One Political Plaza - Home of politics
Home Active Topics Newest Pictures Search Login Register
Posts for: ACP45
Page: <<prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ... 781 next>>
Apr 26, 2024 06:46:24   #
proud republican wrote:


Just plain common sense, wouldn't you agree? Hard to argue a basic point of logic (but that never stops some on the left)! Now if they really wanted to tackle the problem head on, the Senate would actually take up the House H.R. 2 - Secure the Border bill!






Go to
Apr 26, 2024 06:38:33   #
proud republican wrote:
https://youtube.com/shorts/cHKxKtNvD1I?si=2SSmHjaGOxAi_RAq


Perhaps, you and Senator Rubio should get your facts straight. Don't take my word for it, read what Netanyahu and other Israeli leaders actually said and did!!!!

"The fact that Israel has actively supported Hamas is not a "far-out conspiracy theory."
It's a well-documented fact that has been attested to time and time again by Israeli
insiders and reported over and over in mainstream media.

Take the 2009 Wall Street Journal article, "How Israel Helped to Spawn Hamas." In it,
reporter Moshav Tekuma quotes Avner Cohen—a Tunisia-born Jew who worked as an
Israeli official in Gaza during the 1970s and 1980s—lamenting that "Hamas, to my great
regret, is Israel's creation." According to Cohen, it was Israel's strategy from the very
beginning to foster Islamic radicals in Palestine to thwart Israel's true enemy: the
secular Palestinian leadership that was seeking to win Palestinian statehood through
peaceful, diplomatic means." .....

"There are plenty of other examples of Israeli complicity in the build-up of Hamas.
In 2013, Yuval Diskin—head of the Israeli Shin Bet security service from 2005 to 2011,
told Yedioth Ahronoth: “If we look at it over the years, one of the main people
contributing to Hamas’s strengthening has been [Israeli Prime Minster] Bibi [Benjamin]
Netanyahu, since his first term as prime minister.
"

In 2019, former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak appeared on Israeli Army Radio,
where he opined that Netanyahu's "strategy is to keep Hamas alive and kicking . . . even
at the price of abandoning the citizens [of the south] . . . in order to weaken the
Palestinian Authority in Ramallah."


Yasser Arafat told an Italian newspaper that "Hamas is a creature of Israel"
and claimed that former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin had admitted as much to him." ....

"But why would Israel support their enemies?" they might ask in bewilderment.
Luckily, this isn't a difficult question to answer. According to Ehud Barak, the logic
holds that "it's easier with Hamas to explain to Israelis that there is no one to sit with
and no one to talk to." In other words, a radical, violent Palestinians enemy gives the
radical, violent Likudniks an excuse to avoid ever having to seriously engage in peace
talks with the Palestinian people.
". ...

"Once again, it is important to stress that this is not some wild conspiracy theory. It's
publicly acknowledged Israeli policy. As Haaretz openly admitted in the wake of
October 7, Netanyahu has even confessed to using this strategy in cabinet meetings:
“Anyone who wants to thwart the establishment of a Palestinian state has to support
bolstering Hamas and transferring money to Hamas,” he told a meeting of his Likud party’s Knesset members in March 2019. “This is part of our strategy—to isolate the Palestinians in Gaza from the Palestinians in the West Bank.
. ...

"Let's look at the al-Shifa Hospital incident. Remember when Netanyahu won the Fake
News Award
earlier this year for touting the ridiculous IDF animation showing how
"Hamas-ISIS" (whatever that is) "turn hospitals into headquarters for their terror"?

And remember how the IDF then released a (debunked) video revealing that this terror
headquarters actually consisted of two guns and a (GASP!) MRI machine?
Well, regardless of the discrepancy between the scary IDF cartoon of the Hamas bunker
layer and the completely banal reality, it does raise some interesting questions, such as:
Other than Hamas, who could have possibly built such a bunker, anyway?
And what possible reason would they have for building a bunker under a hospital except
to use that hospital as a shield for their terrorist activities?
Oh, that's right. Hamas didn't build the bunker. Israel did, back when Israeli troops were
occupying Gaza.
And why did Israel build the bunker? According to Ehud Barak, it was
"in order to enable more space for the operation of the hospital within the very limited
size of these compounds."

Hamas - James Corbett -
https://corbettreport.substack.com/p/the-secret-history-of-hamas?publication_id=725827&post_id=143585315&isFreemail=true&r=smj1n&triedRedirect=true&utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email
Go to
Apr 26, 2024 06:10:07   #
dtucker300 wrote:
Biden: How Many Times Does Trump Have to Prove We Can't Be Trusted?
by: Matt Palumbo April 24, 2024

In his latest gaffe Joe Biden actually spoke the truth for once.

