Sunday, January 21, 2018

Retweeted Fox News (@FoxNews): .@KellyannePolls: "Since @POTUS took office, 863,000 new jobs were filled by women. Over half a million American women have entered the work force since he took over." @JudgeJeanine https://t.co/hEUlNwsKz7

Retweeted Fox News (@FoxNews): .@KellyannePolls: "Since @POTUS took office, 863,000 new jobs were filled by women. Over half a million American women have entered the work force since he took over." @JudgeJeanine https://t.co/hEUlNwsKz7
by Jm Moran

January 21, 2018 at 01:33PM
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Retweeted Fox News (@FoxNews): .@EricTrump: "My father was elected for one reason, and that's because he actually believes in putting America first, which is overwhelming among the citizens of this country." @JudgeJeanine https://t.co/8qKt8Bb199

Retweeted Fox News (@FoxNews): .@EricTrump: "My father was elected for one reason, and that's because he actually believes in putting America first, which is overwhelming among the citizens of this country." @JudgeJeanine https://t.co/8qKt8Bb199
by Jm Moran

January 21, 2018 at 01:33PM
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Retweeted Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump): Great to see how hard Republicans are fighting for our Military and Safety at the Border. The Dems just want illegal immigrants to pour into our nation unchecked. If stalemate continues, Republicans should go to 51% (Nuclear Option) and vote on real, long term budget, no C.R.’s!

Retweeted Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump): Great to see how hard Republicans are fighting for our Military and Safety at the Border. The Dems just want illegal immigrants to pour into our nation unchecked. If stalemate continues, Republicans should go to 51% (Nuclear Option) and vote on real, long term budget, no C.R.’s!
by Jm Moran

January 21, 2018 at 01:33PM
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Watching Bellator tape of Chael Sonner v Quinton Jackson. Don’t care for Chael’s mouth, but during the National Anthem he stood respectfully with hand over heart! The other guy showed no respect to US! Win or lose, I have a new respect for Chael “The America Ganster” Sonner!

Watching Bellator tape of Chael Sonner v Quinton Jackson. Don’t care for Chael’s mouth, but during the National Anthem he stood respectfully with hand over heart! The other guy showed no respect to US! Win or lose, I have a new respect for Chael “The America Ganster” Sonner!
by Jm Moran

