Monday, November 1, 2021

How the 2020 Election Was Rigged

Next time someone caricatures evidence of voting irregularities as a conspiracy theory, throw the book at them—Mollie Hemingway’s book.


It’s a complex story, which makes for a weighty book. The research is thorough, the writing is evidentiary, the style is clinical—like investigative journalism and social science used to be. The endnotes alone run nearly 100 pages. 

Reading Rigged, one isn’t jarred by hyperbole, conjecture, or spin. Hemingway is unequivocal on progressive malice, yet she can be scathing of Republicans, too. She is particularly critical of Rudy Giuliani’s attempts to publicize fraud nationally, thereby undermining prior case-by-case efforts to get particular state courts to recognize particular violations of particular state laws. 

She also calls out Republican officials who preferred to help the opposition rather than reveal their own state’s dysfunctions. Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger’s office, for instance, secretly recorded a telephone appeal from Trump to expose fraud in Fulton County, then misrepresented Trump to the press as asking for the statewide result to be changed. 

Overall, the story reads like a tragedy. One alternates between anger and consternation that bleeding obvious facts were not reported by the mainstream media at the time.

Some evidence of election irregularities broke through mainstream censorship: the strange spikes in votes counted for Biden overnight in counties with unusually strong Democratic Party governance and histories of criminal mishandling of votes (Milwaukee, Philadelphia, Fulton County, for example). 

Over subsequent days, a news consumer with time and effort could piece together strange disputes. Official election observers were denied access, or kept so far away they could not see any ballots. They sought emergency court orders, but some courts set hearing dates weeks in the future or simply denied jurisdiction. Even if observers did obtain a court order, election officials claimed not to understand it (as in Philadelphia). 

In Georgia, observers were told that counting was being suspended overnight, but a surveillance camera recorded video of four persons pulling boxes of ballots from beneath a cloaked table for unobserved digital entry. Still, Georgia’s officers continued to claim that voting had been suspended overnight. Surely this was a story worthy of investigative reporting? The mainstream media preferred to report all the disputes as conspiracy theories. 

Witnesses came forward testifying to ballot harvesting, ballot stuffing, counts for the Democratic Party without ballots, ballots for the Republican Party that disappeared without counting. Nevertheless, the Republican Party could not get most of the media to show up to hear these witnesses, or the courts to admit them. 

And so 2020 petered out, with the election still disputed but barely investigated. Most of the evidence, most of the admissions, most of the backtracking, waited until after Biden’s victory was confirmed by Congress in January.

A History of Rigging

As Hemingway shows in the book’s opening pages, the theft of an election is a long time in the making, and incorporates many efforts other than ballot rigging. This is the strength of the book: she starts the narrative by detailing the flaws in early American elections that would be reinstituted in 2020. 

In 1844, voting was spread over five weeks, which meant that the results of early voting surely influenced later voters. Additionally, early voters missed out on later campaigning. In 1848, all voting, by law, was scheduled to take place on the same day. And yet, 130 years later, progressive states turned legitimate absentee voting into no-cause early voting. 

In 2020, progressives championed early voting and mail-in voting, knowing that Republicans preferred to vote in person on the day. To strengthen the case, progressives campaigned for all Americans to be locked down against COVID-19, contrary to the pan-Asian norm of locking down local hotspots. A general lockdown had the additional advantage of ruining the national economy, which had been booming, to Trump’s credit. Further, lockdown prevented Trump from campaigning at his best (in person), and excused the stumbling, bumbling Biden from leaving his home.  

Perversely, progressives both encouraged mob rule in response to the killing of George Floyd in May, and used the violence as yet another justification for mail-in voting—and for voting against Trump. As Biden tweeted on August 27, “Remember: every example of violence Donald Trump decries has happened on his watch. Under his leadership. During his presidency.” 

Widespread Collusion

The progressives’ champions were funded by tech oligarchs and promoted by the mainstream media. Even Republican state officials colluded. For instance, Georgia Governor Brian Kemp watered down signature-matching requirements in 2019 to appease Stacey Abrams’ claims of “voter suppression” when she lost to him in 2018. Of course, appeasement just emboldens the bully. Later in 2019, the Democratic Party’s chief elections litigator, Marc Elias, sued Raffensperger, who consented to allow for disputed absentee ballots to be “cured” rather than summarily discounted, and to allow Democrats to train and advise officials on signature matching. 

