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    Racist love making stupid and lazy comparisons when trying to score "intellectual" points to support their prejudices.

    Elon's war on wokeness continues to expose his own racist attitudes and intellectual laziness.
    The last time I had anything to do with the SAT was back in the early 80's. I don't know if they've changed the nature of the test since then, but back then the SAT was notoriously culturally biased and in no way did scores on the SAT correlate to IQ scores. That point alone shows that the theory is based on bovine feces.

    The vocabulary and math sections were the main determinants of the overall score and those are almost completely education driven. In fact, students who took Latin in high school always scored higher than people who didn't, because if you knew Latin you could figure out the meanings of words you didn't know based on the Latin roots of the words..
     



    Jason Whitlock vs Stephen A. Smith

    I don't like Stephen A. never have, but I'd take him over Whitlock any day of the week

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    Stephen A. Smith didn’t hold back during the latest edition of his show, hitting out at conservative commentator and former ESPN colleague Jason Whitlock.

    Smith said he was ‘breaking his silence’ after holding his tongue for “at least nine to 10 years” on Whitlock, who he has now described as being “worse than a white supremacist”.

    What’s the reason for Smith’s criticism? Well, the new comments come after Whitlock questioned the authenticity of Smith’s book Straight Shooter: A Memoir of Second Chances and First Takes which was released last year.

    Whitlock previously appeared to suggest that Smith had written falsehoods in his book. He also previously cited Katt Williams' appearance on Shannon Sharpe's Club Shay Shay podcast when claiming that Smith was an industry plant.

    Whitlock also wrote a column on the right-wing site The Blaze titled "Does Katt Williams’ interview expose Stephen A. Smith as a fraud?".

    Saying he believed it was "necessary" to speak about Whitlock, Smith went on a blistering rant about the controversial figure, who previously attracted criticism by comparing Black Lives Matter to the Ku Klux Klan and touting baseless conspiracy theories about Michelle Obama being trans........



     
    The combination arrogance and idiocy never ceases to amaze me.

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    Germany’s chancellor, Olaf Scholz, has urged democrats to stand together against “fanatics with assimilation fantasies” after it emerged that politicians from the Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) party had discussed a “masterplan” for mass deportations in the event of the party coming to power.

    The far-right meeting, involving members of the AfD, the head of the Identitarian Movement and neo-Nazi activists, took place last November at a countryside hotel on the outskirts of Potsdam.

    According to the investigative outlet Correctiv, which first reported the story, the concept of “re-migration” – the forceful return of migrants, allegedly including those with German citizenship, to their countries of origin through mass deportations – dominated the discussions.


    Invitations seen by Correctiv and the Guardian described the meeting as an opportunity to present “an overall concept in the sense of a masterplan”. The ideas discussed at the meeting reportedly included deportations to areas in northern Africa, where up to 2 million people could be placed.

    Scholz sharply condemned the alleged plans on Thursday. “We protect all, regardless of origin, skin colour or how uncomfortable someone is for fanatics with assimilation fantasies,” he wrote on social media.

    “Learning from history is about more than just lip service,” he added, in what appeared to be a reference to the Nazi dictatorship, which made race ideology, ostracism and the deportation of Jews, Roma and Sinti, gay people and many others the cornerstone of its politics. Scholz continued: “Democrats must stand together.”…..

     


    God & Country,” a new documentary produced by Rob Reiner, opens with idyllic scenes of American churches and a speaker borrowing part of a well-known quote of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.: “When I look at all the injustices of the world, and I drive past churches, I ask myself: What kind of people worship there?”

    The goal of the documentary is to wake up churchgoing American Christians — who number in the many tens of millions — to the threat of anti-democratic religious extremism in the United States.

    The film, which will open in theaters on Feb. 16 and was shown at a private premiere on Thursday at the Capitol, is perhaps the first Hollywood-adjacent effort to make the term “Christian nationalism” mainstream and to get Americans (specifically Christians) to engage in conversations about recent well-organized and well-funded efforts to officially merge church and state.

