Friday, March 30, 2018

Laura Ingraham Show Loses Several Sponsors (So Far) For The Most Minor Of Offenses

RedState  
. . . "It wasn’t that bad.
"The danger here is twofold.
"First of all, it suggests that if you disagree with someone, particularly politically, you can weaponize social media to harmfully affect their livelihood.
"This isn’t a new thing, actually, but it is no more acceptable. It’s a form of bullying.
"Second of all – and possibly most important – a horrible lesson is being taught to kids like Hogg. They’re not being taught to face criticism or opposition head-on.
"Not everything is an offense that requires you lash out. Nor do you always get the results you expect.
"We’re in a post-maturity era, where perceived slights are taken so seriously that it becomes a national outrage.
"Speaking as someone who has issues with Ingraham’s slavish Trump defense, I can say I’m no fan, but she shouldn’t lose all her sponsors over tweeting out a story about Hogg’s stunted college ambitions.
"Ingraham has tweeted out an apology, in response.

Liberal silliness; 3/30/2018

Gonzo Overkill
The law has been credited with reducing chemicals that cause cancer and birth defects, such as lead in hair dyes, mercury in nasal sprays and arsenic in bottled water. But it’s also been widely criticized for abuses by lawyers shaking down businesses for quick settlements.
See the source image
Center for Consumer Freedom.

. . . "I favor changing the Second Amendment," King said. "Yeah, repeal it.""The former talk-show host added that he believes the Second Amendment was "poorly written."" 'You know who started the second amendment?" King then asked. "It was southern senators so they could ward off slave uprisings.""When TMZ pushed King on whether his claim is true, he told the interviewer to "read the history."" 'That's how the Second Amendment started," King said. "And the NRA is the worst.' "

 Chicago youth stage ‘die-in’ in City Hall to demand defunding of $95 mill cop academy, more community resources . . . "Today, members of the #NoCopAcademy — a movement led by Black youth in Chicago but fueled and organized by a group of multiracial youth— took over Chicago’s City Hall, 121 N. LaSalle Dr., to demand that the mayor invests in black and brown communities and resources for the youth." . . .

This is in no way a condoning of the shooting death of the young man shot because his cell phone was thought to be a gun. But I have to believe Black Lives Matter supporters chanting "Pigs in a blanket, fry 'em like bacon!", and the cold blooded murder of those five Dallas policemen has caused our police to assume the worst in encounters of this sort. 
What a choice to have to make: will I die and leave my family alone, or live to have my home and family threatened and hated by Democrat politicians, Beyonce', student activists and the non-Fox media?
The Tunnel Dweller

Sanctuary! SANCTUARY!


Political Cartoons by Steve Kelley

Liberal media, you have created a spoiled brat in this kid

David Hogg Is Quickly Learning How to Be a Bully


"When is it okay to talk back to someone who keeps falsely branding you a murderer? Well, that depends on whether he's being funded by Republicans or Democrats.
"Ever since the shooting last month at Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., a student named David Hogg has become the new face of the gun-confiscation movement. He's everywhere you look, telling you that if you disagree with him, you've got blood on your hands. If you've managed to miss his schtick, here's a quick recap from David Rutz at the Washington Free Beacon:" . . . 



. . . "That's right: The 17-year-old boy is calling for a boycott of insurance companies and Sleep Number beds.
"I'm sure Hogg thinks he's Speaking Truth to Power™. But what he's really doing is abusing his newfound power to lash out at someone who bruised his ego. This isn't about protecting people from gun violence. This is about his pride.
"In other words, he's acting like a 17-year-old kid. Which is why I never took him seriously in the first place.
"No, adults shouldn't be picking on schoolchildren. No, David Hogg didn't do a Nazi salute at that rally. No, he's not actually 25 years old. No, he's not a "crisis actor."
"And no, adults shouldn't be using kids as human shields in the first place, in a cynical attempt to deflect criticism of their political agenda." . . .

