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#Democrats are racist
pharosproject · 2 years
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Defund the Democrats!
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triple-tree-ranch · 9 months
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grayheartart · 10 months
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While Left Wingers are big mad and slinging the N-word at Justice Clarence Thomas...again; here's a lawyer that explains why its wrong to uses a person skin color as a factor when deciding if they deserve a better education.
Not that most of use need to be reminded but apparently some parties *cough cough* Democrats *cough cough* prefer to cling to their roots.
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simply-ivanka · 3 months
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😎
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gothhabiba · 1 year
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Fundamentally, a lot of self-described "progressives," "liberals," "leftists" &c. believe that white supremacy and fascism and Naziism are icky scary ideas to be disavowed or vaguely countered (largely by pointing out logical inconsistencies in those ideas). They don't understand or believe that white supremacists are actual people with whom they could potentially be interacting online or in-person. They don't recognise white supremacist dog whistles, they don't recognise baseline obvious white supremacist rhetoric, they will see someone online spouting obvious white supremacist rhetoric and believe that said person is joking or being sarcastic.
Their idea of progressivism is inherently social—our social circle of the educated anti-racist élite are obviously against that sort of thing. The logical inverse also seems to apply—if someone is socially interacting with them, that person (by virtue of that social interaction) must belong to said circle of the educated anti-racist progressive élite. Their social circle is their politics. They have no understanding of fascism as anything dangerous, anything real, anything that must be seriously intellectually or physically countered. Probably this applies to a lot of self-identified "communists" too.
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1eos · 7 months
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white americans making ethnic cleansing in a country they couldn't find on a map abt them is so.......
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beauty-funny-trippy · 23 days
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thebusylilbee · 6 months
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"zionism is for jewish people to discuss, goyim have no place in this conversation !!!"
what in the holy ethno-brainwashing... are yall... are yall zionist pieces of shit forgetting that the primary victims of the zionist ideology are goyim palestinians and arabs as a whole ??! never fucking seen oppressors be this confident to try to erase their own fucking victims from the conversation holy shit. this is like saying "white supremacy is for white people to discuss, people of color have no place in this conversation" like im sorry but THE JEWISH SUPREMACIST COLONIALIST IDEOLOGY THAT DEHUMANIZED PALESTINIANS AND ARABS AS A WHOLE FROM DAY FUCKING ONE IS VERY MUCH AN OKAY TOPIC TO DISCUSS AMONG ARABS YOU BRAINDEAD ZIONIST CUNTS
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izooks · 6 days
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Let them all know what that POS hat stands for…HATE!
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Republican lawmakers in Tennessee are holding a series of votes Thursday on whether to expel Democratic legislators from the state House over their protests on the chamber floor against gun violence.
In the first vote, Republicans expelled Rep. Justin Jones -- the first time in state history that a House member has been removed for alleged chamber rules violations.
The second vote, to kick out Rep. Gloria Johnson, failed. Cheers erupted in the chamber with chants of "Gloria!" after the tally was announced.
The House voted 72-25 along party lines to expel Jones. The effort to remove Johnson fell short of the two-thirds majority needed. That vote was 65-30.
The next and final vote on Thursday will be for Rep. Justin Pearson.
The resolutions accused each of the Democratic lawmakers of engaging in “disorderly behavior” and purposely bringing “disorder and dishonor to the House of Representatives” during protests against gun violence on the state House floor last week.
The votes drew attention to the partisan divisions that have rankled the Tennessee Legislature in recent months.
Chants from protesters — many of whom touted signs defending the “Tennessee three” — were audible throughout the entire legislative session Thursday. Organizers said hundreds were present.
Over the cacophony of protesters outside the state House, Republican legislators began expulsion proceedings Thursday afternoon against the three Democrats.
At the onset of the proceedings, state House Republicans moved to play a heavily edited video showing some of the events of last week’s protests — despite Democratic objections.
That led quickly to the votes to expel. In a process that closely resembles a trial, the Tennessee House allows each member to defend themselves with a 20-minute speech. House members then debate the resolution, and then each member is allowed to answer questions about the accusations against them from lawmakers.
“What is happening here today is a situation in which the jury has already publicly announced the verdict,” Jones said during a floor speech. “A lynch mob assembled to not lynch me, but our democratic process.”
Jones and Pearson are Black. Johnson is white.
Jones said his participation in the protests amounted to him “standing for those young people ... many of whom can’t even vote yet but all of whom are terrified by the continued trend of mass shootings plaguing our state and plaguing this nation.”
In an MSNBC News interview after his expulsion, Jones said that the legislative body was setting a "dangerous" precedent.
“What the nation is seeing is that we don’t have democracy in Tennessee — and that if we don’t act we have some very dark days ahead. And so we have to respond to this with mass movements, nonviolent movements,” Jones said.
“To expel voices of opposition and dissent is a signal of authoritarianism,” he added, suggesting that Tennessee’s action should “sound the alarm across the nation that we are entering into very dangerous territory.”
