'It may be funny to you, motherf***er': Beto GOES OFF when he gets a taste of his own obnoxiousness



During a town hall speech on Wednesday, Democratic gubernatorial candidate Robert "Beto" O’Rourke was interrupted while dramatically demonstrating what soldiers "on the battlefields in Vietnam" would look like while using an AR-15 to "penetrate an enemy soldier's helmet at 500 feet." Of course, he was obnoxiously using the atrocious murders of 19 children and two teachers in Uvalde, Texas, to bolster his campaign, just as he did in May, just one day after the horrific elementary school massacre, when he showed up and heckled Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott in the middle of an update.

According to the Beto-loving Twitter mob, O'Rourke's heckler "laughed," prompting the Democratic candidate to shout, “It may be funny to you, motherf***er, but it’s not funny to me.”

Apparently, former ESPN host Jemele Hill can be counted among O'Rourke's simpering fans on Twitter, where a video clip of his outburst has been viewed more than 3.8 million times as of this writing.

\u201cTexas, y\u2019all gotta elect this man @BetoORourke\n\n\u201d
— Jemele Hill (@Jemele Hill) 1660197669

No, Jemele, we don't gotta.

O'Rourke, a longtime advocate for strict gun control laws, will face off against Abbott in November.

On "Pat Gray Unleashed," BlazeTV host Pat Gray elaborated on the race to be Texas governor, with Abbott and O'Rourke battling over gun rights, the border crisis, Texas schools, and more.

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



Want more from Pat Gray?

To enjoy more of Pat's biting analysis and signature wit as he restores common sense to a senseless world, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.

Trump refers to 'coyotes' during illegal immigration segment at debate — and Twitter 'blue check marks' dazzle with their ignorance



Leftists love to call President Donald Trump names, particularly with regard to his cognitive abilities. Idiot, stupid, moron — yup, that's the leader of the free world, they say.

But during Thursday night's debate against Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, Trump apparently really stepped in it when he referred to "coyotes" — i.e., human smugglers — who illegally bring children across the U.S.-Mexico border.

Why? Well, some pretty prominent Trump-haters on Twitter lost their minds — no jokes, please — because they actually appeared to believe Trump was talking about the furry, walks-on-all-fours, looks-like-a-wolf coyotes.

Really.

A mind is a terrible thing to waste

First up is everybody's favorite scowling, skinny-armed, gun-confiscation poster boy David Hogg:

Imagine calling the immigrant parents that bring their children to the United States for a better life “Coyotes”… https://t.co/6CcCkMXuTS
— David Hogg (@David Hogg)1603418907.0

"Imagine calling the immigrant parents that bring their children to the United States for a better life 'coyotes,'" Hogg wrote. "The level of xenophobia is sickening."

His post as of Friday morning was still active — and being ratioed to death. Check it out while it's hot.

Next up is Jemele Hill, that former ESPN host posing as a sociopolitical raconteur. The Atlantic gave her a shot, if that's any indication. Anyway, Hill reacted with the following:

Coyotes, dawg?
— Jemele Hill (@Jemele Hill)1603418848.0

For real, dawg.

Or how about Dar'shun Kendrick? She's not only an attorney but also a member of the Georgia House of Representatives — and the chief deputy whip of its Democratic wing, no less. Kendrick was in total disbelief that an animal could carry a human across the border:

Did @realDonaldTrump just say 545 kids they can't find their parents for came over through "cartels and coyotes"?!… https://t.co/HxkV3pudgS
— Dar'shun Kendrick (@Dar'shun Kendrick)1603418650.0

"How the hell does a coyote bring a whole human across the border?!" she responded, dumbfounded. "Lord-----stop talking."

It's worth it to note that Kendrick didn't take kindly Friday morning to contrarians snapping back at her:

Image source: Twitter/DarshunKendrick screenshot

And it also may come as no surprise that Kendrick last year infamously touted a "Testicular Bill of Rights" to protest the Georgia House passing a bill banning abortions after fetal heartbeat detection. Her bill aimed to "regulate" men's bodies, for example, by banning vasectomies and forcing them to get permission from their sexual partners before getting Viagra.

Oh, there's more. Much more.

The latter three aren't the only unsharpened tools in the shed, apparently:

Tonight on blue checkmark twitter, they don’t know what coyotes are. (This isn’t even half of all I found 🥴) https://t.co/Jsh57jSBb1
— Sophia Narwitz (@Sophia Narwitz)1603434178.0

Omri Ceren, national security adviser for Republican U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz (Texas), had the following to say in response to Hill's unfortunate query:

"It's not the lack of knowledge," he wrote, "it's the confidence in that lack of knowledge."

Indeed, it would appear that members of the left for so long and so often have told themselves they're so much smarter than those rubes from flyover country that they've ended up utterly convinced of that narrative — to the point of collective ignorance in regard to uncomplicated, easily accessible truths.

