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SEEKONK, MASSACHUSETTS, United States

Saturday, April 9, 2022

THIS IS HOW A U.S. SENATOR SHOULD TAKE ON THE GOP AND TRUMP: SENATOR SCHATZ EXPOSING HAWLEY FOR WHAT HE REALLY IS: A TRUMP STOOGE AND A FASCIST PUTIN SUPPORTER.

                                                        KEEP IT UP SENATOR SCHATZ.                                      

                                                                    SEE VIDEO.                                    

                                          https://twitter.com/i/status/1512260696347709455


                                    U.S. SENATOR BRIAN SCHATZ- DEMOCRAT FROM HAWAII.

CAN'T ARGUE WITH THAT...

 


CAN A BLACK MAN BE FASCIST HATE-MONGER? MEET VERNON JONES.

 FROM BUSINESS INSIDER.

Trump-backed Vernon Jones says civil rights don't apply to gay people because 'they can actually change' to become straight

Georgia Republican congressional candidate Vernon Jones said Thursday that civil rights for Black people don't apply to gay people because "they can actually change" to become straight, HuffPost reported.

"Let me tell you, civil rights for Blacks and gay rights for gays are two different things," Jones said during an appearance on Steve Bannon's "War Room" podcast.

Jones also claimed that people can "go from being straight to being gay to being transgender and all these other genders." He added, "But when you're Black, I don't have a choice. When did gays come over here on ships?"

Jones doubled down on this argument on Twitter, saying comparing being Black to being gay is a "damn lie."

Jones, the self-proclaimed "Black Donald Trump," pledged his support for the former president while serving as a Democrat in the state House of Representatives.

Election records, however, show Jones cast a Democrat Party ballot on election day for the presidential primary, per The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

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MY RESPONSE:

I GUESS BY THE STANDARDS OF THIS TRUMPIAN, CIVIL RIGHTS DON'T APPLY TO JEWS, CATHOLICS, BAPTISTS, MORMONS., etc. I can't tell by looking at them what they are, and they can change... IN FACT, I GUESS NO BEHAVIOR, OR CHOICE OF LIFESTYLE DESERVES PROTECTION, BECAUSE THE INDIVIDUAL CAN ALWAYS "CHANGE."

Tell me, VERNON, Native Americans didn't come over on ships, so I guess they better not claim TO HAVE BEEN VICTIMIZED, RIGHT? UNLESS, OF COURSE, THEIR APPEARANCE MAKES THEIR ETHNICITY APPARENT TO ALL.

DAVID MCDONALD - PUBLISHER.

















Friday, April 8, 2022

CNN: Trump Jr. text shows ideas to overturn 2020 election.


WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald Trump Jr. texted White House chief of staff Mark Meadows two days after the 2020 presidential election with strategies for overturning the result if Trump’s father lost, CNN reported Friday.

The text was sent two days before Joe Biden was declared the winner, according to CNN. It reportedly laid out strategies that then-President Donald Trump’s team pursued in the following months as they disseminated misinformation about election fraud and pressured state and federal officials to assist in that effort.

The cable news network reported that Trump Jr.’s text made “specific reference to filing lawsuits and advocating recounts to prevent certain swing states from certifying their results.” It also suggested that if those measures didn’t work, lawmakers in Congress could dismiss the electoral results and vote to keep President Trump in office.

Trump Jr.’s lawyer Alan S. Futerfas, in a statement Friday to CNN, said: “After the election, Don received numerous messages from supporters and others. Given the date, this message likely originated from someone else and was forwarded.”

CNN said the Trump Jr. text had been obtained by the House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the U.S. Capitol. In the last week, the committee has interviewed former President Trump’s daughter Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner. Their virtual testimonies are the closest lawmakers have gotten to the former president.

Separately on Friday, Ali Alexander, a conservative activist who helped found the “Stop the Steal” movement, said he had received a subpoena to provide testimony to a federal grand jury as part of the Justice Department’s wide investigation into the insurrection.

In a statement through his attorney, Alexander said the subpoena was seeking information about the “Save America Rally” that was held at the Ellipse — hosted by the pro-Trump nonprofit organization called Women for America First — which thousands had attended before a surge of Trump supporters stormed into the Capitol on Jan. 6.

“I don’t believe I have information that will be useful to them but I’m cooperating as best I can further reiterating that I’m not a target because I did nothing wrong,” he said.

Alexander voluntarily appeared for hours in December before the House panel investigating the insurrection, providing congressional investigators with a slew of documents and information about his communications with lawmakers.

In court documents, Alexander’s lawyers have said he told congressional investigators that he remembers having “a few phone conversations” with Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., and had exchanged some text messages with Rep. Mo Brooks, R-Ala., in the run-up to the Jan. 6 rallies.

“I did nothing wrong and I am not in possession of evidence that anyone else had plans to commit unlawful acts,” Alexander said. “I denounce anyone who planned to subvert my permitted event and the other permitted events of that day on Capitol grounds to stage any counterproductive activities.”