• Nurse Crazy Pants Delivers Dr. Slidenstein's Daily Medications

    From LowRider44M@1:229/2 to All on Friday, June 19, 2020 15:12:23
    From: intraphase@gmail.com

    Dr. Slidenstein's Medications
    This is all premium net content.


    The first one says (55 seconds ) it all, the rest echo it.


    Comedy - Back V. White
    https://youtu.be/kXNn1G39Wqw

    []

    Rapper Exposes Soros As BLM
    https://youtu.be/7bsq1XQwDZg


    Damani Felder — Statement to BLM
    https://youtu.be/8tZkBhB07Cc


    SamanthaMarike - Racism is Obsolete https://twitter.com/i/status/1272342149405634560


    Bill Marr - New Rules for White Shame
    https://youtu.be/T0q2ZR4nBuE


    Old Black Man To Governor
    https://youtu.be/SM_P38WkqmU


    Racial Agitation Terrorism For Communist Revolution https://youtu.be/beL40QeyGo0


    USA Black confronts Uncle Tom meme.
    https://youtu.be/erc4n6NGPK0


    Black Guns Matter
    https://youtu.be/1Au4I6gNwy0


    Equality Under Law
    https://youtu.be/XoI6e60-87I

    []


    Meet Sgt William Carney, the first African American Medal of Honor Recipient. A
    man who fought for what he believed in. Who never knelt for the flag but stood up for it. His reverence for the flag led him to scramble for it when his unit’s color guard
    was shot. He himself was shot several times but never let the flag touch the ground.

    https://www.army.mil/article/181896/meet_sgt_william_carney_the_first_african_american_medal_of_honor_recipient

    Of the 3,498 service members who have received the Medal of Honor throughout U.S. history, only 88 have been black.

    We’ll start with the first black recipient of the award: Army Sgt. William H.
    Carney, who earned the honor for protecting one of the United States’ greatest symbols during the Civil War — the American flag.

    Carney was born into slavery in Norfolk, Virginia, in 1840. His family was eventually granted freedom and moved to Massachusetts, where Carney was eager to learn and secretly got involved in academics, despite laws and restrictions that banned blacks
    from learning to read and write.

    In March 1863, Carney joined the Union Army and was attached to Company C, 54th
    Massachusetts Colored Infantry Regiment, the first official black unit recruited for the Union in the north. Forty other black men served with him, including two of famed
    abolitionist Frederick Douglass’ sons.

    Within a few months, Carney’s training would be put to the ultimate test during the unit’s first major combat mission in Charleston, South Carolina.

    On July 18, 1863, the soldiers of Carney’s regiment led the charge on Fort Wagner. During the battle, the unit’s color guard was shot. Carney, who was just a few feet away, saw the dying man stumble, and he scrambled to catch the falling flag.

    Despite suffering several serious gunshot wounds himself, Carney kept the symbol of the Union held high as he crawled up the hill to the walls of Fort Wagner, urging his fellow troops to follow him. He planted the flag in the sand
    at the base of the fort
    and held it upright until his near-lifeless body was rescued.

    Even then, though, he didn’t give it up. Many witnesses said Carney refused to give the flag to his rescuers, holding onto it tighter until, with assistance, he made it to the Union’s temporary barracks.

    Carney lost a lot of blood and nearly lost his life, but not once did he allow the flag to touch the ground. His heroics inspired other soldiers that day and were crucial to the North securing victory at Fort Wagner. Carney was promoted to the rank of
    sergeant for his actions.

    For his bravery, Carney was awarded the Medal of Honor on May 23, 1900.

    Carney’s legacy serves as a shining example of the patriotism that Americans felt at that time, despite the color of their skin.

    []

    The Great Society Has Failed

    https://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/2020/06/great-society-has-failed-lt-colonel-allen-west/?utm_source=whatfinger


    The 21st century economic plantations and combat zones.
    Fri Jun 19, 2020 Lt. Colonel Allen West
    10

    The old folks down south had a saying when I was growing up that went something
    like this: “That fella is just whistling past the graveyard.”

    As with many of those wise sayings and metaphors, such as “an empty wagon makes the most noise,” you never learn the true meaning until later in life.

    An empty wagon refers to someone who does not have anything in their head, therefore, they are the ones who make the most noise to cover their incompetence. Whistling past the graveyard referred to a person who fails to see the real issues they are
    facing.

