Posted on 08/12/2021 10:39:25 AM PDT by rktman
But Obama is one of their own. So too, one would assume, are Chrissy Teigen, Steven Colbert, John Legend, Don Cheadle and "Real Housewives of Atlanta" star Kim Fields, who, as the New York Times tell us, "was photographed flying into the island."
As the Times would gingerly report, "Democrats supportive of the former president privately expressed surprise at the casual disregard for optics and wondered why it took until just days before the party for Mr. Obama to change course."
The "optics" in question, however, dealt exclusively with COVID. The Times would seem to have missed the real story. THE WORLD WAS COMING TO AN END! And the Obama crowd was hastening its demise.
After all, if a "Real Housewives" star was "flying in," who wasn't? One doubts that, say, Oprah or Steven Spielberg fly commercial.
Yet somehow, the fact that potentially hundreds of guests would be flying in to a 7,000-square foot, $12 million beachfront home on a tiny island did not strike the Times as an "optics" issue.
(Excerpt) Read more at wnd.com ...
“...Kim Fields, who, as the New York Times tell us, “was photographed flying into the island.”...
Was that without a plane and on a broom????
Climate scare . . . they need to be more concerned about the climate change they are going to experience throughout eternity if they don’t believe in the Saving Grace of Jesus. Everyone has a choice. Heaven or Hell.
“....flying into the island......” not literally. 😕
The slum lords of the serfs can do what ever they feel necessary
I don’t know...I saw some pics of her she looked like she’d be right at home on a broom...LOL
Martha’s Vineyard, Nantucket Face Dire Climate Change Impact
By Philip Marcelo | August 11, 2021
The famous islands of Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket in Massachusetts are facing serious impacts from rising sea levels and more powerful coastal storms driven by climate change, a new environmental report warns.
The “State of the Coast” report by the Trustees, a prominent Massachusetts conservation group, says the popular tourist destinations off Cape Cod risk losing hundreds of acres of marshlands to flooding and billions of dollars in coastal homes, buildings and infrastructure to erosion.
What’s more, roughly 900 structures on the two islands may experience daily tidal flooding by 2050 as sea levels are predicted to rise more than 2.5 feet, the organization said.
“The impacts of flooding and erosion on these beloved islands will affect thousands who live and work there, and the thousands more who visit each summer,” said Tom O’Shea, a managing director at the Trustees. “To put this into perspective: Today’s storm is tomorrow’s high tide.”
https://www.insurancejournal.com/news/east/2021/08/11/626161.htm
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