Sunday, September 21, 2025
Saturday, September 20, 2025
Friday, September 19, 2025
Thursday, September 18, 2025
Wednesday, September 17, 2025
Tuesday, September 16, 2025
All he wanted to do is talk to people...
"That someone's life was taken because they had a different opinion, I mean it's just unbelievable," Schwarzenegger said, noting that Kirk was a skilled communicator who connected with young people, even those who disagreed with him. "A human life is gone. He was a great father, a great husband, and I was thinking about his children — they will only be reading about him now instead of him reading to them bedtime stories."
He warned that the nation's political climate was spiraling.
"We are getting hit from so many angles and we have to be very careful we don't get closer to the cliff. When you fall down there, there is no democracy," Schwarzenegger said, blaming social media, the mainstream media and the political parties for dividing Americans. "It's very important that we turn this around."
He urged the hundreds of students who attended the event to show that people can disagree politically without demonizing one another.
Monday, September 15, 2025
Sunday, September 14, 2025
Saturday, September 13, 2025
Friday, September 12, 2025
AND NOW WE WILL MOVE ON....
‘Why are yall sad?’ Teachers, firefighters, officials on leave or fired over
Charlie Kirk posts Alix Martichoux Thu, September 11, 2025 at 9:42 PM EDT 2 min
read 4k Related Video: GOP Lawmakers Urge BIG TECH To ‘Ban For Life’ Users
Celebrating Charlie Kirk’s Shooting (NEXSTAR) – Teachers, firefighters, elected
officials and even a cable news contributor have lost their jobs or are under
investigation after comments they made about the assassination of conservative
influencer Charlie Kirk. Reports of teachers and school administrators around
the country being put on leave proliferated Thursday less than 24 hours after
Kirk’s death. School employees in Tennessee, North Carolina, Pennsylvania,
Virginia, Mississippi, Ohio were all being investigated for posts made on social
media.
ADVERTISEMENT At least one teacher in South Carolina was fired for a post
about Kirk’s death that read: “Thoughts and prayers to his children but IMHO
America became greater today. There I said it.” A teacher and city councilor in
Cornelius, Oregon, wrote the assassination “really brightened up my day,”
landing him in hot water. A public relations employee for the National Football
League’s Carolina Panthers was terminated, according to The Athletic, after
reportedly posting on his personal Instagram account: “Why are yall sad? Your
man said it was worth it,” with an image of the Wu-Tang hit “Protect Ya Neck.”
Matthew Dowd, an MSNBC contributor, was also fired by the network for comments
he made on the air during breaking news coverage on Wednesday. ADVERTISEMENT “He
was constantly pushing this sort of hate speech aimed at certain groups,” Dowd
said, according to The Hill. “And I always go back to: Hateful thoughts lead to
hateful words, which then lead to hateful actions. … You can’t say these awful
words and not expect awful actions to take place.” While Dowd’s comments were
made live on-air with a large audience, some were made in more private channels
but have been brought to light by right-wing activists, WIRED reports.
Laura
Loomer, a conservative media personality with a large following, posted on X, “I
will be spending my night making everyone I find online who celebrates his death
Famous, so prepare to have your whole future professional aspirations ruined if
you are sick enough to celebrate his death. I’m going to make you wish you never
opened your mouth.” Her social media feed Thursday was filled with the names,
pictures and job titles of people who she said should be fired for comments they
made following Kirk’s death.
ADVERTISEMENT Another far-right social media
influencer, who posts under the account Libs of TikTok, was also on the case. A
firefighter in New Orleans had posted an Instagram comment, which she later
deleted, suggesting Kirk deserved to die and the bullet was “a gift from god.”
But the deleted comment had been screenshotted and shared on Libs of TikTok,
drawing the attention of the fire department’s superintendent and the Louisiana
attorney general.
Wednesday, September 10, 2025
Tuesday, September 9, 2025
'Everybody Is Corrupt But You?!': Bernie Sanders And RFK Jr. Have At It!
Monday, September 8, 2025
Sunday, September 7, 2025
Saturday, September 6, 2025
Friday, September 5, 2025
How to "pull over" a drug smuggling boat in the middle of the ocean...
First, you need a helicopter with at least TWO machine guns firing warning shots...
Second,You need a BIG ship that you can launch the helicopter from...in the middle of the ocean.
Finally, you need a trailing Seal Team, fully weaponized to subdue said smugglers...
EZ PEAZY!
EAGLES beat Dallas...
Jalen Carter spits on Dak Prescott before the game even starts & is tossed out of the game...and sent to the locker room.
My sources with the Eagles tell me that Vic Fangio (the Defense Coach) went to the locker room & pencil whipped Jalen Carter!
Wednesday, September 3, 2025
The current State of Things...By Kim Ezra Shienbaum
September 3, 2025
9/11 to Mamdani...
America has entered the era of the post-millennial voter—a generation born after 9/11, now approaching one-quarter of the electorate. For many, that day isn’t a defining national memory but a vague historical footnote. As Rep. Ilhan Omar once controversially described it, it was simply the day “when some people did something.”
This is a generation raised in a dramatically different cultural and educational environment—one shaped more by ideology than history. From grade school to university, progressive activism isn’t just accepted, it’s institutionalized. Students have been taught to protest before they are taught to understand what they’re protesting.
So when Zohran Mamdani, a self-described anti-capitalist and vocal supporter of the “Globalize the Intifada” movement, won the Democrat primary for mayor of New York City, young voters were unfazed. With 63 percent of his supporters holding college degrees, it wasn’t a fringe message—it was the appeal.
