“What does it tell you when the DC Establishment, the Corporate Media and the Left are all against you… Honestly, it should tell you absolutely everything,” she said. “Enough of the elites imposing their will against us, it’s about damn time we impose our will on them!”
Ron DeSantis has consistently lagged former President Donald Trump in polls among Republican voters by around 45-50 points.
Online, many were quick to point out that it wasn’t left-wing media Casey needed to worry about.
CNBC previewed an upcoming interview between Sara Eisen and Citadel CEO Ken Griffin, a Republican megadonor who gave $5 million to a PAC that supported DeSantis last year during his reelection effort. Amid DeSantis’ public appeal struggles, donor hemmoraging, and campaign overhauls, Griffin hinted that he won’t throw DeSantis a life raft — citing his displeasure with the broader political conversation.
“I’m still on the sidelines as to who to support in this election cycle,” said Griffin. “Look, if I had my dream, we’d have a great Republican candidate in the primary who was younger, of a different generation, with a different tone for America. And we’d have a younger person on the Democratic side in the primary, who would have his message for our country… We’d have a debate around ideas and principles and policies to make this a great nation. We’re not having that dialogue right now.”
Fox News’ Howard Kurtz asked Ron DeSantis to weigh in on one of the more awkward flaws in his struggling presidential campaign.
“You’ve heard this criticism for months. He’s too stiff. Oh, he’s too awkward. Oh, he doesn’t have the charisma. In retrospect, would it have been better, would it be better now, to project a warmer image?” Kurtz asked the Republican Florida governor Sunday on “MediaBuzz.”
“Well, I think some of that is manufactured,” the Florida governor replied, pointing to his landslide reelection victory in last year’s midterms and claiming to have “very strong support.”
Here’s a sampler of Florida ethics these days.
A political ally who Gov. Ron DeSantis appointed to chair the Florida Commission on Ethics was forced to resign his seat on the ethics board last month due to, well, an ethics issue.
I know. Embarrassing.
But this was bound to happen. DeSantis requires a lot of henchmen to operate his vast web of vendettas, legally problematic schemes and dictator-adjacent impulses. And sometimes you just run out of compliant pawns.
I think that’s what happened to Glen Gilzean Jr. The poor man just got stretched too thin.
You can’t be both the head of the state Ethics Commission that bats away any ethical complaints filed against DeSantis while also double-tasking as a member of the board designed to punish Disney World for not being blindly obedient to DeSantis’ woke-a-dope posturing.
One of his current issues with DeSantis' second term as governor is the war he has waged against Disney. "The ongoing battle with Disney, I think, is pointless," said Griffin. "It doesn't reflect well on the ethos of Florida."
The fight between DeSantis and Disney started last year, when the company said it opposed Florida's so-called Don't Say Gay bill, which forbids instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity for students in public school.
After Disney came out against the bill, DeSantis and his allies targeted the special tax district that had allowed Disney to effectively self-govern its Orlando-area theme parks for decades. Disney and DeSantis are now locked in dueling lawsuits.
Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
According to a report by the Iraqi al-Ghadeer TV television network, the activist, identified as Sheikha al-Majid, was detained following her return from the holy Iraqi city of Karbala to the Bahraini capital of Manama.
She was charged with “sectarianism” due to broadcasting live images while standing in the vicinity of the shrine of Imam Hussein (AS), the report added.
Al-Ghadeer TV noted that Bahraini opposition groups and human rights organizations have condemned Majid’s arrest and demanded her immediate release.
Meanwhile, Karim Alivi al-Mohammadavi, a member of the Foreign Relations Commission of the Iraqi Parliament, denounced Majid’s arrest as a direct assault by Bahrain’s ruling Al Khalifa dynasty on Shia Muslims.
Mohammadavi said the move conveys the message that the Manama regime does not seek civil peace and spares no effort to create internal chaos and division in any way.
The Iraqi legislator slammed the move as “irresponsible,” calling upon Bahraini authorities to reconsider the Shia activist’s detention and put an end to all heavy-handed measures against members of the majority religious community.
Dave had been responding to a drug overdose call when he barreled through the intersection at 74 miles (119 kilometers) per hour in a 25 mile per hour zone, killing Kandula, a graduate student in Information Sciences at Northeastern University in Seattle. In addition to her schoolwork, Kandula had also been working part time to help support her mother in Andhra Pradesh in India.
