Category: US News

  • Trump’s Biker Friends Threatened “Arrogant Little Bitch Pelosi” If She Tries To Go For Impeachment

    Trump’s Biker Friends Threatened “Arrogant Little Bitch Pelosi” If She Tries To Go For Impeachment

    The founder of one of the nation’s largest biker groups, Rolling Thunder, has publicly proclaimed his opposition to Nancy Pelosi and any action she might take against Trump in the area of impeachment. Artie Muller, the executive director of the group, said that thousands of bikers would descend on the nation’s capital if the House Speaker, who he called an “arrogant little bitch,” were to begin impeachment proceedings.

    During a speech at the National Mall, Muller said Pelosi should lose her seat in Congress for pursuing investigations of the President rather than focusing on prisoners of war:

    I would like to see Nancy Pelosi and her hypocrites work on the POW issue instead of bullshitting [and] aggravating the President of the United States, who’s doing a fantastic job.”

    Later in the speech, Muller’s comments got considerably more personal about Pelosi, as he remarked on the infrastructure meeting that Trump pretended he was going to hold recently with Democratic leaders in Congress before bolting for an “impromptu” (but clearly pre-staged) speech from the Rose Garden:

    He walks out of a meeting with Nancy Pelosi not because he’s had a hissy fit like she said. Because he’s tired of putting up with her bullshit. We should look at her and her family background. I have to look at it myself because somebody told me her family background. They’re all a bunch of damn thieves. Let’s investigate Nancy Pelosi and throw her the hell out of Congress.”

    It would be surprising if Muller’s threats are not investigated by the FBI.

    The Memorial Day gathering of the bikers this year was scheduled to be the last mass event, with plans to do separate, smaller gatherings in the coming years. Some estimates put the number of motorcycles that rode through DC over the holiday at a million.

    Trump didn’t seem to get the memo about the group’s change in plans for future gatherings, tweeting that weekend in contradiction with the group’s plans:

    The Great Patriots of Rolling Thunder WILL be coming back to Washington, D.C. next year, & hopefully for many years to come. It is where they want to be, & where they should be. Have a wonderful time today. Thank you to our great men & women of the Pentagon for working it out!

    — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) May 26, 2019

    Featured image via screen capture

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    The post Trump’s Biker Friends Threatened “Arrogant Little Bitch Pelosi” If She Tries To Go For Impeachment appeared first on DC Tribune.

    This content was originally published here.

  • Trump Is Winning the Little Cold War With Iran

    Trump Is Winning the Little Cold War With Iran

    The small-minded critics of his policy are doing themselves and our Mideast allies no favors.

    BRANDON J. WEICHERT | THE AMERICAN SPECTATOR

    Since the rise of the Islamic Republic of Iran in 1979, Iran has been in a state of ideological, religious cold war against the United States and its allies. Desiring to become the dominant force in the Mideast, Iran has worked to export its particular brand of Islamist revolution beyond its present borders. At the same time, like the Soviet Union with its specific version of Marxist-Leninism, Iran’s leaders have sought to expand their country’s zone of influence and control beyond its current national boundaries, to encompass the entire region — looking at the outside world in Manichean terms: divided between Iran’s Twelver Shiite brand of political Islam and the unbelieving world waiting to be liberated by their green revolution.

    Setting the Mideast Ablaze

    Iran engaged in behavior very similar to that of the old Soviet Union when its fervor for worldwide revolution was at its highest. In his book Setting the East Ablaze: Lenin’s Dream of an Empire in Asiathe incredible Peter Hopkirk details how Soviet agents of influence spread out to the former Russian imperial states in Central Asia with intentions of reabsorbing them into Lenin’s ideological Soviet empire.

    With similar zeal and malign ideological intentions, Iranian agents have (since the start of their regime) moved out beyond Iranian territory, along the axis of half-moon-shaped part of the Middle East in which most of the region’s Shiite Muslims reside — it’s known as the Shia Crescent — and attempted to bring about Iranian-style Islamic revolutions there. The goal has been to expand Iran’s regional reach and increase its power relative to its perceived enemies in the Sunni Arab states, Israel, and the West.

