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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Land Shark who wrote (999419)2/7/2017 8:49:36 PM
From: locogringo4 Recommendations

Recommended By
FJB
jlallen
longz
Mick Mørmøny

  Respond to of 1575175
 
Sniff sniff.........whimper..........whine. 8 more GLORIOUS years snowflake. Elections have consequences.



To: Land Shark who wrote (999419)2/7/2017 9:50:48 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Respond to of 1575175
 
After it happens, count on civil rights going down the tubes, war, torture, detention, murder and mayhem.
kinda like an extension of ReaganBushClintonBushObama?



To: Land Shark who wrote (999419)2/7/2017 9:58:52 PM
From: jlallen2 Recommendations

Recommended By
longz
Mick Mørmøny

  Respond to of 1575175
 
LOL!!!

Your TDS appears terminal.



To: Land Shark who wrote (999419)2/8/2017 7:59:21 AM
From: longnshort1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Mick Mørmøny

  Respond to of 1575175
 
Social Justice Jihadis Defend the Violence in Berkeley

Violence helped ensure safety of students
BY JUAN PRIETO | SPECIAL TO THE DAILY CAL LAST UPDATED 15 HOURS AGO

A national debate on freedom of speech has sparked since the night of Feb. 1, when a Breitbart hatemonger’s speech was cancelled because of radical acts against replaceable property at my school, UC Berkeley.

… They want to ensure that there is a distinction between the rioters and the students who were there to protest peacefully.

Well, I’m here to thank the radical measures the AntiFas took to ensure my safety. …

As an outspoken undocumented student at UC Berkeley, this frightened me. I walked around campus constantly looking over my shoulder that day, uncertain whether the doxing of my online profile had already placed a target on me.

On November 7, 2016, I blogged about illegal alien Juan Prieto’s anti-free speech op-ed in the New York Times:

NYT: Undocumented Student Denounces Free Speech on Immigration Policy
STEVE SAILER • NOVEMBER 7, 2016 •

From the New York Times:

Even at Berkeley, I Face Threats as an Undocumented Student

Now this illegal alien continues his campaign against America’s First Amendment by praising the use of violence to suppress free speech:

My campus did nothing to stand between my undocumented community and the hateful hands of radicalized white men — the AntiFas did. A peaceful protest was not going to cancel that event, just like numerous letters from faculty, staff, Free Speech Movement veterans and even donors did not cancel the event. Only the destruction of glass and shooting of fireworks did that. The so-called “violence” against private property that the media seems so concerned with stopped white supremacy from organizing itself against my community.

Also from today’s Daily Californian:

Black bloc did what campus should have
BY NEIL LAWRENCE | SPECIAL TO THE DAILY CAL LAST UPDATED 1 HOUR AGO

… On the afternoon of Feb. 1, a few friends and I met up with many other small groups of friends. We gathered off campus, distributed flags, wrote the National Lawyers Guild number on each others’ arms and helped each other make sure our faces were properly covered. Then we started marching.

… We were not, as the news, the chancellor and concerned progressives have alleged, “unaffiliated white anarchists.” Behind those bandanas and black T-shirts were the faces of your fellow UC Berkeley and Berkeley City College students, of women, of people of color, of queer and trans people.

That would seem to undermine for Cabinet secretary Robert Reich’s tall tale that the masked blackshirts were Milo’s false flag agents provocateur.

… To those who hate Yiannopoulos and the alt-right but have a hard time condoning black bloc tactics and property damage, I understand that these tactics are extreme. But when you consider everything that activists already tried — when mass call-ins, faculty and student objections, letter-writing campaigns, numerous op-eds (including mine), union grievances and peaceful demonstrations don’t work, when the nonviolent tactics have been exhausted — what is left?

And a third from today’s Daily Californian:

Check your privilege when speaking of protests
BY NISA DANG | SPECIAL TO THE DAILY CALLAST UPDATED 20 HOURS AGO

In light of recent events, there has been a resurgence of the belief that in order for a protest to be effective, it must also be nonviolent. This belief especially plagues liberals, who are talented in drafting long Facebook posts about how they are down with the cause, but not really because windows were broken and some white nationalists got their asses beat. Here’s looking at you, Berkeley.

