redbloodedamerica:

Leftist Books For Brainwashing Kids

Today we’re doing story time with Will, with the book “Peaceful Fights for Equal Right”.  It’s a children’s book that we got at Barnes and Noble.  It’s meant for kids ages four to eight – because you know, when you’re four to eight years old, that’s what you should be doing.  Protesting.  Not school, sports or anything else.  Protesting.

People say the indoctrination starts in college, or maybe as late as high school.  It starts when you’re four to eight years old, when parents are getting their kids these books, or when they’re seeing them in the bookstore, or when their friend has it at school and they read it with them.

The True History of Millstone Babies

deadbilly:

If you’d like to be the smartest person at your next cocktail party by knowing the truth about the 14th Amendment, this is the column for you!

Of course the president can end the citizenship of “anchor babies” by executive order — for the simple reason that no Supreme Court or U.S. Congress has ever conferred such a right.

It’s just something everyone believes to be true.

How could anyone — even a not-very-bright person — imagine that granting citizenship to the children of illegal aliens is actually in our Constitution?

The first question would be: Why would they do that? It’s like being accused of robbing a homeless person. WHY WOULD I?

The Supreme Court has stated — repeatedly! — that the “main object” of the citizenship clause of the 14th Amendment “was to settle the question … as to the citizenship of free negroes,” making them “citizens of the United States and of the state in which they reside.”

The 14th Amendment has been an anachronism for over 100 years now. It should have been repealed decades ago, but now would be a good time as any to do it.

The True History of Millstone Babies

How Hollywood Dictates Whether A Red State Passes Conservative Laws

The effect of the transactional relationship is that Hollywood is in a
strong position to dictate social policy in a red state. Correctly
sensing cultural tensions, Republican candidates like Josh Hawley in
Missouri have emphasized their Democratic opponents’ ties to Hollywood.
In his campaign announcement, Hawley warned
that Sen. Claire McCaskill will “take their money” and “do their dirty
work.” Sen. Ted Cruz has similarly sought to use O’Rourke’s Hollywood
connections against him.

Skepticism of coastal elites is a hallmark of the Trump era, and
rightfully so. Agree or disagree with RFRA proposals, the motivation to
keep one out of Georgia stems in large part from a desire to placate the
California and New York-based entertainment industry.

For
Abrams, of course, it also happens to comport with her worldview. But
there’s no way around the fact that Hollywood is in a position to hold a
chunk of Georgia’s economy— think about all those jobs Abrams
mentioned,— hostage to its social policy preferences.

How Hollywood Dictates Whether A Red State Passes Conservative Laws