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Politics : A Real American President: Donald Trump -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: locogringo who wrote (342300)3/27/2022 1:25:11 PM
From: Honey_Bee1 Recommendation

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pak73

  Respond to of 455132
 
Well, I will say this unequivocally: In the humor department, you win hands down. LOL!!!



To: locogringo who wrote (342300)3/27/2022 1:48:49 PM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

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locogringo
pak73

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 455132
 
WAR CRIMES ON VIDEO


Shocking Videos Allegedly Show Ukrainians Shooting and Torturing Russian POWs




To: locogringo who wrote (342300)3/27/2022 3:09:59 PM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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locogringo

  Respond to of 455132
 


Salt Lake Tribune needs a Waaambulance…

Utah GOP lurches to the right at Davis County convention, costs longtime legislator his Utah House seat

Rep. Steve Handy was defeated by right-wing newcomer Trevor Lee, while other Republican lawmakers will be pushed into primaries.

(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Steve Handy talks to delegates, at the Davis County Republican nominating convention at Farmington High School, on Saturday, March 26, 2022.


By Bryan Schott

| March 27, 2022, 12:00 p.m.

For Utahns looking to understand the future of the Republican Party in 2022, there was no better place than Farmington High School on Saturday. There, candidates at the Davis County Republican Convention ran through culture war issues dominating the zeitgeist on America’s political right.

Railing against mandates and government overreach? Check.

Warnings about critical race theory creeping into Utah’s schools? You know it.

Attacks on President Joe Biden? Absolutely.

There was also mention of other policy issues like rising inflation, tax cuts and preserving Utah’s increasingly scarce water sources. Still, those were more of a garnish on the heaping plate of red meat being served up to delegates.

Donald Trump’s presidency and subsequent loss to President Joe Biden, combined with growing anger from two years of Covid restrictions, has reoriented the party to such a degree that it’s hard to believe Sen. Mitt Romney was the GOP presidential nominee just ten years ago.

That hard lurch to the right-wing of the party cost longtime state Rep. Steve Handy of Layton his seat in the Legislature on Saturday. One of the state’s more moderate Republicans, Handy, was defeated by newcomer Trevor Lee, who has embraced several right-wing issues during his campaign.


On his campaign website, Lee says he favors election audits and wants to pass “heartbeat” legislation, which bans abortions once a heartbeat is detected. Lee also says he favors a ban on “anyone with male DNA from competing on Women’s (sic) sports teams.”

Handy was one of several Republicans who flipped their vote to help override Gov. Spencer Cox’s veto of a bill banning transgender athletes. Although the vote switch wasn’t enough to sway Davis County delegates to support the longtime lawmaker. Lee is now unopposed in HD16.

On Saturday, other prominent Davis County Republicans were forced into a primary contest by more right-wing candidates.

Sen. Jerry Stevenson of Layton, co-chair of the Legislature’s top budget committee, was sent to a primary against Betty Young. Her campaign website focuses on the perceived loss of liberties and parental rights.

(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah state Sen. Jerry Stephenson, R-Layton, talks to delegates, at the Davis County Republican nominating convention at Farmington High School, on Saturday, March 26, 2022.

Rep. Melissa Garff Ballard, R-North Salt Lake, was sent to a primary against Ronald Mortensen, who has a history of sharing false, anti-immigrant rhetoric. Mortensen was nominated for a top post at the State Department by former President Donald Trump, but he was never confirmed.

Rep. Ray Ward, R-Bountiful, avoided an outright loss on Saturday by taking the signature-gathering route to potential re-election. He moves on to a June primary against Lyle Mason, who has been a favorite of right-wing groups like Utah Parents United.

Utah’s HD18 — which is open after Rep. Tim Hawkes, R-Centerville, announced he would not run for another term — features a primary election between a former Centerville Mayor Paul Cutler and Alena Ericksen.

Ericksen, who briefly ran for Congress in 2021, has adopted rhetoric common to the far-right anti-government sovereign citizen movement. She also sued state officials and the Davis School District over coronavirus-related restrictions. The two suits sought nearly $1.5 billion in damages.

The startling turn to the right on Saturday was evident throughout Saturday’s convention, focusing on culture war issues over more traditional bread and butter Republican topics.

Even the international crisis resulting from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was just a passing mention, only coming up during the opening prayer and from Gov. Spencer Cox, who bizarrely connected it to his signing of last year’s bill allowing for the carrying of a concealed weapon without a permit.

“Let me tell you, our friends in Ukraine understand the importance of the right to bear arms,” Cox said.

