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1 y

Maxine Waters: Trump Winning Would Be Threatening To ‘Millions’; ‘Killings’ Will Happen
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Maxine Waters: Trump Winning Would Be Threatening To ‘Millions’; ‘Killings’ Will Happen

Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA) declared over the weekend that if former President Donald Trump wins re-election that “millions” of people will be threatened and “killings” will happen. Waters made the remarks during a Sunday interview on MSNBC when asked about if she was concerned about her personal safety if Trump were to win. “I’m very concerned, not only about my safety and not only about the safety of members of Congress,” she claimed. “I’m concerned about the safety of so many people in this country, particularly people of color. Donald Trump has said that if he does not win, it is going to be fraud, and because it is going to be fraud, there will be blood in the streets. He threatens about a civil war, and he threatens there’s going to be violence.” “I would say all of this talk is motivational with many of those who are racist, who are sitting at home listening to him, and they are taking him up on his threats even before the elections take place,” she continued. “It is about thousands, maybe millions of people being threatened and being at risk because of Donald Trump and his desire to seek revenge on anything and everybody.” She claimed that Trump’s words, combined with the January 6 riot, would lead to “more killings” happening. “I think Donald Trump has to take responsibility for what he is saying about blood in the streets and violence if he is not elected to be the president of the United States of America,” she said. WATCH: Maxine Waters feigning concern for the safety of all ‘people of color’ if Trump is elected: “I’m very concerned, not only about my safety, and not only about the safety of members of Congress. I’m concerned about the safety of so many people in this country, particularly people… pic.twitter.com/aJgnrKMwnx — Eric Abbenante (@EricAbbenante) June 22, 2024
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

71-Year-Old Makes History By Becoming The Oldest To Compete For The Miss Texas USA Crown 
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71-Year-Old Makes History By Becoming The Oldest To Compete For The Miss Texas USA Crown 

Thanks to a recent rule change, the gorgeous and talented Marissa Teijo was able to make her dreams come true and compete in the 2024 Miss Texas USA pageant. At 71, Marissa made history when she joined the dozens of hopefuls vying for the crown in Houston this weekend. And all eyes were on her. The stunning Paso Del Norte region rep was able to compete after the Miss Universe organization dropped rules that formerly banned women who were married, had been pregnant or divorced, or were over the age of 28. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Marissa Teijo (@marissateijo) “I am delighted to be a part of this incredible new experience as a contestant in the Miss Texas USA pageant,” she wrote in an Instagram post ahead of the pageant. “In doing so, I hope to inspire women to strive to be their best physical and mental self and believe there is beauty at any age.” Marissa Teijo Earns Nationwide Attention As She Prepared For Miss Texas USA Pageant It wasn’t long before Marissa Teijo’s story made national news. Shortly after announcing her campaign for the crown, she amassed a huge following. She also earned the attention of several companies who offered to sponsor her. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Marissa Teijo (@marissateijo) “All of your generous donations have made my participation in the Miss Texas USA possible,” she wrote in a follow-up. While Marissa left her mark on the pageant world, it was Aarienna Ware who took the title on June 22. The Dallas native will head to the Miss USA competition next. If she wins, she’ll have a chance to become Miss Universe. You can find the source of this story’s featured image here. The post 71-Year-Old Makes History By Becoming The Oldest To Compete For The Miss Texas USA Crown  appeared first on InspireMore.
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1 y

1,300 Estimated Dead In Annual Pilgrimage Abroad: Report
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1,300 Estimated Dead In Annual Pilgrimage Abroad: Report

The Hajj pilgrimage is an annual five-day journey for Muslims heading to the holy city of Mecca, which at times has seen over two million people in attendance, according to the AP
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1 y

Florida Homeowner Launches ‘First-Of-Its-Kind’ Claim At NASA Over Damages From Space Debris
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Florida Homeowner Launches ‘First-Of-Its-Kind’ Claim At NASA Over Damages From Space Debris

'There could have been serious injury or a fatality'
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1 y

