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1 w

Column: The Washington Post's Sunday Slobber Over Rosie O'Donnell
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Column: The Washington Post's Sunday Slobber Over Rosie O'Donnell

The Washington Post would like you to pretend along with them that they’re the essence of fact-based neutrality, that they don’t play favorites. Then you notice that their Sunday Arts & Style section carried a sprawling four-page spread with ten color photographs on the glorious Rosie O’Donnell and her passionate loathing of Donald Trump. The Post summarized the puff piece on X: “Donald Trump’s first administration took an emotional toll on Rosie O’Donnell. She didn’t think she could endure a second term. This time, O’Donnell had a plan: she moved to Ireland.” So let’s give Rosie credit for carrying out the threat to leave America, unlike many exquisitely sensitive celebrities. “She’s a sensitive soul, a giant exposed nerve who has posed, successfully, for most of her life and career as a brassy Long Island toughie,” gushed Post arts reporter Geoff Edgers. The first Trump term “took an emotional toll on the die-hard liberal, even as she tweeted and marched and spit invective against the president every chance she got.” So at least we get the term “die-hard liberal,” and the accurate note on “invective.” But these only make her more lovable to the customers of The Washington Post. She moved to Ireland for her child: “O’Donnell, 63, worried about life under an administration that has been hostile to gay rights and gender-nonconforming people in general; her youngest, 12-year-old Clay, is nonbinary.” It used to be “her daughter Dakota.” Then Edgers dropped a pile of obligatory "they/their" terms on Clay. Edgers pitched O’Donnell vs. Trump as two “vivid triborough loudmouths” who could deliver “late-night bluster.” He quoted Rosie attacking Trump’s personal life: “Left the first first wife, had an affair, left the second wife, had an affair. Had kids both times, but he’s the moral compass for 20-year-olds in America.” The Post laid out a similarity here, but didn’t make it direct: Rosie left the first wife, after four adopted kids. Rosie left the second wife, after adopting one more. The second wife later committed suicide. That’s not mentioned in this huge article. Edgers isn’t going to mock Rosie’s moral compass. No, her problem is she cares too much. We’re told “This impulse to help – anyone, anywhere, at whatever cost – is a constant source of frustration for her friends.” Even now, Trump enjoys mocking Rosie, and that’s painted as somehow weird, when it’s not weird in reverse. When the Irish prime minister came to the White House, Trump mocked her in response to a question from the Real America’s Voice network. Edgers turned dramatic: “Suddenly, what had once seemed like a classic showbiz rivalry — a Joan Crawford-Bette Davis slap fight rebooted for the reality TV era — was beginning to feel more ominous than absurd.” Ominous? Like Trump was going to send a goon squad to rough her up? Leftists love to dish it out against Trump, but they can’t seem to take it. The Post story is accompanied by a Rosie portrait of Trump where she scrawled the words “Felon, Crook, Creep, Liar, Loser, Done.” But that’s not ominous? Of course, the Post wouldn’t use words that would be upsetting about Rosie's strange views, like "9/11 conspiracy theorist." This isn’t the first time Geoff Edgers has traveled to Ireland for a puff piece. In 2020, he offered the same routine, a huge Sunday tribute to leftist singer Sinead O’Connor, beloved for tearing up a picture of Pope John Paul II on Saturday Night Live. She was “one of contemporary music’s greatest and most original artists.” These women are very much alike -- “sensitive artists” at war with everyone The Washington Post hates.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 w

‘He’s a guy who likes to get butt-kissed’: Whoopi Goldberg spirals over Trump yet again
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‘He’s a guy who likes to get butt-kissed’: Whoopi Goldberg spirals over Trump yet again

The women of “The View” appear to be “grasping at straws” when it comes to their hatred of Donald Trump — and their latest rant about the president has only made that crystal clear.“His personal stuff, I could care less,” Goldberg began, before asking, “I want to know, what are you doing for us?”“The president for everybody, but you haven’t been the president for anybody. You’ve been the president just for you,” she added. “Well, the crypto guys, the people in prison he’s pardoned,” co-host Ana Navarro chimed in.“But even the people he’s pardoning, he’s not connected to them. He said he was our president. He’s not our president,” Goldberg interjected.“He’s a guy who likes to get butt-kissed. That’s what he is,” she added, to applause from the audience.BlazeTV host Pat Gray, co-host Jeff Fisher, and executive producer Keith Malinak aren’t shocked by anything the women on “The View” say anymore.“‘The people he’s pardoning, they’re not connected to him. What is he doing for us’ — he just pardoned that Democrat lawmaker, and then that guy turned around and said, ‘Yeah, I’m running,’” Malinak says.“‘Yeah, thanks for pardoning me,’” Fisher mocks. “‘And you know what? I’m going to run for office as a Democrat.’”“They can’t find a way to position that in a negative way. He just pardoned a Democrat, and so they’re grasping at any straw they possibly can to make it a negative,” Gray adds.Want more from Pat Gray?To enjoy more of Pat's biting analysis and signature wit as he restores common sense to a senseless world, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 w

