LiLSpeedy's Blog

Red State Rejects MOORE, TRUMP, and BANNON

Roy Moore, aka child molester, liar, hypocrite, and bigot got his azz kicked by Doug Jones. This win was a slap into the face of Trump and Bannon. Moore is so pissed until he refused to concede. He is hoping for a miracle but he already received it. His miracle is that he is not in jail for being a child molester. He's a hypocrite that quotes the Bible and is an abomination in the worst way. Alabama refused to send someone like Moore to represent their state that the world loathes. They can do better and did. They chose integrity over party. They let Bannon know that he was a nobody and they didn't want to hear anything his drunk azz had to say.

Entry #791

Go Get Em Roy...Quipped Trump

Roy Moore praises the era of slavery and says America may be the focus of evil in a series of viral, resurfaced comments

  Business Insider
  • People are digging up some controversial comments from Roy Moore, the Republican US Senate candidate in Alabama's special election next week.
  • They include Moore praising the era of slavery, saying America may be the focus of evil in the modern world, and claiming that young Americans are killing one another because they are taught the theory of evolution.
  • Moore was already facing allegations that he pursued relationships and engaged in sexual misconduct with teenage girls when he was in his 30s.


A series of controversial comments from the embattled GOP Senate candidate Roy Moore began to resurface Thursday and have quickly gone viral online with the Alabama special election less than a week away.

Moore was already facing several allegations that he engaged in sexual misconduct with teenage girls when he was in his 30s. The comments that have emerged in the past day include Moore praising the era of slavery and Russian President Vladimir Putin. He also once linked drive-by shootings to the teaching of evolution in schools.

His comments on slavery resurfaced Thursday after Eric Columbus, a former official in President Barack Obama's administration, tweeted them, garnering more than 8,000 retweets.

During a September rally in Florence, Alabama — a rally at which he also called Native Americans and Asians "reds and yellows" — Moore responded to a black man who asked when Moore thought America was most recently "great."

Moore said it was during the era of slavery.

"I think it was great at the time when families were united," Moore said, according to a September Los Angeles Times story. "Even though we had slavery, they cared for one another ... Our families were strong — our country had a direction."

Moore praised Vladimir Putin

The Reagan Battalion, a conservative group, separately tweeted out footage of an interview Moore conducted with The Guardian in August in which Moore praised Putin and suggested that America may be the focus of evil in the world.

The Guardian reporter interviewing Moore asked about Russia, noting that President Ronald Reagan once said the Soviet Union was "the focus of evil in the modern world."

"Could say that very well about America, couldn't you?" Moore responded. "Well, we promote a lot of bad things. Same-sex marriage."

The reporter said that was "the very argument that Vladimir Putin makes."

"Well, maybe Putin is right," Moore said. "Maybe he is more akin to me than I know."

The Reagan Battalion's tweet showcasing the exchange has been retweeted roughly 6,000 times.

The final piece of resurfaced commentary came via CNN, which highlighted a speech Moore gave in 1997 criticizing the theory of evolution.

"We have kids driving by shooting each other that they don't even know each other," he said. "They're acting like animals because we've taught them they come from animals. They're treating their fellow man with prejudice because we've taught them they've come from animals, not from God, who despises that sort of thing."

The clip has been retweeted more than 15,000 times since Thursday afternoon.

The election is Tuesday

With the election just a few days away, Moore and his campaign have doubled and tripled down on attacking the women who accused him of sexual misconduct. Many of them have said the incidents happened while they were teenagers and he was in his 30s.

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

President Donald Trump, hours ahead of a Florida rally just minutes from the Alabama border, provided one of his strongest endorsements of the candidate Friday morning, telling Alabama voters to "VOTE ROY MOORE!"

"LAST thing the Make America Great Again Agenda needs is a Liberal Democrat in Senate where we have so little margin for victory already," he tweeted, attacking Moore's Democratic opponent, Doug Jones. "The Pelosi/Schumer Puppet Jones would vote against us 100% of the time. He’s bad on Crime, Life, Border, Vets, Guns & Military. VOTE ROY MOORE!"

The Republican National Committee reinstated its support for the candidate this week after Trump first endorsed him, while top GOP senators have eased off in their condemnations of Moore. Moore has also seen his polling numbers improve after falling behind Jones when the allegations that he preyed on teenagers first surfaced last month.

One of the most prominent allegations of sexual misconduct came from Beverly Young Nelson, who said Moore tried to sexually assault her when she was a teenager. Nelson told ABC News for the first time in an interview Friday that she wrote part of the message attached to a yearbook signature she said was from Moore.

Moore strongly denies that he wrote his signature in her yearbook in the 1970s, and she and her attorney, Gloria Allred, have planned a news conference Friday afternoon to address the matter.