January 21, 2018 at 01:17PM
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Restoring Persecuted Middle East Christians' Faith in America by Johny Messo January 21, 2018 at 4:00 am https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/11745/persecuted-christians-middle-east Send Print Share14 Christians, members of the largest religion in the world, have become the most persecuted faith group but lack a political voice. The White House urgently needs to develop a clear vision of how to help Christianity survive -- let alone thrive -- in its homeland. At the moment, there seems to be no foreign policy based on this vision. Without urgent action on the part of the United States, Christianity in biblically historic lands, such as Iraq, Syria and Turkey, will be clinically dead before the year 2030. The current administration in Washington has expressed, in words, that this situation cannot be tolerated. It is time now for deeds, as well, to reverse the previous administrations' virtual abandonment of Christians in the Middle East to the fate of persecution at the hands of Islamists. In September 2007, then-Senator Obama wrote a letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, expressing "concern for Iraq's Christian and other non-Muslim religious minorities, including Catholic Chaldeans, Syriac Orthodox, Assyrian, Armenian and Protestant Christians, as well as smaller Yazidi and Sabean Mandaean communities." Obama warned: "These communities appear to be targeted by Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish militants... And according to the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, 'violence against members of Iraq's Christian community occurs throughout the country'... Such violence bespeaks a humanitarian crisis of grave proportions. The severe violations of religious freedom faced by members of these indigenous communities, and their potential extinction from their ancient homeland, is deeply alarming... and demand an urgent response from our government." In spite of Senator Obama's having addressed the growing threat to Christians and other ethno-religious minorities in Iraq, their situation would only deteriorate during the eight years of his presidency. While President George W. Bush may have opened the gates of hell for Iraq's Christians, President Obama not only widened them, but unleashed the demons on Syria. The following give some idea of this downward spiral: Before the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, after earlier underreported exoduses of Christians from the country, there were 1.4 million Christians in Iraq, making up 5.4% of its overall population of 26 million. Today, 15 years later, Iraq's Christian population stands at less than 250,000, a drop of 82%, and a mere 0.65% of Iraq's general and much larger population of 38 million. In 2011, there were 1.8 - 2 million Christians in Syria, who made up 8% of the country's total population of 23 million. Today, less than seven years later, no more than 500,000 Christians, out of a total population of 18.2 million can be found in their war-torn homeland -- a drop of more than 72%. Enter the Trump Administration The classical Christian populations in the Middle East consist of Copts, Greeks, Armenians and Arameans -- the latter being the indigenous people of Southeast Turkey, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. As a stateless Semitic people, who live in a global diaspora, the Arameans include the traditionally Aramaic-speaking churches of the Syriac Orthodox, Syriac Catholics, Chaldeans, Nestorians (also known as Assyrians), Maronites, Melkite Orthodox and Melkite Catholics. Their incessant pleas and cries for help from the international community seem to have fallen on deaf ears for more than a decade; these Middle Eastern Christians feel abandoned and betrayed by both the United Nations and America. Statements emerging from the Trump administration, however, have given rise to new hope. Addressing the "In Defense of Christians" summit in Washington at the end of October, Vice President Mike Pence delivered a message that "help is on the way." Declaring that the U.N. "has too often failed to help the most vulnerable communities... [and] too often denies their funding requests," Pence promised that "from this day forward, America will provide support directly to persecuted [Christian] communities through USAID." Pictured: Vice President Mike Pence making a speech at the "In Defense of Christians" summit, on October 25, 2017, in which he said: "from this day forward, America will provide support directly to persecuted [Christian] communities through USAID." (Image source: Channel 90 TV video screenshot) As an Aramean (Syriac Orthodox), whose family originates from Southeast Turkey -- where the indigenous Arameans have been reduced to fewer than 2,000 people struggling for survival -- I felt encouraged. As the head of the World Council of Arameans (Syriacs), an NGO with special consultative status at the U.N., I can testify to the truth of Pence's statements. Our organization frequently has brought the needs and challenges of the Christians and other threatened minorities to the attention of the international community -- mainly through the Human Rights Council of the U.N. Human Rights Council and its Commission of Inquiry on Syria -- to no avail. This is why persecuted Christians greeted Trump's election last year with cautious optimism, anxious to see whether he would follow Obama's example and ignore their plight, or take action on behalf of his coreligionists abroad. Statements Trump made, both before and after his inauguration -- such as tweeting, "Christians in the Middle East have been executed in large numbers. We cannot allow this horror to continue!" -- indicated that he might actually come to their aid. When Trump entered the Oval Office, cynics argued that Trump's words were hollow. In an op-ed in the Washington Post in January 2017, Daniel Williams, author of Forsaken: The Persecution of Christians in Today's Middle East, called Middle Eastern Christians "Trump's pawns." Yet Trump's actions, so far, have involved putting the genies of Bush and Obama back in the bottle. Trump ended the covert CIA program of 2013 to arm the "rebels" in Syria; he spoke out against "radical Islamic terrorism" during his first address to Congress; he visited the heart of the Muslim world in Riyadh, where he urged leaders of Islamic states to "drive out the terrorists from your places of worship;" and he contributed to the defeat of ISIS in Iraq and Syria. All of the above are fulfillments of his campaign promises, and thus bode well for the fate of the remaining Christians in the Middle East. Much work needs to be done to help them, however. To this end, the White House urgently needs to develop a clear vision of how to help Christianity survive -- let alone thrive -- in its homeland. At the moment, there seems to be no foreign policy based on this vision. Trump might launch an international conference -- similar to one held in Budapest in October -- to address and engage the lay and religious Mideast Christian leaders, with the participation of world representatives. Meanwhile, the Trump administration should pressure the U.N. Security Council to recognize the genocide, committed by ISIS, which uprooted many tens of thousands of Aramean Christians, Yazidis and others from their ancestral lands. It is not enough to defeat and punish ISIS and other terrorist groups; their victims must be acknowledged and provided help. America also could demand that the U.N. declare an International Day of Solidarity with the Threatened Christians of the Middle East. Christian America's Duty and Role America was founded on Judeo-Christian values. Almost all U.S. presidents, including Trump, and members of Congress, have identified themselves as Christian. Yet Christians, members of the largest religion in the world, have become the most persecuted faith group but lack a political voice. In addition, as a result of failed U.S. foreign policy, Christians have vanished in record numbers from the lands where the traditional and still main religion of America (and Europe) was born. In view of its Christian roots and identity, America has a moral obligation to the cradle of Christianity from becoming "Christenrein" ("free of Christians"). Christians in and from the Middle East should be viewed as reliable partners and allies in securing America's interest in a more viable and prosperous region, where Jews, Christians, Muslims and others are able to coexist peacefully on equal footing. Johny Messo, author of "Arameans and the Making of 'Assyrians': The Last Aramaic-speaking Christians of the Middle East," is from the Netherlands and presides over the World Council of Arameans, a worldwide umbrella organization of the Aramean (Syriac) people and an NGO in special consultative status with the United Nations.

