Conservative pundit Dave Rubin referred to new White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre as a “Black lesbo” and claimed that she only got the job because of her identity. Rubin is a member of the LGBTQ community himself as a gay man, making his comments even more disparaging and curious. Cenk Uygur and Ana Kasparian discuss on The Young Turks.
“Blaze TV host Dave Rubin called the new White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre a “Black lesbo” during a recent podcast episode. On Monday’s episode of The Rubin Report, Rubin began to discuss current White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki announcing her departure and introducing her successor. “She will now be replaced by Karine Jean-Pierre,” said Rubin. “We know nothing about her other than the most important things — she’s a Black lesbo. And for that, she’s got the gig.” “Very exciting,” he added. “She’s also married to a CNN anchor. You can’t make this stuff up. She’s married to Suzanne Malveaux who’s a CNN anchor. I did not know Suzanne is a lesbian. Not that there’s anything wrong with that.” He continued, “You would think in terms of optics, if you were bringing in a new White House Press Secretary, you could maybe, possibly, find someone who wasn’t married to a CNN anchor.” “Do you think that would be possible?” Rubin asked. “But, the impossible is possible with these people.” Rubin, who is also a member of the LGBTQ community, recently received backlash from his own audience after making the announcement that he is set to welcome two children in 2022 with husband David.”
I am the youngest public plaintiff in the “Don’t Say Gay” lawsuit. I am my Florida high school’s first openly-gay Class President. I am being silenced, and I need your help. 🧵
A few days ago, my principal called me into his office and informed me that if my graduation speech referenced my activism or role as a plaintiff in the lawsuit, school administration had a signal to cut off my microphone, end my speech, and halt the ceremony. (2/8)
I am the first openly-gay Class President in my school’s history–this censorship seems to show that they want me to be the last. This threat is not the first that I have received from administration about my queer rights. (3/8)
When administration discovered that I was organizing a Say Gay walkout, they had all our posters ripped from the walls and told me to shut down the protest. They said they would send school security if I did not listen. (4/8)
I held the walkout anyways, and it became our county’s largest protest. I won’t give into threats and I won’t be silenced. I have a plan to fight back again, and this time, I need your help. (5/8)
The SEE Initiative has secured 10,000 Say Gay stickers that we’re prepared to ship to high school seniors across Florida. We want you to wear them on your gowns as you cross the graduation stage, reminding underclassmen that we’re done with highschool, not the fight. (6/8)
For those not familiar with Dave Rubin he has a history. He is after the big bucks. He used to be a liberal / progressive and was on the TYT network. But that doesn’t pay the big bucks so he switched becoming a right wing token gay on The Blase network spouting far right talking points. TheBlaze was a pay television network founded by Glenn Beck. Rubin became wealthy, bought a mansion and cozied up to people that hated him for being gay and insulted Rubins same sex marriage to his face on his own show. Then Rubin said he was moving to the maga haven of Florida from the evil liberal California. That is when his well paying buddies turned on him. See Dave Rubin announced in March that he and his husband, David Janet, had fathered children through In Vitro Fertilization and surrogacy. The right attacked him, his spouse, the babies and are being vicious to him. He is shock by it, they are supposed to attack the other LGBTQ+ but leave him alone as his is their token gay. I am not sure but I heard that Beck turned on him and his show was moved to a crowd funded platform he co-founded. He is a gay version of Candice Owens, a token who spouts what the right wants to hear that the right uses to claim that even gay people (black in Owens case) support their wild ideas.
“She [Jen Psaki] will now be replaced by Karine Jean-Pierre. We know nothing about her other than the most important things — she’s a Black lesbo.
“And for that, she’s got the gig. Very exciting. She’s also married to a CNN anchor. You can’t make this stuff up.
“She’s married to Suzanne Malveaux who’s a CNN anchor. I did not know Suzanne is a lesbian. Not that there’s anything wrong with that.”
“You would think in terms of optics, if you were bringing in a new White House press secretary, you could possibly find someone who wasn’t married to a CNN anchor.
“Do you think that would be possible? But the impossible is possible with these people.” – Homocon podcaster Dave Rubin, on today’s show.
Yes, there are such things as self-hating gay people.
Also gay men who are obviously misogynists, too.
He claims to know all these personal relationship things about Ms. Jean-Pierre, but not a fucking thing about her career or qualifications. When he says “we know nothing,” he’s confessing both is own personal ignorance and lack of caring to go find out.
