U.S. Civil War

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Guest

Re: U.S. Civil War

Post by Guest »

There is also an enormous shift underway in public opinion and party identification. The Democrat Party’s dramatic shift to a deeply leftwing, pro-transsexual, anti-white, and anti-Semitic ideology is a driving factor. The participation of “the squad” in pro-Hamas rallies is a symptom of this new pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel bias. The fact that 12 Democrat state legislators walked out of the North Carolina State House in protest of a resolution pledging support to Israel is another example.
Game over.

Guest

Re: U.S. Civil War

Post by Guest »

CAUGHT RED-HANDED.
@CocaCola
deletes its support for BLM.

One screenshot is of
@CocaCola
's website before BLM supported Hamas parachuting into a concert to kill Israeli civilians.

The other is from this morning.

Editing your website is not enough. Americans DEMAND an apology.

Ibn Battuta

Re: U.S. Civil War

Post by Ibn Battuta »

Guest wrote:
Mon Oct 23, 2023 10:36 am
CAUGHT RED-HANDED.
@CocaCola
deletes its support for BLM.

One screenshot is of
@CocaCola
's website before BLM supported Hamas parachuting into a concert to kill Israeli civilians.

The other is from this morning.

Editing your website is not enough. Americans DEMAND an apology.
Does this mean that POCs can be arrested for raping, robbing, and murdering whites?

It says a lot that this is what it took to take out BLM...

guest

Re: U.S. Civil War

Post by guest »

https://apnews.com/article/michigan-isr ... 33523882a7

in other news: Biden has zero chance of winning the next election. Zero! And I don't even the hate guy. I didn't vote against him. What I see is the implosion of the Democratic party along racial lines. The Democrats have whipped up racial division as a campaign strategy, and now they are facing blow back.

This article comes form the AP, but if you look online, you will find dozens of news articles saying the same thing. This is pure irony, or perhaps its karma. The Democrats are reaping the whirlwind. Not only that, this country is even more divided. Politically, we are divided; racially, we are divided; socially, we are divided. The Gaza episode will blown those divisions wide open. I don't see a regeneration happening, even in this era. Liberals, leftists, WHATEVER you want to call them, have left America dangerously balkanized.

I don't see the Republicans winning either. The Republicans are as divided as ever, but probably not as badly as the Democrats.

Biden is out. So is Kamala. Trump might be able to win a plurality, if he is allowed to run. I think the Democrats well do anything necessary to see Trump railroaded into prison. I have mixed feelings about Trump, but I think what the Democrats are doing to him and Rudolph Giuliani, the man who saved New York City, who has now been bankrupted, lost his home, and faces prison, is criminal. Rudolph Giuliani, the man who broke the power of the mob in city is going to prison!

Will we even make it to 2024?

Guest

Re: U.S. Civil War

Post by Guest »

Democrats Splinter Over Israel as the Young, Diverse Left Rages at Biden
:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
The Democratic Party’s yearslong unity behind President Biden is beginning to erode over his steadfast support of Israel in its escalating war with the Palestinians, with a left-leaning coalition of young voters and people of color showing more discontent toward him than at any point since he was elected.

From Capitol Hill to Hollywood, in labor unions and liberal activist groups, and on college campuses and in high school cafeterias, a raw emotional divide over the conflict is convulsing liberal America.
https://dnyuz.com/2023/10/27/democrats ... -at-biden/

Guest

Re: U.S. Civil War

Post by Guest »

America splinters over the Israel-Hamas war

On college campuses, in workplaces, on city streets and inside the Capitol building and the White House, opinions around the Israel-Hamas war are starkly divided — and the chasm is growing.

Why it matters: The deep divisions are roiling American society, and they have the potential to reshape U.S. politics.

Zoom out: “Most foreign policy issues do not generate these kinds of strong feelings in the U.S.,” says Guy Ziv, a professor at American University’s School of International Service. “There has always been a disproportionate interest in this issue.”

That's in part because of strong connections that Jewish and Christian communities in the U.S. have to Israel, as well as the historical alliance between the two countries.

There’s also a larger media presence in Israel than other hotspots around the world, Ziv notes.
On top of that, social media platforms are catalyzing heated debates and provocations, he says. "Social media tends to shed more heat than light, and there's a lot of misinformation and disinformation on there."

