A non violent protest leads to two Black state lawmakers being removed.
Prayers, sending condolences, lowering flags, moments of silence, taking a knee, showboating and photo ops do not save lives. Having more armed individuals will not stop a gunman who has a goddamn AR-15.
As Kid Rock's dumb ass shown in videos, those firearms blow up things.
Imagine how many people heads are blown off from a high powered firearm!
The Republicans who hold a supermajority in Tennessee legislature voted to remove two of three House Democrats from office. Their reason for removal, violations of decor.
The very fact that the two removed were Black men and one who survived was white shows how Republicans are the party of white nationalism. Their policies are not popular among most Americans. They rather have you focused on culture wars instead focusing on real issues like gun violence, protecting democracy and fixing the economy.
For them, they believe "cancel culture" only means ban Democrats, progressives and those who support them.
The three protested with gun control advocates on the steps of the state capitol andmit riled up the Republicans. The House Republican which control most of the state had its resolution to remove two of the lawmakers.
State Reps. Justin Jones and Justin J. Pearson, who were expelled, and Rep. Gloria Johnson -- faced separate expulsion hearings Thursday for allegedly violating the chamber's rules of decorum by participating in a gun control protest at the state Capitol last week.
At one point during the protest, the trio stood at the well of the House chambers, leading chants with a megaphone. The demonstration came in the wake of the deadly Covenant School shooting in Nashville on March 27, where a former student fatally shot three children and three adults, police have said.
Days later, Tennessee Republican Reps. Bud Hulsey, Gino Bulso and Andrew Farmer sponsored the expulsion resolutions, arguing the three Democratic lawmakers "did knowingly and intentionally bring disorder and dishonor to the House of Representatives through their individual and collective actions."
Jones, the first lawmaker expelled when House members voted to adopt HR65 Thursday, called the resolution "a spectacle" and "a lynch mob assembled to not lynch me, but our democratic process."
"We called for you all to ban assault weapons and you respond with an assault on democracy," Jones said during his 20-minute opening statement.
Justin Pearson and Justin Jones were expelled from the Tennessee House of Representatives.
Following the adoption of the expulsion resolution, Jones said his ouster set a "precedent that any member who voices dissent or opposition can be expelled from the legislative body."
"Today is a very dangerous day for America," he said in a hallway interview after the vote.
Pearson, who sang "Power to the People" and quoted from the Bible during his opening statement, called the resolution to remove him an "injustice against the First Amendment."
"Speaking up on behalf of the last, the lost, the least, those who've been left out, those who've been ignored, those who've been silenced but refuse to be silent anymore, that does not deserve expulsion from this House," he said before he was expelled from the chamber Thursday evening.
During her hearing, Johnson, the sole lawmaker to survive the expulsion resolutions, denied allegations that she "shouted" from the well during the demonstration last week. But she maintained that she joined the protest, breaching House decorum, in a needed effort to stir "good trouble."
"My friends in school all called me 'Little Miss Law and Order' because I'm a rule-follower, and I know that rules sometimes have to be broken and sometimes you have to get in good trouble," she said.
The reason why I am still here is because I'm white. I am showing solidarity with Justin Pearson and Justin Jones.
"I may have broken a rule, but the words in this document are false and I did what I was compelled to do based on speaking for the voters in my district who were begging me to bring this issue forward," she later added, gesturing at HR64, which would have expelled her from the legislative body.
Following the votes, Republican Speaker Cameron Sexton, who previously accused the trio of attempting to incite an insurrection, said he personally voted for all three Democratic members to be expelled.
"I think what you heard on the House floor today is that those members took away the voice of this chamber for 45 minutes when they were on the House floor, leading the protest to those and disrupting the business that we were doing," he said in an interview with NewsNation. "What I will say is there are consequences for action."
The three Republican lawmakers who introduced the expulsion resolutions, Hulsey, Bulso and Farmer, did not immediately respond to ABC News' request for comment.
Earlier in the Thursday session, the legislature passed HB322, a bill that requires schools to implement a number of safety plans and security systems, including requiring locked doors and active shooter training for school security guards, over the objections of the three members who faced expulsion.
"This bill is not about school safety," Jones said, adding the move to "make our schools militarized zones" is borne out of refusal "to address the real issue, which is easy access to military grade weapons."
Johnson, a former teacher, decried the possibility of "gun battles at our schoolhouse door," while Pearson argued that "the root cause that each of us have to address is this gun violence epidemic."
"We don't need a solution that says if you don't lock a door or get someone with a gun, we need a solution that says people shouldn't be going to schools and to houses and to neighborhoods with weapons of war," Pearson added.
President Joe Biden said in a statement that the move to oust the lawmakers was "shocking, undemocratic, and without precedent," arguing Republicans in Tennessee were focused on punishing lawmakers who "stood in solidarity with students and families and helped lift their voices" rather than pushing for gun control reforms.
Since the Civil War, the Tennessee state House has voted only twice to expel a member.
