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Thursday, April 21, 2016

Ben Carson: Keep Jackson where he is, put Tubman on the $2 bill





Everyone and their brother knows this is pure political horse shit. Does anyone believe for a second had Mt McKinley been Mt Tubman it would now be called Mt Denali?

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"I love Harriet Tubman," the former GOP White House hopeful told Fox Business Network's Neil Cavuto. "I love what she did, but we can find another way to honor her. Maybe a $2 bill." 

Tubman, the African-American suffragist, and abolitionist who brought slaves to safety on the Underground Railroad, will begin appearing on a forthcoming version of the $20 bill, bumping former President Andrew Jackson to the back, Treasury Secretary Jack Lew announced Wednesday. 

Carson insisted he had nothing against Tubman, but said Jackson deserved to stay where he is.

"Andrew Jackson ... was a tremendous president," Carson told Cavuto. "I mean, Andrew Jackson was the last president who actually balanced the federal budget, where we had no national debt."

Thomas Jefferson currently resides on the $2 bill, which is seldom used in circulation. Carson didn't discuss what should be done with the existing design of the $2 bill.
Democrats widely embraced the announcement on Wednesday. Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton tweeted, "A woman, a leader, and a freedom fighter. I can't think of a better choice for the $20 bill than Harriet Tubman."
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders also voiced his support for Tubman. "I cannot think of an American hero more deserving of this honor than Harriet Tubman," he tweeted.

In making his announcement, Lew also said Alexander Hamilton, the nation's first treasury secretary, will remain on the front of the $10 bill. Lew also announced plans for the reverse side of each bill. A montage of women involved in the American suffrage movement -- Lucretia Mott, Sojourner Truth, Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Alice Paul -- will be on the back of the Hamilton-led $10.







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Family of Benghazi victim to receive $400G after CIA expands benefit program




This story kills me.



This woman must get her advice from Cindy Sheehan. Romney "used her son for political advantage"?
 What a dope. Probably still believes it was the video!
Her son died at the hands of Barry and Killary to serve their own political agenda fashioned by negligence and indifference to those being slaughtered! 

Surprised to hear she sued the CIA and the State Dept instead of Romney.
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The family of a CIA contractor killed in the Sept. 11, 2012 attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya will receive $400,000 after the agency expanded survivor benefits for employees and contractors killed in the line of duty overseas in acts of terrorism.

Glen Doherty, a former Navy SEAL who was working for the CIA's Global Response staff in Libya at the time of Benghazi, held a standard federal insurance policy that pays a survivor benefit only to spouses and dependents. Doherty, 42, was divorced and had no children, rendering his family ineligible for compensation under the 1941 Defense Base Act, which still requires all overseas contractors including CIA employees to carry disability and life insurance.

According to the San Diego Union-Tribune, the CIA informed lawyers for Doherty's mother, Barbara, Wednesday that the agency's policy change had been finalized.

Barbara Doherty told WFXT that she was relieved that the expanded benefit had approved. She also called on Congress to repeal the Defense Base Act. 

"It gives me solace that the CIA has done the right thing,” Doherty said. “Now it’s up to Congress to see if they can step up to the plate."

Legislation introduced last year by Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass. and Rep. Stephen Lynch, D-Mass., would expand the death benefit to include families of all defense employees killed in terror attacks since Sept. 11, 2001, even if they don't have spouses or dependents.

"It is entirely disrespectful to make [the families] fight through a long bureaucratic process to get the benefits that that heroism has earned," Lynch told WFXT.

The CIA policy change is retroactive to April 18, 1983, the date a suicide attacker crashed a truck into the front of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, killing 63 people, including 17 Americans, some of whom were CIA officers.

"It wasn’t about the money, at all," Doherty told WFXT. “It was a fight for [all families] because they didn’t have a voice and we did …that’s what kept us going on, knowing that they would eventually be recognized."

"I am glad the [CIA] made this decision so the Doherty family and others who have lost loved ones in service to and sacrifice for our country will finally receive the recognition and honor they deserve," Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., the chair of the House Select Committee on Benghazi, said in a statement. 

Doherty's family filed a $1 million damages claim against the CIA and the State Department in September 2014. The Union-Tribune reported that the family will drop all claims against the federal government in the wake of the expanded death benefit.






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The world is upside down!





Target: Use the bathroom of your 'gender identity'



I remember a time a man caught in a women's bathroom got arrested.


Just think:

Before                                    After


Next time you're in Target using the "Men's Room" this could be standing next to you.


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Target said its policy is not new, but is a restatement of corporate policy. (target.com)

Visit a Target and use whichever bathroom you'd like.

That's the message the retail giant appears to be sending with a new statement on its website that ostensibly takes aim at so-called "bathroom laws" seeking to restrict men's and women's bathrooms to the sex listed on a person's birth certificate.

"In our stores, we demonstrate our commitment to an inclusive experience in many ways," the statement said. "Most relevant for the conversations currently under way, we welcome transgender team members and guests to use the restroom or fitting room facility that corresponds with their gender identity."

Target's policy is not new, but is simply a more pronounced "restatement" of an existing corporate rule, Target spokeswoman Molly Snyder told the Minneapolis Star Tribune.

The bathroom question turned into a national debate after North Carolina enacted legislation in March to restrict who could and could not use men's and women's bathrooms. Proponents of the law believe it's needed to keep potential sexual predators out of the bathroom of the opposite sex. Opponents say it's insensitive to transgender people, who don't identify with the gender on their birth certificate.

The law gained even more notoriety after several music acts, such as Pearl Jam, Bruce Springsteen and Ringo Starr, canceled concerts in the state in response to the legislation.

