Whitlock: The reparations movement undermines black American progress



In less than a minute Monday night, Hilary Fordwich blew up CNN broadcaster Don Lemon’s simple-minded narrative on reparations.

In a discussion about the British monarchy, Lemon nonchalantly referenced the need for reparations because of England’s past colonialism. Fordwich pounced. The seasoned public speaker and expert on the royal family argued that Britain was the first nation to end slavery and that African slave traders owed reparations.

Her argument left Lemon speechless. He quickly moved on.

We shouldn’t. We need to discuss reparations in America. It’s a critical issue that impacts the mindset of many black Americans. Many black people believe America owes us for the oppression of our ancestors.

I take a completely different position. I believe I owe my ancestors for the oppression they endured and conquered. I owe reparations. To my mother and father. To my grandparents. To Martin Luther King Jr. and Booker T. Washington. To Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson, Harriet Tubman, George Washington, and Crispus Attucks. To my high school football coaches. To my fourth-grade teacher. To all the people who invested their time, concern, prayers, and mentorship in my development.

I try to immerse myself in a spirit of gratitude because I believe Jesus Christ died on a cross for all of my sins. His grace and mercy overwhelm me and combat any sense of entitlement.

Reparations are an entitlement. They’re rooted in the desire to be compensated for the oppression suffered by others. Entitlement handicaps the mind and undermines productivity.

America does not owe me. I owe America. I owe my ancestors.

When President Kennedy told Americans in 1960 to ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country, he spoke to a nation of Christian believers.

A hallmark of faith is gratitude. A hallmark or a lack of faith is entitlement.

My parents’ generation, despite facing in-your-face racism, felt grateful for their American citizenship. Their generation and previous generations fought for full American citizenship.

They earned it. And I owe them for their sacrifice. We all do.

Here’s the truth that Hilary Fordwich avoided unloading on Don Lemon: The modern descendants of African slaves brought to America (and England) are blessed and owe an enormous debt to our forefathers and mothers. They suffered so that we now live free. They turned lemons into lemonade.

I’m not owed reparations. I owe an endless debt to the people who sacrificed their lives so that I could live in the freest, safest, and most opportunity-filled country on the planet.

I wake up every day thinking about how I can pay back my mother, father, brother, sister, my high school, my college, and anyone else who helped me along the way.

I owe this country. It is not perfect. But there’s no place else on the planet I’d rather live.

I certainly do not have an interest in living in a land that Britain had to stop from capturing, enslaving, and selling people who looked like me. Americans stopped Americans from doing that. The Brits stopped Africans from doing it.

I’m an American. I’m not ashamed of that. God placed me in this country for a reason.



The American reparations movement sends the message that white people are responsible for the destiny of black people. The movement exonerates black people from our role in the slave trade.

We pretend that Europeans invented and initiated the African slave trade. It’s a revisionist history that defies logic. Africans established the African slave trade. It’s laughable to blame the customer for a product line he didn’t launch.

The fight for reparations is reinforcement of a slave mindset. It screams that black people are not responsible for themselves or their actions. It screams that black people are whores to the highest white bidder.

Are we? We celebrate rappers who profit from denigrating the image of black people. Jay Z, Snoop, Dr. Dre, Meek Mill, and all the rest are no different from African slave traders. They sell out black people for record deals and fame.

They have an entitled mindset. They owe the world and their ancestors nothing. They’ve enriched themselves at the expense of other black people. Anyone who complains is vilified as a traitor.

Black Americans will not progress until we rid ourselves of the entitled reparations mindset, until we embrace the fact that we owe our ancestors – black and white – an enormous debt.

CNN's Don Lemon defends Biden's 'semi-fascism' smear of MAGA base: 'No lies detected'



CNN anchor Don Lemon defended President Joe Biden's use of the term "semi-fascism" to describe "MAGA Republicans," arguing the president's comments were "unifying" because some believe they are "true."

Biden drew swift condemnation from Republicans last week after his remarks at a Democratic National Committee fundraiser in Bethesda, Maryland, were reported.

