Red State,
by
Susie Moore
Original Article
Posted by
ladydawgfan
—
12/17/2024 11:00:09 PM
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It may seem somewhat anti-climactic, given that the outcome of the presidential race was clear in the wee hours of November 6, but Tuesday was the day the Electoral College formally met and cast their votes for the president and vice president, pursuant to 3 U.S. Code § 7.
The certified slates of electors for each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective states, beginning with Maryland and continuing through to Hawaii. [Tweet]
And while it was Pennsylvania that made Trump's victory a certainty on Election Night (despite the fact that it took a while longer for some states to get their final tallies sorted —
PJ Media,
by
Robert Spencer
Original Article
Posted by
ladydawgfan
—
12/17/2024 10:20:43 PM
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Massachusetts being Massachusetts, Elizabeth Warren (D-Cherokee Nation) is still in the Senate, and while she maintained a relatively low profile during the presidential campaign, she is now sending up new smoke signals. After years of turning a blind eye to the massive corruption of the Biden crime family, to say nothing of the Clintons and other leftists, Warren has suddenly discovered that public servants shouldn’t enrich themselves at the public trough, and she’s demanding action. The only problem is, as you may already have suspected, she is demanding it of all the wrong people.
PJ Media,
by
Robert Spencer
Original Article
Posted by
ladydawgfan
—
12/17/2024 10:10:58 PM
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It is not entirely easy to tell. There was no big announcement that the seemingly interminable vote counting was finally finished. The sites that provide vote totals, however, have carried the same totals for about a week, when previously they were updating many times a day. And so it may be safe to say that the presidential election of 2024 is finally over. It ends with over three million fewer votes cast in 2024 than there were in 2020. Is that fishy? With so many allegations of chicanery swirling around the 2020 election, the answer is obvious.
Still, there may be a perfectly innocuous explanation.
Daily Mail (UK),
by
Germania Rodriguez Poleo
Original Article
Posted by
ladydawgfan
—
12/17/2024 4:17:52 PM
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The baby-faced killer who gunned down a fellow student and a teacher at her Wisconsin high school has been pictured.
Natalie Samantha Rupnow, 15, killed herself after unleashing the massacre at a study hall at Abundant Life Christian School. She also injured six others including two students who were in critical condition.
A substitute teacher and three students had been taken to a hospital with less serious injuries, and two of them had been released by Monday evening.
Rupnow's father Jeff Rupnow shared several images of his daughter throughout the years - all the way back to her birth in 2009.
PJ Media,
by
Matt Margolis
Original Article
Posted by
ladydawgfan
—
12/17/2024 12:56:45 PM
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The House Administration Oversight Subcommittee, led by Chairman Barry Loudermilk (R-Ga.), released an interim report on Tuesday regarding the January 6 Capitol riot. The report concluded that the attack was preventable and also called for an investigation into former Rep. Liz Cheney over allegations of criminal witness tampering during the Democrat-led congressional inquiry into the event.
“Based on the evidence obtained by this Subcommittee, numerous federal laws were likely broken by Liz Cheney, the former Vice Chair of the January 6 Select Committee, and these violations should be investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation,” the report states.
PJ Media,
by
Victoria Taft
Original Article
Posted by
ladydawgfan
—
12/17/2024 12:49:39 PM
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Former cop Derek Chauvin has been granted a chance to take a look at George Floyd's heart to explore an alternate theory of why the man died in police custody. The federal judge's move on Monday will allow Chauvin's lawyers to determine if the former cop's knee on his upper back killed him or if the fentanyl and other drugs he was on exacerbated an already weakened heart and created a condition that ended in his death.
This move also gives the country another chance to look with more sobriety and less emotion at Floyd's death, which birthed hundreds of riots,
Red State,
by
Ward Clark
Original Article
Posted by
ladydawgfan
—
12/16/2024 3:02:45 PM
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Boy howdy, isn't it nice to see some real leadership again? Granted, President-elect (I'd argue "Acting President") Trump isn't yet seated at the Resolute Desk, but he's pretty much doing the job. On Monday morning, at Mar-a-Lago (otherwise known as the Southern White House), the President-elect held a free-wheeling presser, and one of the high points of that event was the announcement of a $100 billion investment by the Japanese technology firm SoftBank - expected to create 100,000 American jobs. [Tweet, video]
In one humorous exchange, the CEO of SoftBank admitted the possibility of doubling the investment amount,
Red State,
by
Teri Christoph
Original Article
Posted by
ladydawgfan
—
12/16/2024 2:52:49 PM
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Despite the best efforts of legacy media to portray President-elect Donald Trump as "literally Hitler," the true character of the man can often be found in his more private moments at Mar-a-Lago, AKA "the southern White House."
Such was the case this past weekend when the Trumps welcomed the widow of the late Shinzo Abe, former prime minister of Japan, to Mar-a-Lago. Melania Trump tweeted out a picture from the occasion: [Tweet]
Few other details of the dinner have emerged, but what is coming to light is the fact that Donald Trump has kept in regular contact with the Mrs. Abe since the 2022 assassination of her husband.
Red State,
by
Nick Arama
Original Article
Posted by
ladydawgfan
—
12/16/2024 2:44:24 PM
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I don't think it's a surprise that folks in Washington, D.C., tend to be liberal.
So it probably wouldn't be surprising to have people who might not be fans of the Department of Government Efficiency just because of its connection to the Trump administration.
But when Fox interviewed folks about government spending, the exchanges were hilarious when they found out just how our money was being spent. [Tweet, video]
They thought the government spent too much money, one saying, "By definition."
But then, when Fox asked about some of the crazy things that the government spent money on, they were stunned at how ridiculous the expenditures were.
PJ Media,
by
Matt Margolis
Original Article
Posted by
ladydawgfan
—
12/16/2024 2:25:30 PM
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Lame-duck President Joe Biden took the stage at the Democratic Party’s holiday party Sunday evening, reflecting on his time in office and touting his supposed international achievements. Unsurprisingly, his speech was packed with the usual dose of delusion.
Of course, before Biden spoke, Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff, First Lady Jill Biden, and Vice President Harris all spoke briefly. I wonder how hard it was for them all to offer kind words to each other.
But Joe Biden really delivered a masterclass of delusion.
If you were expecting humility or even an honest assessment of the state of the country, you haven’t been paying attention to this presidency.
PJ Media,
by
Stephen Green
Original Article
Posted by
ladydawgfan
—
12/16/2024 1:02:48 PM
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Call me old-fashioned, but I've always believed that the government's job was to provide basic services like roads and infrastructure and otherwise stay out of the way so people could make their lives better. At the very least, I figured it was the government's job to not make things worse.
That's exactly why I left San Francisco 30 years ago when, as I liked to joke, the state had made it impossible even to take a leak without first filing a CalEPA environmental impact statement. In triplicate, of course. And with a hefty filing fee.
On January 1, life in San Francisco will get that much worse
Townhall,
by
Sarah Arnold
Original Article
Posted by
ladydawgfan
—
12/15/2024 2:31:01 PM
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Failed Democratic Vice Presidential candidate Gov. Tim Walz (D-Minn.) is trying to gain sympathy after a devastating loss by crying about the struggles of managing bills and responsibilities he faces as the country’s “poorest” vice president candidate that Americans face daily. Walz shed light on how it felt to be the least richest person to run alongside a presidential candidate despite making over $100,000 annually, while most Americans bring in far less than that.
During an interview, Walz said he thought it was a “flex” that he had to “pay bills” like all Americans and appeal to voters because he is “poor.”