Conservative Treehouse,
by
Sundance
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earlybird
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6/26/2021 9:42:16 PM
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The one issue that frustrates me personally; amid the known deep weeds and moves of the RNC as a club and their vitriolic hatred for the Tea Party before and MAGA movement now; is why President Trump continues to express confidence in Ronna McDaniel.
Yes, there is always going to be intra-party factions within the Republican system as a whole. However, the (at best) 10 to 20% of the club establishment, the Wall Street Multinational faction, are toxic to the objectives of restorative Americanism. The club elites, and this includes current RNC head Ronna McDaniel, simply hate the vulgarian middle-class and the base of the movement.
Epoch Times,
by
Allen Zhong
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earlybird
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6/26/2021 9:28:09 PM
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Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards vetoed a bill passed by the bipartisan state lawmakers that would have nixed the permit requirement for carrying a concealed handgun.
The governor, a Democrat, said he’s a strong supporter of the Second Amendment and an “enthusiastic outdoorsman and hunter,” but he can’t support permitless concealed carry.
“I simply cannot support carrying a concealed carry firearm without proper education and safety training,” he said in a statement. “Our current system strikes the right balance of ensuring that people can bear arms while also keeping reasonable permitting and training processes in place …
Taki´s Magazine,
by
Taki
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earlybird
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6/26/2021 5:00:39 PM
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NEW YORK—I hope this is my last week in the Bagel. I plan to fly first to Switzerland and then on to London.(snip)Well, it’s not all bad news. Mx. Avory, who is described by the degenerates who write for the Times as transgender and nonbinary, is calling for solidarity and action to support Black trans and gender-nonconforming youth at a rally intended to promote their voices and concerns. Socrates was condemned to death by the ancient Greeks for corrupting youth with his teachings on fairness. Mx. Avory is written up in The New York Times, causing even rotting fish to refuse to be wrapped up in its pages.
Washington Post,
by
Theodore R. Johnson
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earlybird
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6/26/2021 2:12:51 PM
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The latest totem in our hyperpartisan and politically polarized culture war is the terminology around race relations in America. (snip)Not only do the two sides respond differently to the question of whether the United States is a racist country, they can’t even seem to find common ground on the definition of racism.
Charles Murray, co-author of the contentious 1994 book “The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life,” doesn’t so much enter the fray as he stakes out his well-trod turf. In his latest offering, “Facing Reality: Two Truths About Race in America,” Murray doubles down on the assertions from the most controversial chapters in “The Bell Curve”
The Hill,
by
Jonathan Turley
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earlybird
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6/26/2021 1:26:57 PM
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This week, New York's Supreme Court took the extraordinary step of suspending Rudy Giuliani, former federal prosecutor and counsel to former President Trump, from practicing law. As a long-standing critic of Giuliani for his baffling, self-defeating and at times bizarre statements, I found the action was, on some level, reaffirming.
However, the fluid standard applied in Giuliani’s case raises serious concerns over how and when such suspensions will be imposed against lawyers in public controversies. Indeed, the Giuliani standard would seem to implicate a wide array of attorneys who straddle the line of legal and political advocacy.
(Snip) is deeply concerning in its heavy reliance on Giuliani’s statements out of court.
FrontPageMag,
by
Daniel Greenfield
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earlybird
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6/24/2021 4:15:34 PM
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General Milley of the Joint Chiefs of Staff turned in a performance that was part gaslighting and part humiliating theater.
It's hard to imagine how his part in the hearing could have gone any worse than defending the imposition of critical race theory by arguing, “I’ve read Mao Zedong. I’ve read Karl Marx. I’ve read Lenin. That doesn’t make me a communist.”
The military does not, as of yet, conduct Communist indoctrination sessions. And while officers might have read Mao and Lenin, they weren't being told to read it because it was "on the right side of history".
As I said, yet. At the rate we're going it may only be a
Conservative Treehouse,
by
Sundance
Original Article
Posted by
earlybird
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6/24/2021 2:13:09 PM
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A statement made by Joint Chiefs Chairman General Mark Milley defending the teaching Critical Race Theory to West Point cadets has gained some attention. However, the comments Milley made today actually reconcile several years of CTH watching Milley operate and having puzzling questions.
