Thursday, January 19, 2023

Jacinda Ardern Quits In Shocking Way!

Jacinda Ardern resigns mid-term.

World leaders react to the shocking resignation of Jacinda Ardern, then Prime Minister of New Zealand. 

At the age of 37, Ardern became one of the youngest elected to be Prime Minister of New Zealand. She also was pregnant while in office and gave birth to her daughter.

Ardern describes herself as a social democrat and a progressive. The Sixth Labour Government has faced challenges from the New Zealand housing crisis, child poverty, and social inequality. In March 2019, in the aftermath of the Christchurch mosque shootings, Ardern reacted by rapidly introducing strict gun laws, winning her wide recognition. Throughout 2020 she led New Zealand's response to the COVID-19 pandemic, for which she won praise for New Zealand being one of the few Western nations to successfully contain the virus. 

Ardern moved the Labour Party further to the centre towards the October 2020 general election, promising to cut spending during the remainder of the COVID-19 recession. She led the Labour Party to a landslide victory, gaining an overall majority of 65 seats in Parliament, the first time a majority government had been formed since the introduction of a proportional representation system in 1996.

Still, her announcement came as a shock throughout the nation of 5 million people.

Fighting back tears, Ardern told reporters in Napier that Feb. 7 would be her last day as prime minister after five and a half years in office.

“I know what this job takes, and I know that I no longer have enough in the tank to do it justice. It is that simple,” she said.

Lawmakers in her Labour Party will vote for a new leader on Sunday.

Ardern became an inspiration to women around the world after first winning the top job in 2017. She seemed to herald a new generation of leadership — she was on the verge of being a millennial, had spun some records as a part-time DJ, and wasn’t married like most politicians.

In 2018, Ardern became just the second world leader to give birth while holding office. Later that year, she brought her infant daughter to the floor of the U.N. General Assembly in New York.

She notched up center-left victories while right-wing populism was on the rise globally, pushing pushed through a bill targeting net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, overseeing a ban on assault weapons, and largely keeping the coronavirus out of New Zealand for 18 months.

Her approach to the pandemic earned the ire of Washed Up 45, and she pushed back against wildly exaggerated claims from Washed up 45 about the spread of COVID-19 after he said there was a massive outbreak and “It’s over for New Zealand. Everything’s gone.”

“Was angry the word?” Ardern said about Washed Up 45’s comments in an interview with The Associated Press at the time.

In March 2019, Ardern faced one of the darkest days in New Zealand’s history when a white supremacist gunman stormed two mosques in Christchurch and slaughtered 51 worshippers during Friday prayers. Ardern was widely praised for her empathy with survivors and New Zealand’s wider Muslim community in the aftermath.

After the mosque shootings, Ardern moved within weeks to pass new laws banning the deadliest types of semi-automatic weapons. A subsequent buyback scheme run by police saw more than 50,000 guns, including many AR-15-style rifles, destroyed.

Less than nine months after the shooting, she faced another tragedy when 22 tourists and guides were killed when the White Island volcano erupted.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern with President Joe Biden.

Ardern was lauded globally for her country’s initial handling of the coronavirus pandemic after New Zealand managed to stop the virus at its borders for months. But she was forced to abandon that zero-tolerance strategy as more contagious variants spread and vaccines became widely available.

She faced growing anger at home from those who opposed coronavirus mandates and rules. A protest against vaccine mandates that began on Parliament’s grounds last year lasted for more than three weeks and ended with protesters hurling rocks at police and setting fires to tents and mattresses as they were forced to leave. This year, Ardern canceled an annual barbecue she hosts due to security fears.

Ardern last month announced a wide-ranging Royal Commission of Inquiry would look into whether the government made the right decisions in battling COVID-19 and how it could better prepare for future pandemics. A report is due next year.

Many observers said that sexist attitudes played a role in the anger directed at Ardern.

“Her treatment, the pile on, in the last few months has been disgraceful and embarrassing,” wrote actor Sam Neill on Twitter. “All the bullies, the misogynists, the aggrieved. She deserved so much better. A great leader.”

But Ardern and her government also faced criticism that it had been big on ideas but lacking on execution. Supporters worried it hadn’t made promised gains on increasing housing supply and reducing child poverty, while opponents said it was not focusing enough on crime and the struggling economy.

Ardern described climate change as the great challenge for her generation. But her polices faced skepticism and opposition, including from farmers who protested plans to tax cow burps and other greenhouse gas emissions.

Ardern had been facing tough prospects at the ballot box. Her center-left Labour Party won reelection in 2020 with a landslide of historic proportions, but recent polls have put her party behind its conservative rivals.

rdern said the role required having a reserve to face the unexpected.

