Thursday, June 11, 2026

Your Terms Are Acceptable

https://x.com/breitbartnews/status/2065068038685159578?s=46&t=cLq01Oy84YkmYPZ-URIMYw


“Podcaster Larry Reid calls for a "mass exodus" of black Americans to Africa in response to the Karmelo Anthony verdict.


"I want you to begin to think about this America and the white people problem that we have... As a collective, let's drain this place of its benefits and make our mass exodus and go home and build."


"Civil rights did not make white people that are infected with whiteness stop being racist. They still raised racist children that run this country to this day."


"You come from a land that flows with milk and honey. They pulled you out of that land ancestrally and brought you to a place to where your royalty was not recognized. Used your black power, your black mysticism, your African spirituality, and your physiological superiority to build this country and give everybody reparations except you."“

More Views

 https://www.facebook.com/share/1H66qWYR4q/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Karmelo Anthony was found guilty of murder.


And even though the “only good cracker is a dead cracker” chorus immediately cast the case as just another example of white unfair “white” jurisprudence putting down the black man, it was not because Anthony is a black teenager and four hundred years ago black Africans were enslaved and shipped to the Western Hemisphere as chattel to satisfy a rapidly growing need for labor.


Anthony was found guilty because he was guilty. He murdered another 17-year-old student, Austin Metcalf, who was white.

Anthony’s case was an overt example of trying to defend the indefensible. 


Based on accounts I read overnight, his defense did more to confirm his guilt than exonerate him, appearing to a great extent to corroborate the prosecution’s positions.


I have followed with a high degree of interest my friend, Jefferson Knight, and his analysis of law versus what he calls “folklore law”, the process wrapped around an invented metanarrative that, in the Anthony case, meant that the white kid was an oppressor, little different than a slave master, and the black kid was just seeking to escape the oppression of a white society and therefore justified in his actions.


Thomas Sowell, one of the most under appreciated public intellectuals of our times, once noted that blacks were not forced into slavery because they were black, they were made slaves because they were available. 


[** Much the same as it glaringly obvious and tragic in the 21st century! In how Black Americans avail themselves to a Master that is in every way, the Democrat Party of U.S. politics, Divide and the quasi ownership of human life. At the point of conception. Or its ending, before it has ever been given the choice of option to breathe on its own!]


There is considerable evidence supporting Thomas Sowell’s observation. Slavery existed throughout human history long before modern concepts of race emerged. Romans enslaved Europeans, Arabs enslaved Europeans and Africans, and African kingdoms enslaved rival tribes. 


In most cases, the determining factors were military defeat, vulnerability, geography, or economic opportunity rather than skin color. The Atlantic slave trade developed in part because existing African slave-trading networks could supply large numbers of laborers to meet the demands of plantation economies in the Americas.


That said, European societies generally viewed sub-Saharan African cultures as less technologically and organizationally advanced than their own. This perception was not based on skin color alone but on differences in political institutions, military technology, literacy, industrial development, and economic organization. 


Throughout history, civilizations have often equated cultural differences with civilizational superiority, whether Greeks describing outsiders as “barbarians” or other societies drawing distinctions between the civilized and the uncivilized. Such attitudes can easily evolve into viewing other peoples as less fully human.


The crucial distinction is that racial inferiority was not necessarily the original cause of African slavery, but it became an increasingly important justification for it. 


As the plantation economies of the New World grew dependent on African labor, a moral and political problem emerged: how do you defend the permanent enslavement of millions of people and their descendants? 


One answer was the development of racial theories that portrayed Africans as naturally suited for servitude or inherently inferior. Those ideas helped reconcile the contradiction between Western ideals of liberty and the reality of slavery.


Africans entered the Atlantic slave system largely because they were available through existing trade networks because the economics of the era demanded a large labor force. As the institution of slavery continued, economic interests and racial theories reinforced one another, transforming slavery from a common human institution into a distinctly race-based system.


Race was less the original cause of slavery than the rationale developed to sustain it, but that racialization has, over centuries, led to a tension between two competing concepts of equality that have been battling for dominance in American life for decades.


This is where Knight’s concept of “folklore law” enters the picture. Globally, there is no shortage of people who intentionally cast Western culture and its morality as a predominant evil and the cause of the world’s problems—but that requires ignoring the bulk of human history and how unequal treatment of each other was based on real and imagined differences. 


Race is just a useful sociopolitical tool right now.