Dozens of teenagers loot 7-Eleven in brazen flash-mob robbery — and post video on social media
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Dozens of teenagers loot 7-Eleven in brazen flash-mob robbery — and post video on social media

Police are trying to identify dozens of teenagers who looted a 7-Eleven convenience store in downtown Los Angeles in broad daylight.The clerk of the store hit the panic alarm Saturday to alert police after someone walked into the store and pointed a gun at him. That's when a mob of teens started stealing items from the business on Beverly Boulevard.'They feel like they can get away with anything — and from the looks of it, they can.'Video posted on social media showed the laughing teens happily ransacking the store.One of the teens can be heard boasting on the video: "Bro, it's worth it because it ain't got my face on it."The teen flash mobs have targeted several convenience stores in California in numerous incidents in recent years, and they often post videos of their crimes on social media."Nobody respects anything or anyone," said Erik Albizures, a resident of L.A., to KTTV-TV. "They feel like they can get away with anything — and from the looks of it, they can."KTTV reported that no one had been arrested yet, despite numerous surveillance cameras capturing video at the intersection."How do we get this to stop? I don't even know," said Aaliyah Robinson, another resident. "Kids don't listen in general, but maybe if parents start teaching their kids to be more respectful."RELATED: Security video shows deputy walk in on 4 thugs robbing 7-Eleven in California At least one resident actually tried to say economic pressures forced the teens into looting."They probably don't have the money for food," Malcolm McBride said. "If you go up that block, there are so many homeless people. It's a systemic issue, and I don't think California is doing a good job at that. I'd start there."Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 w

Hollywood Saves Democracy One Instagram Post at a Time
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Hollywood Saves Democracy One Instagram Post at a Time

In the latest episode of Hollywood Lectures Humanity, celebrities known primarily for their roles as fictional characters have bravely taken up the noble cause of educating “regular” folks on how…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 w

Climate Change Catastrophism Ebbs Among America’s Left as Moral Panic Starts To Evaporate
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Climate Change Catastrophism Ebbs Among America’s Left as Moral Panic Starts To Evaporate

Is the American left finally waking up from its decades-long climate catastrophism stupor?  For years, climate alarmism has reigned as political catechism: The planet is burning, and only drastic…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 w

South Korea Moves to Require AI Labels on Digital Ads Amid Rising Wave of Deceptive Deepfakes
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South Korea Moves to Require AI Labels on Digital Ads Amid Rising Wave of Deceptive Deepfakes

BY EMMANUEL OGBONNA South Korea will begin enforcing mandatory labels on all advertisements created with artificial intelligence starting next year, taking aim at a rapidly expanding ecosystem of…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 w

Over 200,000 Power Banks Recalled From Amazon Due To Risk, After $380,000 In Fire Damage
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Over 200,000 Power Banks Recalled From Amazon Due To Risk, After $380,000 In Fire Damage

By Leslie D. SouleINIU 10,000mAh portable power banks are the subject of a current recall, as INIU has received 15 reports of power banks overheating, and 11 reports of fires caused from these power banks…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 w

Lithuania Declares National Emergency Over Balloons From Belarus
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Lithuania Declares National Emergency Over Balloons From Belarus

By Leslie D. SouleLithuanian authorities have declared a nationwide emergency in response to balloons coming over their border from Belarus, carrying smuggled cigarettes. This issue is not purely about…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 w

Morning Greatness: DOJ Rolls Back ‘Anti-Discrimination’ Rules
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Morning Greatness: DOJ Rolls Back ‘Anti-Discrimination’ Rules

Good Wednesday morning. Here is what is on President Trump’s agenda today: 2:00 PM  THE PRESIDENT participates in a Roundtable 5:00 PM THE PRESIDENT greets Pastors News roundup: Gov. Shapiro faces…
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Nostalgia Machine
Nostalgia Machine
1 w

Alexandr Zhitomirsky’s Anti-Nazi and Anti-American Photomontages For The Soviet Union Propaganda Machine
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Alexandr Zhitomirsky’s Anti-Nazi and Anti-American Photomontages For The Soviet Union Propaganda Machine