Georgia’s primary election in June 2020 was conducted by the counties. They made a mess of it—especially the strongly Democratic counties. The worst offender, Fulton County, was forced to agree to federal monitoring and various training and performance standards. Yet state reforms were perversely to their advantage. Raffensperger inexplicably directed most of the reform funds to those same Democratic counties, which promoted yet more mail-in voting.

Millions of dollars were sourced from Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook, acting mainly through the Center for Election Innovation and Research (CEIR) and Center for Tech and Civic Life (CTCL). Both centers were founded and run by former affiliates of the Democratic Party. Some of these affiliates were given roles in the implementation of official reforms. In the city of Green Bay, Wisconsin, they were actually given keys to the central counting facility and ballot machines. 

Did election integrity improve given this outsourcing? No. In Green Bay, poll workers “cured” ballots with the same color pens voters had used. Subsequently, Wisconsin’s legislature voted to ban private funding of election operations, only to be vetoed by Democratic Governor Tony Evers. 

CEIR reported that it contacted all 50 states, of which 23 were awarded funds. What CEIR did not explicitly report was that it gave 7.6 times more funds to Democratic states than to states that had voted for Trump in 2016. CEIR gave more than half of its money to four battleground states: Georgia, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Arizona. 

Georgia received more than $31 million, or nine percent, of all “Zuck Bucks.” Yet not all of Georgia’s counties received funding. Biden-voting counties received $7.13 per registered voter, on average, compared to $1.91 in Trump-voting counties. Counties that did not receive CEIR funding did not show significant voting shifts from 2016 to 2020, but the funded counties showed an average shift of 2.3 percent in favor of Democrats. 

The disputed runoff for Georgia’s two U.S. senators accounted for another $14.5 million from Zuckerberg’s organizations, with similar bias in favor of Democratic counties. 

The other battleground states showed the same funding bias. In the end, Zuckerberg had channeled more than $400 million into nominally non-partisan election reforms.  

Changing the Rules

For the 2020 general election, 39 states modified their election laws or procedures. 

Early voting started up to two months before the statutory election day, and one month before the first televised debate between the presidential candidates. Receipts were permitted days after election day, to accommodate the anticipated postal delays. More than 100 million of the 159 million ballots counted in 2020 were posted prior to election day. In 2016, the rate had been 33 million posted out of 140 million counted. Joe Biden won the Electoral College by 43,000 more votes than Trump across just three states.

Early voters are generally less informed voters. In 2020, in-person Republican voters were suppressed by general reporting that early voting favored Biden. They were further suppressed by inaccurate polling suggesting Biden was on course for a landslide. Finally, they were suppressed by early results out of Arizona, which started counting mail-in ballots two weeks before election day. Biden won Arizona by a margin of just 0.3 percent, and Georgia by the same margin.

Early voting makes fraud easier, of which the two easiest forms are double voting and manipulating another person’s ballot. Secrecy of voting is more difficult in a household than a voting booth. Family members, community organizers, and clerics have been known to collect ballots for completion.

In some states, strangers are allowed to harvest ballots, meaning that they may collect ballots merely on the promise to deliver them correctly. But the volunteer could filter out votes for disliked candidates, or influence how the ballot is completed, particularly in the name of the elderly, homeless, infirm, or anyone confined on the grounds of COVID. 

Secretly filmed footage from Minneapolis showed harvesters for Representative Ilhan Omar exchanging cash for ballots. The all-mail-in election for Paterson City Council, New Jersey in May 2020 was invalidated by court order, after 19 percent of ballots were disqualified (mostly for unmatched signatures, the rest for being packaged together). The City Council’s incumbent vice president and three other men were charged with voter fraud. 

Voters are alerted to the opportunities for double voting when they receive ballots at more than one address. Eleven percent of Americans move every year. States are incentivized to register more than to purge voters. In 2019, Judicial Watch forced Los Angeles County, by civil legal action, to purge its voter rolls of at least 1.5 million voters above the number of voting-age resident citizens. In the same year, Judicial Watch established that eight states and DC maintained more registered voters than eligible voters.

Mail-in ballots make double voting easier still, because the voter’s identity is usually proven by nothing more than a signature. In New Jersey, which compares the ballot signature with the signature obtained during voter registration, 9.6 percent of mail-in ballots were disqualified, on average, across 31 local elections in May 2020.  