It seems evident that if Karmelo Anthony is a victim, he was not a victim of white racism but of black racism which promotes a narrative that blacks must never allow a white person to challenge them. He was also the victim of a set of terrible parents and a culture that taught it was acceptable to take a deadly weapon to a high school track meet and then use that weapon to stab another teenager to settle a meaningless high school dispute.


In the scope of this specific event, there is no larger context here other than a murder—but there surely is one in the aftermath and it has to do with a collision between two principles: individual equality and group equity. 


One treats the individual as the fundamental unit of society; the other views individuals through the lens of group membership and historical disparities. 


Supporters of the latter argue that ignoring group differences perpetuates inequality. Critics argue that assigning benefits, burdens, or moral standing based on identity undermines equality before the law and revives the very distinctions the civil rights movement sought to eliminate. 


The traditional American understanding of equality, rooted in the Declaration of Independence and reflected in the Constitution, holds that individuals possess equal moral worth and equal standing before the law. 


Under that framework, race, class, religion, and ancestry are irrelevant to justice. People are judged by their actions and character, not by the groups to which they belong. 


Over the past several decades, a competing view has gained influence. Rather than focusing primarily on equal treatment, it seeks more equal outcomes among groups. 


Under this approach, race, ethnicity, sex, and class become relevant considerations in public policy, education, employment, and even the interpretation of social conflicts. 


The question is not whether Americans still believe that all men are created equal, the question is what that phrase means. 


Does equality require treating people equally regardless of identity, or does it require treating people differently in a futile attempt to produce more equal outcomes? 


The former is the basis for what is perhaps the most equal society and culture in history, the irony of the second is that it produces inequality through a series of cascading intended and unintended consequences, but which is chosen may well decide our fate as a nation. 


Michael Smith

When People Tell You Who They Are, Believe Them

 https://www.facebook.com/vlawrencefisher1

"I want to speak on the Karmelo Anthony case because I truly do not feel like the verdict or sentencing was fair.
Let me be clear: no one is saying that a life being lost does not matter. No one is dismissing the pain of the family who lost their loved one. A family is grieving, and that pain is real. But justice is supposed to be fair, balanced, and based on the full facts — not public pressure, social media outrage, race, emotion, or a one-sided narrative.
What bothers me is how quickly people were ready to throw this young man’s entire life away without acknowledging the full situation. When a young Black man is involved, the world often stops seeing him as a child, a teenager, a son, or a human being. They start treating him like he was born guilty. That is the problem.
Accountability matters. But fairness matters too.
There is a difference between holding someone accountable and making an example out of them. There is a difference between justice and punishment driven by outrage. A sentence should fit the facts, the circumstances, the age of the person involved, and the evidence presented — not what people on the internet are demanding.
If there were claims of fear, self-defense, threats, confrontation, or anything that led up to what happened, then all of that should matter. Context matters. Circumstances matter. Intent matters. Age matters. A young person’s entire future should not be decided by headlines and public opinion.
Too often in this country, young Black men are not given the same grace, the same benefit of the doubt, or the same compassion that others receive. They are judged harder, sentenced harsher, and talked about as if they are disposable. That is not justice. That is a broken system repeating the same pattern over and over again.
You can feel compassion for the family who lost their loved one and still question whether the outcome was fair. You can believe accountability is necessary and still believe the sentencing was excessive. Those two things can exist at the same time.
I believe this case deserves a deeper review. I believe the sentencing was too harsh. I believe emotions and public pressure played too big of a role. And I believe people need to stop acting like questioning the fairness of the system means you do not care about the victim.
This case also hits me personally because I have brothers who are currently in prison dealing with similar situations, and I am not okay. I know what it feels like to watch the system move one way for some people and a completely different way for others. I know what it feels like to have someone you love be judged, sentenced, and written off like their life no longer matters.
So when I see cases like this, it is not just another headline to me. It is personal. It brings up pain, fear, anger, and frustration because families live with these outcomes every single day. People on the outside may argue online and move on, but families are left carrying the weight forever.
That is why I cannot stay silent. I believe in accountability, but I also believe in fairness. I believe in justice, but I do not believe in throwing young Black men away without fully considering the facts, the context, and the circumstances.
Justice should not be about destroying one young life to prove that another life mattered. Justice should be about truth, fairness, accountability, and balance.
This case should concern everyone, because when the system can overlook context for one person, it can do it to anybody."
 
