Tag Archives: violence

Worst Quotes of the Week – February 5, 2022

“Here’s a quick thought experiment: If AOC was fat and in her 60s, would anyone listen to another thing she ever said?”

TV personality Adam Carolla, about Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, to FOX News commentator Sean Hannity

Carolla, creator and co-host of the now-defunct “Man Show”, argued that while the 32-year-old politician is “young, vibrant and beautiful,” and “everyone’s always putting a camera and a mike in her face,” her “opinions are idiotic 95 percent of the time.”

“If you’re going to do this, then let’s be truthful about it, because the Holocaust isn’t about race.  It’s not about race.  It’s about man’s inhumanity to man. That’s what it’s about.”

Whoopi Goldberg, on The View

Goldberg made the comments during a discussion of how the Nazi Holocaust-centered graphic novel “Maus” was banned by a Tennessee school board.  That school board banned the book, Goldberg said, because there were complaints about the novel containing nudity and bad language.  “The minute you turn it into race, it goes down this alley.  Let’s talk about it for what it is – it’s how people treat each other.  It’s a problem.  It doesn’t matter if you’re Black or white because Black, white, Jews – everybody.”

Goldberg apologized the next day for her comments, but ABC announced immediately they had decided to suspend her for two weeks.

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Political Cartoon of the Week – January 29, 2022

Image: Khalil Bendib

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Video of the Week – January 15, 2022

Rep. Marjorie Taylor-Greene, suggesting use of the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution against her Democratic constituents, during an interview with talk show host Sebastian Gorka:

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Video of the Week – January 8, 2022

This is Sen. Ted Cruz giving something of a mea culpa to talk show screed Tucker Carlson over the senator’s frequent description of the January 6, 2021 Capitol Hill insurrection as a terrorist attack.  It’s obvious Cruz is terrified of faux journalist Carlson who always gives the same expression a puppy does when it tries to understand what you’re saying.  Of course, puppies are way cuter – and often far more intelligent – than Carlson on his best day.

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Grasp

“I really do love you, Janie.”

Heath looked so sad.

Janie managed to lift her yes; the migraine having magically disappeared.  The light from the floor lamp beside her normally would have reignited the pain.  But, she thought, the wine must have already started working its own magic – along with whatever Heath had put into it.

He stood a few feet in front of her; bare-chested and holding…something in his left hand.  She couldn’t make out exactly what it was.  And she didn’t care.  She couldn’t help but salivate over his rocky torso and recall how much she cared about him.  How things had seemed so perfect all this time.  If college was supposed to be a coming-of-age/adventure/find-your-true-identity, Janie had achieved a perfect score.

And now, it had come to this.  These things weren’t supposed to happen.  In a perfect universe.  If such a place existed.  In this universe.

His lips trembled – the way they did when he first asked her out.  The way they did when he asked her to marry him.  So…what was he going to ask her now?  “I’m sorry,” he muttered.

She saw his eyes glance to the wine glass she held in her left hand.  And unexpectedly let go.

It tumbled to the floor.

“Sorry,” she said.  “Sorry about…what?”

“I love you.  But…”

She tried to lean forward, yet her body seemed paralyzed.  The lines in Heath’s torso began to crisscross.  “What?” she spit out.

“I can’t go on like this.”

“Like what?”

“I’m sorry it came to…this.”

The last thing she heard.  Her head knocked to the right, and her body slumped.

A few spots of wine dotted the chair where she sat.

Heath took a deep breath.  “Oh, God.  Forgive me.”

She was heavier than he thought.  He pulled her limp body off the chair and into the kitchen.

Getting her into the boat along the pier was even more difficult.  He moved only by feel and by moonlight.  The blue-black darkness hid enough, he felt.  Lewisville Lake was a long 20-something miles away from the condo.  A trash dumpster would have been closer…but too obvious.

So he chose the lake.

The flavor of the alga-laden water swaddled his throat.  Heavy, heavy.

