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Showing posts with label David Axelrod. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Axelrod. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Van Jones Crushes "Safe Spaces" Argument.


Liberal Van Jones absolutely obliterates ‘ridiculous’ campus ‘safe spaces’ in fiery talk

 


Liberal Van Jones absolutely obliterates ‘ridiculous’ campus ‘safe spaces’ in fiery talk
Van Jones takes down campus "safe spaces." (Image source: YouTube screen cap)



CNN commentator Van Jones unloaded with “tough talk” for fellow liberals on college campuses who’ve been calling for “safe spaces” from ideas they disagree with.
While he said he supports safety from physical harm and hate speech, Jones called out a “horrible view” that has become “ascendant” in campus culture, describing it as “I need to be safe ideologically. I need to be safe emotionally. I just need to feel good all the time. And if someone says something that I don’t like, that is a problem for everyone else, including the administration.”
Then Jones turned the tables on his listeners at the University of Chicago.
“I don’t want you to be safe ideologically. I don’t want you to be safe emotionally. I want you to be strong — that’s different,” he said. “I’m not going to pave the jungle for you. Put on some boots and learn how to deal with adversity. I’m not gonna take all the weights out of the gym. That’s the whole point of gym. This is the gym.”
Jones then began raising his voice as he underscored his message.
“You can’t live on a campus where people say stuff you don’t like? And these people can’t fire you, they can’t arrest you, they can’t beat you up. They can just say stuff you don’t like — and you get to say stuff back! And this you cannot bear?” he said, placing the back of his hand against his forehead as the crowd laughed, apparently getting it. “This is ridiculous b.s.!”

Image source: YouTube screen cap
Image source: YouTube screen cap

Jones went on to describe his parents who marched and dealt with issues such as fire hoses, dogs and beatings. Then he asked the crowd, “You can’t deal with a mean tweet?”
He wasn’t through.
“You are creating a kind of liberalism that the minute it crosses the street into the real world is not just useless, but obnoxious and dangerous,” Jones said. “I want you to be offended every single day on this campus. I want you to be deeply aggrieved and offended and upset — and then to learn how to speak back. Because that’s what we need from you in these communities.”

Jones was appearing at the school’s Institute of Politics with fellow CNN commentator S.E. Cupp and IOP Director David Axelrod to discuss the political and cultural landscape under the administration of Republican President Donald Trump.
On the night of Trump’s election, Jones called the Republican’s win a “white-lash against a black president.”
(H/T: Heat Street)Va

Saturday, December 10, 2016

CNN Is The Racist For Not Looking For The Reasons Republicans Did Not Support Obama's Programs And Only Looked At Racism As The Cause.


CNN Legacy Special

 Lauds Obama For

 Overcoming 

Republican Racism

Cortney O'Brien
|
Posted: Dec 08, 2016 5:30 PM

CNN Legacy Special Lauds Obama For Overcoming Republican Racism
CNN aired a special highlighting 
President Obama’s legacy on 
Wednesday. As expected, the 
network offered a glowing review
 of his two terms, while praising
 him for being able to overcome those racist Republicans in 
Congress.
You probably could have guessed how it was going to go judging
 by the host, former Obama adviser Fareed Zakaria, who once
 called Donald Trump a cancer on democracy. On Wednesday 
night's report, Zakaria explained how the president faced unfair
 pushback as soon as he was elected.
“Within half a mile of where Obama and Michelle are dancing and 
celebrating their great victory, his Republican opponents are wining
 and dining and plotting his defeat,” he said, eerily.
He used two other liberals' opinions to support his claim.
DAVID AXELROD: It's indisputable that there was a ferocity

to the opposition and a lack of respect to him that was a

function of race.
VAN JONES: I can't name one thing that this congress

supported this president on in eight years. You have to

have an extraordinary explanation for this level of obstruction.
Later in the two-hour program, Zakaria suggested that the fight over
 Obamacare was also rooted in racism.
The host wouldn’t dare say this, but most Republicans did not
 oppose Obama’s policies because of the color of his skin. They
 fought against them because they were counter to a freedom-loving, conservative agenda.
I’m left to wonder, where was the legacy special for President
 George W. Bush? You would be hard pressed to hear the media
 talk about his successes or defend him from his Democratic 
dissenters. Apparently that opposition was completely justifiable.

