Much as I'd like to take credit for the formatting, I'm just passing it on from my curated RSS-feed verbatimJust a side note, but I want to say I really appreciate the formatting you use for these headlines, @GasBandit. They're easy to read and include a link to the cited source.
I hadn't ever actually thought about this. Oof.
Okay.Louisiana’s Republican Governor signed legislation requiring public schools to display the Ten Commandments in every classroom. “This bill mandates the display of the Ten Commandments in every classroom — public elementary, secondary and post-education schools — in the state of Louisiana, because if you want to respect the rule of law, you’ve got to start from the original lawgiver, which was Moses,” Gov. Jeff Landry. Civil rights groups, meanwhile, vowed to challenge the law in court. The organizations called the new law “blatantly unconstitutional.” (USA Today / Washington Post / Axios / New York Times / CNN / Associated Press)
Good idea.
Now I want to play Civilization.
And now this from Snopes:Well, I guess I don't trust Snopes any more. Seems they've made a turn to the right, with the bullshit "true" rating about the contents of Ashley Biden's diary.
To be 100% fair, no he didn't. What he did say was some mealy mouthed bullshit that was obviously meant to dogwhistle to the white supremacists, but if we are going to talk about what was factually said, his actual statement was that the protest was attended by "very fine people on both sides" and, in this same statement, clarified "I don't mean the neo nazis, they should be condemned" but then followed up "But there were fine people in that crowd other than them."He called neo-nazis and white supremacists 'very fine people'. Denying that is absurd.
Unfortunately, due to the nature of the soundbite world we live in where people get their news from reading a headline... or maybe half a headline, at max, we are forced to care about these technicalities. Back when this speech first happened, the 'very fine people' line became a meme, got misquoted, and then the "left" (as much as there is a left in the USA, more of a center-right) turned it into a meme. What are supposed to be trusted news sources like CNN ran with it for ratings, when they should have been reporting the actual news, that Trump was doing weak-ass both sides-ism while skirting around trying to appeal to his obvious nazi base. But the news organizations are too chicken shit to tackle things as they are, and so this happens.And this is how Trump will win again and lead us to ruin. Technicalities no one care about.
He made that "clarification" later on, not with the original statement. People called him on it, and he tried to weasel out of what he'd said.To be 100% fair, no he didn't. What he did say was some mealy mouthed bullshit that was obviously meant to dogwhistle to the white supremacists, but if we are going to talk about what was factually said, his actual statement was that the protest was attended by "very fine people on both sides" and, in this same statement, clarified "I don't mean the neo nazis, they should be condemned" but then followed up "But there were fine people in that crowd other than them."
I literally posted the video, with time stamps.He made that "clarification" later on, not with the original statement. People called him on it, and he tried to weasel out of what he'd said.
So, make no mistake. In no way is pointing out the error of misquoting meant to be an endorsement of Trump, even though the sports team mentality of modern politics has conditioned people to think. He's said plenty of horrible, horrible shit. My point is that when someone says "He didn't really call nazis fine people in that speech," in an attempt to claim some sort of approval of him, the rebuttal isn't to say "ya-huh he did!" Because it doesn't matter. The rebuttal is to openly point out all the shit he did do and not get lost in the weeds because you remember one bad sound bite and don't want to look it up yourself.Let's face it: Trump has done/said enough to earn my ire, even without this particular incident. His reputation isn't exactly balancing precariously and only held up by doubt on this specific issue. No, he tanked it looooong ago.
--Patrick
You posted video of a press conference that happened after the speech the original statement was made in.I literally posted the video, with time stamps.
Every 20 minutes?
~64000 pregnancies over 550 days = 116rrppd (rape-related pregnancies per day) = 1 rape-related pregnancy every ~12m25s.Every 20 minutes?