During the March 30 protests, the trio led supporters in chants calling for stricter gun safety measures after a mass shooting in a Nashville school that killed six people — including three 9-year-old children. A bullhorn was used, in violation of rules for the House chamber, and the lawmakers were gathered in area on the House floor without being recognized to speak. House leaders at the time called their actions “an insurrection.”
As members debated the resolution to remove Johnson, she said she participated in the protest because she felt she had to "raise the voice of the people in my district. I did what I felt those folks wanted me to do.”
“I did it for the kids in my district, for the kids in my state, for the kids in this community,” she said.
“My friends in school all called me Little Miss Law and Order because I’m a rule follower and I know that rules sometimes have to be broken, and sometimes you have to get in good trouble," Johnson added.
She also said that the resolution's charge that she "began shouting without recognition," was false, insisting that while she did protest in the part of the chamber known as the well, she didn't speak.
Addressing her supporters after the vote, Johnson said, “America should be worried," adding, according to The Tennesseean, that the failed vote to expel her “might have to do with the color of my skin.”
GOP Rep. Andrew Farmer, who sponsored the resolution to expel Pearson, described the trio’s March 30 protest on the House floor as a “temper tantrum.”
“Just because you don’t get your way doesn’t mean you can come to the well with your friends,” he said Thursday.
Pearson responded by saying: “He called a peaceful protest a temper tantrum. It isn’t a temper tantrum to say kids should go to schools that are actually safe."
The proceedings prompted criticism from Democrats across the country, including the White House. Press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre dubbed the scheduled expulsion votes as "legislative bullying."
“The fact that this vote is happening is shocking, undemocratic and without precedent,” she said at Thursday's White House briefing.
After Jones was expelled, President Joe Biden chastised Republican legislators over the votes to remove the Democrats.
"Three kids and three officials gunned down in yet another mass shooting. And what are GOP officials focused on?Punishing lawmakers who joined thousands of peaceful protesters calling for action," Biden tweeted. "It’s shocking, undemocratic, and without precedent."
In an MSNBC News interview before the vote over his expulsion, Pearson said, “We are losing our democracy, this is not normal, this is not OK.”
“We broke a House rule because we were fighting for kids who are dying from gun violence and people in our communities who want to see an end to the proliferation of weaponry,” Pearson said.
“No one should be wanting to operate as though this is not happening, as though we are not living in a gun violent-epidemic in the state of Tennessee," he added.
Tensions flared earlier this week when the expulsion proceedings started Monday with the introduction of the resolutions. Over the yells of protesters who had again filled the chamber, each proposal passed on a party-line vote.
A protester was arrested Monday during the chaos, which, according to reporters at the session, included a physical altercation between Jones and GOP Rep. Justin Lafferty. Jones accused Lafferty of stealing his phone and trying to “incite a riot with his fellow members,” The Tennessean newspaper of Nashville reported.
The Tennessee Constitution allows either of the legislative chambers to expel a member with support from two-thirds its members.
With Republicans holding the necessary supermajority to carry out the expulsions Thursday, Democrats in the chamber had no tools to put up any meaningful resistance against the measures.
Any of the lawmakers removed by expulsion will be able to run in special elections for the seats they were booted from.
Gov. Bill Lee, a Republican, has 30 days to set a date for the special elections. In the meantime, interim representatives selected by county commissions in which the seats are located will fill in.
Johnson’s district includes parts of Knoxville; Jones’ includes parts of Nashville; and Pearson’s includes parts of Memphis.
The Tennessee House last voted to expel a sitting member in 2016, when members voted 70-2 to throw out Rep. Jeremy Durham over sexual misconduct allegations.
According to The Tennessean, House members had previously voted to expel a member in 1980 — but they hadn’t done so since the Civil War. The Tennessee Senate voted last year to expel a sitting member for the first time — Katrina Robinson — after she was convicted of federal wire fraud charges.
But unlike in those prior instances, Johnson, Jones and Pearson faced no criminal or civil charges or any investigations.
More than 250 Democratic state lawmakers across the U.S. signed on to a letter organized by a progressive legislation advocacy group that accused Tennessee Republicans of racist motives.
“The attempts to expel Reps. Jones, Johnson, and Pearson show a dark truth in the light of day: there’s a robust and racist connection between fighting against gun safety and dismantling our democracy,” the letter says.
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inkandguns · 10 months
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I’ve sold shoes, stocked groceries, shoveled snow, sold dime bags, written essays, sold housewares, cut fish, served in the Army, cleaned hotel rooms, served civil process, grown cannabis, and ran a surgical center. If I was anywhere near as bad at ANY of those jobs as Sotomayor I would have been swiftly fired.
How brainless can you be to interpret the 14th amendment as justifying race based admissions??
These people won’t stop until there’s a black person hung by the neck from every fucking tree in America.
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angelx1992 · 4 days
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blackpantherblog · 1 year
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