“But I am not leaving because it was hard. Had that been the case I probably would have departed two months into the job,” she said. “I am leaving because with such a privileged role comes responsibility. The responsibility to know when you are the right person to lead, and also, when you are not.”

She said her time in office had been challenging but fulfilling.

“I am entering now my sixth year in office, and for each of those years, I have given my absolute all,” she said.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Ardern “has shown the world how to lead with intellect and strength.”

“She has demonstrated that empathy and insight are powerful leadership qualities,” Albanese tweeted. “Jacinda has been a fierce advocate for New Zealand, an inspiration to so many and a great friend to me.”

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau thanked Ardern on Twitter for her friendship and “empathic, compassionate, strong, and steady leadership.”

Ardern charted an independent course for New Zealand. She tried to take a more diplomatic approach to China than neighboring Australia, which had ended up feuding with Beijing. In an interview with the AP last month, she said that building relationships with small Pacific nations shouldn’t become a game of one-upmanship with China.

New Zealand Opposition Leader Christopher Luxon said Ardern had been a strong ambassador for the country on the world stage. He said that for his party “nothing changes” and it remains intent on winning this year’s general elections to “deliver a government that can get things done for the New Zealand people.”

Ardern announced that vote would be held on Oct. 14, and that she would remain a lawmaker until then. Deputy Prime Minister Grant Robertson announced that he won’t contest the leadership of the Labour Party, throwing the competition open.

It’s unclear who will take over as prime minister until the election.

If no candidate gets at least two-thirds support from the caucus when Labour lawmakers vote on Sunday, then the leadership contest will go to the wider party membership. Ardern has recommended the party chose her replacement by the time she steps down.

Ardern said she hadn’t had too much time to reflect on her tenure in the role, although noted it had been marked with crises.

“It’s one thing to lead your country in peace times, it’s another to lead them through crisis. There’s a greater weight of responsibility, a greater vulnerability amongst the people, and so in many ways, I think that will be what sticks with me,” she said. “I had the privilege of being alongside New Zealand during crisis, and they placed their faith in me.”

Aya Al-Umari, whose brother Hussein was killed in the Christchurch mosque attacks, tweeted her “deepest gratitude” to Ardern, saying her compassion and leadership during that grim day “shone a light in our grief journey.”

“I have a mixture of feelings, shocked, sad but really happy for her,” Al-Umari wrote.

Ardern said she didn’t have any immediate plans after leaving office, other than family commitments with her daughter, Neve, and her fiancé, Clarke Gayford, after an outbreak of the virus thwarted their earlier wedding plans.

“And so to Neve, Mum is looking forward to being there when you start school this year,” Ardern said. “And to Clarke, let’s finally get married.”

Life Is A Drag!

Kitara will soon become a U.S. Representative.

Rep. George Santos (R-NY) is facing more heat. He is the first drag queen in Congress. 

Santos has admitted to fabricating parts of his life story, including his university education and elements of his employment history.

The New York freshman lawmaker has a revealing past. It appears Santos was a Brazilian drag queen named Kitara. Wondering why he facing allegations of check fraud? I am going on the assumption, he was a transvestite prostitute and stole from a trick.

Well the New York Times wrote in November 2022 the bombshell about Santos fabricating about his past and it led to numerous Democrats and several Republicans calling for him to resign. Santos so far has refused to resign and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) had gave him, Rep. Majorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) and Rep. Paul Gosar (R-AZ) committee assignments.

Santos so far has become more of a celebrity for Republicans than a distraction.

So photos emerged of Santos dressing in drag and some detail how he was aspiring to be a popular drag queen.

A 58-year-old Brazilian performer, who uses the drag name Eula Rochard, said she befriended the now-congressman when he was cross-dressing in 2005 at the first gay pride parade in Niteroi, a suburb of Rio de Janeiro. Three years later, Santos competed in a drag beauty pageant in Rio, Rochard said.

Another person from Niteroi who knew the congressman but asked not to be named said he participated in drag queen beauty pageants and aspired to be Miss Gay Rio de Janeiro.

Anthony Devolder was Santos other name.

Emails to the congressman's press office and a newly hired communications director on Wednesday evening were not returned.

Santos is the first openly gay Republican to win a House seat in Congress as a non-incumbent, but has positioned himself as a staunch conservative on many social issues.

He has backed Florida's "don't say gay" bill, which prohibits classroom discussion of sexual orientation and gender identity.

Republicans are increasingly denouncing drag shows and performers, claiming they are harmful to children.

Santos, responding in October to criticism of his support for the "don't say gay" bill, told USA Today: "I am openly gay, have never had an issue with my sexual identity in the past decade, and I can tell you and assure you, I will always be an advocate for LGBTQ folks."

Rochard said the congressman was a "poor" drag queen in 2005, with a simple black dress, but in 2008 "he came back to Niteroi with a lot of money," and a flamboyant pink dress to show for it. Santos competed in a drag beauty pageant that year but lost, Rochard said.

