I say YES. YOU say NO....Numero Tre! Enjoy!

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  • Betrayal
    Betrayal Member Posts: 1,374
    edited February 2022

    I have been in Wassilla and no, you cannot see Russia from her back door unless you are on hallucogenic drugs. It appears she derailed her own case during her testimony.

    Sorry that the drumpf organization no longer has an accounting firm but who in their right mind wants to "cook the books" for a grifter. Looks like Melania got ample warning that her "teas" do not meet the criteria for a charity and she may have to rethink how to grift the public. Is she raising funds for her husband's legal fees or her own when she decided to abandon ship? Hopefully that ship is sinking like the sloop John B.

    Lara Trump is a classless piece of garbage and I found her handbag with the letters "FJB" to be as tasteless as the rest of her actions. Money does not buy respect nor does it buy the right to flaunt social norms. "Stupid is as stupid does" to quote Forrest Gump and this characterizes most of their behaviors.

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022

    Obstacle Discourse
    By Tom Tomorrow
    image

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022

    A keen sense of humor helps us to overlook the unbecoming, understand the unconventional, tolerate the unpleasant, overcome the unexpected, and outlast the unbeatable.

    Billy Graham

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022

    and how many might be in jail as well.

    May be a Twitter screenshot of one or more people and text that says 'Middle Age Riot @middleageriot If there were a Democratic version of Donald Trump, financed by Russia and spewing conspiracy theories and propaganda, they'd be shunned by the party faster than you could say "Tulsi Gabbard."'


    And actually, I had to stop and think who Tulsi Gabbard was.

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022

    And once again, it is hard to imagine just where they dig up people with so few brain cells. They seem to find them all though.

    May be a Twitter screenshot of 1 person and text that says 'Middle Age Riot @middleageriot They're not your schools, store brand Sarah Palin. Lauren Boebert @laurenboebert We need school choice AND we need to take back our schools. It's not one or the other.'

  • Miriandra
    Miriandra Member Posts: 1,327
    edited February 2022

    I had to look up Tulsi too. I don't remember this controversy at all, but others obviously did:

    (From Wikipedia): "In October 2019, false and later corrected stories claimed that former Secretary of State and 2016 presidential nominee Hillary Clinton said that Russia was "grooming" a female Democrat to run as a third-party candidate, who would help President Donald Trump win reelection via a spoiler effect. The media understood Clinton to be referring to Gabbard, which Nick Merril, a Clinton spokesperson, seemed to confirm to CNN by saying: "If the nesting doll fits"; however, Gabbard repeatedly said she would not run as a third-party candidate in 2020 and did not do so. Gabbard was defended by a number of fellow 2020 Democratic presidential candidates, who rejected Clinton's suggestion that Gabbard was a Russian asset."

    If Drumph tries for 2024 outside the GOP, I wonder how that would skew things. If he doesn't go comatose from a massive aneurism first.

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022
  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022

    As usual, seems much info is conflicting. Began to hear that Russian troops are pulling back from the Ukraine area while Anthony Blinken said this morning that he finds no credible evidence that is happening. It is difficult to get to the bottom of things, but I'm glad to hear that Pres. Biden has told the Archives to release the presidential logs of calls for the 1/6 committee. I had forgotten that in 2017 Trump had said he would NOT make the calls logs available. Well, not only is he secretive but he knew himself that he would be skirting norms and breaking laws right and left and logs provide irrefutable evidence of this.

    I would never bet on just when this abomination is going to stop turning up as an almost daily visitor to our politics and government. He does seem to have lost some of his influence, but it is still there. Don't recall the piece (think NPR maybe) that was indicating the possibility that McConnell is going to try and put better people in for the open seats rather than the Loon's choices since for the most part they are all misfits that have a high chance of losing the seats. What I found interesting about his was the fact that McConnell is soft-pedaling. He is trying to do this behind the scenes which is not going to offer much steam to stopping the Loon. McConnell needs to come out strong as being against Trump, and what he wants. Hiding out while you try and effect change is not a very strong signal.

    Those are just a couple of the things that make me feel (should things continue on the same path) that we do have a chance to come out ahead. It would still require a lot of hard work, but the disarray and inability to show strength in combatting Trump will do more to keep the Reps. very un-balanced, I think. I hope so anyway.

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022

    This is one to giggle about.