… First, no protest is nonviolent. You are laboring under the assumption that protesters are coming into a peaceful atmosphere and disrupting it through chanting, song and broken windows. This, of course, is a misrepresentation of our society and its treatment of the marginalized. … This is violence. If I know that you are planning to attack me, I’ll do all I can to throw the first punch. …

“As I recently wrote in a tirade against this brand of idiocy, asking people to maintain peaceful dialogue with those who legitimately do not think their lives matter is a violent act.” …

To people with platforms who decide when a protest should and should not be violent: You speak from a place of immense privilege. …

Nisa Dang is an alumna of UC Berkeley.

From Nisa Dang’s Linked-In page:

Experience
Field Organizer
Nevada State Democratic Party
July 2016 – November 2016 (5 months)

In other news, an attempted filibuster of Jeff Sessions’ nomination to be Attorney General was broken today, setting him up for final confirmation on Wednesday.

It’s time for rule of law.



To: Land Shark who wrote (999419)2/8/2017 8:14:23 AM
From: longnshort4 Recommendations

Recommended By
Bill
James Seagrove
Mick Mørmøny
PKRBKR

  Respond to of 1575175
 
after fauxahanist was thrown out of the senate she tweeted I'll not vote for an AG who will not stand up to the president when he breaks the law like holder and lynch what a slut if libs didn't have double standards they would have none at all



To: Land Shark who wrote (999419)2/8/2017 6:25:41 PM
From: RetiredNow2 Recommendations

Recommended By
locogringo
Mick Mørmøny

  Respond to of 1575175
 
The left has done far more to create censorship and fear than the right has. Trump supporters now do not wear any Trump paraphernalia, not admit to being a Trump supporter for fear of physical violence against them. The left is acting exactly like Hitler's brownshirts and intimidating anyone who disagrees with them. Add to that the political correctness brainwashing in every major educational institution and most people are afraid to say what's on their minds for fear of upsetting or angering some sliver of the population.

Here's what the left has wrought:
* violence
* censorship
* hate

So much for the peace and love party. I'm very disappointed. There are issues I am directly in alignment with the left on, like social issues and climate change, but I will never be in agreement with violence, curtailment of freedom of speech, nor any kind of victim mentality the likes of which the liberal espouse with their identity politics.



To: Land Shark who wrote (999419)2/10/2017 10:52:06 PM
From: RetiredNow2 Recommendations

Recommended By
jlallen
locogringo

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1575175
 
CNN has repeatedly hosted left wing nut jobs to accuse Trump of being racist for trying to protect our borders and putting a temporary pause on immigration from countries where terrorists and ISIS are known to be operating. Now, it turns out CNN is racist. You can always count on the accuser to be guilty of what they are accusing the accused of. The universe's karmic backlash on the mainstream media and their lefty flunkies gets sweeter and sweeter.

-------------
Lawsuits accuse CNN of racial discrimination

By Gracie Bonds Staples - The Atlanta Journal-Constitution 104

This month would have marked Omar Butcher’s seventh year at CNN, but instead of celebrating, he hopes he’ll soon be vindicated for speaking out against what he considers the network’s discriminatory practices.

He recently shared his story for the first time since filing suit against the network last October.

Butcher, 37, dreamed of becoming a journalist from the moment he saw Ed Bradley on “60 Minutes.” He wanted to use his voice to expose the good and bad in our society. He hoped to work one day at the New York Times or CNN, which in his mind were the pantheons of journalism.

Butcher, whose father was in the Army, grew up in Italy and Germany. After high school, he enrolled at Florida State University, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in mass media studies in 2008.

When he was selected to intern at CNN, the entire Butcher clan celebrated.

“I’d made it,” Butcher said in an email interview.

Two years later, the network hired him full time as a video journalist.