Cloistered NBC Host Rehashes Dubious Tropes on Crime, Immigrants
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Cloistered NBC Host Rehashes Dubious Tropes on Crime, Immigrants

NBC News Chief White House Correspondent Peter Alexander is making the most of his guest stint at Meet the Depressed while host Kristen Welker is out on maternity leave. During his interview of Governor Kristi Noem (R-SD), Alexander pounced upon the opportunity to rehash Regime talking points related to crime and immigration. Watch as Alexander injects those talking points twice, as he and Noem go back and forth on potential pardons related to January 6th (click “expand” to view transcript): NBC MEET THE PRESS 6/23/24 10:27 AM PETER ALEXANDER: We're in the shadow of the Capitol right now, just outside the building here. On January 6, 2021, you posted a message immediately condemning the violence. You said, “what's happening in the Capitol right now must stop.” What message is Donald Trump, Governor, sending by promising to pardon the rioters who have been convicted if he wins? KRISTI NOEM: I think each of those situations needs to be looked at separately. You can’t put a blanket approach. ALEXANDER: But he hasn’t made that distinction, so you would disagree with him in pardoning all of them. NOEM: I would say that every single one of those cases needs to be looked at specifically. ALEXANDER: So let me ask you specifically about the hundred- NOEM: What I have been very clear about is we don't want to see another January 6th again. We- nobody in the country wants to see another day like that again and I believe that Donald Trump- when he comes back to The White House and is in charge of this country, we’re going to have incredible opportunities to show that people in this country will be safer, that we'll have law and order back in our streets, if you look at one of the most violent areas of the country is often Democratic-run cities- sanctuary cities with an open border where we’re allowing migrants… ALEXANDER:  In fact, violent crime in the country is down 50% since Joe Biden took office, but specifically, just to get back to this topic of the rioters. Is Donald Trump wrong when he says he would pardon all of those who have been convicted in the January 6th attack. NOEM: Each of those individuals needs to be looked at separately as far as what their role was and what was happening in that situation… ALEXANDER: And the 132 of them who admitted to assaulting law enforcement officers, would you agree they should not be pardoned? NOEM: I think that every one of those cases needs to be looked at individually,and if the January 6th-  ALEXANDER: And if they admitted to it, you would agree that that would be… NOEM: I think that…yeah. This is what our judicial system is for. It's supposed to be the scales of justice, and Lady Justice is supposed to be blind. ALEXANDER: Well, they went through the judicial system and he's offering to pardon them. So I guess the question is, would that be based on the grounds if they attcked law enforcement officers? NOEM:  That will be based on his prerogative and his decision when he looks at those cases. But what I’d say is we have a nation. We are a nation of laws and they need to be enforced and we have a president in The White House today that is ignoring federal law.  ALEXANDER: Let me ask… NOEM: He is ignoring federal law and allowing people into this country that are incredibly dangerous. And there- just this week I think we had four different people that were attacked, or raped or murdered by illegal immigrants that have come in over our open border and that cannot continue to happen. ALEXANDER: To be clear, as you know well, undocumented immigrants commit crimes at a much lower percentage than Americans do.  The rest of the interview went largely as expected, kicking off with questions on dog-killing and North Korea, followed by questions on abortion, the January 6th portion some of which you saw here, and Noem’s own future aspirations. But right in the middle was that regime propaganda on two critical issues. Actually, we don’t really know the rate at which illegal immigrants commit crimes compared to Americans, because there is no study accounting for the 10 million that have swarmed across the border over the last three and a half years. The data everyone keeps citing are basically obsolete. And folks are getting tired of these recitations of data as a reflexive response to the horrendous rapes and/or murders of innocent American girls and women at the hands of individuals who never should have been in the country in the first place.  The same applies for the ongoing media recitation about the crime rate being down. In the vast majority of cases the Regime Media are citing FBI crime data. The problem with the FBI crime database is that the number of cities submitting their crime statistics since 2022 when the report changed is down by A THIRD. Among these cities: New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles. Both of those points are carefully crafted to deflect questions on the Biden Administration’s handling of crime and immigration. Alexander faithfully executed both. If it weren’t for Regime Media, we’d have none at all.  
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On PBS Roundtable, ABC's Jon Karl Claims Trump Is Losing It, Getting 'Fuzzier'
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On PBS Roundtable, ABC's Jon Karl Claims Trump Is Losing It, Getting 'Fuzzier'

