, 71 in Kentucky, 70 in Arkansas and South Carolina, 68 in Alabama. Those numbers would be even higher counting bonuses from Obama’s 2009 stimulus bill.

Obama’s law mandated that states open Medicaid to everyone with household income up to 138 percent of the federal poverty rate – $15,420 a year for an individual or $31,812 for a family of four. The federal government would cover all costs of new Medicaid patients from 2014 to 2016 and pick up most of the price tag after that, requiring states to pay up to 10 percent. The existing Medicaid population would continue under the old formula. In its ruling on the law, the Supreme Court left the details alone, but declared that states could choose whether to expand.

Hospital and physician lobbying groups around the country have endorsed a bigger Medicaid program.

Becker said he explains on his road show that the Obama law paired Medicaid growth with cuts to payments to hospitals for treating the uninsured. Just as they do with Medicaid insurance, states already must contribute their own money in order to get federal help with those so-called “uncompensated care” payments.
Former presidential candidate, Texas governor Rick Perry leads the way in Republican opposition.
The idea was instead of paying hospitals directly, states and Congress could spend that money on Medicaid and have those new beneficiaries – who now drive costs with preventable hospital admissions and expensive emergency room visits – use the primary care system. But the Supreme Court ruling creates a scenario where hospitals can lose existing revenue with getting the replacement cash Congress intended, all while still having to treat the uninsured patients who can’t get coverage.

Florida's scandal plague governor Rick Scott.
Becker said that explanation has gotten local chambers of commerce across Tennessee to endorse expansion. “These are rock-ribbed Republicans,” he said. “But they all scratch their heads and say,

`Well, if that’s the case, then of course we do this.’”

In Louisiana, Jindal’s health care agency quietly released an analysis saying the changes could actually save money over time. But the Republican Governors Association chairman is steadfast in his opposition. In Georgia, Deal answers pressure from his state’s hospital association with skepticism about projected “uncompensated care” savings and Congress’ pledge to finance 90 percent of the new Medicaid costs.

Altman, the Kaiser foundation leader, predicted that opposition will wane over time.


Arkansas Republicans, who oppose Democratic Gov. Mike Beebe’s call for expansion, have floated the same idea as Haslam: pushing would-be Medicaid recipients into the insurance exchanges. Jindal, using his RGA post, has pushed the Obama administration to give states more “flexibility” in how to run Medicaid.

Deal convinced Georgia lawmakers this year to let an appointed state board set a hospital industry tax to generate some of the state money that supports Medicaid. That fee – which 49 states use in some way – is the same tool that Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer is using to cover her state’s Medicaid expansion. Georgia Democrats and some hospital executives have quietly mused that Deal is leaving himself an option to widen Medicaid in his expected term.

“These guys are looking for ways to do this while still saying they are against `Obamacare,’” Altman said. “As time goes by, we’ll see this law acquire a more bipartisan complexion.”

Friday, February 22, 2013

Limbaugh: [For The First Time] I'm Ashamed Of My Country....

How could he be ashamed of his country? He makes a nine figure salary for the next five years!

He's only ashamed that he has lost major advertising after the whole Sandra Fluke fiasco!

He and the conservative agitators in the media now have four more years of their sworn enemy President Barack Obama.

And to make matters worse, Republicans are fighting each other. Karl Rove want to purge the U.S. Senate of the most extreme members and stop extreme candidates from winning the primaries.

Fox News took a severe nosedive in the average demographic ratings. Although on the top of the cable news chain, the network is suffering from a lack of trust among the viewers.

Republicans are at an all time low among the public. The Republican Party has low approval among the public. They've managed to sink Congress to historical lows since retaking back the House of Representatives. If Congress fails to pass a bill to stop the sequester, Republicans will take the majority of the blame, endangering their slim majority in the House.

Republican governors Rick Scott (Florida), Scott Walker (Wisconsin), John Kasich (Ohio) and Nikki Haley (South Carolina) are giving up the fight on Obamacare. They're finally going to embrace the implications of the health care law.

President Barack Obama job approval is up and his policies on gun control, tax reform and spending are approved among the public. Although he has still lagging ratings in the handling of the economy, his popularity shot up on many social issues.

More Americans are tolerant of the LGBT community and are slowly supporting gay marriage.

