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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
1 y

NYPD Cop Wins Lawsuit over Police 'Courtesy Cards'
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www.allsides.com

NYPD Cop Wins Lawsuit over Police 'Courtesy Cards'

This concept may be unfamiliar to some readers who don't have relatives or close friends serving on the police force but it happens all over the United States. Police Unions, including those representing the officers in the NYP, issue what are known as "courtesy cards" to officers. They are emblazoned with a police officer's badge and display the name of the union that issued them. The officers can then distribute them to friends, family members, or even people they are seeking favors from. If...
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
1 y

More than 337,000 people visit Taylor Swift's link to register to vote
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www.allsides.com

More than 337,000 people visit Taylor Swift's link to register to vote

Taylor Swift’s endorsement of Vice President Kamala Harris for president may boost voter registration beyond Democrats’ "wildest dreams." The General Services Administration, which oversees the website, confirmed to NBC News that as of 2 p.m. ET Wednesday, 337,826 people have visited a custom URL that Swift posted on Instagram when she announced she was endorsing Harris. The custom URL directs people to vote.gov, a website that helps visitors to register to vote in their state. The site also...
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
1 y

ABC debate moderators spark fury for aggressive fact-checking of Trump, easy treatment of Harris
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www.allsides.com

ABC debate moderators spark fury for aggressive fact-checking of Trump, easy treatment of Harris

ABC News sparked intense backlash among critics for its aggressive approach to former President Trump versus its soft treatment of Vice President Kamala Harris during Tuesday's presidential debate.  The Disney-owned network shocked the nation as its debate moderators David Muir and Linsey Davis repeatedly fact-checked Trump on various topics from crime, abortion to the former president's past comments about the 2020 election. 
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
1 y

How ABC’s Debate Moderators Showed Bias
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www.allsides.com

How ABC’s Debate Moderators Showed Bias

Vice President Kamala Harris and Former President Donald Trump met for the first time this week in a 90-minute debate hosted by ABC News (digital news rated Lean Left). Minutes in, the moderators showed bias against Trump, primarily by fact checking him and not Harris, even though both made false claims. It is possible Trump made more false claims than Harris overall — CNN (Lean Left bias) counted 33 false claims from Trump and one false claim from...
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

Ohio dad begs politicians not to use his son's death to demonize Haitian migrants
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www.upworthy.com

Ohio dad begs politicians not to use his son's death to demonize Haitian migrants