The latest edition of the Washington Week with The Atlantic weekly political roundtable tried to change the subject from President Biden’s obvious frailty and mental decline to Donald Trump’s odd anecdotes about sharks at campaign rallies. Show host (and editor of The Atlantic magazine) Jeffrey Goldberg opened the show by noting the looming Biden-Trump debate, admitting both candidates were old and unpopular, but “….Only one is a convicted felon, however, and yet the pressure is somehow on Joe Biden to prove that he has what it takes to continue in office. Donald Trump will obviously try to highlight what he and his supporters see as Biden’s frailty. Biden will undoubtedly highlight the fact that Trump led an anti-constitutional insurrection.” Does "convicted felon" have any gas at all as an anti-Trump insult? Especially when Biden's son is a convicted felon? How do they leave that out?  From that slanted start, the panelists spent time trying to make the Republican candidate’s mental acuity the issue, not the Democratic candidate’s obvious physical and mental decline. A 15-second clip of a stiff, awkward Biden at a Juneteenth event was followed by a 38-second clip of former President Trump relaying some odd hypothetical situation about a boat, a battery, and a shark, which was used to suggest that while President Biden “has some frailty issues,” that Trump is lacking “in matters of cognition and coherence and storytelling….often Donald Trump doesn`t make any sense, right? So, Jon [Karl], how does Trump come into this debate and prove that he`s cognitively competent?” ABC News’ Jonathan Karl approved of the long clip and wished it were longer. Jonathan Karl, ABC News: Well, you did something important there, which is you played an extended clip of Donald Trump. And, by the way, you could have kept on going…. this is actually the case I've been making, based on my reporting, is-- this is not even the same Donald Trump of the Trump presidency. He wanders all over the place. His ideas have gotten fuzzier. Goldberg’s Atlantic colleague Anne Applebaum underlined the mainstream press’s desperate defensiveness toward Biden, trying to suggest what everyone saw didn’t really happen that way. Applebaum: I mean, they both face a certain kind of danger. I think, in a way, Joe Biden has the advantage, partly because that clip that you just showed, plus the other clips that have been circulating, there’s one of him appearing to wander off at a G7 meeting when, in fact, he was going to greet somebody. Goldberg: That was edited. Applebaum: That was edited to make it look like that. But that means the bar for him is very low. All he has to do is prove that he`s not senile. And, clearly, he isn`t senile. And so he has a chance of doing very well, whereas I think actually the expectations for Trump are higher. And so it will be harder for Trump to appear coherent, to sound coherent. Trump doesn`t seem to me anymore capable of making a coherent argument or making a case. And in a way, the difficulty is also going to be for those who are running the debate because Trump is going to lie. That`s what he does now. He just goes off on these rants. He makes stuff up. Biden did indeed “wander off at a G7 meeting” toward a paratrooper who’d landed nearby via parachute, with Italian Prime Minister Georgia Meloni trying to wrangle Biden back, and the whole group of world leaders shifting toward the president to accommodate his meandering for the photo-op. Applebaum continued the rant later:  I was just going to say that one of the things that’s at stake in this election is do we vote on policy? Do we vote on what`s really happening in the economy? Or do we vote on bombast and identity politics and essentially lies and, that suit whatever biases you have? And the debate might show that. I mean, we might have a contest between one person who’s trying to talk about policy on the one hand and another person who’s riffing about sharks on the other. A transcript is available, click “Expand.” PBS Washington Week with The Atlantic 6/21/24 JEFFREY GOLDBERG: We're just days away from watching Joe Biden and Donald Trump, two men whose combined age is 159, debate in front of a television audience of millions, and a live studio audience of not one single person. Tonight, a close look at what we should expect when these two superannuated rivals take the stage, next. Good evening and welcome to Washington Week and to our new studio here at WETA. If you notice the table, I built it myself. This coming Thursday, President Joe Biden and the man he defeated in 2020, former President Donald Trump, will make their respective cases to the American people. Neither would want to hear this, but they actually have much in common. Both are unpopular, they are more or less tied in recent polls, and both are older than our previous oldest president, Ronald Reagan. Only one is a convicted felon, however, and yet the pressure is somehow on Joe Biden to prove that he has what it takes to continue in office. Donald Trump will obviously try to highlight what he and his supporters see as Biden's frailty. Biden will undoubtedly highlight the fact that Trump led an anti-constitutional insurrection. Joining me tonight to discuss this and more, Anne Applebaum is my colleague and a staff writer at The Atlantic and author of the forthcoming book, Autocracy, Inc., The Dictators Who Want to Run the World, Zolan Kanno-Youngs is a White House correspondent for The New York Times, Jonathan Karl is the chief White House -- chief Washington correspondent, excuse me, for ABC News and the author of Tired of Winning, Donald Trump and the End of the Grand Old Party, and Vivian Salama is a national politics reporter at The Wall Street Journal. John, I didn't mean to demote you, I'm sorry, or promote. I don't know. Promote, demote, I don't know. JONATHAN KARL, Chief Washington Correspondent, ABC News: I thought that was still a good title. JEFFREY GOLDBERG: Yes. No, everybody here hears great titles. So, welcome to our new table, very proud of it. I want to focus our attention really on the debate tonight. It's something that I didn't think was going to happen. I'm still not a hundred percent sure it's going to happen. We'll get to that. But