    And, just like the Soviets of yesteryear (and many other autocratic regimes today), the Iranians have assessed that their only path to regime survival is to develop and threaten the world with nuclear weapons. Such a threat cannot — and should not — be ignored. Every American president since 1979 has had to deal with a different Iranian provocation. Despite this quiet, “little” cold war between the West and Iran, though, the United States and her allies have long had the advantage over Iran.

    Obama Unilaterally Disarmed

    Yet, in 2015, the Obama Administration convinced itself that unilaterally disarming in the face of Iranian brinkmanship was the only path to peace and stability in the region. The result of this deal with Iran was not greater stability and security. Instead, it ensured the mad mullahs would be given an easy path to not only nuclear weapons capability, but also a complete integration of Iran into the global economic system!

    Since that time, Iran has become more emboldened to threaten and decrease U.S. power. Since Donald Trump became president, he effectively ended the Obama era agreement and focused on building up not just the American military’s capabilities to deter Iran, but more importantly, the military capabilities of America’s regional allies (the Sunni Arab states and Israel).

    Winning the Little Cold War

    Intuitively recognizing the mini-cold war that Iran has waged upon the United States since 1979, Trump has assiduously worked to replicate the winning strategies from the Cold War and apply them to the conflict with Iran. Oddly enough, his political rivals in the United States continue to belittle his efforts by arguing that he is simultaneously a warmonger and wimp even as they undercut the Administration’s efforts to enhance the ability of our regional partners, such as Saudi Arabia, to resist Iranian aggression in the Mideast.

    Trump’s rivals are the feckless ones.

    Yes, the United States faces an ideological foe ensconced in an apocalyptic version of Shia Islam. No, the United States does not need to rush headlong into another Mideast war that will only erode Trump’s political legitimacy at home and usher in another decade of American weakness abroad. As Victor Davis Hanson has written recently: the United States holds all of the cards in the conflict with Iran. As I have long advocated, the best approach to this ideological war against Iran is through containment, deterrence, and multilateralism — the same tools that the United States effectively used to defeat the Soviet Union’s global threat in the Cold War.

    That’s why it’s strange that, at the same time that tensions with Iran are increasing, the Republican-controlled Senate has voted to terminate a vital arms deal with Saudi Arabia (on vacuous “moral” grounds). They want to invade Iran. But they want the United States to go it alone as we did in Iraq — thereby replicating the mistakes of the previous decade and hastening American decline (whether this is their true goal or not, this is what would happen).

    The recent decision by President Trump not to retaliate for Iran’s idiotic attack on an expensive U.S. drone flying in international waters was a victory for the president’s foreign policy. He alone is walking the dangerous line between war and peace — and winning in the process. Ideological warfare is not necessarily kinetic. It requires other, non-kinetic tools of statecraft. More importantly, it requires alliances with states that are far more threatened by Iran than we are. Also, Trump’s careful balancing act on Iran is pivotal as it allows him to resist a true threat to U.S. interests in the region, while at the same time upholding a key campaign promise not to engage in wasteful Mideast wars.

    In the Cold War, the United States deftly built the institutions of NATO and other multilateral organizations meant to burden-share and to increase the defensive capacities of Europe. Similarly, the Trump Administration has attempted to replicate some semblance (although on a smaller scale) of this policy against Iran in the Mideast.

    If the “Deep State” would get out of the Trump Administration’s way, then it is more than likely an Israeli-Sunni Arab alliance could be solidified and its members would work together to return Iran to its proverbial box, which it had been loosed from during the Iraq War of 2003, while creating some regional stability and enhancing U.S. interests along the way.

    Brandon J. Weichert can be reached via Twitter: @WeTheBrandon.

    This content was originally published here.