"Given the specific questions these legislative proposals raised about how we manage our fitting rooms and restrooms, we felt it was important to state our position," Target's statement said.

"Everyone deserves to feel like they belong. And you'll always be accepted, respected and welcomed at Target."






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Wednesday, April 20, 2016

The Vicious Snake



On a tip from Ed Kilbane




Love him or hate him he's dead right on this issue!



Video 232









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Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Barry's immigration plan appears to be in trouble after Supreme Court hearing



This is pretty much going the way I thought but you never know about Roberts. If Scalia was still around it would have been over and done with. 

I'm not a big fan of Trump but if he gets in I hope he lives up to his hype of deporting illegals instead of giving them drivers license's, and everything else under the sun, which is totally insane. Liberals love illegals. Why anyone would WANT to embrace people who come to America illegally I never quite understood? One thing for sure a vote for Killary or the Socialist is a vote for illegals in spades.

The SC judges are supposed to be impartial. Anyone really believe Sotomayor is going to vote against illegals...or Barry for that matter?

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President Obama's far-reaching plan to ease life for millions of immigrants in the U.S. illegally ran into solid conservative opposition at the Supreme Court on Monday, putting its fate in doubt.

The administration’s supporters were left to hope that justices — evenly divided between Republican and Democratic appointees since the death of Justice Antonin Scalia — might dismiss the Texas case on a legal technicality by finding the state of Texas cannot show it would be sufficiently harmed by the president’s program.

But the comments and questions during Monday’s argument suggested the court’s four conservatives probably would side with Texas and 25 other Republican-led states, while the four liberals would vote to uphold Obama’s plan.

If so, the 4-4 split would be a defeat for the administration, keeping in place a federal judge’s order that has blocked the plan from taking effect.

At issue is whether the president has the authority to temporarily remove the threat of deportation and offer a work permit to more than 4 million immigrant parents of children who are U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents.

Obama’s lawyers argued that U.S. immigration laws give the chief executive broad leeway in deciding whom to deport, including the authority to take no action against millions of working immigrants who have families here and no serious criminal records.



(I agree... in Mexico)

But in the opening minutes of arguments Monday, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justice Anthony M. Kennedy said Obama’s order appeared to go further by in effect changing the law and reclassifying millions of immigrants so that they may stay and work legally in the U.S.

Roberts asked the president’s attorney whether there were any limits to executive authority when it comes to deportation. “Could the president grant deferred removal to every unlawfully present alien in the United States?” Roberts asked.

No, replied U.S. Solicitor Gen. Donald Verrilli Jr., noting that the law still calls for arresting criminals.

“OK. So not criminals. Who else?” Roberts continued.

Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. interjected to say that, under the administration’s legal theory, a future president might decide unilaterally on an “open borders” policy, regardless of what Congress decided.

Verrilli disagreed. “That’s a million miles from where we are now,” he said.

Kennedy, whose vote is seen as crucial for the administration, leaned forward. “Well, it’s 4 million people from where we are now,” he said. “What we’re doing is defining the limits of discretion. And it seems to me that is a legislative, not executive, act.”

Allowing the president to take the lead in defining which immigrants can stay is “backward,” Kennedy said. “The president is setting the policy and Congress is executing it. That’s just upside down.”

The sharp exchange served notice that the court’s conservatives are unlikely to uphold Obama’s order as being within his executive authority.

The administration’s fallback argument is that the case should be dismissed because Texas suffered no injury and therefore has no standing to sue. The state has complained it must shoulder the cost of issuing driver’s licenses to the immigrants.

Roberts, who has been skeptical of granting standing to states to challenge federal policies, said Texas looked to have a real complaint. “Texas says: Our injury is we have to give driver’s license here, and that costs us money,” the chief justice told Verrilli.

Standing is sometimes a wild card in cases over which the justices are deeply divided.

In 2004, eight justices were split over whether public schools could have students recite the phrase “one nation under God” in the Pledge of Allegiance. Scalia had recused himself, and a tie vote would have affirmed the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals’ ruling that the practice was unconstitutional. Instead, the justices defused the controversy by deciding that Michael Newdow, the father who sued on his daughter’s behalf, did not have standing.

The most important recent test of a state’s standing came in 2007 when Massachusetts, California and a coalition of “blue states” sued the George W. Bush administration for failing to take action on climate change under the Clean Air Act. By a 5-4 vote, the court’s liberals, joined by Kennedy, upheld the state’s claim on the theory that rising seas could damage their coastlines.

Roberts dissented in that case, but he mentioned the ruling twice Monday. “We said in Massachusetts vs. EPA that we have a special solicitude for claims of the states,” he said, a comment that suggested he was not ready to throw out the Texas case on standing.

Thomas Saenz, president of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, joined Verrilli in support of Obama’s order, known as Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents, or DAPA. He said he was there on behalf of three Texas mothers who seek “relief from the daily fear they will be separated from their families and detained or removed from their homes.”

Arguing on the other side, Texas Solicitor Gen. Scott Keller called Obama’s order an “unprecedented unlawful assertion of executive power” and potentially “one of the largest changes in immigration policy in our nation’s history.”

He ran into sharp questions from the court’s liberal justices. They steadily defended the president’s executive action and said it was consistent with past presidents who extended relief to large groups of immigrants.

“We still go back to the basic problem: 11.3 million people,” said Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Congress has not appropriated the money to arrest and deport millions of otherwise law-abiding immigrants, she said, so it makes sense to allow some of them to work legally and raise families.

The justices will meet this week to discuss the case and vote on whether to affirm or reverse the lower court. A decision is likely to be announced in June.



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