"He's changed a lot, but he was always a liar. He was always such a dreamer," Rochard said.

Santos admires Greene's dress. Maybe he'll wear it one day.

Santos even used a fake name. Gregory Morey-Parker, who previously lived with Santos, told CNN's Anderson Cooper on Tuesday that Santos used several aliases during their time as roommates.

Morey-Parker said he primarily knew Santos, who has listed his full name as George Anthony Devolder Santos, as Anthony Devolder.

But the former roommate said Santos also referred to himself as Anthony Zabrovsky, a name the now New York congressman reserved for a GoFundMe venture called Friends of Pets United. 

Zabrovsky and variations of the name are common among Ashkenazi Jews.

Morey-Parker told CNN: "He would say, 'Oh well, the Jews will give more if you're a Jew.' And so that's the name he used for his GoFundMe."

Santos' claim to be Jewish is one of many lies that have landed him in hot water in recent weeks.

During his 2022 campaign, Santos called himself a "proud American Jew" in a memo sent to pro-Israel groups, and he said in media appearances that his grandparents were Holocaust survivors. Santos even claimed his mom died on 9/11. His mom was in Brazil at the time.

Wednesday, January 18, 2023

Matt Schlapp Faces Lawsuit For Crotch Grab!

Okay, I am not answering these allegations.

The man who accused conservative activist of sexual abuse is suing him. The accuser has filed a $9.4 million lawsuit against Matt Schlapp, the chairman of the American Conservative Union, the organization that hosts CPAC. 

Interesting February. 

CPAC 2023 will be hosted in Orlando and of course Schlapp and wife, Mercedes are "swing" towards defense. They had already painted the accuser as a liberal hack and discrediting his work ethic. 

So during the Herschel Walker senate campaign, the accuser said a drunken Schlapp literally grabbed his penis and tried to fondle him.

“Matt Schlapp of the CPAC grabbed my junk and pummeled it at length, and I’m sitting there thinking what the hell is going on, that this person is literally doing this to me,” the staffer said in a video he claimed he recorded at the time and later shared with the Beast. “I’m supposed to pick this motherfucker up in the morning and just pretend like nothing happened. This is what I’m dealing with.”

The lawsuit also accuses Schlapp and his wife, Mercedes Schlapp, who served as Washed Up 45’s White House director of strategic communications, of defamation and conspiracy, claiming that they coordinated a campaign to discredit the Walker aide and his allegations.

Timothy Hyland, a lawyer for the accuser, said in a statement that the lawsuit, which asks for at least $9.4 million in damages, had been filed in part because Mr. Schlapp had not apologized for “his despicable actions.”

Sinema And Manchin Will Leave If Dems Repeal Filibuster!

I'm all white.

Progressives are fuming at two senators many see as obstruction to the Democratic Party's agenda. One senator from West Virginia and one senator from Arizona has angered the left by their refusals to go big on some of the most challenging issues.

And they have the audacity to use Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in their statements.

Get the fuck outta here, Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-AZ). You motherfuckers aren't invited to the soul food function. Keep your lily white asses out of Black empowerment.

Manchin and Sinema went to Davos, Switzerland to discuss America's challenges and the political discourse which allowed folks like Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), Rep. George Santos (R-NY) and Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) to exist.

Sinema wearing an expensive attire, confirms that if the Democrats repeal the filibuster, she and Manchin will no longer be a part of the Democratic Caucus.

They shared a high-five as proof.

“We still don’t agree on getting rid of the filibuster,” Manchin said before they turned to each other and high-fived.

The lawmakers’ intransigence on the filibuster effectively blocked key Democratic legislative priorities, such as voting rights reforms and codifying abortion rights, over the past two years. Sinema, who left the Democratic Party to become an independent last month, used the outing at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting to take a victory lap.

J.B. Pritzker called the high five shameful.

“While some would say that there were reluctant folks working in Congress in the last two years,” she said, gesturing at herself and Manchin, “I would actually say that was the basis for the productivity for some incredible achievements that made a difference for the American people in the last two years.”

Sinema was apparently jabbing back at fellow panelist Illinois Democratic Gov. J. B. Pritzker, who had knocked the senators for their pushback to some of President Biden’s agenda.

“[Biden] has worked with some reluctant members of his own party,” Pritzker said, motioning toward the side of the stage with Manchin and Sinema. “But we have gotten things done for the United States at the federal level under this president.”

Sinema called the filibuster an “important guardrail for the institution” and dinged Democrats who argued the U.S. would “not have any more” free elections without the voting rights package, saying the country had free elections in 2022 without the legislation passing.

“One could posit that the push by one political party to eliminate an important guardrail in an institution in our country may have been premature or overreaching in order to get the short-term victories they wanted,” Sinema said.

