Wednesday, May 13, 2015

GOP USA 05/13/2015

Critic: Obama 'leads chorus' in cop-hating rhetoric
image The media -- both conservative and mainstream -- are pointing out an undeniable trend President Obama is demonstrating: honoring those killed by police, condemning police for misconduct, and ignoring police killed in the line of duty by black assailants.

Shut Pam Geller Up, or We Will All Die
image Last week, Fox News' Bill O'Reilly announced that Pamela Geller, the woman who sponsored a draw Muhammad event in Texas, threatened America's national security. Geller, said O'Reilly, "spurred a violent attack." He continued, "Insulting the entire Muslim world is stupid. ... It does not advance the cause of liberty or get us any closer to defeating the savage jihad."

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Subway employee fired for posts celebrating police deaths
image A Mississippi Subway restaurant employee has been fired after posting a photo on Facebook that appeared to show her in uniform celebrating the killing of two police officers in Hattiesburg.

Rawlings-Blake defends handling of Baltimore rioting
image Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake defended her handling of the recent rioting in Baltimore, arguing Tuesday that more aggressive police or military tactics could have escalated the violence.

Police critically shoot man wielding hammer in NYC
image A man suspected of attacking four people with a hammer this week was shot and wounded by police Wednesday after he pulled a hammer from a bag and lunged at officers who approached him on the street near Penn Station, police said.

In Washington, NYC mayor touts national liberal vision
image New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, fashioning himself as one of the left's loudest voices on economic causes, appeared in Washington on Tuesday to make two stops on his national tour to tout the need to fight income inequality - one with Sen. Elizabeth Warren, the other to unveil his national liberal political platform - before meeting with President Barack Obama.

Obama: Stereotypes on left, right a hurdle to ending poverty
image It wasn't your typical panel discussion: President Barack Obama sat down Tuesday with leading thinkers from the left and right to reflect on poverty, income inequality and the stereotypes that get in the way of finding solutions.

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