JEWISH KING JESUS IS COMING AT THE RAPTURE FOR US IN THE CLOUDS-DON'T MISS IT FOR THE WORLD.THE BIBLE TAKEN LITERALLY- WHEN THE PLAIN SENSE MAKES GOOD SENSE-SEEK NO OTHER SENSE-LEST YOU END UP IN NONSENSE.GET SAVED NOW- CALL ON JESUS TODAY.THE ONLY SAVIOR OF THE WHOLE EARTH - NO OTHER. 1 COR 15:23-JESUS THE FIRST FRUITS-CHRISTIANS RAPTURED TO JESUS-FIRST FRUITS OF THE SPIRIT-23 But every man in his own order: Christ the firstfruits; afterward they that are Christ’s at his coming.ROMANS 8:23 And not only they, but ourselves also, which have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body.(THE PRE-TRIB RAPTURE)
RADICAL EXTREMIST UNRESTRAINED PERVERTS OF FREAKAZOID ZOMBIE GAYS AND BABY MURDERERS PROTESTS AND PARADES CONTINUE.
BREAKING NEWS-THE SUPREME COURT RULES YOU CAN PRAY ON SCHOOL FIELDS NOW.
Kamala
Harris tweet on abortion rights slammed by liberals: ‘Literally the
embodiment of thoughts and prayers’Pro-choice protests broke out
throughout the country after the Supreme Court decision overturning Roe
v. Wade Friday-By Lindsay Kornick | Fox News Flash top headlines for
June 26
Vice President Kamala Harris faced a rare bipartisan
attack on Twitter following a post about fighting for abortion "rights"
from Friday night.On her official vice president Twitter account, Harris
posted an image of herself watching CNN’s coverage of pro-choice
protests while flying on Air Force 2."I know there are women out there
who are afraid. To those of you who feel alone and scared: I want you to
know the President and I are fighting for you and your rights. We are
in this fight together," Harris tweeted.placeholder-After the Supreme
Court overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade case, several pro-choice protests
broke out throughout the country with riots taking place in major
cities.STACEY ABRAMS WARNS BUSINESSES TO CONSIDER ‘DANGER’ GOV. BRIAN
KEMP’S ABORTION LAWS POSE TO WOMEN IN GEORGIA Although several other
Democrat politicians denounced the court’s decision, many liberal
Twitter users called out Harris’ tweet as being too vague and
meaningless."Could you be specific? Like, *how* are you fighting?
Describe the tactics, explain the policy, give us the rundown," New York
Magazine contributor Hillary Kelly wrote.Actor James Urbaniak joked, "I
want you to know: we are watching TV.""Um. 36,000 feet above
everything, watching on a big a-- TV in a private plane, and the message
is ‘we're in this together’? I'm not sure you guys get where the rest
of us are at right now," Daily Kos writer Joan McCarter posted.AOC
WONDERS IF PRO-LIFE DEMOCRATS SHOULD CONTINUE TO SERVE: ‘WE REALLY NEED
TO REASSESS’ "Not VP Kamala Harris watching the erosion of #RoeVsWade
from her plane, at a distance. Whoever thought this was good photo-op
needs to be fired immediately. This is literally the embodiment of
thoughts and prayers," writer Anna Gifty tweeted.Sports writer Trent
Reinsmith similarly echoed, "So, more or less, 'thoughts and
prayers...'"Ernest Owens, editor-at-large for Philadelphia magazine,
tweeted to Harris, "Change his mind on this [changing the filibuster to
protect abortion rights] and I'll believe you."In 2021, court documents
indicated that Harris colluded with abortion providers as she worked a
case against pro-life journalist David Daleiden as California's Attorney
General.More recently in May, Harris met virtually with abortion
providers at the White House to discuss the potential impact of the
Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade.Lindsay Kornick is an associate
editor for Fox News Digital. Story tips can be sent to
lindsay.kornick@fox.com and on Twitter: @lmkornick.
