Starting you off with a 20-minute video of where we are going and what the Globe is promoting:
Sorry for the wide video; however, I was unable to shrink it with the paltry or defective tools I have long had on this blog, but more on that below. The point is, the video Schwabs you with what I perceive to be the personification of evil despite the mild mannerisms. He is promoting some evil he thought up called "stakeholder capitalism," and if you watch the video closely you will find that the vast majority of us are not stakeholders. Only The Davos crowd is, and once you open Pandora's Box.....
Explore The Great Reset Transformation Map Image: World Economic Forum
Now is the time for a ‘great reset,’ and it is becoming clearer and clearer that this is no longer about a viru$ with limited lethality, it is about the destruction of humanity's entire way of life in favor of a technological dystopia that will not only surveil the entire planet but -- according to the video -- be creating safe spaces for free thought because they will literally be inside your minds cleaning your brain for the rest of your life. We will be Borgs. That is what the control freak psychopaths have planned, and it is beyond atrocious, beyond abominable, beyond words to describe other than $atanic evil -- and Trump was there, too, so he is one board now. Clinging to him in hope looks like it will now be the death of us.
I agree with the NTS that the people [need to] wake the fuck up now and get out there and fight this madness, but I see little of that in my fellow human beings. What little enlightenment I have offered has been met with harsh resistance or the sophistry of rationalizations that lead back to supporting the overall narrative. Granted, I'm in the belly of the beast and the American people have been like this since 9/11; however, the propensity to believe liars and those who harm and claim the mantle of protectors while stuffing their pockets baffles me. The mind-control mechanisms have worked incredibly well, although about 1/3 of humanity seem immune to it for some reason and are not blind. Some of the 2/3 is willful ignorance, but that doesn't account for everything. The ability to make individuals feel alienated, alone, and isolated certainly has something to do with it, but it doesn't account for everything. People have stood by as their livelihoods have been destroyed in the false belief that government and our bought- and paid-for politicians have our best interests at heart.
I hadn't intended to post today (I was going to let you get your fill of my last post), nor start with a lengthy commentary of my own; however, I feel it incumbent to mention that Blogger is going to be resetting the blog with something I looked at but didn't like, and I will have no choice by the end of the month so who knows what happens here. What I have noticed lately is all the slowness and glitches, worse than I have ever seen, and that includes my computer. It is taking too long for stuff, and I've cleared the cookies and caches. I haven't been able to locate any viru$es, but I'm not a wizard with the $hit either, and don't get me wrong about Blogger, either. I wish to reiterate the thanks I have offered in previous posts for allowing me to post my thoughts on the pre$$ reporting all these years. Who knows for how much longer they will allow it, but there it is. I'm sure it's all cached somewhere out there.
Of course, a stray cough in the wrong place could spark another outbreak that might send people back into their homes for weeks or months.
(AHEM)
"Phase 2 of COVID-19 plan will begin tomorrow in Mass. with retail stores, camps, day cares all free to open, along with outdoor dining" by John Hilliard, Anissa Gardizy, Jeremy C. Fox and Janelle Nanos Globe Staff, Globe Correspondent and Globe Staff, June 6, 2020
After a three-month shutdown that brought much of routine daily life to a halt, some semblance of normalcy resumes Monday when the second phase of recovery from the coronavirus in Massachusetts will allow customers to shop inside stores, restaurants to serve diners outdoors, and youths to venture out to playgrounds and sports programs.
I don't want a "semblance" of normalcy over a f**king fraud; I want to put back the way it was. No more masks, no more distancing. You guys own up to this, tell us it has burned off, quit pushing this evil crap, tell us what a great job you did, and then get down on a knee and beg for forgiveness.
Governor Charlie Baker, who outlined the latest stage of the reopening at the State House on Saturday, said he felt comfortable moving forward because the number of new cases and hospitalizations in Massachusetts continues on a downward trajectory.
I want him at the head of the group.
The move cheered many business owners, who are anxious to start returning to the world they knew before March 10 — when Baker declared a state of emergency.