David Hogg, who initially flubbed the speeches his FBI swampist father had apparently provided, is a brainwashed child of the left-wing Deep State.  Hogg seems to view the NRA as the New Jew, the all-purpose scapegoat that can be blamed for everything.
HIGH ON THE HOGG: Parkland Teen Hogg Refuses to Accept Laura Ingraham Apology – UNTIL SHE DENOUNCES FOX NEWS
"(Gateway Pundit) – As previously reported, crazed liberal and anti-gun activist 17-year-old David Hogg unleashed a boycott rampage after Laura Ingraham tweeted about his college rejections.
"David Hogg, a senior at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School has been rejected by numerous colleges as of late.
"Maybe the high school senior should attend his classes rather than being truant."   Hat tip to TeaParty.org
David Hogg
@davidhogg111
I 100% agree an apology in an effort just to save your advertisers is not enough. I will only accept your apology only if you denounce the way your network has treated my friends and I in this fight. It’s time to love thy neighbor, not mudsling at children.

https://
So since it's presently useful you are now an untouchable child, David?


‘PICK ONE’! Kyle Kashuv DROPS MIC on David Hogg for playing the ‘children’ card
Hogg’s been getting dragged — rightly so — for talking out of both sides of his mouth. Hard to take someone seriously who says “love thy neighbor” with the same voice he used to call the NRA “pathetic f*ckers that want to keep killing our children.” And speaking of children, Kyle Kashuv has another bone to pick with Hogg:

Kyle Kashuv
@KyleKashuv

Are you a child or are you an adult that can dictate policy? Pick one. https://witter.com/davidhogg111/s

Thursday, March 29, 2018

#OBAMAGATE: Scandal Questions That Remain Unasked -- and Unanswered

Victor Davis Hanson


"Sometimes the hysteria of crowds causes them to overlook the obvious. Here is a series of 12 questions that do not seem to trouble anyone, but the answers to these should expose why so many of the people today alleging scandals should themselves be considered scandalous.
1) Had Hillary Clinton won the election, would we now even know of a Fusion GPS dossier? Would assorted miscreants such as Andrew McCabe, Bruce Ohr, Lisa Page, Glenn Simpson, Christopher Steele, or Peter Strzok now be under a cloud of suspicion? Or would they instead have been quietly lionized by a President Clinton grateful for noble services in the shadows rendered during the campaign?
2) If Clinton had won, would we now know of any Russian-supplied smears against Donald Trump? Would a FISA judge now be complaining that he was misled in a warrant request? Would likely Attorney General Loretta Lynch be reassigning Associate Deputy Attorney General Bruce Ohr for his consultations with Fusion GPS operatives? Or would Russian operatives alone be likely, at an opportune moment, to threaten to leak to the media that they had given salacious material to Clinton operatives to ensure her election, and thus they were to be owed for their supposed help in ensuring a Clinton victory?  . . .
3) Are any Russian related interests currently still donating millions of dollars to the Clinton Foundation? Why is Bill Clinton not being asked to speak by various groups—including those with Russian-ties—for $500,000 and above per talk? Is he now less persuasive than he was between 2009 and 2015?
4) Why did Andrew McCabe believe that two Democratic political action funds, one controlled by Clinton “best friend” Virginia governor Terry McAuliffe, donated a total of $675,288 to his wife’s campaign for a rather obscure state senate post? What percentage of Jill McCabe’s actual campaign budget did the $675,288 comprise? And why after her defeat would Andrew McCabe still not recuse himself from directing FBI inquiries into allegations of (likely next president and past generous benefactor) Hillary Clinton’s prior improper use of an email server while Secretary of State? Does quid pro quo refer really more often to simultaneous benefactions or rather sequential ones?
5) What is the qualification for lying or giving false information to FBI investigators, and did the information supplied to the FBI by Cheryl Mills and Huma Abedin concerning their knowledge of the use of Hillary Clinton’s private server qualify?  . . .
6) What would have happened had the FISA court justices been apprised by the FBI and the Justice Department that the submitted Steele dossier was a) paid for by Hillary Clinton, b) impossible to verify by the FBI, and 3) the sole source for news stories that were being used in circular fashion to corroborate the dossier’s veracity?
7) Why did Bruce Ohr not disclose to his superiors that he had met with the compiler of the anti-Trump dossier, Christopher Steele, as well as Glenn Simpson of Fusion GPS, who had hired Steele? Why did not Ohr disclose on government-mandated ethics forms that his spouse, Nellie, had worked for Fusion GPS on the anti-Trump dossier during the election? What are the criminal and civil penalties for deliberately misleading auditors, if any? Why has Ohr not been put on notice by authorities that he violated such statutes and could face charges?
8) Why is Christopher Steele not under indictment and facing extradition as a foreign agent for a) interfering in a U.S. election, b) colluding with Russian interests to obtain information deemed damaging to a U.S. presidential candidate, c) lying to the FBI about his own disclosures of FBI sensitive material related to the dossier to news organizations? Did Steele’s collusion efforts and interference in a U.S. campaign differ much from, or exceed, the attempts of Russians currently indicted by Robert Mueller?
9) Why did Mueller, at the beginning of his special counsel investigation—to ensure against even the appearance of partisanship or conflicts of interests—not insist of potential hires: a) that they had not donated to either 2016 political campaign, b) that they had not represented past clients who were involved either with the Clinton or Trump organizations or were even tangentially involved with ongoing scandals concerning either Clinton or Trump, c) that were not from his own law firm WilmerHale, which was currently representing, or had in the past, individuals who may well be caught up in future special counsel investigations?
10) Why did Samantha Power, in a non-intelligence affiliated job as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, request classified surveillance of American citizens and others to be sent to her office with the names unmasked, eventually at a rate, on average, of one request per day in 2016? . . .
11) Why were the major figures—James Comey, Andrew McCabe, Robert Mueller, Rod Rosenstein, and Peter Strzok—who have in the past investigated, or are currently investigating or overseeing investigations of collusion charges against Donald Trump, all previously involved with investigations of Hillary Clinton? Have they exercised the same methods in the Trump collusion investigation that they used in the past in which Clinton was exonerated?
12) Which members of the Obama administration were aware of, or gave orders to, members of the Obama Justice Department and the FBI to use the Steele dossier to obtain FISA court orders to surveille American citizens? . . .
Victor Davis Hanson is an American military historian, columnist, former classics professor, and scholar of ancient warfare. He was a professor of classics at California State University, Fresno, and is currently the Martin and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution. 