He grinned.  They both liked the lake.  They and all of their friends.  How many good times did they have out here?  Memorial Days, Fourth of July, Labor Days…many summer days.  Just about any weekend they felt like coming out here.  Just about any time they felt good about…something.  Or didn’t feel good.  The lake was always a refuge; always a place to escape from whatever.

That odor of the water…heavy, heavy…like Janie’s body.

Even getting the inflatable boat out of the garage had been a chore.  Everything had become so difficult.

He had shrouded her in an old burlap bag and hoisted her into the boat.  Actually a giant…raft?  Seemed like it.  An oversized pool toy colored blue and green.  Thick material.  It wobbled…but made little noise as he slipped it into the water.

No moon.  Clouds covered it.

The water undulated quietly.  The mossy scent had become strong, almost too strong.

What great times they had out here.

How had it come to this?

Despite the coolness of the night air, sweat coated his bare torso.  His cargo shorts were also damp with moisture.  He paddled out as far from shore as he could, using the little rubber oar that came with this glorified pool accoutrement.

He finally stopped.

And breathed.

Strong water smell.

Without looking he grabbed the end of the thick rope laying beside him.  The rest was already wrapped around…the bag.  “I’m sorry,” he muttered.

Rolling her over the rounded edge of the boat almost tipped the entire thing over.  The sound of her form hitting the water made the loudest noise in that serene night.

The rest of that rope quickly uncoiled itself from its spot beside Heath’s foot…before the last few inches wrapped around his ankle…and knocked him off balance.

He fell into the water with an even louder splash.

The boat tipped upwards onto its side before smacking back down into place.

A whirlpool sprung up where Heath entered the water.

And, as Janie’s burlap-clad body sank into the lake, Heath didn’t see – he couldn’t see – her hand poking through the bag…grasping the rope.

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Political Cartoon of the Week – May 22, 2021

Khalil Bendib

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Worst Quotes of the Week – May 22, 2021

“Just warms your heart to see.”

Harry Khachatrian, a contributing editor for “Daily Wire”, about the January 6 Capitol Hill riots

“Let’s stop pretending that the media is not a participant and that it is somehow entitled to not be treated like every other active enemy.”

Kurt Schlichter, senior columnist at the right-wing site “Townhall”, about the January 6 Capitol Hill riots

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Photo of the Week – February 6, 2021

This week Capitol Hill police officer Brian D. Sicknick was honored in the Capitol Rotunda.  Sicknick was caught up in the January 6 riots where he sustained serious injuries and died later.

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Don’t You Understand? They’re Victims!

“The Devil made me do it!”

Flip Wilson

You have to understand something about the people who stormed the U.S. Capitol on January 6.  They’re not entirely responsible for their actions.  They had merely responded to the words of their newly-formed deity, Donald Trump.  In the hours leading up to the siege, Trump had infused them with idea that he had been wronged by the voting process; that the 2020 elections had been manipulated by covert gangs of leftist forces determined to enforce abortions and gun confiscations upon helpless, red-blooded, bible-carrying Christian American citizens to ensure his loss.  He was a victim, Trump maintained, and vicariously so were his minions.

CHARGE!!!!!!!!!

Thus, the Trumpians had been victimized by the same queer-loving renegades and they were justified in storming the Capitol, tearing through offices, screaming like children told to come in for dinner, threatening others because they got their feelings hurt – all while dressed like ghosts of the Civil War and refugees from a Comic-Con conference gone wrong.

Please!

The Capitol Hill warriors are no more victims of enraged rhetoric than porn stars are of poor script-writing.  For years conservatives have proclaimed the tenets of individual freedom and personal responsibility.  They declared such values in reactive angst to a welfare society and relentless victimhood proclamations.

They loathed when non-White people bemoaned centuries of Euro-colonial oppression and systemic racism.  They rolled their eyes at the thought of women hollering about sexual harassment in the workplace and on college campuses.  They snickered at queer folks complaining of innate homophobia on the job and in school.