“What we’re seeing now is either the beginning or the death knell of an extreme MAGA philosophy. It’s not just Trump, it’s the entire philosophy that underpins the — I’m going to say something, it’s like semi-fascism," Biden told Democratic donors. "This is not your father's Republican party. This is a different deal," he said.

On "Don Lemon Tonight" Wednesday, CNN contributor Scott Jennings criticized the president for appearing to demonize millions of Americans who support former President Donald Trump's "Make America Great Again" agenda.

“[Biden] ran his campaign on, ‘I’m going to unify the country.’ His message to the nation was ‘we’re all in this together, I’m going to unify the country,’” Jennings said. “And now, he’s out saying two things. One, ‘lots of y’all are fascist,' and 'by the way, if you vote Republican, there’s a decent chance our democracy will no longer exist.’ These are not unifying messages by any stretch.”

But Lemon pushed back, asking, "Can the unifying message be that some of what he's saying is true?"

\u201cDon Lemon on Biden calling Republicans "fascist": "Where's the lie?" "No lies detected." "He's telling the truth!" \n"You have to call a thing a thing. You have to call it what it is. THAT is unifying."\u201d
— Nicholas Fondacaro (@Nicholas Fondacaro) 1662047586

"I've got to tell you, Scott, a lot of folks would go, 'Where's the lie? I don't see it. No lies detected,'" Lemon said.

"I think there are 70-80 million Americans who would say, 'Just because I choose to vote Republican doesn’t make me a fascist,'" Jennings replied.

"But he did not call, Scott, I've got to be honest with you, he did not call all Republicans fascists," Lemon interrupted, arguing that Biden made a distinction between "MAGA Republicans" and the 80 million Trump voters.

"Why is it up to Joe Biden to divide up the Republicans?" Jennings asked.

"No, no, no, no," Lemon said, visibly frustrated and raising his voice. "The former president every single day talks s**t about everybody, including other presidents, including members of his own party, probably you on CNN," he said, gesturing at Jennings.

"And now everybody is ... all of the sudden they've got the vapors about one statement that Joe Biden made in the entire year and a half of his presidency? It's just, I mean, spare me!" Lemon exclaimed.

"He's telling the truth, Scott!" Lemon added, clarifying he doesn't think that every Republican is a fascist. "I don't think it was the best thing for him to use that language. But you have to call a thing a thing. You have to call it what it is ... that is unifying, by bringing people around to the reality of what is."

At the end of the segment, Lemon acknowledged his opinionated comments may displease CNN's new leadership at Warner Bros. Discovery, which wants to take the network's editorial voice in a more neutral, nonpartisan direction.

"I'm in so much trouble," Lemon said, laughing.

CNN's Don Lemon defends media bias: 'If we don’t we are not doing our jobs'



Last month, CNN's new chairman and CEO Chris Licht said he wanted to see less partisan opinion and more objective journalism from show hosts in an effort to jumpstart the failing cable news network.

But CNN primetime anchor Don Lemon said he just wouldn't be doing his job if he treated Democrats and Republicans the same, after all, the GOP is really "very dangerous."

“Speaking very soberly about the realities of America and American politics right now — we sit around and we talk about these things and we want to give this false equivalence to Democrats and Republicans. That is not where we are right now. Republicans are doing something that is very dangerous to our society and we have to acknowledge that. We have to acknowledge that as Americans. We must acknowledge that as journalists because if we don’t we are not doing our jobs," Lemon told "New Day" hosts John Berman and Brianna Keilar.

\u201cThe real shocker here is that Don Lemon thinks CNN and other news networks currently cover Republicans and Democrats fairly and equally. \n\n"We \u2014 we want to give this false equivalence to Democrats and Republicans."\n \nHe's either a liar or an imbecile.\u201d
— Larry O'Connor (@Larry O'Connor) 1657854895

On "The News and Why it Matters," BlazeTV host Sara Gonzales, Eric July and Lily Kate discussed Lemon's claim that journalists can't treat Republicans equally because they're "dangerous" even as CNN's new management tries to steer the news network away from sowing further division in the American political discourse.

Watch the video below. Can't watch? Download the podcast here.