Manchin and Sinema are up in 2024 and they have not confirm whether they'll run for reelection or retire. Manchin is in a state that voted for Washed Up 45 overwhelmingly.

Washed Up 45 carried West Virginia with 76% of the vote. 

President Joe Biden carried Arizona by 1.4 points and Sen. Mark Kelly (D-AZ) won by 6 points in 2022. Sinema won against Martha McSally by 3 points. Kelly won against McSally by 2.4 points in 2020.

Ignore the noise. Don't listen to polls and stay focus on issues that matter. Democrats defied the odds in 2022 and will again in 2024. Republicans will destroy themselves.

We must not allow the noise to win. If the noise wins, white supremacy and authoritarism rules.

Being Homeless Is A Crime!

Culture wars are the common theme of Republicans. They often scapegoat the vulnerable in their attempts to undermine democracy. Contemporary wedge issues include abortion, homosexuality, transgender rights, pornography, multiculturalism, racism, homelessness and other cultural conflicts based on values, morality, and lifestyle which are described as the major political cleavage.

They seriously believe crime is the fault of Democrats and the policies of liberal governments. The very same folks who refuse to curb gun violence and political extremism are willing to find some unjustified outrage over an issue that has long plagued America's founding. 

Living in hotels, living under highways, living under bridges, living in vacant buildings, sleeping at bus stops, sleeping at train stations, sleeping in stairwells and sleeping in parks could be a crime now.

City governments in certain areas are cracking down on homelessness.

Federal data shows 582,462 people were experiencing homelessness on a single night in January 2022. Experts warn more people will enter homelessness as housing costs increase, as has been the case for decades in cities such as New York and in much of California.

Behaviors that can be penalized under this system can include sleeping, resting, actively or passively requesting donations, jaywalking, and even simply existing in public (sometimes known as “loitering”). When their existence is considered a crime, people experiencing homelessness can be punished with expensive tickets and citations, “sweeps” which force them to evacuate the areas they’ve come to know as a home, and even arrest and incarceration.

Republicans need to focus on real issues but alas, they won't.

Unsheltered homeless people have a much higher than average rate of interaction with police officers. One recent analysis suggests that a person living outdoors was likely to encounter police more than twenty times in a single six-month period. The result of this, rather than improved conditions or returns to housing, is that people experiencing unsheltered homelessness are much more likely than others to become victims of police violence.

This has very implications when it comes to race. Black people make up forty percent of the homeless population, and about half of the unsheltered homeless population. Moreover, the data consistently indicates Black people are three times more likely than average to experience violence at the hands of police. This makes the link between unsheltered homelessness and police violence, and the need to undo criminalization, even clearer.

One of the most effective ways to immediately make life safer for unsheltered people, and to avoid the dangers listed above, is to dismantle the systemic criminalization of homelessness. Reducing the number of interactions between homeless people and police, reducing the number of local ordinances penalizing life-sustaining activities, and replacing criminalization tactics with housing and services can be the difference between life and death for many.

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

Those Insufferable Women Fought In A Restroom!

It gotten so bad, folks had to separate them.

When will they finally realize that these two women aren't really taking their job of being a U.S. Representative seriously?

Rep. Majorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) and Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) allegedly got into a heated argument in a women's restroom inside the U.S. Capitol. The two were loud and obnoxiously brutal. No physical blows yet. It wasn't the infamous lunge by Rep. Mike Rogers (R-AL) at Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL). 

Greene is feuding with Boebert, Gaetz, Rep. Andy Biggs (R-AZ), Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), Rep. Marie Newman (D-IL), Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-MA), Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN), Rep. Cori Bush (D-MO), Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC), Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA), Rep. Maxine Watters (D-CA), Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), David Hogg, Michael Fanone, Dr. Dre and CNN.

Boebert who was warned by her own constituents to tone down but the noise keep going.

Greene who fought to get the rules package which included prevention a primary challenger from House Speaker Kevin McCarthy's (R-CA) Super PAC and allies of his is furious at Boebert and Gaetz for nearly screwing up the whole deal. She has openly attacked them and has signalled that she won't endorse them in 2024. Greene has also been warned by constituents to focus on issues and keep her appearances minimal.

Greene so far has ignored the warnings.

Greene has possible consideration for president.

The Daily Beast reports on the first day of Congress this year, Jan. 3, the mounting tension between Greene and Boebert reached its boiling point. According to multiple sources, the two women were nearly in a screaming match in the Speaker’s lobby ladies room just off the House floor.

“Greene questioned Boebert’s loyalty to McCarthy, and after a few words were exchanged, Boebert stormed out,” a source familiar with the fight told The Daily Beast.

According to another source familiar, while in the bathroom, Greene asked Boebert, “You were OK taking millions of dollars from McCarthy but you refuse to vote for him for Speaker, Lauren?”

