Boston is repurposing a former veterans housing facility to accommodate illegal immigrants due to resource exhaustion following a state of emergency declaration by Democratic Gov. […]
Boston is repurposing a former veterans housing facility to accommodate illegal immigrants due to resource exhaustion following a state of emergency declaration by Democratic Gov. […]
Get caught up on today's must read stores!
Boston’s Mayor makes Kamala Harris seem like Oppenheimer, by comparison, which, once again, also makes Democratic voters appear clueless. However their leaders are certainly not clueless. The Boston Mayor is one of many that now constitutes a majority in Blue States. The Courts reflect a striking similar resemblance. How did this happen? In 1964, we got to where we are today, by legislation, in addition to considerable help from the Department of Education since 1979. Add newly minted potential voters, on the public dole, and think again about what LBJ meant when he said that his Party will have, (N word), voting for us forever. The 1964 Civil Right’s Legislation, supported by Republicans, was a domestic Trojan Horse that created a different class of people in a country that was created, Constitutionally, to be classless. The fruit of that poisonous legislation is why the country is becoming less of a country, and more like a Banana Republic, with every passing day.
The 14th Amendment, along with the original Constitution, and the Bill of Rights, makes any type of affirmative action as lawless as slavery, Constitutionally, once was. The Constitution, correctly applied, judiciously, without the Civil War, would have eventually eliminated it. There is nothing wrong with the US Constitution. There is a lot wrong with America’s Courts and federal legislation.
Some things can’t be legislated on, nor can courts rule on. Today I doubt most Americans realize what Benjamin Franklin meant when he replied, “A republic if you can keep it”, when asked what type of government was created in Philadelphia, after the Constitutional ratification, in 1787.