  • Juliana v. United States: The climate change lawsuit that could stop the U.S. government from supporting fossil fuels – 60 Minutes – CBS News

    Juliana v. United States: The climate change lawsuit that could stop the U.S. government from supporting fossil fuels – 60 Minutes – CBS News

    Of all the cases working their way through the federal court system, none is more interesting or potentially more life changing than Juliana versus the United States. To quote one federal judge, “This is no ordinary lawsuit.” It was filed back in 2015 on behalf of a group of kids who are trying to get the courts to block the U.S. government from continuing the use of fossil fuels. They say it’s causing climate change, endangering their future and violating their constitutional rights to life, liberty and property. As we first reported earlier this year, when the lawsuit first began hardly anyone took it seriously, including the government’s lawyers, who have since watched the supreme court reject two of their motions to delay or dismiss the case. Four years in, it is still very much alive, in part because the plaintiffs have amassed a body of evidence that will surprise even the skeptics and have forced the government to admit that the crisis is real.

    The case was born here in Eugene, Oregon, a tree-hugger’s paradise, and one of the cradles of environmental activism in the United States. The lead plaintiff, University of Oregon student Kelsey Juliana, was only five weeks old when her parents took her to her first rally to protect spotted owls. Today, her main concern is climate change, drought and the growing threat of wildfires in the surrounding Cascade Mountains.

    Kelsey Juliana: There was a wildfire season that was so intense, we were advised not to go outside. The particulate matter in the smoke was literally off the charts. It was past severe, in terms of danger to health.

    Steve Kroft: And you think that’s because of climate change.

    Kelsey Juliana: That’s what scientists tell me.

    It’s not just scientists. Even the federal government now acknowledges in its response to the lawsuit that the effects of climate change are already happening and likely to get worse, especially for young people who will have to deal with them for the long term.

    “The government has known for over 50 years that burning fossil fuels would cause climate change. And they don’t dispute that we are in a danger zone on climate change.”

    Steve Kroft: How important is this case to you?

    Kelsey Juliana: This case is everything. This is the climate case. We have everything to lose, if we don’t act on climate change right now, my generation and all the generations to come.

    She was 19 when the lawsuit was filed and the oldest of 21 plaintiffs. They come from ten different states and all claim to be affected or threatened by the consequences of climate change. The youngest, Levi Draheim, is in sixth grade.

    Steve Kroft: You’re 11 years old, and you’re suing the United States government, that’s not what most 11-year-olds do, right?

    Levi Draheim: Yeah…

    He’s lived most of his life on the beaches of a barrier island in Florida that’s a mile wide and barely above sea level.

    Steve Kroft: What’s your biggest fear about this island?

    Levi Draheim: I fear that I won’t have a home here in the future.

    Steve Kroft: That the island will be gone.

    Levi Draheim: Yeah. That the island will be underwater because of climate change.

    Steve Kroft: So you feel like you’ve got a stake in this.

    Levi Draheim: Yes.

    The plaintiffs were recruited from environmental groups across the country by Julia Olson, an oregon lawyer, and the executive director of a non-profit legal organization called “Our Children’s Trust.” She began constructing the case eight years ago out of this spartan space now dominated by this paper diorama that winds its way through the office.

    Steve Kroft: So what is this?

    Julia Olson: So this is a timeline that we put together…

    It documents what and when past U.S. administrations knew about the connection between fossil fuels and climate change. The timeline goes back 50 years, beginning with the presidency of Lyndon Johnson.

    Julia Olson: During President Johnson’s administration, they issued a report in 1965 that talked about climate change being a catastrophic threat.

    Whether it was a Democrat or a Republican in office, Olson says, there was an awareness of the potential dangers of carbon dioxide emissions.

    Julia Olson: Every president knew that burning fossil fuels was causing climate change.

    Fifty years of evidence has been amassed by Olson and her team, 36,000 pages in all, to be used in court.

     

    Julia Olson: Our government, at the highest levels, knew and was briefed on it regularly by the national security community, by the scientific community. They have known for a very long time that it was a big threat.

    Steve Kroft: Has the government disputed that government officials have known about this for more than 50 years and been told and warned about it for 50 years?

