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Message

Will Biden Mention Radical Islamist Terrorism? He Always Mentions White Supremacy
Posted on 1/1/25 at 5:53 pm
Posted on 1/1/25 at 5:53 pm
Will he say the words?
Posted on 1/1/25 at 5:54 pm to LuckyTiger
No, but he'll find some way to weave "MAGA Republicans" into his incoherent blather. Of course he said we shouldn't jump to any conclusions. He wouldn't say that if this was some alleged "white nationalist."
This post was edited on 1/1/25 at 6:06 pm
Posted on 1/1/25 at 5:55 pm to LuckyTiger
Lloyd Austin + Biden = joke!!!
Posted on 1/1/25 at 5:56 pm to LuckyTiger
He will probably mention islamaphobia or some other bullshite
Posted on 1/1/25 at 5:56 pm to LuckyTiger
It's Trumps fault turning good Americans against their fellow men women and children.
signed
TheDeadHead
signed
TheDeadHead
Posted on 1/1/25 at 5:56 pm to LuckyTiger
He just needs to keep his lying mouth shut and get the frick out
Posted on 1/1/25 at 5:56 pm to LuckyTiger
Nope islamists are protected class of people. They love them and their evil.
Posted on 1/1/25 at 5:57 pm to 5WFSHR
quote:
Lloyd Austin
Don't you dare say anything about DEI though. One of the resident leftists will imply you are racist.
like Lloyd fricking Austin would be the fricking SecDef is he was white
Posted on 1/1/25 at 5:57 pm to LuckyTiger
"Look, I'm serious. It's not a joke.!"


Posted on 1/1/25 at 5:58 pm to SouthEasternKaiju
Biden needs to retire into the grave.
Posted on 1/1/25 at 5:59 pm to LuckyTiger
No but he will probably chit himself
Posted on 1/1/25 at 6:01 pm to LuckyTiger
Mumbling about the suspect's Army service and being from Texas.
Posted on 1/1/25 at 6:03 pm to Tchefuncte Tiger
He didn’t mention radical Islamist terrorism or specifically condemn it.
He did mention an isis flag was found but mentioned it in a very generic manner.
No specific mention of Islamic terrorism or condemnation of it.
He did mention an isis flag was found but mentioned it in a very generic manner.
No specific mention of Islamic terrorism or condemnation of it.
Posted on 1/1/25 at 6:07 pm to LuckyTiger
Nailed it
Thecretard just couldn't do it.
Thecretard just couldn't do it.
Posted on 1/1/25 at 6:19 pm to 5WFSHR
He needs to retire to hell which is where he will spend eternity
Posted on 1/1/25 at 6:24 pm to LuckyTiger
I don't want to hear jack squat about "White Supremacy". It's Jihadi's doing all of the Terrorism. Don't want to hear about Muslims being the victims of backlash either.
Posted on 1/1/25 at 6:35 pm to Neutral Underground
Contrast Biden on Charlottesville and Biden on Nola.
Do it.
I await a statement like this from Biden:
Today in Charlottesville, Virginia the battle for the soul of America was laid bare for all to see.
The forces of hate and violence were summoned from the shadows as Neo-Nazis, Klansmen, and white supremacists descended on a historic American city. With torches in their hands and veins bulging from their necks, they spewed the same antisemitic bile that was heard in Germany in the 1930s and with the same beatings and bigotry we saw in Jim Crow America for nearly a century.
But what they didn’t account for was the extraordinary force of American goodness and decency. In that moment and as we’ve seen throughout our history, Americans of different races, religions, and backgrounds stood ground and stayed true to the promise of our nation: that we are all created equal and deserve to be treated equally throughout our lives.
In that moment, the courage of the nation was summoned. One brave woman, Heather Heyer, a young civil rights activist, was murdered while representing the best of us. Her life and activism are reminders that while we have never fully lived up to the promise of America, we have never fully walked away from it either.
What happened in Charlottesville – and securing the promise of America for every American – motivated me to run for president and now motivates my Administration’s work to ensure that hate has no safe harbor in America.
In my first week in office, I signed an executive order establishing whole-of-government effort to advance racial equity and support underserved communities, and a presidential memorandum directing all federal agencies to combat the resurgence of xenophobia against Asian Americans that we’ve seen during this pandemic.
And in May, I signed into law the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act that empowers the U.S. Department of Justice and our entire Administration to address the critical problem of hate crimes being underreported. The law includes provisions in Heather Heyer’s name that will help state and local governments to ensure hate crimes information is more accessible to the public.
Heather’s mother joined me at the bill signing. As I told her on that day, I know it’s hard. Even with the significance of the law being changed, it’s like getting the news of her death just seconds ago. It takes enormous courage. It’s also especially hard on this day of commemoration. Jill and I are thinking about Heather and her family.
And we know there is more work we must do as a nation – as we saw with the mob of insurrectionists at the United States Capitol on January 6th that joins the horror we saw in Charlottesville as shameful chapters in our history.