S.E. Cupp, Joe Scarborough, David Brooks, and some members of Congress (who choose to stay anonymous) are urging the Republicans to stop taking orders from Rush Limbaugh, The Drudge Report and Fox News.

Republicans made fools of themselves over the "Friends of Hamas" endorsement of Secretary of Defense nominee Chuck Hagel. Senator Rand Paul (R-Kentucky), Breitbart, and others took the bait! There was a rumor of this so-called imaginary Gaza Strip organization embracing the nomination of Hagel. The nominee is a former Nebraska senator who happens to be a Republican.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) made a fool of himself also over a parody website making a news report about detainees of GITMO getting access to the G.I. bill.

Congresswoman Michele Bachmann (R-Minnesota) couldn't get a person to endorse her repeal of Obamacare.

Newt Gingrich is saying that the Republicans are playing like that losing team going against the Harlem Globetrotters.

And to make it worse, many Republicans are slowly coming to terms that the president will get what he wants.

Yeah, Rush Limbaugh is ashamed of his country. People aren't listening to him. They can't stomach all that whining from the likes of him and those who want to be like him!

Eric Boehlert of Media Matters for America wrote recently about the conservative outrage model is running out of steam.

He wrote that being outraged, and especially being outraged about made-up claims, like Obama's imaginary "name-calling" on Monday, has become a signature of the far right movement over the last four years. It's also blossomed into Fox News' entire business model. Fox News makes a pile of profits each year overreacting to imagined Obama slights.

The question is, has the Fox/Rush Limbaugh/Drudge model of the phony Outrage Machine damaged the conservative movement? Is it standing in the way of Republican progress and electoral success?

Writing at his site RedState this week, conservative CNN commentator Erick Erickson beseeched fellow partisans to drop the outrage shtick and to move into more substantial areas of debate. "Conservatives, frankly, have become purveyors of outrage instead of preachers for a cause," he wrote. "Who the hell wants to listen to conservatives whining and moaning all the time about the outrage du jour?"

Erickson's point is dead on. The amount of time and energy conservatives devote to utterly trivial bouts of phony outrage now seem to consume the movement, or at least the media portion of it. But it's unlikely Fox News and its legion of copycat whiners in the press will heed Erickson's wise advice. They're too busy super-serving a radical niche and making money off the faux Outrage Machine.

Friday, January 25, 2013

Red Sea!

The Huffington Post, Talking Points Memo, The Raw Story, The Atlantic, Addicting Info, and Think Progress are concerned with Republican vote rigging and suppression strategies. The Republican governors signed off gerrymandering laws that give the Republicans a stronger district favor. The Democrat may have a strong disadvantage in the 2014 and 2016 U.S. Elections. 

Republicans control 32 of the states/territorial governorships. The Democrats control 21 of the state/territorial governorships. There are 2 independents who serve as governors and one independent who serve as the elected Washington, D.C. mayor.

The Republicans have a strong advantage in governorships. Most of the governors have stuck to their "principles" of union busting, not enacting Obamacare, fighting federal funds for infrastructure repairs to roads and bridges, high speed rail and shipping channels.

The Republicans had a strong opportunity to take back the White House with their shady redistricting. We could have said hello to President Mitt Romney. Thank god that perennial loser didn't win the election.

With Republicans being swept back into power in 2010, the consequences were a result of their hands on approach to congressional seating. 

Remember back in 2010 when the Tea Party got the phobia about the U.S. Census. Congresswoman Michele Bachmann (R-Minnesota), Congressman Trent Franks (R-Arizona) and former Texas Republican congressman Ron Paul were making such a fuss about the government's civic duty to count the nation's growing population.

The Republicans have a serious issue with minorities and women. So instead of the broad coalition of individuals (minorities and women), the Republicans will play to the social culture warriors (WHITE, OLD, MEN) who doomed them in the last two elections.

The Atlantic's David Graham reports that Republicans are green lighting the winner-takes-all strategy. GOP chairman Reince Priebus favors the idea is to get state legislatures to change the way they allocate electoral votes. Instead of a winner-take-all scheme, which most states use, they want to institute a system where votes could be split between candidates. Now, on face, that might not seem so bad. It would mean that very Republican areas in very Democratic states -- think Orange County, California -- and very Democratic areas in Republican states -- think Austin, Texas -- wouldn't be essentially throwing their presidential votes away. 

