Monday, June 22, 2020

Georgia House passes bill that could abolish police department after Arbery shooting

AJC   "The Georgia House backed an effort Friday to dissolve the Glynn County Police Department following its handling of the shooting death of Ahmaud Arbery.
"The House voted 152-3 to allow voters to decide to eliminate their county police departments, moving authority to county sheriff’s offices.
"There are several county police departments in Georgia, including in Cobb, DeKalb, Fulton and Gwinnett counties. In counties where there are two agencies, the county police handle the enforcement of state and local laws while the sheriff’s office manages the jail." .  .  .



More here:   . . . "The legislation isn’t so simple after all, is it? The next move is for the House bill to move to the state Senate for further consideration."

Meet the “Cool Teenager” Who Started the TikTok Rally Scam…She’s Actually a 51-Year-Old Buttigieg Volunteer

Wayne Dupree

"I thought the TikTok rally scam was organic "teenage" activism? LOL"

Hmmm.  We were told that the TikTok rally scam was an organic teenage uprising by young people who wanted to “stick it to Trump” on behalf of their hero Joe Biden. 
"I mean, that’s what Rep. AOC told us when she took to Twitter to gloat over the ticket scam, where so-called “teenagers” ordered fake Trump Tulsa rally tickets.

Actually you just got ROCKED by teens on TikTok who flooded the Trump campaign w/ fake ticket reservations & tricked you into believing a million people wanted your white supremacist open mic enough to pack an arena during COVID

Shout out to Zoomers. Y’all make me so proud. ☺️


On Anniversary Of Korean War, North Korea Threatens To End America…

American celebrities will beg you not to hurt them but our millennial Taliban will be there to help you, Kim. All the above love you and want you to know they are on your side.

Weasel Zippers


Via ChoSun:
North Korea has threatened to use nuclear weapons against the U.S. in case of war.
The North Korean Embassy in Moscow issued a statement on the 70th anniversary of the Korean War saying Pyongyang possesses nuclear weapons and the U.S. will meet its own end in case of war, according to official TASS news agency Saturday.
“This year, the U.S. military has been carrying out various kinds of military maneuvers in South Korea and its vicinity with the purpose of striking North Korea quickly,” the statement says. “A new round of the Korean War will add a particularly sensational event to the history of mankind, which will put an end to another empire, whose name is the United States,” it adds.

Is there real courage in the halls of Congress?

http://www.terrellaftermath.com/
Andrea Widburg: The Supreme Court is out of control  "With one exception, the Supreme Court causes supreme problems when it oversteps its bounds, as it has done regularly since Trump's election.  It did this most recently when it held that, although President Obama illegally instituted his DACA program, President Trump must jump through a series of arbitrary administrative hoops to walk it back.  Daniel Horowitz says that there is a way to end the Court's unconstitutional power grab." 
"Going back as far as 1857, with one exception, the Court's major public policy decisions have been constitutionally invalid and had disastrous outcomes.  Dred Scott denied African-Americans citizenship, Plessy v. Ferguson enshrined segregation, Korematsu v. the United States erased the rights of Americans of Japanese descent, and Roe v. Wade created an imaginary constitutional right to abortion that created a 47-year-long schism in America that perverts every presidential election.  Each time, the Court waded into areas that are the preserve of the states and Congress, making up rights as it went along." . . .

Supreme Court becomes supreme power, overruling President and Congress
"It’s great for the Dreamers in the short term, but a long-term loser for the rule of law and for immigration reform: That’s the bottom line of the Supreme Court’s ruling Thursday on President Trump’s move to rescind his predecessor’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals executive order." . . .

From January 2020; how's it all playing out?  The 7 big Supreme Court cases to watch in 2020  . . . "The justices are being asked to decide if a public official lying about their motive for an official action violates federal corruption laws. The court has in recent years narrowed such corruption laws, making it harder for prosecutors to prove charges of bribery in cases against government officials." . . . 

Why conservatives hate the media

Weasel Zippers  "Hypocritical weasel. How’s that sexual assault claim against Lemon going?" . . .

CNN's Don Lemon had a lot to say when barriers were put up around the White House during violent protests.  Not So Much About CNN Wall
"Wonder how he feels now that CNN's HQ has done the exact same thing."
 
CNN Builds a Wall to Protect Atlanta Headquarters  "Townhall's Julio Rosas has been covering the leftwing chaos plaguing our cities. He's currently in Atlanta, where he discovered the hypocrites at CNN have built a wall to protect their headquarters. Of course, CNN's wall sucks compared to what we want down on the border. But we should never hear that "walls don't work" or that "we need drones, sensors and AI instead." When push comes to shove, CNN doesn't even believe the garbage they air." . . .

