Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Vester Lee Flanagan Said God Told Him to Kill Alison Parker and Adam Ward as Payback for Charleston (VIDEO)

From Jessica Chasmar, on Twitter, "Flanagan says God told him to kill Parker and Ward as Charleston payback."

The suspect apparently wrote that he "put down a deposit for a gun on 6/19/15. The Church shooting in Charleston happened on 6/17/15."

See also, ABC News, "After Shooting, Alleged Gunman Details Grievances in ‘Suicide Notes’."



Police: Vester Lee Flanagan Dead, Shot Himself After Killing Journalists During Live Broadcast

Initial reports said that the suspect attempted suicide, but was taken to a hospital. But CNN reports that he died after shooting himself as he was being apprehended by law enforcement.

See, "Police: Bryce Williams fatally shoots self after killing journalists on air."

And WDBJ General Manager Jeff Marks says Alison Parker and Adam Ward were "exuberant and energetic" people. "They were pros." Watch:



PREVIOUSLY: "Vester Lee Flanagan, #WDBJ Shooting Suspect, Angry Black Democrat, Disciplined for Wearing 'Barack Obama Sticker' at Work."

Vester Lee Flanagan, #WDBJ Shooting Suspect, Angry Black Democrat, Disciplined for Wearing 'Barack Obama Sticker' at Work

They said we'd have crazed gunman shooting up innocent media reporters if I voted for Mitt Romney and they were right!

At the Huffington Post (via Dana Loesch), "Alleged Virginia Shooter Requested Personnel Records on Victims":

According to an internal memo included in the court documents, after Flanagan was presented with a severance letter in February 2013, he said, "You better call police because I'm going to make a big stink." A newsroom employee called 911, and police officers arrived to physically escort Flanagan from the building.

Memos indicate that Ward videotaped Flanagan as he was escorted out. Flanagan told Ward to “lose your big gut,” and flipped off the camera.

WDBJ objected to Flanagan’s request for employee documents, claiming the personnel records were proprietary information and irrelevant to his claims.

The court filings also include Flanagan’s application for employment at WDBJ and his resume, in which he reported graduating from San Francisco State University with a 3.7 grade point average and his affiliation with the National Association of Black Journalists.

Flanagan was offered a position with WDBJ on March 6, 2012, as a multimedia journalist/general assignment reporter with an annual salary of $36,000. However, he quickly racked up a misconduct record during his year of employment.

In a performance review in August 2012, Flanagan was given a “1,” the lowest rating, for being “respectful to coworkers at all times,” but a “4” for work diligence and attendance. He was written up in November 2012 for wearing a Barack Obama sticker...
RTWT.

Plus, at Gateway Pundit, "BREAKING: WDBJ SHOOTER WAS ANGRY GAY BLACK DEMOCRAT – WAS REPRIMANDED FOR WEARING OBAMA STICKER."

BONUS: At CNN, "#WDBJ TV officials called 911 & some employees hid behind locked door when shooter was fired." Well, yeah, those Obama-Democrat activists are pretty dangerous. Don't forget the guy from Staten Island, "Garland Tyree, Shooter in Staten Island Standoff, Was Democrat Party Activist and Community Organizer (PHOTOS)."

Hillary Clinton: 'We Have Got to Do Something About Gun Violence' (VIDEO)

At the Wall Street Journal, "Hillary Clinton on Virginia TV Shooting: ‘We Must Act to Stop Gun Violence’."



PREVIOUSLY: "Reporter Alison Parker and Photographer Adam Ward Shot and Killed During Live Broadcast (VIDEO)."

ADDED: At Twitchy, "‘Ever the opportunist’: Hillary Clinton calls for action to ‘stop gun violence’ after #WDBJ murders."

Tiny Makeshift Houses Used by Homeless Could Soon Be Removed by the City of Los Angeles (VIDEO)

Well, if the homeless have these little houses, then I guess they're not homeless. These are their homes.

But local officials want the tiny shelters to come down.

Watch, at CBS News 2 Los Angeles, "Makeshift Homes Used by Transients Could Soon Be Removed from Streets of L.A."

Little Girl's Wonder Woman Lunchbox 'Too Violent' for School

Wouldn't want one of the girls going on a violent spree with her "Wonder Woman Lunch Boxes," or anything.

At iOWNTHEWORLD Report, "School Declares Wonder Woman Lunchbox Too Violent."

More at the Metro UK, "School tells parents their daughter's Wonder Woman lunchbox is too violent."

And on Twitter.

Today's "Women's Equality Day," but apparently when it comes to little girls and super heroes, women are not only not equal, they're deemed too violent for the tender sensibilities of school children.

Oh, and I don't know what school district this is, or where this episode of stupidity took place, but I'll update if and when that information becomes available.

All New Victoria's Secret T-Shirt Bra (VIDEO)

Watch, at Theo Spark's, "Victoria’s Secret T-Shirt Bra TV Commercial (August 2015)."

Jorge Ramos Interviewed on 'CBS This Morning'

Following-up from yesterday, "'Go Back to Univision!': Donald Trump Boots Jorge Ramos from Iowa Press Conference (VIDEO)."