Friday, November 18, 2016

Sessions, Once Disrespected By The Senate, Is Now Going To Be Trump's Attorney General

Trump taps Sessions for AG





Trump taps Sessions for AG
© Getty Images
President-elect Donald Trump has selected Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) to serve as his attorney general, Trump's transition team announced Friday morning. 
Sessions becomes the first person selected by Trump to a Cabinet-level position in the new administration. In doing so, Trump selected one of his most loyal supporters and a senator whose border-security positions predated Trump's candidacy. 
“Jeff has been a highly respected member of the U.S. Senate for 20 years,” Trump said in a statement. “He is a world-class legal mind and considered a truly great Attorney General and U.S. Attorney in the state of Alabama. Jeff is greatly admired by legal scholars and virtually everyone who knows him.”
The 69-year-old Alabama Republican was the first senator to endorse Trump's White House bid. Two of his top staffers have become key players in Trump's orbit on the campaign and the transition team. 
That loyalty has gone a long way with Trump: A source told The Hill ahead of the announcement that Sessions had his pick of Cabinet spots
The two men met at Trump Tower on Wednesday, with Trump specifically highlighting the senator's "phenomenal record."
In the statement from Trump’s transition team, Sessions said he is “humbled” to have been chosen for the job. 
“My previous 15 years working in the Department of Justice were extraordinarily fulfilling. I love the Department, its people and its mission. I can think of no greater honor than to lead them,” he said.
If confirmed, Sessions would succeed Attorney General Loretta Lynch, the first African-American woman to serve as the nation's top law enforcement official.
But Democratic opposition to Sessions is already beginning, signaling the potential for a rocky path to confirmation. 
Past controversies touching on race will dominate the discussion surrounding Sessions, who would preside over an agency with responsibilities to protect civil rights. 
Thirty years ago, Sessions was denied a federal judge position over allegations that he had called the NAACP and American Civil Liberties Union "un-American" and said he thought the Ku Klux Klan was "OK, until he learned they smoked marijuana." 
Sessions has vehemently denied the claims, but Democrats are already pointing to the accusations as disqualifying. 
David Axelrod, President Obama's former senior adviser, blasted Sessions’s selection on Twitter, arguing the appointment will "send chills to advocates of civil and immigrant rights." 
The leader of the liberal Democracy for America issued a statement that said Sessions was barely more qualified to lead the Justice Department than a member of the KKK.
“The handful of people who might be even less equipped than Jeff Sessions to dispense justice on behalf of the American people typically spend their weekends wearing pointy hats and burning crosses,” Democracy for American executive director Charles Chamberlain said.
Sessions was a vocal critic of Obama's immigration reform efforts.
Defenders of Sessions argue he has a better record on civil rights than he receives credit for.
Supporters point to his vote in favor of a 30-year extension of the Civil Rights Act, for example, or multiple desegregation lawsuits he filed as a U.S. attorney in Alabama.
Sessions in April 1999, meanwhile, led efforts to award the Congressional Gold Medal to Rosa Parks, a civil rights icon and Alabama native.
Senior Trump adviser Jason Miller told reporters that Sessions is "very well qualified" for the position on a Friday conference call. 
He brushed aside concerns about Sessions’s earlier scuttled confirmation, noting that the senator filed a number of desegregation lawsuits while working in the Justice Department, voted for the Civil Rights Act's extension and backed Eric Holder, the first black attorney general.
"We feel very confident that Sen. Sessions has the background and the support to receive confirmation," Miller added. 
Sessions’s pick has so far been greeted warmly by Republican senators, who will have to sign off on the nomination. The Alabama senator will have to pass through the Judiciary Committee, a feat he could not accomplish during his 1986 appointment, and then get confirmed by the Senate by winning a simple majority of senators. 
There are currently 51 Republicans in the Senate and 48 Democrats, with Republicans expected to pick up another seat after a December runoff in Louisiana. Sessions is generally well-liked by his colleagues, and it's likely they will confirm him — especially because of the 51-vote threshold. 
Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.), one of Trump's more vocal GOP opponents throughout the election, said he would back Sessions. 
And other top Republican senators have signaled through statements they'll vote for him, too, including Majority Whip John Cornyn (Texas) and Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (Iowa). 
Sessions has represented Alabama in the Senate for nearly 20 years, and his appointment would leave a vacancy in the ruby-red state.  
Sen. Ted Cruz (Texas), Trump's main rival in the Republican presidential primary, had been interested in the role, too. Cruz met with Trump on Tuesday, and while the senator has publicly demurred when asked about his interest in the position, he privately told those close to him that he was interested in serving as Trump's attorney general. 
Cruz quickly released a statement lauding Sessions's nomination as "great news for all of us who revere the Constitution and the rule of law" soon after the selection broke. 
Trump on Friday also announced retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn as his national security adviser and Rep. Mike Pompeo (R-Kan.) to lead the CIA
Jonathan Swan contributed. Updated at 2 p.m.

Monday, September 12, 2016

Are Democrats Preparing For A Hillary Meltdown?




NEW YORK – It’s Sept. 26, and Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are at Hofstra University on Long Island in front of a live television audience, set to square off for the first of three presidential debates.
As moderator Lester Holt of NBC introduces Clinton, a camera zooms in on the Democratic Party presidential nominee. Suddenly, Clinton collapses, sending her medical handlers rushing to her side. Out cold, Clinton is removed from the stage on a gurney in front of the stunned Hofstra audience and tens of millions of viewers at home.
That’s the nightmare scenario that, according to high-level Democrat power brokers on Wall Street and in New York City law firms and unions speaking to WND on condition their names be withheld, is causing panic among top party operatives and donors.
The key question is this: What assurance can the Clinton campaign give to the party that the health of its candidate won’t continue to be an issue?