“I praised God in my sister’s living room all by myself,” he remembered. “Just me and Jesus. I was pumped to get started.”

Butcher set his sights on becoming a writer. When positions were posted on the company website, he eagerly applied. But without even knowing interviews had been conducted, Butcher said he’d get a mass email from his manager congratulating the new newsroom writer.

“I was crushed,” he said. “I was expecting an interview, a writer’s test and then a promotion. Instead, I was overlooked, forgotten. I felt something was not right.”

When he inquired about the process, a woman in CNN’s human resources department walked him through the steps an applicant normally goes through.

“I told her none of those things are happening when I apply,” he said. “She encouraged me to keep applying. So I did.”

By then, Butcher had worked his way up to writer/segment producer and associate producer, and he said all indications were he was good at both.

When he didn’t get an interview for another position, Butcher said he asked his manager, who questioned Butcher’s level of training. When Butcher requested training opportunities, he said he was denied.

He was noticing an ugly trend.

Not only was he not afforded an opportunity to interview for writing positions, those positions were being filled by his white colleagues.

CNN vice president of communications Barbara Levin declined to comment.

In addition to the race discrimination claim, Butcher, a devout Christian, also accuses the network of religious discrimination. Specifically, Butcher’s attorney Ed Buckley, said the suit alleges Butcher was offended by repeated swearing in the workplace that took the Lord’s name in vain.

Then in July, anchor Ashley Banfield asked in an on-air segment about violence in the African-American community: “Have we lost a generation?” She questioned whether “there is an entire generation out there that cannot be changed, that cannot be reached, they just have to age and die.”

Butcher was troubled by Banfield’s remarks and sent her a private email explaining his concern and noting that she did not make similar queries in a previous segment addressing young white males who murder.

He said Banfield responded, questioning whether Butcher was suggesting she was “a racist” and that she would “take [it] up with our bosses.”

A day later, Butcher was terminated.

“I was deeply hurt,” he said.

Buckley said his client, who has since moved to Los Angeles to start his own production company, is asking for, among other things, reinstatement and/or promotion, as well as lost wages and benefits.

“We believe he engaged in protected speech when he expressed his concern,” Buckley said. “Sometimes protected speech makes people uncomfortable, but that’s why it is important. The fact that they are uncomfortable doesn’t mean they can lash out and seek retribution against the speaker.”

Buckley believes Butcher’s observations to Banfield could have been a teaching moment. Instead of lashing out, CNN could have sought to understand his client’s position.

That sadly didn’t happen.

A separate class action suit on behalf of African-American employees has also been filed against the Atlanta-based network, Turner Broadcasting System and New York-based parent company Time Warner Inc. complaining of racial discrimination.

That suit, filed in December in the U.S. District Court in the Northern District of Georgia, asserts that blacks and black males in particular are discriminated against in evaluations, compensation and promotions.

The class-action identifies two plaintiffs by name but attorneys for the plaintiffs have said that at least 30 mid-level black CNN and Turner Broadcasting employees are impacted going back 20 years.

“This discrimination represents a company-wide pattern and practice, rather than a series of isolated incidents,” the suit states.

The claims are particularly egregious because they allegedly occurred within a news organization where diversity of opinion should not only be welcomed but considered a valuable commodity.

Buckley said an internal human resources document attached to the class-action suit indicates African-Americans don’t fare as well as non-blacks in personnel decisions. That dovetails with Butcher’s claims that he was passed over repeatedly for promotion.

The attorney said CNN has responded to the lawsuit, admitting some things, denying some others. Both sides are now in the discovery phase, examining the evidence.

“He was an ambitious employee who not only wanted to advance in the company and do well by the company but was shut down from that opportunity,” Buckley said.

He said that Butcher’s allegations are consistent with the overarching legal theories of the class action. Whether he will ultimately become part of that suit will depend on a number of factors, including whether or not the court permits the case to proceed as a class action.

“He can decide to pursue the case on his own or be a member of the class,” Buckley said. “We haven’t reached that point yet.”

myajc.com