Wednesday, April 10, 2019
Comment on House Dems’ Ominous White Nationalist Hearing Typifies The Woke Left And The Silent Right
Comment by Average Joe
My understanding of the answer would basically be that MAGA refers to a time, say pre-1965, when the country was 90+% White, or of European heritage if you prefer, and before the so called 'civil rights movement' eliminated or greatly eroded the idea of private property rights and the right of association by choice as opposed to government dictate. It is also considered to be before Ted Kennedy's immigration law that has been used to overrun the country with third world immigrants and put the country on the path to being ruled by non-Whites, every liberal's wet dream.
Any and everything that questions the government's dictates and or immigration policy, by inference, means you prefer the low crime, peace, good schools, etc. rather than the conditions we now 'enjoy' and hence the label "White Nationalism."
Funny how no one ever refers to policies that will eliminate a White majority, you know those who built the country, as "anti-White", isn't it? Of course using such a term would also get you called a 'White Nationalist' and of course a 'racist."
For what it's worth, you see the same scenario being played our in many European countries as well. Globalist and those who benefit from their policies don't respond kindly to questioning their results.
Always remember...anti-racist is codeword for anti-White.
America Is No Longer A Nation
Via Tedmund Chan
The America in which I grew up and lived my early adult life was a nation. Over the course of my life I have watched my country turn into a Tower of Babel. Homogeneity and shared values permitted us to understand one another. This doesn’t mean that there was uniformity or that things were perfect. A Baptist wasn’t a Catholic. A WASP was not a black laborer. A female was not a male. Blacks and poor whites had a hard time becoming middle class, but it could be done. It was possible for middle class people to become “well off,” but difficult to become rich. Immigration was controlled, and the reduction of inflows had helped the Irish and Italians to integrate into society.
Police were helpful and didn’t burst into homes with guns blazing or rough you up on traffic stops. On important issues, compromises could be reached and reforms implemented. English was the language. If you telephoned a service provider, utility, or bank, you quickly were connected to a real person capable of handling every aspect of whatever you were calling about. Today you wait through the Spanish language option for the robo-voice listing the options that might have something to do with the reason for your call. The companies save money and make profits by imposing their service costs on customers.
More @ Paul Craig Roberts
Most of the $33 Billion in Remittances to Mexico Flow Via U.S. Govt. Banking Program
Though President Trump said he would block money transfers to Mexico to fund a much-needed border wall, Mexicans in the U.S. sent a record $33.48 billion in remittances last year and a big chunk of it flowed through a government program operated by the Federal Reserve. This means that, amid an onslaught of illegal immigration, the U.S. government is largely responsible for the billions in remittances flowing south of the border from illegal aliens. Figures released by Mexico’s central bank show that 104 million transactions were executed in 2018, nearly six million more than the previous year.
More @ Judicial Watch
America's Sovereign States: The Obscure History of How 10 Independent States Joined the U.S
Via Alex
It is often said that before the Civil War, the United States “are,” but after the War, the United States “is.” This is a reference to the formerly theoretically sovereign nature of each state as compared to “one nation, indivisible.”
More than just the theoretic sovereignty of the individual states, the territory now comprising the U.S. has a rich history of sovereign states outside the control of the federal government. Some of these you’ve almost certainly heard of, but a lot of them are quite obscure. Each points toward a potential American secession of the future.
It is often said that before the Civil War, the United States “are,” but after the War, the United States “is.” This is a reference to the formerly theoretically sovereign nature of each state as compared to “one nation, indivisible.”
More than just the theoretic sovereignty of the individual states, the territory now comprising the U.S. has a rich history of sovereign states outside the control of the federal government. Some of these you’ve almost certainly heard of, but a lot of them are quite obscure. Each points toward a potential American secession of the future.
More @ Ammo.Com
Breaking Report: Western Journal Blacklisted by Google, Despite CEO’s Testimony to Congress
Via Billy
Google reportedly blacklists news sites by manipulating search results, contrary to congressional testimony offered by the tech giant’s CEO in December.
Among the conservative sites Google has blacklisted, according to The Daily Caller, is the Conservative Tribune, which is the commentary page for The Western Journal.
“The purpose of the blacklist will be to bar the sites from surfacing in any Search feature or news product. It will not cause a demotion in the organic search results or de-index them altogether,” reads the policy document obtained by The Daily Caller.
The blacklist applies to most search features, like “top news” and “videos.”
Among the conservative sites Google has blacklisted, according to The Daily Caller, is the Conservative Tribune, which is the commentary page for The Western Journal.
“The purpose of the blacklist will be to bar the sites from surfacing in any Search feature or news product. It will not cause a demotion in the organic search results or de-index them altogether,” reads the policy document obtained by The Daily Caller.
The blacklist applies to most search features, like “top news” and “videos.”
More @ WJ
The single-sentence Russia bombshell that Attorney General Barr delivered to Congress
Sitting in the hot seat of a high-profile congressional hearing has a way of unmasking the mettle of any witness.
Attorney General William Barr showed us Tuesday, in his first testimony since the end of the Russia probe, that he’s not big on emotion, animation or flashy presentations. Calm, scholarly and precise was his modus operandi, even as Democrats tried to lob a bomb or two his way.
But the even-keeled nature of his two-hour-plus performance shouldn’t blind us to one momentous declaration he made to lawmakers.
More @ The Hill
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