Here are some of the people to thank for this blatant and despicable call to violence;
‘Put your whole d**n fingers in their salads’: Prof wants more harassment of senators in restaurants | TheBlaze
“Don’t just interrupt a Senator’s meal, y’all. Put your whole damn fingers in their salads. Take their apps and distribute them to the other diners. Bring boxes and take their food home with you on the way out,” Thomas tweeted Oct. 6, the day Judge Brett Kavanaugh was confirmed to the Supreme Court amid throngs of left-wing protesters who descended upon Washington, D.C. “They don’t deserve your civility.”
A leftist mob harassed Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and his wife in the nation’s capital in late September. And the left-wing group that posted video of this incident added a chilling promise to Cruz, President Donald Trump, Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, and “right-wing scum” in general: “You are not safe. We will find you.”
What did an Ole Miss official say?
“A recent social media post by a UM faculty member did not reflect the values articulated by the university, such as respect for the dignity of each individual and civility and fairness,” Ole Miss Chancellor Jeffrey Vitter wrote in a Facebook post Sunday without naming Thomas. “While I passionately support free speech, I condemn statements that encourage acts of aggression. I urge all members of the Ole Miss community to demonstrate civility and respect for others and to honor the ideal of diversity of thought that is a foundational element of the academy.”
How did one politician respond?
Chris McDaniel, a Republican Mississippi state senator and independent candidate for U.S. Senate, called Thomas a “low-life liberal,” according to the Daily Mississippian.
“Another threat from another low-life liberal — this time it’s from an Ole Miss professor,” McDaniel wrote on Facebook, the paper said. “Disgusting. It’s time for disciplinary action.”
How did Thomas respond to the outrage?
“Run for office. Get elected. Pass legislation that harms large groups of people. And I will stick my whole foot in your lunch. Deal?” he wrote Saturday, according to Fox News.
The network added that Thomas also said if he’s given a sabbatical, he’ll write his fifth book and is “committed to helping strengthen Democratic Socialists as a viable political alternative, so I’ll do that in my spare time.”
Thomas told the Daily Mississippian he’s “guessing” the Ole Miss chancellor’s statement was directed at him, “but you’d need to ask [Vitter] since he wrote it. Only he would know who he was directing it toward. I support the chancellor’s right to free speech and to express himself through his social media. The free exchange of ideas is a hallmark of higher education.”
Campus Reform said when it called Thomas’ office for comment, he hung up the phone— and the school didn’t respond to the outlet, either.
Prominent Democrats encouraging bad behavior
The political landscape has become increasingly unbridled this year with conservative figures other than Cruz getting heckled and punched and kicked out of restaurants — and prominent Democrats have been encouraging such behavior.
Hillary Clinton said in an interview last week that “you cannot be civil” with Republicans and that “civility can start again” if the Democrats win back the U.S. Senate, the House of Representatives, or both come November.
Former Attorney General Eric Holder recently was caught on video turning around the Democratic mantra, “When they go low, we go high,” by saying, “No, no. When they go low, we kick them!”
U.S. Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey in July urged activists in Washington, D.C., to “go to the Hill” and “get up in the face of some congresspeople.”
U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters of California in June infamously ranted to supporters to “create a crowd” and “push back on” members of President Donald Trump’s cabinet if they’re seen “in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station.” She added in her speech, “You tell them they’re not welcome anymore, anywhere.”
In recent days, the ante only seems to have been upped:
An official with Minnesota’s Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party commented on Facebook that Republicans should be brought “to the guillotines” Nov. 7 — the day after the midterm elections — which earned the official a weeklong suspension.
The campaign manager for Nevada Republican gubernatorial nominee Adam Laxalt said she was physically attacked Tuesday night in Las Vegas by a man she recognized as a liberal activist.
And a Vermont mother of two daughters who’s running as a Republican for the state’s House of Representatives said she received a left-wing death and rape threat in a pro-“Socialism” letter mailed to her home which said, “We are hunting you.”
Robert De Niro: Of course I want to punch Trump in the face
While appearing on The View Friday morning, Robert De Niro addressed controversial comments he made about wanting to punch Donald Trump in the face last year, saying his feelings haven’t changed since the former reality television host was elected president.
“I said that because he said that about somebody, that he would like to punch them in the face,” the actor told cohost Joy Behar. “How dare he say that to the crowd? How dare he say the things he does? Of course I want to punch him in the face.”
De Niro went on to clarify his comments: “It was only a symbolic thing, anyway. It wasn’t like I was going to go find him and punch him in the face. But he’s got to hear it. He’s got to hear that, you know, that’s how he makes people feel. It’s not good to feel that way. It’s not good to start that stuff up, but at the same time sometimes when people are bullies like that, that’s what you have to do to shut them up. Bully them back.”
Brennan: Trump-Putin Presser Nothing Short Of "Treasonous," "There Will Be Consequences For Him"
Former CIA director John Brennan said President Trump's behavior at his joint press conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday was "nothing short of treasonous." Brennan said Trump is "giving aid and comfort to the enemy" and warned that there will be "consequences" for him.