A statement from the family read, “Jaahnavi’s tragic and untimely death has left her family and community with a huge hole in their hearts that will never be repaired. In spite of earning less than $200 per month, her mother educated Jaahnavi and encouraged her to travel to the United States hoping Jaahnavi would have a better future and better life abroad.”
Dave, 35, is a former US Marine hired by the Seattle Police Department as part of a mass hiring initiative in 2019. The officer, while having no significant disciplinary history with the SPD prior to the January incident, did have a previous Arizona driver’s license suspended in 2018 for unpaid traffic tickets and failure to appear in court. Dave’s driving record also includes a 2018 traffic ticket for running a red light in Washington state.
The leaked body camera footage in question shows Auderer in his patrol car speaking over the phone to a man later identified as guild president Mike Solan a day after the January accident. Auderer is heard assuring Solan the incident would not be the subject of a criminal investigation and stated that driving 50 miles per hour through a 25 mile per hour intersection—not the actual 74 miles per hour—was “not reckless for a trained driver.”
Auderer then gave Solan his own interpretation of witness testimony regarding the incident. “I think she [Kandula] went up on the hood, hit the windshield, then when he [Dave] hit the brakes, flew off the car.” He then told Solan, “but she is dead” and then proceeded to laugh out loud. In a subsequent statement dripping with horrifying contempt for the working class student, Auderer tells Solan, “It’s a regular person. Yeah, just write a check. $11,000.” Auderer then states, mistaking Kandula’s age, “She was 26 anyway. She had limited value.”
Search and rescue teams say they find seven to eight bodies every week.
The city buries the unknown bodies if they are not claimed by family within two months.
"Following measures and inspections being carried out for the dead bodies, we will place the dead bodies in refrigerators at the Mosul morgue for a legal timeframe of 60 days. Upon instruction from the court, we will bury them in coordination with the Mosul municipality," Shahd Arif, head of the Mosul forensic department, told Rudaw.
Despite the smell of death that haunts parts of the city, health authorities have not registered any diseases as a result of the bodies lying under the rubble.
Turkish airstrikes targeted on Saturday a number of regions in Dohuk province, located in northern Iraq, claiming they were targeting positions affiliated with the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which Ankara designates as a "terrorist organization".
According to a security source, Turkish helicopters conducted aerial raids on areas within the Amadiya district, north of Dohuk province.
Providing further insight, the source told news outlets that areas falling within the same province were also subjected to shelling.
Turkey has been terrorizing Iraq for years. And the area that they targeted on Saturday? It was the third time in a week that they attacked it.
Turning to the US, Alex Bollinger (LGBTQ NATION) reports:
Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) denounced the state of Massachusetts for allegedly taking a step towards jailing parents for not supporting their transgender children, even though that didn’t happen at all. Her statements were part of a larger myth on the right that Democrats and other liberal people want to take people’s children away and force them to transition to another gender.
“A commission in Massachusetts just said that child-abuse laws should include withholding ‘gender-affirming care,'” she tweeted last week. “So, if I don’t want my eleven year old to get his body mutilated, I should be sent to jail for child abuse.”
Really? The whore said that. Because whore is the only word for her. She's wrong ("First, 'mutilation' does not describe gender-affirming care. Also, 11-year-old trans kids don’t get gender-affirming genital surgery because it is not performed on transgender minors, much less pre-teens.") but that doesn't stop the whore does it. She has condemned gay people, trans people, drag artists and everyone else as a threat to the public. But it was still-married Lauren Boebert, the whore, who went to a performance of BEETLJUICE with her new male partner -- again, she's not yet divorced -- and chose, in full view of others, to let him grope her breasts, while she repeated grabbed his crotch.
See for yourself in the video below.
She wants to talk about what others do in public? Then let's talk about the sitting whore in Congress who went to a musical and put on a sex show.
She's still married to another man and she acts like that in public? She can't even claim they were parked on a dark road and so she thought no one would see. This was in public with people seated on all sides of them. And she wants to lecture others? This is how a member of Congress behaves -- a married member of Congress behaves with someone who is not her spouse -- in public? And she has the nerve to attack anyone else?