Certainly, there are longstanding critiques of the Electoral College. Recently they've mostly come from the left. The 2000 election, in which Al Gore won the popular vote but lost the electoral vote, was a galvanizing moment. And there are plans to try to rectify the oddness of the Electoral College. For example, the National Popular Vote plan is a push to get states to sign on to a scheme in which they'd award all their electors to the winner of the most votes nationwide. The plan would only take effect once states representing at least half of the electoral votes have joined, guaranteeing its effectiveness.
Romney supporters packing it up!
So this GOP plan is a smart move, driven by politics but with a result that would better reflect the will of the majority, right? Not quite. Here's the twist: The proposal would award electoral votes based on who wins Congressional districts. (That's already how Maine and Nebraska work, but the two states only account for nine of the 538 total electoral votes.)

From a Republican perspective, this is genius, but it's evil genius. It would allow the party to gain electoral votes in swing states and near swing states like Ohio, Colorado, and Michigan that went for Obama in the last two elections but have large Republican constituencies. But you may also recall that the GOP maintained its majority in the House in November but actually won fewer votes than Democrats did in congressional elections overall. This is because the GOP has been extremely effective at gerrymandering House districts. One reason the 2010 election mattered so much is that the Tea Party wave handed control of redistricting after the 2010 Census to Republican-led legislatures in many states. And they didn't waste the opportunity. Now the lines won't be redrawn again until after the next census, in 2020. 

With Virginia playing the game so well, it's possible that many other states will go there soon. 

[So] clearly this isn't a plan that would solve the problem of an undemocratic Electoral College. But it is a plan that would forestall Republican demographic doom. Now, whether instituting these laws would be politically viable is a different question. Even if a few states adopted it, it could change the political landscape. 

And moreover, the plan would disenfranchise voters. Which ones? Mostly the minority ones in cities who helped Obama win this year. Most urban districts are going to vote Democratic, and most rural ones will go Republican. But if votes are quarantined in a single Congressional district, it doesn't matter if the turnout in a city is 50 percent, 70 percent, or 100 percent; there's only one electoral vote on the table, plus the two at-large electoral votes. This takes almost all the venom out of the formidable Democratic get-out-the-vote operation.

There's a certain nihilism here. One of the major storylines of the 2012 election was voter-ID laws and voting hours. While ostensibly formulated to stop voter fraud, there wasn't much voter fraud to stop, and the changed hours tended to affect mostly poorer and urban (and therefore Democratic) voters. In some cases, Republican officials put the changes in starkly honest ways. A Pennsylvania legislator said a voter-ID law would help Mitt Romney win the state (he was wrong), while an Ohio official said voting hours shouldn't be shaped to accommodate the "urban -- read African-American -- voter-turnout machine." For a variety of reasons, however, these pushes didn't work: courts struck down some laws, and voters were willing to wait in long lines to cast their ballots.

But hey, if disenfranchisement didn't work once, just try it again, right? It's not like the GOP's standing with minority and urban voters can get much worse.

So in David Graham's piece on Republicans trying to steal elections is basically simple: If we can't win by the votes of the American people, we'll win by the American governance!

Let's repeat the words of wisdom for the Republicans and their conservative allies:


Republicans continue nominating OLD, WHITE, TIRED LOOKING, IGNORANT, BIGOTS as their leaders. They continue to rally EXTREMISTS with coded language and inflammatory rhetoric!

Conservatives obsess with calling those who supported the president, low information voters and uninformed!

It seems like this last election informed millions of Americans to vote against the Republican nominee, the perennial loser Mitt Romney. It didn't help Republicans win the Senate. It only gave Republicans a small majority in the House of Representatives.

If you consider Americans low information voters and the like: 

Get use to losing because it's not us that's uninformed!

It's likely you! 

I will repeat this over and over again until people notice!

Monday, November 19, 2012

Frenemies?



Governor Chris Christie of New Jersey embraces President Barack Obama. 
Mitt Romney is a perennial loser. He is a very bitter man! After he was recorded slamming the president for being a "sugar daddy" to his voters with "gifts", Republicans are putting the final nail in his coffin. They want this loser to disappear before he causes more damage to an already destroyed brand.