In November 2020, thousands of Georgians voted within a county other than the county in which they lived—mostly by absentee voting. 

In some jurisdictions, the only signatures to compare are the signature on the ballot, and the signature on the application for a ballot, which itself might have been obtained by somebody other than the legitimate voter. In any case, even in states that mandate a comparison, election workers seem to have skipped the burden. Some parts of Pennsylvania counted ballots without either the signature or the date—even though both are required by law. Only 0.4 percent of absentee ballots were rejected by Georgia in November 2020, compared to 6.4 percent in 2016. Some Republicans tested the system by using different signatures at each stage, without getting caught, as they proved later by publishing photographs.  

All of this adds up to a targeted campaign to undermine election integrity in the 2020 elections. Across several states, with the help of numerous friendly institutions, the Democratic Party was able to change the way America votes, and manipulate how those votes were counted. The vast coordination to defeat Trump by any means necessary on display in Rigged exposes the rank dishonesty of leftist objections to the Right’s efforts to ensure election integrity. Next time someone caricatures evidence of voting irregularities as a conspiracy theory, throw the book at them—Mollie Hemingway’s book.


You Libs Made Your Cesspool, Now Float In It



Article by Kurt Schlichter in Townhall


You Libs Made Your Cesspool, Now Float In It

The cities are devolving into chaos, and perhaps that’s good – people too dumb to learn from experience or from those who know better have to learn from something, and if that’s pain, well, pain’s a great teacher.

In Philadelphia, some troubled youth who was illegally in this country, but had been let go on previous occasions post-interaction with the local gendarmes, decided to woo a local woman he met on a train the old-fashioned way, by threats and violence. The other passengers reacted as one might expect in a Democrat-run metropolis, and whipped out their iPhones to record the attack. Not coincidentally, the City of Brotherly Love – apparently of the kind endemic to the Omar clan – recently elected a Soros-bought leftist DA who thinks the real crime problem is people complaining about crime.

In Scat Francisco, the city that comedian Bobby Slatyon (I believe) once memorably said “makes its own gravy,” the local Walgreens drug stores are closing. The local zombies – drug-induced ones, not to be confused with the one occupying the Oval Office – like to stagger in and load up on the goods from the shelves, then carry their loot outside and sell it. Again, not surprisingly, the City (I grew up just outside of it and it has always referred to itself as “the City” though now, thanks to its bountiful harvest of bum droppings, a vulgar, rhyming adjective is more apt) recently elected a – wait for it – Soros-purchased DA who doesn’t believe in prosecuting criminals, which makes it challenging to do his job of prosecuting criminals.

Then in New York, an angry gentleman punched out a woman on a subway train. The assault was caught on video, but the assailant wasn’t caught – the other passengers went full Kitty Genovese by way of Sergeant Schultz and saw nothing. The local DA is really focused on gang-busting the kind of criminal activity that affects every day New Yorkers – like whether reimbursements to employees of the Trump organization were properly characterized for tax purposes.

I would rail and wail about how the cities are turning into chaos, but then, I don’t live in one. I live in an affluent suburb by the beach where we don’t put up with that crap. You whisper “Cops” and five back-and-whites show up looking to drag away what ever scumbag is getting out of line. 

But the city dwellers choose to live like they do. It’s democracy in action. They voted for chaos, and they should suffer for it appropriately.

It is kind of sad that the rest of us will now avoid the cities, but I can live without them. ‘Frisco was always arrogant and boring. I used to go there back before I got married to see friends and it was, even then, full of dumb, commie people who think they are smart and girls so ugly that they would get passed over in DC, which is saying something. Now it’s worse, with hordes of savages chasing you as you dodge mounds of hobo excrement – hard pass. Philadelphia has the Liberty Bell and cheesesteak sandwiches and little else, while today’s New York is like Vegas – fun for about 72 hours then you have to leave. That assumes you are willing to produce your papers to go in anywhere, and I am not.

No, the cities’ problems are the cities’ problems, not ours. Enjoy what you created, urban jerks.