215,000,000 Christians Persecuted, Mostly by Muslims by Raymond Ibrahim • January 21, 2018 at 5:00 am In short, the overwhelming majority of persecution that these 215 million Christians experience around the world — especially the worst forms, such as rape and murder — occurs at the hands of Muslims. If time is on the side of Christians living under Communist regimes, it is not on the side of Christians living under Islam. The center of the great Christian Byzantine Empire is now an increasingly intolerant, rapidly Islamizing Turkey. Carthage, once a bastion of Christianity — where one of Christendom's greatest theologians, St. Augustine, was born and where the New Testament canon was confirmed in 397 — is today 99% Muslim-majority Tunisia. As what began in the seventh century comes closer to fruition and the entire world becomes more Islamic and "infidel" free, as in Iraq, confronting these uncomfortable facts is at least a welcome first step in countering the problem. A militiaman from the Nineveh Plain Protection Units (NPU) walks through a destroyed church on November 8, 2016 in Qaraqosh, Iraq. The NPU is a militia made up of Assyrian Christians that was formed in late 2014 to defend against ISIS. Qaraqosh is a mostly Assyrian city near of Mosul that was captured by ISIS in August 2014, and liberated in November 2016. (Photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images) "215 million Christians experience high levels of persecution" around the world, according to Open Doors, a human rights organization. On its recently released World Watch List 2018, which ranks the world's 50 worst nations wherein to be Christian, 3,066 Christians were killed, 1,252 abducted, and 1,020 raped or sexually harassed on account of their faith; and 793 churches were attacked or destroyed. The Islamic world had the lion's share of this persecution; 38 of the 50 worst nations are Muslim-majority. The report further cites "Islamic oppression" behind the "extreme persecution" that prevails in eight of the 10 worst nations. In short, the overwhelming majority of persecution that these 215 million Christians experience around the world — especially the worst forms, such as rape and murder — occurs at the hands of Muslims. Continue Reading Article

DISGUSTING! Another ‘Hate Hoax’ Exposed...


Last fall a swastika, and other racially charged graffiti, was found at the University of Maryland in the men’s bathroom. Was it for real? Like much of the racist graffiti being found these days, the answer is NO. That case is now solved. The perpetrator was Terrell Demonte Alexander, an 18-year-old former university employee. According to The College Fix, Alexander is black—which suggests this incident was a hoax, or at the least an act of intimidation committed by a member of the targeted minority group. It’s the second such deceptive case at the university in the past few months. Last October, police arrested Ronald Alford, a 52-year-old black former employee, for spray-painting a swastika on campus. At the University of Maryland, workplace grievances seem to be more important motivators of bias incidents than racism. (via: The Gateway Pundit) It makes you wonder what perpetrators of these hoaxes think they are going to accomplish. If they are looking for media attention, they definitely get it. The question is: are they bringing the right kind of attention to their cause? Since most of these incidents are turning out to be hoaxes it seems that they are ultimately getting the WRONG kind of attention. Eventually even liberal media is going to look at these incidents and think, is this for real? What do you think about these ‘hate hoaxes?’ Do you agree they are ultimately counter-productive?

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