Cancel culture strikes again
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wrote on 22 Jun 2020, 18:22 last edited by
All history is tainted. Erase it all.
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wrote on 22 Jun 2020, 20:32 last edited by Larry
Trying to find the pearl buried in this shit pile, once they have erased all record of slavery, when they start kissing and moaning about slavery we can say "what slavery? Prove it or it didn't happen...."
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wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 11:34 last edited by George K
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wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 11:36 last edited by
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wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 14:54 last edited by
Christ
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wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 14:55 last edited by
Shaun King is reliable.
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I’m surprised the Andrew Jackson statue in Lafayette Park wasn’t torn down earlier this month.
wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 16:25 last edited by@89th said in Cancel culture strikes again:
I’m surprised the Andrew Jackson statue in Lafayette Park wasn’t torn down earlier this month.
https://news.yahoo.com/protesters-try-pull-down-andrew-022526909.html
They tried last night.
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wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 16:37 last edited by
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wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 16:37 last edited by
Absolutely LOVE this move by Trump.
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wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 16:42 last edited by
Do it
Lock 'em up
Retroactively would be great, get them all, every single one
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wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 17:08 last edited by
So when are the mosques going to start coming down? I mean, Islam does have a history tied up with slavery, doesn’t it?
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wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 17:18 last edited by
Indeed Islam does and in some places continues to do so. But that is an inconvenient truth best left alone.
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wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 17:24 last edited by Catseye3
From Connecting Vets.Radio.com:
"The Veterans' Memorial Preservation and Recognition Act of
2003
establishes criminal penalties for anyone who "willfully injures or destroys, or attempts to injure or destroy ...veterans' memorials" including "any structure, plaque, statue or other monument on public property commemorating the service of any person or persons in the armed forces of the United States."
Under that statute, anyone convicted of those acts could be fined and/or imprisoned for
no more than 10 years,
or both."
Oh, well. His heart's in the right place.
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wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 18:14 last edited by
Robert Downey Jr remains untouchable... good.
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From Connecting Vets.Radio.com:
"The Veterans' Memorial Preservation and Recognition Act of
2003
establishes criminal penalties for anyone who "willfully injures or destroys, or attempts to injure or destroy ...veterans' memorials" including "any structure, plaque, statue or other monument on public property commemorating the service of any person or persons in the armed forces of the United States."
Under that statute, anyone convicted of those acts could be fined and/or imprisoned for
no more than 10 years,
or both."
Oh, well. His heart's in the right place.
wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 18:20 last edited by@Catseye3 said in Cancel culture strikes again:
From Connecting Vets.Radio.com:
"The Veterans' Memorial Preservation and Recognition Act of
2003
establishes criminal penalties for anyone who "willfully injures or destroys, or attempts to injure or destroy ...veterans' memorials" including "any structure, plaque, statue or other monument on public property commemorating the service of any person or persons in the armed forces of the United States."
Under that statute, anyone convicted of those acts could be fined and/or imprisoned for
no more than 10 years,
or both."
Oh, well. His heart's in the right place.
Cats, I don’t get your point. Trump says they can be sentenced up to 10 years, which is what the law states as well...Your post reads like you believe the law expired in 10 years. It didn’t, that was just the sentencing limit.
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wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 18:49 last edited by
@LuFins: No, that's not it. His tweet reads "I have authorized the Federal Government . . . " His authorization isn't needed. The authorization was in force at the moment the VMPA passed into law. He makes it sound like he reintroduced it somehow. He had nothing to do with it.
The vandals committed criminal acts, and have not been apprehended. Unless they are identified and caught, his tweet is doubly pointless -- as is the threat of 10 years imprisonment.
Sure sounds presidential, though!
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wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 19:07 last edited by
I think his tweet says he authorizes the ARREST, and then from there the charges would follow the Act's punishment guidelines.
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wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 19:08 last edited by
His authorization for the arrest isn't needed; it's already in the law.
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wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 19:19 last edited by
Then it reemphasizes it.
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wrote on 23 Jun 2020, 19:22 last edited by LuFins Dad
@Catseye3 said in Cancel culture strikes again:
His authorization for the arrest isn't needed; it's already in the law.
Correct, but as the executive, the agencies generally follow his guidance regarding enforcement. To this point they have refrained from enforcing the law. Now he is instructing them to actively enforce and prosecute.