And at CBS, "Univision's Jorge Ramos on confrontation with Trump."

Also at CNN, "Univision's Ramos booted from Trump event."

Reporter Alison Parker and Photographer Adam Ward Shot and Killed During Live Broadcast (VIDEO)

Here's the video, "WDBJ Journalist Alison Parker and Photographer Adam Ward Shot Dead During Live TV Broadcast."

More on Facebook and Memeorandum.

And at CNN, "Shooting occurs during live television report: A reporter and cameraman from CNN affiliate WDBJ were killed during a shooting incident that occurred on live television, according to the station," and "WDBJ VP annouces death of journalists."

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

'Go Back to Univision!': Donald Trump Boots Jorge Ramos from Iowa Press Conference (VIDEO)

Heh.

At Politico, "Univision anchor Jorge Ramos gets tossed out of Donald Trump event."



Victoria's Secret Model Adriana Lima Claims She Was Duped Into Making Turkish Terror Salute (VIDEO)

Watch, at the New York Daily News, "Adriana Lima duped into making Turkish terror group salute."

More at Free Beacon, "Victoria’s Secret Model Salutes Terrorist Group That Tried to Kill Pope John Paul II," and the Jerusalem Post, "Victoria's Secret model gives terror group salute sparking outrage."

Coach Steve Sarkisian Will Enter Treatment After Drunken F-Bombs at Salute to Troy Event (VIDEO)

Here's the background, at Lost Lettermen, "Steve Sarkisian Allegedly Gets Drunk at Event, Makes Ass of Himself."

And at the O.C. Register, "VIDEO: USC football coach Steve Sarkisian says he mixed alcohol with medication, apologizes again for his behavior":

LOS ANGELES - USC coach Steve Sarkisian acknowledged he was intoxicated and again apologized for his recent behavior while meeting with the media Tuesday morning for the first time since an ugly incident at a school event over the weekend.

Sarkisian said his altered state at the annual “Salute to Troy” rally was the result of mixing unspecified medication that he takes with alcohol. He is not facing a suspension and will continue to coach the team, barring further developments.

Sarkisian did say that he will participate in a treatment program. He did not specify what that is but said it will not be full-on rehab. He also said he does not believe he has a drinking problem. Here's a full transcript of Sarkisian's remarks...
Keep reading.

Also at LAT, "Five important questions raised by Steve Sarkisian's news conference."

Here's Michael Walsh's New Book, The Devil's Pleasure Palace

I would've blogged this book sooner, but I haven't started reading it yet.

I'm ordering on Amazon, and the preview matter at the link is freakin awesome!

Here: The Devil's Pleasure Palace: The Cult of Critical Theory and the Subversion of the West.

More blogging tonight.

Andrea Tantaros: Hillary Clinton on the Verge of Political Collapse (VIDEO)

Watch: "From 'Outnumbered', August 17, 2015: Tantaros, Hillary Clinton is on the verge of political collapse."

$30 Pizzas at Lanesplitter Pizza & Pub in Emeryville

How's that minimum wage hike working out for you?

At the Los Angeles Times, "A minimum wage arms race has broken out in the Bay Area":
Nina Gates, 44, and Ira Gibson, 39, are employees of Lanesplitter Pizza & Pub in Emeryville, Calif., whose workers earn $15 to $25 an hour as part of a business model that also did away with gratuities and raised prices, making meals at all five locations “sustainably served … no tips necessary.”
 "Sustainably served," and expensive as hell.

The Fed's Stock-Price Correction

From Martin Feldstein, the George F. Baker Professor of Economics at Harvard, and former Chairman of Council of Economic Advisers during the Reagan administration, at the Wall Street Journal:
The unfolding stock-market collapse—the Dow Jones Industrial Average plummeted more than 1,000 points on Monday morning, rebounding later to nearly 600 points down, following several days of decline last week—is the inevitable result of the Federal Reserve’s policies, namely quantitative easing that produced abnormally low interest rates. The decline on Wall Street has spread to every stock market on the globe, many of which were also weakened by their own policies of excessively easy money.

When the Obama administration’s poorly designed 2009 stimulus legislation failed to produce a strong economic turnaround, then-Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke announced that the central bank would pursue an “unconventional monetary policy” by purchasing immense amounts of long-term bonds and promising to hold short-term interest rates near zero for an extended period.

Mr. Bernanke explained that the Fed’s policy was designed to drive down long-term interest rates, inducing portfolio investors to shift from bonds to stocks. This “portfolio substitution” strategy, as he labeled it, would increase share prices, raising household wealth and therefore consumer spending.

The Fed’s strategy worked, causing household net worth to increase by $10 trillion in 2013. Households responded by spending more, leading to an accelerated rise in gross domestic product and a decline in unemployment.

The increase in share prices took the price-earnings ratio of the S&P index to about 30% above its historic average before the market downturn began last week. An alternative measure of the price-earnings ratio that looks at inflation-adjusted earnings over the past decade was even higher, at more than 50% over its historic average.