The Hill-Tensions flare at abortion protests with arrests, clashes-Olafimihan Oshin-Sun, June 26, 2022 at 11:54 PM
Tensions
erupted between police and demonstrators during protests over the
weekend in response to the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the
constitutional right to abortions.A number of GOP-led states, mostly in
the South and Midwest, quickly implemented laws banning or restricting
abortions, while many Democrat-led states have moved forward with
measures to protect abortion access.While many protests were peaceful,
protesters were arrested in states including South Carolina and Oregon
after the Friday decision, while police also used force while
confronting demonstrators in states such as Arizona and California.Six
demonstrators arrested in South Carolina Six demonstrators were arrested
Saturday on charges stemming from interfering with police, disorderly
conduct, and resisting arrest during protests in Greenville.In a
statement on Sunday, the Greenville Police Department (GPD) said that
its officers monitored separate pro and anti-abortion demonstrations in
the city.The department added that about 400 to 500 people showed up for
the demonstration, saying that arrests happened when some demonstrators
interfered with the arrest of another protester.“On several occasions,
officers had to address people in the roadway and parties from one side
trying to go over to another,” the department said in a statement to The
Hill.“The picket was deemed an unlawful assembly, and officers
dispersed both sides,” GPD added.Ten demonstrators arrested in Oregon
Oregon authorities said they arrested ten protesters who were a part of a
large crowd in what has been called a “night of rage” on Friday
night.In a statement, Eugene Police Department (EPD) said that
protesters and police clashed at a local medical center, where a crowd
of some 75 people had gathered wearing all-black clothing, with some
picking up rocks and wearing gas masks.“An officer used a public address
system to admonish the group of more than 75 people that they were
committing disorderly conduct and were subject to arrest,” the
department said in a news release.“This had no effect on the crowd and
they advanced closer to officers. Unknown people in the crowd threw
smoke bombs at officers along with several filled water
bottles.”Authorities said that some protesters resisted, leading
officers to shoot inert pepper balls at demonstrators’ feet.Nine people
were charged with disorderly conduct, with one being additionally
charged with escape in the third degree and resisting arrest. Another
demonstrator was charged with harassment.Rhode Island candidate ends
campaign after protest incident-Jeann Lugo (R), a local police officer,
was seen on video striking Jennifer Rourke (D), his opponent in a state
Senate race, at a Roe v. Wade protest on Friday.Rourke wrote on Twitter
that Lugo had “violently attacked” her, saying, “This is what it is to
be a Black woman running for office. I won’t give up.”In a statement,
the Providence Police Department (PPD) said that Lugo has been placed on
administrative leave with pay as it investigates the matter.The
department also said that Lugo was charged with simple assault and
disorderly conduct. Lugo said in his own statement that the incident was
“very chaotic”.“As an officer that swore to protect and serve our
communities, I, unfortunately, saw myself in a situation that no
individual should see themselves in,” Lugo told the Boston Globe. “I
stepped in to protect someone that a group of agitators was
attacking.”However, Lugo on Saturday announced he was ending his Senate
campaign.Tear gas used against protesters in Arizona-Arizona state
troopers launched tear gas canisters at thousands of protesters gathers
outside the state capitol building on Friday night.Officials and
protesters issues conflicting narratives about what led to the police
action, according to the Washington Post.Republican Senate President
Karen Fann described the protest as an attempted insurrection, while
protest leaders call it an overreaction against a crowd made up mostly
of people opposed to the Supreme Court’s decision.Republican Sen.
Michelle Ugenti-Rita took videos of the scene and told the Associated
Press the protesters were trying to break the windows into the Capitol
building.“There was no other conclusion than they were interested in
being violent,” she said. “I have no other takeaway than that.Rep.
Athena Salman (D) said on Twitter that those gassed were peaceful,
noting that many of her Democratic colleagues recently voted to raise
police pay.“Some even called it historic,” she wrote. “Remember that
every time the cops gas peaceful protesters.”Actress Jodie Sweetin
shoved by police at protest in LAActress Jodie Sweetin, known for her
portrayal of Stephanie Tanner on the hit television sitcom “Full House,”
was shoved by authorities during an abortion protest on Sunday.A video
surfaced online showed the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) blocking
a group of demonstrators at a highway, where a couple of officers are
seen pushing back Sweetin, 40, who was holding a megaphone, onto the
ground.In a statement, LAPD told NBC Los Angeles that officers
responding to the scene were trying to prevent the group from overtaking
the 101 freeway.“The force used will be evaluated against the LAPD’s
policy and procedure,” the department said in a statement.In a statement
through her publicist, Sweetin said that she will continue to fight for
rights, NBC Los Angeles reported.“Our activism will continue until our
voices are heard and action is taken. This will not deter us, we will
continue fighting for our rights. We are not free until ALL of us are
free,” she said.