The first source said Greene was in a stall and, upon coming out, confronted Boebert about taking money from McCarthy for her re-election and then turning against McCarthy when it came time to vote. The Colorado Republican was allegedly unaware that Greene was also in the bathroom at the time.

“That’s when Lauren said, ‘Don’t be ugly,’” the first source said, before she—in the words of this source—“ran out like a little schoolgirl.”

Asked about the dustup in the Capitol, Boebert simply said, “See you later. Bye.”

Sheila Jackson-Lee: Can't Your Staffers Read Bills Lauren Boebert?

Still feuding. The worst comes in next posting.

The most worthless lawmaker in the Western Slope of Colorado continues to stoke "angertainment." It appears that Adam Frisch is likely going to run for a second time to defeat her.

Republican lawmaker Lauren Boebert of Colorado continues to do what 49.9% of the voters disapprove of. The lawmaker barely won. At final count, Boebert won with 549 votes ahead of Frisch.

Many of her supporters even told her to stop making noise and focus on the 3rd Congressional District.

Debbie Hartman voted for Boebert for Congress in 2020 and again in 2022, delighted by Boebert’s unequivocal defense of cultural issues that animate the Republican Party’s far right flank. But as Hartman shopped recently at a supermarket in this Rocky Mountain ranching outpost, she had one piece of advice for the Colorado lawmaker.

“Tone down the nasty rhetoric on occasion and just stick with the point at hand,” said Hartman, 65, a veterinary tech assistant.

That sentiment reflects Boebert’s challenge as she begins her second term in the House. In her relatively short time in Washington, she has built a national profile with a combative style embracing everything from gun ownership to apocalyptic religious rhetoric. Constituents such as Hartman in the Republican-leaning district laud Boebert for defending their rights, but cringe at her provocations.

Boebert has engaged in feuds with numerous lawmakers. Her most notable were Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN), Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA), Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), Rep. Cori Bush (D-MO), Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) and now Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee (D-TX).

Boebert took issue with the bill and aimed at the Texas lawmaker.

Jackson-Lee had introduced a bill that addresses extremism. She wrote a bill that criminalizes violent instigation of white supremacy. Lee's bill was reaction to the Buffalo mass shooting attack in which a man filmed attack on Black shoppers through alt-tech.

The man also advocated anti-Black rhetoric on those white supremacy platforms.

Jackson-Lee introduced the Leading Against White Supremacy Act of 2023 to assign criminal punishment for certain forms of hate speech.

The bill's language is broad and could result in people facing criminal charges for sharing hateful content, including on social media.

Under Jackson-Lee's bill, a "person engages in a white supremacy inspired hate crime when white supremacy ideology has motivated the planning, development, preparation, or perpetration of actions that constituted a crime or were undertaken in furtherance of activity that, if effectuated, would have constituted a crime."

Just a few weeks ago, she had to check Brian Mast.

The bill would impose criminal penalties for anyone who "published material advancing white supremacy, white supremacist ideology, antagonism based on ‘replacement theory,’ or hate speech that vilifies or is otherwise directed against any non-White person or group, and such published material," if it was "read, heard, or viewed by a person who engaged in the planning, development, preparation, or perpetration of a white supremacy inspired hate crime."

Though the bill has no chance of moving through the Republican-led House, Jackson-Lee hits back at Boebert for being clueless to how bill are drafted. She even took aim at her inability to have her staffers look at bills.

Boebert is one of 90 members who have very to little accomplishments. She has spent 90% of her time outside her district. Even with the warning to tone down the noise, she continues to double down.

Doubling down on trying to "own the libs" instead of delivering results.

Many of her supporters rather see her vote "no" on issues than appear on television, radio and the internet yelling it.

She and Greene are not productive lawmakers. They are invested in being in the limelight and being accepted by white extremists. Damn shame, though.

Only the voters will decide if her noise will earn her a third term.

Monday, January 16, 2023

Keep His Name Out Your Mouth!


Republicans and some Democrats need to keep Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s name out their mouths.

When I see the grandiose of several lawmakers, media agitators and folks who distort the message of King, I grind my teeth and shake my head.

The far right loves to quote King's quotes to justify white supremacy. 

If King was alive, the far-right, Fox, Breitbart and Republicans would hate him with a passion.

So I boggles the mind to hear lawmakers who oppose voter rights and civil rights, support war and bigotry, stomp on the grave of King.

Respondents to a new The Economist/YouGov poll were asked “Do you think that Martin Luther King’s birthday should be a Federal Holiday?”

Overall, 55 percent of respondents said “yes,” Martin Luther King’s birthday should be a Federal Holiday, with 24 percent responding “no” and another 21 percent saying they were “not sure.”

