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  1. #3001
    LMAO koriwhat's Avatar
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    still upset about this guy?
    not at all... but i doubt you can actually put into words what makes bongino a bad person. you just hate his politics and therefore he's the enemy. i already knew this before watching your little video. you proved nothing pav.

  2. #3002
    Believe. Pavlov's Avatar
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    not at all... but i doubt you can actually put into words what makes bongino a bad person. you just hate his politics and therefore he's the enemy. i already knew this before watching your little video. you proved nothing pav.
    He's the same lying bag you love on the right.

    He lies a lot just to bait people like you into pumping their fists.

    It's no surprise you love him.

  3. #3003
    LMAO koriwhat's Avatar
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    He's the same lying bag you love on the right.

    He lies a lot just to bait people like you into pumping their fists.

    It's no surprise you love him.
    but you can't point to his lies? lol same old broke back story

  4. #3004
    non-essential Chris's Avatar
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  5. #3005
    non-essential Chris's Avatar
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    Not a good month for AOC



  6. #3006
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    How long are you going to use Obama as a crutch to uphold an inhumane policy?

    If you like it, you should give Obama credit, tbh.

  7. #3007
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    I don't like and give him credit, why are y'all sitting on the fence?

  8. #3008
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    Did the Obama Administration Separate Families?

    “Bush and Obama did not have policies that resulted in the mass separation of parents and children

    like we’re seeing under the current administration,”
    Sarah Pierce, a policy analyst with the Migration Policy Ins ute

    Jeh Johnson, DHS secretary under the Obama administration, told NPR earlier this month that he couldn’t say that family separations “never happened” during his tenure.

    “T
    here may have been some exigent situation, some emergency. There may have been some doubt about whether the adult accompanying the child was in fact the parent of the child.

    I can’t say it never happened but not as a matter of policy or practice. It’s not something that I could ask our Border Patrol or our immigration enforcement personnel to do,”

    a multi-agency team was considering “every possible idea” at the time, including separating families.

    “I do remember looking at each other like, ‘We’re not going to do this, are we?’ We spent five minutes thinking it through and concluded that it was a bad idea,” the Times quoted Muñoz saying.

    “The morality of it was clear — that’s not who we are.”

    Brown told us that while the Obama administration “did separate some families,” it also tried to detain families together.

    In 2016, a court ruling limited how long children with their parents could be in family detention centers.

    That ruling confirmed that a 1997 settlement applied to both unaccompanied and accompanied minors, as we’ve explained before.


    “At that point,” Brown said, “family detention dwindled and most families were released into the US,

    https://www.factcheck.org/2018/06/di...rate-families/

    Trash separated 1000s of kids from "criminal" parents whose "crime" was seeking asylum (violating US and international law), kids that now are lost to the DHS.

    Kids are being sexually abused in detention, so no doubt the lost kids "released" are being sexually abused.


    In short, Trash's goons and Spursbabblers are using lying FALSE ING EQUIVALENCE that

    "Trash separates (1000s of kids now missing), but it's OK because Obama separated (some kids)"

    America tortures kids and sicko, sadistic, Trash and Miller are the torturers in chief.

    Last edited by boutons_deux; 06-21-2019 at 08:30 AM.

  9. #3009
    coffee's for closers FrostKing's Avatar
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    Did the Obama Administration Separate Families?

    “Bush and Obama did not have policies that resulted in the mass separation of parents and children

    like we’re seeing under the current administration,”
    Sarah Pierce, a policy analyst with the Migration Policy Ins ute

    Jeh Johnson, DHS secretary under the Obama administration, told NPR earlier this month that he couldn’t say that family separations “never happened” during his tenure.

    “T
    here may have been some exigent situation, some emergency. There may have been some doubt about whether the adult accompanying the child was in fact the parent of the child.

    I can’t say it never happened but not as a matter of policy or practice. It’s not something that I could ask our Border Patrol or our immigration enforcement personnel to do,”

    a multi-agency team was considering “every possible idea” at the time, including separating families.