    May be a Twitter screenshot of one or more people and text that says 'Middle Age Riot @middleageriot SUPER FUN FACT: The only person who can use executive privilege to hide evidence that Donald Trump tried to steal the election is the person he tried to steal it from.'

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022
  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022
  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022
  • ruthbru
    ruthbru Member Posts: 57,235
    edited February 2022

    (From Huffington Post.....probably is why FOX is going crazy with Hillary.....again)

    WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden is ordering the release of Trump White House visitor logs to the House committee investigating the riot of Jan. 6, 2021, once more rejecting former President Donald Trump's claims of executive privilege.

    The committee has sought a trove of data from the National Archives, including presidential records that Trump had fought to keep private. The records being released to Congress are visitor logs showing appointment information for individuals who were allowed to enter the White House on the the day of the insurrection.

    In a letter sent Monday to the National Archives, White House counsel Dana Remus said Biden had considered Trump's claim that because he was president at the time of the attack on the U.S. Capitol, the records should remain private, but decided that it was "not in the best interest of the United States" to do so.

    She also noted that as a matter of policy, the Biden administration "voluntarily discloses such visitor logs on a monthly basis," as did the Obama administration, and that the majority of the entries over which Trump asserted the claim would be publicly released under the current policy.

    A Trump spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the decision.

    The Presidential Records Act mandates that records made by a sitting president and his staff be preserved in the National Archives, and an outgoing president is responsible for turning over documents to the agency when leaving office. Trump tried but failed to withhold White House documents from the House committee in a dispute that was decided by the Supreme Court.

  • ruthbru
    ruthbru Member Posts: 57,235
    edited February 2022
  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022

    The truth is that our finest moments are most likely to occur when we are feeling deeply uncomfortable, unhappy, or unfulfilled. For it is only in such moments, propelled by our discomfort, that we are likely to step out of our ruts and start searching for different ways or truer answers. -M. Scott Peck

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022

    Oh why do they do it -- guess they hope we are all as stupid as their bunch and won't go back and check it out. We start out not trusting and believing that bunch and they do very, very little to dissuade us.

    May be a cartoon of 2 people and text that says 'BREAKING NEWS: Tom Cotton was forced to backtrack after blaming Democrats for a criminal justice bill... that was signed by Trump. WHAT DO YOU SAY TO TOM? OCCUPY DEMOCRATS'


    and Ruth that is oh so true. Can't say I blame Mazar's one bit. They would like to stay in business if possible. Sounds like they were misled to the point of not changing much in the financial statements all these past ten yrs. and suddenly realized what a grave mistake that was. The Loon is saying that if anything his income was under-reported and he is worth many billions that do not appear in the financial statements. Really -- when everything he has nis name on has lost ground over and over and many loans are coming due. Won't be able to borrow maybe to pay those loans off now. Oops !!!

    Not only Kaepernick, but so many others will still have their accountants -- like Hilary Clinton, thee Bidens, likely even ole 'Mike Pence. The walls continue to get closer.

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022

    Judge orders Trump, children to answer questions about their business practices under oath

    A New York judge shot down a bid to block the state attorney general's subpoenas of the former president, Donald Trump Jr. and Ivanka Trump.
    Feb. 17, 2022, 2:04 PM CST / Updated Feb. 17, 2022, 2:42 PM CST

    By Dareh Gregorian

    A New York judge on Thursday ordered former President Donald Trump and two of his children to answer questions under oath about the Trump Organization's business practices in the state attorney general's civil probe of the company.

    Lawyers for Trump, Donald Trump Jr. and Ivanka Trump had sought to quash the subpoenas from Attorney General Letitia James' office, arguing her investigation is politically motivated and designed to provide fuel for an ongoing criminal probe into the company by the Manhattan district attorney's office.

    In his ruling, state Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron gave the green light for the three Trumps to be deposed within the next three weeks. He portrayed the Trumps' claims of being selectively targeted as overblown.

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    Judge rules Trump, children must sit for deposition in civil case involving business practices

    FEB. 17, 202203:35

    "In the final analysis, a state attorney general commences investigating a business entity, uncovers copious evidence of possible financial fraud, and wants to question, under oath, several of the entities' principals, including its namesake. She has the clear right to do so," the judge wrote in his eight-page decision.

    The Trumps' lawyers indicated at a hearing earlier in the day that they would appeal if the judge let the depositions proceed.

    James' office is looking into whether to file a civil suit against the Trump Organization over allegedly inflated financial statements. In court filings, her office alleged it has "uncovered substantial evidence establishing numerous misrepresentations in Mr. Trump's financial statements provided to banks, insurers, and the Internal Revenue Service."