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Former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey blasts Brian Stelter, says he witnessed incident in which CNN tried to falsify news



Jack Dorsey, former Twitter CEO and co-founder, hit out at CNN's Brian Stelter on Sunday and said that he has seen CNN promoting falsified news reports and pushing narratives after witnessing an incident that took place during the 2014 Ferguson, Missouri, riots.

What are the details?

Dorsey on Sunday evening hit out at Stelter on Twitter after the CNN host shared a link from the Washington Post, which accused Fox News host Tucker Carlson of "selling doubt" to his core audience.

Dorsey fired back, "And you all are selling hope?"

and you all are selling hope?
— jack\u26a1\ufe0f (@jack\u26a1\ufe0f) 1650326587

His response prompted a social media frenzy, with at least one Twitter user accusing him of defending Carlson.

"Not defending a thing. Holding up a mirror," Dorsey quipped.

not defending a thing. holding up a mirror
— jack\u26a1\ufe0f (@jack\u26a1\ufe0f) 1650327342

Dorsey later took aim at the network in response to a tweet from Miss Universe Iraq Sarah Abdali Idan, who wrote, "Even @CNN sometimes sells false news. I know this from covering Iraq events in 2019. People need to understand every media is prone to either mistakes or deliberate corruption. Do your own investigations before believing what they're selling you."

even @CNN sometimes sell false news. I know this from covering Iraq events in 2019. People need to understand every media is prone to either mistakes or deliberate corruption. Do your own investigation before believing what they\u2019re selling you.
— Sarai (Sarah Idan) Miss Iraq (@Sarai (Sarah Idan) Miss Iraq) 1650332988

Her remark prompted Dorsey to tweet, "I know this from being on the streets of Ferguson during the protests and watching them try to create conflict and film it causing the protestors to chant 'f*** CNN.'"

Image source: Twitter screenshot

Dorsey did not expound on specific incidents he saw in Ferguson.

What else is there to know?

Dorsey, who rarely speaks out on the social media network he co-founded, also made headlines over the weekend after blasting the company's board of directors amid Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk's bid to purchase and privatize the company.

His criticism came in response to a user's tweet that said, "If I look into the history of Twitter board, it’s intriguing as I was a witness on its early beginnings, mired in plots and coups, and particularly amongst Twitter’s founding members. I wish if it could be made into a Hollywood thriller one day.”

Dorsey — who still sits on the company's board — responded, “It’s consistently been the dysfunction of the company” and agreed with another user's comment that "[g]ood boards don't create good companies, but a bad board will kill a company every time."

it\u2019s consistently been the dysfunction of the company
— jack\u26a1\ufe0f (@jack\u26a1\ufe0f) 1650170151

CNN's Brian Stelter interviews 8th-graders who are learning about detecting 'misinformation' — and viewer reaction is priceless



CNN's Brian Stelter recently interviewed 8th-grade students and their teacher at P.S. 207 in Queens, New York, about their class on how to detect "misinformation" online.

In a video published Sunday, Stelter — CNN's chief media correspondent — spoke to teacher Barbara King, who said she began teaching media literacy 10 years ago and that it's "a skill my students really need; there's too much misinformation around us in the world."

The clip shows King telling her students about satire, false context, imposter content, manipulated content, and fabricated content.

Stelter also interviewed students outside classroom time about how they've been using what they've learned. One student said his family believed COVID-19 was a "hoax" when the pandemic was breaking but that he argued back that it was real.

With that, Stelter emphasized the tendency of some who want to believe untruths — and then added that instead "you gotta face reality head-on."

Mockery ensues

As readers of TheBlaze know, Stelter and CNN repeatedly have been called out for pushing misinformation and bias.

The latest example appears to be Stelter running "cover" for NPR's report — refuted as fake news — claiming Chief Justice John Roberts "in some form" asked justices to wear masks because Justice Sonia Sotomayor has diabetes and that Justice Neil Gorsuch refused, Fox News reported.

