#333226
As President Obama concludes his reign of error, his party is smaller, weaker and ricketier than it has been since at least the 1940s. Behold the tremendous power that Democrats have frittered away…
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#333227
The 240th anniversary of Washington crossing the Delaware to win the Battle of Trenton.
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#333228

Israel Recalling U.S. Ambassador

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is letting his feelings known by way of this symbolic move.
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#333229
A freshman student at Bryn Mawr College has dropped out after what she says was unbearable harassment from her fellow students for supporting President-elect Donald Trump. In September, shortly aft
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#333231
✖ Follow Peter Schiff https://twitter.com/peterschiff ✖ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/user/SchiffReport 1791L - Your source for the top speeches & debates...
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#333232

Israel’s Best Friend

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

President Obama has redefined the Iran issue by saying it is about U.S. national security and global security, too.
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#333233
President Barack Obama, in addition …
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#333234
Some of Britain's leading universities are becoming no-go zones for Jewish students because anti-Semitism is so rife, the first ever higher education adjudicator has warned.
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#333235

FEMINIST RUINS CHRISTMAS!!!

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

It's Christmas faggots and what better way to start this glorious day but with a fucking dumb feminist video claiming that classic Christmas songs are sexist...
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#333236
Tweet Share 0 Reddit +1 Pinterest 0 LinkedIn 0 Email Depending on who you ask,  George Ciccariello-Maher is either a radical, self-hating member of the alt-left, or a master troll. Either way, the Drexel University professor has drawn some strong reactions to his holiday Twitter messages on Sunday. The post that started it all, which ?
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#333237

Affirmative Action

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

What an Orwellian euphemism, ?affirmative action?. 1997 SAT Data In 1997, Stephen Epinshade found that being black is worth 230 points on the SAT, being hispanic is worth 185 points, be…
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#333238
I was in a weird filter kind of mood. I will avoid getting all queer and cinematic on you in the future. Note that I used #2 and #5 from the 10 Most Dangerou...
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#333239
Two and half thousand Europeans plan to march into Aleppo waving white flags to demonstrate against the civil war taking place in Syria.
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#333240
Vladimir Putin jabbed the Democrat-media elites on Christmas weekend. The Russian president told reporters President Ronald Reagan would be proud ...
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#333241

Christmas at Bastogne

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

‘What’s merry about all this, you ask?” Thus began a Christmas Eve message from General Anthony McAuliffe to his troops besieged at the Belgium town of Bastogne. Adolf Hitler had launched a desperate counteroffensive against the allies in the West in December 1944. As described in the book No Silent Night: The Christmas Battle for Bastogne, the town became a linchpin of the Battle of the Bulge. Hitler hoped to split the Allied armies and retake the crucial harbor at Antwerp. His attack through the Ardennes forest, accompanied by a withering artillery barrage, caught the Allies by surprise and met with initial success. But he needed Bastogne, a crossroads that General Dwight Eisenhower quickly decided must be held. The American general rushed the 101st Airborne (the “Screaming Eagles”) to the town, together with other units. Seventy years ago, the heroes of Bastogne, or, as they were fondly dubbed, “the battered bastards of Bastogne,” spent Christmas breaking the advance of the German army in one of the most storied fights in American history. It is Bastogne that gives us some of the great statements of American military defiance. When the Germans demanded surrender of his forces, Generl McAuliffe shot back with his famous rejoinder, “NUTS!” A soldier’s quip captured the spirit of the American defenders: “They’ve got us surrounded, the poor bastards.” The bravado shouldn’t obscure the dire conditions. The Americans were undersupplied and outnumbered. The weather was miserable, frigid and snowy, with cloud cover denying the Allies their advantage in the air. This had been the case for weeks, leading to General George Patton’s famous prayer, reading in part: “Grant us fair weather for Battle. Graciously hearken to us as soldiers who call upon Thee that, armed with Thy power, we may advance from victory to victory, and crush the oppression and wickedness of our enemies.” When the weather cleared on December 23, Allied planes attacked the German forces on the ground and dropped supplies to the besieged at Bastogne. As Christmas approached, the Americans scratched out what cheer they could. On Christmas Eve, an American officer wrote “Merry Christmas” on a map showing the Americans surrounded. There was a Christmas service, appropriately enough, in a stable, and one at an ancient chapel. But they were still under mortal threat, and many Americans assumed, as the Germans prepared another assault, that they wouldn’t survive Christmas. Germans launched a bombing raid on Christmas Eve that hit an American aid station. Among the casualties was the local woman Renee Lemaire, whose tender care for the wounded Americans had earned her the sobriquet the “Angel of Bastogne.” Then German armor and infantry massed for an attack early on Christmas morning that punched through American lines and came within a mile and a half of Gen. McAuliffe’s headquarters. But it was blunted and ferociously chewed up, leaving a devastated landscape of dead bodies and burned-out German tanks, the wreckage of the Germans’ last chance to take the town. With the worst seemingly past, General McAuliffe enjoyed a makeshift Christmas dinner of canned salmon and biscuits, complete with a Christmas tree fashioned from spruce branches. The next day, General Patton finally arrived to relieve Bastogne. The siege had been broken, and so had the Ardennes offensive. Hitler’s grand gambit had failed. In his message on Christmas Eve, General McAuliffe had continued: “We’re fighting — it’s cold — we aren’t home. All true.” But when the Germans had surged ahead at the start of the Battle of the Bulge, “the Eagle Division was hurriedly ordered to stem the advance. How effectively this was done will be written in history; not alone in our Division’s glorious history but in world history.” “We are giving,” it concluded, “our country and our loved ones at home a worthy Christmas present and being privileged to take part in this gallant feat of arms are truly making for ourselves a merry Christmas.” — Rich Lowry is the editor of National Review. He can be reached via e-mail:[email protected]. © 2014 King Features Syndicate
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#333242
Obama's latest executive move, banning offshore drilling in large areas of the Atlantic and Arctic waters, folds neatly into six years of executive control.
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#333243
It may have been the offseason for the Texas Legislature, but there was still ample news coming from state officials, much of which will reverberate through the legislative session starting in January.
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#333244
Even as security officials say they’re foiling big plots, small-scale attacks seem inevitable.
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#333245
Roseanne Barr: Obama’s Anti-Israel UN Action Like ‘Nazis Who Enacted Anti-Jewish Laws on the Eve of Jewish Holidays’
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#333246
RNC communications director Sean Spicer today had to explain that no, there was no comparing of Jesus Christ and Donald Trump in its Christmas message.
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#333247

Donald J. Trump on Twitter

Submitted 8 years ago by ActRight Community

“#MerryChristmas”
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#333248
Young National Front supporters say they feel vindicated by a "wave" — including Brexit and the election of Donald Trump — sweeping across the West.
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#333249
Witnesses report strange circumstances surrounding the birth of a child in the small town of Bethlehem.
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#333250
Texas Sen. Ted Cruz put the United Nations on notice Saturday evening, issuing his toughest statement yet in response to Friday's vote to condemn Israeli settlement building. In a tweet, the Republican lawmaker said he spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Saturday evening to not only wish him a happy Hanukkah, but also to assure him of strong support in Congress. Spoke w/ Israeli PM @netanyahu tonight to wish him Happy Chanukah & assure him of strong support in Congress. No US $ for UN until reversed.— Ted Cruz (@tedcruz) December 24, 2016
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