Friday, August 14, 2015

Muslim Beheads Someone At IKEA, Their Response? RIDICULOUS

Mad World News   "On Monday, two people were killed at an IKEA location by a Muslim, one of which was beheaded, and the store had a rather ridiculous response as to how they’re going to prevent future attacks. I’ll give you a hint; it’s not banning Muslims.
"The incident unfolded at a Swiss IKEA, where a 57-year-old woman and her 22-year-old son were reportedly stabbed to death by a Muslim seeking asylum in Sweden, and one of them had their head removed by the radical Islamist, Breitbart reported. Apparently, according to the Express, he had just met with immigration officials and was due to be deported, so he did what any good Muslim would do – he beheaded someone.
"The 35-year-old man apparently grabbed a couple of kitchen knives from the store’s housewares department, then proceeded to attack two of the shoppers in there at random. While most of us would think that beefing up security would be the way to handle such a situation, IKEA’s idea of bold and swift action to prevent future beheadings in their store is unlike anything we’ve ever heard."

Would Martin Luther King Have Supported The ‘Black Lives Matter’ Message?

Downtrend 

 
"If you’ve been paying attention to the racial outrage lately you may have noticed that black activists and their guilty white liberal sympathizers consider saying “all lives matter” as extremely racist. The Black Lives Matter movement insists that black people are being exterminated in this country by whites so to even suggest that all life is precious undermines their plight. This is of course insanely stupid, but as you will soon see the intelligence level of this debate just took a nosedive.

"Because it’s so hard to convince rational people that it’s not racist to say the lives of one race of people are more important than others, The Other 98%, a socialist “Occupy Wall Street” type group, published a meme on their FaceBook page they hope will simplify things. Take a look:
. . . 
  . . ."why don’t we look at what MLK actually said in the “I Have A Dream” speech:"
I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.”
I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia, the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave owners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood.
I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.
"Black Lives Matter seeks to create inequality by favoring one race over the others. Black Lives Matter destroys brotherhood by dividing people along racial lines. Black Lives Matter begs for people to judge them on the color of their skin, not the content of their character." . . .
Skate around
http://terrellaftermath.com/
 Someone with that kind of vulnerability to blackmail shouldn’t be allowed to sweep the floors of the NSA, much less run our country.   . . . "There are probably a bunch of folks in China and Russia who are praying (even if they’re atheists) for Hillary to be elected. If she wins, they own the President of the United States. I can just imagine in a meeting with Putin, Hillary being told to back off supporting Ukraine or he’ll release her emails (as he hands her a folder containing the most damaging ones for her to peruse). Put in that position, would Hillary fall on her sword or sacrifice a country like Ukraine? I don’t know, but I wouldn’t want to be living in Ukraine…"
"Once you're actually President, you can use your I-am-the-President tools. What's anyone going to do about it? Impeach you? That's been-there-done-that for Hillary. She could welcome the opportunity to survive a second impeachment crisis in her family. Bring it on!"
Tech company which maintained Hillary's secret server was sued for 'illegally accessing' database and 'stealing White House military advisers' phone numbers' 

How Clinton’s team went from nonchalant to nervous over e-mail controversy

 . . . "The controversy over her private e-mail setup has moved into a new and, potentially, more serious phase. What had begun five months ago as a relatively narrow question about proper archiving of public records has become a bigger, more politically dangerous one: Whether the then-secretary of state and her close aides, in choosing to use a private e-mail system, disregarded common sense and may have put sensitive information at risk of falling into the wrong hands." . . .WaPo

Trump, Trump, Trump; the boy is marching

Political Cartoons by Gary Varvel

To Be Coarse, But Compelling   . . . " Look, Donald Trump is only saying what millions are thinking, or have already said at the local sports bar, American Legion Hall, the supermarket checkout line, little league game, Jiffy Lube waiting room, or hockey practice, without the benefit of a billionaire’s platform.  But as Richard Nixon might reprise, “You don’t have to elect him president.” . . .

Did Donald Trump win Round One with Megyn Kelly?
We explored her success — and anti-Fox News Media Matters’ frustration — in Megyn Kelly’s success must be driving Media Matters crazy-er.
Kelly had some uncomfortable on-air back and forth with Donald Trump during the first debate, particularly on the issue of how Trump treats women:
 A Letter to Donald Trump Supporters With One Big Question  "You’re right to mistrust conventional politicians. But why do you think he’ll treat you any better?"
. . . " Trump is a good negotiator, you say, and he’ll get us a better deal with the Chinese. What makes you think that President Trump would be thinking about your interests while he negotiates with the Chinese, and not his own? Are your interests the same as a billionaire with vast real estate holdings in blue states? Trump has made clear that his negotiating prowess relies heavily on leverage: the billions he has, the politicians he has bought, his mastery of U.S. bankruptcy laws, his high-priced lawyers. But foreign leaders aren’t intimidated by his billions; his lawyers can’t sue them into submission; he doesn’t have any Chinese politicians in his pocket; and in negotiations with the Chinese, he’ll have no more and no less leverage than any other American president. And because he is a former realty TV star and beauty pageant owner, one would assume that some foreign leaders won’t even take him seriously. How will that result in a strong America?" . . . The Atlantic

Krauthammer: The 2016 Racing Form, third edition


. . . "Legal disclaimer: This column is for betting purposes only. What follows is analysis — scrubbed, as thoroughly as a Clinton server, of advocacy. (Unless I simply can’t resist.)
Charles Krauthammer writes a weekly political column that runs on Fridays. View Archive

"Hillary Clinton: Ever since her disastrous book-launch performance, I’ve thought her both (1) a weak candidate and (2) the inevitable Democratic nominee.

"No longer. She has fallen from her 95-percent barring-an-act-of-God perch. The e-mail imbroglio has already badly damaged her credibility. But now that she’s lost control of the server, there is potential for further, conceivably fatal, damage. It hinges largely on how successful she was in erasing the 32,000 e-mails she unilaterally deemed private.

"Whatever happens, she will stay in the race. Clintons never quit. But if more top-secret information is found, if she did destroy work-related e-mails and if her numbers continue their steady decline, the party might decide it simply can’t afford to continue carrying her baggage." . . .

How to remedy America’s social ills? Exercise the mind’s power to choose, says Ben Carson


. . . "But there were certain intervening events that were pivotal in helping to change the course of my life.

"The first was that my mother, who could barely read herself, forbid my brother and me from watching television and insisted instead that we read books. Reading opened up whole new worlds for me, and both fertilized my imagination and fueled my aspiration to go beyond the confines of my physical environment. The second major intervening event was my acceptance of the wisdom of God. An incident in which I attempted to stab a classmate out of anger forced me to confront a dysfunctional attitude that, if unchecked, would impede my ability to succeed in school or realize my dream of one day becoming a doctor. I prayed to God to guide me in becoming more tolerant and forbearing." : . . .

 Read the full article