But the effort to expel the three Tennessee lawmakers is one of several recent moves by state legislatures to penalize lawmakers of underrepresented backgrounds taking a stand on progressive causes.
For example, Oklahoma Republicans removed the state’s only nonbinary legislator from House committees after the lawmaker provided refuge to a transgender rights activist.
As of Thursday, the trio of Democratic lawmakers said they have already lost ID access to the state Capitol and been stripped of any committee assignments.
But Pearson and Jones, flanked by their fellow Democratic lawmakers as they heard the results of their expulsion votes, said they remain undeterred in fighting for their constituents.
"We're gonna keep fighting for people in Nashville and Memphis, across the state of Tennessee and across the United States of America who want justice. We deserve it. This is our birthright. Our inheritance is not just some pieces of paper and constitutions and rules," Pearson said in a hallway interview following his expulsion. "It is the advocacy and the ability to protest for what is right and to create laws and to advocate for laws that make justice more possible."
Jones addressed his Republican colleagues directly during his hearing.
"My prayer to you, is that even if you expel me that you still act to address the crisis of mass shootings because if I'm expelled from here, I'll be back out there with the people, every week, demanding that you act," he said.
After 2022, the Republicans won control of the House of Representatives. They hold a five seat majority and Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) became the House Speaker. In the three months since taking over, the Republican Party passed legislation that has nothing to do with the economy.
Even if they do pass any legislation that deals with the economy, any spending cuts that go against the Democratic-controlled Senate will no advance. And if it goes against President Joe Biden's policies, it will be vetoed.
So far the 118th Congress has been lackluster to say the least. Many of the House bills involve abortion, anti-LGBTQ, lowering taxes, the U.S.-Mexican border and energy production which means oil drilling.
About 80% of the Republican passed bills stand little progress in the Senate.
Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) called upon Republicans to find bipartisan bills and end the unnecessary showboating.
With the Republicans fearing the young voters, the legislature they're passing at the state level increases guns, illegal gerrymandering, bans on books, bans on independent teaching, bans on transgender services and voting restrictions.
They want more Americans to provide identification to vote. They don't accept the word of a voter anymore in many states states Republican control.
They have Americans angry over woke, the indictment of Washed Up 45, transgender people and crime. They whip up phony outrage over border agents and their apprehensions of migrants and fentanyl as "weak border protection."
They claim that transgender people are destroying families.
They have stated that Blacks were better off as slaves. Some believe the Democrats keep Blacks on the plantation.
They claimed that under Washed Up 45 leadership, the economy was great. They literally ignored the pandemic, the unrest and the complete idiocy.
In America, a bunch of white folks show the world what gun violence does.
These weapons of mass destruction have shown to be the choice for mass shooters. They can easily use them to wipe out at least five lives within seconds of fire.
Washed up entertainer Kid Rock showed the world how an assualt rifle destroys human bodies. In a rant going after Anheuser-Busch, Kid Rock was shouting and screaming at Dylan Mulvaney and Drew Barrymore.
He ends up shooting up a bunch of Bud Light beer cans and it showed the massive destruction. The moron explicitly shows what mass shooters do when they kill innocent lives.
Mulvaney, a 26 year old transgender activist and social media influencer announced she will be spokeswoman for Bud Light.
Libs of TikTok (Chaya Raichik) and the far right were outraged over it. So now, they decided to "boycott" Bud Light by dumping their $15 boxes of 12 or $28 boxes of 24 into the drain.
Boycotting is their right.
However, they are fucking stupid to be outraged over an endorsement.
Mulvaney has faced backlash over her transition. In recent weeks, she appeared on The Drew Barrymore Show and Drew kneeled to Dylan to show solidarity with her journey.
Fox and many far right extremists resorted to labeling Dylan a "man."
Kid Rock used several Bud Light cases for target practice on Monday, shooting them with a rifle in response to the news that beer maker Anheuser-Busch made a transgender woman a Bud Light spokesperson.
After destroying several dozen beers with some heavy firepower, the performer turned to the camera and declared "Fuck Bud Light and fuck Anheuser-Busch!"
Rock’s explosive statement happened after the beer company sent a pack of Bud Light to transgender woman and activist Dylan Mulvaney with her face on it over the weekend. The biological male has been celebrating "365 Days of Girlhood," marking each day up to a year, since undergoing her transition from male to female.
The camera then immediately panned to reveal Rock holding a rifle and taking aim at several Bud Light cases laid out on a table about fifteen yards in front of him.
In an intense burst of gunfire, the musician tore through the beer cans, spraying foam and sparks everywhere. When he stopped firing, the table was drenched in beer and blue can fragments were strewn about.
The camera then panned back to Rock, who turned around, flipped the bird at the camera and said, "Fuck Bud Light and fuck Anheuser-Busch! Have a terrific day." The video ended with one last look at the beer can carnage he left.
In less than 12 hours, Rock’s video had already received more than eight million views.
Dylan Mulvaney gets a sponsorship and the far right outraged.