Remember, General Milley did some really odd things as Joint Chiefs Chairman under President Trump:
(1) Milley never removed Lt. Col Alexander Vindman from his White House post after the underling compromised his leadership position. The pentagon left Vindman on assignment to the NSC even after Vindman attempted to take-down President Trump.(2) Milley was then slow to react to Navy Secretary Richard Spencer threatening President Trump; attempting
New York Post,
by
Editorial Board
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earlybird
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6/24/2021 11:48:12 AM
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President Biden’s topic was one of utmost importance Wednesday — crime and gun violence. But you wouldn’t know it from the way he spoke.
He slurred his words. He called the ATF “the AFT.” At one point, he talked about the history of the Second Amendment and “the blood of patriots” before concluding that someone would need nuclear weapons to take down the government. If you weren’t confused, you were horrified.
Biden was obviously tired, speaking in barely a monotone. He couldn’t pronounce “cognitive.”
The media would pick apart every appearance of President Donald Trump, saying, even in news stories, that he was “manic,” “exhausted” or some other adjective.
American Greatness,
by
Benjamin Braddock
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earlybird
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6/23/2021 10:49:11 PM
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The April COVID surge in India is an interesting microcosm of what went wrong in this pandemic—and what went right.
As cases and deaths began to mount exponentially, a new wave of terrifying headlines and images also began to ripple across the West, (snip) Early in the pandemic, Wagstaff and a team of researchers at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia conducted cell culture experiments to see if Ivermectin might be a useful therapy in the war on COVID. Their findings blew away all expectations.
Ivermectin halted the replication of the virus and completely eradicated it from the cell culture in under 48 hours.(snip)Why would this information be suppressed by our media outlets?
American Greatness,
by
Adam Mill
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earlybird
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6/23/2021 10:39:29 PM
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Predictably, Vice President Kamala Harris’ tour of Latin America failed as a debut of her diplomatic credentials and showcased her inability to address the crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border. Worse yet, it provided conservatives with delicious material for a video juxtaposing candidate Harris condemning those who would stop migrants at the border with her recent command to migrantsL “Don’t come.” (Snip)Who in the Biden Administration could possibly want to sabotage Harris? I have a nominee, Mrs.—er, excuse me—“Dr.” Jill Biden. The mechanics of her rivalry with Harris are plain and oddly reminiscent of the rivalry between Nancy Reagan and then-Chief of Staff Donald Regan.
CNBC,
by
Dan Mangan
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earlybird
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6/23/2021 5:23:37 PM
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Eccentric antivirus software company founder John McAfee was found dead of suspected suicide in his prison cell in Barcelona, Spain, on Wednesday, shortly after Spain’s National Court approved his extradition to the United States to face criminal tax evasion charges, Reuters and the Associated Press confirmed.
The Spanish newspaper El Mundo first reported that the Catalan Justice Department had said McAfee, 75, died within hours of the extradition ruling.
McAfee’s lawyer told Reuters that the McAfee Associates founder apparently hanged himself.
USA Today,
by
John Fritze
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earlybird
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6/23/2021 1:38:05 PM
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WASHINGTON – In a blow to organized labor, a divided Supreme Court ruled in favor of two California fruit farmers on Wednesday who said union organizing on their orchards represented an unconstitutional taking of private property.
At issue in the case was a 1975 California law that permits union organizers to access farms 120 days a year during non-work hours to meet with employees. The farmers said the intrusion represented a taking that violated the Fifth Amendment’s prohibition on the government seizing private property "without just compensation."
Six conservative justices agreed with that reasoning while the court's three liberal justices dissented.
Comments:
Think about the $3.2 billion Biden & Co. have budgeted for NEW antivirals to fight Covid… New meds that will be patented and sold for many millions, billions. Ivermectin is no longer under patent. Cheap. Effective. Proven safe. The article explains for those who cannot figure out why the vaccines were pushed over any existing treatments, and treatments that worked were hush-hushed awaiting the development of new meds… Yes, we are being manipulated.