Is Dexter Reed the next George Floyd?



After the Chicago police shooting of Dexter Reed, the left seems to have found its next George Floyd.

Reed, a 26-year-old black man, was pulled over by police officers for not wearing a seatbelt. After the stop escalated into an altercation where he pulled a weapon and fired on police officers, one cop was injured and Reed sustained fatal injuries.

“I think that the mainstream media is trying to turn this into, like, the new George Floyd,” Sara Gonzales says before reviewing the body cam footage — which tells a different story than the accepted narrative.

Reed is seen initially complying with an officer’s order to roll down his window before rolling it up and refusing to comply. When the officer attempted to get him to open his car door, Reed began shooting at officers.

“It’s a lot of shots being fired at the cops,” Gonzales notes.

Eric July believes it’s not as black and white as the media is painting it. “If we look at it with zero nuance,” he says, we’ll see that a “person got shot and killed over seat belt.”

“That’s how essentially it’s going to be worded, though that’s not entirely accurate, and it’s just a little bit more complicated,” he says, noting that to go from not complying to attempting to shoot and kill someone is never the right move.

“That is the ultimate, utmost escalation,” July says.

While July didn’t believe the cops' reaction was right either, he believes the media’s reaction makes it worse.

“I hate that the conversation immediately goes to race, because then at that point, what it does is absolve them of everything,” he explains.


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Ben Domenech: The Commission On Presidential Debates Is An Outdated Antique

Federalist Publisher and Fox News Contributor Ben Domenech railed the Commission on Presidential Debates (CPD) Wednesday as an outdated antique.

Former Sen. Bob Dole accuses bipartisan Commission on Presidential Debates of bias against Trump



Former Sen. Bob Dole (KS), who was the 1996 Republican presidential nominee, voiced his concern Friday that the bipartisan Commission on Presidential Debates might favor Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, saying that none of the GOP members support President Donald Trump.

What are the details?

"The Commission on Presidential Debates is supposedly bipartisan w/ an equal number of Rs and Ds," Dole tweeted. "I know all of the Republicans and most are friends of mine. I am concerned that none of them support @realDonaldTrump. A biased Debate Commission is unfair.

The Commission on Presidential Debates is supposedly bipartisan w/ an equal number of Rs and Ds. I know all of the… https://t.co/Ed7hQia3p2
— Senator Bob Dole (@Senator Bob Dole)1602273762.0

President Trump responded, "Thank you @SenatorDole. So true!"

The Hill noted, "Members of the commission's board of directors include former GOP Sens. John Danforth (Mo.) and Olympia Snowe (Maine). All of the living former presidents serve as honorary co-chairs."

Dole's public statement came amid uproar over accusations that the moderator selected for second debate, C-SPAN's Steve Scully, reached out to notorious anti-Trumper Anthony Scaramucci via Twitter on Thursday, asking if he should "respond to Trump."


Scully deleted the comment the next day, but was already facing heat and accusations of bias, over reports that he was an intern for Biden in 1978.

Several fellow journalists came to Scully's defense, saying that he has been balanced in his reporting, while a co-chair on the debates commission claimed Scully's Twitter account was hacked. C-SPAN also released a statement saying that Scully's account was hijacked and that authorities were investigating.

Meanwhile, Fox News reported that "Scully has a history of blaming hackers for his social media posts," citing previous times he made the same claim on the platform. Twitter refused to comment to the outlet on the matter.

Following Dole's comments, The Wall Street Journal reported that the second presidential debate between Trump and Biden, which was slated for Oct. 15, had been canceled.

The commission had previously announced that the town hall debate would be virtual following Trump's coronavirus diagnosis, but the president said he would not participate unless the event was held in person.

President Trump tweeted after the cancelation, ".@SteveScully, the Never Trumper next debate moderator, got caught cold. Pulled out the old, 'I've been hacked', line. That never works. His bosses are furious at him as he's lost all credibility!"

.@SteveScully, the Never Trumper next debate moderator, got caught cold. Pulled out the old, “I’ve been hacked”, li… https://t.co/X1cNyoyGRH
— Donald J. Trump (@Donald J. Trump)1602286280.0

Scully tweeted on his own account afterward, "I want to thank the @CPD for the honor of moderating the town hall meeting debate in Florida next Thursday. With news tonight the debate was cancelled, I want to wish @KWelkerNBC the very best on October 22nd. Presidential debates are part of America's great democracy!"