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Simple, both are Senator Scott
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Again, makes all kinds of sense Pete. |
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Pete: No, because Senator Scott knows how it feels to be pulled over by police without justification. Yes Pete, a withering rebuttal. |
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The opportunity zones provided some benefit for residents but was funded by the wealthiest Americans. Neither of those does that much for Blacks vs Lincoln. |
There’s no way to prove that the tax break for wealthy investors who buy a stake in a business or property in the zones has created jobs or helped minority businessowners. The federal government chose not to collect information on projects attracting investments in the more than 8,700 zones, leaving policymakers and advocacy groups to rely on anecdotes and self-reporting.
But critics have long said the tax break, which encourages building in designated low-income communities, may end up accelerating gentrification and that it’s unlikely to help Black businessowners. |
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The problem with our authoritarian tendencies is when they are unjustly imposed on the lives of others. Parents are normally authoritarian in the raising of their children. For the most part we accept that this is justified. Owners are authoritarian in the operation of their business. For the most part we accept this as justified. We accept as right that military commanders have tremendous authoritarian power over their soldiers. When we speak of authoritarianism in politics, we mean a politician's use of power that is not legally his, which is an unjust use of authority. With politicians, unfortunately, but predictably, this happens often. Usually it's the common seemingly unstoppable petty corruption that is often allowed by the people when they view their politician as someone, even if corrupt, who will make their lives better. When political authoritarianism is most onerous, even dangerous to the notion of individual freedom, to personal agency, is when the political system itself is authoritarian. There is no remedy to this for the individual other than disobedience or revolt. When a governmental system is crafted, by the consent of the governed, to limit political authority to the least oppressive but necessary functions in order to maintain stability and harmony, governing authorities are limited only to the powers the system grants them. The most dangerous threat to individual freedom in such a system is its destruction and its replacement with one that grants total authoritarian power of the ruling regime over the people--which is far more destructive to liberty than the personality of a given politician, even one of the highest rank. Those who seek political office may well have more of a desire, than most, to have authority over others. So it is most important to assure that the system of governance limits them to the agreed upon and fewest powers necessary. There is wisdom in such platitudes or slogans such as "don't hate the player, hate the game." It's what the game allows more than what the player does within the rules that is the problem. What has been happening over the course of a century is the government "game" has been changing. This game has incrementally been changed from one of limited government to one of growing government power with a vector toward unlimited government. This election, as have been most over this last century, is about the nature of the "game," not the character of the player. The government "game" started as a constitutional republic with very limited central government power, and has gradually, continously, been transformed into one of unlimited government power. The basic nature of Progressivism, the "game" into which we are being made to play, is the unhampered (unlimited) power of government to govern our behavior. The stated intention is that this is all for the good of the people. That may be so. Personally, I believe the intention, no matter how sincere, cannot withstand the force of human nature. We are all potential authoritarians. Given the legal authority, it is inevitable that the "players" in the Progressive game will rule us to be what they want, rather than the "game" allowing us to be whom we wish. This election, as much as, if not more, is about the game we wish to play--limited constitutional government, or an unlimited Progressive one. |
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Mark this post, that kid is getting off, with at most a misdemeanor |
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Paul, ask your self this. Would you be this resistive to giving the president credit for helping blacks, if Hilary had won and had the same exact results as Trump? Or would you be saying she deserves the Nobel Prize? I don't like Trump as a person. But nevertheless, until we shut ourselves down by choice, blacks were way better off than they were on his first day. Obama deserves some credit for that. Trump deserves some credit for that. I'm sorry you don't like those facts. Facts don't care about you feelings towards Trump. |
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Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
1. The economic opportunity zones, disproportionately help blacks.
Black Businesses Largely Miss Out on Opportunity Zone Money https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/researc...ity-zone-money 2. criminal justice reform, disproportionately helps blacks. That is one plus, here are some of the minuses. Restricted clemency to only those who are celebrities, well-connected individuals, or have a personal affiliation with the president Restarted federal executions after a 17-year informal moratorium on federal capital punishment Secretly altered the risk assessment authorized in the FIRST Step Act to drastically reduce the number of federally incarcerated people eligible to be released to subdue the spread of COVID-19 Denied federal coronavirus relief funding to small business owners with a criminal record Argued in court against people eligible for sentence reductions under the FIRST STEP Act Jeopardized the FIRST STEP Act by underfunding its programs Reinstated DOJ contracts with private prisons Disbanded a program to create federal prison education systems Closed halfway houses that help those incarcerated transition back to the community Prohibited federal investigations of patterns of unconstitutional policing Stopped assistance to police departments that voluntarily wanted reform Eliminated restrictions preventing police departments from obtaining military equipment Eliminated community-based violence prevention programs Condemned public criticism of police by threatening that protestors “might find themselves without the protection they need” Eliminated DOJ community policing program grants in proposed executive budget Attacked prosecutors who are pursuing criminal justice reform in their communities Ordered federal prosecutors to pursue the harshest punishments possible Attempted to resume use of the federal death penalty and encouraged expansion of the death penalty in drug cases Waged the same failed war on drugs from the 80s Attempted to force federal job candidates to disclose participation in diversion programs Failed to report on deaths in police custody as required by Congress Disbanded the DOJ Science Advisory Board that provided evidence-based rigor to DOJ policies 3. School choice, disproportionately helps blacks. That's quite a claim to make, do you have any supporting evidence or did you just hear that from Tucker? |