I've been thinking a lot about the particular weaknesses that both men bring to Atlanta next week. And actually watch this short clip and you'll see what I'm referring to. DONALD TRUMP (R), Former U.S. President, 2024 Presidential Candidate: And it must be because of MIT, my relationship to MIT, very smart, he goes -- I say, what would happen if the boat sank from its weight, and you're in the boat and you have this tremendously powerful battery, and the battery is now underwater? So I said, so there's a shark ten yards away from the boat, ten yards, or here. Do I get electrocuted if the boat is sinking? Water goes over the battery, the boat is sinking. Do I stay on top of the boat and get electrocuted or do I jump over by the shark and not get electrocuted? Because I will tell you, he didn't know the answer, he said, you know, nobody has ever asked me that question. JEFFREY GOLDBERG: Okay. So, one man in that little sequence has some frailty issues. It just seems that way. I know his people are telling us, the journalists in Washington, that Joe Biden is like the Hulk. He's all like muscle and vigor, but our eyes are telling us something else. The other man is only three years younger, actually, and it doesn't seem very frail physically. But, you know, in matters of cognition and coherence and storytelling, you know, it's something else entirely. So, I mean, I don't want to overstate it, but often Donald Trump doesn't make any sense, right? So, Jon, how does Trump come into this debate and prove that he's cognitively competent? JONATHAN KARL: Well, you did something important there, which is you played an extended clip of Donald Trump. And, by the way, you could have kept on going. And I think it's something that people haven't seen much of. Donald Trump is omnipresent in our lives, the criminal cases, all this, but there has been not much coverage of what he is actually saying since he was in the White House. I mean, people have largely tuned out. So, here you will have an extended period of time where we actually hear what Donald Trump have to respond to real basic questions, give answers, have to have rebuttals and hear what he's actually talking about. And it's -- but he's been out there. I mean, this is actually the case I've been making, based on my reporting, is this is not even the same Donald Trump of the Trump presidency. He wanders all over the place. His ideas have gotten fuzzier. JEFFREY GOLDBERG: Because he's never been lenient. JONATHAN KARL: No, he's never in particular, but, I mean, I think this is the first extended look that a mass group of American people will have of Donald Trump since he was in the White House. ZOLAN KANNO-YOUNGS, White House Correspondent, The New York Times: And that was the thinking too when sort of the Biden campaign, when President Biden first sort of challenged him this early. I, like you, was surprised when the news of this popped this early in what is normally the debate schedule, that it's happening this early. But when you talk to Democrats and Biden's top aides, they think that by being able to put Trump out there in the spotlight can sort of help them accomplish what they've been trying to do for now the past couple of years and have thus far failed to really convey to voters, and that's the contrast. JEFFREY GOLDBERG: Right. Vivian, I want to ask you two questions. The first is, would you rather be electrocuted or eaten by a shark? You don't have to answer that one right now. The second question is, how does Joe Biden come into this debate and prove that he's not too old for the job? VIVIAN SALAMA, National Politics Reporter, The Wall Street Journal: Well, first of all, to your first question, I'm terrified of sharks. So, definitely, electrocuted, that's just me. JEFFREY GOLDBERG: Something you have in common with Donald Trump. VIVIAN SALAMA: There you go. As far as President Biden, you know, typically when you go into a debate like this, it's a referendum. When there's an incumbent, it's a referendum on their presidency. Of course, now we have a very unusual situation where both men have served as president, and so both of them have a record. That's one of the big differences between Donald Trump of today versus Donald Trump back in '16, where he didn't have that. But then you have two presidents who are older and Donald Trump has really fixated on this idea of Joe Biden's age. They've been playing those clips over and over again on everything from Fox News to any other Republican or conservative networks to show that he is either too frail or kind of wandering off. Trump talks at his rallies about Biden's cognitive abilities. Ironically, at one of his rallies a few days ago, he talked about Biden's cognitive abilities and then he messed up the name of the former White House doctor/congressman, Ronny Jackson, he called him Ronny Johnson, immediately after talking about Biden's cognitive abilities. So, obviously the two men come in here with challenges. They are both older at this point. Trump himself, you know, not the man he was in '16. You just played a clip of him kind of rambling a little bit and that's one of his issues as well. And so one of them is going to have issues of coming out there and appearing strong and the other one is going to have kind of that beyond the offense to corner him on everything, from his age and his frailty to his record on the economy and other things as well. And it's going to be a challenge for President Biden. JEFFREY GOLDBERG: Anne, just your opinion on this, but who's in greater danger in this debate, in the sense of, oh my goodness, I didn't realize he was like that? ANNE APPLEBAUM, Staff Writer, The Atlantic: I mean, they both face a certain kind of danger. I think, in a way, Joe Biden has the advantage, partly because that clip that you just showed, plus the other clips that have been circulating, there's one of him appearing to wander off at a G7 meeting when, in fact, he was going to greet somebody. JEFFREY GOLDBERG: That was edited. ANNE APPLEBAUM: That was edited to make it look like that. But that means the bar for him is very low. All he has to do is prove that he's not senile. And, clearly, he isn't senile. And so he has a chance of doing very well, whereas