Trying to organize a national advertiser boycott to avenge a petty personal slight is petty in itself, but . . .

Laura Ingraham To David Hogg: Sorry For Making Fun Of You For Not Getting Into College  . . . "Trying to organize a national advertiser boycott to avenge a petty personal slight is petty in itself, but 17-year-olds have a better excuse to be petty than 54-year-old news-show hosts do. Plus, whatever his faults, Hogg is shrewd in his assessments of his own political power. The average person in his position who’d just been mocked by Ingraham probably would have tweeted his outrage first, complaints about her, counter-mockery, etc etc, *then* had the idea to organize a boycott as he gave the matter more thought — assuming it occurred to him at all. There’s none of that on his Twitter feed. His first mention of her comments was to ask who her advertisers were, followed quickly by a list for his fans to target. It’s an inversion of roles: The adult is the one tossing schoolyard insults and the kid is the one coolly considering how to punish his antagonist."

Rebecca Boldrick, David Hogg’s Mom: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know

From Ms. Boldrick's Facebook page.
  • 1. Rebecca Boldrick Is a Teacher and Does Not Work at CNN . . .
This photo is only from a tour of CNN in Atlanta. 


  • 2. Boldrick Said Her Daughter’s Phone Died During the Shooting, Leaving Her Very Worried
  • 3. Boldrick Doesn’t Like Trump, But She Tries to Respect Other People’s Viewpoints
  • 4. Her Family Has Received Death Threats Since the Shooting
  • 5. Her Husband, Kevin Hogg, Is Retired from the FBI

Obamas are behind the Parkland disarmament movement

College Republicans at Rutgers Call Out Double Standard on Hillary Visit

Legal Insurrection

“exempting Hillary Clinton from the protests that greeted Condoleezza Rice”

Her look when asked a question she didn't like.