Support for the holiday from racial subgroups was highest among Black respondents, 77 percent of whom said “yes” versus 10 percent who said “no” and 14 percent who weren’t sure. Among White respondents, support was lowest among White men with no college degree at 44 percent.

The highest support was registered among Democrats at 74 percent “yes” and 12 percent “no,” with 14 percent not sure.

But by far, the lowest support for the holiday came from Republicans, only 39 percent of whom said “yes,” MLK Day should be a federal holiday, with the remaining 61 percent either against it (37%) or not sure (23%).

Among independent voters, the plurality who said “yes” was 49 percent, while 25 percent said no and 26% were not sure.

Even more shocking, though, is the fact that while support for the holiday has grown among Democrats since the holiday was signed into law in 1983, support from Republicans and independents has decreased quite significantly.

According to a Harris poll taken weeks before the Senate passed the bill, 48 percent of Republicans and 62 percent of independents favored establishing the law. Forty-two percent of Republicans were opposed, while 10 percent were “not sure.”

Support among Republicans has also dropped by two points since the same poll in 2021.

In that same poll, 66 percent of Democrats favored the law while 29 percent opposed, with 5 percent saying they were “not sure.”

Dayton Faces A Year Of Gun Violence!

Outside a business, an Uber/Lyft driver saw a Dayton woman's body in the street shot dead.

Dayton, Ohio has a population of 137,000 and is part of the rust belt.

It's the third week of the year and in my hometown of Dayton, Ohio, we have experienced a high amount of gun violence in the city. There were 10 people killed from Jan. 1 to Jan. 15.

There were over 15 incidents of gun violence.

The suspect(s) are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

What happens when a Black person shoots a white person?

They obviously go to jail and are judged by the junk food media agitators for having some fault in their life. It is common that the far right wants Black America to condemn the actions of one Black extremist, one Black criminal or one Black politician.

According to the far rightWhite shooters are mentally ill. Black shooters are unrepentant criminals. Gay shooters are active groomers. Muslim shooters are terrorists. Hispanics and Asians shooters are illegal immigrants. Almost all mass shooters are registered Democrats because they have liked one thing common to the left.

The Republicans usually amplify white victims. Anytime a person of color kills a white victim, it is often wall-to-wall coverage on Fox and they force it into national news.

So on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day of Service, I ask the question..... 

What can we do to stop gun violence?

I have the answer, but it will take an act of Congress and the president to minimize gun violence in the United States.

For those who aren't aware, Martin Luther King, Jr. is the only African American who is not a politician to get a national holiday. It was widely disapproved of by Republicans and the signer of the legislation, Ronald Reagan. 

At first, some states resisted observing the holiday as such, giving it alternative names or combining it with other holidays. It was officially observed in all 50 states for the first time in 2000.
 
Two of the main arguments mentioned by opponents were that a paid holiday for federal employees would be too expensive and that a holiday to honor a private citizen would be contrary to longstanding tradition (King had never held public office).

The other was the explorer Christopher Columbus, a brutal Spanish colonializer who is sanitized to be a hero of American history.


By the way, King was a victim of gun violence. He was assassinated in April 1968 outside the Lorraine Hotel in Memphis.

Every community in the United States will eventually have a legacy. A legacy of tragedy. Gun violence, monkeypox and COVID-19 will affect your town, your family and your life. So I don't want to hear that bullshit about how gun reform is taking away your rights to own firearms.

I don't want to hear that protesting against police killing people of color is hate on cops in general. I don't want to hear talk about the coronavirus being a myth.

When you hear folks say "gun rights," what they really mean is that its white privilege. This good guy with a gun nonsense has to end. The cops didn't do nothing when children were shot inside a school. A security guard was shot dead trying to protect shoppers. A cop accidentally shot his own. The good guy who tried to stop a bad guy is outgunned and a part of the rule #3.

Remember #3 means: The "good guy with a gun" better be prepared to die if they want to stop a shooter.

I don't want to hear folks say masks and vaccine mandates impede their freedoms. It prevents a deadly outbreak from spreading. If you want to die from the coronavirus, that's on you. We lost over 1 million people from the coronavirus.

I don't want to hear the shit about guns saving lives. Cause a bullet does not have eyes and it's always likely gonna hit a target. These folks seem to not get it. These incidents are a tragic part of American history. Thoughts and prayers and your heart going out to the victims is not enough. It quite frankly is an insult. I am also tired of scapegoating Black on Black crime, Chicago, Baltimore and Democratic mayors for the nation's obsession to be numb to gun violence. You pretty much enable this nonsense by deflecting.

President Joe Biden is trying to curb gun violence. However, he has no support from Republicans. Most Democrats and America are for gun control measures. However the two Democrats in the Senate refuse to change the filibuster rules and its holding us back.

