Chad Bianco's seizure of ballots foreshadowed the CA "voting" conspiracies. And that took a few years of pestering by right-wing groups all associated with nondenominational evangelical churches. The influence of these churches and spiritual warfare is not covered by most of the media very well.
This article goes soft on Trump endorse Herrera and even so he’s a horror show, whose platform for years has been joking/not-joking advocacy of civil war and political murder. It’s not a side dish for him, it’s the main event.
Elon Musk is unambiguously calling for a violent race war.
This is far from unprecedented. The Rwandan Genocide was stoked and enabled by Felicien Kabuga, the wealthy owner of the RTLM radio station that helped coordinate the genocide and used euphemisms like "go to work" to signal attacks.
Imagine future historians looking at this age of billionaires buying media empires--CBS, WaPo, Twitter, maybe Warner Bros next--with what can only appear to be a deliberate strategy to predictably decrease their reach and profitability. Audience of one, indeed.
Bovino talking about running—that is, attempting to shake down Trump admin—is really good news. Not because he can erode much, but because a former paid killer for the regime sees the regime as not yet so consolidated that this move is dangerous. www.newsnationnow.com/politics/bov...
This is right. There’s no debunking. People have tried. This is where I get kinda despairing. Literally, election centers have windows, cameras, everything. The more you explain the worse it gets.
But yeah, I don’t think they genuinely believe some secret group is somehow throwing the election in Los Angeles; they believe the “right” voters preferred him, so he should win.
I hate to say it, but the colleagues positioning themselves to be pro AI in teaching and curriculum, are probably also positioning themselves to be administrators, and probably aren’t thinking about or don’t care how it will affect teaching, learning, or the careers of those around them.
was thinking this morning that how emerging leaders respond to the struggle at Delaney Hall should be understood as more consequential for progressive politics than fandoms constructed around symbolic working class white men