    The 90-minute documentary, directed by Dan Partland, is inspired by the 2020 book “The Power Worshippers: Inside the Dangerous Rise of Religious Nationalism,” by Katherine Stewart. It includes a who’s who of prominent Christians — almost all Protestant or nondenominational — who have in recent years rung bells about growing anti-pluralistic, anti-democratic strains of religion in the United States, and about their symbiotic relationship with Donald Trump.

    “Evangelicalism got married with a kind of political activism, and now evangelicalism has morphed into a cultural and political movement you could say is better described as ‘Christian nationalism,’” Skye Jethani, co-host of the “Holy Post” podcast, says in the film.

    “God & Country” illustrates this by weaving clips of prominent Christians floating antidemocratic ideas. John MacArthur, whom Christianity Today has called one of the most influential pastors in modern times, says: “No Christian with half a brain would say, ‘We support religious freedom!’ We support truth!”

    The film tallies the billions of dollars that advocacy groups have spent in an effort to put their favored version of conservative Christianity in government, and quotes longtime political consultant and founder of the Faith and Freedom Coalition Ralph Reed telling a gathering of the North Carolina branch of his group how it blanketed conservative Christians with texts, calls and home visits to get them to vote. “I don’t want to scare you, but we had 147 different data points we tracked.”.

    Phil Vischer, an animator who co-created the formerly Christian-themed children’s video series “VeggieTales,” says in the film that Christian Nationalism has exploded because many Christians have come to believe that the United States has a special God-ordained role.

    “Here’s the thing: If I have decided that America is irreplaceable in God’s story … and democracy gets in the way, well democracy has to go,” Vischer said, describing this way of thinking............




     
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    I can’t believe how disgusting this is. The Civil Rights Act ended Jim Crow.


    He’s not the only one. Charlie Kirk has also posted that the Civil Rights Act was a mistake in the last day or so. They’re vile human beings.
     
    Martin Luther King Jr. was just an “ersatz pastor” and a “communist,” and the 1960s civil rights movement was “crap,” according to a series of Facebook posts by Mark Robinson, the leading Republican candidate to be North Carolina’s next governor.

    Robinson, who is currently the state’s lieutenant governor, regularly criticized King and the civil rights movement for years on Facebook ― specifically on MLK Day ― HuffPost found amid a review of his posts. The Black politician also downplayed slavery, rejected the idea that he’s part of the African American community, and attacked the late congressman and civil rights icon, John Lewis.

    These posts are surfacing at a time when Robinson, who is on track to be the GOP nominee for governor in November, has been trying to soften his rhetoric, and celebrate King and the civil rights movement.

    Last month, former President Donald Trump hailed Robinson as “better than Dr. Martin Luther King” at a campaign event, and Robinson responded by saying he “took it as a compliment” and “knowing what I know about him, and the history thereof, you know, those are big shoes to fill.”

    His social media posts tell a different story.

    In January 2018, Robinson mocked people who celebrate King, who he said was just a subpar pastor. He didn’t mention King by name, but he was clearly talking about the civil rights leader in his series of messages posted on MLK Day that year.

    “It is at once funny and sad that so many people will follow the lead of a bunch of atheists and worship an ersatz pastor as a deity,” he wrote in one post.

    Robinson also used MLK Day to dismiss the idea that racism is real.

    “The ‘state of race relations’ exist chiefly within your own mind,” he said.

    “‘Free at last! Free at last! Thank God almighty we are free at last!’ Now what?” he said in another post that day.........

    That same day, Robinson posted that actual real-life slavery isn’t as bad as slavery “of the mind,” which is Satan’s greatest tool.

    “Slavery of the mind is FAR worse than physical slavery,” the GOP gubernatorial hopeful wrote. “Slavery of the mind cannot be seen, cannot be made illegal, and is and always has been the greatest tool of Satan used against man..... and men against each other.”..........


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