With virtually no yield available on government bonds and other low-risk fixed-income securities, investors were tempted to climb on the bandwagon of rising share prices. Some sophisticated investors realized that the rapid increase of share prices was a bubble that would end when interest rates returned to normal. They invested on the mistaken theory that they would know when to pull out.

Though the recent decision to start selling was triggered by a variety of events, including the collapse of oil prices world-wide and financial chaos in China, the high price-earnings ratios were enough to make the downturn inevitable. All that was needed was a spark to start the process, just as the increased defaults of subprime mortgages did in 2007.

The excess price of equities was not the only mispricing caused by the Fed’s unconventional monetary policy. As investors reached for yield in a very low-yield environment, they depressed the spreads between Treasury rates and the yields on high-risk bonds and emerging market debt. The prices of commercial real estate have also been pushed to extremely high levels, driving down yields to unsustainably low levels. Banks and other lenders have boosted their short-term earnings by lending to lower-quality buyers and making loans with fewer conditions.

Much of this mispricing will likely unwind in the months ahead. What isn’t clear is whether the fall of equity prices and other corrections will have adverse systemic effects as they did in 2007-08, bringing down consumer spending and business investment and thereby reversing the recent labor-market improvement. Only time will tell...
Boy, that sure sounds familiar.

But keep reading.

Black Women 'Humiliated' After Getting Thrown Off Napa Wine Train for Laughing Too Loud (VIDEO)

Hey, now this is hilarious!

Throw that black mama from the wine train!

And watch, at CBS News San Francisco, "Racism Alleged In ‘Humiliating’ Ejection of Book Club Members From Napa Wine Train."

Also at the San Francisco Chronicle, via Memeorandum, "Black women ‘humiliated’ after getting kicked off Napa Valley Wine Train."

Sorry not sorry, but these big black bitches can be freakin' obnoxious as hell. I'm not surprised they got booted. Not at all.

And see Lisa Renee Johnson's Facebook thread, "Facebook Family, we have a problem!"

Young Albino Amputees from Tanzania

Well, certainly not something you see everyday.

At WSJ, "New Start in New York City for Hunted Albino Children."


Conservatives Need to 'Get Activist'

This is interesting, from Neo-Neocon, at Legal Insurrection, "Problem: Passive Right, Activist Left."

However, I don't know if conservatives are truly "passive." Are they right-wing Alinskyites? Not sure, but the tea party movement wasn't bean bag.

Investors Seek Answers Amid Stock Market Rout

You think?

Maybe they needed some faster circuit breakers, or something.

At the Wall Street Journal, "Investors Grasp for Answers Amid Wild Stock Rout":
Concerns about China’s economy intensified, accelerating the selloff across global markets as investors tried to assess whether the rout was just a short-term pullback or a signal of deeper trouble.

The market misery marched from China though Europe to the U.S., where the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 1,089 points Monday morning—the worst intraday drop in its history—then popped back up like a cork and fell again in a jagged line to finish 588.40 points down, extending a slide that has left the blue-chip index off 11% this year.

European and Asian shares suffered even deeper declines, with the Shanghai Composite Index tumbling 8.5%, entering negative territory for 2015, having risen as much as 60% at its peak in June.

“Meltdown was the only word that can be used to describe price action in equities,” said ANZ Bank Senior Economist Mark Smith.

Asian stocks continued to be volatile early Tuesday in China, though markets elsewhere in the region showed signs of tempering. China’s Shanghai Composite opened 6.4% lower.

On Monday, oil slid below $39 a barrel in New York, and emerging-market currencies like Turkey’s lira and Russia’s ruble fell against the dollar.

The euro and U.S. Treasurys were notable exceptions, gaining in value as investors sought out safer havens for their money.

Richard Madigan, chief investment officer of J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.’s private bank, called an emergency investment committee meeting following the morning drop in U.S. stocks. The executives spent more than an hour discussing what they were seeing and what had changed.

“Some of this is knowing what you don’t know,” Mr. Madigan said. “And not trying to overthink what we’re seeing but just try to understand what is real, fundamental and deserved…what may create opportunities.”

The severity of the selloff in stocks—shares of J.P. Morgan were down more than 20% at one point early Monday—confounded some observers, because the U.S. economy is showing few of the red flags that preceded major market downturns in the past. The economy continues to expand, corporate earnings outside the energy sector are staying aloft, and credit remains widely available at historically low interest rates even for some junk-rated companies.

Still, the risk is that the market turmoil could spill over into the U.S. economy if the selloff persists. The wide-ranging declines are already raising concerns for officials around the world, notably the Federal Reserve, where officials are debating whether to raise interest rates this year. Beyond that, the rise in the euro and turbulence in emerging markets are threatening the already shaky growth in Europe’s export-driven economies.

Meanwhile, China is pursuing new measures to boost lending and economic growth. The sharp drop in the Shanghai Composite, its worst single-day percentage decline in more than eight years, rippled across Asia, with Japan’s Nikkei Stock Average dropping 4.6% and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 index falling 4.1%...
More.