#335826

Donald Trump condemned the late Cuban leader Fidel Castro on an otherwise quiet Saturday for the president-elect.

#335827

Green Party presidential nominee Jill Stein is raising money to call for a recount in three states: Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania. She said that it was necessary due to "reported hacks into voter and party databases and individual email accounts are causing many Americans to wonder if our election results are reliable." A Wisconsin recount request was filed on Friday.

#335828

Well over 150,000 people have fled Venezuela in the last year alone, the most in more than a decade, scholars say, with the sea route posing special dangers.

#335829

Geraldo Rivera went on FOX News channel on Saturday morning and defended Marxist tyrant Fidel Castro after his death. Geraldo ...

#335830

Cuban Communist Fidel Castro finally died last night. He was 90 years old. Barack Obama and Donald Trump both released ...

#335831

Donald Trump Calls For ‘Free Cuba’ After Fidel Castro’s Death

#335832

Thirteen facts about Fidel Castro’s cruelty should be etched on his tombstone.

#335833

Several student groups at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., sent a letter to administrators claiming that the police protecting them on campus is an “act of violence” because a police union endorsed Donald Trump.
The letter, which was obtained by the College Fix, is titled “Demands for Our Campus by Concerned Students.” (Yes . . . demands.)
The relevant section states:
“The university must re-channel its resources and money to its fundamental requirement: to protect its students. This safety must not depend on the University’s police. The Fraternal Order of Police, the largest police union in the United States, has formally endorsed President-Elect Donald Trump. The FOP includes over 10,000 members in Washington D.C., many of which have jurisdiction over GW’s campus. Placing us in these officers’ care is an act of violence, especially for Black students.”
“The University must protect its students, instead, by dramatically increasing financial aid, emergency funds, health care resources, health insurance grants, and discretionary funds available to low-income students. It must create and/or dramatically increase funding for the community centers like the Multicultural Student Services Center for people of color and marginalized students. It must increase funding for Mental Health Services and expand hiring to candidates that are of color and specialize in race-related mental health concerns.”
Now, it’s important to note that it’s not clear from the language in the letter whether these kids want the cops to stop protecting them or not. It does state that campus police protection is an “act of violence,” that their “safety must not depend on the University’s police,” and that the university must increase funding to other areas “instead” — but we can’t be sure if they’re saying that they feel that the university is depending only on the police — and that it should pay more attention to other areas as well — or if they’re saying that it must not depend on the police at all. In either case, though, their argument is ridiculous.
Say the latter option is true: That these students want to get rid of campus police entirely, and that applying extra funding to the causes that they listed would be a fine replacement. If this is the case, I’m going to push back a little and bet that, if a murderer were breaking into one of their dorm rooms, he or she would probably not be calling the Multicultural Student Services Center for help. What’s more, keep in mind that their reason for calling campus-police protection an “act of violence” is that some FOP members have jurisdiction over campus. If you follow this logic, then there would be a lot of places other than their campus where police protection would also be “an act of violence,” seeing as, by their own admission, FOP has more than 10,000 D.C. members. If they really are declining protection over this, then by extension they’re basically saying that they don’t really want the police’s protection when they’re out in D.C. at all . . . which might be something that they’d want to rethink.
The other option, of course, would be that these students do still want the police protection, but they just want the university to understand that the protection is an “act of violence.” Kind of like, “Look, protect me, but understand that your protecting me is an act of violence.” Okay? It’s like inviting your boyfriend over, opening the door, and saying, “You being here is an act of violence” and when he tries to leave saying “Wait? What are you doing? Just because I said your presence is an act of violence doesn’t mean that I don’t want you to help me change the lightbulb I’m too short to reach! Just make sure to also donate to PETA on the way out!” It’s not hard to see how crazy this sounds.
#related#If these students have a problem with a police union or its political affiliations, then okay. It’s perfectly fine to express that. But calling their very protection an “act of violence” is just inaccurate. A police officer protecting someone is not an “act of violence.” An “act of violence” is, for example, getting hit in the face, or kicked in the shin, or thrown down a flight of stairs. See: any dictionary. What’s more, their demand that the school send money to different organizations in order to fix the situation makes no sense. When in the world would that ever be a thing? Say I had a doorman at my apartment who supported Donald Trump. Would I ever, in a million years, write a letter to my building owner claiming that, based on his political beliefs, my doorman’s very being there was an “act of violence” against me? And demand that they donate to Planned Parenthood and the World Wildlife Federation to make it better? No, I would not . . . because that is crazy. And although advocating a respect for diversity can certainly make a culture more peaceful, the fact still is that a police force and a multicultural center have very different, distinctive functions. Add to all of this that the Fraternal Order of Police endorsing Donald Trump does not mean that all of the officers on GW’s campus personally support Donald Trump, and we’ve got approximately 9 million reasons why these kids have some thinking to do.
The letter was endorsed by the following campus groups: Young Progressives Demanding Action GW, the Feminist Student Union, the Roosevelt Institute, Progressive Student Union, Students for Justice in Palestine, Green GW, Fossil Free GW, GroW Community, Casa Blanca, the Theta Chapter of Latinas Promoviendo Comunidad/Lambda Pi Chi Sorority, inc., Asian Pacific Islander Student Alliance Advocacy Committee, and the Association of Queer Women and Allies.
— Katherine Timpf is a reporter for National Review Online.