Anheuser-Busch has since responded to the backlash generated by making Mulvaney a Bud Light partner. In a statement to Fox News, the company explained, "Anheuser-Busch works with hundreds of influencers across our brands as one of many ways to authentically connect with audiences across various demographics and passion points."
An active shooter doesn't care about the politics, race, gender, sexuality, nationality, religion, your finances, your family, your plans that day, your successes, your failures, and most importantly, your life.
The shooter is motivated within seconds to take out as many people as he/she can.
Culture wars that have nothing to what's really going on in the U.S. in general. Gun violence is the most common problem in the United States. Over 145 people die a day from gun violence.
According to the far right: White 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. Of course, extremists often promote disinformation by using the "Sam Hyde" meme as a way to denounce most mass shooters being white.
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.
Republicans solutions are more guns, blame others for America's social ills and defect from accepting reality.
With Republicans in charge of the House of Representatives, the only thing they'll offer to every mass shooting is "thoughts and prayers", "our hearts going out to", "the good guy with a gun", and their most common phrase "now it's not the time to politicize these tragedies."
Use the hashtag #ignorethenoise whenever you deal with folks who embrace this.
This Red Wave the Republicans are talking about in 2024 is looking unlikely. Given that Democrats will have to defend five seats in states that Washed Up 45 carried, it will be a challenge for the them and President Joe Biden.
Nonetheless, Democrats are motivated this year.
For the first time in 15 years, the Supreme Court elected a progressive jurist.
Another defeat for the far right and its poster boy Scott Presler.
Janet Protasiewicz, a judge on the Milwaukee County Circuit Court, has won a seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court, NBC News projects, giving liberals their first majority on the state’s highest court in 15 years.
Protasiewicz defeated conservative Dan Kelly, a former state Supreme Court justice, on Tuesday in what became the most expensive state Supreme Court race in U.S. history and one of the most closely watched elections of 2023.
Protasiewicz’s victory will allow the court’s new liberal majority to determine the future of several pivotal issues the bench is likely to decide in the coming years, including abortion rights, the state’s gerrymandered legislative maps and election administration — including, possibly, the outcome of the 2024 presidential race in the battleground state.
With 85% of the expected vote counted, Protasiewicz had the support of 55% percent of voters, while Kelly had 45% percent.
Conservative-leaning justices hold a 4-3 majority on the court. Protasiewicz will fill the seat being vacated by retiring conservative Justice Patience Roggensack, giving liberals the majority for the first time since 2008. Protasiewicz was elected to a 10-year term.
Throughout her campaign, Protasiewicz made it clear that her positions on many issues — most prominently abortions rights — aligned with those of the Democratic Party. She was endorsed by the Democratic abortion rights group Emily’s List, Hillary Clinton, former Attorney General Eric Holder and several other prominent Democrats.
Democrats in the state, and nationally, described the race as the most important one in the country this year, and they focused their messaging on emphasizing abortion rights and fair elections — extending a strategy the national party used last year to fend off a red wave in the House and keep the Senate. The win by Protasiewicz suggests that the strategy continues to pay off for the party — a data point national Democrats will be all but certain to rely on heading into next year’s presidential election.
State Democrats and abortion rights groups lauded her win in the moments after NBC News called the race for her. Ben Wikler, the chair of the state Democratic Party, tweeted that the race was "a release valve for twelve years of Democratic rage in Wisconsin about Republicans rigging our state and smashing our democracy." Laphonza Butler, the president of Emily's List, a group that works to elect Democratic women who support abortion rights, said in a statement to NBC News that Protasiewicz’s win "will change the lives of Wisconsinites for years to come and give the state the opportunity to become a beacon of reproductive health care access."
Another significant factor was that the Protasiewicz campaign, as well as groups supporting it, widely outspent Kelly’s campaign and groups supporting it.
In her victory speech from Milwaukee, Protasiewicz praised voters for having “chosen to reject partisan extremism in this state” and said, “Our democracy will always prevail.”
“Too many have tried to overturn the will of the people,” she added in a veiled reference to attacks she made against Kelly during the campaign for his ties to a plot to overturn the 2020 election results in the state.
“Today’s results show that Wisconsinites believe in democracy and the democratic process,” she said.
Kelly, who lost his seat on the state Supreme Court in 2020 to liberal Jill Karofsky, faced relentless attacks from Protasiewicz and allied groups for having advised Republicans on legal efforts to overturn the 2020 race through the use of “fake electors.”
Kelly, in a blistering speech to supporters in the small town of Green Lake, acknowledged his loss but slammed Protasiewicz for having run what he called "the mostly deeply deceitful, dishonorable, despicable campaign I’ve ever seen run for the courts."
“The people of Wisconsin have chosen the rule of Janet. I respect that decision because it is theirs to make," Kelly said.
“I wish I would be able to concede to a worthy opponent," he added, "but I do not have a worthy opponent to which I can concede."
He ended his remarks with another jab, saying he wished Wisconsin luck, "because I think it's going to need it."
In a deposition to the House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, former Wisconsin GOP chairman Andrew Hitt said he and Kelly had “pretty extensive conversations” about the plan, and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported last month that the Republican Party at the state and national levels had paid Kelly $120,000 to advise them on “election integrity” issues.
