The hatred against Asian-Americans continues. and it's all Trump's fault

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And on the other side of the country, it’s the same story.

Those in the city's Asian-American community told NEWS CENTER Maine this incident is part of a much larger issue.

"It's not the first time our community is hearing go back to your country go back to your home. It's nothing new to us. It may be new to some people because it's not being reported," Chanbopha Himm said.

A new report by the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University revealed while overall hate crimes nationwide have decreased by 7-percent in the last year, hate crimes against Asian Americans have spiked by 150-percent. [That would be 18 attacks, up from 12]

Himm said it is due in large part from the rhetoric by former President Donald Trump referring to COVID-19 as the 'China virus.'

That’s the attacker, a Mr. Troy Sprague, below. I can’t guarantee that I personally knew him during my years volunteering at the soup kitchen that served the people in this area of Portland, and I certainly won’t claim that politics were discussed over mac-and-cheese, but I do know that not a single “client” ever expressed animosity towards citizens of Lyme, CT, or Hong Kong. Clearly, their demented rage must have been triggered by the Orange Man.

It’s not that the media’s deceitfulness and fraud is new, it’s just that it no longer feels any need to hide it. They’ve got the 51%, and they’re going with it.

Portland Maine trump supporter mr. Troy Sprague  attacking asian american

Portland Maine trump supporter mr. Troy Sprague attacking asian american

Circling back. The media is whitewashing the “surge” in crimes against Asians. It’s a black on yellow phenomenon, with an overwhelming majority of the attacks committed by blacks . Links within links in this article, with plenty of studies and statistics. The media knows this, but it doesn’t fit the narrative. The real white crimes against Asians is the discrimination against them by Ivy League admission committees, but that, too doesn’t fit the narrative.

Some day, we'll hang these people for what they did to spread terror in our country

We’re doomed, I tell you, doomed!

We’re doomed, I tell you, doomed!

CDC Director shrieks of “Impending Doom”

CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky became emotional at a White House coronavirus press briefing on Monday — her voice breaking as she warned that the US is facing “impending doom” as COVID-19 cases rise again.

“I’m gonna lose the script and I’m going to reflect on the recurring feeling I have of impending doom,” Walensky told reporters at the briefing.

Am I the only one old enough to remember what happened when the Girondins met the Montagnards?

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(Happily married lesbian) Financial advisor attacked for suggesting that people save money.

POSTED ON MARCH 29, 2021 BY STEVEN HAYWARD IN POLITICAL CORRECTNESS:

TODAY IN CAMPUS CRAZY

So we know that math is officially racist according to the Cult of the Wokerati, but what about compound interest, which Albert Einstein described as “the eighth wonder of the world—he who understands it, earns it. He who doesn’t, pays it”?

The question becomes relevant because the latest object of campus outrage is financial guru Suze Orman, who was recently the online keynote speaker at the annual conference of NASPA: Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education. I’ve never been much impressed with Orman when I used to see her on TV, because, like Dave Ramsey, her message is basic financial common sense combined with some discipline, and after that you just let compound interest take over. But Orman and Ramsey have huge followings because we don’t teach any financial literacy in school much any more. I’m an outlier, having become enamored of compound interest in the seventh grade, and then reading Ben Graham’s The Intelligent Investor in college.

Well, you’ll never guess what happened to Orman when she gave her standard financial literacy talk to a group of college staff. Actually, of course you know what happened, but I’ll let Inside Higher Education take it from here:

NASPA, one of the nation’s top professional associations for student affairs professionals, issued a lengthy apology Thursday for an “insulting and insensitive” speech by financial expert and television host Suze Orman, which drew immediate criticism from those attending the organization’s virtual conference. . .

Those who watched Orman’s address said her comments, meant to inspire student affairs workers to advocate for higher pay and boundaries in their jobs, focused on major personal obstacles to wealth — “fear, shame and anger” — without noting systemic barriers to wealth such as class, race or gender. Some observers said Orman equated “net worth” to “self-worth,” which some felt was an insensitive way to frame the discussion of financial literacy with an audience made up of many entry-level student affairs professionals who are historically underpaid and heavily indebted with loans they used to finance their undergraduate and graduate degrees.

Some attendees were also offended by Orman’s reference to the South Side of Chicago, where she grew up, as “the hood” and “the ghetto,” according to people who watched the keynote address.

NASPA leaders emailed and tweeted a statement apologizing to conference attendees a few hours after Orman’s speech. The statement said the association had “missed the mark” for providing a speaker who made comments “offensive to your lived experiences and to our NASPA values.”

“We cannot discuss financial literacy without first acknowledging the inequitable and unjust systems that have prevented Black, Indigenous, Latinx, Asian, Queer, Trans, first-gen, low-income, and many other historically minoritized and marginalized communities from attaining education and generational wealth,” said the statement, which was signed by NASPA board chair Angela Batista, President Kevin Kruger and Michele Murray, chair of the 2021 conference.

Just lock the door behind them

We didn’t know who these people were when we chose to apply here!

We didn’t know who these people were when we chose to apply here!

200 students walk out of Washington & Lee University, demanding that it change its name

Students at Washington & Lee University in Lexington, Virginia are demanding that the school remove "Lee" from its name to promote racial equity, according to a local report

On March 23, at least 200 students, many clad in t-shirts and face masks staged a walkout, protesting for what sophomore Amber Morrison called the university's "second chance to be on the right side of history." 

"We will only be made better by creating a more inclusive campus," she said, "A lot of students feel like there's no point arguing because we don't have the support and we don't have the people, but we do, and I think this really shows that."

Another student, Clara Albacete, said Washington & Lee University, whose Board of Trustees will not meet to review its name until May, will become an accomplice to racial injustice if it doesn't accede to the protesters' demand.