The Republicans are pointing fingers at one another and of course blaming President Barack Obama for half the crap they've gotten themselves into. The Republican governors are fearing that Mitt Romney's toxic brand could hurt them in their reelection bids. So they're working hard to put a notion that the Republicans are friendly to all Americans, not a select few.

New Jersey governor Chris Christie has caught a lot of flack from Republicans as of lately. He is attacked by the conservative media because he embraced the president's handling of the Hurricane Sandy damages.

When the Republican governors meet the president, it's sort of cordial. When there's a disaster or a tragedy, it's the president and the governors trying their hardest to offer comfort to the American people.

Still if you think that Republicans are total assholes, I agree with you!

Governor Bobby Jindal and many other Republicans are trying to eliminate the notion of his party being a bunch of assholes.

They got a lot of work ahead of them. Since the fall of Mitt Romney, he managed to take away three groups that could have been a major swing to the Republicans.

Hispanics, young voters and single women. These are primary groups that could have went to the Republicans but they've thrown it out for their rigid ideology.

Pictures of President Barack Obama meeting with Republican governors.
Bill Haslam of Tennessee


Mitch Daniels of Indiana 


Robert Bentley of Alabama

John Kasich of Ohio


Bobby Jindal of Louisiana

Susana Martinez of New Mexico



Rick Perry of Texas



Scott Walker of Wisconsin


Rick Scott of Florida

Bob McDonnell of Virginia
Jan Brewer of Arizona

Monday, October 22, 2012

Blame Game: Wisconsin Spa Shooting!

Radcliffe Houghton standing in pose with firearm. He is responsible for a mass shooting at suburban spa and salon in Brookfield, Wisconsin. He committed suicide after he killed his wife and injured others.
The media reported that a man went into a suburban spa on the premises of a Wisconsin mall. This person shot and killed three before he turned the gun on himself. President Barack Obama, Wisconsin governor Scott Walker and Republican nominee Mitt Romney sent their condolences to the families of the victims.

The media is trying to figure out how this tragedy happened. They think that Radcliffe F. Houghton was distraught over a pending divorce. The man opened fire injuring numerous others.

But the question that most should wonder, how come this person had a firearm when he held a restraining order?

How come this individual wasn't looked at as mentally disturbed or likely to cause/inflict harm upon someone after his estranged wife reported he slashed the tires of her vehicle?

And why isn't this a flag of the growing issue with firearms and the mentally disturbed?

What you're expected from the conservative media is basically the blame game!
Picture of shooting victim, Zina Houghton. This is the wife of shooter Radcliffe Franklin Houghton.
Obviously I'm expected that Breitbart will report that the shooter is a registered Democrat!

The Drudge Report will lay out the "Scary Black Man With A Gun!" Of course, you see the picture above, it's the shooter. And of course in Romneyland and the conservative/white supremacist bubble, this is one of "OBAMA'S SONS!"

The White supremacists websites will harp about the epidemic of Black on White crime! Reason why, the wife is a White woman and the shooter is a Black man.

Conservatives will eventually attack the president for politicizing a tragedy! And they're still harping on the Libyan attack also!

The National Rifle Association will rally their fundraising efforts by saying that this is a gateway for President Barack Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder to take away firearms. There's no legislation proposed or even thought of during this lame duck session of the U.S. Congress. Although the president supports the ban on dangerous assault weapons in the city, Republicans would gladly try to say "Obama's coming for the guns" regardless of what he says. They're sketchy on former governor and perennial candidate Mitt Romney, the Republican nominee. He once supported the assault weapons ban and doesn't own firearms.

But the point of this is simple. If you look at the situation, our country is on the path to slow recovery. The Republicans have delayed progress for their lame attempts to stop the president.
Distraught and shock at such an event by a dangerous individual.
And it's going to get worse before it gets better.

Zina Houghton was killed when he approached the Azana Spa and Salon in Brookfield, Wisconsin.
He also taken the lives of two other women. One being a single mother of a teenager. Another one isn't confirmed but it's still pending.

The Brookfield Police and FBI are investigating the history of this man.