We must acknowledge what America’s intelligence community has already confirmed, and what Charlottesville and so many other communities know all too well: the most lethal terrorist threat to our homeland in recent years has been domestic terrorism rooted in white supremacy. We cannot ignore it. We must confront the spread of hate-fueled violence in every form.
To that end, in June, my Administration laid out America’s first-ever comprehensive effort to take on the threat of domestic terrorism. We are doing so by countering and reducing online radicalization and recruitment to violence, disrupting the networks that inspire violence by domestic terrorists and hate groups, and providing new resources for communities to build up local resilience against the spread of hate.
Charlottesville is an example of how this is the work of all of us.
In the hours and days after what happened there, America’s moral conscience stirred. The nation’s military, business, and labor leaders took a firm stand. Political, community, and faith leaders raised their voices. Religious leaders held a prayer service at St. Paul’s Memorial Episcopal Church the night before the rally and marched in the streets the next day. When the Neo-Nazi marchers passed Charlottesville’s only synagogue, Beth Israel, the congregation continued worship services, stood up to the hate, and helped their neighbors. And we should never forget the courage of that small group of University of Virginia students who stared down the mob and did not flinch.
While it may come with enormous pain and cost, the greatness of America is that at our best, we meet President Lincoln’s appeal to embrace the “better angels of our nature.”
That’s what we must do – together – to win this battle for the soul of America.
Do it.
I await a statement like this from Biden:
Today in Charlottesville, Virginia the battle for the soul of America was laid bare for all to see.
The forces of hate and violence were summoned from the shadows as Neo-Nazis, Klansmen, and white supremacists descended on a historic American city. With torches in their hands and veins bulging from their necks, they spewed the same antisemitic bile that was heard in Germany in the 1930s and with the same beatings and bigotry we saw in Jim Crow America for nearly a century.
But what they didn’t account for was the extraordinary force of American goodness and decency. In that moment and as we’ve seen throughout our history, Americans of different races, religions, and backgrounds stood ground and stayed true to the promise of our nation: that we are all created equal and deserve to be treated equally throughout our lives.
In that moment, the courage of the nation was summoned. One brave woman, Heather Heyer, a young civil rights activist, was murdered while representing the best of us. Her life and activism are reminders that while we have never fully lived up to the promise of America, we have never fully walked away from it either.
What happened in Charlottesville – and securing the promise of America for every American – motivated me to run for president and now motivates my Administration’s work to ensure that hate has no safe harbor in America.
In my first week in office, I signed an executive order establishing whole-of-government effort to advance racial equity and support underserved communities, and a presidential memorandum directing all federal agencies to combat the resurgence of xenophobia against Asian Americans that we’ve seen during this pandemic.
And in May, I signed into law the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act that empowers the U.S. Department of Justice and our entire Administration to address the critical problem of hate crimes being underreported. The law includes provisions in Heather Heyer’s name that will help state and local governments to ensure hate crimes information is more accessible to the public.
Heather’s mother joined me at the bill signing. As I told her on that day, I know it’s hard. Even with the significance of the law being changed, it’s like getting the news of her death just seconds ago. It takes enormous courage. It’s also especially hard on this day of commemoration. Jill and I are thinking about Heather and her family.
And we know there is more work we must do as a nation – as we saw with the mob of insurrectionists at the United States Capitol on January 6th that joins the horror we saw in Charlottesville as shameful chapters in our history.
We must acknowledge what America’s intelligence community has already confirmed, and what Charlottesville and so many other communities know all too well: the most lethal terrorist threat to our homeland in recent years has been domestic terrorism rooted in white supremacy. We cannot ignore it. We must confront the spread of hate-fueled violence in every form.
To that end, in June, my Administration laid out America’s first-ever comprehensive effort to take on the threat of domestic terrorism. We are doing so by countering and reducing online radicalization and recruitment to violence, disrupting the networks that inspire violence by domestic terrorists and hate groups, and providing new resources for communities to build up local resilience against the spread of hate.
Charlottesville is an example of how this is the work of all of us.
In the hours and days after what happened there, America’s moral conscience stirred. The nation’s military, business, and labor leaders took a firm stand. Political, community, and faith leaders raised their voices. Religious leaders held a prayer service at St. Paul’s Memorial Episcopal Church the night before the rally and marched in the streets the next day. When the Neo-Nazi marchers passed Charlottesville’s only synagogue, Beth Israel, the congregation continued worship services, stood up to the hate, and helped their neighbors. And we should never forget the courage of that small group of University of Virginia students who stared down the mob and did not flinch.
While it may come with enormous pain and cost, the greatness of America is that at our best, we meet President Lincoln’s appeal to embrace the “better angels of our nature.”
That’s what we must do – together – to win this battle for the soul of America.
Posted on 1/1/25 at 7:11 pm to SouthEasternKaiju
quote:
"Look, I'm serious. It's not a joke, Fat!"
That addition is my favorite Biden. Cracks me up all on its own.
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