#335834

Hillary Camp to Join Jill Stein in Recount Efforts— Hillary Clinton’s lawyer for her presidential campaign published a statement Saturday ...

#335835
#335836

While it appears that Jill Stein has raised enough money, albeit suspiciously, to start a vote recount in Wisconsin, efforts have begun on the other side to challenge votes in three states won by Hillary [...More]

#335837

An award-winning video featuring happy children with Down syndrome has been banned from French TV by France’s Conseil d’État (State Council) because it may offend post-abortive women. The video in question, "Dear Future Mom," touchingly featured children with Down syndrome of various ages bonding with their respective parents, educating mothers that such children can live a happy life and that they need not be worried.

#335838

Some opponents of Donald J. Trump are seeking recounts in Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania, states where his margin of victory was extremely thin.

#335839

Citing "two teams of independent researchers" who found "Russia’s increasingly sophisticated propaganda machinery...echoed and amplified right-wing sites across the Internet as they portrayed Clinton as a criminal," The Washington Post has named Drudge, Zero Hedge and Ron Paul (and many others) among the "useful idiots" that true American patriots should be wary of.

#335840

“.@marcorubio: "I would hope that [the Obama Admin.] would send no one to the funeral." #FidelCastro #Cuba”

#335841

For the hundreds celebrating in Miami, it's the end of a terrifying era.

#335842

One blog on the inanities in CNN anchor Christiane Amanpour's impassioned address at the Committee to Protect Journalists dinner against granting any respect to conservatives in the "news" media product is not enough. In a second look at the transcript, one can see how Amanpour complained that Hillary Clinton was judged by an "exceptionally high bar" and Trump an "exceptionally low bar." She also insisted, as many at CNN do, that the fact-based journalist never accepts a rebuttal on the "empirical scientific evidence" of global warming.

#335843

President Obama urged Hillary Clinton to concede to Donald Trump on the night of her devastating loss, it was reported Friday. Obama made the call as Clinton and her campaign were watching the elec…

#335844

The Electoral College has a dropout problem. Last week another Bill Clinton political protege lost a presidential election in the Electoral College despite winning the bulk of the popular votes, and in response disgruntled Democrats renewed calls for overhauling, or abandoning, the Electoral College.

#335845

Fidel Castro’s death late Friday led to impromptu street celebrations across Miami, in the heart of the Cuban exile community.

#335846

Given the abject failures of progressive policies, both in governing and at the ballot box, progressives should reexamine their basic assumptions.

#335847

In 2012, Michael Flynn was put in charge of all military attachés and defense-intelligence collection around the world. He ran into serious trouble almost immediately.

#335848

Don't they know a new sheriff is in town?

#335849

Fidel Castro, who towered over his Caribbean island for nearly five decades, a shaggy-bearded figure in combat fatigues whose long shadow spread across Latin America and the world, is dead at age 90. His brother Raul announced the death late Friday night.

#335850

Sarah Palin: ‘Grateful to See the Church Step Up’ for Donald Trump Because ‘Eight Years Ago, I Felt They Didn’t’