She has a long history in both politics and press relations dating back to the beginning of the Obama administration.
Misogyny isn’t limited to men in the LGBT world. There are clearly some conservative, lesbian and transgender female misogynists too, not to mention some misandrists of all genders in the LGBT community.
The members of the anti-transgender cults (aka TERFs) which closely work with far-right religious groups like the Heratige Foundation and Liberty Council, are some of the worst misogynists because on one hand they (falsely) claim to be feminists, then support the most misogynistic, anti-feminist groups around.
Western society is institutionally misogynistic (and racist, homophobic, transphobic, and all the rest of it). We have to unlearn the bigotries we absorb. A lot of people don’t bother.
It’s a good deal of work to root out all the racism and sexism and other bigotry we were indoctrinated with and discard it. I know I’m not done, but I am working on it. Some lgbt people just double down on it. I don’t get it.
She’s black and lesbian and therefore must not be as qualified as any white straight man who was under consideration for the job.
Seriously, Rubin just gets more deranged. I guess that’s what happens when you turn on your own community for a gig. No friends except for people who don’t believe he should have any rights. I’d rather starve.
Tennessee cops bust down the door of a 16-year-old transgender girl while she was playing Minecraft on a Twitch live stream for being truant from school. As it turns out, the school rejected her use of her preferred bathroom and was pressured into going to school online, and since she protested the online schooling, she was taken away into foster care. Cenk Uygur and Ana Kasparian discuss on The Young Turks.
Read more HERE: https://twitter.com/keffals/status/15… “a 16-year-old trans girl from Tennessee was denied an education because she wasn’t allowed to use the correct washroom. the state decided she was truant. while playing minecraft, cops busted her bedroom door down and before dragging her into foster care asked “are you winning””
State officials freed up cash for Operation Lone Star with the help of federal funds meant to respond to the coronavirus crisis.
BY TONY ROMM, THE WASHINGTON POST
State Troopers arrest an undocumented Mexican migrant for trespassing as part of Operation Lone Star after he was caught with others in private property in Kinney County, Texas on Nov. 9, 2021. Credit: Verónica G. Cárdenas for The Texas Tribune/ProPublica
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Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and top state lawmakers shifted around roughly $1 billion in federal coronavirus aid to help pay for their campaign to arrest migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border, exposing gaps in a law meant to bolster the country’s response to the ongoing pandemic.
Relying on the availability of generous federal relief funds, Texas repeatedly in recent months rerouted state money toward its controversial immigration crackdown — all without leaving a massive hole in its budget. But critics say the money would have been put to better use tending to a public health crisis that has killed more than 86,000 people in the state.
The trouble centers on Operation Lone Star, an initiative announced by Abbott last year, when he promised that law enforcement would “start arresting everybody” crossing the U.S.-Mexico border illegally. The campaign, which detains migrants on state trespassing and other charges, relies on extensive and expensive deployments of National Guard troops.
Civil rights groups have widely derided the effort as discriminatory — and some have urged the Biden administration to intervene — calling it a harmful political stunt by a Republican governor who harbors aspirations for the presidency. The operation even has seen Texas send buses of arrested migrants to other cities, including Washington, as Abbott argues his state “should not have to bear the burden” at the border.
But the program also has been expensive, and to help pay for it, Texas has eased the financial burden using money received under a 2020 law meant to help states battle the coronavirus. The state did so through a series of little-noticed “swaps,” in the words of one aide to the governor, who explained the setup to state lawmakers at a hearing in early April.
Essentially, Texas this year transferred money away from its public health and safety agencies and to the governor’s office to administer Operation Lone Star. That cash, totaling nearly $1 billion, was available because the state had backfilled those same public health and safety agencies with stimulus funds it received from Washington, according to interviews with local officials, submissions to the Texas legislature and missives from the governor’s office itself.
The moves appear to be legal under the stimulus law known as the Cares Act, enacted in March 2020. Congress never prohibited states from rejiggering their budgets to take full advantage of a program called the Coronavirus Relief Fund, which aimed to help cities and states pay front-line workers, purchase supplies and tend to other pandemic needs. The approach helped states save their money, which some local governments later reinvested in their efforts to arrest the spread of the virus. Others, like Texas, however, seized on the federal program to redirect their newly found savings for unrelated uses — including immigration enforcement.
