New post on Now The End Begins |
|
SM1's BLOG 4 U: AN AGGREGATION OF CONSERVATIVE VIEWS, NEWS, SOME HUMOR, & SCIENCE TOO! ... "♂, ♀, *, †, ∞"
New post on Now The End Begins |
|
Election Therapy From My Basket of Deplorables
By Kevin Dowd
The election was a complete repudiation of Barack Obama: his fantasy world of political correctness, the politicization of the Justice Department and the I.R.S., an out-of-control E.P.A., his neutering of the military, his nonsupport of the police and his fixation on things like transgender bathrooms. Since he became president, his party has lost 63 House seats, 10 Senate seats and 14 governorships.
The country had signaled strongly in the last two midterms that they were not happy. The Dems' answer was to give them more of the same from a person they did not like or trust.
Preaching - and pandering - with a message of inclusion, the Democrats have instead become a party where incivility and bad manners are taken for granted, rudeness is routine, religion is mocked and there is absolutely no respect for a differing opinion. This did not go down well in the Midwest, where Trump flipped three blue states and 44 electoral votes.
The rudeness reached its peak when Vice President-elect Mike Pence was booed by attendees of "Hamilton" and then pompously lectured by the cast. This may play well with the New York theater crowd but is considered boorish and unacceptable by those of us taught to respect the office of the president and vice president, if not the occupants.
Here is a short primer for the young protesters. If your preferred candidate loses, there is no need for mass hysteria, canceled midterms, safe spaces, crying rooms or group primal screams. You might understand this better if you had not received participation trophies, undeserved grades to protect your feelings or even if you had a proper understanding of civics. The Democrats are now crying that Hillary had more popular votes. That can be her participation trophy.
If any of my sons had told me they were too distraught over a national election to take an exam, I would have brought them home the next day, fearful of the instruction they were receiving. Not one of the top 50 colleges mandate one semester of Western Civilization. Maybe they should rethink that.
Mr. Trump received over 62 million votes, not all of them cast by homophobes, Islamaphobes, racists, sexists, misogynists or any other "ists." I would caution Trump deniers that all of the crying and whining is not good preparation for the coming storm. The liberal media, both print and electronic, has lost all credibility. I am reasonably sure that none of the mainstream print media had stories prepared for a Trump victory. I watched the networks and cable stations in their midnight meltdown - embodied by Rachel Maddow explaining to viewers that they were not having a "terrible, terrible dream" and that they had not died and "gone to hell."
The media's criticism of Trump's high-level picks as "not diverse enough" or "too white and male" - a day before he named two women and offered a cabinet position to an African-American - magnified this fact.
Here is a final word to my Democratic friends. The election is over. There will not be a do-over. So let me bid farewell to Al Sharpton, Ben Rhodes and the Clintons. Note to Cher, Barbra, Amy Schumer and Lena Dunham: Your plane is waiting. And to Jon Stewart, who talked about moving to another planet: Your spaceship is waiting. To Bruce Springsteen, Jay Z, Beyoncé and Katy Perry, thanks for the free concerts. And finally, to all the foreign countries that contributed to the Clinton Foundation, there will not be a payoff or a rebate.
As Eddie Murphy so eloquently stated in the movie "48 Hrs.": "There's a new sheriff in town." And he is going to be here for 1,461 days. Merry Christmas.
.Some motorists say they deliberately travel this route just to read the quote which brightens their day.Here’s A Selection:The lady behind this wonderful initiative at Hutton Hyde Park is Alison Billett.She told SA People: “We inherited the board from the previous owner, Dick Hutton, when we bought the filling station from him almost 20 years ago.“We continued the tradition and it has become a landmark– more so now that it’s on social media!“Not a day goes by when I don’t get a call or a visit from someone to tell me how much they appreciate the message – it seems that every day there’s something that just speaks to what is going on in someone’s life and that inspires or motivates them.“Having people come and tell me their stories and how the quote helped them in some small way is what motivates me to keep writing!“We use a variety of quotations – some are topical, some are funny, some are inspirational, some even reflect what is going on in my life that day!“Different things appeal to different people…“The boards were spotted by a motivational speaker from the UK, Geoff Ramm, when he was driving by one day and he was so taken by them he included a piece about them in his book!“The boards have appeared many times in newspapers and magazines and been spoken about on radio stations all over the world. 9GAG has re-tweeted them a few times too!”Bob 95 FM in the USA recently posted Alison’s “Rest in Peace” quote which has now been shared over a quarter of a million times around the world!
