CNN’s Brooke Baldwin on Friday had a priceless reaction to the news that
Donald Trump has fired chief White House strategist Steve Bannon,
reading headlines from the president’s “chaotic four weeks” that were so
long she had to stop and drink a cup of water.
In the 80's, if you wanted extra lives, the ability to skip levels, to be
invincible, or anything that wasn't included in your console's video
game...you were out of luck. That all changed in 1990 when Codemasters
created the Game Genie, opening the world of console video games to
amazing ways to cheat and to an extent, a form of hacking.
The Game
Genie was important not only for being a groundbreaking device but also
for establishing a legal precedent. In this video we'll take a quick
look at the Game Genie's various abilities and console versions, how it
worked, as well as its fight just to make it to the market.
Lawrence O'Donnell reacts to Donald Trump's newest lie about
fighting terrorism, as well as top Republican senator Bob Corker saying
Donald Trump lacks the "stability" and "competence" to be president.
Three different charities have cancelled scheduled events at Mar-A-Lago
after Trump’s refusal to denounce the attacks that took place over the
weekend and by aligning himself with the alt right. This is a lot of
money lost for Trump, but importantly, shows that these charities
understand that some money just isn’t worth it, and they’ll find new
venues to host their events. Ring of Fire’s Farron Cousins discusses
this.
FUCK STEVE BANNON - YOU LIVER SPOT COVERED MOTHER FUCKER
WHAT THE FUCK WERE YOU DOING IN THE WHITE HOUSE IN THE FIRST PLACE - YOU NO TALENT, COUPON CLIPPING, COPENHAGEN SNUFF DIPPING, CORN COB PIPE SMOKING, BISCUIT AND GRAVY SOPPING REDNECK
Trump is defending Confederate monuments more than Lindsey Graham. Cenk Uygur, the host of The Young Turks, breaks it down.
“Washington (CNN)The feud between President Donald Trump and Sen.
Lindsey Graham over the President's response to racially motivated
protests in Charlottesville, Virginia, continued Thursday, with the
South Carolina senator accusing Trump of stoking tensions, a claim Trump
called "a disgusting lie."
"Your tweet honoring Miss Heyer was
very nice and appropriate. Well done," the South Carolina lawmaker said
Thursday morning, referring to Heather Heyer, the 32 year old woman who
was killed in a car attack on Saturday. The man charged in her killing
has been described as a Nazi sympathizer.
"However, because of
the manner in which you have handled the Charlottesville tragedy, you
are now receiving praise from some of the most racist and hate-filled
individuals and groups in our country. For the sake of our nation -- as
our President -- please fix this."
"History is watching us all,"
added Graham, who has been one of the few Republican lawmakers to
directly denounce Trump's equivocation earlier this week between white
supremacists and those who were protesting them in Charlottesville. The
President blamed "both sides" for inciting violence and said there were
"very fine people" protesting in the Virginia city amid the
torch-bearing protesters.”
After a string of disastrous press conferences – and an overall tanking
of his presidency – Fox News host Shepard Smith admitted Wednesday that
his team of producers were unable to find a single Republican willing to
come on the air and defend Donald Trump’s disaster of a week.
When Fox
News can’t find a pro-Trump Republican, you know things are getting bad
in Trumpland.
Sherrilyn Ifill, president of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, talks with
Rachel Maddow about how Congress can do more than the bare minimum of
tweeting condemnation of racism to address the actual problem with
legislation.
Trump’s response to the Charlottesville aftermath is earning him scorn
from even his own party. Cenk Uygur, the host of The Young Turks, tells
you how the moment of truth is coming.
“(CNN)Republican lawmakers and administration aides found themselves
again Wednesday weighing the costs and benefits of remaining loyal to
President Donald Trump, whose equivocal statements about neo-Nazis and
white supremacists marked a dramatic shift in presidential rhetoric.
By
Wednesday afternoon, most appeared to have made their calculation:
deserting Trump now could only harm — and not help — their agendas or
political fortunes.