Prepare for more reasons why she lost to President of the United States Donald J. Trump, now Commander-in-Chief of the United States Armed Forces. TD

"When Condoleezza Rice visited the campus, there were protests. Hillary? Well, that’s completely different.
"Campus Reform reports:
Rutgers Republicans: Clinton invite reveals double standard
The Rutgers University College Republicans are accusing liberal students and professors of hypocrisy for exempting Hillary Clinton from the protests that greeted Condoleezza Rice.
When Rice, the first black female Secretary of State, spoke at Rutgers’ 2014 commencement and received an honorary degree, students and faculty offered strong resistance, citing her support for the Iraq War and involvement in a presidential administration that “utilized torture,” according to a CR press release that was provided to Campus Reform.
The College Republicans attached several faculty emails from 2014 encouraging students to protest Rice and attend a “teach-in,” as well as a poster juxtaposing Rice with images of torture and the coffins of American servicemen. Although many student organizations expressed support for Rice, she eventually backed out of the invitation.
Yet the CRs point out that Clinton—who held the same post in the Obama Administration as Rice did under George W. Bush—is susceptible to the same criticisms that the Rutgers community cited as objections to Rice.
As a Senator from New York, Clinton voted for the resolution authorizing use of military force against Iraq, and as Secretary of State, she participated in an administration that also received criticism for its use of torture techniques.
According to a Rutgers press release, Clinton will speak on “American democracy and its institutions, her political career, and her role in the women’s political movement.”

The octogenarian busybody





Richard Jack Rail  "Former president Jimmy Carter says John Bolton will be a "disaster for America" as national security Adviser.  Carter knows about disasters, his presidency having been the worst of its generation, so bad that it wasn't topped until the Obama administration.  Carter meddled in foreign policy repeatedly after his one term in office, always with adverse consequences.  The Logan Act is aimed specifically at busybody former presidentsbut Carter behaves stupidly with full forgiveness.  No one knows why.

"They gave Jimmy a Nobel Prize for Peace, too – just as they did Obama.  It cannot escape anyone's notice that the dumber a president or presidential policy, the greater the attention lavished by the left.  Actually, it's worse than that – the greater the adulation by the left.  These guys who wreck America's standing in the world get Nobels while those who do the real work – Nixon opening China, say, or Reagan or Trump beefing up the military to stand up to Russia – get vilification.

"This seems to be the way of the world.  Good guys get notoriety, bad guys fame, at least for a while.  Winston Churchill was pretty much in disgrace until called upon to save England in WWII.  Once that was done, they kicked him to the curb again.  Stalin was celebrated by the West until he went so far in the wrong direction that it could no longer be denied.

"Jimmy Carter's not really a bad guy.  He's more like Neville Chamberlain – just has a knack for coming down on the wrong side of every issue.  He doesn't lack brain power or information; he lacks common sense and wisdom.  That combination makes him unable to learn from his own or others' mistakes.  He just keeps coming back with more and worse ideas that deepen his hole.  He never gets it, and he wants to drag America down into his hole with him." . . .

California, here they come to vote

Rich Terrell

A frivolous lawsuit against Trump's census question  "A new lawsuit by liberal state attorneys general is trying to stop the Trump administration asking people whether they are citizens on the 2020 census.
"This was as inevitable as night following day. But can this case be taken seriously, and should it be?
"It may be that the citizenship question simply encourages people to lie. But it cannot be reasonably claimed to violate anyone's constitutional powers or rights. If you don't like it, pass a law. If you can't pass a law, too bad." . . .
Ending California's raid on congressional seats
. . . UPDATE: California is suing to stop Trump from doing what was done in past censuses. I overlooked the obvious: This gives California 55 Electoral College votes instead of 52. It's like adding another state to California's total. . . .

Walmart Kicks Cosmo Out of the Checkout Line, Restricts to Magazine Rack

Legal Insurrection

The culture war is made up of many small battles and this is a victory in this right direction.