President-elect Donald Trump introduces retired Gen. James Mattis as his appointed Secretary of Defense during a Tuesday rally in Fayetteville, N.C. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)
By Todd Beamon | Tuesday, 06 Dec 2016 08:29 PM
President-elect Donald Trump said he would only use military force "when it is in the vital national security of the United States" and pledged Tuesday to seek elimination of the federal budget sequester.
"We don't want to have a depleted military, because we're all over the place fighting in areas that just we shouldn't be fighting in," Trump told supporters at rally at the Crown Coliseum in Fayetteville, N.C., on the second stop of his "thank you" tour of battleground states. "We're going to have such a strong, powerful military. It is not going to be depleted any longer."
"We're going to have the finest equipment in the world," Trump added of the nation's armed forces. "It is going to be new. It is going to be modern. It is going to be clean. It is going to be the best.
"We're not going to be a depleted military any more."
"We will stop racing to topple foreign governments – foreign regimes that we know nothing about – that we shouldn't be involved with," the president-elect said.
"Instead, our focus must be on defeating terrorism and destroying ISIS. And we will."
Trump's first stop on his tour was Ohio last week — and he is scheduled to visit Iowa and Michigan later this week.
Reiterating his campaign theme of "peace through strength," Trump said he would ask Congress to eliminate the sequester that began in fiscal 2013 in his first budget request.
The automatic spending cuts, to last through 2021, have caused drastic reductions to the nation's armed forces.
"I call it 'depletion,'" Trump said. "Gets worse and worse every year.
"Not for our military."
He added a Trump administration would work with other nations that share his mission on eliminating terrorism and promoting peace because "we want to strengthen our friendships and seek out new friendships.
"Rather than a rigid dogma, we're guided by the lessons of history and desire to promote stability — stability all over."
"This destructive cycle of intervention and chaos must finally, folks, come to an end," Trump said.
"We seek harmony and goodwill among the nations of the world — and we believe that respect for mutual sovereignty helps form the basis of trust and understanding."
"But we don't want people taking advantage of us anymore," Trump warned. "We don't want countries taking advantage of us
Trump also introduced retired Marine Corps Gen. James Mattis as nominee for Defense Secretary, whom he referred to by his nickname of "Mad Dog."
Mattis, 66, was a key commander during the Iraq invasion. He led the 1st Marine Division and later oversaw the retaking of Fallujah in 2004.
He retired from the Marines in 2013 after a 41-year career.
"This is going to be so great for us," Trump said. "He led an assault battalion in Operation Desert Storm, and you saw what happened.
"That was the way you were supposed to lead it. There was no games."
"'Mad Dog' plays no games," Trump said.
In his brief remarks, Mattis thanked Trump for "the confidence that you have shown in me."
"I'm grateful for the opportunity to return to our troops, because I know how committed they are and how devoted they are to the defense of our country, the defense of our Constitution," he said.
In other comments, Trump told the rally he would introduce his veteran's agenda, and he pledged to "see what we're going to do" to people who burn the American flag.
"We salute their sacrifice, and we salute the flag they fought to protect," Trump said as he saluted American soldiers stationed in the Tar Heel State.
"We love our flag," the president-elect continued. "And we don't like it when we see people ripping up our flag and burning our flag. We don't like it."
"And we'll see what we're going to do about that," Trump said. "OK? We're going to see."
RT @anti_commie32: Keep up the great work!!! https://t.co/FIAnl1hxwG — Joseph Moran (@JMM7156) May 2, 2023 from Twitter https://twitter....