The National Rifle Association is always pushing against it. They will not relinquish from the narrative that guns are not saving lives. The Republicans aided by a fickle junk food media are openly encouraging anarchy and disruption in a desperate attempt for the Republicans to win back Congress and the White House. These agitators are calling for Biden to curb crime but will not help him. They want more guns on the street. It makes no sense.

So in closing, expect more.

The website Officer Down is a memorial to those who were killed in the line of duty. Those who don't get their names mentioned in the junk food media. Also the website the National Gun Violence Memorial also keeps record of the many individuals killed by gun violence

Call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline (Lifeline) at 1-800-273-TALK (8255) or 988, or text the Crisis Text Line (text HELLO to 741741). Both services are free and available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The deaf and hard of hearing can contact the Lifeline via TTY at 1-800-799-4889. All calls are confidential. Contact social media outlets directly if you are concerned about a friend’s social media updates or dial 911 in an emergency. Learn more on the Lifeline’s website or the Crisis Text Line’s website.

The call number to the U.S. Capitol is now going to be used. This is the official phone number, 202-224-3121. Let them know that "thoughts and prayers," "hearts going to" and "good guys with guns" are no longer acceptable and you want legislation to curb gun violence.

GUN VIOLENCE IS THE NUMBER ONE PROBLEM IN THE UNITED STATES.

Sunday, January 15, 2023

What Happened To Keenan Anderson?

The arrest of Keenan Anderson led to his death.

The cousin of controversial activist Patrisse Cullors was found dead after an encounter with the Los Angeles Police Department.

Keenan Anderson died moments after the Los Angeles Police Department arrested him and tasered him.

This was a series of incidents where the LAPD used deadly force on people they tried to arrest or detain. It has brought back the infamous reputation of "beat on the street."

The incident happened on Jan. 3 and involved Los Angeles resident Keenan Darnell Anderson. The police department released body-camera video of Anderson's arrest Wednesday.

Police said Anderson was involved in an accident and tried to flee. Cullors said her cousin had flagged down police and was asking for help.

"And not a single time did any of the responding officers listen to him," she said in a phone call.

Anderson, 31, a Black man, died at a hospital after he suffered a medical emergency about 4½ hours after he was arrested, Kelly Muñiz, a police spokesperson, said in a video statement.

The situation began around 3:35 p.m. when a Los Angeles police officer was flagged down about a traffic accident, Muñiz said. Witnesses directed the officer to Anderson, who "they indicated had caused the vehicle accident," she said.

Clearly unarmed and with his hands up.

The body camera video shows Anderson in the middle of the street. "Please help me," he tells the officer before he runs away.

The officer tells Anderson to "get off to the side," the video shows. In response, Anderson says someone is trying to kill him.

Anderson eventually gets on the sidewalk and puts his hands in the air. "I didn't mean to," he tells the officer.

The officer instructs Anderson to get up against the wall, the video shows. Anderson instead drops to his knees and puts his hands behind his head.

"Please. Please, sir, I didn’t mean to, sir. Please. Please. I’m sorry," Anderson says, according to the video.

Anderson tells the officer that he lost his key and had someone fix his car. After Anderson says again that someone is trying to kill him, the officer asks whom he is talking about.

"I had a stunt today," Anderson responds. "I had a stunt today, sir. I need to. Like, no, no, no."

Patrisse Cullors.

Muñiz said Anderson stayed on the ground for several minutes.

"However, as the additional officers arrived Anderson suddenly attempted to flee the location by running into the middle of the street," she said in the video statement.

"The officers gave chase and ordered Anderson to stop. Anderson ultimately stopped and was ordered to get on the ground. As the officers attempted to take Anderson into custody, he became increasingly agitated, uncooperative and resisted the officers."

The body camera video shows Anderson lying on his back in the middle of the street in front of a car. Several officers tell him to turn over on his stomach, and when he does not, they grab him, the video shows.
"Please, sir, don’t do this," Anderson says in the video. "Please, help me, please. ... They’re trying to kill me. Please, please, please, please, please, please."

The officers tell Anderson that if he does not stop resisting, they will Taser him. The video shows one officer, who appears to be Black, placing his elbow on Anderson's neck to pin him to the ground.

At one point, Anderson yells, "They’re trying to George Floyd me," referring to the Black man who was killed by Minneapolis police in May 2020.

His death his under investigation.

As Anderson and the police struggle, an officer is seen in the video deploying his Taser repeatedly. He is later handcuffed and placed in an ambulance to be evaluated for the Taser deployment, according to Muñiz and the video. He died at the hospital around 8:15 p.m. Jan. 3.

Cullors said the body camera video was "shocking" and "disturbing to watch." She questioned why officers used force. She also said she did not think police should be the first to respond to minor traffic incidents.