    “I do remember looking at each other like, ‘We’re not going to do this, are we?’ We spent five minutes thinking it through and concluded that it was a bad idea,” the Times quoted Muñoz saying.

    “The morality of it was clear — that’s not who we are.”

    Brown told us that while the Obama administration “did separate some families,” it also tried to detain families together.

    In 2016, a court ruling limited how long children with their parents could be in family detention centers.

    That ruling confirmed that a 1997 settlement applied to both unaccompanied and accompanied minors, as we’ve explained before.


    “At that point,” Brown said, “family detention dwindled and most families were released into the US,

    https://www.factcheck.org/2018/06/di...rate-families/

    Trash separated 1000s of kids from "criminal" parents whose "crime" was seeking asylum (violating US and international law), kids that now are lost to the DHS.

    Kids are being sexually abused in detention, so no doubt the lost kids "released" are being sexually abused.


    In short, Trash's goons and Spursbabblers are using lying FALSE ING EQUIVALENCE that

    "Trash separates (1000s of kids now missing), but it's OK because Obama separated (some kids)"

    America tortures kids and sicko, sadistic, Trash and Miller are the torturers in chief.

    Spread the news. Spread it loud. Hopefully it deters others from coming. There is a reason view seek asylum in Australia for example

  10. #3010
    LMAO koriwhat's Avatar
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    How long are you going to use Obama as a crutch to uphold an inhumane policy?

    If you like it, you should give Obama credit, tbh.
    the most inhumane thing of all is trying to rewrite history and wipe it away completely while blindly acting like the past means nothing. so again, what did obama call those facilities he put kids in cages at?

  11. #3011
    LMAO koriwhat's Avatar
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    but you can't point to his lies? lol same old broke back story
    still waiting...

  12. #3012
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    Doesn't this forum occasionally blame Trump for mass murders because of the words he uses? Now the US is running "concentration camps" and that is the perfect terminology. Okay.

  13. #3013
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
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    As usual, Nathan is the real victim here

  14. #3014
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    the most inhumane thing of all is trying to rewrite history and wipe it away completely while blindly acting like the past means nothing. so again, what did obama call those facilities he put kids in cages at?
    I'm sure he had some anodyne bureaucratic description for it just like Trump does. It's fair to point out the continuity between Obama and Trump. The immigration system was cruel and inhumane when Trump got there, it's unfortunate he's made a bad bureaucracy even worse..

  15. #3015
    LMAO koriwhat's Avatar
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    I'm sure he had some anodyne bureaucratic description for it just like Trump does. It's fair to point out the continuity between Obama and Trump. The immigration system was cruel and inhumane when Trump got there, it's unfortunate he's made a bad bureaucracy even worse..
    Nothing gets done without the cooperation of the left so... why won't the left help with the crisis at the border instead of pretending nothing is going on?

  16. #3016
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    A Brief History of US Concentration Camps


    concentration camp (noun):

    a place in which large numbers of people, especially political prisoners or members of persecuted minorities,

    are deliberately imprisoned in a relatively small area with inadequate facilities,

    sometimes to provide forced labor or to await mass execution.

    – Oxford English Dictionary

    What follows is an overview of US civilian concentration camps through the centuries.

    Trail of Tears

    a young Virginia governor named Thomas Jefferson embraced genocide and ethnic cleansing as solutions to what would later be called the “Indian problem.” In 1780 Jefferson wrote that “if we are to wage a campaign against these Indians, the end proposed should be their extermination, or their removal beyond the lakes of the Illinois River.”

    Tens of thousands of Cherokee, Muscogee, Seminole, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Ponca, Winnebago and other indigenous peoples were forced from their homes at gunpoint and marched to prison camps in Alabama and Tennessee.

