"Oregon Governor Tina Kotek Claims Federal Agents in Portland Are Antagonizing Protesters".
Poor little things! Good thing you've got Governor Kotex watching your back.
Meanwhile, these boomer idiots take a walk down memory lane, happy to relive the 1960s
This land belongs to all of us. It's not a war zone—it’s home. Trump can't take that from us. pic.twitter.com/8VmyKfMqRF
— Congresswoman Maxine Dexter (@RepDexterOR) October 6, 2025
Related Via friend and commenter Veeshir: a sterling example of FAFO.
Antifa spits at a federal agent in the face and immediately regrets it
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) October 6, 2025
Incredible FAFO pic.twitter.com/AmXIGrglnU
Those folks really need Tiny Tim, they just look ridiculous without him.
ReplyDeleteRelated to the linked article
It was the FAest of times, it was the FOest of times.
https://x.com/libsoftiktok/status/1975084702374773017?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
Fun fact:
ReplyDelete"This Land Is Your Land" was written American folk singer Woody Guthrie, in critical response to Irving Berlin's "God Bless America".
Guthrie was pretty much a socialist, a/k/a communist. So it's no surprise that ancient hippies in Oregon are singing his song.
Yeah, he and old Pete Singer, who was a Stalin apologist, and continued to be one years after that kind of thing became "unfashionable".
DeleteBoth Ron Radosh and David Horowitz grew up as Red Diaper Babies in NYC. It's always puzzled me that they apparently never interacted in their youth, but I wonder if that was a Stalin/Trotsky thing, as odd as that sounds.
DeleteAnyway they both went to Red Diaper Baby summer camps, albeit different ones. Another odd fact is that there were at least three different Communist youth camps in NY state at the time.
One common factor though, was they all got to hear Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie and Paul Robeson, who performed at all of the camps.
"This land belongs to all of use." And you know they're lying, because they don't really mean all of us, unless you define "us" as the hard left, and only the hard left.
ReplyDeleteI used to think that America was large and pluralistic enough for all of us to share. But the past decade or two I am thinking that was naive... because people like this are making it plain that they don't believe that at all.
They've got a highly unusual definition of the word "us".
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