They are not returning to that world, and there is where we need the revolt. Throw your doors open and dare them to shut us all down and jail us for distance. Doesn't seem to be a problem when it comes to certain protests that override COVID.
In the weeks leading up to Saturday’s announcement, Baker had been pulled in different directions: Business advocates said he moved too slowly in restarting the state economy, while some public health experts worried he was moving too quickly to ease restrictions that are critical to slowing the spread of COVID-19.
Even with a reopening, the coronavirus continues to be a threat: On Saturday, the state reported 55 new deaths from COVID-19 and 575 new cases, as overall numbers continue to trend downward.
The seven-day average for the state’s positive COVID-19 tests rate has declined by 82 percent since mid-April, officials said Saturday. The three-day average of hospitalized patients has dropped by 55 percent, and the number of hospitals experiencing a surge of infected patients is down by 76 percent.
Throwing numbers at you, no context, no verification, nothing, just paddling fear over a distortion at best, outright fiction at worst (likely the latter).
Public health officials have cautioned that a stray cough in the wrong place could spark another outbreak that might send people back into their homes for weeks or months. On Saturday, Baker faced renewed concerns about the risk of reopening.
AH-CHOO!
That keep me in the clear?
State Representative Mike Connolly, a Cambridge Democrat, said not enough has been done to ensure at-risk populations, including people of color, are adequately protected during the reopening. He’s also disappointed Baker has not signed legislation to require more data collection and more data reporting on COVID-19, according to a statement.
Carlene Pavlos, executive director of the Massachusetts Public Health Association, said Baker ignored basic standards in the reopening, such as not collecting enough data on at-risk populations, raising the prospect of the disease spreading again.
The governor Saturday said the state is strategizing with specialists to ensure that won’t happen. “We’ve been very successful over the past 120 days in significantly reducing the amount of COVID we’ve had here in the Commonwealth,” he said, “and we did that by following the guidance and advice from our colleagues in public health and the medical community."
Okay, time to comment. Baker himself is a creature of that community, and the fact that the state is the last to reopen with its onerous restrictions means he is neck-deep in this re$et.
Unfortunately, at this moment which I do not expect to last, you have to take him by default. The Democrat is basically arguing for more racial profiling and tyrannical data collection. I'm sure Baker will at some point sign, and in any event, his goal is to test every single person in the Commonwealth. A lose-lose for those who love liberty.
When Phase 2 kicks off Monday, life will still be far from the old normal — measures like social distancing will remain in place.
I will get to the $coreboard later.
Businesses have been waiting a long time for this day. Jon B. Hurst, president of the statewide retailers association, has been frustrated at how much longer Massachusetts took to let stores open than other states, and, Christopher Carlozzi, state director for the National Federation of Independent Business, urged Baker to accelerate the reopening of other businesses.....
Too late, and he is following their plan to a T!
--more--"
You just got out of the house and already a second surge is developing:
"Virus ebbs in New York; spread continues in Houston, across globe" by Marina Villeneuve Associated Press, June 6, 2020
ALBANY, N.Y. — New York’s recovery from the coronavirus pandemic is moving faster than expected, Governor Andrew Cuomo said Saturday, allowing the state to loosen some restrictions on gatherings in houses of worship.
Churches, temples, mosques, and other religious buildings will be allowed to operate with 25 percent of their usual capacity once the region they are in reaches the second phase of the state’s reopening plan.
“We’re going to open the valve more than we originally anticipated because the metrics are so good,’’ Cuomo said.
Be careful! You will reignite a surge of infections!
All of the state except for New York City is in Phase 2 of loosening restrictions, or will enter it within a few days. That means larger religious gatherings can begin in most places immediately. New York City starts the first phase Monday.
COVID-19 killed 35 people in the state Friday, Cuomo said, down from a peak of more than 700 per day in April.
Wow, Massachusetts is now tops on the daily death tolls. Another #1 you never want to have, and that is this state all over.