Kelly repeatedly hit back against the accusations and denied any involvement in the matter.
At the center of the race, however, was abortion rights.
The state Supreme Court is widely expected to decide the fate of the state’s restrictive 1849 abortion law in the near term.
Several of Protasiewicz’s television advertisements emphasized her support for abortion rights and slammed “extremists” on the other side. Kelly, who refrained from saying how he would rule in such a case, was endorsed by three groups that oppose abortion rights, and he provided counsel to another Wisconsin group that opposes abortion rights.
The state Supreme Court is also likely to hear various challenges to existing election laws, as well as cases that might relate to recounts, absentee ballots and other facets of election administration that could have material impacts on the outcomes of close elections in the perpetual battleground state — including the 2024 presidential election.
Daniel Kelly bitter to the last drop.
For example, in a 4-3 decision last year, the state Supreme Court deemed all ballot drop boxes outside of election clerks’ offices illegal — a setback for Democrats, who had advocated to preserve one of the more lenient rules about the boxes that arose during the coronavirus pandemic. Two years earlier, the court, in another 4-3 vote, narrowly upheld the 2020 election results in the state. Court watchers predict similar cases in the future.
Other issues that could make it before the court in the coming years are challenges to Act 10, a law enacted by then-Gov. Scott Walker, a Republican, that eliminated collective bargaining for most public workers. It could also hear cases about redrawn legislative maps (the current map, which experts have said is one of the most gerrymandered in the country, was approved by the current state Supreme Court last year). As is the case in many states, in Wisconsin, if the governor and the Legislature cannot agree on legislative maps, the issue falls to the state Supreme Court.
Protasiewicz made her stance clear, saying at a debate: “I think the map issue is really kind of easy, actually. I don’t think anybody thinks both maps are fair.”
Meanwhile, Wisconsin voters Tuesday also approved a constitutional amendment that could make it more difficult for suspects in violent crimes to be released from jail on bail. Protasiewicz and Kelly had supported the proposed amendment.
Fun fact: There are African Americans mayors in New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, San Francisco, Atlanta, Washington, DC, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Dallas, Charlotte, Baltimore, Milwaukee and Kansas City.
The noise of the far left helped a candidate that will be vilified by the far right.
Brandon Johnson became the mayor-elect of Chicago. The third largest U.S. city has become the scapegoat for crime and Republicans often use the city as a wedge issue against Democrats.
It will be a test for Johnson.
Johnson, a union organizer and former teacher, was elected as Chicago’s next mayor Tuesday in a major victory for the Democratic Party’s progressive wing as the heavily blue-leaning city grapples with high crime and financial challenges.
Johnson, a Cook County commissioner endorsed by the Chicago Teachers Union, won a close race over former Chicago schools CEO Paul Vallas, who was backed by the police union. Johnson, 47, will succeed Lori Lightfoot, the first Black woman and first openly gay person to be the city’s mayor.
Lightfoot became the first Chicago mayor in 40 years to lose her reelection bid when she finished third in a crowded February contest.
Bernie Sanders managed to carry his endorsement to victory.
Johnson’s victory in the nation’s third-largest city topped a remarkable trajectory for a candidate who was little known when he entered the race last year. He climbed to the top of the field with organizing and financial help from the politically influential Chicago Teachers Union and high-profile endorsements from progressive Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren. Sanders appeared at a rally for Johnson in the final days of the race.
Taking the stage Tuesday night for his victory speech, a jubilant Johnson thanked his supporters for helping usher in “a new chapter in the history of our city.” He promised that under his administration, the city would look out for everyone, regardless of how much money they have, whom they love or where they come from.
“Tonight is the beginning of a Chicago that truly invests in all of its people,” Johnson said.
Johnson, who is Black, recalled growing up in a poor family, teaching at a school in Cabrini Green, a notorious former public housing complex, and shielding his kids from gunfire in their west side neighborhood.
He referenced Civil Rights leaders Martin Luther King Jr. and the Rev. Jesse Jackson and called his victory a continuation of their legacies. He also noted that he was speaking on the anniversary of King’s assassination.
“Today the dream is alive,” Johnson said, “and so today we celebrate the revival and the resurrection of the city of Chicago.”
It was a momentous win for progressive organizations such as the teachers union, with Johnson winning the highest office of any active teachers union member in recent history, leaders say. It comes as groups such as Our Revolution, a powerful progressive advocacy organization, push to win more offices in local and state office, including in upcoming mayoral elections in Philadelphia and elsewhere.
Paul Vallas backed by the Chicago police union was defeated.
Speaking to supporters Tuesday night, Vallas said that he had called Johnson and that he expected him to be the next mayor. Some in the crowd seemed to jeer the news, but Vallas urged them to put aside differences and support the next mayor in “the daunting work ahead.”
“This campaign that I ran to bring the city together would not be a campaign that fulfills my ambitions if this election is going to divide us,” Vallas said.
He added that he had offered Johnson his full support in the transition.
