#325076
As the Democratic Party continues to grapple with the inescapable reality of crushing 2016 electoral defeats, former President Jimmy Carter has one request: don’t ignore white American workers. Throughout her presidential campaign, former Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton kept intensely focused on wooing women, the LGBT community and several minority groups. But Carter contends Clinton lost so badly because she failed to talk to white, working-class people. “And I kept waiting for Mrs. Clinton to say, ‘I’m for you, white workers, too!'” “In the 2016 election alone, the working class people built the election,” Carter said during a sermon delivered at a church service in Georgia Sunday. “And I kept waiting for Mrs. Clinton to say, ‘I’m for you, white workers, too!'” But Clinton didn’t express that at all, as Carter lamented in the sermon aired on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” Monday. “But [Clinton] hasn’t talked to them in ages and went after Americans who were Hispanic and women and so forth,” Carter continued. “She
loading
#325077
More Americans have a positive opinion of Donald Trump than they do of Republicans or Democrats in Congress, according to a new poll.
loading
#325078
Former President George W. Bush said Monday it’s hard to fight a war on terrorism while “in retreat” and that he generally supports an immigration policy that is “welcoming” and that “upholds the law.”
loading
#325079
Sweden is suffering an immigration crisis, news of which the media and government try to suppress.
loading
#325081
Each of the non-citizen voters have committed a criminal felony.  DHS is deporting illegal alien felons as a top priority.  Any illegal alien who voted will now be subject to arrest and deportation…
loading
#325082
100% of pregnant women in Iceland abort their babies who have been pre-natally diagnosed with Down syndrome. And it gets so much worse than that.
loading
#325083
Psychologist Paul Bloom of Yale University talks about his book Against Empathy with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Bloom argues that empathy--the ability to feel the emotions of others--is a bad guide to charitable giving and public policy. Bloom argues...
loading
#325084
The drama at this conference reveals a disturbing picture of a medical community unable or unwilling to exercise judgment in the face of trans rage.
loading
#325085
Obamacare's defenders like to argue that the law has saved lives. But that's not true.
loading
#325086
Because there's just not enough opacity shrouding police misconduct and not enough slanting of the criminal justice system against defendants, California police unions have decided to get involved in a judicial dispute over lists of law...
loading
#325087
Former Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Donna Brazile is maintaining that the emails showing her relay questions ahead of debates to Hillary Clinton during the Democratic primary may not be authentic. In an interview with Politico published Monday, Brazile, a former CNN contributor, acknowledged the emails allegedly show her passing advantageous information to Clinton's campaign. She said, however, that those emails don't show full context. You know, I think there's always a lot of confusion when something is put out in a dump of emails that trickles out, she said. So, the first answer is an easy answer. Did CNN provide Donna Brazile or any other contributor debate questions? No. I've never received questions from CNN. I've made that very clear, I've made that very plain.
loading
#325088
A university has suspended a lecturer who was caught on tape assaulting a conservative student and at least one other. Eric Canin, a cultural anthropology lecturer at California State University, F
loading
#325089
The House Intelligence Committee's top Democrat said it is too early to say whether anyone on President Trump's campaign colluded with Russia. We haven't obtained any of the information yet, Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., said. We are in the very infancy of this investigation, he said, adding that prejudging what his panel might discover in the course of a nascent probe into potential contacts between the Trump administration and Moscow is unhelpful. We're not in a position to reach any conclusions yet, Schiff said. Chairman Devin Nunes, R-Calif., told reporters earlier Monday: There's nothing there, regarding improper communication between any Trump advisers and Russian officials. Schiff sees three major obstacles to getting to the bottom of the Russian issue: keeping the inquiry bipartisan; receiving full cooperation from the FBI; and adequate staffing to conduct a thorough review.
loading
#325090
The new book “Portraits of Courage” combines former President George W. Bush’s appreciation for the sacrifices of our veterans with his love of painting. Bus...
loading
#325091
"This move puts them at the forefront of the kiosk and tech movement," Tristano said.
loading
#325092

How Donald Trump is fueling ISIS

Submitted 7 years ago by ActRight Community

From his clumsy comments to the travel ban, Donald Trump is giving jihadis exactly what they want.
loading
#325093
Exclusive — President Trump: Oscars ‘Were Focused so Hard on Politics’ They Could Not Get the Basics of the Ceremony Right
loading
#325094

Gov. Mike Huckabee on Twitter

Submitted 7 years ago by ActRight Community

“Watch celebs spew ignorant political venom at Oscars?? Nah...think I'd rather have a colonoscopy. Both happen from same location.”
loading
#325095
A month into Donald Trump’s presidency, key Cabinet posts remain unfilled and many officials who have assumed their posts did so only after near party-line votes. The contrast with the treatment accorded then-President Obama’s nominees is stark. “Certainly, Trump didn’t shy away from people who he knew would be controversial.” Consider the position of attorney general, where Jeff Sessions — despite two decades serving in the Senate alongside his fellow senators — received the vote of only one Democrat. Meanwhile, Eric Holder — one of Obama’s most controversial nominees — won “yes” votes from nearly half of Republicans, including Sessions himself. Fourteen of Obama appointments requiring Senate approval did not even have recorded votes. Instead, the Senate confirmed them on unanimous “voice votes.” The lack of deference shown Sessions contrasts with the way Senate Republicans treated a Democratic colleague up for a Cabinet post in 2009 — Hillary Clinton. Only two of 41 Republicans opposed her nomination as secretary of
loading
#325096
On Sunday night, Moonlight shocked America by defeating heavily-favored Best Picture competitor La La Land. It won for one simple reason: those in Hollywood decided that intersectionality should defeat Hollywood self-aggrandizement this year.
loading
#325097
U.S. Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao said on Sunday she was reviewing self-driving vehicle guidance issued by the Obama administration and urged companies to explain the benefits of automated vehicles to a skeptical public.
loading
#325098
On Saturday, Hillary Clinton’s wing of the Democratic Party won yet another rigged election over the Bernie Sanders wing of the party with the selection of Thomas Perez, former Obama Labor Secretary, to head the Democratic National Convention. Many of the more radical Democrats were quite upset with Perez’s selection, hoping for a militant move to the left. Here’s what you need to know.
loading
#325099
Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, said his fellow Republicans should repeal Obamacare before agreeing on a replacement, and dismissed concerns of a potential backlash when current beneficiaries lose coverage as a fictional boogeyman designed to scare lawmakers away from delivering on repeal. Entering the new year, Republicans seemed to have had a clear strategy on Obamacare: pass a bill that repealed much of the law, while delaying its effective date for a few years to buy time to come up with a replacement. But a combination of mixed signals from the Trump administration and the blowback from the prospect of disrupting the insurance arrangements of millions of Obamacare beneficiaries has given many Republicans cold feet. As fissures break out over the details of a replacement plan, conservatives such as Lee are pushing back, arguing that the baseline should be to pass the same repeal bill that Republicans already passed in 2015, which was then vetoed by former President Obama. The 2015 bill would have repealed the mandates, taxes, and major spending in Obamacare, and also denied federal funds to abortion provider Planned Parenthood.
loading
#325100
Tim Pool, an independent investigative journalist bravely traveled into the Sweden to capture how mass migration has impacted society. Tim Pool interviews a ...
loading