So whatever they have to do to stop us is permissible, even called for. That is that we, everybody who opposes them, are the essence of evil. So this is what the left reserves for themselves. If what they’re fighting is indeed the essence of evil, then you are entitled to do anything to beat it back. That’s a technique that people oftentimes use to permit evil in what they’re doing. This is the way they think - proving, by the way, this is a religion. This threat is so existential that even if we have to lie, we’ll do it. They establish these rules for themselves no matter what it takes. If they want it to be true, you’re gonna agree with it or you’re gonna be harassed and threatened and intimidated. What they believe does not have to be true. Whatever they believe is going to be what everybody else believes no matter what it takes to make that happen. The whole notion of right and wrong, truth or fact versus lies and BS is irrelevant. Do you realize there literally is no moral foundation propping them up? Do you realize, folks, the left… I don’t care where you find them, global warming movement, militant feminist, militant gays. It’s entirely within the bounds of propriety to really, really hype things to get people’s attention and get their money. It’s perfectly the fine to make it up, perfectly fine to exaggerate.
“Gawker’s Adam Weinstein suggests arresting those on the wrong side of the climate change debate.”īy the way, our buddy Marc Morano, former “our man in Washington” from Rush The TV Show, he’s got a website in Climate Depot where he chronicles all of the leftist propaganda on this issue and apparently two accredited, concomitant climate scientists have come out and said that it’s perfectly fine to exaggerate and lie about global warming impacts in order to get people’s attention and money. They thought I was making up a word on the other side of the glass. “Climate Activists Uncaged.” (interruption) What? (interruption) I told you it was a word. You’ve never heard of concomitantly? (interruption) Look it up! It was published concomitantly and coherently with the New York Post.Ĭohesively, too - meaning it looks the same in the New York Post as it does at National Review. (interruption) Concomitant? It’s not… (interruption) No, I didn’t make up the word.
I think it was also published concomitantly and coherently at the New York Post. It's just that no one knows it's legal.RUSH: I mentioned Jonah Goldberg’s column at National Review.
The sponsor of that bill told the Advertiser: "Every bit of this bill is already legal. McClurkin also voice-voted through a bill "that would allow students to initiate prayer in school and express their religious views in their schoolwork." The House's clerk told the Advertiser that "the chairman of each committee has the discretion to decide the outcome of a voice vote." Two Republicans and one Democrat insist they said "no" to the bill in the voice vote three legislators weren't even present for the vote. Only McClurkin and one other Republican on the panel actually voted "aye" on the bill. "It's what I heard as chairman," she said. Mary Sue McClurkin, R-Indian Springs, chairwoman of the committee, said she heard more votes in favor of the bill. Steve Hurst, R-Munford, would require teachers to spend no more than 15 minutes in the first class of each day to read, verbatim, opening prayers said before a meeting of the U.S. The bill passed through the chamber's education policy committee late last week, according to the Montgomery Advertiser: Alabama is also home to Roy Moore, the state Supreme Court chief justice who fought to keep a massive stone sculpture of the Ten Commandments in the state court building.īut that stand seems lukewarm next to the current House measure's planned compulsion of religion among captive pupils. Alabama Legislators Approve Bill Requiring School Prayer Every MorningĪdam Weinstein ("Gawker," February 24, 2014)Ī key committee in Alabama's House of Representatives has pushed through a bill requiring teachers and students at all of the state's public schools to spend 15 minutes every morning in Christian prayer, even though a majority of legislators present say they opposed the measure.Īlabama, of course, is a churchin' state, ranked the "2nd most religious state" behind its neighbor, Mississippi.