The top Democratic Party politicos in New York City have decided they can no longer rely on a two-page report of good health put out by the campaign, insisting it’s time to replace Clinton’s current medical team with A-list professionals, which are readily available in New York City.
If top medical experts decide it’s likely Clinton will suffer another fainting spell, regardless of the treatment she is given, the mood among New York Democrats is that now is the time to find a replacement.
Concerns about Clinton’s health, including recent coughing fits – reported for months in alternative media – have been dismissed by the campaign and establishment media as “conspiracies.”
But the disastrous videos of Hillary’s collapse as she stepped into her van while making an early departure from Sunday’s 9/11 memorial have gone viral, and top Democratic politicos have decided it is time to stop taking calls from worried donors and start talking turkey with the Clinton campaign, according to the sources.
Clinton’s campaign later admitted to media she had been diagnosed with pneumonia two days before the incident Sunday. Clinton press secretary Brian Fallon said Monday the campaign was at fault for delaying the announcement that Clinton had pneumonia and plans to release additional medical records this week.
Democrat panic
At least eight Democrats or establishment media figures, some citing multiple party members, have raised the specter of replacing Clinton or questioned the campaign’s handling of her health issues:
  1. Former Democratic National Committee chairman Don Fowler said President Obama and the party’s congressional leaders should immediately come up with a process to identify a potential successor for Clinton if a health emergency forces her out of the race, reported Politico. “Now is the time for all good political leaders to come to the aid of their party,” said Fowler, who led the DNC for two years during Bill Clinton’s presidency. “I think the plan should be developed by 6 o’clock this afternoon.”
  2. Democrat donor and fundraiser Bill Bartmann fielded calls Sunday from about half-a-dozen worried Democrats who are waiting to see how everything plays out, Reuters reported.
  3. Cokie Roberts confirmed in an NPR report the nervous whispers of Democratic Party leaders that Hillary Clinton may have to bow out because of her health, Mediaite reported. “People are angry at the lack of transparency,” Roberts said on “Morning Edition.” “It was hours before the pneumonia diagnosis was revealed, after seeing this incredibly damaging video of her being helped and stumbling into a van. And look, there’s a reason why the campaign’s not transparent. Obviously, it gives Trump ammunition.”
  4. In a tweet, NBC’s David Schuster wrote: “DNC delegate: If @HillaryClinton withdraws, every indication now committee will vote to replace with Biden. @BernieSanders team scrambling.”
  5. Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland said Clinton’s running mate, Tim Kaine, is “ready to become the president” if necessary, the Columbus Dispatch reported.
  6. Former Obama senior adviser David Axelrod on Monday criticized Clinton’s lack of transparency in a tweet: “Antibiotics can take care of pneumonia. What’s the cure for an unhealthy penchant for privacy that repeatedly creates unnecessary problems?”
  7. CNN media reporter Brian Stelter wrote: “I don’t understand why Clinton aides weren’t telling reporters at 10:30am: ‘pneumonia.'”
  8. Chuck Todd, the host of NBC’s “Meet the Press,” said: “Of course they should have disclosed this. This isn’t a cold.”
Even Clinton’s aides at the State Department, more than three years ago, expressed concern about her health.
In an email exchange Jan. 26, 2013, Huma Abedin and Monica Hanley said it was “very important” to go over phone calls with Clinton because the secretary of state was “often confused.”
‘Danger of brain hemorrhage’
VIDEO: BILL CLINTON: HILLARY IS A "CHANGE MAKER"

As WND has reported, the list of known ailments justifies concern that she might have some kind of brain damage.
She had a concussion serious enough to have required wearing eyeglasses fitted with Fresnel prisms, which typically are prescribed to treat double vision caused by nerve damage as a result of head trauma. She also had a rare Cerebrial Venous Sinus Thrombosis blood clot in the sinus behind the ear, between her skull and the brain, most likely resulting from the concussion.
In addition, she is known to have a chronic hypothyroid condition for which she is taking Armour Thyroid, as WND previously reported, a natural remedy made from desiccated pig glands. To prevent clots, as WND reported, she is taking Coumadin, otherwise known as Warfarin, an old but commonly prescribed blood-thinning medication originally developed as a rat poison.
WND also reported the medication Clinton has taken since 1998 to deal with her blood-clotting problems may have side effects such as blurred vision and confusion, both of which she has experienced. And a California physician warned Coumadin could be more life threatening to her than the possibility of a recurring blood clot.
The Atlanta-based Alliance for Natural Health warns in a bulletin, titled “Hillary Clinton Prescribed a Dangerous Blood-Thinner,” that Coumadin has a long list of nasty side effects. The medical literature warns that Coumadin can cause excessive bleeding that can turn even a minor injury into a life-threatening event. In 2008, a study in the American Academy of Neurology journal showed Warfarin can increase the danger of excessive internal bleeding in the brain, causing a stroke.
Copyright 2016 WND

Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2016/09/8-top-democrats-fear-hillary-collapse-in-debate/#8ro06l9q91zXWjEm.99