Anger as Mitzpe Ramon LGBT march sidelined and
counter-protest okayed on its route-Organizers file High Court petition,
denounce alleged threats from local yeshiva, after police reroute pride
parade to city’s outskirts due concerns of public disorderBy TOI
staff-JUN 27,22-Today, 12:49 pm 3
Organizers of an LGBT pride
march in the southern city of Mitzpe Ramon filed a petition Sunday with
the High Court of Justice, Israel’s top court, against a police decision
to move the event from the city center to its outskirts and instead
allow a counter-demonstration along the pride march’s original route.The
pride march, which is scheduled for Friday, had been approved by police
following a request last month, the Ynet website reported.But last
week, police notified organizers that they were changing the route due
to intelligence that indicated with “near-certainty” that marching along
the original route would cause “severe and serious harm to public
safety and public order.”According to the report, the Midbara K’Eden
yeshiva in the city had asked permission to hold a protest along a
section of the march’s approved route — and was granted it.In May, the
head of Midbara K’Eden, Rabbi Tzvi Kustiner, spoke out against the LGBT
community, which he described as “evil” and replete with violence and
sexual assault. Kustiner called on his followers: “Don’t be embarrassed,
be brave! Wherever you work, say ‘LGBTs go home!’ and ‘Homos, go
home!'”Pride march organizers told Ynet that “it is important to stress
that the struggle is over democracy. In Israel, basic human rights are
being trampled.”They said the new route takes them around the outskirts
of the city rather than through the central streets.The High Court
petition was filed on behalf of march organizers by the Keshet
non-profit, a local culture lobby group, and the Be Free Israel liberal
organization, which campaigns for policy change on religion and state.
In the petition, the groups wrote that the decision to change the pride
march route due to the counter-demonstration was “inconsistent with
common sense or the law.”Attorneys for the petitioners said in a
statement that changing the route “significantly deviates from the duty
of the police to protect public order” and that it is the
counter-demonstration that should be moved instead.“Unfortunately,
threats against the LGBT community are too often used to try and push it
to the margins of public space,” the attorneys said.They said that the
local Orthodox community is working to prevent the march from going
ahead and that the yeshiva students are inciting against the LGBT
community with flyers, hate graffiti and banners displayed from private
homes.Police said in response to Sunday’s report that “our evaluation is
based on both the intelligence picture and the situation assessments,
as in any incident, and includes overt and covert police activity before
and during the event.”They said police had yet to receive the petition
and would respond in court.“We will continue to allow freedom of
expression and protest as a matter of law,” police said.Last year,
Mitzpe Rimon Mayor Roni Marom also spoke out against the annual march —
which was being held for the first time in the city — saying it was “a
mistake” by the LGBT community “to externalize their sexuality.” The
march went ahead anyway with 300 people attending.There are often
counter-protests by extreme right and religious groups against LGBT
events in Israel, including against the Jerusalem pride march, one of
the largest held in the country. This year’s event in Jerusalem was held
under tight security after threats were made against an organizer and
lawmakers who said they would participate.Intimidation resulted in the
cancellation of this year’s pride march in Netivot, after a bullet was
sent to the mother of one of the organizers.Pride marches are held
annually in several locations across the country. Tel Aviv puts on the
largest pride, with tens of thousands of people typically attending. It
was held this year on June 10.Midbara K’Eden and its head were recently
embroiled in another controversy when students who are serving in the
IDF reportedly asked to be excused from a major exercise because there
was a female officer involved. The students reportedly consulted with
Kustiner, who told them to ask for permission to skip the drill, which
they did. Their commanding officer agreed.Although media reports claimed
Kustiner told the soldiers to refuse any order to participate, the
yeshiva later stressed that he told them only to ask for permission to
be excluded and did not tell them to disobey orders.