Entry #790

Dear God, HELP!

2017 First Baptist Church shooting

On November 5, 2017, a mass shooting occurred at the First Baptist Church. At least 27 people were reported to have been killed, as well as 24 injured. The shooter has not been identified and was reported dead.[2]

Entry #782

Sgt. Bergdahl's Sentence May Be Lighter Because of Trump's Comments

In sentencing, mitigating factors weigh in favor of leniency while aggravating factors tip the scales toward harsher punishment. The judge’s decision means he will weigh Mr. Trump’s comments along with other mitigating factors presented by the defense, including evidence that Sergeant Bergdahl had a severe mental disorder and suffered torture in captivity.

 

FORT BRAGG, N.C. — Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl was dishonorably discharged from the Army by a military judge on Friday, but received no prison time, for desertion and endangering troops, ending a drama that began more than eight years ago in war-torn Afghanistan.

At the sentencing hearing, the military judge, Col. Jeffery R. Nance of the Army, also reduced Sergeant Bergdahl’s rank to private and required him to forfeit $1,000 a month of his pay for 10 months.

Entry #781

What is the Magnitsky Act?

What is the Magnitsky Act? The law Putin allegedly wants Trump to get rid of, but why?

The story behind Donald Trump Jr.'s controversial meeting with a Russian lawyer during the 2016 presidential campaign has turned out to be a complicated one linking adoptions, sanctions, and frozen assets.

President Donald Trump's son had initially said the discussion was set up to talk about adoptions, but he later admitted that he had attended in the hopes of learning potentially damaging information about Hillary Clinton.But many believe some Russians ultimately saw the meeting as an opportunity to advocate for U.S. lawmakers to repeal a controversial law that penalizes many Russians. Bill Browder repeated that claim during testimony to Senate lawmakers in a recent hearing.

"It's clear the interest and goal in that meeting was to repeal the Magnitsky Act. It's the one thing we can agree with certainty that happened in that meeting," Browder said.

Browder played a key role in getting the 2012 law was passed, which was named in honor of Sergei Magnitsky, a Russian lawyer Browder hired who was jailed and ultimately died in Russian captivity after working tirelessly to uncover a $230 million tax fraud scheme.

 

Browder was an American born to a Russian family who was the biggest investor in the Russian stock market at one point. But that all changed in 2005 he says after he became an outspoken critic of corporate governance in the country, alienating Vladimir Putin and others.

Lawmakers passed the Magnitsky Act in order to punish various businessmen and officials believed to be connected to Magnitsky's death, freezing Russian assets and barring suspected human rights abusers from entering the United States.

Russia quickly retaliated by passing a law that prohibits Americans from adopting Russian children, a popular phenomenon in the years leading up to the law. The two issues have been linked ever since.

"Russian adoptions was really code for Russian sanctions," Browder claims.

Russian adoptions have come up since. When news of a second quiet Trump-Putin meeting emerged earlier this month, Trump insisted that the two only shared "pleasantries" and discussed adoption.

Since then, Browder has claimed that Putin and his associates have spent millions of dollars -- including hiring the Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya -- to try and get the act repealed.

Browder speculates that it is an effort to protect human rights abusers as well as free up frozen assets including money belonging to Putin himself.

Entry #780

Fats Domino, New Orleans music legend, dead at 89

 

New Orleans resident and legendary pianoman Fats Domino pauses a moments for a photo after meeting with reporters on Aug. 19, 2007.

NEW ORLEANS -- Fats Domino, the amiable rock 'n' roll pioneer whose steady, pounding piano and easy baritone helped change popular music while honoring the traditions of the Crescent City died Tuesday at the age of 89, the Jefferson Parish Coroner says.

The New Orleans musician's daughter said he died peacefully while surrounded by family and friends, CBS affiliate WWL-TV reports.

In appearance, he was no Elvis Presley. He stood 5-feet-5 and weighed more than 200 pounds, with a wide, boyish smile and a haircut as flat as an album cover. But Domino sold more than 110 million records, with hits including "Blueberry Hill," ''Ain't It a Shame" and other standards of rock 'n' roll.

He was one of the first 10 honorees named to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and the Rolling Stone Record Guide likened him to Benjamin Franklin, the beloved old man of a revolutionary movement. The magazine listed Domino at No. 25 in its list of "Greatest Recording Artists of All Time." 

His dynamic performance style and warm vocals drew crowds for five decades. One of his show-stopping stunts was playing the piano while standing, throwing his body against it with the beat of the music and bumping the grand piano across the stage. 

After learning of his passing, artists and musicians shared their condolences on social media.

Entry #778