It keeps flipping between Venus and Mars...

It keeps flipping between Venus and Mars...
But without demonstrating that anyone associated with her actually said it. The only source is the article itself and they've already been copy-pasted onto dozens of other sites. It's fucking ridiculous. You get the impression of a real story from the scale of the reporting alone, but then when you look into it you find that all the "reporting" rests on a single source that doesn't bother to provide the means to validate its claims.Her office pushed back against the notion that it was hypocritical for Ocasio-Cortez, who has made housing affordability one of her top policy concerns, to move into a luxury building. A spokesman pointed out that her office also uses a car with an "internal combustion engine that runs on fossil fuels," even though she thinks their use should be eliminated.
That's been one of my pet peeves for a while now. Reporters don't tell you how they know things, and the use of vague terms like "a person with knowledge" or something like that, we don't know how that person got their knowledge - first hand? Second hand? The media are too wild and unsubstantiated wit their reporting.Sean Hayden wrote: ↑Wed Feb 20, 2019 2:22 pmI don't know man. Going through the media is hell. They say things like:
But without demonstrating that anyone associated with her actually said it. The only source is the article itself and they've already been copy-pasted onto dozens of other sites. It's fucking ridiculous. You get the impression of a real story from the scale of the reporting alone, but then when you look into it you find that all the "reporting" rests on a single source that doesn't bother to provide the means to validate its claims.Her office pushed back against the notion that it was hypocritical for Ocasio-Cortez, who has made housing affordability one of her top policy concerns, to move into a luxury building. A spokesman pointed out that her office also uses a car with an "internal combustion engine that runs on fossil fuels," even though she thinks their use should be eliminated.
Perhaps it's time to restrict the use of the comment section to fact-checking the article.Forty Two wrote: ↑Wed Feb 20, 2019 4:52 pmThat's been one of my pet peeves for a while now. Reporters don't tell you how they know things, and the use of vague terms like "a person with knowledge" or something like that, we don't know how that person got their knowledge - first hand? Second hand? The media are too wild and unsubstantiated wit their reporting.Sean Hayden wrote: ↑Wed Feb 20, 2019 2:22 pmI don't know man. Going through the media is hell. They say things like:
But without demonstrating that anyone associated with her actually said it. The only source is the article itself and they've already been copy-pasted onto dozens of other sites. It's fucking ridiculous. You get the impression of a real story from the scale of the reporting alone, but then when you look into it you find that all the "reporting" rests on a single source that doesn't bother to provide the means to validate its claims.Her office pushed back against the notion that it was hypocritical for Ocasio-Cortez, who has made housing affordability one of her top policy concerns, to move into a luxury building. A spokesman pointed out that her office also uses a car with an "internal combustion engine that runs on fossil fuels," even though she thinks their use should be eliminated.
The short clip of the interaction shows Feinstein in a fairly bad light, but in a longer version it's apparent that she eventually became more conciliatory, including offering an internship to one of the group. Later she did some damage control: 'Unfortunately, it was a brief meeting but I want the children to know they were heard loud and clear. I have been and remain committed to doing everything I can to enact real, meaningful climate change legislation.'U.S. Sen Dianne Feinstein, D-California, isn't backing the Green New Deal, and she wasn't shy about letting a group who does support it know it — even if they are children.
A group of schoolchildren visited the senator at her San Francisco office Friday and urged her to get on board with the renewable energy legislation. But the conversation quickly turned into somewhat of a confrontation, and Feinstein has been criticized online for the tone she took. Edited video of the 85-year-old lecturing more than a dozen kids went viral Friday.
One girl implored the senator to back the Green New Deal and argued that the government can afford it. "We have tons of money going to military," the girl told the lawmaker.
"I've been doing this for 30 years," Feinstein said. "I know what I’m doing. You come in here and you say it has to be my way or the highway. I don’t respond to that."
House Democrats are looking to strike the phrase “so help you God” from the oath taken in a committee, prompting one prominent Republican to label them "the party of Karl Marx.”
A draft of the proposed rules for the House Committee on Natural Resources that was recently made public showed certain changes for the rules in red and items to be deleted put in brackets.
For the oath witnesses are supposed to take, the proposed rules remove the phrase “so help you God” while adding the phrase “under penalty of law.”
The proposed rules also add gender inclusive edits, changing “chairman” to “chair” and on multiple occasions replacing “his or her” with “their.”
Democrats refused to say "so help me God" during the swearing-in oath before testifying to a House committee this week, by simply omitting it when they were sworn in.
The seemingly pre-prepared move by the Dems sparked a furious reaction from Republican ranking member Rep. Mike Johnson.
Video captured the moment at the beginning of the House Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution and Civil Rights & Liberties and shows Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.) starting the hearing by asking three people to be sworn-in before testifying.
“Do you swear or affirm under penalty of perjury that the testimony that you’re about to give is true and correct to the best of your knowledge, information, and belief?” Cohen asked the trio.
They all said "yes," then left a silent pause before sitting down again.
Johnson shared the video clip on Twitter on March 1, saying: “I will not give up on this issue. Stay tuned."
Cohen prepared to move on but Rep. Mike Johnson (R-La.) interjected, saying, “I think we left out ‘so help me God.'”
“We did,” admitted Cohen.
Johnson, 47, asked the witnesses to reaffirm the oath with the traditional phrase for the record, to which Cohen responded, “No.”
“If they want to do it, but some of them don’t want to do it, and I don’t think it’s necessary, and I don’t like to assert my will over other people,” Cohen said.
Johnson responded: “Well it goes back to our founding history, it’s been part of our tradition for more than two centuries and I don’t know that we should abandon it now.”
“Could I ask the witnesses if they would choose to use the phrase?” he asked.
Before the witnesses could respond, Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) asked to speak.
He then said: “If any witness objects he should not be asked to identify himself. We do not have religious tests for office or for anything else.”
“And we should let it go with that,” he added.
Cohen then moved the hearing on without any of the witnesses taking the oath with the phrase “so help me God" included.
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The drаft of the committee rules features other nods to cultural Marxism.
The words “his or her” are replaced throughout the proposed rules with “their” and all of the references to “chairman” are replaced with “chair.”
An offshoot of Marxism, cultural Marxism focuses on culture instead of economics.
The ideology is steeped in atheism and purports that there is no such thing as race and gender.Cultural Marxism’s central goal is to destroy traditional culture, with a specific focus on family values, faith, and love for one’s country.
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