    Julia Olson: No. They admit that the government has known for over 50 years that burning fossil fuels would cause climate change. And they don’t dispute that we are in a danger zone on climate change. And they don’t dispute that climate change is a national security threat and a threat to our economy and a threat to people’s lives and safety. They do not dispute any of those facts of the case.

    The legal proceedings have required the government to make some startling admissions in court filings. It now acknowledges that human activity – in particular, elevated concentrations of greenhouse gases – is likely to have been the dominant cause of observed warming since the mid-1900s… That global carbon dioxide concentrations reached levels unprecedented for at least 2.6 million years… That climate change is increasing the risk of loss of life and the extinction of many species and is associated with increases in hurricane intensity, the frequency of intense storms, heavy precipitation, the loss of sea ice and rising sea levels.

    Julia Olson: It’s really the most compelling evidence I’ve ever had in any case I’ve litigated in over 20 years.

    The lawsuit claims the executive and legislative branches of government have proven incapable of dealing with climate change. It argues that the government has failed in its obligation to protect the nation’s air, water, forests and coast lines. And it petitions the federal courts to intervene and force the government to come up with a plan that would wean the country off fossil fuels by the middle of this century.

    Steve Kroft: You’re just saying, “Do it. We don’t care how.”

    Julia Olson: Do it well and do it in the timeframe that it needs to be done.

    Steve Kroft: You’re talking about a case that could change economics in this country.

    Julia Olson: For the better.

    Steve Kroft: Well, you say it changes the economy for the better, but other people would say it would cause huge disruption.

    Julia Olson: If we don’t address climate change in this country, economists across the board say that we are in for economic crises that we have never seen before.

    The lawsuit was first filed during the final years of the Obama administration in this federal courthouse in Eugene.

    Steve Kroft: Did they take this case seriously when you filed it?

    Julia Olson: I think in the beginning they thought they could very quickly get the case dismissed.

    In November 2016, a federal judge stunned the government by denying its motion to dismiss the case and ruling it could proceed to trial. In what may become a landmark decision, Judge Ann Aiken wrote, “Exercising my reasoned judgment, I have no doubt that the right to a climate system capable of sustaining human life is fundamental to a free and ordered society.”

    Steve Kroft: A federal judge ever said that before?

    Julia Olson: No judge had ever written that before.

    The opinion was groundbreaking because the courts have never recognized a constitutional right to a stable climate.

    Ann Carlson: That’s a big stretch for a court.

    Ann Carlson is a professor of environmental law at UCLA. Like almost everyone else in the legal community, she was certain the case was doomed.

    Ann Carlson: There’s no constitutional provision that says the that environment should be protected.

    Steve Kroft: Why is the idea that the people of the United States have a right to a stable environment such a radical idea?

    Ann Carlson: Well, I think that Judge Aiken actually does a very good job of saying it’s not radical to ask the government to protect the health, and the lives and the property of this current generation of kids. Look, If you can’t have your life protected by government policies that save the planet, then what’s the point of having a Constitution?

    Steve Kroft: How significant is this case?

    Ann Carlson: Well, if the plaintiffs won, it’d be massive, particularly if they won what they’re asking for, which is get the federal government out of the business of in any way subsidizing fossil fuels and get them into the business of dramatically curtailing greenhouse gases in order to protect the children who are the plaintiffs in order to create a safe climate. That would be enormous.

    So enormous that the Trump administration, which is now defending the case, has done everything it can to keep the trial from going forward. It’s appealed Judge Aiken’s decision three times to the ninth circuit court in California and twice to the Supreme Court. Each time it’s failed.

    Julia Olson: They don’t want it to go to trial.

    Steve Kroft: Why?

    Julia Olson: Because they will lose on the evidence that will be presented at trial.

    Steve Kroft: And that’s why they don’t want one.

    Julia Olson: That’s why they don’t want one. They know that once you enter that courtroom and your witnesses take the oath to tell the truth and nothing but the truth the facts are the facts and alternative facts are perjury. And so, all of these claims and tweets about climate change not being real, that doesn’t hold up in a court of law.