    Thousands of men, women and children died of cold, hunger and illness in camps and during death marches, including the infamous Trail of Tears, of hundreds and sometimes even a thousand miles (1,600 km). This genocidal relocation was pursued, Jackson explained, as the “benevolent policy” of the US government, and because Native Americans “have neither the intelligence, the industry, the moral habits nor the desire of improvement”

    The Long Walk

    Minnesota governor Alexander Ramsey responded with yet another call for genocide and ethnic cleansing. “The Sioux Indians of Minnesota must be exterminated or driven forever beyond the borders of the state,” he declared in 1862, offering a bounty of $200 — over $5,000 in today’s money — for the scalp of each fleeing or resisting Indian. Around 1,700 Dakota women, children and elderly were force-marched into a concentration camp built on a sacred spiritual site.

    Civil War general and notorious Indian killer James Henry Carleton forced 10,000 Navajo people to march 300 miles (480 km) in the dead of winter from their homeland in the Four Corners region to a concentration camp at Fort Sumner, New Mexico.

    It is estimated that some 1,500 people died while interned at Fort Sumner, many of them infants and children.

    Contraband

    the Union Army was re-capturing freed slaves throughout the South and pressing them into hard labor in disease-ridden “contraband camps,” as escaped and freed slaves were considered captured enemy property. “There is much sickness, suffering and des ution,”

    One camp near Natchez, Mississippi held as many as 4,000 black refugees in the summer of 1863; by fall 2,000 had already perished, most of them children infected with smallpox and measles.

    ‘Benevolent Assimilation’ in the ‘Suburbs of ’

    When Filipinos resisted, US commanders responded with tremendous cruelty.

    As General “ -Roaring” Jake Smith ordered his troops to “kill everyone over 10” in Samar, future president William Howard Taft, the US colonial administrator of the archipelago, ins uted a “pacification” campaign that combined the counterinsurgency tactics of torture and summary execution with deportation and imprisonment in concentration camps, or reconcentrados, that one commandant referred to as the “suburbs of .”

    “all consideration and regard for the inhabitants of this place cease from the day I become commander.”
    In some camps, as many as 20 percent of internees died. In order to save food, 1,300 Batangas prisoners were forced to dig mass graves before being gunned down 20 at a time and buried in them.

    “To keep them prisoners would necessitate the placing of [US] soldiers on short rations,” one soldier explained. “There was nothing to do but kill them.”

    Concentration Camps for US Citizens

    During both world wars, thousands of German nationals, German-Americans and Germans from Latin American nations were imprisoned in concentration camps across the United States.
    Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, under which all people of Japanese ancestry living on the West Coast were rounded up and imprisoned in dozens of civilian assembly centers (where they were often forced to sleep in crowded, manure-covered horse stables), relocation centers, military bases, and “citizen isolation centers” — harsh desert prison camps where “problem inmates,” including those who refused to pledge allegiance to the United States, were jailed.

    the Supreme Court sided with the government in three cases brought by Japanese-Americans challenging the cons utionality of their detention, and an American public caught in the grip of racist “yellow peril” hysteria acquiesced to the blatantly uncons utional mass imprisonment.

    In addition to Japanese and some Germans, a smaller number of Italians and Italian-Americans were also imprisoned during World War II.

    Nearly 900 Aleuts were imprisoned in abandoned factories and other derelict facilities without plumbing, electricity or toilets; decent food, potable water and warm winter clothing were in short supply. Nearly 10 percent of the detainees died in the camps. Others were enslaved and forced to hunt fur seals.

    Subversive Activities Control Act of 1950 over President Harry Truman’s veto, which led to the construction of

    six concentration camps that were meant to hold communists, peace activists, civil rights leaders and others deemed a threat in the event the government declared a state of emergency

    From Japan to Vietnam

    In a little-known atrocity, at least 3,000 Okinawans died from malaria and other diseases in camps set up by US troops after they conquered the Japanese islands during fierce fighting in 1945. During and after the war, Okinawans’ land and homes were seized at gunpoint and their houses and farms were bulldozed or burned to the ground to make way for dozens of US military bases.

    For sheer scale, no US concentration camp regime could match the Strategic Hamlet Program. In 1961 President John F. Kennedy approved

    the forcible relocation, often at gunpoint, of 8.5 million South Vietnamese peasants into over 7,000 fortified camps surrounded by barbed wire, minefields and armed guards.

