Azealia Banks is in Sweden and she is a MOOD.
— Annika H Rothstein (@truthandfiction) August 25, 2019
“This socialism shit is bogus” 😂😂 pic.twitter.com/EQJvM0yxMd
Thursday, August 29, 2019
Azealia Banks
Dennis Prager Featured at the Los Angeles Times
See, "How a Los Angeles-based conservative became one of the internet’s biggest sensations."
.@latimes' attack on @prageru indicates how crucial the platform is in this climate. Lib MSM bashes @DennisPrager for making case for God-based moral system but deems @Google restricting access to their videos unnewsworthy making no mention in the article. https://t.co/OYG2UE862E pic.twitter.com/XMF2EBnvHB
— Adam Milstein (@AdamMilstein) August 26, 2019
Halsey
And at Drunken Stepfather, "Halsey - Seen at Tatsu Ramen in NYC 8/27/19."
MY JAW DROPPED AT THIS LOOK!!!!!!!!! @halsey 😱😱😱
— Video Music Awards (@vmas) August 26, 2019
Find out if she wins TONIGHT at the #VMAs at 8p on @MTV ❤️ pic.twitter.com/ll0beJAQsP
.@halsey came to SERVE at the #VMAs this year! 🔥👏 pic.twitter.com/gsLYronWOo
— MTV (@MTV) August 26, 2019
Halsey is no sweet dream, but she's one hell of a sight. #VMAs pic.twitter.com/PKUyqLkDp9
— E! News (@enews) August 27, 2019
Monday, August 26, 2019
Is College a Good Investment?
In any case, here's Charlie Kirk for Prager University:
Michael Mann, 'Hockey Stick' Hoaxer, Loses Multi-Million Libel Suit in British Columbia
And MSE Creative Consulting, "The Iconic Image of the Global Warming Movement Is a Fraud."
RTWT. (Via Instapundit.)
Decriminalizing Hard Drugs
Seattle is in effect decriminalizing the use of hard drugs, @NickKristof writes. It is relying less on the criminal justice toolbox to deal with drug abuse and more on the public health toolbox. https://t.co/3YvnxDaxAM
— New York Times Opinion (@nytopinion) August 23, 2019
Sunday, August 25, 2019
Jennifer Delacruz's Sunday Forecast
It's fabulous summer weather.
And here's the spectacular Ms. Jennifer, for ABC News 10 San Diego:
Saturday, August 24, 2019
Paul Blustein, Schism
Out next month, at Amazon, Paul Blustein, Schism: China, America, and the Fracturing of the Global Trading System.
Dow Drops 623 Points as U.S.-China Trade War Escalates (VIDEO)
And ABC World News Tonight. Notice Trump's "I am the chosen one" comments:
....having fun. I was smiling as I looked up and around. The MANY reporters with me were smiling also. They knew the TRUTH...And yet when I saw the reporting, CNN, MSNBC and other Fake News outlets covered it as serious news & me thinking of myself as the Messiah. No more trust!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) August 24, 2019
Nazi Salute Video at Pacifica High School in Garden Grove
At the Los Angeles Times, "Nazi acts by youth loom over increasingly diverse Orange County":
In March, social media blew up with photos of a group of partying students from Newport Beach and Costa Mesa giving the Sieg Heil salute to a bunch of red plastic cups arranged into a swastika. School officials immediately condemned the images, notifying parents across the district what had happened and what they planned to do.It was an "off campus" event. Seems like the First Amendment protects their speech, although that's no defense for it.
The same month, school officials in Garden Grove were alerted to a group of Pacifica High School students raising the Nazi salute while singing a Nazi marching song at an off-campus athletic event.
Pacifica High administrators kept their situation quiet — which worked until this week, when the months-old recorded Snapchat video exploded online after it was sent to the Daily Beast.
Since Monday, Garden Grove Unified School District officials have learned of other videos and multiple allegations of students engaged in hate speech. The district has opened an investigation.
The students’ motivation and identities are unclear. But the images in Newport and Garden Grove reflect both a rise in such incidents nationwide and a conflict more specific to Orange County: tension between a rapidly diversifying populace and racist elements deeply seated in its history.
In September, at a football game in predominantly white Aliso Viejo, the visitors from a predominantly Latino high school in Santa Ana were met with signs of “Build the Wall” and “We love White,” according to the Santa Ana principal.
And white supremacist groups like the Rise Above Movement are giving a new voice to the bigotry of the skinheads and peckerwood gangs that long haunted Huntington Beach, Anaheim and working-class parts of the county. The group attacked counter-protesters and journalists at a rally in support of President Trump at Bolsa Chica State Beach in 2017.
The eight-second video from Garden Grove shows about a dozen Pacifica High school boys standing in what appears to be a banquet room giving the stiff-armed salute used in Nazi Germany, as the song “Erika,” written by German composer Herms Niel during Adolf Hitler’s ascent to power, plays in the background. At least one of the boys appears to sing the lyrics. One boy gets up and leaves, and another quickly drops his arm and sits down.
The video, taken before the start of an athletics banquet in November 2018, was originally shared among a small group of students on Snapchat. High school administrators learned of the video four months later and addressed the situation internally with the students appearing in the video and their families, Garden Grove Unified spokeswoman Abby Broyles said. School district officials did not know about the video until it surfaced Monday.
The students involved were disciplined, but officials declined to discuss the consequences they faced...
Still more.
Friday, August 23, 2019
Ibram X. Kendi, Stamped from the Beginning
At Amazon, Ibram X. Kendi, Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America.
Reparations Won't Make Blacks Whole
At LAT, "Slavery’s descendants say a reparations check won’t make the pain go away":
Many African Americans in South Carolina support reparations.— Los Angeles Times (@latimes) August 18, 2019
But others say that what they want just as much is for the country to grasp the painful history they live with every day. https://t.co/mYWRRcLeCt
CHARLESTON, S.C. — Five years before the first shots of the Civil War rang out from the harbor here in 1861, alderman Thomas Ryan and a business partner opened Ryan’s Mart at No. 6 Chalmers St.Keep reading.
Their merchandise was slaves: African men, women and children who were prodded, picked over and auctioned off to the highest bidders.
The finest adult males could fetch up to $1,600 apiece —$49,000 in today’s dollars. The most able-bodied women could sell for $1,400.
Today, the former showroom in Charleston’s historic quarter, hidden on a narrow lane of row houses blazing with pink blossoms and palmetto trees, serves as the home of the Old Slave Mart Museum.
The museum and other historic sites in the American South lay bare a shameful chapter in the nation’s past, one that’s getting new attention in the debate over whether the government should pay financial reparations to an estimated 40 million descendants of slaves.
Many African Americans in this part of South Carolina support reparations. But they say what they want just as much is for the country to grasp the painful history they live with every day.
Their ancestors often were separated from their children on the auction block. Women were raped by their white owners. Slaves were beaten for waking up too late, not working hard enough or trying to escape. They were stripped of their African names and given the last names of their masters.
The hardship and humiliation didn’t end when the 13th Amendment abolished slavery in 1865. Black Americans continue to endure racist violence, entrenched poverty and inequities in areas such as education, employment and the criminal justice system.
“What the reparations debate is about is not so much people wanting to get money,” said Daniel Littlefield, a historian from Columbia, S.C. “Black people feel they deserve some acknowledgment of ongoing wrong.”
The reparations debate comes at an especially tense time. Since 2016, there’s been a nationwide rise in racially motivated hate crimes. Videos of police killings of African Americans have become all too common. President Trump’s attacks aimed at black leaders and immigrants have kept people on edge...