What we’re witnessing is the political coming-of-age of a generation untethered from the national narratives that once shaped American identity. Two quiet revolutions—one demographic, the other intellectual—have transformed the university and, in turn, the electorate.
And their impact is only just beginning.
How the campus left found unlikely new allies
Between 2000 and 2010, the progressive movement, long incubated in the academy, became visible, vocal and aggressive. Terms like “white supremacy” and “institutional racism,” now routine, were once jarring. Arguments relied less on evidence than on “lived experience” and “personal truth.” Under the DEI umbrella, phrases such as “microaggression” and “systemic harm” made dissent nearly impossible.
By the next decade, universities actively recruited fee-paying international students, many from the Middle East. They helped bankroll ballooning bureaucracies but also brought a worldview that recast U.S. foreign policy, Israel, and Western ideals as inherently oppressive. A curious alliance followed: Islamists and progressives — otherwise ideological opposites — united in hostility to liberal democracy, Zionism, and American exceptionalism.
From disciplines to dogmas
At the same time, the organization of knowledge on campus changed. Traditional departments, once home to varied viewpoints judged by disciplinary standards, steadily lost ground. In their place, alongside but independent of departments, arose “studies” programs — American studies, Ethnic studies, Gender studies, Postcolonial studies — built around activism rather than scholarship.
These programs hired ideologically aligned faculty, wrote activist curricula, and reviewed their own work for publication. Many of their leaders rose to administrative power as deans, provosts and presidents, shaping hiring and tenure decisions across entire universities.
Middle Eastern studies in particular has been shaped by Gulf-state funding, especially from Qatar. Donor dollars influence faculty appointments, research priorities, and even student activism. Since the Hamas attacks of Oct. 7, anti-Israel activism on U.S. campuses has surged — often driven by foreign students linked to well-funded networks.
Foundational terms like “genocide” and “ethnic cleansing” have been stripped of history and turned into weapons against Jews and Israelis. The fact that Jewish communities predate Islam in the region, or lived there continuously for millennia, is ignored in favor of a “settler colonialism” narrative. Absent is Islam’s own history as an empire from Spain to India and its vision of a unified global community under Islamic Law (Dar El Islam).
U.S. history has undergone a similar inversion in American studies programs. The New York Times’s 1619 Project recast America’s founding as the arrival of African slaves rather than the Declaration of Independence. Historians objected, but the narrative stuck. Activists like Ibram X. Kendi found eager audiences in classrooms primed to see the nation’s past through the lens of grievance.
Religious dissenters like the Quakers, who helped shape ideals of freedom, are erased. The global nature of slavery, including its African practice, is forgotten. Britain’s costly abolition of the slave trade is dismissed. The Founding Fathers are reduced to villains. White men are no longer part of a complex national story but caricatures to be rejected.
From campus to city hall
What began as campus trends have now spilled into politics. The ideological re-engineering of the post-9/11 generation has produced not only activists but candidates, not only protests but political platforms.
Mamdani’s rise in New York is the logical outcome: a politician whose anti-capitalist, anti-police, and openly pro-Intifada worldview mirrors the curricula and coalitions incubated in universities. In him, the campus pipeline runs straight into City Hall.
Reclaiming history before it’s too late
The result is a sharp decline in historical literacy. The rise of Mamdani in New York and Fateh in Minneapolis is not a local curiosity. It is the predictable harvest of two decades of ideological cultivation on campus.
The post-9/11 generation, raised on grievance and moral certitude, is only beginning to flex its political muscle. Unless we reclaim our institutions — and restore a shared national story grounded in history rather than ideology — we will see more Mamdanis and more Fatehs, not fewer.
Remedial history, once unthinkable in a serious democracy, may now be necessary. Students must be grounded in the full story of American democracy, its principles, and its allies. Civic education will have to keep pace with political engagement if we are to preserve a shared sense of who we are.
The only question is how far this will spread before Americans are ready to confront it.
The Penguin is calling it quits!
New York Representative Jerry “The Penguin” Nadler has announced he is not going to seek reelection in 2026.
78-year-old Nadler was going to face a significant primary threat from the far-left.
NEW YORK – “Watching the Biden thing really said something about the necessity for generational change in the party, and I think I want to respect that,” Mr. Nadler said, adding that a younger successor “can maybe do better, can maybe help us more.”
Rep. Jerry Nadler, was the former chair of the House Judiciary Committee who joined forces with Adam Schiff and spearheaded President Donald Trump’s impeachment effort.
Tuesday, September 2, 2025
'It's like throwing Gold Bars off the TITANIC>>>
BREAKING:
@EPA
Advisor Admits ‘Insurance Policy’ Against Trump is Funneling Billions to Climate Organizations, “We’re Throwing Gold Bars off the Titanic”
“It was an insurance policy against Trump winning.”
“Get the money out as fast as possible before they [Trump Administration] come in ... it’s like we’re on the Titanic and we’re throwing gold bars off the edge.”
BREAKING: Appeals Court EXCORIATES Obama Judge Chutkan, Sides with Trump Administration, Axes Billions of Dollars in Biden-Era Climate Grants...
According to AP, the $20 Billion was awarded to “Coalition for Green Capital, Climate United Fund, Power Forward Communities, Opportunity Finance Network, Inclusiv and the Justice Climate Fund.”
AND NOW IT'S GONE AWAY!
Monday, September 1, 2025
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