NYC Pride
parade stampede after fireworks mistaken for gunfire; no serious
injuries-Noise causes panic among revelers in Washington Square Park;
organizers decry ‘dangerous’ US abortion ruling amid fears it could be
start of broader push by court to curb freedoms-By AFP-JUN 27,22-Today,
10:28 am 0
NEW YORK — A stampede occurred at a Pride parade in
New York City on Sunday, with hundreds of people attempting to flee
after mistaking the sound of fireworks for gunfire, police said.“There
were NO shots fired in Washington Square Park. After an investigation,
it was determined that the sound was fireworks set off at the location,”
the NYPD said in a tweet shortly after the incident.Police told AFP
“there were no serious injuries” from the stampede.Terrified people ran
or walked briskly along a street adjacent to the square after the scare,
videos on social media showed.Tens of thousands of people attended
Sunday’s LGBTQIA+ Pride parade, which wound its way through the streets
of lower Manhattan under the blazing sun.The atmosphere was largely
festive, although the shadow of Friday’s US Supreme Court decision to
abolish a constitutional right to abortion — leaving states to legislate
on the matter themselves — loomed over proceedings. Queer and trans
people are so worried about shootings now that there was a stampede at
pride. Someone shot off fireworks in Washington Square Park and everyone
ran. pic.twitter.com/VdybnPnOIL— Eli Erlick (@EliErlick) June 27,
2022-New York’s Pride parade is the second-largest in the United States,
after San Francisco, and Sunday’s gathering was the first time it had
taken place since the COVID-19 pandemic began.Organizers said the US
Supreme Court decision on abortion was “devastating.”“This dangerous
decision puts millions in harm’s way, gives government control over our
individual freedom to choose, and sets a disturbing precedent that puts
many other constitutional rights and freedoms in jeopardy,” organizers
said.Many rights groups fear that the verdict on abortion could be the
beginning of a broader push by the Supreme Court, currently dominated by
a conservative majority, to curtail other freedoms won in recent
decades, such as rights to contraception or same-sex marriage.
CBC-Quebecers protest Roe v. Wade reversal in defiance of anti-abortion sentiments-Sun, June 26, 2022 at 3:19 p.m.
Protesters
at a Montreal abortion rights rally in solidarity with Americans
following the reversal of Roe v. Wade by the United States Supreme Court
say they fear the decision will lead to a rise in anti-abortion
sentiment in Quebec and the rest of Canada.Hundreds of Quebecers of all
ages gathered outside the Montreal courthouse Sunday afternoon amid
sweltering heat, carrying signs that said, "Solidarity and rage," "My
body, my choice" and "Access to abortion is a human right."Law student
Celeste Trianon, who spoke to the crowd at the protest, called the
decision "one of the darkest days for feminism" in an interview with
CBC."Our body autonomy as women, queer, trans and non-binary people is
under threat," Trianon said, adding they have already noticed a
galvanization among far-right, anti-abortion movements in Canada."We're
lucky that we have a society right now that is generally accepting
toward abortion … but I'm very afraid that it could turn back."Rosalie
Chretien distributed popsicles at the protest and carried a black and
white sign depicting a crying face."It's just how I reacted when I heard
the news on Friday," Chretien said. "I'm an illustrator, so I try to
convey feelings and emotions through visuals."The rally and others like
it were organized by the Fédération du Québec pour le planning des
naissances, which called on people across the province to protest in
front of their local courthouse or city hall today at noon, and to
arrive dressed in black."We're here first and foremost out of solidarity
with our American counterparts, who are being forced to carry to term
pregnancies that are unwanted," said the federation's co-director, Jess
Legault.But Legault said it was also important to show that such
setbacks would not be met with idleness."The anti-choice movement in
Quebec is seeing this as a victory, and we want to be very clear that we
will not stand by," she said.Residents in Montreal's Plateau
neighbourhood received graphic anti-abortion flyers in their mailboxes
over the weekend. Similar pamphlets have been distributed in other
Canadian cities in recent weeks, with city councils looking into
preventing them from being handed out.Montreal Councillor Marie Plourded
tweeted that she also received one of the flyers and said she was
"outraged."Several Quebec politicians have come out against the decision
in the U.S., decrying the sudden overturn of the 50-year-old ruling
that had enshrined abortion as a right in the country.Manon Massé, the
co-spokesperson of Québec Solidaire, was at the protest, and called on
the provincial government to study and improve abortion access in