This is why I do not get all up in arms when the locals don’t jump in when they see strangers get attacked. After all, they are simply obeying the rules they themselves made. I’d like a society where people intervene, where some disease-ridden pervert puts a paw on a woman and a thicket of handguns emerge from the belts and purses of the surrounding citizens and the miscreant is then marched off to a dungeon. But the locals don’t want that, so they don’t get it.

It’s very clear that these voters have voted for the rule requiring they be passive observers to crime, so when the witnesses shrug as thuggo goes to town, we need to understand that the city dwellers’ situation is their own doing. You can’t get a gun permit in SF or NY, yet someone expects you to take on a criminal who is not going to observe those legal niceties? How could you expect that? If you want to build a house, you don’t ban tools. If you ban tools, it’s reasonable to assume you don’t want any construction.

And imagine, if you will, the video of you attacking the attacker playing on CNN and MSNBC 24/7 – gee, do you think that somehow you will be the good guy, particularly if you are of a disfavored race while the criminal is of a favored one? Yeah, right. “Evil KKK supporter probably attacks local honor student after being inspired by DeSantis’s insurrectionist climate denial!” 

Remember the parade of degenerates threatening the St. Louis couple who gunned up to defend themselves? Remember who the Soros-owned DA made the bad guys – not the hairbags invading the neighborhood but the innocent citizens defending their home. You are quite literally putting your freedom and fortune – not to mention your life – on the line by defending yourself or others in one of these hellholes. Do you think they won’t prosecute you? You, the normal citizen, are these communists’ dream defendant. Will you get convicted? Maybe, then maybe you’ll eventually get out on appeal, after you lose everything. Or not. Just look at all the people who made the mistake of getting involved and are put through hell and ask yourself – is it reasonable to ask you to take that risk to protect people so stupid they voted for the chaos they would now expect you to extricate them from?

If they want a society where fellow citizens save others from criminals, they will vote accordingly. Until then, they will get what they voted for – and what they deserve.

 

https://townhall.com/columnists/kurtschlichter/2021/11/01/you-libs-made-your-cesspool-now-float-in-it-n2598307 


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Americans Don’t Buy the Insurrection Narrative

Two polls show few Americans believe the January 6 riot was a “coup” or “insurrection.” And the numbers are declining.


Americans never bought House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s “insurrection” narrative about the January 6 violence at the Capitol, and the majority believe the incident was not as serious as portrayed, according to a new pair of polls.

More Americans identify the mayhem as a “riot” or as “protests” rather than an “insurrection,” armed or otherwise, according to polls published in June and October.

The Center for Security Policy commissioned the polls with TIPP in May and September, asking the same respondents for multiple answers to identify precise public perceptions about the riot that occurred during the January 6 protest.

As the congressional January 6 committee began hearings in late September, the percentage of Americans who agreed with the insurrection narrative had declined since spring. 

More Americans describe January 6 events as “unlawful entry” and “vandalism” than Pelosi’s favored term “insurrection.”

In June, a survey of 1,308 adults showed that only 13 percent identified with the “insurrection” term, and 14 percent with “armed insurrection.” Those views decreased to 10 and 12 percent respectively by early October.

Rejection of the insurrection narrative is strongest among Republicans, independents, and people of color. 

The poll results show no majority view as to what Americans call the events of January 6.

In June, nine percent of Republicans and 13 percent of independents identified with the “insurrection” label, and five and 13 percent with the “armed insurrection” term. By October, those numbers had decreased.

Democrats held the strongest views, with 18 percent choosing “insurrection” in June and 15 percent in October, and “armed insurrection” at 22 and 19 percent, respectively. 

Blacks and Hispanics showed more skepticism about the insurrection narrative than whites. The June poll showed that 11 percent of people of color agreed with the “insurrection” label and nine percent with “armed insurrection.” For months later those numbers held steady at 10 percent and nine percent respectively.

One-Third of Democrats Call It  “Domestic Terrorism”

The term chosen most often by respondents to describe January 6 was “domestic terrorism,” at 25 percent in June and 23 percent in October. 

That was not the term of choice for Pelosi, and the  Justice Department has not charged any January 6 suspect with terrorism-related crimes, but the opinion is strong among the sizeable minority that favors the description.

Variations were small in both polls among race and sex, with the sharpest differences being according to political affiliation: 34 and 33 percent of Democrats in both polls called January 6 “domestic terrorism,” compared to 14 and 11 percent of Republicans, and 21 and 22 percent of independents.