Cuomo urged people to continue wearing masks and practicing social distancing, which has been collapsing in many parts of the state as people have watched tightly-packed crowds of thousands of people protesting racial injustice.
They got approval from the $cienti$ts!
Meanwhile, in Texas, the Houston area has begun to see a significant increase in cases and hospitalizations related to the coronavirus.
The upturn began two weeks ago and accelerated last week, the Houston Chronicle reported Saturday.
“This is a trend we’re definitely keeping an eye on,” said Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo, the county’s top elected official.
Health officials believe people might have let down their guard and come in closer contact with others after the state authorized businesses to reopen, and with last month’s Memorial Day weekend holiday.....
There isn't going to be any ba$ketball at the end of July!
AP).
I put the photo up because I wanted you to see the face of a murderous criminal, and how the COVID-19 is acting just like any old virus with the bell curve bull$hit.
--more--"
You won't be open long, Ma$$achu$etts, and now for the front-page protests:
‘Here’s Monica, with a sea of people behind her’
Zoe Greenberg and Stephanie Ebbert of the Globe Staff help you meet the woman who drew tens of thousands of protesters to Franklin Park, and all I will say is when my pre$$ starts waving women and children in front of you it means two things: watch out, and their agenda-pushing is failing.
How are those kids in Yemen doing, btw? Or Haiti? Or Palestine?
(flipping below the fold)
George Floyd and protests bring on a me-too reckoning on race
I would say get up off your goddamn knees, but the photo itself is proof positive that authority is collaborating on this big societal shift into the Brave New World Order and Great Re$et, and I'm going to skip the shots for now (a key component of their sick plan) just as the state elder affairs office shelved citizens advisory council before coronavirus crisis.
At the bottom of the front page there was a note to print readers that there was no magazine in the insert because the cover was apparently controversial, ill-timed, and insensitive (like that Ben Stiller movie during the days of Zimmerman).
At least it's back to politics as u$ual in my Sunday Globe:
Biden pushed to embrace bolder reforms as he emerges from basement to address Floyd unrest
As soon as I saw the byline I crossed it off the reading list, and another $en$e of normalcy was provided when the page before was a full-page ad for Total Wines, and $hop $afe!
The Sunday Globe is filling me with normalcy today!
"Vote for Trump? These Republican leaders aren’t on the bandwagon" by Jonathan Martin New York Times, June 6, 2020
They never were, either!
WASHINGTON — It was one thing in 2016 for top Republicans to take a stand against Donald Trump for president: He wasn’t likely to win anyway, the thinking went, and there was no ongoing conservative governing agenda that would be endangered.
The 2020 campaign is different: Opposing the sitting president of your own party means putting policy priorities at risk, in this case appointing conservative judges, sustaining business-friendly regulations, and cutting taxes — as well as incurring the volcanic wrath of Trump, but, far sooner than they expected, growing numbers of prominent Republicans are debating how far to go in revealing that they won’t back his reelection — or might even vote for Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee. They’re feeling a fresh urgency because of Trump’s incendiary response to the protests of police brutality, atop his mishandling of the coronavirus pandemic, according to people who spoke on the condition of anonymity to disclose private discussions.
Biden is no longer presumptive after last week.
Former President George W. Bush won’t support the reelection of Trump, and Jeb Bush isn’t sure how he’ll vote, say people familiar with their thinking. Senator Mitt Romney of Utah won’t back Trump and is deliberating whether to again write in his wife, Ann, or cast another ballot this November, and Cindy McCain, the widow of Senator John McCain, is almost certain to support Biden but is unsure how public to be about it because one of her sons is eyeing a run for office.
UGH!
Bush sounded off on race again this week, with the ma$$ media clearly forgetting the charges of WASP racism during his father's administration as well as his own debacle regarding Katrina (Kanye, where are you?). On top of that are the stacks and stacks of brown and black corpses that have gushed forth from his 9/11 false flag atrocity and his resulting GWOT and invasion of Iraq.