I think actually the expectations for Trump are higher. And so it will be harder for Trump to appear coherent, to sound coherent. Trump doesn't seem to me anymore capable of making a coherent argument or making a case. And in a way, the difficulty is also going to be for those who are running the debate because Trump is going to lie. That's what he does now. He just goes off on these rants. He makes stuff up. JEFFREY GOLDBERG: I want to get to that. I want to get -- how do you actually manage this debate in a second? But I just want to come to this question I sort of foreshadowed a bit at the beginning. Do you think that the debate is going to happen? ZOLAN KANNO-YOUNGS: At this point. I mean, just based off of my reporting, what I'm hearing, yes. JEFFREY GOLDBERG: Trump is fully in? He's not going to look for an exit? JONATHAN KARL: Trump is fully in. ZOLAN KANNO-YOUNGS: Yes. And, look -- JONATHAN KARL: Biden is fully in. ZOLAN KANNO-YOUNGS: And Biden is fully in. He's going to Camp David. He's going to Camp David. He's in Camp David right now. Ron Klain will be helping out with moderating as well. They are going through mock debates. I'm of the position, the reporting basically says thus far, that's -- JEFFREY GOLDBERG: Right. JONATHAN KARL: But I agree with Anne that the expectations game is favoring Biden. But I think this is a potentially perilous moment for Joe Biden. I mean, his people will have you believe that the problem that he faces is basically the media hasn't been covering how great and, you know, strong he is. And there's been -- and that his enemies have taken clips out of context. But in reality, I mean, Democrats who are not inside the Biden campaign, but very much want him to win are deeply concerned about his ability to make it through this campaign and are worried about at least the perception of him being so old and not able to make it through four years of a second term. JEFFREY GOLDBERG: Yes, stay on that for a little bit. How much of that anxiety is related to the fact that, at the end of his perspective, theoretical second term, he'd be 86 years old, how much of the worry is like, even if he can get through next year, is Kamala Harris going to be president? Are you voting essentially for Kamala Harris? JONATHAN KARL: I think that is the concern. And, look, I went back, and I know you've done this too, but I went back and re-watched the debates from four years ago, particularly the second debate, which was the more -- the first debate was a bunch of shouting, and they both looked awful. Trump looked a little worse than Biden. But Biden was sharp in that second debate. And when you look at it, you're struck at how much younger he looks. It was four years ago. It looks like more than four years ago. And I think one of the significance of this debate coming so early is it is coming before the Democratic Convention, and that dream, that fever dream of Republicans and some Democrats, that there will be some change at the Democratic Convention will not be over until Biden speaks and accepts the nomination in the convention. VIVIAN SALAMA: But there's also so much riding on this debate because of that. You have the conventions coming right afterwards. And then we don't have another debate until September. So they are going to be there. It's the first time that these two see each other since the last time they debated. And for them at this point to be able to come out there and actually have an exchange, a policy discussion, that's why so many rules have been put into place, everything, from cutting the mics while they're speaking, to having them on opposite ends of the stage, so that you don't have an incident like that first debate where they're just shouting over each other. I'm sure there's still going to be opportunities for them to do that. But also remember that both of these men, when they are not scripted, they tend to say things that can be a little bit off the cuff and/or, you know, not what their aides would like. President Biden has been doing these mock debates trying to really kind of soak in all the talking points where they're trying to get him to really memorize and stick to certain policy framings. But former President Trump is not. They say he's having policy discussions. So, whether or not they're really getting into the nitty-gritty of specific policy talking points, or if he's just going to go out there and riff, that could really make a difference for him. JEFFREY GOLDBERG: Well, Jon, you've written a whole book on this. The idea that Donald Trump is going to read the briefing book is not historically grounded. JONATHAN KARL: No. And policy is not Trump's thing, as you know. JEFFREY GOLDBERG: Right. JONATHAN KARL: But if I can just say -- so I think just to finish the Biden point is this is a moment where he can either answer those concerns, particularly the concerns among Democrats that he can do this. Like here he is hype big moment. He seizes it. He looks like he can handle it. He can take on Donald Trump. Or, if it's a disaster, there will be questions about whether or not he should continue to be the nominee. JEFFREY GOLDBERG: Right. Anne? ANNE APPLEBAUM: No, I was just going to say that one of the things that's at stake in this election is do we vote on policy? Do we vote on what's really happening in the economy? Or do we vote on bombast and identity politics and essentially lies and that suit whatever biases you have? And the debate might show that. I mean, we might have a contest between one person who's trying to talk about policy on the one hand and another person who's riffing about sharks on the other. But there's a constituency that likes the sharks. I mean, he's funny, he's a showman, I can identify with someone who says wacky stuff, you know, that's just like me, that's just like my uncle. And that's one of the things that we'll discover.
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Left-leaning fact-checker finally admits Trump never called neo-Nazis 'very fine people' after 7 years, falsehood spread by Biden
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Left-leaning fact-checker finally admits Trump never called neo-Nazis 'very fine people' after 7 years, falsehood spread by Biden