Stoking fear about immigrants for political gain is nothing new, but a particularly heinous wave of fear-mongering over Haitian immigrants in Ohio has prompted one grieving family to speak out in a powerful way.The parents of 11-year-old Aiden Clark, who was killed in a school bus accident in August of 2023, stood together at the podium at a Springfield City Commission meeting on September 10, 2024, begging people to stop invoking their son's name to spread hate. The driver of the minivan, 36-year-old Haitian immigrant Hermanio Joseph, crossed the centerline, colliding with the school bus carrying Aiden and around 50 other students and causing the crash. Aiden was killed and around 20 other students were injured in the accident. Aiden Clark's father says he wasn't murderedAlong with spreading unfounded accusations of Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, stealing and eating pets, some Republican politicians have used Aiden's death to support anti-immigrant rhetoric. Even vice presidential candidate JD Vance posted on X that "a child was murdered by a Haitian migrant," appearing to refer to the accident that killed Aiden. "My son, Aiden Clark, was not murdered," Aiden's father, Nathan Clark, said at the meeting. "He was accidentally killed by an immigrant from Haiti. This tragedy is felt all over this community, this state and even the nation. But don’t spin this towards hate."Clark didn't mince words sharing his feelings about how "reprehensible" it is that people would use his son's death as "a political tool." — (@) "You know, I wish that my son, Aiden Clark, was killed by a 60-year-old white man. I bet you never thought anyone would ever say something so blunt. But if that guy killed my 11-year-old son, the incessant group of hate-spewing people would leave us alone," Clark said. "The last thing that we need is to have the worst day of our lives violently and constantly shoved in our faces. But even that’s not good enough for them," he continued. "They take it one step further. They make it seem as though our wonderful Aiden appreciates your hate. That we should follow their hate. And look what you’ve done to us. We have to get up here and beg them to stop."Nathan clark asks people to "live like Aiden"Clark pointed to specific politicians who have invoked his son's name "for political gain" and called for such rhetoric to end."This needs to stop now," he said. "They can vomit all the hate they want about illegal immigrants, the border crisis, and even untrue claims about fluffy pets being ravaged and eaten by community members. However, they are not allowed, nor have they ever been allowed, to mention Aiden Clark from Springfield, Ohio. I will listen to them one more time to hear their apologies."Clark said that Aiden "researched different cultures to better appreciate and understand people he interacted with." He said he told his son he would try to make a difference in his honor and invited people to "live like Aiden.""In order to live like Aiden, you need to accept everyone," he said. "Choose to shine. Make the difference. Lead the way and be the inspiration. What many people in this community and state and nation are doing is the opposite of what you should be doing." Springfield, Ohio, has seen an influx of Haitian immigrants over the past several years, with approximately 15,000 Haitians making their way to work in the struggling industrial town of nearly 60,000. The swift population growth has come with growing pains including rising rents due to increased demand and an increase in welfare and federal assistance. But contrary to the fear-mongering rhetoric, violent crime and property crime have not increased, according to Reuters. Others in Springfield speak out against hate for Haitian migrantsThe Clarks are not the only Springfield residents to come to the defense of Haitian immigrants in the wake of hateful allegations about them. Springfield metal factory owner Jamie McGregor told PBS NewsHour that he has hired 30 Haitians, about 10% of his workforce, and he wished he had 30 more. "Our Haitian associates come to work every day," McGregor said. "They don't have a drug problem. They'll stay at their machine, they'll achieve their numbers. They are here to work." — (@) The United Farm Workers labor union also spoke out about the baseless, disgusting allegations against Haitian migrant workers in a post on X. "We organize with Haitian-origin farm workers in NY. They’re as American as the apple pie their work makes possible, but right wing racists are spreading dehumanizing lies. Haitians are not eating pets. They’re feeding America. The anti-Haitian bigotry we’re seeing is repulsive," the union wrote. "(Cannot believe this is something we need to say.)" they added. — (@) And yet, the rumors about the Haitian population in Springfield persist in right-wing circles on social media.To be extra clear, a spokesperson for the Springfield police issued a statement saying, "In response to recent rumors alleging criminal activity by the immigrant population in our city, we wish to clarify that there have been no credible reports or specific claims of pets being harmed, injured or abused by individuals within the immigrant community."Unfortunately, using fear and prejudice against immigrants—or anyone easily deemed an "other"—has proven for decades to be an effective political strategy. Fueling our most primal instincts of self-preservation and fear of the unknown is the playbook dictators and autocrats have used time and again to rise to power and successfully commit atrocities. Especially when coupled with economic anxiety and times of uncertainty, scapegoating immigrants works. It may be an unjust and hateful strategy, but it works. The more voices like Nathan Clark and Jamie McGregor and the United Farm Workers we have to counter the purposeful fear-mongering about specific populations, the better. There are legitimate conversations to be had about managing immigration and ensuring migration is handled in a sustainable way, but equating a car accident with murder and claiming without evidence that people are eating people's pets are not it.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

Coldplay surprises couple by letting their wedding be the world premiere of a new song
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www.upworthy.com

Coldplay surprises couple by letting their wedding be the world premiere of a new song