Then the U.S. Congress met on January 6, 2021 to certify Joe Biden as the winner of last year’s presidential contest, and – as Dante Alighieri once wrote – all hell broke loose.

The Trumpian crowd became maddened by the process and felt they had no other recourse but to subvert that constitutional mechanism in the most violent manner possible.  Their voices and votes had been ignored and they had to stop the madness.

So, in the name of Ronald Reagan, where the hell was all that talk of personal responsibility?  Where were the people to take ownership of themselves and their actions?  In other words, why do the Capitol Hill rioters suddenly see themselves as victims of…well, anything?!

They all sound like a bunch of – oh, God!  A bunch of minorities, women and queers!  Pass the rifle and heaven forbid!  Now these “victims” have placed themselves in the same category as tree-loving, pot-smoking, Muslim-loving liberals!

What’s going to happen next?  The magnetic poles will switch sides – like communist traitors – and life as we know will extinguish itself?

Again – please!

I personally don’t care to hear the anguished state of mind of these mentally- challenged pencil-dick and cavern-cunt imps.  What happened with last year’s presidential elections is something known as democracy.  It’s the sustenance upon which civilized societies survive.  We cannot exist without it.  The goons who stormed the Capitol three weeks ago didn’t fall victim to the verbiage of Donald Trump; they were victims of their own damned stupidity.  If they truly were swayed by Trumpian oratory, they are as gullible as a child believing in Santa Claus.  They roared into that building because what was left of their brain cells had perished in the swamp of their own hysteria.

It’s just so incredibly interesting that these right-wing extremists who wrap themselves in the American flag and cry freedom – while waving the loser traitorous Confederate flag – are suddenly helpless and violated.  They couldn’t help themselves.  Their faux president told them to do it.

The reality is quite simple: they’re violent and they’re stupid.  But they aren’t victims.

Flip Wilson on “The Ed Sullivan Show” January 11, 1970

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Most Ominous Quotes of the Week – October 31, 2020

Drew Miller, preparing for the 2020 elections and other calamities inside a fortified bunker in West Virgina. A retired Air Force intelligence officer and Harvard-educated writer, Miller has been establishing compounds in readiness for an apocalypse.  Photo by Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post)

“Militia groups and other armed nonstate actors pose a serious threat to the safety and security of American voters.”

Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, a nonprofit organization that researches political violence and has tracked more than 80 extremist groups in recent months. The project’s report said Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Oregon “are at highest risk of increased militia activity in the election and post-election period.”

“Could the election devolve into civil war? Unlikely. “But look at World War I: Some worthless, low-level archduke gets assassinated and things escalate out of control. I’ve got people who are concerned that all it would take is a close election and some cheating.”

Drew Miller, founder of a network of members-only survivalist camps

“The right is not going to give up their power unless they feel threatened.  People are opening up to the idea that a riot is the language of the unheard.  Property destruction is not violence.”

Olivia Katbi Smith, a co-chair of the Democratic Socialists of America in Portland

“We’re talking about violence in U.S. elections, and that’s insane.  This is a real threat, and we have seen increased confidence among the militias.”

Lisa Kaplan, the chief executive of the Alethea Group, a Washington company that tracks disinformation efforts

“I don’t want to amplify the voices of extremists because the last thing we want is to help them create fear and anxiety. But people need to know there is real concern, that these are the perfect conditions for extremists to try to create chaos.”

Oren Segal, vice president of the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism

“I just can’t get product. It seems like 30 million people went out and bought guns. We call suppliers and distributors and they just don’t have any product. Our selection is just terrible.”

Nate Gerheim, general manager and gunsmith at the Shooters Bench in Russellton, Pennsylvania, about the increased number of recent firearm purchases

“Violence is not popular at all. But even five percent is millions of people, and it only takes a few people to create chaos.”

Lilliana Mason, a political scientist at the University of Maryland

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