It only took nearly seven years, but left-leaning fact-checking website Snopes finally admitted that former President Donald Trump never called neo-Nazis or white supremacists in Charlottesville "very fine people." The falsehood has regularly been spread by President Joe Biden. The media-driven controversy stemmed from the so-called "Unite the Right" rally held in August 2017 in Charlottesville, Virginia. The demonstration was attended by various groups across the political spectrum, including neo-Nazis, white supremacists, individuals protesting the removal of a Confederate statue, and progressives holding a counter-protest. The demonstration turned violent when James Fields Jr. deliberately rammed his car into a group of counter-protesters. Civil rights activist Heather Heyer was killed in the car attack and more than 30 others were injured. He was sentenced to life in prison on federal hate crime charges.Days after the deadly attack, then-President Trump held a press conference and was asked by a reporter about the neo-Nazis at the rally and said: Excuse me, they didn’t put themselves down as neo-Nazis, and you had some very bad people in that group. But you also had people that were very fine people on both sides. You had people in that group – excuse me, excuse me. I saw the same pictures as you did. You had people in that group that were there to protest the taking down, of to them, a very, very important statue and the renaming of a park from Robert E. Lee to another name.Despite the availability of Trump's quote made on Aug. 15, 2017, Snopes waited nearly seven years to challenge the media narrative that the former president called the neo-Nazis "very fine people." On Thursday, Snopes published a fact-check article titled: "No, Trump Did Not Call Neo-Nazis and White Supremacists 'Very Fine People.'"The left-leaning fact-checker noted: In a news conference after the rally protesting the planned removal of a Confederate statue, Trump did say there were "very fine people on both sides," referring to the protesters and the counter-protesters. He said in the same statement he wasn't talking about neo-Nazis and white nationalists, who he said should be "condemned totally."Snopes was inundated with complaints about the fact-check by its liberal readership, to which it released an editor's note the next day:Editors' Note: Some readers have raised the objection that this fact check appears to assume Trump was correct in stating that there were "very fine people on both sides" of the Charlottesville incident. That is not the case. This fact check aimed to confirm what Trump actually said, not whether what he said was true or false. For the record, virtually every source that covered the Unite the Right debacle concluded that it was conceived of, led by and attended by white supremacists, and that therefore Trump was wrong. Since Trump's "very fine people" remark, numerous Democrats have pounced on his comments by misconstruing his words. Biden has regularly spread the partial, misleading "very fine people" hoax in an attempt to hurt Trump politically. Snopes noted that the misinformation "spread like wildfire" and was "a cornerstone" of Biden's 2020 campaign." You can see examples of Biden weaponizing Trump's quote here, here, here, and here. 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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It's Not About 'Zionism': Jewish Family Attacked at NY Elementary School Graduation
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It's Not About 'Zionism': Jewish Family Attacked at NY Elementary School Graduation