Imagine being able to tell everyone that your wedding also happened to be the world premiere of a song from an intentionally beloved band. Talk about an awesome flex. These bragging rights belong to Paul and Céline Delcloy—all because they asked nicely, by the way. Here’s what went down. On Sept 2, Chris Martin, rockstar frontman for Coldplay, played a sneak preview of "All My Love,” a track which will be featured on the band's upcoming new album, “Moon Music, set to be released on Oct. 4. Coldplay then shared the clip onto X, along with the caption "All My Love. Last song of the summer ❤️,” as this would be the last live concert before “Moon Music” would debut.All My LoveLast song of the summer ❤️ pic.twitter.com/7CmoNbJIbA— Coldplay (@coldplay) September 2, 2024 Paul and Céline, both huge Coldplay fans, went out on a limb and reached out to Coldplay's manager and “fifth member”, Phil Harvey, on X on Sept. 5, asking if "All My Love" could be the first dance at their wedding, coming up in only two days time. "We’re getting married in 2 days, please Phil do your magic and let us dance [to] All My Love ???,” read the tweet. In addition, the couple also re-shared a photo previously posted on X about a month ago, where they’re holding a sign that reads, "Would you come and play 'All Our Love' [for] our wedding first dance?"We’re getting married in 2 days, please Phil do your magic and let us danse All My Love ??? @coldplay https://t.co/i9MsKXYStW— P/A/F (@paulartforms) September 5, 2024 As fate would have it, Harvey not only saw the tweet, but replied, “Congratulations Paul! Let me see what I can do.” And next thing you know, Paul and Céline share another video—this time from their wedding, sharing their first dance to the sought after track. In gratitude, Paul wrote: “We had a world premiere of All My Love. We cried a lot, this music is meaningful for us, Céline has been living with illness for so many years, I lost my dad 4 years ago, we both supported each other in so many situations. Thank you @coldplay, We are so proud and fulfilled that you have accepted this.”We had a world premiere of All My Love. ❤️We cried a lot, this music is meaningful for us, Céline has been living with illness for so many years, I lost my dad 4 years ago, we both supported each other in so many situations.Thank you @coldplay, We are so proud and fulfilled… pic.twitter.com/ZPW6fEuxP8— P/A/F (@paulartforms) September 8, 2024 Coldplay would later share the Delcloys' dance video on their own X account, saying, "Congratulations, Céline and Paul ? ?. We wish you a lifetime of love, laughter and happiness." The message was signed with "Love c, g, w, j & p," representing band members Martin, Guy Berryman, Will Champion and Jonny Buckland, along with Harvey. In an exclusive interview with People, the newlyweds shared why having a Coldplay track for their wedding dance felt so important, as their music held deep meaning in their relationship. They reminisced about attending their first Coldplay concert together seven years ago, which “sparked a journey that took us across Europe to see the band seven times during the Music of the Spheres world tour.” “All My Love,” is particularly meaningful, as the “lyrics echo the hardships we endured but also the power of love between us, making the song deeply meaningful to us." After hearing it in Athens, the track became the couple’s “anthem” as they dealt with challenges like Céline's Crohn's disease and the loss of Paul’s father. Why people love Coldplay Of course, the Delcloys aren’t the only folks who hold a special place in their heart for Coldplay. Fans appreciate the band’s musicianship, emotional lyrics, and the way their music bring people together, particularly at live concerts. But not only that, they practice being kind humans—from working with KultureCity to make their shows accessible to deaf, hard-of-hearing or visually impaired fans, to offering $20 concert tickets to those who can’t pay the normal prices, to acknowledge Indigenous land, to employing more 40 women in areas from carpentry to personal security for their 2024 tour. Plus, Coldplay are touted as sustainability pioneers, with their unprecedented “environmentally conscious touring” initiative and plan to offer their “Moon Music” album in multiple formats, including vinyl made from recycled plastic bottles. Even if you aren’t the biggest Coldplay fan like Paul and Céline, you gotta appreciate what they're doing to make a real positive impact. Both in their fans’ lives, and around the world.
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
1 y