Congress initially had considered barring such a practice, prohibiting states from “supplanting” their own spending with generous federal aid, according to an early version of the Cares Act obtained by The Post. But lawmakers opted against including any such restrictions in the bill they sent to then-President Donald Trump that spring. More than two years later, the result has frustrated local advocates, who say that Texas should have spent its savings far differently — helping Americans who were out of work, at risk of losing their homes or facing unprecedented financial constraints.
“At this point, they’re just trying to go back and refinance state payroll expenses to come up with general revenue that can be spent today,” said Eva DeLuna Castro, a program director overseeing fiscal and budget policy for Every Texan, a left-leaning advocacy group that has argued for more health-care and education spending. “When we get federal money and there’s any flexibility attached to it,” she added, “the first instinct is, ‘How can I use this dollar instead of a state tax dollar?’”
Asked about the funding, Renae Eze, a spokeswoman for Abbott, attacked the Biden administration for creating “an ongoing crisis along our southern border and throughout Texas, with millions of illegal immigrants from over 150 countries surging across the border.” Without addressing the funding, she added in a statement: “The President continues turning a blind eye to the suffering of Texans, as his administration dumps migrants in our border communities that are already overwhelmed and overrun by the historic level of illegal crossings.”
The White House did not respond to a request for comment. The Treasury Department said it is reviewing the spending in Texas — as well as every other state — as part of its normal diligence over such stimulus expenses.
For Washington, the windfall that federal lawmakers granted to states over the past two years has proved to be one of its most vexing fiscal challenges in the still-simmering pandemic.
Dating back to the earliest days of the crisis, Congress approved a series of rescue packages that in total set aside about $500 billion for local governments believed to be in financial peril. The money complemented the trillions of dollars in direct housing, education, health-care and nutrition assistance that lawmakers asked states to manage and disburse with record speed.
The wellspring of local aid marked an attempt to stave off a deeper recession, as lawmakers came to fear a repeat of the financial crisis more than a decade ago — when the downturn cleaved deeply into local governments’ revenue, sparking massive layoffs that devastated local economies. Congress imposed few restrictions on how the money could be spent, hoping to give cities, counties and states great flexibility to address needs as they saw fit.
States’ finances proved more stable than some in Washington had anticipated, thanks in part to a historic burst of roughly $6 trillion in total stimulus spending. In the wake of the improvements, some local governments began to eye the federal aid as an enticing pool of cash that could free up scarce budgetary resources and pave the way for long-stalled pet projects, according to an earlier Post analysis of federal data.
Alabama devoted some of its funding toward the construction of a new prison. A Florida town channeled some toward helping to equip a forthcoming golf course. Others refurbished parks and trails, expanded airports and constructed gas pipelines — backfilling projects stalled amid the pandemic downturn even though many were not related to public health. Many of those investments came about after the adoption of the American Rescue Plan in March 2021, which allowed governments to put their cash toward projects stalled as a result of the pandemic.
But every dollar spent this way has meant one fewer dollar available in the event of a worsening public health crisis. Sensing potential trouble, the Biden administration has urged Congress in recent weeks to approve as much as $22.5 billion in new coronavirus aid, hoping to shore up the country’s reserves in the event new variants emerge. Congress has struggled to provide less than half that amount — while state governments continue to shell out sizable sums toward seemingly unrelated causes — leaving some in the nation’s capital alarmed.
Under the first major coronavirus aid package, the Cares Act, Texas received more than $8 billion in direct aid. Like other states, it was required to put that money — awarded on the basis of population — specifically toward new pandemic-related expenses. Texas predominantly tapped its funds to provide excess medical capacity at hospitals, purchase tests and protective equipment and offer hazard pay to front-line workers, according to state data furnished to the federal government.
None of the money under the program directly went toward the state’s newly enhanced campaign to find, detain and deport migrants. But state officials in recent months acknowledged that federal covid aid dollars did essentially free up other cash for the immigration crackdown, saving Texas from the need to tap its own reserves to ramp up operations at the border.
Two months after launching Operation Lone Star, the Texas legislature took a critical budgetary step that appeared to ease the cost burden of its new immigration program. Lawmakers in May 2021 approved a supplemental plan to tap $2.4 billion under the federal Coronavirus Relief Fund, which it put to use on salaries for public health and safety employees, according to state budget documents.