As for McCain, he was a war-monger extraordinaire (and a recipient of the Steele dossier via John Brennan) with both him and Biden voting for the damn war we knew was based on lies. Nevertheless, Cohen of the Globe says President Trump is the worst president ever, and he may well turn out to be, but as of now he can't hold candle to the lying, mass-murdering war criminal W. Bush who authorized torture and also crashed an economy. I hope that fucker is haunted forever!
None of them voted for Trump in 2016, but former Republican leaders like the former speakers Paul Ryan and John Boehner won’t say how they will vote, and some Republicans who are already disinclined to support Trump are weighing whether to go beyond backing a third-party contender to openly endorse Biden. Retired military leaders, who have guarded their private political views, are increasingly voicing their unease about the president’s leadership but are unsure whether to embrace his opponent.
Looks like a good day for Biden and the e$tabli$hment, and why not just change your voter registration to Communist, 'er, Democrap?
Biden himself, while eager to win support across party lines, intends to roll out his “Republicans for Biden” coalition later in the campaign, after fully consolidating his own party, according to Democrats familiar with the campaign’s planning.
HA-HA-HA-HA-HA!
Yeah, f**king fall in line, pwahgwe$$ives!!
The public expressions of opposition to Trump from parts of the Republican and military establishment have accelerated in recent days over his repeated calls for protesters to be physically constrained, “dominated,” as he put it, and his administration’s order to forcefully clear the streets outside the White House so he could walk out for a photo opportunity. His conduct has convinced some leaders that they can no longer remain silent.
That even has already flamed out.
Former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis’s blistering criticism of Trump and the admission this past week by Senator Lisa Murkowski of Alaska that she is “struggling” with whether to vote for the sitting president of her own party have intensified the soul-searching taking place, forcing a number of officials to reckon with an act they have long avoided: stating out loud that Trump is unfit for office.
That's when I knew an insurrection was afoot!
“This fall, it’s time for new leadership in this country — Republican, Democrat, or independent,” said William H. McRaven, the retired Navy admiral who directed the raid that killed Osama bin Laden. “President Trump has shown he doesn’t have the qualities necessary to be a good commander in chief.”
Translation: the mail-in ballots have already been filled out.
McRaven, making his first public comments opposing Trump’s election in an interview on the 76th anniversary of D-Day, noted that those wartime leaders inspired Americans with “their words, their actions, and their humanity.”
Spare us the pious platitudes please.... admiral.
In contrast, he said, Trump has failed his leadership test. “As we have struggled with the COVID pandemic and horrible acts of racism and injustice, this president has shown none of those qualities,” McRaven said. “The country needs to move forward without him at the helm.”
Yeah, he hasn't started a shooting war of his own yet, and that last part is DAMN OMINOUS regarding the health of the President!
Dallas, 1963!
Trump won election in 2016, of course, despite a parade of Republicans and retired military officers who refused to support him. Far more current GOP elected officials are publicly backing Trump than did four years ago. Among his unwavering supporters are Republican leaders like Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, and past foes like senators Ted Cruz and Lindsey Graham, and polls today indicate that rank-and-file Republicans are squarely behind the president, although that is in part because some Republicans who can’t abide Trump now align with independents.
They have the same problem as progre$$ives; where else do they have to go?
Yet it would be a sharp rebuke for former Trump administration officials and well-known Republicans to buck their own standard-bearer. Individually, they may not sway many votes — particularly at a time of deep polarization, but their collective opposition, or even resounding silence, could offer something of a permission structure for Trump-skeptical Republicans to put party loyalty aside.
That could be read one of two ways, either as an attempt at security or complicity.
John Kelly, Trump’s former chief of staff and a retired Marine general, would not say who he would vote for, though he did allow that he wished “we had some additional choices.”
Kelly reminds me that everyone who has been run out of the White House has fallen afoul of a certain chosen son-in-law who shall remain nameless -- although his last name also begins with a capital K.
Dan Coats, a former Republican senator who was Trump’s director of national intelligence, “has been concerned about the negative effect on the intelligence community by the turmoil of turnover at DNI,” said Kevin Kellems, a longtime adviser to Coats, adding that the former spy chief is “encouraged by the confirmation of a new DNI and career intelligence deputy.”