Slash names the best LA punk band: “My all-time favourite”
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faroutmagazine.co.uk

Slash names the best LA punk band: “My all-time favourite”

Bordering on absolute chaos. The post Slash names the best LA punk band: “My all-time favourite” first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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Conservative Satire
Conservative Satire
1 y Funny Stuff

rumbleRumble
Unreal. A man in Pennsylvania makes Biden to put a red Trump hat on: "I'm proud of you now, you old fart!" Biden: "What? Nobody called me that. Thank you!"
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Probing the Anti-Racism Racket
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spectator.org

Probing the Anti-Racism Racket

Two years ago, director Justin Folk and podcaster Matt Walsh collaborated on the documentary What Is a Woman? The whole thing was tongue-in-cheek: the premise was that Walsh, having been exposed to oodles of trans propaganda, was confused about the definition of woman and hence went about consulting a bunch of transgender “experts” in search of the answer. The result was an exposé of the whole abominable charade — the entire industry that seeks to convince young people that they were born in the wrong body and to plop them onto the assembly line of social transition, of hormone injections that go by the name of therapy, and of butchery that goes by the name of surgery. Somehow, the film managed to be at once horrifying and hilarious.  In their new documentary, Am I a Racist?, Folk and Walsh take much the same approach to the anti–racism racket, which claims that all white Americans are racist. The film isn’t anywhere near as horrifying as its predecessor — nothing here is as chilling as listening to highly credentialed men in drag calmly explaining the wisdom of mutilating children’s genitalia — but it’s still pretty damn riveting and, yes, funny.  This time around, Walsh, pretending that he’s conscience-stricken by endless claims in the media that all white men are racist, seeks to discover the truth about his own bigotry. Consequently he consults a series of people who have declared themselves to be “experts” in “anti-racism.” Armed with a “DEI card” that he’s been awarded by from some quack mail-order institution that identifies him as a credentialed expert who’s equipped to fight racism, “white supremacism,” and “white entitlement,” Walsh spouts anti-racist dogma on a local Utah TV news show. Later, in an interview, Kate Slater, author of a book called The Anti-Racist Road Map, tells him that “America is racist to its bones” and that racism makes up “the fabric of our society.” Walsh also consults an employee of a Boulder, Colorado, bookstore that boasts an extensive section of anti-racism tomes as well as a selection of titles on the topic that have been recommended by staffers. Taking home a pile of these texts, he starts with Robin DiAngelo’s White Fragility and Ibram X. Kendi’s How to Be an Antiracist.  He then attends a workshop hosted by a black woman who, for the princely sum of $30,000 (throughout the film, these numbers pop up on the screen like jackpot amounts on a game show), works as a “grief expert and anti-racist instructor” — which means that she suckers an audience of well-off white people into confessing their own racism and paying for it. Later, Walsh doles out no less than $2,350 to Regan Byrd, an “anti-oppression instructor,” for a private session.  He then turns the tables around, stopping ordinary people on the street, brandishing his “DEI card” and offering to use his expertise to help “decenter” their “whiteness” and overcome their racial bigotry. One of three goofily clad but likable-looking young guys actually comes back with an excellent bit of common sense: As he puts it, he’s white, he’s not racist, and he disapproves of talking endlessly about race. “I feel,” he tells Walsh, “like you’re the most racist person I’ve ever talked to.”  Resuming the role of student, Walsh talks to the “founder of Phoenix Black Lives Matter” who has a Ph.D. in “sustainability” and who, for a mere $1,500, offers to help him “decolonize” himself. “The only thing about white culture,” she explains, “is buying things and stealing things.” She even compares white Americans to Nazi doctors.  Then Walsh comes up with a keen stratagem. Standing near the Washington Monument, he asks passersby to sign a petition to rename it the George Floyd Monument (and paint it black) — and, alas, collects a depressing number of signatures from cowed honkies, one of whom calls it “a beautiful idea.”  