Republican leaders in Congress, including
House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell,
released statements affirming their disavowal of white supremacist
groups and neo-Nazis — but not explicitly condemning Trump, who said
Tuesday there were "very fine people" protesting in Charlottesville amid
the torch-bearing marchers.
Within the White House, Trump's
aides privately expressed indignation at the derailed news conference,
which unraveled on cable television Tuesday afternoon and has been
replayed endlessly since.
But they, too, stopped short of
declaring their consternation publicly, determined instead to remain
focused on their agenda and keep the President occupied.
Trump
himself has remained largely silent on the matter. But inside the
glassed-in confines of Trump Tower — where he remained inside for nearly
two days straight — the President was defiant in the wake of the
ensuing backlash, according to two people who visited the building on
Wednesday.”
In this ‘Dollemore Daily’ Jesse addresses Heather Heyer's memorial
service which wasn't attended by Donald Trump. Instead, he sent a
tweet... A stark juxtaposition against the actions of President Barack
Obama in the face of similar circumstances.
Roland Martin delivered a blistering commentary in response to Donald
Trump’s bizarre impromptu press conference where he doubled down on his
initial Charlottesville remarks.
Even without the violence and the tragedy, is there a lower moral
hurdle to clear than "Denounce the bastards wearing swastikas and
chanting Nazi slogans?"
And when an American citizen is killed by a terrorist in service of
one of history's most evil ideologies, is it really so much to ask of Trump, "Stand WITH us, AGAINST them?"
Apparently so.
To a nation mourning a terrorist attack, he offered neither healing
nor calm. Instead, he bragged about how well he did in the primary.
Bragged about the economy. Attacked the press. Whined. Aired old
grievances. Spit piss at John McCain for robbing him of a victory on
health care. Motherfucking boasted about owning a fucking winery in a
community still washing blood off the ground.
And all that is abominable enough.
But then he did all he could to give cover to the terrorist's
ideology. To lessen its evil. He stood at a podium adorned with the
Presidential seal, and suggested that those who opposed white supremacy
were equally as bad as those who killed in its name.
There were "very fine people" among the Nazis. The white
supremacists were the ones with the permit, so in a way, THEY have the
high ground. My God.
In his loathsome statements today, Donald Trump blamed Heather Heyer
for her own death. By standing in protest of these diseased
ideologies, Trump said, she was merely part of a regrettable morass
where everybody was a little bit right, and nobody was totally wrong.
Not even the Nazis.
Whether it's Bob Mueller dragging him out of the Oval in cuffs, or
the House GOP defensively impeaching him as his approval rating seeks
absolute zero, or H.R. McMaster slapping a straight-jacket on him before
he can order bombers to attack CNN headquarters, or even, if we
absolutely MUST wait so long, a deafening electoral avalanche in
November 2020, the day is surely coming when we will be push this
shit stain out of the People's House forever. As dark as this day is, we
WILL be rid of him.
And when he's gone, we must NEVER stop scrubbing his stink from our nation.
Every executive order will be reversed. However long it takes, we
will sandblast every molecule of his legacy from our government.
We'll rip every portrait off every wall.
Should anyone attempt to erect any monuments to this Blight on
Decency, know the sun will never set on a single one of them, we'll tear
them down so quick.
Should you break ground on a Presidential Library honoring this
indecent fuck, know that we'll salt the earth before we let you so much
as pour the foundation.
Should you slap his shitty little name on a battleship, future
generations will refuse to serve on it, and it will rust and sink,
forgotten and shunned.
We will hound Trump and Trumpism from our nation, however long it takes.
Three days after Charlottesville, Virginia, erupted into violence and racial unrest,
the family of Robert E. Lee is denouncing the white nationalist groups
who rallied and marched to preserve a statue of the long-dead Civil War
general.
"There's no place for that," Robert E. Lee V tells Newsweek,
referring to the white supremacist protesters who carried torches and
marched through Charlottesville on Friday. "There's no place for that
hate."