All that to say, a number of commenters under CNN's YouTube video of Stelter's report about the "misinformation" class mocked the notion of him interviewing teenagers about the subject:

  • "The irony of Brian Stelter talking about how to spot fake news is pretty incredible," one commenter wrote.
  • "Like, 'Kids, CNN is full of lies, so watch them as an example on how journalism shouldn't be,'" another commenter quipped.
  • "LMAO! Tell me this is a joke!" another commenter wrote. "If Stelter wants to teach kids how to spot misinformation, he should give them a picture of himself.
  • "They should just watch CNN," another commenter said. "They'll be experts in spotting it within a half hour."
  • "How to spot misinformation, eh?" another commenter noted. "They should show a CNN article of the Covington kid then their undisclosed amount they had to pay him for defamation."
  • "Brian Stelter story? On misinformation?!" another commenter remarked. "That's rich."

Anything else?

Don't forget that CNN just last week announced that it's putting together a news team "dedicated to covering misinformation." The announcement also was met with derision.

These students are learning how to spot misinformationyoutu.be

CNN runs misleading report on Florida COVID teacher deaths and gets torched online: 'This is absurd framing'



CNN faced some fierce backlash online after running a misleading report about the coronavirus deaths among teachers in Florida.

The report documented four deaths in one single day among teachers in the Broward County School District. CNN anchor Brianna Keilar posted the video of her reaction to the news on her social media account.

BREAKING: WFOR is reporting that 4 teachers from Broward county have died of covid in a single day. Three were un… https://t.co/A8DgKo0Skr

— Brianna Keilar (@brikeilarcnn) 1628857377.0

"That is a stunning number," said Keilar in the video. "This is obviously going to be met with a lot of grief in that community, and it's showing the cost of COVID there, especially for the unvaccinated."

That report came from a statement from Broward Teachers Union President Anna Fusco.

Fusco later admitted that the union had mistakenly reported four teachers had died of the coronavirus. Instead, two teachers and a teacher aide had died of the coronavirus. Also, none of them had been vaccinated. All were in their 40s.

Critics online immediately noted that the "absurd framing" of the story at CNN implied that the teachers had contracted the coronavirus at schools, but they had not.

"This is an absurd framing," replied former CNN producer Steve Krakauer. "Broward county schools are not open until next week. You could say this about any occupation. It has absolutely nothing to do with them being 'teachers' or about what schools should do regarding masks, vaccines or anything else."

"This stat is reported with the context that Florida's state government opposes mandatory masking of children," replied former ThinkProgress journalist Zaid Jilani. "But schools in Broward county are on summer break. The teachers didn't get covid-19 in schools from kids. Their status as teachers isn't relevant..."

"Trash reporting from CNN somehow (oopsie!) fails to mention schools in Broward County have yet to open. Garbage. Shameful silence from the rest of the media," responded Karol Markowicz.

While CNN offered a minor correction on their website, the false information on Keilar's tweet remained online.

"An earlier version of this story mischaracterized one of the four people who died based on information provided by the Broward Teachers Union. That person has been identified as a female Broward County Public Schools graduate with close ties to the school district through her job."

Florida is experiencing a spike in the coronavirus infections and hospitalizations, leading many to blame the policies of Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis. Others accuse media outlets like CNN of trying to damage DeSantis because he was a prominent supporter of former President Donald Trump.

Here's a local news report about the Florida teacher deaths:

Broward Teacher's Union President Anna Fusco Rectifies Number Of Teachers Who Recently Died From COVwww.youtube.com

CNN report bashes Trump admin for 'nonexistent' vaccine plan, Dr. Fauci and others implode the 'scoop'



A CNN report bashed the Trump administration for having a 'nonexistent' vaccine distribution plan, but the story imploded after Dr. Anthony Fauci was asked about it during a media briefing.

The CNN report by MJ Lee relied on quotes from anonymous sources in the Biden administration intending to paint the previous administration as completely incompetent.

"There is nothing for us to rework. We are going to have to build everything from scratch," one anonymous source said to CNN.

The other source said the new administration would have to begin from "square one," because there was no plan in place.

"Wow, just further affirmation of complete incompetence," the second anonymous source told CNN.

'There was, indeed, a plan from Trump'

The prized "scoop" was almost immediately undermined by other reporters, including Sam Stein of MSNBC and Politico.

"Biden folks are spinning here or trying to lower the bar strategically. There was, indeed, a plan from Trump. I listened in on govs calls on vaccine distribution," tweeted Stein.