Fewer people of color than whites called it “domestic terrorism” in June (21 percent among blacks and Hispanics and 26 percent among whites), but practically matched in October (24 and 23 percent respectively).

Most Consider January 6 as Less Serious Than the Narrative Alleges

As the House of Representatives convened its committee hearings in late September, total descriptions of less serious offenses outnumbered the grave offenses by almost two-to-one.

Respondents, when given a broad set of choices, overwhelmingly did not agree with the dominant narrative of “insurrection” or even “domestic terrorism,” even though those terms, plus “armed insurrection,” made up three of the six most popular responses.

The number of respondents who were “not sure” about what to call January 6 (13 percent in June and 14 percent in October) was equal to and greater than those who called it an insurrection.

“Civil disobedience” and “insurrection” got roughly equal responses in the poll, with more choosing civil disobedience in October, just outside the poll’s margin of error.

Ditto for “unlawful entry” (13 in June and 14 percent in October) versus “armed insurrection” (14 and 12 percent).  

Seven percent of respondents in June and 5 percent in October described the events of  January 6 as “sedition.”

The “coup” narrative never got traction, with numbers unchanged in June and October at 5 percent of total respondents.

Methodology of the Polls

The polls were designed to gauge with precision the public’s opinion about the January 6 events by inviting up to three answers. 

About 1,300 respondents in the June and October polls were asked in an online questionnaire, “Which of the following words best describe the events of January 6 in Washington, D.C.? (Please select up to three.)” 

So a triple-voting system was allowed to measure mood in a more nuanced way than single answers would provide. For this reason, the total percentage of answers far exceeds 100 percent, so one can safely conclude significant overlap among responses. The polls have a margin of error, or “cred interval,” of 2.8 percent.


When the Regular Joes Shrugged

What happens when thousands of Chicago or New York cops are all let go? 
What about teachers and garbagemen and janitors and electricians?


Until recently, conservatives were the party of business. They defended the business world not as a necessary evil or because of its efficiencies, but because they thought it exemplified an enterprising, individualist morality. It respected rights of contract, served as an arena for creativity, and allowed socially useful competition. Even now, Republicans condemn the Left’s programs as creeping socialism, seemingly forgetful of the last decade in which corporations became the vanguard of the cultural revolution. 

Part of American conservatives’ embrace of capitalism comes from its historically central place in American life. Americans had tamed the wilderness and become an industrial powerhouse by the middle of the 20th century. Most of this activity was rooted neither in the pursuit of glory nor religious conviction—as, perhaps, with Spanish colonialism—but by ordinary economic self-interest, the spirit of Yankee ingenuity.

While the 1950s are now considered a conservative time—and in many ways they were—capitalism and free markets were held in considerably lower regard. Drawing the wrong lessons from the Great Depression and the war, the smart set embraced robust forms of redistribution and state meddling in the economy. As American capitalism reached its zenith, its critics championed the goal of economic equality, along with its perceived guardian: the New Deal welfare state.

The American Right’s role as stalwart defenders of capitalism and capitalists had many causes, but part of it arose from the romance of the business titan expressed in Ayn Rand’s novel Atlas Shrugged. Her magnum opus has been popular in conservative circles since it was published in 1957. While prolix and heavy-handed, it had an important message, which was revolutionary for the time. 

Instead of lauding equality or its handmaiden, the welfare state, Rand portrayed the businessman as a modern-day Prometheus, who triumphed over enemies within the state, while also resisting seduction by uninformed customers, unscrupulous competitors, and envious employees. Rand’s heroes possessed vision, intelligence, and independence in a world of drabness, mediocrity, and conformity. 

As fans of the novel are aware, the key event is a kind of strike, not by unionized workers, but by the capitalists themselves, who decided no longer to participate in a system where their life’s work could be dragooned into public service or confiscated outright by government authorities. As the hero states in his (very lengthy) speech defending their collective action, “We are on strike, we, the men of the mind.”

Notably, Rand’s capitalists were heroes of industry, operational managers and entrepreneurs who developed useful and tangible things like railroads and innovative metal alloys. Such men reflected the American economy of the day, when American industry was the world’s source of cars, durable goods, machine tools, televisions, radios, airplanes, and much else. 