The statue of Lee,
which has stood in Charlottesville since 1924, is now at the center of a
racially charged conflict that has gripped the city and resulted in one woman's death. In February, the local city council decided to remove the statue from the park, noting that
for many people, such Confederate monuments are "painful reminders of
the violence and injustice of slavery and other harms of white supremacy
that are best removed from public spaces." In May, white supremacist
Richard Spencer organized a demonstration
in support of the monument, and on Friday evening, a large group of
torch-bearing white nationalist marchers descended on Charlottesville to
protest the decision to remove the statue.
Lee,
a great-great-grandson of the Confederate hero, and his sister, Tracy
Lee Crittenberger, issued a written statement on Tuesday condemning the
"hateful words and violent actions of white supremacists, the KKK or
neo-Nazis."
Then, Lee spoke with Newsweek by phone.
"We
don't believe in that whatsoever," Lee says. He is quick to defend his
ancestor's name: "Our belief is that General Lee would not tolerate that
sort of behavior either. His first thing to do after the Civil War was
to bring the Union back together, so we could become a more unified
country."
White supremacists gather under a statue of Robert E. Lee during a
rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, August 12. Lee's descendants have
denounced the violent actions that led to a counter-protester's death. Joshua Roberts/Reuters
The
general was a slave owner who led the Confederate Army of Northern
Virginia during the Civil War and who remains a folk hero throughout
much of the South.
"We don't want people to think that they can
hide behind Robert E. Lee's name and his life for these senseless acts
of violence that occurred on Saturday," Lee says.
The Lee heir says it would make sense to remove the embattled statue from public display and put it in a museum—a view shared by the great-great-grandson of Jefferson Davis.
"I
think that is absolutely an option, to move it to a museum and put it
in the proper historical context," Lee says. "Times were very different
then. We look at the institution of slavery, and it's absolutely
horrendous. Back then, times were just extremely different. We
understand that it's complicated in 2017, when you look back at that
period of time... If you want to put statues of General Lee or other
Confederate people in museums, that makes good sense."
Lee, who
works as a boys' athletic director at the Potomac School outside
Washington D.C., says that his family was raised to believe that his
great-great-grandfather "was fighting for his homeland of Virginia" and
not for the preservation of slavery.
Historians, though, typically
agree that the Confederate cause was "thoroughly identified with the
institution of slavery," to quote from Mississippi's own declaration
of secession. The Southern states that seceded were largely motivated by
a desire to continue owning and using black slaves as property. (Lee's
own personal views on slavery are commonly debated, though the general
did own slaves and, as The Atlantic notes, "raged against Republican efforts to enforce racial equality on the South.")
The debate over Confederate monuments has erupted in other cities such as New Orleans, where a statue of Jefferson Davis was recently removed, and Durham, where protesters tore down a Confederate monument on Monday evening.
For
the Lee family, the question of Confederate iconography is complicated
as their family name becomes a rallying point for white nationalists.
The younger Lee hopes that lawmakers and citizens in individual
communities will "talk it over and [decide] what makes best sense for
them in the times that we're living in today."
Lee declined to comment on Donald Trump's administration, nor on his erratic response to Charlottesville.
Here's the Lee family's statement in its entirety:
The
events of the past weekend in Charlottesville were a terrible tragedy
for America, for the state of Virginia and for us, the descendants of
General Robert E. Lee. Our family extends our deepest condolences to the
families who lost a loved one. We send our heartfelt sympathy to those
who were injured, and pray for their recovery.
General Lee's life
was about duty, honor and country. At the end of the Civil War, he
implored the nation to come together to heal our wounds and to move
forward to become a more unified nation. He never would have tolerated
the hateful words and violent actions of white supremacists, the KKK, or
Neo Nazis.
While the debate about how we memorialize figures from
our past continues, we the descendants of Robert E. Lee decry in the
strongest terms the misuse of his memory by those advancing a message of
intolerance and hate. We urge the nation’s leaders as well as local
citizens to engage in a civil, respectful and non-hateful conversation.
As
Americans and as human beings it is essential that we respect one
another and treat others as we ourselves wish to be treated. As General
Lee wrote in his diary, “the great duty of life is the promotion of the
happiness and welfare of our fellow man.”
Robert E. Lee V Great-great-grandson of General Robert E. Lee
Tracy Lee Crittenberger Great-great-granddaughter of General Robert E. Lee