The contest surfaced longstanding tensions among Democrats, with Johnson and his supporters blasting Vallas — who was endorsed by Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the chamber’s second-ranking Democrat — as too conservative and a Republican in disguise.
Johnson and Vallas were the top two vote-getters in the all-Democrat but officially nonpartisan February race, which moved to the runoff because no candidate received over 50%. Both candidates have deep roots in the Democratic Party, though with vastly different backgrounds and views.
After teaching middle and high school, Johnson helped mobilize teachers, including during a historic 2012 strike through which the Chicago Teachers Union increased its organizing muscle and influence in city politics.
Vallas, who finished first in the February contest, was the only white candidate in that nine-person field. A former Chicago budget director, he later led schools in Chicago, New Orleans, Philadelphia and Bridgeport, Connecticut. He has run unsuccessfully for office multiple times, including a 2019 bid for Chicago mayor.
Among the biggest disputes between Johnson and Vallas was how to address crime. Like many U.S. cities, Chicago saw violent crime increase during the COVID-19 pandemic, hitting a 25-year high of 797 homicides in 2021, though the number decreased last year and the city has a lower murder rate than others in the Midwest, such as St. Louis.
Vallas, 69, said he would hire hundreds more police officers, while Johnson said he didn’t plan to cut the number of officers, but that the current system of policing isn’t working. Johnson was forced to defend past statements expressing support for “defunding” police — something he insisted he would not do as mayor.
But Johnson argued that instead of investing more in policing and incarceration, the city should focus on mental health treatment, affordable housing for all and jobs for youth. He has proposed a plan he says will raise $800 million by taxing “ultrarich” individuals and businesses, including a per-employee “head tax” on employers and an additional tax on hotel room stays. Vallas says that so-called “tax-the-rich” plan would be a disaster for the city’s recovering economy.
Special shout out to The Evolve. Would have never known about how bad things are for washed up entertainer Raymond Leon Scott (formerly known as Benzino).
I've been trying not to waste my time covering this washed up entertainer. However, he just can't stay out of the negative spotlight. Eminem buried his career. He should have figured it out when he lost The Source, got blackballed on radio and television and faced failures throughout his 58 years on this earth.
He literally is trying to sabotage his daughter. His daughter, well known rapper Coi Leray has been trying to find her way out of her father's shadow for years. He is so jealous of her gaining more followers, people listening to her music and she getting deals. He is trying to collect a paycheck from whatever he's doing down in Atlanta.
Ever since he admitted he played with a dildo, he has been fighting rumors of him being gay.
“Attention to all in the LGBTQ, abcd!!!” Scott began in the since-deleted series of tweets. “I respect y’all’s movement and your decision to be who you want to be BUT STOP THE WEIRD SHIT WITH THE COMMENTS AND FLIRTING. I’M NOT FUCKING FLATTERED BECAUSE I’M NOT GAY!! RESPECT THAT SHIT AS I RESPECT WHO YOU ARE!!”
After apparently being called out for lying, the former Love & Hip-Hop star came with receipts of a few of the comments he’s gotten. “Wtf I gotta lie to y’all for? Yall weird asf!” he wrote. “There’s WAY more but twitter only allows 4 pics at a time.”
He then doubled down on his statements. “Fuck y’all mad at me for?? Cause I ain’t wit that shit?” he asked. “I know it ain’t all gays & not all gay men are disrespectful but it’s a lot who are, it’s been going on for awhile. I don’t wanna see that on my timeline. Just respect that. I’m straight, and idgaf about none y’all comments.”
In 2022, a trans woman named Shauna Brooks alleged that she’d been texting and chatting with Scott and that he wanted to engage in an intimate relationship with her. While also alleging she’d turned him down, she leaked audio of purported phone calls with him to back up her claims.
Stizz already knew.
For his part, Scott denied any involvement and was adamant that he was a straight man.
Real World Police showed that Scott was evicted from his apartment, owes a lot of child support, got his vehicle impounded and is forbidden from driving and is required to take anger management classes. He owes a man in punitive damages for kicking his truck.
Fun facts about Raymond "Benzino" Scott. This is a copy and paste I've put together. So for anyone who never heard of this dude, here's some fun facts about him.
He is the former co-owner of The Source Magazine and Hip-Hop Weekly.
He is best known for being on Love & Hip-Hop: Atlanta for two seasons.
He is a former reality television star.
He is a former rapper.
He is a Boston-native entertainer.
He is the reason why The Source Magazine nearly went bankrupt.
He is the father of rapper/socialite Coi LeRay.
He is standing at 5'3" tall.
He is bipolar.
He is a one-hit wonder. His biggest single "Rock The Party" was hot in 2002.
He is the guy who took on Eminem and it left his rap career ruined.
He is the one who told staffers to give Eminem's albums poor ratings.
He is the one who threatened to kill Eminem's daughter, social media influencer Hallie Mathers in a rap verse.
He has threaten men who dated the mothers of his children. He was arrested for damaging a man's truck after he caught Althea Easton walking with him and their son, Zino.