That’s not all. After seeing Dr. Phil on TV interviewing two women, one white and one black, who hold elegant dinners at which — for a price of $5,000 a head — they offer rich white women the privilege of being accused of racism, Walsh gets himself hired as a waiter at one of these shindigs, where he hears the white host declare that “Republicans are Nazis,” that “the entire system has to burn,” and that America “is not worth saving” because it’s “a piece of shit.”  Later he drops into a shabby little Southern biker bar to ask the working-class white customers if they’ve “confronted their whiteness.” His interlocutors turn out to be as indifferent to race as those fancy dinner guests are obsessed with it. “Why does race have to be thrown into everything?” one of them asks Walsh, who replies: “You’re white.” The guy grunts: “So? Who cares? … I got black friends. I love them too.” Another customer agrees: “I have more black friends … than I have white friends.” A third admits that his father, back in the day, was a Klansmen, but that times have changed radically: “I accept people as they are…. You wanna do away with racism? Quit labeling people as black and white.”  What about working-class blacks? Seeking out a few of them, Walsh discovers that they don’t care about color, either. Is America racist? No, they say. “America is a beautiful country,” one of them maintains. When Walsh references his own whiteness, an older black man laughs amiably and says, “If I cut you, you would bleed just like me.” He adds: “We got to love each other. That’s how you get past racism.”  Those working-class whites and blacks apparently didn’t charge Walsh for their interviews. But it costs him no less than $15,000 to secure a few minutes on camera with the sainted Robin DiAngelo, arguably the doyenne of this entire anti-racism movement. In one of the film’s funnier moments, Walsh seduces her into a role-playing bit in which he pretends to be black and accuses her first of smiling too much at him (whites smiling too much at blacks in order to show they’re not racist is, apparently, a serious offense) and then of not smiling at him at all (which is also offensive). Brilliantly, he suggests that she pay reparations to his black producer. She’s obviously uneasy about this proposal — after all, she’s not in this game to shell out cash but to rake it in — but she ends up forking over 30 bucks, which, as the film notes, brings the cost of the interview down to $14,970.  There’s more, but you get the idea. At the end of What Is a Woman?, Walsh’s pretend confusion ends when, after all his encounters with trans propagandists, he goes home to his wife, who spells out the basic facts of biology in a simple sentence or two. At the end of this film, Walsh’s faux epiphany emerges on its own: “Am I making the world better,” he ponders, “or am I just profiting off of people’s racial guilt?”  As with What Is a Woman?, one fears that this highly engaging documentary will mainly attract the attention of the already converted. If people who’ve been taken in by the anti-racism shakedown somehow find themselves watching this picture, though, I suspect the huge sums charged by these con artists will turn a few heads. What’s more, Walsh does a very effective job of demonstrating that the current preoccupation with racism is largely the province of ridiculously privileged and idle white women who, for whatever reason, get a perverse kick out of being labeled as bigots, whereas ordinary, hard-working Americans of every race, by and large, are sincerely indifferent to skin color — buying, quite sincerely, into Martin Luther King Jr.’s argument for colorblindedness. Few conservatives, I suspect, will be surprised by anything in Am I a Racist?, but for any people on the left who can be cajoled into viewing it, it will likely be an eye-opener.  READ MORE: Sen. Vance, Rep. Cloud Introduce Legislation to Dismantle DEI Reckoning of a Race Hustler The post Probing the Anti-Racism Racket appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

“She’s a Marxist!” Trump Goes There – Calls on Commie Kamala on Debate Stage (Video)
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“She’s a Marxist!” Trump Goes There – Calls on Commie Kamala on Debate Stage (Video)

by Jim Hoft, The Gateway Pundit: “She’s a Marxist!” Trump Goes There – Calls on Commie Kamala on Debate Stage Donald Trump: Anymore because of philosophies like they have and policies like they have. I don’t say her because she has no policy. Everything that she believed three years ago and four years ago is out […]
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