 
 
 
The facts were that Anthony stabbed Austin Metcalf for absolutely no good reason.   
The fact is that Metcalf actually did have his entire life thrown away for no reason, Anthony could be out in 18 years.  
 They treated him as if the evidence showed him to be guilty.  Not one defense witness testified to anything beyond the fact that Anthony killed someone because he got "shoved".   
I believe that emotion and the desire to exert public pressure are what drove this post.   
I believe that this whole rant is personal and driven solely by skin color while ignoring the facts.
I also believe that the weight carried by the Metcalf family is vastly heavier than by the Anthony family. 
Anthony had hundreds of thousands of dollars given to him to pay for a defense to bring up issues of context, fairness, Truth, accountability, and balance.  They failed to do so. 
Anthony had every opportunity to express remorse and to attempt to negotiate a plea deal, he didn't.  
Anthony's attorneys could have put him on the stand to testify about what he was justified and they chose not to.  
 
The insanity around this relatively simple case is beyond belief.   



This is a video of a bunch of idiots making excuses based on the size of the knife.   You know, the knife that was driven through bone, directly into the heart?   That ain’t a deadly weapon.  

Q & A

 
"17 “Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them. 18 For truly I tell you, until heaven and earth disappear, not the smallest letter, not the least stroke of a pen, will by any means disappear from the Law until everything is accomplished. 19 Therefore anyone who sets aside one of the least of these commands and teaches others accordingly will be called least in the kingdom of heaven, but whoever practices and teaches these commands will be called great in the kingdom of heaven. 20 For I tell you that unless your righteousness surpasses that of the Pharisees and the teachers of the law, you will certainly not enter the kingdom of heaven."

Can we agree that the above meets your subjective, personal criteria to be considered a "Teaching of Jesus"?    

One question, one simple answer, nothing else but the simplest and most direct answer will survive moderation.  

A second simple question with an equally simple answer.  

Can we agree that Jesus was referring to something specific when He referred to the Law and the Prophets?   

A third simple question, with an equally simple answer.  

Can we agree that by looking at the Greek word translated as Law it is possible to draw some objective conclusions about what Jesus was referring to?   

Good Read

 https://x.com/dr_balbin/status/2064599381815545922?s=51&t=cLq01Oy84YkmYPZ-URIMYw

This is a long thread, so I don't think I'll try to copy/paste each Tweet and stitch them together, but worth the read.  

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Mormons

 Mike Lee needs to shut up about the Mormon thing, as do the rest of the morons who keep insisting the Mormons are merely another Christian denomination.  

The hilarious aspect of this is that removing the Mormons from the list of Christian denominations would have required that the Pentagon provided actual Mormon chaplains for them instead of whatever random Protestant chaplains were available.   

I'm not going to list the theological reasons why Mormonism is incompatible with Christianity, but I will note that Joseph Smith was quite clear that Mormonism was intended to replace every existing Christian denomination because it was a new and better revelation than Scripture.  

So, let their bosoms burn with anger at this perceived slight, who cares.   

FYI, if you are ever in SLC or the surrounding areas, the religious fiction section in the LDS bookstores is huge. 

BOT

 https://x.com/allie__voss/status/2063699725400838410?s=51&t=cLq01Oy84YkmYPZ-URIMYw

Girl I follow on Instagram who said Sydney Sweeney’s jean commercial was “promoting eugenics” is now defending the down syndrome abortion couple Do I tell her?"

There are probably a lot of people who fall into this category. Condemning something in one instance, while celebrating the same thing in another.  Look at the "NAZI salute" nonsense, or the "NAZI tattoo" hypocrisy. 

 https://www.cbsnews.com/minnesota/news/tyson-goodsell-murder-charges-north-mankato-minnesota/

 "On Thursday, police say they arrested a 20-year-old St. Peter, Minnesota, man who is now charged in Nicollet County with second-degree murder, attempted first-degree aggravated robbery, conspiracy to commit first-degree aggravated robbery, one count of first-degree assault, two counts of second-degree assault and felony possession of a firearm.

An 18-year-old Mankato man and a 23-year-old Shakopee man are also in custody and each face five felony counts, including aiding an offender in aggravated robbery and murder, and aiding and abetting assault. "

Shockingly enough, CBS omits the names of these three gentlemen, although y'all can probably guess the exact name of at least one of them.    

 https://kstp.com/kstp-news/top-news/neighbors-of-george-floyd-square-say-theyre-feeling-sticker-shock-from-special-assessments/

How typical of DFL led government.    Of course they're sticking it to the local residents who have already been damaged by the whole thing.   Virtue signaling extraordinaire.