Oh, yeah, remember him?
The confirmations were done under the cover of COVID.
As for the candidate for whom Coats will vote, “ultimately he remains a loyal Republican but he believes the American people will decide on Nov. 2,” Kellems said.....
Uh-huh!
--more--"
Woa, good thing he is sticking a finger out there before he keeps riding the wave.
"Young protesters say voting isn’t enough. Will they do it anyway?" by Matt Flegenheimer New York Times, June 6, 2020
As nationwide demonstrations continue to simmer, interviews with millennial and Generation Z protesters and activists across racial lines reflect a steady suspicion about the value and effectiveness of voting alone. Their disillusionment threatens to perpetuate a consistent generational gap in election turnout, hinting at a key challenge facing Joe Biden. The former vice president, who announced Friday evening that he had earned a majority of delegates in the Democratic primary contest, has struggled to generate youth enthusiasm despite the demographic’s broad disapproval of President Trump.
In terms of the generation gap, I will never again criticize young people for having their heads in their phones for partying away. Their futures have now been stolen from them, a future that will be without fun as well.
To some degree, this dynamic has figured in political fights across the decades: Voters are disproportionately old; marchers are disproportionately young, but the frustrations of younger Americans also speak to the particular conditions of the era, with a preferred candidate in the past two Democratic presidential primaries, Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, falling short twice and a sense that those in office have done little to stem a flood of crises.
Sanders had the nomination stolen from him twice, with the 2020 cycle being (unbelievably) even worse than in 2016. It was a blatant theft after what happened in Nevada.
The deaths of Black people at the hands of law enforcement. The relentless creep of climate change. Recurring economic uncertainty — this time amid a pandemic exacerbated by missteps across the federal government.
Notice how the endless wars of aggression and empire never enter into the equation?
“In an ideal world, all of these issues would be solved by going out and voting,” Zoe Demkovitz, 27, who had supported Sanders’s presidential campaign, said as she marched in Philadelphia against police violence. “I tried that. I voted for the right people, “and this,” she concluded, adding an expletive, “still happens.”
Which faction of the one-party War $tate do you like?
Democratic leaders are plainly aware of this perception and mindful that a stronger showing from Hillary Clinton among young voters four years ago probably would have turned her fortunes. Some have moved in recent days to explicitly urge protesters not to overlook November.
Oh, now YOU, TOO, are to BLAME for HILLARY'S FAILURES!
One wonders if all you youngsters are deplorable Russian dupes!
In a post on Medium, Barack Obama disputed the notion that racial bias in criminal justice “proves that only protests and direct action can bring about change, and that voting and participation in electoral politics is a waste of time. Eventually, aspirations have to be translated into specific laws and institutional practices,” the former president wrote, italicizing liberally, “and in a democracy, that only happens when we elect government officials who are responsive to our demands.”
He isn't helping matters by interjecting himself. All I can think of is the yawning wealth gap under his regime and the wars, coups, and destabilization campaigns he brought to Libya, Syria, Yemen, and the Ukraine.
Even Obama’s White House tenure, made possible in large part by his strength with younger voters, has come in for mixed appraisals. Evan Weber, 28, the political director for the Sunrise Movement, a group of young liberal environmental activists, cited the dissatisfaction among progressives his age over Obama’s record on financial reform and some climate issues.
“People are turning to protest out of necessity,” Weber said. “We have grown up — millennials and especially Generation Z — with a system that has either delivered too little or not at all.”
As de$igned, kid!
--more--"
I agree with the student who says “I’m tired. I’m literally tired. I’m tired of having to do this,” and so much for social distancing!
"Democrats to propose broad bill to target police misconduct and racial bias" by Nicholas Fandos New York Times, June 6, 2020
Democrats in Congress plan to unveil expansive legislation on Monday that would make it easier to prosecute police misconduct and recover damages from officers found to have violated the constitutional rights of civilians, and step up pressure on the Justice Department to address systemic racial discrimination by law enforcement.