"If there’s an accident, then it should be ambulance and firefighters. There should be professionals who are trained in crisis management," she said. "If my cousin did not have to interact with LAPD that day, he would be alive."

At a news conference Wednesday, Police Chief Michel Moore said Anderson had committed a felony hit-and-run and tried to "get into another person's car without their permission."

A report by the police department's toxicology unit found that Anderson tested positive for cocaine metabolite and cannabinoids, Muñiz said. An independent toxicology test will be conducted by the Los Angeles County coroner's office. A cause of death has not been released.

Asked about the toxicology report, Cullors said the family's focus was on why Anderson had to die.

"Our family can never know what truly happened that day, because we weren’t there. What we do know is that Keenan was in a supposed accident and he asked for help, and in that process, he died," she said. "How did this result in his death?"

Saturday, January 14, 2023

Spare!

Not afraid.

The memoir of Prince Harry is on pace to sell 3 million copies. It has already broken Guiness Book of World Records for being the fastest selling publication in the world.

Harry spares no one.

His book Spare details his faults from drug abuse, his infamous Nazi uniform, his playboy lifestyle and rumors about not being the King's son. He details his strain relationship with his father King Charles III, Prince William, Queen Consort Camilla and Princess Catherine. 

He shows praise to the late Queen Elizabeth II and his mum, Princess Diana, who died in a deadly car accident in 1997. He said that he fears the very fate could happen to his wife and children.

He also took aim at the U.S. and British media. He is furious at the way they have treated Duchess Meghan of Sussex. Since he married Meghan, the junk food media has been relentless on attacking her.

Nevermind that Charles cheated on Diana or Prince Andrew cheated on Duchess Sarah with numerous women and allegedly slept with underage girls. Nevermind the royal institution has declined in popularity in eight nations where their leaders are people of color.

In July 2021, it was announced that Harry was set to publish a memoir via Penguin Random House, with proceeds from its sales going to charity and Harry reportedly earning an advance of at least $20 million. It is ghostwritten by novelist J. R. Moehringer. In the following month, Harry confirmed that $1.5 million of the proceeds from the memoir would go to the charity Sentebale, while £300,000 will be given to WellChild.

Harry stated "I'm writing this not as the prince I was born but as the man I have become. I've worn many hats over the years, both literally and figuratively, and my hope is that in telling my story – the highs and lows, the mistakes, the lessons learned – I can help show that no matter where we come from, we have more in common than we think." Harry said the book was "accurate and wholly truthful". The publisher stated that the book takes readers "immediately back to one of the most searing images of the 20th century: two young boys, two princes, walking behind their mother's coffin as the world watched in sorrow – and horror". The publisher maintained the book is "full of insight, revelation, self-examination, and hard-won wisdom".

The Times reported in January 2023 Harry had second thoughts about publishing the book after visiting his grandmother Queen Elizabeth II during her Platinum Jubilee celebrations in the summer of 2022, but eventually went ahead with it. In an interview with Bryony Gordon, Harry stated that the first draft was 800 pages, meaning that he had enough material for two books, but it was reduced to about 400 pages because there were things between him and his father and brother that "that I just don't want the world to know. Because I don't think they would ever forgive me." He claimed that the book's aim was "not trying to collapse the monarchy" but rather save it, and added that he felt he had an obligation to reform the institution for the sake of future spares, namely his brother's younger children, despite being told explicitly by William that his children are not Harry's responsibility.

But what got me going is the lies about Meghan. The extremists are claiming that Meghan's mother Doria Ragland was a drug dealer.

 Tom Bower appeared on Dan Wootton and claimed that Doria Ragland was not only a drug user, she was also a dealer. He believes that is what caused the split from Thomas Markle.

He also says Prince Harry has been an addict for twenty-five years and continues to take drugs to this day. Bower said he believes he smokes pot every day.

Predator Arrested Again!

The continuing downfall of a notorious sexual predator.

Disgraced actor and comedian was arrested for public intoxication and failure to register as a sexual offender. He is likely homeless. His only residence is a trailer home and it was raided during his arrest.

This actor had a history of inappropriately touching women and men.

Deputies first received reports of an intoxicated person early Friday morning at a tavern in Lake Elsinore, according to the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department.

When deputies arrived, the sexual predator, 57, was present and appeared intoxicated, according to TMZ.

During the arrest, authorities say the predator’s records showed he was a registered sex offender who was not up to date on his registration.

He was taken into custody without further incident. The predator8 was booked and later released after posting bond.

This is not the comedian’s first run-in with the law.

In 2022, he was convicted of sexual battery after groping an Uber driver in West Hollywood back in 2019.

In May 2022, the predator was arrested at an Orange County campground for alleged sexual battery. 

In October 2022, the predator was caught allegedly stealing tools from a Santa Barbara home, according to the Santa Barbara Independent.

The suspect is innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

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