These petulant children are no worse than the adult faculty members at this dreadful school, 79% of whom voted to drop Lee’s name last year. And not just Lee:

Before Monday’s faculty meeting to vote on the name change, three Black law school faculty members urged the school to drop both Washington and Lee. “Washington’s brutality, inhumanity and cruelty are well documented,” they wrote. “Lee’s reputation for racial violence and hatred is well known. He was a monster.”

Fun facts

NyC teachers on strike

NyC teachers on strike

NYC spent $25,199 per pupil in 2017. Washington D.C. spent $21,974. Hartford, $23,920.

All three cities produce graduates who are neither numerate nor literate. Anyone with compassion would disband this system that has so failed the poorest of children and try something new — charter schools come to mind, or just closing the schools and buying annuities for each kid instead of wasting it on teachers’ salaries — but Democrats aren’t compassionate, they’re union tools.

RELATED: Oakland teachers refuse to return to work despite receiving vaccine priority

School officials on Thursday, were forced to cancel their previously scheduled reopening dates next week at six elementary schools and 10 preschools, reported the San Francisco Chronicle.

After seven months of distance learning, some students were supposed to be able to head back to in-person teaching on Tuesday, as agreed to by the district and unions.

But due to a lack of teachers willing to come back before April 14, high needs pupils, including homeless, foster and special needs students, will not be able to get into classrooms ahead of time, the newspaper reported.

Kampalla is stuck in Blair House, and boy, is she pissed

Baked potatoes, or human beings in biden cages? Don’t ask Kampalla, she’s up in Washington, overseeing improvements to her new digs

Baked potatoes, or human beings in biden cages? Don’t ask Kampalla, she’s up in Washington, overseeing improvements to her new digs

The lady is still waiting for renovations to be completed at the official VP residence, and her scribes at CNN have alerted all of us who care.

“It’s unclear why the renovations are taking so long, said one administration official, but it’s a situation that has left Harris increasingly and understandably bothered, according to several people who spoke to CNN about her situation. “She is getting frustrated,” said another administration official, noting with each passing day the desire to move in to her designated house — a stately, turreted mansion two-and-a-half miles from the White House — grows more intense.”

Kampalla had not just one minion, but “several” alert CNN to her anger about the delay. That’s probably her white half exercising its privilege.

Quotas

1:12 — a properly diversified team per population percentage

1:12 — a properly diversified team per population percentage

Judge Ho dissents

Paul Mirengoff, Powerline:

Last week, the House Judiciary Committee held a hearing on “The Importance of a Diverse Federal Judiciary.” The title of the hearing shows that the Committee had already reached the conclusion that a “diverse” federal judiciary is quite important. It brings to mind the old Johnny Carson show gag in which Ed McMahon might ask: “How important is it, Johnny?”

One of the Committee’s witnesses didn’t go along with the gag. Judge James Ho of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit included the following observations in his prepared remarks:

Once everyone has had full and fair opportunity to be considered, you pick on the merits. Both the Constitution and the Civil Rights Act make clear that it is wrong to hire people based on race.

That’s the law for a wide range of jobs. But it would be especially wrong to select judges based on race.

It is true that I am the only Asian American on my court. I’m also the only immigrant on my court.

But I would never suggest that a wise Asian would, more often than not, reach a better conclusion than a white judge. That would be antithetical to our legal system, and poisonous to civil society. No one should ever assume that I’m more likely to favor Asians or immigrants or anyone else—or that my colleagues are less likely to. . . .

I don’t say this because I think race is no longer an issue in our country. I’ve received racist hate mail and racially disparaging remarks because of positions I’ve taken in my career. I’ve been treated differently because of who I’m married to. And I also remember, back in high school, my college admissions adviser telling me that my grades, SAT scores, and activities were all strong enough to get me into my top choice of schools—if I wasn’t Asian.

Now, I’m not saying any of this here to complain. Whatever negative experiences I’ve had, they pale in comparison to my many blessings living in this great country. I was not born an American. But I thank God every day that I will die an American.

My point is just that I don’t come to my views because I think racism is behind us. Rather, I come to my views precisely because racism is not behind us. The last thing we should do is divide people by race. The last thing we should do is suggest that the racists are right. We don’t achieve equality of opportunity by denying it to anyone—we achieve it by securing it for everyone.

So make no mistake: It would be profoundly offensive—and un-American—to tell the world that you’re restricting a judgeship to members of only one race. It’s offensive to people of other races. And it’s offensive to people of that race—because you’re suggesting that the only way they’ll get the job is if you rig the rules in their favor.

Judge Ho is a superstar. He was nominated to the Fifth Circuit by President Trump. Notwithstanding his stellar qualifications and his “diversity,” only three Democrats (Donnelly, Heitkamp, and McCaskill) voted to confirm him. None of the three is still in the Senate.

Circling Back: At Boston’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital, they’ve initiated a pilot program that identifies blacks (and, I assume, Pacific Islanders, a rather mysterious recent addition to our oppressed classes) and gives them preference over white slave masters for admission for cardiac arrest treatment.

Last week, CIGNA was busted for excluding white males from consideration as hireable candidates. You know that CiGNA’s not the only corporation doing this; sooner or later, those who aren’t in the favored classes: Whites (including that despised sub-category, Jews), white-adjacent Asians; “White Hispanics” ( a category invented after George Zimmerman popped up with his pistol); Scandinavians; and even the few remaining non-Muslim French, will notice that they’re being denied health care and their children excluded from what were once considered better schools, and they’ll revolt. Which reminds me of my father’s toast at my wedding rehearsal dinner: “He married and discovered true happiness, but by then, of course, it was too late”.

(Another circling back). Geeze, reading this, I realized that I have to add that my father adored Pal Nancy.