From them or taxpayers, because if it's taxpayers, forget it, and you can't really make the cop liable for the risk of public service, either.
The PROBLEM is NOT the SYSTEMS, dear readers! The SYSTEMS work fine. It is the CORRUPT and EVIL CRIMINAL CLA$$ that is in CHARGE that is the problem! The SYSTEMS, as designed, would work just fine with different leadership!
The bill, which House and Senate Democrats have named the Justice in Policing Act of 2020, is a direct response to the recent killings of three Black Americans by white civilians and officers that have prompted protests across the country, but it includes policies that civil rights activists have been pushing for decades to combat racial bias and excessive use of force by law enforcement.
No offense, but I don't like legislation crafted during an emotional response. That leads to bad things -- like the 1994 Crime Bill, right, Joe?
Said he is running on his record.
The New York Times obtained a copy of a section-by-section summary of its contents, circulated privately on Capitol Hill late Friday.
I love the phrasing and spin on the event. By saying they obtained the leak it makes it look like they did some actual digging like a real reporter would, not just accepting a government and political handout.
It would be the most aggressive intervention into policing by Congress in recent memory, and elements of it are certain to meet with staunch opposition from politically powerful police unions and other law enforcement groups that have fought against such efforts in the past.
Yeah, the Democraps just guaranteed an entire constituency to Trump.
It is not clear if President Trump, who often aligns himself with law enforcement and has advocated the use of brutal police tactics, will embrace such measures now.
It is pretty certain where he stands, no?
Democraps are simply farting in the wind and laying down a political marker for November (you should be insulted by the blatant manipulation, dear voter).
As currently proposed, it would significantly change federal law and require states and localities to make modifications of their own, such as instituting mandatory bias training, to receive federal funds.
It would create a national registry to track police misconduct and require that law enforcement agencies report data on the use of force, as well as ban certain chokeholds and other practices that were used in confrontations with the police that left Black Americans dead.
Why hasn't there been one?
They have databases for everything else!
“Persistent, unchecked bias in policing and a history of lack of accountability is wreaking havoc on the black community,” House and Senate Democrats who assembled the package wrote in an e-mail to colleagues on Friday accompanying the summary. “Cities are literally on fire with the pain and anguish wrought by the violence visited upon black and brown bodies.”
They all go along with the wars based on lies, though. What f**king hypocrites!
Oh, yeah, before the controlled demolition of the economy, blacks were experiencing record-low poverty and unemployment so..... who benefitted?
The effort is being led by Representative Karen Bass of California, the chairwoman of the Congressional Black Caucus, Representative Jerrold Nadler of New York, the House Judiciary Committee chairman, and Senators Cory Booker of New Jersey and Kamala Harris of California, the only two Black Democrats in the Senate.
They cited the deaths of George Floyd in Minnesota and Breonna Taylor in Kentucky that have inspired protests across the country, as well as other well-known victims of such force in recent years.
They knocked and then ran away!
Because most police departments are under state and local control, there are limits to the kinds of changes Congress can mandate from Washington.
That is PART of the RE$ET, to replace local forces that live in the community and must be responsive with other troops (UN forces?) that have no concept of the community or culture, so SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL POLICE as much as you can! You KNOW THEM, and MOST of them are WELL-MEANING! Don't let a FEW BAD APPLES spoil the whole bunch, lest you get a bushel of rotted apples from even farther away (the State Police doesn't need any more overtime).
Calls from activists to break up or drastically restructure police departments, for instance, are more likely to be answered at the state and local level.
Still, the changes Democrats are proposing would be significant.
They will hopefully die a quiet death in the Senate.