    Among the items James wants to ask Trump about are several "Statements of Financial Condition" involving the company that the attorney general says were inflated by hundreds of millions of dollars and that had been signed off on by the former president.

    The attorney general's office said in January that it has not yet reached a final decision about whether the evidence it says it has found merits legal action.

    Lawyers for the Trumps contended James wants to question the trio to improperly gather evidence in a related criminal probe by the Manhattan district attorney's office.

    Two lawyers from James' office are assisting in the district attorney's investigation, which has already led to criminal charges against the Trump Organization and its former chief financial officer, Allan Weisselberg. Both the company and Weisselberg have pleaded not guilty to the charges, which include allegations of tax fraud and falsifying business records.

    The judge noted that the Trumps would be able to invoke their Fifth Amendment rights during the depositions if they had concerns about self-incrimination, and noted that Trump's son Eric had taken the Fifth more than 500 times when he was deposed for the probe back in 2020.

    Donald Trump lawyer Ron Fischetti said this case is "special" because "this is a former president of the United States," and if he takes the Fifth while answering questions, "he'll be on every front page in the world."

    Engoron countered that there's nothing in the law making a former president special. "To me, he's a citizen," the judge said.

    The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that asserting one's Fifth Amendment rights is not an admission of guilt, but Trump offered a different perspective while running for president in 2016. "The mob takes the fifth. If you're innocent, why are you taking the Fifth Amendment?" he said at a rally in Iowa.

    The allegations involving the inflated financial statements have caused other problems for Trump over the past week, including his longtime accounting firm Mazars' decision to cut ties with the Trump Organization after reviewing the statements it helped prepare.ecommended



    "We write to advise that the Statements of Financial Condition for Donald J. Trump for the years ending June 30, 2011 — June 30, 2020, should no longer be relied upon," the company said in a letter.

    The Trump Organization noted that Mazars' letter said its review had not found "any material discrepancies" in the Trump Organization's financial statements.

    On Thursday, the Democratic-controlled House Oversight Committee, citing Mazars' disavowal of the statements, urged the General Services Administration to cancel its lease for Trump's Washington, D.C. hotel.

    In a filing responding to specific allegations from the attorney general about the financial statements earlier this week, Trump's lawyer Alina Habba said the former president "(d)enies knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the truth of the allegations."

    The day after that filing, however, Trump issued a lengthy statement defending his company's accounting, saying, "We have a great company with fantastic assets that are unique, extremely valuable and, in many cases, far more valuable than what was listed in our Financial Statements."

    He said that Mazars had been "essentially forced to resign from a great long-term account by the prosecutorial misconduct of a highly political, but failed, gubernatorial candidate, Letitia James, and the Hillary Clinton run District Attorney's Office of Manhattan."

    The attorney general's office flagged the statement to the judge in a letter Wednesday.

    "It is not unusual for parties to a legal proceeding to disagree about the facts," the letter said. "But it is truly rare for a party to publicly disagree with statements submitted by his own attorneys in a signed pleading — let alone one day after the pleading was filed."

    The letter urged the judge to ignore the legal responses from Trump and his children, arguing they "improperly deny knowledge about subjects indisputably known" to them, including what Trump's positions were at the company and what Trump Jr.'s job is.

    "Despite currently serving as an executive vice president of the Trump Organization, Donald Trump, Jr. denies knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to allegations that he is an executive vice president of the Trump Organization," the attorney general's letter said.

    Trump Jr.'s lawyer, Alan Futerfas, responded in his own letter to the judge that the attorney general's recital of its case included "vague" allegations and the Trumps responses were all made in "good faith."

    Also Thursday, a judge in Washington, D.C., set a trial date for a separate civil case that's been brought against the Trump Organization and Trump's presidential inaugural committee by Washington Attorney General Karl Racine. It alleges that the inaugural committee improperly used inaugural funds to enrich the Trump family. The company and the committee have denied any wrongdoing. The case is scheduled to go to trial on Sept. 26.

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022

    February 16, 2022

    Heather Cox Richardson

    Feb 17

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    Today, the Washington Post ran a story by Claire Parker explaining that most Canadian truckers oppose the so-called "Freedom Convoy" protests. Almost all Canadian truckers are vaccinated and resent the protesters, whose shutdown of international borders has "had a very significant negative impact upon our professional driving community," according to Stephen Laskowski, the president of the Canadian Trucking Alliance.