    War on Terrorists and Migrants

    most of the men and boys held at the Guantánamo Bay military prison were innocent but held for political reasons or in an attempt to glean a “mosaic” of intelligence. Innocent civilians were also held in military prisons, some of them secret, in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. Many detainees were tortured and died in US custody.

    despite the howling protestations of those who commit or justify the crime of tearing infants and children from their parents’ arms and imprisoning them in freezing cages that Trump officials have euphemistically compared to “summer camp,” there is no doubt that concentration camps are in operation on US soil once again.

    https://www.counterpunch.org/2019/06...tration-camps/




  17. #3017
    LMAO koriwhat's Avatar
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    A Brief History of US Concentration Camps


    concentration camp (noun):

    a place in which large numbers of people, especially political prisoners or members of persecuted minorities,

    are deliberately imprisoned in a relatively small area with inadequate facilities,

    sometimes to provide forced labor or to await mass execution.

    – Oxford English Dictionary

    What follows is an overview of US civilian concentration camps through the centuries.

    Trail of Tears

    a young Virginia governor named Thomas Jefferson embraced genocide and ethnic cleansing as solutions to what would later be called the “Indian problem.” In 1780 Jefferson wrote that “if we are to wage a campaign against these Indians, the end proposed should be their extermination, or their removal beyond the lakes of the Illinois River.”

    Tens of thousands of Cherokee, Muscogee, Seminole, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Ponca, Winnebago and other indigenous peoples were forced from their homes at gunpoint and marched to prison camps in Alabama and Tennessee.

    Thousands of men, women and children died of cold, hunger and illness in camps and during death marches, including the infamous Trail of Tears, of hundreds and sometimes even a thousand miles (1,600 km). This genocidal relocation was pursued, Jackson explained, as the “benevolent policy” of the US government, and because Native Americans “have neither the intelligence, the industry, the moral habits nor the desire of improvement”

    The Long Walk

    Minnesota governor Alexander Ramsey responded with yet another call for genocide and ethnic cleansing. “The Sioux Indians of Minnesota must be exterminated or driven forever beyond the borders of the state,” he declared in 1862, offering a bounty of $200 — over $5,000 in today’s money — for the scalp of each fleeing or resisting Indian. Around 1,700 Dakota women, children and elderly were force-marched into a concentration camp built on a sacred spiritual site.

    Civil War general and notorious Indian killer James Henry Carleton forced 10,000 Navajo people to march 300 miles (480 km) in the dead of winter from their homeland in the Four Corners region to a concentration camp at Fort Sumner, New Mexico.

    It is estimated that some 1,500 people died while interned at Fort Sumner, many of them infants and children.

    Contraband

    the Union Army was re-capturing freed slaves throughout the South and pressing them into hard labor in disease-ridden “contraband camps,” as escaped and freed slaves were considered captured enemy property. “There is much sickness, suffering and des ution,”

    One camp near Natchez, Mississippi held as many as 4,000 black refugees in the summer of 1863; by fall 2,000 had already perished, most of them children infected with smallpox and measles.

    ‘Benevolent Assimilation’ in the ‘Suburbs of ’

    When Filipinos resisted, US commanders responded with tremendous cruelty.

    As General “ -Roaring” Jake Smith ordered his troops to “kill everyone over 10” in Samar, future president William Howard Taft, the US colonial administrator of the archipelago, ins uted a “pacification” campaign that combined the counterinsurgency tactics of torture and summary execution with deportation and imprisonment in concentration camps, or reconcentrados, that one commandant referred to as the “suburbs of .”

    “all consideration and regard for the inhabitants of this place cease from the day I become commander.”
    In some camps, as many as 20 percent of internees died. In order to save food, 1,300 Batangas prisoners were forced to dig mass graves before being gunned down 20 at a time and buried in them.

    “To keep them prisoners would necessitate the placing of [US] soldiers on short rations,” one soldier explained. “There was nothing to do but kill them.”