Zoom in: Tensions are bubbling over in ugly ways across the country.

The Anti-Defamation League says it recorded 213 antisemitic incidents between Oct. 7 and Oct. 23, compared with 64 incidents during the same period last year.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations says it received 774 complaints about Islamophobic incidents between Oct. 7 and Oct. 24.
What’s happening: Institutions are scrambling to respond.

Cornell University cancelled Friday classes after a 21-year-old student was arrested on campus for posting hate speech and antisemitic threats online.
Columbia University launched an antisemitism task force and a doxxing resource group for pro-Palestinian students this week. Students have seen job offers revoked for taking part in pro-Palestinian protests.
27 law firms signed a letter to university deans this week urging them to condemn antisemitism and Islamophobia on campus.
A number of high profile figures have fielded blowback or even lost from their jobs after expressing pro-Palestinian views.

Samira Nasr, editor-in-chief of Harper's Bazaar drew sharp criticism after expressing concern for Palestinians in Gaza when Israel initially cut off water supplies, and she issued a public apology, The Guardian reports.
Michael Eisen, the Jewish editor-in-chief of the science journal eLife, was dismissed from his post after retweeted a satirical article from "The Onion," which he said "call[ed] out indifference to the lives of Palestinian civilians."
Maha Dakhil, a top Hollywood agent whose clients include Tom Cruise and Anne Hathaway, apologized and stepped down from her leadership role at Creative Artists Agency after posting about the situation in Gaza on Instagram, the L.A. Times reports.
In Washington, congressional Democrats are growing increasingly vocal in their critcism of the war effort, Axios' Andrew Solender reports.

Nearly 60 House and Senate Democrats signed a letter to Secretary of State Antony Blinken released Friday night urging him to press the Israeli government to do more to limit civilian casualties.
President Biden has maintained his support for Israel, but has also called for humanitarian aid to Palestinians in Gaza.
What to watch: Public opinion will continue to shift and divisions may continue to grow as the war unfolds.

Protests and counter-protests have turned into screaming matches, with neither side listening to the other, Amaney Jamal, the Palestinian dean of Princeton's public policy school and Keren Yarhi-Milo, the Israeli dean of Columbia's counterpart, write in a N.Y. Times op-ed.
"Nuance doesn't play well in a demonstration, and it certainly doesn't play well on social media," says Ziv.
The bottom line: Pay attention to this moment — and how leaders handle it. What politicians, university leaders and CEOs say and do has the power to make or break our trust in institutions.
https://www.axios.com/2023/11/04/ameri ... -hamas-war

Cool Breeze
Posts: 2960
Joined: Sun Jul 26, 2020 10:19 pm

Re: U.S. Civil War

Post by Cool Breeze »

Make or break?

Trust in institutions was gone long ago.

Earth to Axios, Earth to Axios

An-Axios

h UK native

Re: U.S. Civil War

Post by h UK native »

Each year, hundreds of thousands suffer from crimes because we have not yet enacted repatriation of migrants. That’s why the younger generations’ moods are changing. We don’t want government by talk, we want government by action.

Cool Breeze
Posts: 2960
Joined: Sun Jul 26, 2020 10:19 pm

Re: U.S. Civil War

Post by Cool Breeze »

h UK native wrote:
Sat Nov 11, 2023 7:49 pm
Each year, hundreds of thousands suffer from crimes because we have not yet enacted repatriation of migrants. That’s why the younger generations’ moods are changing. We don’t want government by talk, we want government by action.
Do you actually see that happening? That would mean your leaders actually care about you.

Now you know why Hitler came around.

Guest

Re: U.S. Civil War

Post by Guest »

Cool Breeze wrote:
Thu Nov 16, 2023 3:40 pm
h UK native wrote:
Sat Nov 11, 2023 7:49 pm
Each year, hundreds of thousands suffer from crimes because we have not yet enacted repatriation of migrants. That’s why the younger generations’ moods are changing. We don’t want government by talk, we want government by action.
Do you actually see that happening? That would mean your leaders actually care about you.

Now you know why Hitler came around.
Anyone else feeling the dire need to fortify and prepare for the impending Reconquista?

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