    The Justice Department declined our request for an interview, but in court hearings, in briefs, it’s called the lawsuit misguided, unprecedented and unconstitutional. It argues that energy policy is the legal responsibility of Congress and the White House, not a single judge in Oregon. And while climate change is real it’s also a complicated global problem that was not caused and cannot be solved by just the United States government.

    In other words, it’s not responsible.

    Steve Kroft: Why is the federal government responsible for global warming? I mean it doesn’t produce any carbon dioxide. How are they causing it?

    Julia Olson: They’re causing it through their actions of subsidizing the fossil fuel energy system, permitting every aspect of our fossil fuel energy system, and by allowing for extraction of fossil fuels from our federal public lands. We are the largest oil and gas producer in the world now because of decisions our federal government has made.

    Steve Kroft: What about the Chinese government? What about the Indian government?

    Julia Olson: Clearly, it’s not just the United States that has caused climate change but the United States is responsible for 25 percent of the atmospheric carbon dioxide that has accumulated over the many decades.

    Julia Olson is confident they’re going to prevail in court. Ann Carlson and most of the legal community still think it’s a longshot, but she says she’s been wrong about this case every step of the way.

    Ann Carlson: Courts have asked governments to do bold things. The best example would be Brown versus the Board of Education, when the court ordered schools to desegregate with all deliberate speed. So there have been court decisions that have asked governments to do very dramatic things. This might be the biggest.

    Steve Kroft: You’ve been stunned by how far this case has gotten. Why has it gotten this far?

    Ann Carlson: I think there are several reasons this case has actually withstood motions to dismiss. I think the first is that the lawyers have crafted the case in a way that’s very compelling. You have a number of kids who are very compelling plaintiffs who are experiencing the harms of climate change now and will experience the harms of climate change much more dramatically as they get older. I think the hard question here is the law.

    The latest oral arguments in Juliana versus the United States were heard earlier this month in portland. But whatever happens next will certainly be appealed. Two-thousand miles away, in the aptly named town of Rayne, Louisiana, the family of one of the plaintiffs, 15-year-old Jayden Foytlin, is still rebuilding from the last disaster in 2016 that dumped 18 inches of rain on Rayne and Southern Louisiana in just 48 hours.

    Jayden Foytlin: That’s just something that shouldn’t happen. You can’t really deny that it, climate change has something to do with it. And you can’t deny that it’s something that we have to pay attention to. I’m not sure if most of Louisiana, of South Louisiana is going to be here, that’s just a really big worry of mine.

    For the foreseeable future, it’s impossible to predict when and how the storms and the lawsuit are likely to end.

    Produced by Draggan Mihailovich. Associate producers, Katie Brennan and Chrissy Jones

    This content was originally published here.

  • Mike Pence on “Face the Nation” blames Congress for harsh conditions at migrant detention centers – CBS News

    Mike Pence on “Face the Nation” blames Congress for harsh conditions at migrant detention centers – CBS News

    Pence blames Congress for harsh conditions at migrant child detention centers

    Vice President Mike Pence called the grim conditions in some detention centers for migrant children in U.S. custody “heartbreaking” and “unacceptable,” but said there was little his administration could do to remedy them unless congressional Democrats agreed to sign off on more funding and expand detention space. 

    “We’re doing a lot with what the Congress has given us, but again Congress refused to increase the bed space in the last appropriations bill,” Pence said on “Face the Nation” Sunday. 

    “They continue to delay efforts on additional humanitarian support,” he added. 

    Lawyers this week detailed harsh conditions faced by approximately 250 migrant children — including infants — at an overcrowded Border Patrol station in Clint, Texas. According to the attorneys, older children were taking care of the younger ones. Some young mothers had to wear clothes stained with breast milk. The children also did not have access to soap and toothbrushes, and most had not showered since they crossed the southern border. 

    Border Patrol is supposed to transfer unaccompanied migrant children to the Department of Health of Human Services (HHS) within 72 hours. Lawyers and advocates, however, have documented cases in which some children are being held for longer. 