America was simultaneously the world’s biggest producer and consumer, and American workers enjoyed a high standard of living and faced comparatively low income inequality. American businessmen had some legitimate claim to their prestige and wealth, not least because their visionary management brought useful, affordable goods into every home. 

A Revolt of the Masses?

The strike among the “men of the mind” stands in contrast to much of what we are seeing in response to vaccine mandates. As with flu vaccines and other innovations, there were early adopters (chiefly those at highest risk), then a great many who were simply wary of the virus, as well as those for whom “belief in science” had become part of their identity. Later, influenced by the positive experiences of friends and family, others in younger cohorts got the vaccine. By late summer, most of those who wanted a vaccine had gotten one, but a surprisingly high number of holdouts persisted. 

Then, the government began to use the stick. Jobs and travel and other conveniences were threatened. Biden and various Democratic cities ordered government workers, soldiers, and employees of larger businesses all to take the vaccine. In response, additional groups gave into the pressure, facing the Hobson’s Choice of losing a job or taking a perceived risk to one’s health. 

But then something surprising happened. A significant number of ordinary people refused to budge. Airline pilotsservicemembershealthcare workers, and teachers, held out. Many wrote and recorded impassioned, reasoned defenses of their decision, often expressing extreme bitterness about the position that they were put in by the mandates. 

In New York City, cops, firemen, and other city workers now face a deadline, where many are taking involuntary leave as lawsuits, requests for exemptions, and public-relations efforts continue on their behalf. In the meantime, bills have to be paid, and the crimes and fires and other social ills these folks keep at bay will get worse. 

So far, Joe Biden and his fellow travelers appear unmoved by the looming and massive unemployment problem they are creating in the name of public health. None of the powers-that-be seem worried about aftershocks, comparable to the supply chain problems set in motion by the brief, nationwide shutdown over a year ago.

While Rand celebrated the virtues of the visionary industrialists, in the modern economy speculative finance looms large. If the inventors of “credit default swaps” and “high speed trading” all went on strike, it is unlikely anyone would shed a tear or beg them to return. As hedge fund leader Jeremy Grantham has noted, modern finance is a tax on the productive economy. 

In other words, the “men of the mind” today mostly benefit themselves, inventing increasingly arcane algorithms to transfer wealth, without the offsetting improvement to the lives of regular people that was true of the industrialists and inventors of generations past. 

Remember Who Does the Real Work

One problem with Rand’s vision is that she had little to say to regular people, beyond urging them to get in line and defer to the “Prime Movers.” Exceptional or not, without plumbers, garbagemen, cops, firemen, pilots, nurses, teachers, and many others who are facing unemployment due to vaccine mandates, it is likely regular life will become very grim, very quickly. Far from a world resting on the shoulders of a few genius “Atlases,” it rests on an army of these ordinary people, each doing his small part to give us clean water, clean streets, and safe and orderly communities. 

Any single cop, fireman, soldier, or nurse getting fired over a vaccine mandate likely will have little impact. But what happens when thousands of Chicago or New York cops are all let go? What about teachers and garbagemen and janitors and electricians? Even in the face of persecution, there are choices to be made and power in numbers. If nothing else, it would be good to remind the ruling class and the “men of the mind” who do the real work in this country.

As the hero of Atlas Shrugged said for the industrialists, it may equally be said of the working people today resisting extreme pressure on vaccines: “Do not cry that it is our duty to serve you. We do not recognize such duty. Do not cry that you need us. We do not consider ‘need’ a claim. Do not cry that you own us. You don’t. Do not beg us to return. We are on strike. . . .”


Colin Kaepernick Returns to Remind Us That Wokeness Is a Mental Disorder


Bonchie reporting for RedState

Did you know Colin Kaepernick has a new Netflix special coming out? Yeah, me neither, but a clip was released, and it’s proof positive that wokeness is a mental disorder.

In it, you see Kaepernick walking around the set of a mock slave market, complete with actors in chains. Dressed in all black, the former San Francisco 49ers quarterback then proclaims that being in NFL training camp is just like the slave trade. You see, they poke, prod, and examine you before paying you millions of dollars to play a game.

Also, I went to the doctor a few weeks back, and it was totally like slavery.

This is absurdity on a level that’s hard to diagnose. Does Kaepernick truly believe this nonsense? Or does he just like making lots of money from gullible executives? It’s probably both.