Biden folks are spinning here or trying to lower the bar strategically. There was, indeed, a plan from Trump. I lis… https://t.co/TYMgxqPyKN
— Sam Stein (@Sam Stein)1611253633.0

"The plan had obvious shortcomings. but to say there's nothing to rework is not true," he added.

Fauci, the head of the coronavirus task force under the Trump administration, was asked about the claim during a media briefing on Thursday and he denied the report.

"We're certainly not starting from scratch, because there is activity going on in the distribution," said Fauci, who will continue in the role under the Biden administration.

"I mean we're coming in with fresh ideas, but also some ideas with ... the previous administration. You can't say it was absolutely not usable at all," he added.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Thursday that about 11.1 million Americans had received the first shot of the coronavirus vaccine, or about 3% of the total population.

Biden has set a goal of vaccinating 100 million Americans in the first 100 days of his administration.

Fauci also went on to say that he found it liberating to work under the Biden administration compared to the Trump administration.

Here are the comments from Fauci on Thursday:

Dr. Anthony Fauci returns to White House press briefing to give update on COVID-19 responsewww.youtube.com

Trump-hating CNN hosts rip 'disgraced' president as he and the first lady depart White House: 'He just looks like a small man'



Given CNN's nakedly biased coverage of now-former President Donald Trump over his four years in office, you knew the talking heads at the cable network Trump loved to call "fake news" were sharpening their verbal knives even as they popped champagne corks Wednesday as Trump and now-former first lady Melania Trump left the White House.

What happened?

As CNN live video documented the Trumps walking to the Marine One helicopter that would take him to Joint Base Andrews for his flight to Florida, the cable network's personalities piped up and offered commentary on the moment.

Jake Tapper started things out. You probably recall Tapper a week ago questioning a Republican congressman's "commitment" to democracy for arguing against impeaching Trump in a rushed vote, despite the fact that the congressman lost both legs fighting overseas for the U.S. military.

Anyway, Tapper seems to like the commentary he gets to spout, as he narrated things as "the disgraced 45th president of the United States" and first lady Melania Trump walked to Marine One. He added that Trump would be giving an "ad-libbed" speech at the base, and "one can only imagine what he will say."

'He looks small'

Then Dana Bash chimed in with a Trump observation. "He looks small. He just looks like a small man," she said. "And that is exactly the way that he has handled his presidency since he lost, and he just has appeared smaller and smaller and less and less courageous."

Concerning Trump's decision to not greet Joe and Jill Biden at the White House on Inauguration Day, Bash added that "it does take courage, it takes fortitude, it takes a sense of self to be able to not do this — to be able to get into the motorcade with your successor, to take that ride ... and that is not happening."

Tapper also said of Trump that "he really is doing everything he can that's wrong. This a textbook case of how not to leave the presidency," Fox News said. "Whine and cry, pretend that you didn't win, incite your supporters, stage an insurrection. And on his way out the door, he pardons a bunch of his cronies."

Fox News noted that Tapper named some of those whom Trump pardoned, including former campaign chairman Steve Bannon. "You think that he couldn't get any more disgraceful — well, just give him a few hours," he said.

While CNN commentator Van Jones is no fan of Trump's, last October he did say Trump "has done good stuff for the black community" and "does not get enough credit" — after which the left, who love to eat their own, attacked Jones.

Well, Wednesday was a different day, and Jones said Biden's victory — along with the Democrats grabbing control of the Senate — is a "complete repudiation" of Trump's policies, particularly with regard to Muslims. Jones also made reference to illegal immigrants being happy about Biden taking office after their "babies" were "being snatched away at the border." Jones forgot to mention it's a policy of former President Barack Obama's administration.

Wolf Blitzer's 'little' fixation

Finally, Wolf Blitzer had his say — and seemed to have an obsession with the word "little" to describe Trump, as he used it a whopping seven times during his piling-on speech.

First, Blitzer noted that Trump has a "little bit of a speech" he would give later and said "it looks like a tiny little crowd has gathered at Joint Base Andrews," before observing Trump taking "a little tour over the city" in Marine One.

Soon he noted Trump's "brief little flight" that was doing a "little circle over the U.S. Capitol."