    Prominent leaders of the convoys, including conspiracy theorist James Bauder, are not truckers themselves. Instead, right-wing agitators appear to be the ones behind the Trump and Confederate flags at the protests. More than 55% of the donations to the Christian fundraising website GiveSendGo for the protesters came from the United States.

    Truckers' organizations say the protests undermine the real concerns of truck drivers—wage theft, bad roads, and a lack of bathrooms—and worry that the convoys will hurt the public image of truckers.

    Parker's Washington Post story showing the Freedom Convoys as the expression of a radical fringe was an important reality check to the breathless stories from the American right hailing the Freedom Convoys as a popular movement.

    The story that former secretary of state Hillary Clinton allegedly spied on then-candidate Trump's campaign in 2016 illustrates the importance of the sort of reality-based corrective the Washington Post published about the Canadian truckers.

    The story at the root of the right's accusations against Clinton is actually fascinating. After Russians hacked the servers of the Democratic National Committee in 2015 and 2016, cybersecurity experts started to look to see what else hackers might have hit. In July 2016, four of them noticed that Russia's Kremlin-linked Alfa Bank appeared to be pinging a server registered to Trump Tower. To a lesser extent, it communicated with Spectrum Health in Michigan, an organization associated with the DeVos family. The servers were configured in such a way that they appeared to be shutting out other communications.

    One of the security experts took the story to lawyer Michael Sussman, who took it to the general counsel at the Federal Bureau of Investigation in September 2016, alerting him that cybersecurity folks thought there might be secret communications between the Trump Organization and Alfa Bank. Sussman worked for the same law firm that represented the Clinton presidential campaign.

    In May 2019, Trump's attorney general, William Barr, appointed John Durham, former U.S. attorney for Connecticut, as special counsel to investigate the origins of the FBI's investigation into the relationship between the Trump campaign and Russia.

    In September 2021, Durham indicted Sussman for lying to the FBI by saying he was not working for a client when he alerted them to the issue. Sussman denies he said he did not have a client, and identified himself as working for the cybersecurity expert. While Durham's witness has contradicted himself, emails support Sussman's account. For his part, Sussman responded by denying the charges and saying that Durham's 27-page indictment contained "prejudicial—and false—allegations that are irrelevant to his Motion and to the charged offense, and are plainly intended to politicize this case, inflame media coverage, and taint the jury pool."

    In his indictment, Durham said the cybersecurity experts did not believe their own suggestion of connections between Alfa Bank and Trump Tower and were trying to hurt candidate Trump. They responded by accusing Durham of editing their emails misleadingly and stood behind their earlier conclusions.

    The current furor is over a related issue. On Friday, in a court filing in the case against Sussman, Durham alleged that one of the cybersecurity experts, who was working for the White House as part of a cybersecurity contract, "exploited" his access there to find "derogatory information" about Trump. This charge stems from the fact that the researchers found odd data suggesting that a Russian-made smartphone, a YotaPhone, had communicated with the same networks—this we already knew—and that one of them told that information to the CIA in February 2017, about 20 days into the Trump administration. Durham did not indicate when he thought the experts had uncovered the issue—the timing suggests it was in 2016, before Trump took office—and the researcher's lawyer has pointed out that the person had been hired to identify security breaches and threats.

    The story is confusing, but it seems to show security experts who found anomalies and took them to the appropriate authorities (none of them has been charged with anything). The FBI dismissed the server issue, and it is not clear whether the phone issue was ever investigated. The launch of the FBI's investigation of the ties between the Trump campaign and Russia had nothing to do with any of this, anyway. The investigation, called Crossfire Hurricane, began in July 2016 after George Papadopoulos, a member of the Trump campaign, told an informant that the campaign had dirt on Hillary Clinton. An investigation by the inspector general of the Justice Department concluded that the FBI investigation was not politically motivated.

    The current story appears to be a nothing burger, and yet, the former president, right-wing media, and Trump loyalists are flooding the news with accusations that the Clinton campaign paid operatives to "infiltrate" servers at Trump Tower and the White House to create the Russia scandal. They are calling for multiple indictments.