While attempting to slam Donald Trump for abortion restrictions placed following the overturning of Roe v. Wade, Biden accidentally used that as proof as “we” can’t be trusted.

“Folks, in a sense, I don’t know why we’re surprised by Trump. How many times does he have to prove we can’t be trusted?” Biden asked.

Watch below:
https://bongino.com/biden-how-many-times-does-trump-have-to-prove-we-cant-be-trusted
Biden: How Many Times Does Trump Have to Prove We ... (show quote)


Typical dog bites man story. This is an every day occurrence for the senile in chief. Now if he said something accurately or insightful, that would be really be noteworthy!
Go to
Apr 26, 2024 06:05:29   #
AuntiE wrote:
https://mises.org/mises-wire/danger-wests-neglect-individual-rights

The Danger of the West’s Neglect of Individual Rights
04/25/2024
By: Finn Andreen

Though the Western political class constantly criticizes the “authoritarian” nature of certain nations, one should sweep in front of his own door first, to paraphrase Johann von Goethe. Indeed, Western nation-states and international institutions have for years been gnawing at the freedom and rights of both individuals and businesses.

First, the exorbitant fiscal and inflationary pressures on Western populations should never be considered “normal” or “acceptable”; they are severe violations of property rights in and of themselves. These pressures alone help to explain the economic stagnation and political decadence of Western societies. Additionally, previously unthinkable powers have been given to Western police and security forces, many of them now permanent. Wikileaks and others have revealed the programs of mass surveillance of entire populations that are practiced by unaccountable Western intelligence agencies.

Censorship and propaganda are common practices by governments and mainstream media, not least in Western democracies where control of public opinion is key. But the violation of rights in the West took a dramatic turn with the unprecedented and unjustified confinements of healthy people during the covid-19 pandemic, essentially mandatory vaccination policies, and the other political scandals surrounding these vaccines.

Next on the agenda are further restrictions to the freedom of speech on certain social media platforms. New laws, like the RESTRICT Act (Restricting the Emergence of Security Threats that Risk Information and Communications Technology) in the United States and the Digital Services Act in Europe, are undemocratically pushed through, ostensibly to protect the people. However, they allow the Western oligarchic elite to increase its control over society, implement its globalist agenda, and protect itself from brewing dissent.

Yet, in the near future, things are probably going to get far worse. From the alarming potential control of individual lives through the planned digital wallets and central bank digital currencies to the grave economic and social consequences of the “Green deals,” all the alarm bells have been ringing for some time already.

In view of these severe rights violations and threats of further violations, much more pushback from the majority at the receiving end might be expected. True, there are pockets of political disobedience, like the encouraging farmers’ protests in Europe, but these are fringe movements by people who are experiencing firsthand the above-mentioned policies.

There are positive signs of disapproval among the general population, like a measurable loss of trust in both Western mainstream media and political leaders, yet there is no massive opposition to these glaring violations of individual rights. Thus, before asking what conditions are needed for radical political change in the West, it seems necessary to first look at this indifference.

The Neglect of Individual Rights

The Western world was able to produce such inspiring texts as the French Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen and the US Bill of Rights, both from 1789. Their purpose was to guarantee the protection of individual rights and liberty against state coercion. For more than two centuries, these two documents have played a certain role in restraining the most egregious violations of individual rights by Western governments against their subjects.

It must be noted, however, that these documents have not only been quite “liberally” interpreted but also violated, even openly, on many occasions (e.g., forced conscription and confiscatory taxation to name but two). This is unavoidable when such rights are only protected by the willingness of legislators and judges to adhere to old parchments, however “sacred” they are often pretended to be. Considering the relatively poor protection of individual rights that these documents have in fact provided, it is not surprising that these rights—in particular the most fundamental one, the right to property—can be so easily undermined today.

Arguably, this current brazen violation of rights can happen for several reasons. First, in the prevailing postmodernist culture, the meanings of words are subjective, positivist, and not to be taken very seriously. This is reflected in the current zeitgeist which considers statist intervention as not only acceptable but also a much better means to move society than such “quaint, old principles.” A good example of this is the draconian measures that are planned to be imposed in order to fight “climate change.”

Second, individual rights are usually disregarded by the majority because they are taken for granted. This is the naïve “end of history” conviction, according to which Western “liberal democracies” are the pinnacle of mankind’s moral and political development. It is the idea, common among the good-hearted but politically ignorant, that individual rights no longer need attention because they have been acquired already, once and for all.