Houghton's father Radcliffe, Sr. express remorse and sorrow about this tragedy. His father released a statement expressing sorrow for all the victims lost or injured during this weekend tragedy.

As I went through the web, I've seen a website that is considered conservative. It's already going around.

So of course, the blame game is what conservatives play. They know that an unemployed firearm owner is likely going to commit an act of terror upon anyone when they're distressed. Houghton was unemployed, depressed and feuding with his wife. He had envisioned her probably cheating on him and among other things.

But since this is a Black person, it's another attempt of NIGGERIZATION of President Barack Obama.

The individual alone is the monster.

We here at Journal de la Reyna send our condolences to those who were lost in this senseless tragedy.

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Tragedy In Wisconsin!

Radcliffe Franklin Houghton shot and killed numerous individuals before turning the gun on himself. The shooting in Brookfield, Wisconsin continues a trend of dangerous mass shootings. This is approximately three months since the Aurora, Colorado shooting in which James Holmes killed twelve and injured nearly 70 people.
There's late word that a mass shooter in Wisconsin is reported dead. The name is Radcliffe Franklin Houghton, a 45 year old man who was apparently shooting at employees at a local mall spa. One of the employees was the shooter's wife. The suspect killed himself at the scene.

The gentleman is an African American man.

In Brookfield, Wisconsin, about ten miles from Milwaukee, a mass shooting occurred near the Brookfield Mall. The shooting has causalities. According to the Associated Press, about three people are dead so far.

There's numerous individuals who were shot and injured.
The shooting was at a spa near the Brookfield Mall in Wisconsin.
The Azana Spa shooting was on Sunday. The motive of the shooting was an apparent domestic violence issue in which the shooter, probably his wife and another individual died in the shooting.

Soon we'll hear from condolences and sympathy from President Barack Obama, Wisconsin governor Scott Walker and Republican nominee Mitt Romney.

Of course since this is Black person involved, you'll eventually get the conservative media (or White supremacists, in general) agitated about the person's political affiliation, the epidemic of Black on White crime, conspiracies about the president coming for their guns (or in some case Mitt Romney coming for the guns)! 

You'll hear conservatives blame liberalism and Black leaders for this.

Of course, they'll ignore the fact this individual fits the notion of disturbed or the mentally challenged operating firearms.
Visual design of the Brookfield Mall in Wisconsin.
The NRA will denounce the shooting and say that it's not the firearm, it's the owner.

This is an ongoing story and we here at Journal de la Reyna will keep you posted on the latest developments.

We also send our condolences to those who were lost in this senseless tragedy.

Also sending our condolences to actor Alex Karras, famed football star who became the TV dad on 80s sitcom Webster, former presidential candidate George McGovern and former senator Arlen Specter.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

GOP Candidate's Son: Send Obama's Ass Back To Kenya!

Jason
U.S. senate candidate Tommy Thompson is doing damage control after his son invoked birtherism. 
That was unraveled by progressive groups this weekend when the son of former Wisconsin governor and 2008 presidential candidate Tommy Thompson said that offensive comment about President Barack Obama.

Perennial candidate Tommy Thompson is like Mitt Romney in a way. He's a moderate Republican. He was a one of the longest serving governors of the state. He knew how to build bridges as moderate Republican in a Democratic state. He served as Bush's secretary for the Department of Health and Human Services. And he wanted to be the President of the United States. He ran for president in 2007. He managed to get out early after polls showed him trailing badly against Rudy Giuliani, Fred Thompson, Senator John McCain (R-Arizona) and Mitt Romney.

He's running for an open U.S. Senate seat being vacated by longtime member Senator Herb Kohl (D-Wisconsin).

He faced a tough primary against a former congressman, a state House speaker and millionaire hedge fund owner.

The most conservative opponent Mark Neumann, the former congressman was the most suitable candidate by right wing members Senators Rand Paul (R-Kentucky), Jim DeMint (R-South Carolina), Mike Lee (R-Utah), and Pat Toomey (R-Pennsylvania). Thompson managed to outspend him and eventually won the nomination.

Congresswoman Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisconsin) is his opponent. She came from behind and is leading in some polls. If elected she will be the first openly gay woman to serve as a member of the U.S. Senate.

That has the Republicans investing money in this state.