It's Not About 'Zionism': Jewish Family Attacked at NY Elementary School Graduation
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NH Teacher Fired for Calling in Sick to Take Pregnant Student to Abortion Clinic
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A Glimpse into the Life as a Pirate Captain (Video)
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A Glimpse into the Life as a Pirate Captain (Video)

The transition to Pirate Captain often stemmed from a background in privateering or ownership of a ship. Wealthy backers would commission vessels, appointing experienced leaders like Henry Jennings or those with military ranks like Stede Bonnet, who preferred the title of "Major" from his militia days. The title "Captain" wasn't universal; some, like Henry Morgan's former soldier Charles Swan, commanded as merchant captains turned pirates. The Intricate World of Pirates, Privateers, Buccaneers, and Corsairs 10 Of The Most Famous Pirates, Male And Female, Who Ruled The Seas! Democratic election was another avenue to captaincy, often following successful mutinies or vacancies. Candidates vied for support, possibly with speeches or informal ballots, though manipulation was common. The newly elected Captain would then appoint lieutenants, including a Quartermaster to balance power. Once in command, a Pirate Captain's duties were multifaceted. They managed ship operations, mediated disputes, and represented the crew in negotiations. Despite limited documentation, historical insights suggest a blend of administrative tasks and interpersonal challenges, from maintaining morale to strategizing collective decisions. Read moreSection: NewsGeneralVideosHistoryRead Later 
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