That approach returned money to the state’s vast, general pool of funds for use elsewhere. Lawmakers would soon tap that expanded pot in the fall: They approved an emergency spending bill in September 2021 that appropriated roughly $1.8 billion to a slew of agencies that oversee border crossings, state records show.
Most of the money went to Abbott’s office for a wide array of purposes, according to legislative documents, including improvements to local security, border-security grants, the hiring of more border officials and enhanced prosecutions of border-crossing crimes. But Operation Lone Star ultimately would prove even more expensive, requiring the state to continue to rearrange its budget with the help of federal aid. By this January, state officials had to act again: They transferred roughly $480 million from domestic agencies that had been backfilled with Cares Act money, invoking the governor’s special powers under state disaster laws.
The funding situation caught the eye of Texas lawmakers by early April, as they convened to consider Abbott’s program and the state of their border security operations generally. Pointing out that Operation Lone Star is “costing the state taxpayers about $2.5 million a week,” state Sen. Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa (D) questioned one of the governor’s top officials as to “what happens” when the latest tranche of funds runs dry.
Sarah Hicks, an adviser to Abbott on the budget, acknowledged the $480 million transfer and explained the governor’s strategy — an effort to “maximize that use” of federal funds on public health “to the benefit” of the state’s coffers.
“For the agency, it was a dollar for dollar,” Hicks said. “It was just a swap.”
Hicks would go on to fault the federal government for failing to provide direct border assistance to Texas, adding there is a “strong possibility next spring that Congress looks a little bit different” since “elections ultimately matter.”
Until then, though, she said there would be “funds available and salaries to do another $600 million-plus in salary swaps” in the months to come — potentially freeing up even greater sums for border operations.
“I don’t think we’re going to look up in April and say, oh shoot, there’s nothing possible to do here,” Hicks said. She did not respond to a request for comment.
About four weeks later, six Texas agencies put Hicks’s comments into motion. They transferred about $495 million to the governor in late April “to support the deployment of the National Guard” and other border-related operations, according to a letter from Abbott’s office. The missive only said that the transfer had been “fully funded with other sources,” without specifying any, adding that the move “will not affect any agency or program function.”
But a top official on the Legislative Budget Board, a fiscal advisory arm for state lawmakers, confirmed a week later that the governor had additional funds “available to it through the Cares Act” that it ultimately “gave to the agencies for public safety and public health employee salaries.” Testifying at a state House hearing in early May, Katy Fallon-Brown said the decision “freed up general revenue” that the governor’s office took over, putting it to use on its immigration enforcement campaign.
A related presentation, shared with lawmakers, in total details about $4 billion in border security appropriations over the past year. In a subsequent statement, the Legislative Budget Board confirmed that at least $975 million “are related to the general revenue freed up from the application of additional [stimulus] dollars.” Some experts, however, say the amount of federal aid involved reaches into the billions given the extent to which the key Cares Act program had allowed Texas to save money over the past year.
The entire arrangement has troubled civil rights advocates, who have asked the Justice Department in Washington to open an investigation into Operation Lone Star broadly. In a complaint filed last year, the ACLU of Texas has stressed that the crackdown on migrants violated federal civil rights laws. Such a finding would warrant a clawback of some of the state’s coronavirus aid, the group has argued, since federal law prohibits the government from providing help to state agencies engaging in abuse.
Kate Huddleston, a staff attorney at ACLU of Texas, said this week that the Biden administration has not provided a “substantive update” on the request. But she lamented the use of pandemic relief dollars as one of the problems in the state’s controversial immigration campaign.
“Gov. Abbott has poured money into Operation Lone Star that could be going toward literally anything actually productive for the state,” Huddleston said.
Idaho’s right-wing Lt. Gov. Janice McGeachin vowed that “Christ will reign” if she is elected governor. The lieutenant governor is looking to unseat incumbent Gov. Brad Little, also a Republican, and she’s drawn the endorsement of former president Donald Trump after she defended him during an appearance on Tucker Carlson’s program on Fox News, and she has campaigned with election conspiracists such as Stew Peters.
Last month McGeachin held a rally with Peters at which he repeated his claim that COVID is caused by snake venom in the water supply meant to turn you into “Satanic hybrids.” Which is arguably better than becoming flesh-eating zombies.