Note that there are thousands of jobs in existence that require a physical examination before a person can do them. Is the military equivalent to slavery? How about being a pilot? I was asked to pee in a cup and given a thorough physical a few months ago in order to renew my FAA medical. Am I now akin to a slave?

Let’s think even more critically, though. Real sports (i.e. not chess) exist as a test of physical prowess. There is a lot that goes into the mental side of playing in the NFL, but at the end of the day, if you can’t throw the ball more than 30 yards and have terrible footwork, you can’t play quarterback (or really any other position). That’s not discriminatory. That’s common sense.

Besides, teams do physicals on players before training camp for multiple, highly relevant reasons. For one, anyone coming in on a new contract has to be checked that they are healthy before those deals are finalized. Two, those on long-term deals have to be cleared for safety reasons to participate. Players desperate to solidify a starting spot may lie about an injury. Ironically, while Kaepernick compares it to slavery, teams are actually protecting the players by doing their due diligence.

I really don’t think this guy is mentally well, and there’s something gross about the fact that people keep feeding into his nonsense. At what point does it become exploitative on the part of Netflix, who will presumably make more cash off this special than Kaepernick will? Regardless, wokeness absolutely rots the brain.



Pete Buttigieg Says West Coast Port Backlog Unlikely to Be Resolved Until Every American is Vaccinated



Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg appeared on the DC narrative shaping program hosted by swamp gatekeeper Chris Wallace.  Within the interview Buttigieg was questioned about why West Coast port backups are worse now than before the White House announced their solution to operate ports 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

Buttigieg proclaimed the ports are being impacted by the pandemic, and ships stuck in China are the reason why ships are sitting off the coast of California.   Yeah, try to square that circular logic.  LOL.  The scale of incompetence, even in common sense politispeak, is off the charts.  The illogical statements by this guy are legendary; however, he outdid himself today.

Eventually Pete weaves his way through fourteen nonsensical catch phrases to get to a point where he proclaims nothing in the supply chain will start being more efficient until everyone is vaccinated.  And yes, it appears that he is so stuck in pretzel-speak, Buttigieg actually believes that.

All of that said, I wouldn’t post this for review if it wasn’t for the ‘hard-hitting‘ segment from Wallace that comes right after.  You just gotta watch (prompted):


The southern border is in crisis, food inflation is skyrocketing, transportation and logistical supply chains are a mess because of emissions and regulation, store shelves are empty, gasoline is ridiculously expensive, the blue-collar working class is getting crushed, the vaccination mandate is wreaking havoc on jobs, airlines and employment for first responders, overall national anxiety is at a high point, the economy is in a free-fall and two-thirds of all Americans now say the administration is incompetent.  Along comes Chris Wallace with the hard-hitting question about what Pete and his husband are doing with their twins for Halloween.

Lets Go Brandon !

As noted, and as previously outlined, the issues with the backlog of the California ports have absolutely nothing to do with rapid unloading of ships and container vessels.  The issue is the inability of California truckers to move those containers.  The problem is a shortage of CA emission compliant internal transportation trucks to move the containers out of the port and into the U.S. mainland.

As a result… the politically expedient goal to get rid of the optical problem (the ships) by offloading containers into a California port system, that is already overwhelmed with tens-of-thousands of containers, is only making the original issue exponentially worse.  More people are now starting to understand the internal issue that has been created by recent California laws, rules and regulations.

Daniel Greenfield at Front Page Magazine has a solid outline of the emission compliance issues and the problem of independent truckers not being able to work in California:

Front Page Magazine – […] Over the summer, the California Trucking Association actually went to the Supreme Court to fight AB5 and allow owners and operators to use independent contractors. The CTA listed 70,000 owner operators. In the years since AB5, Ubers have become scarcer and more expensive, which is what the law was actually designed to do, but the consequences to the trucking industry have been far worse albeit invisible to most people until now. While truckers are still protected from AB5, many in the industry are not willing to bet their future on SCOTUS.

AB5 was not only the assault on the trucking industry by California Democrats who were aggressively trying to unionize the industry and to impose environmental regulations on it.

Last year, the California Air Resources Board issued a press release boasting that it had taken a “bold step to reduce truck pollution”. The bold step required switching to electric trucks.

“We are showing the world that we can move goods, grow our economy and finally dump dirty diesel,” Jared Blumenfeld, California’s Secretary for Environmental Protection, sneered.