There is thus little recognition today in the West that the struggle for liberty never ends. As Benjamin Constant said in a famous speech to the French assembly in 1819, “In order to benefit from the liberty that they would like, the people must exercise an active and constant surveillance of their representatives.” Otherwise, as George Santayana wrote, “Unless all those concerned keep a vigilant eye on the course of public business and frequently pronounce on its conduct, they will before long awake to the fact that they have been ignored and enslaved.” Such words of wisdom have never been absorbed by Western publics.

The Focus on Positive Rights

The third way in which individual rights are undermined is when they are interpreted too widely and thus diluted. This happens when rights are expanded to include not only negative rights but also positive ones, those that the state is expected to enforce. This legitimizes both the state’s growth as well as its coercive and unjust wealth redistribution in order to assure “equality of opportunity,” or worse, “equality of outcome.”

Such thinking permeates Western society today, even in the United Nations’ Declaration of Human Rights, which hails positive “rights” such as the right to work, the right to equal pay, or the right to rest and leisure. These are obviously not “rights” in the same sense as the natural right to property, and their enforcement by the state necessarily violates the property rights of others. Indeed, as Murray Rothbard wrote in The Ethics of Liberty, “The very concept of ‘rights’ is a ‘negative’ one, demarcating the areas of a person’s action that no man may properly interfere with.”

As Ever, Education in Liberty

There can be only one result of this multifaceted neglect of individual rights among the majority in the West: the creeping violation of individual rights that is so obvious today. If the principles of natural rights were really taught, instead of the vacuous mantra repeated ad nauseam that “all men are created equal,” then the nefarious agenda of control being imposed by the Western ruling minority would be far more readily resisted.

It is worth remembering that the first sentence of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen states, “Ignorance, forgetfulness or contempt for human rights are the only causes of public misfortunes and government corruption.” Efforts must therefore continue unabated to inform and educate the public about the principles of freedom and the importance of protecting negative rights against constant attempts to violate them.
https://mises.org/mises-wire/danger-wests-neglect-... (show quote)


Go to
Apr 26, 2024 06:03:28   #
proud republican wrote:
Biden promissed to bring normalcy to this country after 4 yrs of craziness by former Administration 🙄 So my question is Does our country feels normal to you under this Administration??...Hmmmmmm😮‍💨😮‍💨😮‍💨


Is it normal for a President to intentionally REVERSE a prior presidents executive actions designed to stem the flow of illegal immigrants into this country? Is it normal to order border agents to cut barbed wire installed by Texas to stem the flow of illegal immigrants, and then assist those same illegals into the country? Is it normal to fly illegal immigrants into airports all around the country using "executive immigration Parole Authority"? Is it normal to actively subvert all normal and sensible checks and balances to insure "voting integrity" in an election?
Go to
Apr 26, 2024 05:48:29   #
Smart people know to avoid fallacies.

One of them is known as the fallacy of post hoc ergo propter hoc.

It’s Latin for “after this, therefore because of this.”

The classic example concerns the rooster and the sunrise.

Every morning before the sun comes up, the rooster does his crazy crowing routine, waking up everyone around. Shortly after, the light begins to appear on the horizon.

If you knew nothing else, and you watched this happen over and over, you might conclude that the rooster is causing the sun to rise.

Of course, this is testable. You could kill the rooster and see what happens. The sun still comes up. But wait just a moment. Just the fact that this one rooster is dead doesn’t mean that all roosters are gone. Some rooster somewhere is crowing and causing the sun to rise. So your little experiment doesn’t disprove the theory.

What a conundrum, right?

If someone is convinced that a bird is controlling the sun, there is probably no way to convince him otherwise.

We can laugh at this example. How can someone be so dumb? Actually, this basic fallacy affects all science in all times, all places, and all subjects.

MY COMMENT: Examples: 1) Look, California’s cases are down and California bans gatherings, therefore coercive measures are controlling virus spread! 2) Countless famous people took to social media to announce they had COVID-19 but it was a mild case thanks to the vaccine, or 3) I took the vaccine and got weak, tired, and a bad headache, so I know the vaccine was working!

https://www.theepochtimes.com/opinion/the-fallacy-that-rules-the-world-5635419?utm_source=partner&utm_campaign=ZeroHedge


Go to
Apr 26, 2024 05:31:19   #
"President Biden has granted clemency to five crack dealers, ordering their early release for dealing the drug in recognition of Second Chance Month.

Yes, this guy...

In honor of the new government crack pipe program, here's Joe & Hunter on crack pic.twitter.com/VWCBw9svai
— obedient worker (@lmazzeiphotos) February 9, 2022

Meanwhile, the Biden administration has made zero progress on a campaign promise to release "everyone" in prison for marijuana offenses, the NY Post reports.