Quebec, where most clinics are located in urban areas.Massé said Quebec
must show its solidarity with Americans, and open its doors to those in
need of abortions."It's vulnerable women who are going to be the ones to
lose access," she said."As feminists, we must continue to do our work,
so that these things don't happen.… Women in Quebec and Canada have to
be aware that our rights are very fragile. They can be stepped back at
any time."Other politicians expressed their dismay on social media.'Dark
day'"I am outraged by the reversal of the Roe v. Wade decision, and in
solidarity with all American women whose right to their own bodies is
being violated," Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante wrote on Twitter
Friday."This decision is an unacceptable setback. Let us denounce it
forcefully and vigorously, here and elsewhere."Quebec Liberal leader
Dominique Anglade wrote that it was a "dark day for women and their
rights, and freedoms.""We must continue to fight so that our daughters
always have more rights than us, not fewer," Anglade added.Quebec
Premier François Legault wrote that it was a "sad setback for women's
rights," after the provincial minister for the status of women, Isabelle
Charest, posted that her "heart goes out to American women."Charest
said that in Quebec, "we will never allow this right to be called into
question."
Bad sign for Democrats as more than 1 million voters switch to GOP-Published: Jun. 27, 2022, 3:39 a.m.By Associated Press
WASHINGTON
— A political shift is beginning to take hold across the U.S. as tens
of thousands of suburban swing voters who helped fuel the Democratic
Party’s gains in recent years are becoming Republicans.More than 1
million voters across 43 states have switched to the Republican Party
over the last year, according to voter registration data analyzed by The
Associated Press. The previously unreported number reflects a
phenomenon that is playing out in virtually every region of the country —
Democratic and Republican states along with cities and small towns — in
the period since President Joe Biden replaced former President Donald
Trump.But nowhere is the shift more pronounced — and dangerous for
Democrats — than in the suburbs, where well-educated swing voters who
turned against Trump’s Republican Party in recent years appear to be
swinging back. Over the last year, far more people are switching to the
GOP across suburban counties from Denver to Atlanta and Pittsburgh and
Cleveland. Republicans also gained ground in counties around medium-size
cities such as Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; Raleigh, North Carolina;
Augusta, Georgia; and Des Moines, Iowa.Ben Smith, who lives in suburban
Larimer County, Colorado, north of Denver, said he reluctantly
registered as a Republican earlier in the year after becoming
increasingly concerned about the Democrats’ support in some localities
for mandatory COVID-19 vaccines, the party’s inability to quell violent
crime and its frequent focus on racial justice.“It’s more so a rejection
of the left than embracing the right,” said Smith, a 37-year-old
professional counselor whose transition away from the Democratic Party
began five or six years ago when he registered as a libertarian.The AP
examined nearly 1.7 million voters who had likely switched affiliations
across 42 states for which there is data over the last 12 months,
according to L2, a political data firm. L2 uses a combination of state
voter records and statistical modeling to determine party affiliation.
While party switching is not uncommon, the data shows a definite
reversal from the period while Trump was in office, when Democrats
enjoyed a slight edge in the number of party switchers nationwide.But
over the last year, roughly two-thirds of the 1.7 million voters who
changed their party affiliation shifted to the Republican Party. In all,
more than 1 million people became Republicans compared to about 630,000
who became Democrats.The broad migration of more than 1 million voters,
a small portion of the overall U.S. electorate, does not ensure
widespread Republican success in the November midterm elections, which
will determine control of Congress and dozens of governorships.
Democrats are hoping the Supreme Court’s decision on Friday to overrule
Roe v. Wade will energize supporters, particularly in the suburbs, ahead
of the midterms.Still, the details about party switchers present a dire
warning for Democrats who were already concerned about the macro
effects shaping the political landscape this fall.Roughly four months
before Election Day, Democrats have no clear strategy to address Biden’s
weak popularity and voters’ overwhelming fear that the country is
headed in the wrong direction with their party in charge. And while
Republicans have offered few policy solutions of their own, the GOP has
been working effectively to capitalize on the Democrats’
shortcomings.Republicans benefited last year as suburban parents grew
increasingly frustrated by prolonged pandemic-related schools closures.