"When I use the term, this is 'nothing short of treasonous,' I equate it to the betrayal of one's nation, aiding, abetting, giving comfort to an enemy," Brennan said in an interview with NBC's Today on Tuesday.
“Don’t just interrupt a Senator’s meal, y’all. Put your whole damn fingers in their salads. Take their apps and distribute them to the other diners. Bring boxes and take their food home with you on the way out,” Thomas tweeted Oct. 6, the day Judge Brett Kavanaugh was confirmed to the Supreme Court amid throngs of left-wing protesters who descended upon Washington, D.C. “They don’t deserve your civility.”
A leftist mob harassed Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and his wife in the nation’s capital in late September. And the left-wing group that posted video of this incident added a chilling promise to Cruz, President Donald Trump, Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, and “right-wing scum” in general: “You are not safe. We will find you.”
What did an Ole Miss official say?
“A recent social media post by a UM faculty member did not reflect the values articulated by the university, such as respect for the dignity of each individual and civility and fairness,” Ole Miss Chancellor Jeffrey Vitter wrote in a Facebook post Sunday without naming Thomas. “While I passionately support free speech, I condemn statements that encourage acts of aggression. I urge all members of the Ole Miss community to demonstrate civility and respect for others and to honor the ideal of diversity of thought that is a foundational element of the academy.”
How did one politician respond?
Chris McDaniel, a Republican Mississippi state senator and independent candidate for U.S. Senate, called Thomas a “low-life liberal,” according to the Daily Mississippian.
“Another threat from another low-life liberal — this time it’s from an Ole Miss professor,” McDaniel wrote on Facebook, the paper said. “Disgusting. It’s time for disciplinary action.”
How did Thomas respond to the outrage?
“Run for office. Get elected. Pass legislation that harms large groups of people. And I will stick my whole foot in your lunch. Deal?” he wrote Saturday, according to Fox News.
The network added that Thomas also said if he’s given a sabbatical, he’ll write his fifth book and is “committed to helping strengthen Democratic Socialists as a viable political alternative, so I’ll do that in my spare time.”
Thomas told the Daily Mississippian he’s “guessing” the Ole Miss chancellor’s statement was directed at him, “but you’d need to ask [Vitter] since he wrote it. Only he would know who he was directing it toward. I support the chancellor’s right to free speech and to express himself through his social media. The free exchange of ideas is a hallmark of higher education.”
Campus Reform said when it called Thomas’ office for comment, he hung up the phone— and the school didn’t respond to the outlet, either.
Prominent Democrats encouraging bad behavior
The political landscape has become increasingly unbridled this year with conservative figures other than Cruz getting heckled and punched and kicked out of restaurants — and prominent Democrats have been encouraging such behavior.
Hillary Clinton said in an interview last week that “you cannot be civil” with Republicans and that “civility can start again” if the Democrats win back the U.S. Senate, the House of Representatives, or both come November.
Former Attorney General Eric Holder recently was caught on video turning around the Democratic mantra, “When they go low, we go high,” by saying, “No, no. When they go low, we kick them!”
U.S. Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey in July urged activists in Washington, D.C., to “go to the Hill” and “get up in the face of some congresspeople.”
U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters of California in June infamously ranted to supporters to “create a crowd” and “push back on” members of President Donald Trump’s cabinet if they’re seen “in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station.” She added in her speech, “You tell them they’re not welcome anymore, anywhere.”
In recent days, the ante only seems to have been upped:
An official with Minnesota’s Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party commented on Facebook that Republicans should be brought “to the guillotines” Nov. 7 — the day after the midterm elections — which earned the official a weeklong suspension.
The campaign manager for Nevada Republican gubernatorial nominee Adam Laxalt said she was physically attacked Tuesday night in Las Vegas by a man she recognized as a liberal activist.
And a Vermont mother of two daughters who’s running as a Republican for the state’s House of Representatives said she received a left-wing death and rape threat in a pro-“Socialism” letter mailed to her home which said, “We are hunting you.”
Robert De Niro: Of course I want to punch Trump in the face
While appearing on The View Friday morning, Robert De Niro addressed controversial comments he made about wanting to punch Donald Trump in the face last year, saying his feelings haven’t changed since the former reality television host was elected president.
“I said that because he said that about somebody, that he would like to punch them in the face,” the actor told cohost Joy Behar. “How dare he say that to the crowd? How dare he say the things he does? Of course I want to punch him in the face.”
De Niro went on to clarify his comments: “It was only a symbolic thing, anyway. It wasn’t like I was going to go find him and punch him in the face. But he’s got to hear it. He’s got to hear that, you know, that’s how he makes people feel. It’s not good to feel that way. It’s not good to start that stuff up, but at the same time sometimes when people are bullies like that, that’s what you have to do to shut them up. Bully them back.”
Former CIA director John Brennan said President Trump's behavior at his joint press conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday was "nothing short of treasonous." Brennan said Trump is "giving aid and comfort to the enemy" and warned that there will be "consequences" for him.
"When I use the term, this is 'nothing short of treasonous,' I equate it to the betrayal of one's nation, aiding, abetting, giving comfort to an enemy," Brennan said in an interview with NBC's Today on Tuesday.
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