Biden, who wrote or cosponsored some of the nation’s harshest federal drug laws in the 1980s and ’90s, said that he chose to issue commutations to the five crack offenders because they would have been given more lenient sentences today — continuing a long-running effort dating to the Obama administration to identify and retroactively reduce such sentences.

It’s unclear why Biden chose to free none of the estimated 2,700 federal marijuana-dealing inmates, as he promised to do at a Democratic primary debate in 2019. -NY Post

MY COMMENT: "Nice way to keep your word, Joe"! Adds new meaning to the "Promises are made to be broken" mantra!

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/president-crackhead-son-frees-5-crack-dealers-ditches-promise-release-all-pot-criminals
Go to
Apr 25, 2024 15:07:03   #
"We now have another Democrat screwing with the 2024 election to ensure they win. Democratic Attorney General Kris Mayes manipulated a grand jury in Arizona on Wednesday, indicting 18 Republicans with conspiracy, fraud, and forgery for submitting a document to Congress “falsely” declaring that Donald Trump beat Joe Biden in Arizona during the 2020 presidential election. She has listed a “prior U.S. president,” presumably referring to President Trump, as an unindicted co-conspirator. Mayes blacked out the names of seven individuals she indicted, saying they would be released once they were served." MY COMMENT: Read the rest of the article below. The 4th Amendment - RIP

https://www.armstrongeconomics.com/international-news/rule-of-law/democrats-indicting-18-republicans-in-arizona-for-claiming-trump-won-2020/
Go to
Apr 25, 2024 11:48:06   #
JFlorio wrote:
All he's done isn't bad. I don't disagree that he betrayed his base. Ousting him will look worse, cause more chaos, and cede even more power to anti-American Democrats. There are more republicans in congress who'd like to fund this Ukraine Russia War than those against. I say oust him after the election. Who would replace him that could get the votes? Jordan? I wish. Not gonna happen.


That makes sense. Another consideration, albeit, a remote one, is that the Speaker of the House is third in line of succession to the Presidency. Should the dummy in chief, and the cackling one somehow meet their maker, I would hate to see Jeffries ascend to the presidency.
Go to
Apr 25, 2024 10:14:59   #
https://rumble.com/v4r76ah-exposing-the-human-trafficking-operations-disguised-as-refugee-charities.html

America is being invaded and destroyed with the help of our leaders. Michael Yon has spent his life covering wars, so he recognized right away what was happening.

Unlock the full interview here: https://watchtcn.co/3JDDFV3

Think of how much damage will occur between now and January of next year.
Go to
Apr 25, 2024 10:10:37   #
JFlorio wrote:
I agree. The speaker is in a horrible position with only a one vote margin. Without the House, Senate, and Presidency nothing will change. The Senate has more RINO's percentage wise than the House.


So, are you saying that it is better to have a Republican Speaker of the House, simply because he calls himself a Republican, even thought he follows the script of Democrats? Why should the public vote "Republican" when there is no discernible difference? Does that not destroy the Republican brand?
Go to
Apr 25, 2024 07:27:21   #
https://www.rutherford.org/publications_resources/john_whiteheads_commentary/divide_and_conquer_the_governments_propaganda_of_fear_and_fake_news

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/divide-and-conquer-governments-propaganda-fear-and-fake-news




Go to
Apr 25, 2024 07:20:02   #
Justice101 wrote:
Speaker Johnson is turning out to be the DemocRats' best friend. He obviously needs their support with the razor thin majority of the Republicans who can't coalesce like the other side does.


Exactly so.

"The House of Representatives on Saturday passed a more than $60 billion bill to provide military and economic aid to Ukraine.

A solid majority of Republicans voted against the bill, which passed by a 311-112 margin. 101 Republicans voted for it, and one Republican, Rep. Dan Meuser of Pennsylvania, voted "present."

It was my understanding that there was an agreement among House Republicans that the Speaker would not move legislation that the majority opposed. Either I was wrong in that assumption, or the Speaker broke his agreement with his members.
Go to
Apr 25, 2024 05:16:51   #
https://twitter.com/newstart_2024/status/1782146843989692891


Go to
Apr 25, 2024 05:13:32   #
"Paul went further this week - calling Johnson out for being a complete sellout and acting, once again, against the interests of Americans.

"Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is reported to have bragged to his colleagues about how easily Speaker Johnson gave Democrats everything they wanted and asked for nothing in return," Paul noted, adding that Johnson "reached across the aisle, stiffed the Republican majority that elected him speaker, and pushed through a massive gift to the warfare corporate welfare state." in passing a massive aid package for Ukraine and Israel."

https://twitter.com/VigilantFox/status/1782792998016761927


Go to
Page: <<prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ... 781 next>>
OnePoliticalPlaza.com - Forum
Copyright 2012-2024 IDF International Technologies, Inc.