    Representative Jim Jordan (R-OH) told the Fox News Channel on Sunday: "They were spying on the sitting president of the United States…. And it goes right to the Clinton campaign." The former president claimed that "Robert" Durham—a name switch that might reflect his intense focus on Special Counsel Robert Mueller, who was in charge of the Russia investigation—had provided "indisputable evidence that my campaign and presidency were spied on by operatives paid by the Hillary Clinton Campaign in an effort to develop a completely fabricated connection to Russia.… In a stronger period of time in our country, this crime would have been punishable by death."

    The right is complaining bitterly that the mainstream media has covered this story only briefly, insisting the lack of wall-to-wall coverage proves the media is biased against the right. But the exaggeration of this story seems a transparent attempt to revisit the 2016 attacks on Clinton in order to distract both from the revelations of the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol and from the eye-popping news that Trump's accountants have said the last ten years of his financial statements cannot be relied upon.

    Controlling the narrative has always been a key factor in the right's ability to turn out voters. But that ability just might be slipping.

    Today, former judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit J. Michael Luttig, a Republican, said: "For the past six years, I have watched and listened in disgust that not one single leader of ours with the moral authority, the courage, and the will to stand up and say: 'No, this is not who we are, this is not what America is, and it's not what we want to be,' has done so."

    Also today, a report by the Interior Department's Inspector General Mark Greenblatt, who was appointed by former president Donald Trump, offered a window into how one Trump loyalist looked at our government as a way to further his own interests. The report concluded that Trump's secretary of the interior, Ryan Zinke, broke federal ethics rules, lying to officials that he had "purely social" contact with developers in Whitefish, Montana, when in fact he communicated with the developers 64 times to talk about the project, including a parking lot on his own land and his interest in having a brewery on the property.

    Zinke is now running for Congress. His campaign called the investigation a "Biden Administration led report" (the investigation began in 2018, under Trump) that "published false information, and was shared with the press as a political hit job."

    Spreading false stories depends on making sure the truth is inaccessible. Today Biden rejected Trump's attempt to hide the White House visitor logs for January 6, 2021, from the January 6th committee on the grounds of executive privilege. Biden said that keeping them hidden "is not in the best interest of the United States." Unless a court steps in, the National Archives and Records Administration will deliver them to the committee on March 3.

  • magiclight
    magiclight Member Posts: 8,690
    edited February 2022

    Life is complex. Each one of us must make his [her] own path through life. There are no self-help manuals, no formulas, no easy answers. The right road for one is the wrong road for another. . . The journey of life is not paved in blacktop; it is not brightly lit, and it has no road signs. It is a rocky path through the wilderness.

    M. Scott Peck

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022

    I move through my day-to-day life with a sense of appreciation and gratitude that comes from knowing how fortunate I truly am and how unearned all that I am thankful for really is. To have this perspective in my everyday consciousness is in itself a gift, for it leads to feeling "graced," or blessed, each time. . . . Every time I see beauty around me I appreciate what I am seeing, and simultaneously I have this sense of appreciation—for being alive to have this particular moment. -Jean Shinoda Bolen

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022
  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022

    I think Hillary Clinton is being used again to take a lot of focus off Loon and the Reps. They are all on the edge -- especially the Loon.
    The Reps. want to take away as much traction as they can from the Loon without looking like that is what they really want and are in fact doing. If they had any kind of real platform that might be feasible, but since they have nothing they have stay under cover.

    Sometimes I wonder what the Loon really knows or not. He is so delusional but surely there are things that get through. Just hard to tell since he became totally stuck and focused on convincing others that the '20 election was stolen. He sounds more and more deranged when he makes his highly un-provable statements as though there is all the proof in the world. I would love to think he has a high awareness (mainly because he needs to feel the pain) but his whole life is one of running from consequences by under-handed and or illegal means and ways. By now it would seem impossible for him to get a true appreciation of the deep trouble he seems to be in, while at the same time I would imagine he doesn't even bother looking at the fact that along with the loss of the election -- he has lost everything since. I think he is incapable of making that real because it would expose him to facing up to truth and he has been in denial of truth for life. I still say he is the poorest excuse for a human being I've ever encountered.

    A sad embarrassment for us.

  • Veeder14
    Veeder14 Member Posts: 880
    edited February 2022

    Illinois lady
    I agree with you totally. So sick of reading his idiotic comments in the news. Just wish he would be convicted of at least one of the crimes he has committed so there’s no chance he can be President again. Thanks for all your posts.

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022

    A bag of apples, a pot of homemade jam, a scribbled note, a bunch of golden flowers, a colored pebble, a box of seedlings, an empty scent bottle for the children. . . . Who needs diamonds and van-delivered bouquets?