"It’s about time Cosmo was treated like the trashy rag it is.
"Mega-retailer Walmart has agreed to restrict Cosmopolitan magazine to the periodical racks. Up until the agreement, which was made public Tuesday, Cosmo could be found in checkout lines.

"The National Center On Sexual Exploitation lobbied heavily to have the often erotically-centric magazine moved out of children’s line of sight. Because who doesn’t want their children seeing “9 Best Anal Sex Positions” in bright, bold letters, plastered across a scantily clad Disney star? (Cosmo frequently publishes articles containing graphic sex tips innocuously buried between “bubblegum pink” covers and Disney star photo shoots.)
After collaborative dialogue with NCOSE, Walmart will remove Cosmopolitan magazine from checkout lines at 5,000 stores across the country. Protecting minors from the sexually explicit material that Cosmopolitan embodies and perpetuates has been a long-time priority of NCOSE.
. . .  Full article

Jumping whole-hogg into the political spotlight (Updated)

It's so easy and fun to be a liberal and it gets you adoration from celebrities.

Parkland survivor David Hogg calls on advertisers to boycott Laura Ingraham’s Fox News show

"David Hogg, one of the most outspoken survivors of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting, is pushing back against Laura Ingraham’s taunts.
Ingraham, a conservative radio host and author, teased Hogg about the 17-year-old’s rejections from college.
“David Hogg Rejected By Four Colleges To Which He Applied and whines about it,” she tweeted Wednesday with a link to a Daily Wire article. “(Dinged by UCLA with a 4.1 GPA...totally predictable given acceptance rates.)”
Hogg told TMZ that he had been rejected from UC Los Angeles, UC San Diego, UC Santa Barbara and UC Irvine, but accepted at Florida Atlantic University, Cal Poly and Cal State San Marcos.
"I am not surprised at all, in all honesty,” he told the gossip site.
. . . "Around 9:30 p.m., he published a list of advertisers, asking his 595,000 followers to call the companies, including Hulu, Liberty Mutual and Sleep Number. " . . .


Main Image
Gonzo Overkill
UPDATE from Daily Caller



UPDATE: Advertisers pull ads from Fox’s Ingraham after her jab at Parkland student As of 1 pm, CST 3/29
. . . "Nutrish, celebrity cook Rachael Ray’s dog food company, announced on Thursday that it was “in the process of removing ads from Laura Ingraham’s program.” TripAdvisor, the American travel website, told POLITICO that it had “made a decision to stop advertising on that program.” . . .
Ingraham apologizes.

How Do You Really Feel about David Hogg and Emma Gonzalez?  "A proposed thought experiment for my liberal friends: What if the Parkland students – and the hundreds of thousands of other fired up adolescents who gathered around the nation last weekend – were not on your team?  What if, rather than advocating in favor of something you passionately agree with, they were advocating in favor of something you passionately disagree with?  Say, for example, their voices were raised not for the purpose of restricting access to guns, but for the purpose of restricting access to abortion?" . . .
. . . So, for example, instead of seeing a sixteen-year-old on a podium in front of an enthusiastic throng thundering that "any politician who receives a dollar from the NRA has blood on his hands," it would be "any politician who receives a dollar from Planned Parenthood has blood on his hands."
. . . "Someone should say to these young people: you are being used.  If that's OK with you, fine.  But know that's what it is.  And know that sometime down the road, it is going to end, and you are going to be discarded.  At that point, at least some of you will look back on your behavior during this period and be embarrassed, even horrified." . . .

The 15 minutes of fame are about up for Daniels and Hogg
. . . "The loathsome David Hogg and the pitiful Stormy Daniels are each sad commentaries on our 15-minutes-of fame culture.  The saddest aspect of their brushes with celebrity is their own apparent belief that these events are meaningful.  They are not – not one bit.  They are both this month's media instruments of rage and ratings.  Nothing Hogg has to say is based on truth or facts.  Whatever is true or not true re: Daniels's accusations is of no interest to anyone but voyeurs like Anderson Cooper." . . .