By A Texas Reader
Ilana Mercer: “Hand-on-heart I can say that the larger-than-life personalities who died in Las Vegas are the best of America, the very heart of America. They are what make America great.
“When the people who make America great become a despised minority in the country they’ve made great – America will become … Puerto Rico.”
Those targeted in Vegas are what Make America Great
www.wnd.com
A man, Sonny Melton, 29, died, shielding his wife from the bullets. Another commandeered a truck to drive victims of the Oct. 1 massacre in Las Vegas to the hospital. At first, Vanessa, a concertgoer, fled the Vegas venue, which was being sprayed with bullets from high-velocity rifles. Then, she turned and ran back. She […]
"the Elites’ Favorite Intellectual Pygmy, Ta Nehisi Coates"
ReplyDeleteOh my, that is the burn of the month, if not the year! What makes it extra special is that its also 100% correct. Even though I admire most of your work,
that sentence is donation worthy to say the least.
LOL
Thanks, but I can't tale credit for it. It's from a clever, pretty girl named Ilana Mercer.
ReplyDeleteCrimes against humanity the whitey guilty of for five hundred years now. YES, that is the false narrative. And whitey, your time is a-coming ya'll. "Just you wait until there are more of us than of you. Wait and see what is going to happen then." And they mean it too.
ReplyDeleteLike what the Holocaust survivor said: "when someone says they want to kill you, believe them!!"
This colored guy got a Genius award! Living in Paris. Hope he stays there.
ReplyDeletejerry pdx
ReplyDeleteFirst let me qualify...I have read Ta-Nehisi Coate's book...Most of the first chapter that is.
While I can slog through difficult reading I found Mr. Coat's book to be so agonizing to read I simply could not carry on past the first chapter. There wasn't a single original thought in those pages, I suppose there are those that will claim there was or if I had read "the whole things" I'd find plenty. No, there was nothing but recycled victim fetish race baiting and I guarantee that any books that starts that way also ends that way.
OK, Mr. Coate's is reasonably literate, but an intellectual? James Baldwin had his issues, he was black after all, but was legitimately a talented writer and you Mr. Coate's are no James Baldwin, no matter what white liberals keep telling you.
By chance I picked an Oct. 3, 2017 issue of the NY Times and noticed that the paper, in all it's wisdom, decided to devote most of the front page of the Arts section to "black victimization" issues. There was a drawing of a negro with "I can't breathe" on his face representing an article about how museum curators are rushing to save evidence of "tumultuous" events as they happen. However, those "tumultuous" events were all BLM type protests, so clearly the museum thinks that black riot artifacts are priority historical items to preserve. Also on the front page was a review of Ta-Nehisi Coates new book: A compilation of his most "influential pieces" from the Atlantic. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/01/books/review-ta-nehisi-coates-we-were-eight-years-in-power.html
I'd like to know exactly how he has influenced anything, other than make liberal twits swoon over his tweaking of their black guilt syndrome. The title was "We were Eight Years in Power", a reference to that great liberator Obama.
The author of the article is Jennifer Senior, who I'm guessing is a white woman and she slavishly heaps praise on him with all the fervent fanaticism of a white liberal desperate for validation from the black man. I kid you not Ms. Senior states that Coates is the first, yes the FIRST ever!, to write about "community" and "our national identity". Are you kidding? NY Times allowed something so absurdly stupid to be printed? then she craftily segues to things like "mass incarceration" "difference between white and black economic prospects" suggesting that he pioneered writing about those subjects also. No, Ms. Senior, there isn't an issue there that hasn't been written about by many writers who have hashed and rehashed the subjects innumerable ways (except maybe some of his Obama stuff), but in Ms. Senior's (kiss the black man's ass with lies) bizarro world view Coates is the first to do it.
Quote from the article (try to control your nausea):
"Coates was one of the first to show up to discuss all three of these themes: The man, the community, our national identity. He critiqued respectability politics. He wrote about mass incarceration. He wrote about Michelle Obama and Chicago’s South Side. He wrote about how Barack Obama was exceptional, in many senses, and about the paradoxical limits of the first black president’s power to address race and racism. He wrote about the qualitative difference between white economic prospects and black economic prospects, thanks to discriminatory policies promulgated by the government even during progressive times, and about how, in his view, reparations would be the only way to redress the problem".