--more--"
Also see:
"From Paris to Berlin — as in demonstrations this past week in Japan, Sweden, and Zimbabwe — people around the world once again turned out in solidarity with American protesters calling for justice in the death of a Black man, George Floyd, at the hands of police in Minneapolis. In Paris, authorities barred people from gathering in front of the US Embassy, but thousands protested there anyway in the late afternoon, as well as near the Eiffel Tower, echoing a protest this past week that drew nearly 20,000 people in memory of Adama TraorĂ©, a Frenchman who died in police custody in 2016. The world has been transfixed by the unrest in the United States amid video footage of brutal clashes between police and protesters, along with episodes of looting and destruction — though many cities held peaceful marches and vigils in Floyd’s memory. The global demonstrations, continuing for a week now, were inspired by US demonstrations to call for an end to racism and police brutality in their own countries....."
They are the keepers of Europe’s memory is Jason Horowitz of the New York Times.
Time to cross the Atlantic while remembering the lives lost:
Surfers ‘paddle out,’ circle up in memory of George Floyd
Look up above:
Pentagon ordered National Guard helicopters’ aggressive response in D.C.
Not Trump?
Barr says he didn’t give tactical order to clear protesters
Passing the buck is he?
Meanwhile, across the country:
Protesters pour into cities for another huge mobilization
It is the New York Times busing them in for you.
The second section is a deja vu of the first:
For mothers of Black sons, George Floyd’s death is their worst fear made real — again
There they go again, waving women and children at you!
This is why we march
To propagandize children?
Watch:
...
I thank the source, and he is the only one in the ma$$ media that cares about America and its people as we head towards Maoism and a Great Leap Backward.
(below the B1 fold)
Throughout Mass., rallies continue to protest police brutality, systemic racism
Even in my burg of a town, and it's not surprising. I live in a bastion of progre$$ivism in this state. What I will say is how annoyed at was at the shut down streets during their march. All the young whiteys BLMing around with their signs!
By contrast, they never protested one of the series of racist wars based on lies waged by this country. That was left to 5 old farts protesting on the town common for an hour every Saturday (not anymore though, and I wasn't one of them. I stopped going to protests years ago after I was shushed for talking 9/11 truth).
You know, I'm going to use that argument against anyone who tries to make me kneel or take a knee. I will ask them where have they been as the stacks of brown and black corpses have piled up over wars based on lies these last 20 years at least, wars the same pre$$ screaming about racial injustice collaborated in selling to the American people by blaring the lies from their headlines. Talk about racist!
Well, time to board this post up:
Boston Board Up has been meeting the demands of businesses trying to protect storefronts
It is a shame, scandal, and a crime that they would even need to protect their storefronts.
As I turn into the section I find this:
Judge rules Interior Department decision on Mashpee Wampanoag violates law
How ironic!
The Red man is buried on page B2, and it is at that point that I realize women have been invisible up to now except for a couple of mothers.
Time to let the sun shine in:
Foes of Rhode Island solar project lose legal battle
Can't see because of the glare.
Police identify man killed Thursday in Dorchester shooting
Annual UMass Culinary Conference Goes Virtual for First Time
Here is what else is cooking on campus:
Northeastern to hold virtual day of reflection to remember victims of police brutality
No need to be fickle about it.
Boston high school graduates saluted by caravan of buses and cars
Barry Chin/Globe Staff)
That's right, they are turning the kids into Black Nationalist radicals while trying to soften it with some pink.
Who ya' gonna call?
Cardinal O’Malley says ‘four rogue police officers’ murdered George Floyd in pointed letter on racism
That's a voice dripping with moral authority, 'eh?
For some reason, I didn't think it was a good idea to read anymore of the "news" sections.
I did note that the $port$ section ran for pages C1-C14, with a full-page ad at the end for the Women's Speakers Series the Globe is promoting that features as the keynote speaker a CIA agent who tells us the"problem is not to learn, but unlearn."
Readers, that is how a BRAINWASHER TALKS because we don't "unlearn" things -- what a reprehensible term -- we LEARN FROM OUR MISTAKES and CORRECT the WRONGS!
Yeah, how would you like her at the helm, huh?
Could you manage that?
The obituaries ran from page C15-C26 and only encompassed one section today before the Globe finished out the section by manifesting some $elf-$erving, agenda-pu$hing, full-page advertisements.