He is a known hot head.
He is extremely sexist, homophobic and racist.
He is not known much outside of mainstream. Even the people who engage with him don't know he is a celebrity. In fact, he is a D-list celebrity at best.
He used cocaine, ecstasy, and steroids. It has contributed to his reckless behavior.
He is the father of five [or six] children.
He was born on July 18 either in 1963 or 1965.
He has appeared on Love & Hip-Hop: Atlanta and Marriage Boot Camp.
He was a member of The Almighty RSO which is known as Made Men.
He was caught at the end of his Bootee Remix music video taking a nasty fall.
He says "You know what I'm sayin'" a lot.
He has got into feuds with YouTube personalities NoLifeShaq and TheEvolve.
He has feuded with Eminem, 50 Cent, Wack 100, Aayan X, Funkmaster Flex, DJ Khaled, Angie Martinez, Lil Nas X, Royce Da 5'9", Merkules, Obie Trice and D12.
He was shot in Massachusetts after getting into a confrontation at his mom's funeral. His nephew was criminally charged.
He owes child support to former reality television star Althea Hart.
He steals carts from Publix and Kroger. His landlord at his previous apartment told law enforcement about his failures to pay rent and his tendencies to steal property from grocery stores.
He berated an Uber/Lyft driver because he was upset over masks.
He was caught in a one bedroom motel room with another man. He and Cavario Don Diva were in a Red Roof in Brookhaven. They were trespassed after Scott got upset at the manager. That hotel was known for cruising and prostitution.
He continues to drive a vehicle without a valid license. It's a reason to his multiple arrests. He had his vehicle impounded and despite his multiple pullovers, he still drives. He owes child support, court costs and traffic citations. Those contributing factors to why he is banned from driving.
He was on camera using racial slurs against an Asian-American Brookhaven, Georgia cop.
He is a subject of Real World Police videos. His antics expose the turmoils of fame. Those videos with him have more views than his own music videos.
He has done things to make people believe he could be a pedophile.
He is an internet troll. He often responds to Eminem fans or critics with sexist, racist, homophobic and parental digs. He had his official Instagram account banned for that.
He is sabotaging Coi LeRay's rap career on purpose because of jealousy. Nicki Minaj nearly cancelled her verse on Coi LeRay's album thanks to him running his mouth.
He was threatening Coi LeRay for sharing her experiences being his daughter. Coi said that her dad is broke and after The Source fallout, he literally struggled and she claimed he needed her to appear on reality TV to at least generate a buck.
He was allegedly grooming his half-sister.
He was allegedly sleeping with his niece.
He is screaming Black Lives Matter whenever he has a Karen moment.
He is temporaily banned on Clubhouse for making racial, homophobic and threats toward a gay podcast host.
He has openly brags about having an OnlyFans account and sharing nudity for a buck.
He has a sex tape on XVideo of him eating a woman's ass.
He is caught on social media talking to a transgender model/activist. He begged for forgiveness towards Shauna Brooks because he had a relationship with her.
He admitted he used a dildo on himself. The allegations go back about 10 years ago.
He has already sabotaged his son Yung Chavo's career by dragging on the Eminem feud.
He was relentless trolled on social for his D'Angelo-themed "The Bigger Picture" video.
He has many videos on YouTube and none of them cracked over 500,000 views.
He has a struggling restaurant called Benzino's Crab Trap. He closed two previous locations in Atlanta. He has one struggling location in suburban Chicago. The owner successfully sued him and Stevie J for breach of contract.
He used to own a nightclub, a sports bar, a clothing line and a music label. All of those projects have failed or he's lost them to health violations.
He does a celebrity boxing match to make a little change cause his rap career is pretty much over.
He has no boxing skills or certification.
He has been a failure most of his adult life.
He has been accused performing a sex acts for OnlyFans.
He has been arrested numerous times for not appearing at court.
He was sued by former business partner Dave Mays.
He has no neck.
He has no fame.
He is the worst rapper in modern history.
Scott said that no one in the hood plays Eminem's music. He said Em's music is trailer trash and his fans voted for Washed Up 45. He said thinks Em rhymes "masturbater in the elevator" whenever he's on the mic.
Tell me:
Has anyone in the hood ever heard of a Benzino song?
Or perhaps has anyone ever played any of Benzino's music?
Can we please have someone address the fact that Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) spends far less time in her own congressional district!
It worth noting that Vice President Kamala Harris will be in Dalton, Georgia to visit a solar energy plant.
The Biden-Harris Administration's Investing in America agenda. The event aims to highlight how the administration is building a clean energy economy that benefits all citizens and creates good-paying jobs.
The Investing in America agenda is a major initiative of the Biden-Harris Administration. The initiative is designed to create new jobs and boost economic growth across the country by investing in infrastructure, innovation, and the workforce. The plan also focuses on strengthening the middle class and promoting equity and inclusion for all Americans.
Dalton is part of Greene's district. She only spends 10% of her time in the district.