He also used the crisis to attack the Biden administration’s decision to halt new leases for oil and gas drilling on public lands.

(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Brad Wilson talks to delegates, at the Davis County Republican nominating convention at Farmington High School, on Saturday, March 26, 2022.

Even the top Republican in the House, Speaker Brad Wilson, adjusted his approach to facing his first intra-party challenger since 2010. On Saturday, his speech to delegates was a clear example of that shifting political landscape.

Wilson spent a good portion of the just concluded 2022 session focused on saving the Great Salt Lake and pushing through a $200 million tax cut package. Saturday, he led off attacking former state epidemiologist Dr. Angela Dunn, who Utah Republicans have villanized in the wake of unpopular pandemic restrictions.

“I was in a meeting two years ago with the Senate president, the governor, myself and Angela Dunn. Dr. Dunn was advocating something we all thought was troubling. She wanted to keep our school closed. She wanted to shutter our businesses. And she wanted us to stay home, basically amounting to government telling us what we can and cannot do and controlling every aspect of our lives,” Wilson said.

After discussing efforts to keep “harmful ideologies” out of Utah’s schools, an oblique reference to critical race theory, he stepped onto the more familiar rhetorical ground of tax cuts.

“In the last few years, we have cut taxes for seniors and businesses and other Utahns, but we’ve got a long way to go. We are not done cutting your taxes,” Wilson said.

That was enough for Wilson, who earned enough support from delegates to avoid being sent to a primary, even though he collected signatures to be safe.

Saturday’s results may provide a clue to how much further to the right delegates at next month’s GOP state convention may lean. Last year saw Republican delegates rain boos on Sen. Romney and Gov. Cox. A further step in that direction could see more longtime Republican officeholders facing an unexpected primary or suddenly out of office.



To: locogringo who wrote (342300)3/27/2022 3:11:56 PM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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Honey_Bee
locogringo

  Respond to of 455132
 
  • Trump leads Biden by double digits in Nevada…
  • Hispanic voters favor Trump by 19 pts…



  • To: locogringo who wrote (342300)3/27/2022 3:12:53 PM
    From: FJB4 Recommendations

    Recommended By
    Honey_Bee
    locogringo
    pak73
    Schnullie

      Respond to of 455132
     
  • Ouch, new NBC poll is absolutely brutal for Biden…
  • Hispanic approval at 39 percent…



  • To: locogringo who wrote (342300)3/27/2022 4:02:38 PM
    From: FJB3 Recommendations

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    locogringo
    pak73
    Woody_Nickels

      Respond to of 455132
     

    MUST READ: After Being Paid Off by Big Tech for Years for their Silence Heritage Foundation Finds Itself Victim of Big Tech Censorship


    SNIP:
    Tony Perkins from Family Research Council, Grover Norquist from Americans for Tax Reform, and Kay Cole Jones from the Heritage Organization

    Alphabet Inc.’s Google contributes to more than 200 third-party groups, including the Heritage Foundation, National Cyber Security Alliance, and Americans for Tax Reform.

    These payments were made while the conservative bloodbath by the Tech Giants was roaring ahead.

    These so-called conservative groups were being paid, essentially for their silence, as Facebook eliminated conservative content and killed off conservative publishers.

    From The Wall Street Journal:

    Facebook has privately sought advice from the Family Research Council, a conservative Christian public-policy group, and its founder Anthony Perkins, according to people familiar with those meetings. Twitter’s Chief Executive Jack Dorsey recently hosted dinners with conservatives, including Grover Norquist, the founder and president of Americans for Tax Reform, which advocates for lower taxes. Advisers on the left include the Southern Poverty Law Center, a civil-rights group that keeps a list of hate groups…

    …While outside groups are technically unpaid, the tech companies contribute to some of the organizations they are seeking out for guidance. Alphabet Inc.’s Google contributes to more than 200 third-party groups, including the Heritage Foundation, National Cyber Security Alliance, and Americans for Tax Reform, according to the company. Facebook and most other companies don’t disclose their donations to outside groups.

    Executives see the outreach to a cross-section of groups in part as a form of political protection, to defend against the allegation that they are biased against conservatives, a complaint lodged repeatedly last year by President Donald Trump and Republican lawmakers. Some of the conservative groups tapped recently by tech platforms complain that the companies defer too closely to the Southern Poverty Law Center when defining what constitutes hate speech.

    Many companies and other groups rely on the center’s list of hate groups, counting nearly 1,000 across the U.S., according to its website. The group also writes about some of those groups on its “Hatewatch” blog.