[…] Last year, California’s DMV began refusing to register thousands of trucks with an estimated 100,000 trucks under threat. With “green” trucks costing $70,000 more, this was a non-starter for already troubled independent owner-operators and even larger companies.

[…] Biden called for ports to operate around the clock, but that’s not going to magically bring back thousands of trucks or truckers. California Democrats still haven’t changed their regulations and without that, there’s no incentive or even legal structure that would allow trucks to operate. (read more)


Zuckerberg Should’ve Checked a Hebrew Dictionary….

Zuckerberg Should've Checked a Hebrew Dictionary Before Renaming Facebook: 

Jews Around the World Instantly Recognize New Name

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaks at the Paley Center in New York on Oct. 25, 2019.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaks at the Paley Center in New York on Oct. 25, 2019. (Mark Lennihan / AP)

By Jack Davis for Western Journal October 31, 2021 at 2:30pm 

Giggles, snickers and some awkwardness greeted Facebook’s decision to change its corporate name to Meta.

Jokesters poked fun at Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who is Jewish, because “meta” is pronounced like the feminine form of the Hebrew word for “dead,”, according to the Times of Israel.

“In Hebrew, *Meta* means *Dead*,” Dr. Nirit Weiss-Blatt, a tech expert, tweeted on Thursday. “The Jewish community will ridicule this name for years to come.”

In Hebrew, *Meta* means *Dead*
The Jewish community will ridicule this name for years to come.

— Nirit Weiss-Blatt, PhD (@DrTechlash) October 28, 2021

Other social media users piled on.

Meta means “dead” in Hebrew (feminine adjective).
Mark Zuckerberg must have slept through Hebrew class. pic.twitter.com/B7W9273EGK

— Emmanuel Navon עמנואל נבון 🇮🇱 (@emmanuelnavon) October 28, 2021

The funniest thing that happened was the creation of META

Make Everything Trump Again

Mark Zuckerberg is likely kicking stuff around the office right now
Oh, and BTW, #meta means “dead” in Hebrew

Zuck must’ve been asleep that day during religion class#MakeEverythingTrumpAgain pic.twitter.com/ewGV5M2cUT

— Lisa Ann Michael 🚂🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 (@TheBronxxKid44) October 29, 2021

Facebook changing their corporate name to Meta isn’t going to change the underlying facts. They’re a monopoly. They crush competition. And they refuse to control the spread of misinformation and harmful content on their site. We need to break up Facebook. pic.twitter.com/Gha9PUxAoz

— Elizabeth Warren (@SenWarren) October 29, 2021

We are very honoured that @facebook felt inspired by the logo of our migraine app – maybe they’ll get inspired by our data privacy procedures as well 👀 🤓
#dataprivacy #meta #facebook pic.twitter.com/QY7cota36r

— M-sense Migräne (@msense_app) October 29, 2021

Zuckerberg said the name Facebook does not cover “everything we do” at a time when his empire includes Instagram, Messenger, WhatsApp, its Quest VR headset, its Horizon VR platform and more. Zuckerberg explained that the metaverse is a form of the virtual world where everyone is connected by virtual reality headsets, augmented reality glasses and phone apps.

Sounds chic. But the label? Aye, there’s the rub.

In Portuguese and Spanish, the word is not so troubling because it means “goal.” In Brazil, however, the word has a sexual connotation, according to Bloomberg.

Zuckerberg’s announcement was a boon for Nova Scotia-based Meta Materials. The company’s stock rose 26 percent in after-hours trading on Thursday, when Zuckerberg made his announcement, and another 6 percent on Friday, according to Reuters.

George Palikaras, the CEO of Meta Materials, tweeted a metaverse welcome to Facebook.

On behalf of @Metamaterialtec I would like to cordially welcome @Facebook to the #metaverse#GoBeyond $MMAT #AR #VR Meta, meet META® 🙂 https://t.co/8gOgkYTvSl pic.twitter.com/2i2PMKwzFA

— George Palikaras (@palikaras) October 28, 2021

Name changes can often fail in translation.

Kentucky Fried Chicken learned that when it entered the Chinese market in the 1980s, according to the BBC.

The restaurant’s “finger lickin’ good” motto, when translated into Mandarin, came out “eat your fingers off.”