Current governor Scott Walker was an embattled Republican. After he stripped collective bargaining rights from the public sector unions, the people of Wisconsin fought back against him. They managed to help the Democrats take control of the Wisconsin state senate and recalled a few state senators and judges. They tried to recall Walker but it failed. Walker won the election and became the rally call for the Tea Party and embattled Republicans. It also gave him, Romney and his running mate Congressman Paul Ryan (R-Wisconsin) a boost in the state. Ryan was picked as the vice presidential nominee by Mitt Romney. It put Wisconsin in play. A state that's longtime been a Democratic stronghold is now a toss up!

President Barack Obama's job approval is the upper 40s and lower 50s as of right now! The unemployment rate has went to 7.8% this month and Republicans are in denial.

So in the past couple of weeks, Romney and Ryan have plans on taking Wisconsin away from the president.

Congresswoman Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisconsin) is running for retiring U.S. Senator Herb Kohl (D-Wisconsin). If elected she will be the first openly gay woman to be seated as Wisconsin's newest senator.
The state is leaning towards President Barack Obama, but slightly. Matter of fact, according to Real Clear Politics, 10 states that were easy Democratic holds are either leaning or toss up. That has Republicans with the winds in their sails.

Romney has gained a small lead in the national polls. And that has the president's campaign team on the defensive. Vice President Joe Biden stellar performance at his only debate has stopped the bleeding of the disastrous performance by the president at his first debate. The president's strategy is to win early voters and encourage younger and minority voters back to the polls. That's so far working, but not a big as his 2008 victory.

Overall, Wisconsin U.S. Senate race is toss up leaning towards Baldwin. So far Thompson's lackluster appeal to conservatives has him struggling for some much needed fundraising. Baldwin has outraised the former governor in 2:1 ratio.

This week also marks another chapter in the NIGGERIZATION of the president.

Tommy Thompson's son Jason made some offensive comments at a Republican fundraiser that Mitt Romney can send President Barack Obama back to Chicago or rather Kenya Africa!

"We have the opportunity to send President Obama back to Chicago - or Kenya," said  Jason Thompson, a private attorney and son of U.S. senate candidate Tommy Thompson.

This was in the presence of the Republican national chairman, fellow Wisconsin native Reince Priebus.

Jason Thompson's comment about Obama prompted laughs from the crowd, with one woman jokingly adding, "We are taking donations for that Kenya trip."

The Milwaukee Sentinel-Journal reports that For years, a fringe group of Obama critics has promoted the discredited "birther" argument that the first-term Democratic president was not born in the U.S. Though Obama's father was Kenyan, the White House released Obama's birth certificate last year showing he was born in a Hawaii hospital on Aug. 4, 1961.

Also speaking at the Kenosha event were Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus and Wisconsin Republican Party Chairman Brad Courtney. The video was taken by Democratic Party operative and posted at BuzzFeed Politics early Sunday evening.

Jason Thompson, 38, has been actively involved in his father's bid for an open U.S. Senate seat, representing the campaign at some events. Running against Thompson is Democratic congresswoman Tammy Baldwin of Madison.

A Baldwin spokesman declined to comment on the video.

At an evening news conference in Wauwatosa, the former four-term governor - known for committing his share of verbal gaffes over the years - initially deflected a question from No Quarter about the video.

"I don't know what you're talking about," Thompson said.

About an hour later, however, Thompson's staff sent an email addressing the controversy.

"The Governor has addressed this with his son, just like any father would do," said the campaign statement. "Jason Thompson said something he should not have, and he apologizes."

Priebus and Courtney did not return calls.

During the same Sunday news conference, Thompson had his own slip of the tongue when talking about his Democratic opponent.

A reporter asked Thompson about Baldwin's statements Sunday at the Jewish Community Center in Milwaukee, responding to allegations that she has flip-flopped on imposing sanctions on Iran.

Thompson called Baldwin's explanation "the lamest excuse I've ever heard." He then went on to call her "anti-Jewish."

Only later did he backtrack when the same reporter asked him if he meant what he said.

"She's anti-Israel," he clarified.

Back in 2007, Thompson had to apologize for telling a Jewish group that earning money was "part of the Jewish tradition." He made the remark to the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism while running unsuccessfully for president.

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