Greene, a white nationalist who has no legislative accomplishments is against everything Biden and the Democrats propose. She literally spends a majority of her time traveling on taxpayer money to Washed Up 45 rallies. She does podcasts instead of drafting legislation to benefit her constituents in Northwest Georgia. Greene has spent too much time on social media, showboating, visiting places that are not in her district like the U.S.-Mexican border, crying about being a victim and screaming about being silenced.
CBS News amplified her by interviewing her on 60 Minutes. She called Democrats the party of pedophiles.
— Afro Chingona-Excessively Black (@RealKHiveQueenB) January 27, 2021
This was Marjorie Greene on Jan 7th (2021) recounting with pride the role she played in what took place on Jan 6th. She’s speaking with Katie Hopkins, a far right British provocateur.pic.twitter.com/S3E3FwTuyI
“I would definitely say so,” she replied. “They support grooming children.”
Lesley Stahl pushed back on Greene’s assertion: “They are not pedophiles, why would you say that?”
Greene again defended her remarks: “Democrats support — even Joe Biden the president himself — supports children being sexualized, having transgender surgeries. Sexualizing children is what pedophiles do to children.”
Stahl audibly sighed and rolled her eyes, before asking Greene whether she can fight for what she believes in without name-calling and personal attacks.
Greene being escorted through crowd of protesters in New York City.
Greene then accused Democrats of doing the same to her. “I would ask the same question to the other side. Because all they’ve done is call me names and insult me nonstop since I’ve been here,” she said.
“They call me racist. They call me antisemitic, which is not true. I’m not calling anyone names. I’m calling out the truth basically,” she added.
Biden has called her out by name. After a few years of ignoring her, he is going to make her the face of the Republican Party. He said that Washed Up 45 and the minions will drive moderate Republicans into the Democratic Party.
Biden said Greene is driving "a lot of Republicans...our way" during a March 1 House Democratic Caucus conference.
"Isn't she amazing?" Biden joked.
When the president issued his first veto last week, he used the opportunity to knock Greene, saying the GOP-led bill—which sought to overturn an investment rule that allows retirement fund managers to consider the impact of environmental and social goals when picking investments—would "risk" retirement savings just because it considered "risk factors MAGA House Republicans don't like."
The Drudge Report was an early backer of the former reality TV star and business mogul in his rise to the presidency. Matt Drudge, a reclusive media mogul and conservative agitator backed him in 2016. But things turned sour and The Drudge Report has been extremely critical of the former president. He even went as far to blast the junk food media for its relentless coverage of him post presidency.
As he is running for president again in 2024, the junk food media has given more airtime to him instead of the current president. The same noise that helped him win in 2016 will help him win in 2024.
Former president Donald J. Trump is the first American president to be served with a criminal indictment. The former president who served from 2017 until 2021 was considered one of the most polarizing figures in history. He is ranked as one of the worst in modern history.
Trump became the first U.S. president to be impeached twice while in office. His first was trying to pressure Ukraine president Volodamyrr Zelenskyy into investigating Joe Biden and inciting an insurrection to disrupt the peaceful transfer of power.
Trump's failure to win the 2020 election was his coronavirus pandemic. He did not take action and let nearly 600,000 Americans die from it.
Trump had overseen unrest in the country after George Floyd's murder, the mass shootings in El Paso, Pittsburgh, Las Vegas, Dayton, Parkland and Sutherland Springs.
Trump had increased the debt from $21 trillion to $35 trillion during his term.
Trump refused to attend Joe Biden inauguration. He ordered his administration to delay and refuse to acknowledge Biden and Kamala Harris access to sensitive material.
Trump is under federal watch for his mishandling of classified documents and the insurrection.
Trump is under state investigation for his role in trying to interfere in the Georgia elections
Trump had four U.S. Press Secretaries in his one term.
Trump will be indicted for his role in hush money payments to adult entertainer and activist Stormy Daniels. He is also under investigation for getting the National Enquirer to stop a story about Karen McDougal. He allegedly had affairs with the women.
Trump also has a federal lawsuit from E. Jean Carroll. She claimed that the former president groped her and forcibly kissed her.
Today, the former president will appear at Manhattan Superior Court where he is expected to surrender to authorities. The U.S. Secret Service, the U.S. Marshals, the FBI and the U.S. Postal Inspectors will be on high alert. The New York Police Department will be watching for potential unrest and violent threats.
The Drudge Report front page.
Mayor Eric Adams warns out of state travelers and the insufferable lawmaker Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) that any antics that incite violence will lead to a criminal arrest.
Trump was indicted by a Manhattan grand jury and is scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday afternoon after an investigation into payments made during his 2016 presidential campaign to silence claims of an extramarital sexual encounter. The indictment itself remains sealed for now in the first criminal case ever brought against a former U.S. president.
Trump — a Republican who assailed the case Thursday as a Democratic prosecutor’s “political persecution” of “a completely innocent person” — is expected to turn himself in to authorities next week, according to three people familiar with the matter but not authorized to discuss it publicly.