    Asked if the American people should come to accept these conditions, Pence replied, “absolutely not.”

    Still, he reiterated that he believes the problems in detentions centers stem from what he portrayed as a “refusal” by the Democratic-led House to approve the administration’s multi-billion-dollar request to fund border enforcement, shelters for unaccompanied migrant children and other efforts to deal with the unprecedented surge of Central American families heading towards the U.S.-Mexico border.

    “It’s amazing to think that Mexico has done more to secure our southern border in the last 10 days than Democrats have done in the last 10 years,” Pence said. “The American people deserve better.”

    Republicans and Democrats in Congress are currently negotiating legislation to allocate some of the funds to different agencies, including Border Patrol, that the administration has asked for.

    In a move that was widely seen as preemptive action to prevent talks from falling part, President Trump on Saturday delayed a wave of roundups of undocumented families which immigration authorities were expected to start carrying out Sunday. He nevertheless threatened to order mass deportations unless congressional Democrats agreed to revamp the nation’s asylum laws within two weeks.  

    This content was originally published here.

  • Japanese sign up for DNA matchmaking as country faces demographic crisis

    Japanese sign up for DNA matchmaking as country faces demographic crisis

    he scene resembles a typical blind speed-dating event: 13 women and 13 men, seated on either side of a bamboo screen in an upmarket Tokyo restaurant, are chatting in pairs on a strictly timed three-minute rotation.

    But the doctor hovering on the fringes and the scientific documents held in the participant’s hands, however, offer a hint that this is no ordinary dating event: for everyone attending has undergone a DNA test in a bid to find their best romantic match.

    Welcome to the world of DNA matchmaking. Forget hobbies, professions, ages or nose sizes: one critical new criteria for finding the perfect partner was recently added to Japan’s fast-paced dating world, with the launch of a new service that promises to find love based on genetic compatibility.

    Created by the dating company Nozze., which operates 21 branches across Japan, DNA Matching works with scientists at a Tokyo laboratory in order to decode the science of attraction and find the perfect match for its clients.

    The company staged its first “DNA Party” at a restaurant in Ginza earlier this month – attended by 26 guests and resulting in four new couples – with more events planned across the country, including a special DNA Cruise in the autumn.

    Its launch is timely: Japan is grappling with something of an epidemic of singles who are unable to find a partner, an issue intrinsically linked to the nation’s famously low marriage and birth rates and doing little to help balance the rapidly aging demographics of Japanese society.

    Earlier this week, new government figures revealed that almost half of Japanese singles who wished to marry were unable to find a suitable partner, with more than 60 per cent admitting they were not doing anything to change the situation.

    One of the main reasons for failing to settle down was cited as a lack of opportunities to meet an appropriate partner – a situation most likely made worse by the nation’s culture of long working hours. Other reasons ranged from lack of financial resources to an inability to connect with people, according to the report.

    And so it is perhaps little surprise that a raft of dating events and matchmaking innovations have cropped up in Japan in recent years, from speed dating in temples for single nuns to local government-funded matchmaking events in depopulated areas of rural Japan.

    source

  • PA National Guard Unit Bans Christian Scouts From Tour Because of Religious Beliefs

    PA National Guard Unit Bans Christian Scouts From Tour Because of Religious Beliefs

    A Pennsylvania-based Christian scouting troop was banned from touring a National Guard facility due to the troop’s religious affiliation.

    The  Fort Indiantown Gap National Guard regularly hosts tours for Boy Scout troops, civic and other youth organizations.  However, last February, Trail Life USA Troopmaster Joseph Evege sent an email asking if he could schedule a tour for Troop PA-2717.  After submitting the required paperwork, in April, Evege was told the group could not participate because they belonged to a Christian scouting organization.

    Trail Life USA is a church-based, Christ-centered and boy-focused scouting organization that was founded in 2013 as an alternative to the Boy Scouts, according to Fox News.