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You're dancing all over the place, bitch slapped boy. You're really coming unglued. |
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Try to follow along, I'll try to use small words... Rich people don't need school choice, they can afford to send their kids to great schools. Rich people are disproportionately white. So, people who aren't that rich, are disproportionately black. The worst schools are in poor, urban areas, which are disproportionately inhabited by blacks (thanks to liberalism). I tried to use mostly monosyllabic words. If it's still going too fast for you, I can try to make it into a pop-up book. |
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i never said there are zero poor white people. that again, was biden, who said poor kids are just as smart as white kids. Poor people are disproportionately black. is that true, or is it false? Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Your statements about "why blacks" are showing just who you are, Tweety's target audience, a suburban housewife
"You know who's going to be in charge of it? Cory Booker. That's going to be nice" -- Trump is barely trying to conceal his racism Cory Booker, Stanford graduate, Rhodes scholar, Yale Law Graduate, all-around nice guy who once saved a woman from a burning building. Maybe he tells too many dad jokes. But guessing most Americans would sure as heck rather have Cory as neighbor than one of the Trumps. Elizabeth Kneebone, a fellow at the Metropolitan Policy Program at the Brookings Institution, looked at numbers from the 2010 to 2014 American Community Survey and found that 39 percent of African Americans live in the suburbs, 36 percent live in cities, 15 percent live in small metropolitan areas, and 10 percent live in rural communities. That’s a noticeable shift from 2000, when 41 percent of African Americans lived in cities, 33 percent lived in suburbs, 15 percent lived in small metro areas, and 11 percent lived in rural communities. |
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The homicide charges are extremely serious, I don't think a self defense claim is going to fly when you intentionally put yourself in the situation with a weapon. It will be interesting to see if the can conclusively prove what led to the first shooting. Expect his social media activity to get a lot of scrutiny. His defense should be I'm dumb, immature and listened to too much Trump. |
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Asians are a minority. I don't know if they are disproportionately living in poverty. |
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How about the liberal criticism of all the blacks who spoke at the RNC? Or Biden saying you ain't black if you ain't for him. |
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You want to talk about Tweety's Reality show? 25 were members of the Tweety's family or Tweety's administration, and 72 were white, reflecting the white membership of the Republican Party. After rounding up every African-American they could find willing to say anything nice about Tweety, the RNC featured 12 Blacks at the podium, 13 percent of speakers and four times the percentage of Blacks in the Republican Party. Think of it this way: Most of the white speakers came armed with some agenda. They wanted more farm subsidies or fewer abortions or more Jesus in schools or the right to shoot Black people walking past their homes. But the Black speakers seemingly wanted nothing. There were no additional policies they desired or issues they wanted addressed. They had no goals they wanted the next Tweety administration to accomplish and no legislation they wanted Republicans to pass. Instead of an agenda, the Black people were just there to say, “Thank you, white folks,” and fade off-screen. Most of the Black speakers had a specific story about how a white man helped them in their life: Tim Scott, for instance, spoke about a Chick-fil-A man who helped him pass high school. The ones who didn’t have nice white man to thank had to thank Tweety directly. Jon Ponder had both: He spoke about a white FBI agent who helped him turn his life around—and then, courtesy of a video recorded at the White House several hours earlier, the world got to see Tweety give him a “surprise” pardon. Aimed directly at the suburban housewives, hit home with you apparently........... |
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Sad you would support him as if it's a 2A . And self defense. Argument Classics. Blame everyone but the guy who pulled the trigger that's a go to message from conservatives... from the women who got shot in a police raid. They blamed her for her boyfriend, or the boy who police shot in the park they blamed him for playing with a toy gun , the man who told police he had a gun and had a permit to carry , then shot by cop he told. The excuse he shouldn't have had it or he moved to fast Man jogging shoot by 2 guys in a truck.. excuses he shouldn't have been in the neighborhood or in the construction site .. Yea but god forbid you say this kid shouldn't have the gun or he shouldn't have been there Or that shooti g someone in the back 7 times is excessive.. funny how that works |
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The first TV spot at the RNC, was a very moving story of a black bank robber, pardoned by Trump, who is dedicating his lilfe to helping others He spoke very specifically of the support Trump has given him. Tim Scott talked about the success of the economic opportunity zones. The rising star AG of Kentucky destroyed Biden's notion that you ain't black if you ain't for him (I'd love to know your true opinion on Bidens statement there, which I know you'll never share). The woman who got paroled from prison thanks to criiminal justice reform thanked Trump. So if you're saying that unless someone says "I want this", they have nothing valid to say, I disagree with. I think showing regular people whose lives have been improved by his policies, is a very effective way to make the case. The polls seem to suggest a tightening of the race after the conventions. I don't think it will be enough. But I'm sure the conventions were a net benefit to Trump. |
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As far as the shooting in the back, the suspect was trying to get into his car after resisting arrest at which point, if he was allowed to enter he could come out with a gun or drive away and be a threat to the community. Not sure the cop counted how many times his gun was discharged. It was probably very quick with the intention of stopping the resister, whether it killed him or not. Again, you being a stand up really good person would have let him get into the car and see what would happen after that. |
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He was shot because he was black. Quote:
He was out for a jog, he was shot because he was black. Quote:
He was shot because he was black, and this is why they protest. |
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So when the cops kill white people, who they kill more than black people, are they killing them because they are white? |
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Police search black motorists 3x more than white motorists. But (!), searches of black motorists don't yield more contraband. Apparently those odds are acceptable to you as a white boy, put you in blackface and drop you off in Grosse Pointe on a dark and rainy night you will likely change your tune Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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