The booking and appearance before Judge Juan Merchan should be relatively brief — though hardly routine — as Trump is fingerprinted, learns the charges against him and pleads, as expected, not guilty. Merchan has ruled that TV cameras won’t be allowed in the courtroom.
Trump lawyer Joe Tacopina said Tuesday that the former president wouldn’t plead guilty to lesser charges, even if it might resolve the case. He said he didn’t believe the case would ever make it to a jury, but conceded, “Really, there’s a lot of mystery here because we’re doing something that’s never been done before.”
Insufferable lawmaker Marjorie Taylor Greene will be outside her congressional district to protest Trump's indictment.
“I think there will be a typical processing, which does not take long, 20-30 minutes. There won’t be handcuffs,” Tacopina told ABC’s “Good Morning America.” “But, yeah, he’ll be processed the way anyone else would be — to a degree.”
New York police said they were ready for large protests by Trump supporters, who share the Republican former president’s belief that the New York grand jury indictment and three additional pending investigations are politically motivated and intended to weaken his bid to retake the White House in 2024. As Tuesday wore on, however, journalists often vastly outnumbered the protesters.
Trump, a former reality TV star, has been hyping that narrative to his political advantage, saying he raised $8 million in the less than a week since the indictment on claims of a “witch hunt.” He has assailed the Manhattan district attorney, egged on supporters to protest and claimed without evidence that the judge presiding over the case “hates me” — something his own lawyer has said is not true.
Trump is scheduled to return to his Palm Beach, Florida, home, Mar-a-Lago, on Tuesday evening to hold a rally, punctuating his new reality: submitting to the dour demands of the American criminal justice system while projecting an aura of defiance and victimhood at celebratory campaign events. At least 500 prominent supporters have been invited, with some of the most pro-Trump congressional Republicans expected to attend.
A conviction would not prevent Trump from running for or winning the presidency in 2024.
Inside the Manhattan courtroom, prosecutors led by New York’s district attorney, Alvin Bragg, a Democrat, are expected to unseal the indictment issued last week by a grand jury. This is when Trump and his defense lawyers will get their first glimpse of the precise allegations against him.
The indictment contains multiple charges of falsifying business records, including at least one felony offense, two people familiar with the matter told The Associated Press last week.
After the arraignment, Trump is expected to be released by authorities because the charges against him don’t require that bail be set.
The investigation is scrutinizing six-figure payments made to porn actor Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal. Both say they had sexual encounters with the married Trump years before he got into politics. Trump denies having sexual liaisons with either woman and has denied any wrongdoing involving payments.
The arraignment will unfold against the backdrop of heavy security in New York, coming more than two years after Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol in a failed bid to halt the congressional certification of Democrat Joe Biden’s win.
Though police said they had no intelligence suggesting any violence was likely, they were on high alert for any potential disruptions.
Trump pollster John McLaughlin said the former president would approach the day with “dignity.”
“He will be a gentleman,” McLaughlin said. “He’ll show strength and he’ll show dignity and ... we’ll get through this and win the election.”
But Trump was also defiant. He used his social media network to lash out at Biden, suggesting the president should be facing legal troubles of his own.
Despite that, the scenes around Trump Tower and the courthouse where Trump will stand before a judge were mostly quiet. There were some arguments, but police tried to keep protesters supporting the former president and those opposing him apart, confining them to separate sides of the nearby park using metal barricades.
One demonstrator hoisted a sign reading “Trump or death 1776 2024,” but others carried placards showed images of Trump in prison. The dueling sentiments also played out on nearby posts, were one flyer urged passers-by to donate to help fund Trump’s presidential library and another showed a shouting Trump behind bars — together with police signs instructing that no parking was allowed near the area.
The public fascination with the case was evident Monday as national television carried live images of Trump’s motorcade from his Mar-a-Lago club to a private, red, white and blue Boeing 757 stenciled with his name. From there, Trump was flown to New York, where cameras followed his motorcade into Manhattan and he spent the night at Trump Tower as he prepared to turn himself in.
The former president and his aides are embracing the media circus. After initially being caught off guard when news of the indictment broke Thursday evening, Trump and his team are hoping to use the case to his advantage. Still, they asked the judge in a Monday filing to ban photo and video coverage of the arraignment.
Though prosecutors routinely insist that no person is above the law, bringing criminal charges against a former president carries instant logistical complications.
New York’s ability to carry out safe and drama-free courthouse proceedings in a case involving a polarizing ex-president could be an important test case as prosecutors in Atlanta and Washington conduct their own investigations of Trump that could also result in charges. Those investigations concern efforts to undo the 2020 election results as well as the possible mishandling of classified documents at Mar-a-Lago.
Top Republicans, including some of Trump’s potential rivals in next year’s GOP presidential primary, have criticized the case against him. Biden, who has yet to formally announce that he’s seeking reelection next year, and other leading Democrats have largely had little to say about it.
Prosecutors insist their case against Trump has nothing to do with politics.
Trump's antics are a money maker for Fox, MSNBC, NewsNation and CNN. They continue to cover him despite most of Americans viewers being tired of him.