    In an op-ed posted on the Fox News website,Todd Starnes, host of ‘The Todd Starnes Radio Show” and “Starnes Country” on Fox Nation, reminded the Guard unit “the idea that Christian boys would be banned strictly because of their religious beliefs is not only ludicrous, but it’s also illegal.”

    “Fort Indiantown Gap’s denial of access to the base facilities, which are open to other civic, fraternal, and youth organizations and for youth activities, constitutes viewpoint discrimination,” First Liberty Institute and Independence Law Center wrote in a letter to the National Guard.

    The Guard unit responded by allowing the Trail Life troop to tour the facility.

    “We are grateful that Guard has chosen to open its doors to the Trail Life troop,” said Independence Law Center Senior Counsel Jeremy Samek.  “The boys from Trail Life USA’s troop deserve to be treated fairly and equally.  I know that they are excited to get the opportunity to interact with those who defend our freedom.”

    “The Trail Life troop is very pleased with the outcome and appreciates the manner in which the Guard worked so quickly to resolve this dispute, Lea Patterson, Counsel for First Liberty Institute noted.

    John Stemberger, the chairman of the Trail Life USA board, said it’s disheartening that a “federal institution like the Army is buying into this leftist idea that faith has to be excluded from the public square.”

    “It’s sad that an institution of our society is treating faith like it is some kind of bacteria or virus that needs to be exterminated from secular society,” Stemberger told Fox News. “We need faith integrated with society.”

    Stemberger said he was thankful for the work of the religious liberty law firms.

    “Thank God for good lawyers,” he said.

    The National Guard’s public affairs office did not return multiple inquiries seeking comment, according to Fox News.

    source

  • Popular Online Home Schooling Resource Quietly Promotes LGBT Lifestyle to Children

    Popular Online Home Schooling Resource Quietly Promotes LGBT Lifestyle to Children

     

    As an example, the website posted the following English problem found in a Khan Academy session:

    The lesson is on “Irregular Plural Nouns: from ‘f’ to ‘ves.’” The unsuspecting student is told to “Choose the correct plural noun to use in this sentence”:

    ‘Brittany and Sofia went to lunch with their _____ every Saturday.’”

    Khan Academy’s “correct” answer reveals the gay agenda behind the English “problem”:

    The only choices are “wifes” or “wives.”

    “Some might say that a parent could simply skip this one question while working with their homeschooled child, but the only reason this question even exists is that we have buried our heads in the sand and skipped over this garbage for far too long,” Johnston noted Monday on her online blog. “If you think it’s just this one question, think again. There’s no doubt more material from this company, and likely others will soon follow suit.”

    “The LGBTQ agenda is forcing recognition of same-sex marriage and transgenderism in core courses of our public education system,” Arthur Schaper of California Mass Resistance told LifeSiteNews.

    The news website noted that besides the Gates Foundation’s initial grant, the online academy has received more than $17 million in funding. They reminded founder Salman Khan that with success comes responsibility.  Along with the money from corporate and private investors comes the expectation to follow certain agendas.  “This is proof once again that the gay agenda has never been about assuring equality for all,” Schaper told the website. “It’s about imposing a destructive agenda on our culture and our society, and is determined to undermine Judeo-Christian values and the United States as a whole. It is anti-family, anti-life, and anti-biology.” “The long-term goal to indoctrinate children has been to normalize these destructive behaviors so that these children as adults will not only accept homosexuality and transgenderism as normal parts of life but fight to ensure their protection,” he explained.

    source

     

    Religion needs to also teach the real power of prayer and if you would like to know what that is visit this sight, https://unveiledlife.org/

    Learn how to empower yourself, family and community to stop these kind of influences.  Stop blaming everyone else for your lack of learning the power Christ put in you.

