ping
This seems a little far-out, even for 0b0la. But I wouldn’t put it past him to do any of these things.
It’s humor, but frankly, we’re getting to the point where, due to the federal government’s lawlessness, states, municipalities, and individuals are going to start ignoring federal mandates. When the local police and law enforcement are asked to impose said dictates, they will refuse, and the system will begin to break down.
Makes ya kinda wonder whose side he's on. Don't it?
Lets get serious as this is serious.
1) $500B as reparations for slavery.
2) Executive order mandating firearm registration.
3) Using UN international law to set the stage for firearms confiscation.
4) Executive order mandating nation wide carbon tax to fight global warming.
5) Executive order re-enstating the Voter Rights Act.
6) Executive order strengthening laws preventing Americans from moving funds outside the USA even after revoking citizenship.
10 and 9 are realistic.
They also want to normalize relations with N. Korea.
Dude, where’s my freedom?
Jeez, don’t give him any ideas! Satire has become prophecy!
last one From the article:
1. The Obama administration to propose a new Constitutional Amendment allowing individuals born in Africa or Asia to serve as President of the United States; also, the administration to propose the repeal of the 22nd Amendment.
Because this is from Breitbart and not Semmens, no "satire" warning is needed because web searches won't confuse readers because it's from Breitbart?
-PJ
It must be difficult to write satire In a world where the President of the United States is a race baiting demagogue
As a Cuban exile, I feel betrayed by President Obama
by Carlos Eire
December 20/2014
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/3240741/posts
I am furious, in pain, and deeply offended by those who laud this betrayal of the Cuban people as a great moment in history.
My family and native land were destroyed by the brutal Castro regime. In 1959, as an 8-year-old, I listened to mobs shout paredon! (to the firing squad!). I watched televised executions, and was terrified by the incessant pressure to agree with a bearded dictators ideals.
As the months passed, relatives, friends, and neighbors began to disappear. Some of them emerged from prison with detailed accounts of the tortures they endured, but many never reappeared, their lives cut short by firing squads.
I also witnessed the governments seizure of all private property down to the ring on ones finger and the collapse of my countrys economy. I began to feel as if some monstrous force was trying to steal my mind and soul through incessant indoctrination.
By the age of 10, I was desperate to leave.
The next year, my parents sent me to the United States. I am one of the lucky 14,000 unaccompanied children rescued by Operation Pedro Pan. Our plan to reunite within a few months was derailed by the policies of the Castro regime, which intentionally prevented people like my parents from leaving Cuba. Although my mother did manage to escape three years later, my father remained stuck for the rest of his life. When he died, 14 years after my departure, the Castro regime prevented me from attending his funeral.
* * *
I am now a professor of history and religion at Yale University.
And I long for justice. Instead of seeing Raúl Castro shaking President Obamas hand, I would like to see him, his brother, and all their henchmen in a court room, being tried for crimes against humanity. I also long for genuine freedom in Cuba. Instead of seeing his corrupt and abusive regime rewarded with favors from the United States, I long for the day when that regime is replaced by a genuine democracy with a free market economy.