‘Dumbest Man on TV’ Don Lemon and Rick Wilson just accidentally handed Trump the best 2020 campaign ad EVER (watch this video)
. . . "Sad, right? And to think, we’re watching a bunch of grown men behaving this way on national television. Granted, no one seemed to see it when it aired live (only a dozen or so people actually watch CNN), but still, you’d think they’d want to at least appear somewhat professional.
"Remember when Don wondered out loud if the missing Malaysian airliner actually flew into a black hole? Mental giants these guys." . . .
Look No Further Than Andrew Cuomo and Gretchen Whitmer to Understand Why Conservatives Hate the Media   . . . "Throughout almost all of March, April, and May we bombarded with stories about Cuomo’s brilliant handling of the onset of the coronavirus pandemic in New York. All featured a “this is how real leadership looks” theme and added the perfunctory Orange Man Bad whining.
"The only truth in the early days of the pandemic was that no one really new what the truth was. That didn’t keep the media from lauding every move Cuomo made even though he was winging it just like everyone else was at the time.
"Now that we have some experience and data available it turns out that not only was Cuomo not brilliant, he was an unmitigated disaster." . . .
While Cuomo was being tongue-bathed by the biased media, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis was being excoriated for almost every move he made. He was falsely accused of manipulating COVID-19 data, ridiculed for not issuing a statewide stay-at-home order, and when he reopened the state earlier than other states several members of the media said he had “blood on his hands.” Because she’s not an original thinker, Gretchen Whitmer copied Cuomo and did the same thing in Michigan with, as noted above, similarly disastrous results.
Journalists Work to Divide, Not Inform  "As a young journalist starting out many years ago, I was proud to join a profession where so many men and women had distinguished themselves through honest, thorough investigations, entertaining features, and excellence in writing. But for a long while, I’ve been depressed to see much of the press openly working as political operatives. Objectivity in reporting was always impossible, but at least it used to be discussed as a goal. Now journalists boast of their advocacy journalism for an increasingly leftist agenda." . . .    



What Did Lincoln Know About Language That We Don't? Some lessons on writing from the masters.


Both parties deprecated war, but one of them would make war rather than let the nation survive, and the other would accept war rather than let it perish, and the war came.  —Lincoln, Second Inaugural Address (1865).
Reason  "I've written a new book about language (you can see it here), and Eugene and friends have kindly consented to let me discuss it this week (thanks, Eugene!). The book talks about why the prose of Lincoln, Churchill, Holmes, and other greats is so compelling, and asks what we can learn from them about how to write better ourselves. The book is part of a series on rhetoric—a sequel to this one and this one (which will be reprinted later this summer).

"The new book's general claim is that our culture of advice about good writing doesn't explain the power that Lincoln achieved with his words. The usual story is that the best writing is the most efficient—that clarity and concision are everything. It's hard to argue with this; who doesn't want to be clear? But writing can be clear and powerful, clear and memorable, clear and full of fire, or clear without any of those things. The book argues that rhetorical force isn't created by efficiency alone. It's created by the use of contrasts.
"Consciously or not, Lincoln understood this. It's how he wrote. Here I will talk about one example: contrast in the kinds of words you use." . . .

. . . "Another example, this from Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address:
Both parties deprecated war, but one of them would make war rather than let the nation survive, and the other would accept war rather than let it perish, and the war came.  —Lincoln, Second Inaugural Address (1865).

2019: 'Now That's America:' BodyArmor Release New Megan Rapinoe Ad Praising Soccer Star After Trump Accused Her of Disrespecting Country

Newsweek  "Ahead of the U.S. Women's National Team (USWNT) semi-final game against England, BodyArmor have unveiled their latest ad featuring Megan Rapinoe, who continues to make headlines on and off the field during this FIFA Women's World Cup.
"The sports drink brand released the short ad shot in black and white featuring the soccer star looking into the camera while text quickly appears on the screen.
" 'Nothing like a 30-something, purple haired, fiercely independent, goal-scoring, guitar-strumming, outspoken, relentless competitor that stands for all that is beautiful, all that is good, all that is us. Now that's America," the text reads. "Thanks, Megan. Let's go U.S.A."
"Rapinoe, an ambassador for the brand, shared a version of the advert via her social media accounts." . . .

Why Are University Students So Stupidity-Friendly?

 If people object, label the objection hate since you have learned to find disagreement uncomfortable, and just shut the haters down. In fact, many of today’s students may no longer even be capable of intellectual give and take let along grasping the idea of honest disagreement. Imagine an entire nation of such gullible folk?     
Robert Weissberg "The contemporary political landscape is mired in a tsunami of bad ideas. Who would have ever anticipated that defunding police departments, emptying out prisons, eliminating cash bail, free health care, free college, looting as a legitimate form of social protest politics, among other screwball ideas would go mainstream?  Socialism? How did views resting on blatant falsehoods jump from the academy’s ideological wet markets to the New York Times?
"A full explanation must wait until passions cool, but in the meantime let me offer a personal account based on decades of university teaching where this nonsense initially metastasized from a few quirky campus ideas to a conquering idiocy.  
"I began teaching government at an ivy league school in 1969. Yes, the students were exceptionally bright, but the faculty were unafraid of pushing them hard and an occasional Marine drill sergeant mentality was necessary. Stupidities were immediately confronted, often sarcastically and grading was tough. Some colleagues especially relished slicing and dicing fools, and students years later, would praise these martinets for “making me think and work hard.” Survivors could boast of a world-class, rigorous education.    
"Matters began shifting in the '70s as some faculty conflated easier grading (which facilitated student draft deferments) with opposing the War in Vietnam. Affirmative action admission now appeared and while these admittees lagged far behind regular students, most faculty anticipated no long-term harm, believing that blacks would eventually catch up. In any case, faculty still confidently dominated, students were still considered ignorant, and periodically informed of their failings.