    Pam Brown

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022

    Glad it is the weekend. Of course, there is way too much re-hash of the last part of the week's news. Dh and I have started taking major breaks of the news through the week. We used to keep up with every little scrap, but now only usually watch in the morning over coffee. About 10a.m. we switch over to other non-news shows for the rest of the day. Don't watch night-time either. We already know what the Reps. seem to have in store for us which is not good. Due to this I wish we were taking a harder line on them but hoping it will still come. I think/hope that the DOJ might be working overtime and slightly undercover to be ready for when we start with the televised hearings of the 1/6 committee.

    I think from Adam Schiff and others it does sound like there is much we can learn. Also, from some of the items that have leaked which often have a really provocative sound to them. I hope that these items will in fact prove to make a huge difference in the perceptions the Reps. have tried to put on everything which certainly show Democrats in the wrong light. The more truth that comes out, the better. It should be much harder, maybe impossible, for anyone to paint a falser picture since 1/6 committee has proof for what they intend to present. That along with all other proofs (mainly that there was no foul and or under-handed dirty tricks, fraud, or cheating by Democrats) will hopefully solidify the truth. I certainly hope this is out far enough from the '22 election to make a difference in energizing the Democrats to vote in irrefutable numbers.

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022
  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022

    What we believe about ourselves can hold us hostage. Over the years I have come to respect the power of people's beliefs. The thing that has amazed me is that a belief is more than just an idea--it seems to shift the way in which we actually experience ourselves and our lives. According to Talmudic teaching, "We do not see things as they are. We see them as we are." A belief is like a pair of sunglasses. When we wear a belief and look at life through it, it is difficult to convince ourselves that what we see is not real. . . . Sometimes because of our beliefs we may have never seen ourselves or life whole before. No matter. We can recognize life anyway. Our life force may not require us to strengthen it. We often just need to free it where it has gotten trapped in beliefs, attitudes, judgment, and shame. -Rachel Naomi Remen

  • IllinoisLady
    IllinoisLady Member Posts: 29,082
    edited February 2022

    When we endure our own tragedies or trials, most of us develop some empathy and compassion for others who are suffering. The trick is to keep that sense of compassion going throughout our daily lives, when we are likely to go on automatic pilot and move back into being judgmental—especially when times are tough. -Bill O'Hanlon

  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited February 2022

    Watched Real Time With Bill Maher Friday night and wanted to scream. I used to respect Katrina VanDen Heuvel back in the day, but she has stubbornly remained a frozen-in-time (in amber?) rigidly pacifist-isolationist antediluvian ultra-left (not "progressive") doctrinaire. She is against our getting involved, even diplomatically, in the Ukraine situation--saying that we should be fighting authoritarianism only "at home" and that we should focus only on progressive policy issues that "everybody wants." Someone needs to tell her that we can walk & chew gum at the same time.

    She even said "the nation was founded by abolitionists," and not only Jon Avlon but even Maher were taken aback--until she clarified that she meant "The Nation" periodical, which she edits and is her entire orbit and frame of reference these days. She & Maher claimed NATO is irrelevant and no longer has a raison d'être ever since the breakup of the USSR and the fall of the Iron Curtain, because NATO was formed to protect Europe against the Soviet bloc. Poor Avlon tried but couldn't get a word in edgewise to explain the obvious: NATO opposed the Soviets not because of socialism or communism (which are economic systems) but because of the Soviets' totalitarianism & authoritarianism. Despite Russia now having a klepto-capitalist economy, it retains a totalitarianist authoritarianism that is fueling similar movements across Europe, especially in Hungary--which is why NATO still considers it a threat. Maher pointed out (albeit historically accurately) that the Russian Empire began in Kiev (pronounced "Kyiv" in Ukranian) but failed to mention the distinction between historical Russia on the one hand, and Putin's vision for Russia on the other: a Tsarist, Orthodox-Christian-only empire without hereditary monarchy and--fueled by his KGB past--the USSR without the pesky Communism that would stand in the way of his kleptocratic corrupt riches. He wants to be both a Tsar without royal blood, and Stalin in a designer business suit with an unlimited bank account.

    In my old age, I am growing increasingly frustrated by people who refuse to look at the big picture and fail to see the forest for their own favorite trees (insert cliché of your choice here).

  • DivineMrsM
    DivineMrsM Member Posts: 9,620
    edited February 2022

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