And as inflation intensified more recently, the Republican National
Committee has been hosting voter registration events at gas stations in
suburban areas across swing states like Arizona, Michigan, Nevada and
Pennsylvania to link the Biden administration to record-high gas prices.
The GOP has also linked the Democratic president to an ongoing baby
formula shortage.“Biden and Democrats are woefully out of touch with the
American people, and that’s why voters are flocking to the Republican
Party in droves,” RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel told the AP. She predicted
that “American suburbs will trend red for cycles to come” because of
“Biden’s gas hike, the open border crisis, baby formula shortage and
rising crime.”The Democratic National Committee declined to comment when
asked about the recent surge in voters switching to the GOP.And while
Republican officials are quick to take credit for the shift, the
phenomenon gained momentum shortly after Trump left the White House.
Still, the specific reason or reasons for the shift remain unclear.At
least some of the newly registered Republicans are actually Democrats
who crossed over to vote against Trump-backed candidates in GOP
primaries. Such voters are likely to vote Democratic again this
November.But the scope and breadth of the party switching suggests
something much bigger at play.Over the last year, nearly every state —
even those without high-profile Republican primaries — moved in the same
direction as voters by the thousand became Republicans. Only Virginia,
which held off-year elections in 2021, saw Democrats notably trending up
over the last year. But even there, Democrats were wiped out in last
fall’s statewide elections.In Iowa, Democrats used to hold the advantage
in party changers by a 2-to-1 margin. That’s flipped over the last
year, with Republicans ahead by a similar amount. The same dramatic
shift is playing out in Ohio.In Florida, Republicans captured 58 percent
of party switchers during those last years of the Trump era. Now, over
the last year, they command 70 percent. And in Pennsylvania, the
Republicans went from 58 to 63 percent of party changers.The current
advantage for Republicans among party changers is playing out with
particular ferocity in the nation’s suburbs.The AP found that the
Republican advantage was larger in suburban “fringe” counties, based on
classifications from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
compared to smaller towns and counties. Republicans boosted their share
of party changers in 168 of 235 suburban counties AP examined — 72
percent — over the last year, compared with the last years of the Trump
era.These included suburban counties across Georgia, Iowa, North
Carolina, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Ohio, Virginia and Washington
state.Republicans also gained ground in further-out suburban counties,
which the CDC lumps in with medium-size cities and calls “medium metro” —
more than 62 percent of such counties, 164 in all, saw Republican
growth. They range from the suburban counties north of Denver, like
Larimer, to Los Angeles-area ones like Ventura and Santa Barbara in
California.The Republican advantage was nearly universal, but it was
stronger in some places than others.For example, in Lorain County, Ohio,
just outside Cleveland, nearly every party switcher over the last year
has gone Republican. That’s even as Democrats captured three-quarters of
those changing parties in the same county during end of the Trump
era.Some conservative leaders worry that the GOP’s suburban gains will
be limited if Republicans don’t do a better job explaining to suburban
voters what they stand for — instead of what they stand against.Emily
Seidel, who leads the Koch-backed grassroots organization Americans for
Prosperity, said her network is seeing first-hand that suburban voters
are distancing themselves from Democrats who represent “extreme policy
positions.”“But that doesn’t mean that they’re ready to vote against
those lawmakers either. Frankly, they’re skeptical of both options that
they have,” Seidel said. “The lesson here: Candidates have to make their
case, they have to give voters something to be for, not just something
to be against.”Back in Larimer County, Colorado, 39-year-old homemaker
Jessica Kroells says she can no longer vote for Democrats, despite being
a reliable Democratic voter up until 2016.There was not a single “aha
moment” that convinced her to switch, but by 2020, she said the
Democratic Party had “left me behind.”“The party itself in no longer
Democrat, it’s progressive socialism,” she said, specifically condemning
Biden’s plan to eliminate billions of dollars in student debt.
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