  • Keep Your Beliefs at Home: Student Booted from Class for Saying There Are 2 Genders

    Keep Your Beliefs at Home: Student Booted from Class for Saying There Are 2 Genders

    The entire discussion was caught on camera.  The student and the teacher are unidentified in the video. The student asks the teacher why he kicked him out of class.  “You aren’t being inclusive,” the teacher said on the video. “I know what the authority thinks and point of view. It’s very clear that we make no discrimination on the grounds. I’m sorry what you choose to make an issue about a point that is contrary to policy,” he added. “I think it’s silly to have anything other than two genders,” the student responded. “It’s not scientific what so ever. I stated something that I believe in and you kicked me out of class. I wasn’t making a discrimination. I was simply saying there are two genders, male and female. Anything else is a personal identification,” he said. The teacher then fired back telling the student to “keep that opinion to your own house and not in this school. I am stating what is national school authority policy,” he said.

    “This is an inclusive school. I’m more than one gender in this country. That is my opinion and that is an opinion which is acceptable in the school. I’m afraid that yours, which you are saying there is no such thing as anyone other than male or female is not inclusive. You’re choosing to make an issue about this,” the teacher added.  “You’re making bad choices.”  The student then asks if he can go to the research area to resume his classwork, but is told to stay in the room.  “Thanks for wasting my time,” the student said as the teacher walks out the door of the room.  The video concludes with the teacher stopping in his tracks, turning around and telling the student, “I am not allowed to tell you how much of my time you’ve wasted.”

    source

  • Supreme Court upholds cross on public land in Maryland

    Supreme Court upholds cross on public land in Maryland

    A 40-foot-tall, World War I memorial cross can continue to stand on public land in Maryland, the Supreme Court ruled Thursday in an important decision about the use of religious symbols in American life.

    The justices said preserving a long-standing religious monument is very different from allowing the building of a new one. And the court concluded that the nearly 100-year-old memorial’s presence on a grassy highway median doesn’t violate the Constitution’s prohibition on the government favoring one religion over others. Seven of the court’s nine justices sided with the cross’ backers, a lineup that crossed ideological lines.

  • Illegal immigrant ‘got aways’ at five-year high as border agents pulled from patrol duties

    Illegal immigrant ‘got aways’ at five-year high as border agents pulled from patrol duties

    “This high level of ‘got aways’ is a direct result of agents being reassigned away from the frontline to provide humanitarian support to the unprecedented numbers of individuals and families in custody,” Chief Carla Provost told the House Homeland Security Committee. The panel was meeting to hear how President Trump’s orders to send National Guard and active-duty troops to the border is playing out. Chief Provost said they’ve been a major boost, suggesting the got-away numbers might have been worse without the troops there to fill gaps left when her agents get pulled away to do babysitting duties for the families and unaccompanied children. “That support as my agents are being pulled away to deal with the humanitarian crisis is key to us having situational awareness on the border,” she said. The troops, whom the president first deployed in the run-up to last year’s elections, are performing support tasks, monitoring cameras and scopes and providing air support for border authorities, though they are not supposed to engage in actual policing. In one example last month, National Guard troops in Texas spotted a group of migrants rafting across the Rio Grande and reported it to Border Patrol agents.

    Agents, with the help of local police, corralled the group, whose members had paid up to $10,000 to be smuggled into the U.S.But Mr. Trump’s affinity for using the troops has angered Democrats and some Republicans in Congress, who say they’re being distracted from their national security missions when they’re being used on the border. House Homeland Security Chairman Bennie G. Thompson was particularly irked by the decision to use troops to paint a 1-mile section of border wall. He wanted to know why that wasn’t contracted out. The officials who testified couldn’t detail the exact decision-making, but said the paint is special and is supposed to help prevent climbing the wall. “This is a test of 1 mile, to see how effective that anti-climb paint can be,” said Deputy Assistant Defense Secretary Robert Salesses. Officials say the Border Patrol is dealing with two different, and in many ways competing, threats. One is the massive surge of migrant children and families. They arrive hoping to be caught, looking to take advantage of lax U.S. policies. The numbers are so overwhelming that agents struggle to process and transport them. The other threat is single adult migrants and drug smuggling. Chief Provost said as much as 60% of agents’ time in some regions is taken up by transporting, feeding or doing hospital watch for the families and children. She said that pulls them off their other line-watch duties.

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