    Concentration Camps for US Citizens

    During both world wars, thousands of German nationals, German-Americans and Germans from Latin American nations were imprisoned in concentration camps across the United States.
    Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, under which all people of Japanese ancestry living on the West Coast were rounded up and imprisoned in dozens of civilian assembly centers (where they were often forced to sleep in crowded, manure-covered horse stables), relocation centers, military bases, and “citizen isolation centers” — harsh desert prison camps where “problem inmates,” including those who refused to pledge allegiance to the United States, were jailed.

    the Supreme Court sided with the government in three cases brought by Japanese-Americans challenging the cons utionality of their detention, and an American public caught in the grip of racist “yellow peril” hysteria acquiesced to the blatantly uncons utional mass imprisonment.

    In addition to Japanese and some Germans, a smaller number of Italians and Italian-Americans were also imprisoned during World War II.

    Nearly 900 Aleuts were imprisoned in abandoned factories and other derelict facilities without plumbing, electricity or toilets; decent food, potable water and warm winter clothing were in short supply. Nearly 10 percent of the detainees died in the camps. Others were enslaved and forced to hunt fur seals.

    Subversive Activities Control Act of 1950 over President Harry Truman’s veto, which led to the construction of

    six concentration camps that were meant to hold communists, peace activists, civil rights leaders and others deemed a threat in the event the government declared a state of emergency

    From Japan to Vietnam

    In a little-known atrocity, at least 3,000 Okinawans died from malaria and other diseases in camps set up by US troops after they conquered the Japanese islands during fierce fighting in 1945. During and after the war, Okinawans’ land and homes were seized at gunpoint and their houses and farms were bulldozed or burned to the ground to make way for dozens of US military bases.

    For sheer scale, no US concentration camp regime could match the Strategic Hamlet Program. In 1961 President John F. Kennedy approved

    the forcible relocation, often at gunpoint, of 8.5 million South Vietnamese peasants into over 7,000 fortified camps surrounded by barbed wire, minefields and armed guards.

    War on Terrorists and Migrants

    most of the men and boys held at the Guantánamo Bay military prison were innocent but held for political reasons or in an attempt to glean a “mosaic” of intelligence. Innocent civilians were also held in military prisons, some of them secret, in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. Many detainees were tortured and died in US custody.

    despite the howling protestations of those who commit or justify the crime of tearing infants and children from their parents’ arms and imprisoning them in freezing cages that Trump officials have euphemistically compared to “summer camp,” there is no doubt that concentration camps are in operation on US soil once again.

    https://www.counterpunch.org/2019/06...tration-camps/



    answer this question... would these "camps" exist if these people tried to make their own damn countries great again? out of here you cry baby !

  18. #3018
    non-essential Chris's Avatar
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  19. #3019
    non-essential Chris's Avatar
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  20. #3020
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    Nothing gets done without the cooperation of the left so... why won't the left help with the crisis at the border instead of pretending nothing is going on?
    How is the left supposed to help?

    The last time they tried in 2013, the House of Reps deep sixed the Comprehensive Bipartisan Roadmap. Passed in the Senate 68-32.

    https://www.congress.gov/bill/113th-...-bill/744/text

  21. #3021
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    She's right.

    This Daniels guy has been linked with a far right group.

    Reading material of Daniels:
    https://www.timesofisrael.com/meet-p...roversial-jew/

    Also Steve King.

  22. #3022
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    AOC didn't compare our concentration camps to the Auschwitz or the Shoah, she merely identified them using a historically accurate term.

    The US had concentration camps before the Holocaust, it had them afterward, and it has them now.

  23. #3023
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    lol alt-lite Chris cynically propping himself up on dead Jews to own the libs

  24. #3024
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    "AOC didn't compare our concentration camps to the Auschwitz or the Shoah"

    Breitbart abusing its fans by exploiting their confusion, ignorance, stupidity to inflame them, piss them off, drive them deeper into ignorance.



  25. #3025
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
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    With 100,000+ crashing our borders every month, where exactly are we supposed to put them while they are processed?

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