Finally, he offered that Trump drew a "very impressive crowd" at his inauguration four years ago, and now it's "a little pathetic" that only a "tiny little crowd" was waiting for him at the base.

Don't they frown on repetitiveness at journalism school, Wolf?

Watch President Trump's final White House departureyoutu.be

CNN's David Chalian says lights at National Mall are like 'extensions of Joe Biden's arms embracing America'



CNN political director David Chalian got some social media blowback after he gushed over President-elect Joe Biden and the lights set up at the National Mall for his inauguration.

Chalian was trying to make a contrast between the outgoing President Donald Trump and Biden during Tuesday's live Inauguration Day coverage.

"The contrast on display tonight was so stark, I mean those lights that are just shooting out from the Lincoln Memorial along the reflecting pool, extensions of Joe Biden's arms embracing America," Chalian said.

"It was a moment where the new president came to town and sort of convened the country in this moment of remembrance, outstretching his arms," he continued.

"And contrast that with the video you saw of a disgraced president on his way out at the lowest point of his presidency, at the very end here, by himself, fighting for his political movement to live on," Chalian said of President Trump. "And not even necessarily promising that he's gonna be leading that movement, you noted, in his remarks tonight."

Chalian's comments were widely circulated on social media:

CNN's David Chalian says that the side lights on the National Mall's reflecting pool are like "extensions of Joe Bi… https://t.co/E1zXLyE8An
— Daily Caller (@Daily Caller)1611099041.0

And many saw the comments as the latest example of the mainstream media being overly reverential to Democrats while unfairly spurning Republicans.

"4 yrs of this slobbering," responded Jon Nicosia.

"My God, this is nauseating already. Four years of this is going to be intolerable," said another Twitter user.

"What the heck? This is what we're in for, I guess. Basement Man suddenly and utterly beloved... before he is lost to us and Kamala tearfully takes up his sacred mantle, I suppose," said another commenter.

"This is absolute insanity. Enough of the celebrity of politicians. That's what got us in the place we are in now," replied another user.

"Sir, his name is Joe — not Jesus. Pack it up. This seriously is so weird," added another commentator.

Others were more concise.

"Oh dear," replied veteran Fox News journalist Brit Hume.

Kayleigh McEnany fires back at Jake Tapper, saying he's 'lazy' for making 'baseless personal attacks with ZERO evidence'



White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany fired back at CNN anchor Jake Tapper after he said that he would not have her on his show because she lies so much.

Tapper made the comments on CNN's "Reliable Sources" with Brian Stelter on Sunday. McEnany replied from her official social media account.

"This is a therapy session for a broken network, and @jaketapper is lazy enough to participate by lobbing baseless personal attacks, with ZERO evidence," McEnany said.

This is a therapy session for a broken network, and @jaketapper is lazy enough to participate by lobbing baseless p… https://t.co/QF247k98ka
— Kayleigh McEnany (@Kayleigh McEnany)1609091862.0

"Jake's real problem: I do not leak. I do not lie. But I DO call out the lies of the media (i.e. CNN Russia collusion hoax!)"

Tapper told Stelter on Sunday that he refused to have some of the members of the Trump administration or the Trump 2020 campaign on his show.

"There are some people that are so mendacious, I just wouldn't put them on air," Tapper said in the interview.

"Kayleigh McEnany, I never booked her. Jason Miller from the Trump campaign, I would never book him. I mean, these are just people who tell lies the way that most people breathe. There was no value in that," he continued.

Tapper went on to say that former Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway didn't lie like McEnany did, but that she merely changed the subject when asked a tough question.

"There's a big difference between something like Kayleigh McEnany, who just like, this is what she does, she tells lies all the time, she can't acknowledge reality," Tapper continued.

"So I'm just not gonna put somebody like that on air," he concluded.

Tapper also complained on Monday when President Donald Trump retweeted an insult mocking him and calling him "Fake Tapper."

"The American people are suffering though the deadliest month of the pandemic and the president is RTing mean tweets about me," he tweeted.

Here's Tapper's comment on 'Reliable Sources':

Why Jake Tapper won't put some Trump admin. officials on his showswww.youtube.com