    And so here we are today in America, and both sayings have relevance, the former more so than the latter. Everyone is screaming, shouting, rioting, looting, and committing acts of violence in the name of combatting “systemic racism.” Truly, there are
    many folks, empty wagons, making a lot of noise, while so many others are whistling past the graveyard, not grasping the real issue in America.

    The bottom line is simple: The Great Society – the grand endeavor of the progressive, racist President Lyndon Baines Johnson, has failed. Fifty-five years later, we are witnessing the -- shall I say it --“chickens coming home to roost.”

    The Great Society, also known as the infamous War on Poverty was launched as every other government top-down solution is, with great promise and “noble”
    intention. It was an updated version of Roosevelt’s “chicken in every pot” solution.

    What Johnson and his ilk believed was that they could manipulate the outcomes in the lives of individuals and create equality. They embraced the notion that the government could “level the playing field,” and with a plethora of government subsistence
    programs, all would be well.

    In reflection, we should all agree, and stop whistling past the graveyard, that
    this was a program intended to do one thing -- create economic enslavement, dependency.

    The Great Society blunder has resulted in the modern-day 21st century economic plantation in which American inner-cities have absolutely cratered.

    It does not take a PhD level study to grasp this. Consider my story, a young black kid born in a “Blacks Only” hospital in Atlanta, Georgia on February 7, 1961. I grew up in the historic Old Fourth Ward community, the same one that
    produced Dr.
    Martin Luther King Jr. and the cradle of the American civil rights movement, ya
    know, Sweet Auburn Avenue.

    I learned to swim, box, and play basketball at the historic Butler Street YMCA.
    I went to Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic School, which was across the street from
    Ebenezer Baptist Church. And I walked to and from school by myself.

    When I was born, the traditional two-parent household in the black community was nearly 77%. There were thriving Black-owned businesses all throughout our community, including Citizens Trust Bank, black owned. We kids played in the street, and on the
    weekend, we gathered in the Sears Roebuck parking lot to play baseball -- no sliding.

    My older brother returned from Vietnam where he had been wounded as a Marine Infantryman at Khe Sahn. He wanted to be an Atlanta Police officer.

    I could go on, but I think you are starting to get my point. Compare my inner-city experience to what is happening today.

    Today, only 24% of black kids have mom and dad in the home. Matter of fact, Black Lives Matter has deemed the traditional nuclear family an extension of white supremacy. My school, well, it no longer exists, it is just a community center. Black-owned
    businesses are not as visible.

    We can have all the conversations about racism you want, but we will just keep whistling past the graveyard. Until we recognize the devastation of Johnson’s
    irrational foray into massive government welfare has had upon our urban population centers, the
    problem will not be rectified. We can allow those empty wagons, like Al Sharpton, to be the loudest voices, or we can resolve ourselves to critically right the real wrongs that have been cast upon the American Black community.

    The real issue is the “soft bigotry of low expectations.” That has resulted
    in the decimation and utter despondency we witness in American inner cities, controlled by Democrats over the past six decades. Their policies have created this incessant
    nightmare that is being unfolded before our eyes.

    Yes, there are bad cops, as there are bad elements, individuals in any profession. However, the cancer that we are dealing with, not the symptom, is the breakdown of the family, destruction of educational opportunity, and thwarting of economic
    opportunity. But, no one wishes to address those issues, preferring to just continue to whistle past the graveyard.

    And why?

    The progressive socialist left does not want the issues created by The Great Society to be fixed. They do not want to see strong, two-parent families, educational freedom, and economic empowerment. No, on this new plantation, the left needs victims, and
    victims provide them with electoral patronage. The real discussion about racism
    should be about the policies that have turned American inner cities into combat
    zones, literally.

    Sadly, with the advent of reality TV and other mindless programming, we are becoming a nation of lemmings and useful idiots, not critical thinkers. We prefer to succumb to the irrational emotionalism of which we are bombarded by the lords of propaganda.
    We used to have a responsible press.

    The old folks down South were impeccably wise, and we should pay more attention
    to their lessons. Then again, we have devolved to a point where we do not respect our elders and heed their counsel.

    The Great Society is a failure. We must acknowledge that fact, or just keep whistling past the graveyard.

    []

    Owls
    https://fellowshipoftheminds.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/owls.mp4?_=1

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)