    Keegan Hankes, a senior research analyst at the Southern Poverty Law Center, says the group lobbies tech platforms to remove content it considers hate speech, such as when it successfully asked Facebook to remove content posted by the League of the South, a neo-Confederate group.

    Now this…

    The Heritage has suddenly had a change of heart now that estimate they have lost an estimated $100 million due to Big Tech censorship. And they are joined a conservative group against censorship. President Kevin Robert even said, “Big Tech is an enemy of the American people.”

    Joseph Farah at WND reported:

    “Big Tech is an enemy of the American people.”

    That’s not me making this claim. It’s not Donald Trump. It’s not even Steve Bannon.

    It’s the conservative Heritage Foundation.

    “The think tank announced this week “that it is joining the Free Speech Alliance, a coalition of more than 90 conservative organizations working together to ensure conservatives’ free speech online and to hold tech companies accountable when they undermine it.”

    The only thing I would say about that statement is that it underestimates the extent of Big Tech’s undermining of free speech. They undermine it every day of the week. They undermine it twice on Sunday. They undermine it more than a billion times a second. They couldn’t possibly undermine it any more than they do. They undermine it every chance they get…

    (…)

    What did it take to drive the august Heritage Foundation to reach this critical decision?

    • In February, YouTube censored a video posted to The Daily Signal’s YouTube channel in which Virginia parent Merianne Jensen criticized unscientific and harmful school mask mandates, claiming it “violated” the platform’s “COVID-19 medical misinformation policy.” (The Daily Signal is Heritage’s news site.)
    • Last year, Amazon removed paid ads promoting a book by Heritage senior fellow Mike Gonzalez titled, “BLM: The Making of a New Marxist Revolution,” because content that “revolves around controversial or highly debated social topics is not permitted.” After a public pressure campaign, Amazon reversed itself and restored the ads.
    • In 2020, one of Heritage’s YouTube videos on gender dysphoria was censored by the company, while in 2019, The Daily Signal reported that YouTube had also removed a similar video on its YouTube channel.
    • And in early 2019, then-Heritage President Kay C. James was invited to be a member of Google’s new AI board, only for Google to dissolve the board after an outcry from company employees that James, a conservative, was asked to be on the board.
    This is a good lesson for every conservative group out there taking money from Big Tech for your silence. Eventually, your number will come up.

    Sorry it took you so long, Heritage. Hope you don’t make the same mistake again.



    To: locogringo who wrote (342300)3/27/2022 4:17:05 PM
    From: FJB3 Recommendations

    Recommended By
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    pak73
    Woody_Nickels

      Respond to of 455132
     
    It is time the 25th amendment was moved in the USA.




    To: locogringo who wrote (342300)3/27/2022 4:18:51 PM
    From: FJB  Respond to of 455132
     



    To: locogringo who wrote (342300)3/27/2022 4:27:19 PM
    From: FJB5 Recommendations

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    locogringo
    pak73
    Sr K
    Woody_Nickels

      Respond to of 455132
     
    TRUMP ON KETANJI BROWN JACKSON: "If she can't even say what a woman is, how on earth could she be trusted to say what the Constitution is?”




    To: locogringo who wrote (342300)3/27/2022 4:32:57 PM
    From: FJB4 Recommendations

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    kckip
    locogringo
    pak73

      Respond to of 455132
     
    LOL

    I literally only like the black one.




    To: locogringo who wrote (342300)3/27/2022 4:35:05 PM
    From: FJB2 Recommendations

    Recommended By
    Honey_Bee
    pak73

      Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 455132
     
    We all know where this is headed.




    To: locogringo who wrote (342300)3/27/2022 4:59:03 PM
    From: FJB4 Recommendations

    Recommended By
    Honey_Bee
    locogringo
    pak73
    Tom Clarke

      Respond to of 455132
     
    No task forces. We want…

    select committees populated with a few GOP attack dogs staffed by criminal prosecutors with subpoena power. Public testimony under oath—start with the FBI in on Russiagate, school boards, Whitmer case, and January 6.


    See @January6thCmte
    for template.




    To: locogringo who wrote (342300)3/27/2022 4:59:57 PM
    From: FJB3 Recommendations

    Recommended By
    Honey_Bee
    pak73
    Woody_Nickels

      Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 455132
     
    There’s no way anyone can see what’s coming out at Whitmer “kidnapping” trial and how J6 committee is using that day as pretext to destroy Trump allies and still believe the Capitol “insurrection” wasn’t planned months in advance by same interests: