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BlabberBuzz Feed
BlabberBuzz Feed
30 w

Are The Newsom's Planning A HUGE Immigrant Thanksgiving At Their New Casa? See What they Shelled Out!
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Are The Newsom's Planning A HUGE Immigrant Thanksgiving At Their New Casa? See What they Shelled Out!

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Daily Caller Feed
Daily Caller Feed
30 w

Legendary Game Show Host Chuck Woolery Dead At 83
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Legendary Game Show Host Chuck Woolery Dead At 83

Woolery is remembered as the first host of 'Wheel of Fortune'
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Daily Caller Feed
30 w

ERIKA AHERN: RFK Jr. Has Abortion Issues To Tackle At HHS
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ERIKA AHERN: RFK Jr. Has Abortion Issues To Tackle At HHS

'positioned to make a radical difference'
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Daily Signal Feed
Daily Signal Feed
30 w

Pete Hegseth, the Jerusalem Cross, the Crusades, and Anti-Christian Bigotry
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Pete Hegseth, the Jerusalem Cross, the Crusades, and Anti-Christian Bigotry

As soon as President-elect Donald Trump had nominated Fox News host Pete Hegseth for secretary of defense, the legacy media unleashed a torrent of breathless stories about Hegseth’s “extremism” because he displays tattoos of the Jerusalem Cross and “Deus vult,” a Latin phrase associated with the Crusades. The Associated Press reported that a fellow service member had flagged Hegseth as a possible “Insider Threat” due to “a tattoo on his bicep that’s associated with white supremacist groups.” But are the tattoos really associated with white supremacists, or is that just what far-Left activists want you to think? Retired Master Sgt. DeRicko Gaither, serving as the D.C. Army National Guard’s physical security manager in 2021, flagged the “Deus vult” tattoo to authorities before Joe Biden’s inauguration on Jan. 20, 2021, and as a result, Hegseth has said, he was told to stay home on Inauguration Day. Gaither told The Associated Press that he researched Hegseth’s tattoos and “determined they had sufficient connection to extremist groups to elevate the email to his commanding officers.” The AP uncritically quotes Heidi Beirich of the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism, who acknowledged that the tattoos “are associated with an expression of religious faith” but insisted that they “have also been adopted by some far-right groups and violent extremists.” Beirich isn’t exactly a neutral source. She led the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Intelligence Project for eight years—a period during which the SPLC added Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative Christian law firm that has won multiple cases at the Supreme Court, to a “hate map” that includes chapters of the Ku Klux Klan. As I wrote in my book “Making Hate Pay: The Corruption of the Southern Poverty Law Center,” the SPLC uses this “hate map” to scare donors into raising money and to demonize its political opponents, suggesting they are driven by the same kind of hate as the Klan. The SPLC often demonizes conservative Christians for dissenting from its LGBTQ agenda. But the organization also demonizes nonprofits that warn against the threat of radical Islam, a particularly salient fact for the AP to note when uncritically quoting the activist Beirich on the meaning of crusader symbols. Even Beirich, however, noted that the meaning of the symbols “depends on context,” according to the AP. Yet the AP didn’t provide any context explaining that the symbols aren’t white supremacist in nature. Vice President-elect JD Vance condemned the AP’s report as “anti-Christian bigotry,” and he’s exactly right. They're attacking Pete Hegseth for having a Christian motto tattooed on his arm. This is disgusting anti-Christian bigotry from the AP, and the entire organization should be ashamed of itself. https://t.co/tQxuD3RPlx— JD Vance (@JDVance) November 15, 2024 The Jerusalem Cross So what is the Jerusalem Cross? The Jerusalem Cross consists of a large cross surrounded by four smaller Greek crosses, one in each quadrant of the larger cross. Godfrey of Bouillon, a key leader in the First Crusade, reportedly adopted the symbol. According to Catholic News Agency, the cross predates the First Crusade (1096-1099), but became more common after the Kingdom of Jerusalem adoptedthe cross as its chief banner in the 1200s before Muslim forces expelled the crusaders in 1291. The cross remains the main insignia of the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem—the Latin Catholic diocese for the Holy Land. After the end of the crusader era, pilgrims carried an image of the Jerusalem Cross as they made the journey to the City of David to walk in the footsteps of Jesus. Pilgrims often get a tattoo of the cross after completing a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, in a tradition dating back more than 700 years. Hegseth personally has gone to Jerusalem to walk in Jesus’ footsteps, and it seems plausible he received the cross tattoo after one such journey. Catholic News Agency gives multiple interpretations of the five crosses. They may represent the four Gospel writers—Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John—plus Jesus at the center. They may represent Jesus’ five wounds during the Crucifixion: the nail piercings in his hands and feet and the spear piercing in his side. The crosses also may represent the spread of the Gospel to the four corners of the earth. Father David Grenier is a Catholic priest and member of a religious order called the Holy Land Franciscan Friars, which uses the Jerusalem Cross as its symbol. Grenier told Fox News Digital that he isn’t familiar with the cross being used to represent Christian supremacy or white supremacy. Rather, he said, it represents the message of salvation spreading to all people across the globe. What Is ‘Deus Vult?’ “Deus vult” is a Latin phrase meaning, “God wills it.” It became a rallying cry for European Catholics in the First Crusade, although Christians throughout history—including the Puritans as well as Catholic chivalric orders—also adopted the phrase as an expression of divine Providence. Although white nationalists have occasionally adopted the phrase, medieval scholars have condemned this as an abuse of history. The phrase “Deus vult” has much more to do with Providence and the Crusades than it has to do with any racist movement in the U.S. today. In Defense of the First Crusade The Crusades have gotten a bad reputation. A group of Western Christians traveled to Jerusalem in 1999 on the 900th anniversary of the First Crusade, to apologize to Muslims for the wars, suggesting that the Crusades were a form of European colonization. Many today see the Crusades as a prefiguring of America’s bungles in the Middle East, particularly the invasion of Iraq in 2003. Yet, as sociologist Rodney Stark pointed out in his excellent book “God’s Battalions: The Case for the Crusades,” the truth is far thornier—and the pilgrims who led the First Crusade had a virtuous cause. Pope Urban II called for a crusade on Nov. 27, 1095. In his passionate speech, Urban described how roving bands had attacked pilgrims on the road to Jerusalem, raping women and murdering civilians who planned only to walk in the footsteps of Jesus. Let’s not forget the reason why the Crusades were necessary in the first place. The entire Roman world had become Christian by the 400s, but Islam spread by the sword and Caliph Umar captured Jerusalem in the 600s. Many Muslim rulers allowed Christian pilgrims to the holy city, but violent attacks increased in the late 1000s. No king volunteered to lead the First Crusade, so noble families and peasants took up the charge. The Byzantine Emperor Alexius I Comnenus had asked Pope Urban for help in fighting the Seljuk Turks, who were encroaching on his territory. When the crusaders arrived, Alexius refused to lead the army. He did provide key assistance, but the crusaders held a grudge against him, a grudge that would lead to the Third Crusade sacking the city of Constantinople. Stark, the sociologist, argues that the ragtag band of peasants and lesser nobles fought the First Crusade on the typical terms of war for the period. Modern scholars condemn the crusaders for massacring the population of Jerusalem when the city didn’t surrender, but Stark says this reveals a modern bias. The later Muslim conqueror Saladin also massacred the populations of cities that didn’t surrender during sieges, and he only spared Jerusalem in 1187 because the later crusaders did surrender the city to him. Although modern critics say the Crusades represented an early period of European colonialism, with Europeans plundering the land for profit, Stark notes that the crusader period actually saw European monarchs sending vast sums of money to the crusader states in order to maintain them. The Crusades ultimately failed, and later crusades devolved into tragedy and farce. Yet after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the Crusades resonate with Americans who see the threat of radical Islam. The Modern Salience of the Crusades The ideology that inspires the Islamic State, or ISIS, and its surviving terrorist branches preaches military conquest to bring all the world under the control of Islam. This ideology echoes the early Muslim conquests of Israel and North Africa. The 9/11 attacks illustrated the fact that, even after the collapse of the Soviet Union, America and its ideals still have clear enemies across the world. Since Islam is a religion of law, interpretations of Islamic law vary widely, and many imams teach versions of Islam that are compatible with American freedom. However, Americans must remain alert to the fact that many imams teach strict interpretations of Islamic law that deprive women of rights (as we see in Iran and Afghanistan), teach hatred for Jews and Christians, and teach a form of deception called taqiyya that may cloak nefarious purposes. The threat of radical Islam has made identification with the crusaders a hot topic on the Right, and this may be one reason Hegseth got a “Deus vult” tattoo. Unfortunately, many on the Left have dismissed the threat of radical Islam, and the Southern Poverty Law Center brands groups such as the Center for Security Policy and the David Horowitz Freedom Center (which warn about this threat) as “anti-Muslim hate groups.” Partnering with the Council on American-Islamic Relations, which bills itself as the largest Muslim public policy nonprofit in the U.S. but has historic ties to a terrorist-funding network, the SPLC seeks to silence those who condemn radical Islam. Beirich—whose current nonprofit follows the lead of the SPLC, where she long served as director of the project that releases the “hate map” demonizing conservatives and Christians—has both a track record of condemning conservatives and an incentive to twist Christian symbols into signs of “hate.” The fact that The Associated Press uncritically cited Heidi Beirich in its coverage on these issues reveals its anti-Christian bias and should expose this report for the farce that it is. The post Pete Hegseth, the Jerusalem Cross, the Crusades, and Anti-Christian Bigotry appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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Hot Air Feed
Hot Air Feed
30 w

The Question We All Ask: Sunday Reflection
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The Question We All Ask: Sunday Reflection

The Question We All Ask: Sunday Reflection
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
30 w

God's gunsmith: How Samuel Colt's wife reinvented him as a Protestant hero
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God's gunsmith: How Samuel Colt's wife reinvented him as a Protestant hero

Samuel Colt has been mythologized as a God-fearing man who invented the revolver. Some people insist it’s ironic that a devout man of God could create instruments of war. It’s even in the Colt slogan: “God created man. Sam Colt made them equal." Colt’s days as a laughing gas salesman taught him a lot about marketing. He learned that good salesmanship is often subliminal. In a world of muzzle-loaders, the Colt revolver could fire multiple times without needing to be reloaded, earning its title as “The gun that won the West,” a motto that has been used elsewhere. But was Samuel Colt truly the Bible-loving gunsmith of lore? He was not.A widow's faith The narrative of a deeply religious man shaping firearms in divine favor was largely crafted by his widow, Elizabeth Jarvis Colt, the daughter of an Episcopal minister. After Colt’s death, she built an enduring legacy around her husband, intertwining his inventions with Christian values. In doing so, she reshaped American culture, paving the way for John Wayne. Samuel Colt’s early life was brutal. His mother died of tuberculosis when he was six, followed by the deaths of all three of his sisters. But this didn’t drive him to a life of Christlike contemplation. Instead he obsessed over weapons and explosives. As a child, he showed more interest in science than scripture, preferring encyclopedias over the Bible. By his teens, he had embarked on a journey to India as an apprentice sailor, where he drew up plans for a handgun with an automatic revolving chamber. This early blueprint would later revolutionize firearms and accelerate the technologies of war.Laughing all the way to the bank Colt's natural flair for showmanship was as instrumental to his success as his inventions. At 20, he toured the country under the alias "Dr. S. Colt," selling nitrous oxide — laughing gas — as a form of entertainment. Dubbed “The Celebrated Dr. Colt of New York, London, and Calcutta,” he mixed theatrics and spectacle to fund his early experiments, even performing pyrotechnic displays alongside an artist's wax-figure tour of "Dante’s Divine Comedy" in Cincinnati. The money he earned on this unconventional tour allowed him to pay a gunsmith to produce a working prototype of his revolver. In 1836, at just 22, Colt founded the Patent Arms Manufacturing Company. But by 1843, the company had declared bankruptcy. Colt's enterprise was saved only through the generosity of wealthy relatives. A man of ambition, not devotion Colt was, above all, an industrialist. He liked to work hands to the bone, and not necessarily his own. His reputation as “God’s gunsmith” is less reflective of his personal beliefs than of his business acumen. His factories ran around the clock, producing firearms at an industrial scale previously unseen. Colt’s days as a laughing gas salesman taught him a lot about marketing. He learned that good salesmanship is often subliminal. He paid artists to feature his guns in their work, arguably one of the earliest examples of product placement. He avoided explicit political or religious messages in his advertising. Commerce is an art, not a soapbox. Behind the scenes, he was unambiguous in his aims: profit and expansion. He succeeded at both. The early, violent Wild West offered an excellent market for Colt's products. The Mexican-American War also proved lucrative. In a remarkably un-Christlike way, his dealings often prioritized sales over principles. Ahead of the Civil War, he sold firearms to both the North and the South, leading the New York Times to accuse him of treason. Elizabeth Colt: Architect of the Colt legacy By 1852, Samuel Colt was both wealthy and famous, yet his personal life lacked a woman’s grace. Then he met Elizabeth Jarvis, a woman of strong faith and social standing, American gentry in Hartford, Connecticut. Elizabeth was 30 when they wed in 1956. Colt was almost 42, and these would be the final six years of his life: his greatest, but also his lowest. The Colts suffered profound tragedies, losing four children. Samuel never got over the death of their first daughter. Shortly after the Civil War began, Colt succumbed to exhaustion at 47, his relentless work taking a final toll. He stood no chance against gout. In the Victorian era, sickly burnout was an unexceptional way to die. Carrying the torch Elizabeth, widowed at just 35, became the keeper of Samuel Colt's fortune — and his story. Colt’s estate, valued at $15 million (equivalent to around $350 million today), provided her with ample resources to construct a public memory for her husband. For the next four decades, Elizabeth would carefully manage Colt’s legacy, intertwining his name with the virtues of faith and patriotism. She commissioned statues, constructed monuments, and kept Colt’s name in the press. She published his biography on gilded paper. Then the Colt Armory burned down under suspicious circumstances, possibly a case of Confederate arson. It was her chance to shed the Colt Company and retire. But she didn’t. Wouldn’t. Her reconstruction of the armory elevated Colt’s reputation posthumously, as did the release of the Peacemaker, the company’s most famous gun. Faith and handguns Elizabeth’s devotion to her husband’s legacy went beyond preservation; she sought to sacralize. She commissioned portraits of Colt as a respectable, pious inventor and constructed the Church of the Good Shepherd in Hartford — a tribute to her husband and their lost children, adorned with design motifs drawn from Colt’s guns. The church served not only as a memorial but as a moral statement, sanctifying Colt’s life work and symbolically bonding gun ownership with Christian duty. It also became a refuge for factory workers’ families. Through Elizabeth’s efforts, Colt was immortalized as a Protestant American hero. Under her stewardship, the Colt name gained a symbolic association with moral virtue, reinforcing the cultural alignment between firearms and faith that would become a persistent theme in American identity. The cowboy code After Elizabeth sold the Colt company in 1901 at the age of 75, the gunmaker continued to innovate, creating iconic weapons like the Gatling gun, the Colt 45, and the M16. So much of the company's success depended on branding and mythology. While Colt’s original formula had evolved, his brand endured, in part due to Elizabeth’s careful curation. Even though the company would face challenges, Samuel Colt’s legacy in American culture was sealed. The Colt revolver became synonymous with the American spirit of rugged individualism, and thanks to Elizabeth, this spirit was one of both faith and gunpowder. In making guns affordable and accessible, Samuel Colt changed the landscape of American self-reliance. Elizabeth intertwined that legacy with Christian imperatives: There’s nothing contradictory about a gun called the Peacemaker.
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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
30 w

Path of Exile 2 director says focusing on the endgame at launch “was necessary”
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Path of Exile 2 director says focusing on the endgame at launch “was necessary”

The Path of Exile 2 early access launch is almost upon us. We’ve already had a spectacular year for ARPG fans, with the Last Epoch release a roaring success and Diablo 4 Vessel of Hatred a dramatic upgrade on the base game. Now, the long-anticipated sequel to one of the best PC games of all time is finally about to arrive. Ahead of PoE 2’s comprehensive content reveal this week, I sat down with game director Jonathan Rogers to discuss some of the choices that went into determining what made the cut for launch. Continue reading Path of Exile 2 director says focusing on the endgame at launch “was necessary” MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Path of Exile 2 Witch class guide, Path of Exile 2 preview, Path of Exile 2 release date
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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
30 w

New The Witcher 3 mod adds high quality and 4K textures to the next gen version
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New The Witcher 3 mod adds high quality and 4K textures to the next gen version

According to Nexus Mods, the most popular The Witcher 3 creation is a HD texture pack. Clocking in at an immense 5.6 million downloads, this project reworks a countless amount of the game's models and textures to make them look better, without sacrificing CD Projekt Red's artistic intent. The mod made a stunning game look even better, and thanks to CDPR's next gen update, it now has a sequel. So if you've been itching to replay Geralt's adventure ahead of The Witcher 4, this is the perfect excuse. Continue reading New The Witcher 3 mod adds high quality and 4K textures to the next gen version MORE FROM PCGAMESN: The Witcher 3 mods, The Witcher 4 news, Witcher 3 system requirements
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
30 w

X Mourns As TV Legend, Conservative Patriot (and Twitchy Fave) Chuck Woolery Passes at 83
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X Mourns As TV Legend, Conservative Patriot (and Twitchy Fave) Chuck Woolery Passes at 83

X Mourns As TV Legend, Conservative Patriot (and Twitchy Fave) Chuck Woolery Passes at 83
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Twitchy Feed
30 w

'LAUGHS in Wingman': Joyce Alene Accidentally NUKES Obama Making Smug Dig at Trump About His AG Pick
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'LAUGHS in Wingman': Joyce Alene Accidentally NUKES Obama Making Smug Dig at Trump About His AG Pick

'LAUGHS in Wingman': Joyce Alene Accidentally NUKES Obama Making Smug Dig at Trump About His AG Pick
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