In addition to Peters, who has called for executing prominent Democrats and Anthony Fauci, McGeachin’s rallies have featured a cornucopia of crazies, including white supremacists, QAnon nutbags, and militia leaders.
In March, McGeachin spoke at the convention of Holocaust-denying neo-Nazi leader Nick Fuentes. Which is what Jesus would want.
On two occasions last year, McGeachin took advantage of Gov. Brad Little’s out of state trips to issue orders repealing his COVID protocols. Little undid her stunts each time upon his return.
Idaho Lt. Gov. Janice McGeachin is not subtle about what she envisions for the state if she becomes governor: "God calls us to pick up the sword and fight, and Christ will reign in the state of Idaho." pic.twitter.com/pJcJi6yWZf
I look forward to the spirited conversation about the future of @IdahoGOP in the upcoming gubernatorial primary. Also, isn’t this the owner of the disinfecting cubes company, Don Ahern, introducing Janice in IF? #idpolpic.twitter.com/qamje5B4E7
— Rep. Greg Chaney (@gregchaneyidaho) May 19, 2021
I was watching TV yesterday with the boyfriend and a commercial came on for the batshit crazy Ark thingy. The commercial featured a daddy, mommy, and two child giraffes checking out how amazing the ark was and how much they loved the space. I thought it was just a pair, not a whole family. I guess they don’t understand their own fairy tales.
This shit is getting too crazy. Specific, obviously anti-American statements like this really should disqualify people from running. Proclaiming her religion as above everyone else’s (or lack thereof) should instantly be enough to pull her name off the ballot. How much craziness are we all to endure? Seriously, I’m glad I’m in my final stretch.
Unfortunately the book-worshippers use the Constitution like they use their Bibles: if they even read it, they try to exegize phrasings that suit their hate agendas and ignore what might constrain *them.*
Pretty sure there’s something in the very first amendment about this. I think they call these first ten amendments The Bill of Rights, or something like that. Perhaps I am just misremembering things.
Oh good. So the hungry will be fed (ample SNAP), the sick will be healed (universal health care), the rich will give to the poor (massive tax hikes for them and a massive increase in minimum wage for people who actually work), and every neighbor will be loved (no discrimination against the LGBT community). BITCH PLEASE.
The problem is the majority of this court is driven not by law but by religion. They are doing the work of their god. Same with a lot of Republican Governors who are trying to restrict the federal right of easy access to the so called abortion pills. This SCOTUS is not willing to accept any laws that allow access to abortion or access to means to do it. The people who analyze this say that the SCOTUS would simply strike down a pro-abortion law from the US congress even after saying it should be given back to the people’s representatives to decide. Because the intent is to deny abortion no matter what and they don’t mind showing the hypocrisy in their rulings to do so. They already have in the Texas anti-abortion shadow docket rulings. This is 100% religion driven. Alito given the right to write the opinion was deliberate as he is the most caustic to any allowance of abortion. The release of the opinion was designed to stop any wavering right wing judges from moving to the other side. Thank Ginni and Clarenc Thomas for the leak. Ginni Thomas already leaked other documents and things about the court when it was in the rights favor to do so. And the US moves to a theocracy unless somehow the democrats overwhelm gerrymandering and the new maga election officials to somehow fix this. But I won’t count on it as Pelosi and the Dem leadership is backing an anti-choice Dem over a pro-choice Dem. So abortion rights for women are really not that important to the Democratic leadership.
Is this what the religious SCOTUS want for US women. The men to control their lives to the point where the men get punished for a woman’s actions because women have no agency and must be controlled like livestock? We see the extremes when religion takes over a country, yet a segment of the US is driving us to that. For years people said it couldn’t happen because we have a constitution and laws … well now we see what can happen if you install religious ideologues on the highest court that makes rulings on if a law is legal, and they are driven to support their religion’s rules over the constitution’s protections. We become a country where religion becomes the most important aspect, where religion has the final say in a person’s rights or life. This so against what the founders of this country really wanted it is stunning it is happening. But one small group of the population wanted it and they worked hard through decades to get it. This is the first time ever that SCOTUS has ruled that the constitution doesn’t support existing rights. Never has SCOTUS been regressive, it was always progressive. Until it was stacked with complete republican ideologs.
“This is not about religion,” says Amna Nawaz on the heels of the Taliban’s announcement that women must cover entirely and stay indoors except for necessity. “This is about control.” »