“In my photomontages I spoke to the single soldier who at that moment held the magazine in his hands. I related to him and put myself in his place. I was his interested interlocutor.” – Aleksandr Zhitomirsky   Nazi Minister of Propaganda Joseph Goebbels speaks through the Voice of America in 1950 by Alexandr Zhitomirsky Soviet graphic art was made in the service of political belief and subject to state regulation. Through posters, caricatures and cartoons, the communist Soviet Union hammered citizens at home and abroad with its message. Aleksandr Zhitomirsky (1907–1993) was a leading and prolific artist working under the auspices of the Soviet propaganda ministry. Inspired by German artist John Heartfield, his photomontages and leaflets were airdropped on German troops during World War II. He later worked for Pravda and other Soviet publications during the Cold War.   Goebbels speaks through American capitalism. Zhitomirsky was born in 1907 in Rostov-on-Don and moved to Moscow in 1925. He began work as a publisher for the Artists’ Association of Revolutionary Russia (a major Soviet art group that championed realistic, documentary depictions of everyday working-class life) and as editor for journals such as We’re Building, Socialist Industry and Illustrated Newspaper. During WWII, Zhitomirsky produced some of his best known political photomontage. He worked on The Photo Newspaper for the Red Army, which told stories of Russian heroes, and Front Illustrierte. Published in many languages — German, Italian, Finnish, Romanian and Hungarian — these four-page leaflets were intended to demoralise enemy soldiers. Urging surrender and promising leniency, millions of pages of Front Illustrierte were dropped from Soviet planes over Nazi-occupied territory. The Third Reich forbade German soldiers to collect the leaflets and added Zhitomirsky to its “most wanted” enemy list.   The Pentagon is seen eating up a number of objects, including a school and a hospital, 1950 The Stock Exchange watered with the blood of US soldiers – On the petals of the flower are the names of various American corporations by Aleksandr Zhitomirsky, 1950 Soviet Realism, Anti-Semitism and Persecuting Zhitomirsky After the war, Zhitomirsky became a target of State-approved anti-Semitism. People close to Zhitomirsky were arrested and some executed on account of being Jewish. Joseph Stalin’s rise to power marked a turning point. Following the establishment of Israel in 1948, Stalin increasingly viewed Jewish cultural and political affiliations as threats, labelling Jews with terms like “rootless cosmopolitanism”. He condemned “Zionism” as disloyalty, referring to the Jewish people having existed without a land to call their own for nearly two millennia (the Romans destroyed the Temple of Jerusalem in the year 70) and having lived among the various Gentile nations as they waited a time to return to their ancient land. This led to harsh restrictions on Jewish intellectuals, artists, and organisations, particularly during the Zhdanov Doctrine – Zhdanovshchina, a policy instituted in 1946 by Andrei Zhdanov, the Soviet Union’s “propagandist-in-chief”. The doctrine enforced strict adherence to Communist ideals in the arts. Photomontage as an art form increasingly came under fire in 1951-1952 as a deviation from “socialist realism”, the official artistic form in the Soviet Union. The doctrine was formally proclaimed by Maxim Gorky at the Soviet Writers Congress of 1934, although not well defined. In practice, it meant using realist styles to create highly optimistic depictions of Soviet life. Any pessimistic or critical element was banned. As the Russian-Jewish revolutionary Leon Trotsky (26 October 1879 – 21 August 1940) noted; The name itself has evidently been invented by some high functionary in the department of the arts. This “realism” consists in the imitation of provincial daguerreotypes of the third quarter of the last century; the “socialist” character apparently consists in representing, in the manner of pretentious photography, events which never took place. It was not until the late 1950s, after the death of Stalin and during the Cold War’s “thaw” period under new Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, that Zhitomirsky was able to more freely take up photomontage work again.   Harry Truman and Winston Churchill pose under a giant Napoleon-style hat, 1950 Anglo-Iraqi Pact, 1951 Candidate of the Democratic Party, Candidate of the Republican Party, 1952 Advice for the Artist by Aleksandr Zhitomirsky In 1983, Zhitomirsky published his only book, The Art of Political Photomontage: Advice for the Artist. In it he asks: “What gives the power of dynamite to the photo-poster pamphlet? Foremost, its motto is humanism. And, of course, the ability to see in subjects something new that others do not see but that they by all means should see.”   Lockheed Aircraft Corporation is pictured as a businessman with a grasping hand instead of a head and a foot holding up a bucket full of money – 1961   The United States is seen as a dentist placing a denture of bullets into an unwilling patient, 1963 John Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Robert Kennedy … Who will be the next one?A necktie-wearing shark is shown beneath the title, 1968 Get him out of Vietnam! The United States, pictured as a vicious animal, is being struck on the head by a rifle butt, 1971 The headless rider: The capitalist, with a torch as a head, is pictured riding a bomb, 1981 by Aleksandr Zhitomirsky Via: Brown, The post Alexandr Zhitomirsky’s Anti-Nazi and Anti-American Photomontages For The Soviet Union Propaganda Machine appeared first on Flashbak.
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