Jemele Hill sparks backlash online after insisting 'black men just want better access to patriarchy'



Sports journalist and writer Jemele Hill sparked outrage on Twitter Tuesday after claiming that black men don't want to dismantle the patriarchy — they just want "better access" to it.

What are the details?

As pointed out by Newsweek, Hill commented that she has "increasingly" found that "many black men just want better access to patriarchy."

"They don't actually want it dismantled," she wrote.

I have increasingly found that many black men just want better access to patriarchy. They don’t actually want it dismantled.
— Jemele Hill (@Jemele Hill)1603194991.0

Hill said that her realization surfaced after engaging in what she said were "disturbing" conversations about black men and black women in the U.S.

She wrote, "Let's just say some of the conversations I've had recently are ... disturbing."

One user blasted Hill, and wrote, "America is at war with its Black citizens. Black male 'access' is a false flag. What kind of access do we have of 1.2 million Black men are in jail? The fact that you have lots to say about the myth of Black male 'access' and nothing about the war proves your confusion."

Another added, "More Black men voted against patriarchy and Trump than any other male demographic in 2016 and polls show that they will continue to vote more against Trump than any other male demographic in 2020."

Though many people criticized her for her blanket statement, some social media users spoke out in agreement with her sentiments.

"I dont [sic] know if it's 'many' but it's alarming more than I thought possible," one user wrote. "A byproduct of enslavement. They get let into rooms ... and think they don't think about who and what they leave behind."

Another user added, "Same with many women I've known through the years. Once they 'make it,' they spend a lot of time closing/blocking the doors behind them. Flabbergasting."

A third user noted, "True, as well as many black people want better access to capitalism, they don't actually want it dismantled either. Capitalism is oppressing & black capitalism doesn't end oppression."

Glenn Beck SCHOOLS Jemele Hill for tweet claiming Nazis learned 'systems of genocide by watching America'



Former ESPN journalist Jemele Hill sparked outrage over the weekend when she tweeted that the United States was "nearly as bad as Nazi Germany."

"Been reading Isabel Wilkerson's new book, 'Caste,' and if you were of the opinion that the United States wasn't nearly as bad as Nazi Germany, how wrong you are. Can't encourage you enough to read this masterpiece," Hill wrote on Twitter.

Been reading Isabel Wilkerson’s new book, “Caste,” and if you were of the opinion that the United States wasn’t nea… https://t.co/G5PyyIEgW5
— Jemele Hill (@Jemele Hill)1598214894.0

Just in case you were of the opinion that Hill stopped there, how wrong you are. In fact, she doubled down on her controversial claim by adding that the Nazis "learned their systems of genocide by watching America, and studying our history of racialized slavery, and great knack for racial terrorism."

On the radio program Monday, Glenn Beck had an eye-opening history lesson for the former sports journalist. While it is true the Nazis did learn some horrific ideas from America, such as the inhumane beliefs and practices of eugenics, these concepts came primarily from Progressive Era leaders, including President Woodrow Wilson, Edward Bernays, Margaret Sanger, and President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

"Let me set the record straight for Jamele, who I'm sure is a deep, deep ... scholar on the issue. The Nazis, you're right, did learn from America," Glenn said. "Except ... they got that from the progressives, Southern Democrats, and even the Klan."

Watch the video below to hear Glenn break down the historical details you won't hear from liberal journalists like Jemele Hill:



Want more from Glenn Beck?

To enjoy more of Glenn's masterful storytelling, thought-provoking analysis and uncanny ability to make sense of the chaos, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution and live the American dream.

Jemele Hill says the US was 'nearly as bad as Nazi Germany' after reading book on systemic oppression of black people



Jemele Hill, writer for the Atlantic and host of the "Jemele Hill is Unbothered" podcast, wrote on Twitter on Sunday that the United States was just as bad as Nazi Germany in the context of systemic oppression.

What did she say?

"Been reading Isabel Wilkerson's new book, 'Caste,' and if you were of the opinion that the United States wasn't nearly as bad as Nazi Germany, how wrong you are," Hill wrote Sunday afternoon. "Can't encourage you enough to read this masterpiece."

Been reading Isabel Wilkerson’s new book, “Caste,” and if you were of the opinion that the United States wasn’t nea… https://t.co/G5PyyIEgW5
— Jemele Hill (@Jemele Hill)1598214894.0

What's this book about?

"Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents" by Isabel Wilkerson was released earlier this month and was recommended by Oprah for her book club.

The premise of the book is that looking at race and class doesn't go deep enough to understand the divisions and oppression that have impacted black people in America. Wilkerson suggests that a caste system exists in America that serves as the infrastructure within which racial oppression exists.

In the book, Wilkerson draws parallels between the caste system in the United States and the caste systems of India and Nazi Germany.

"I have to say that my focus was not initially on the Nazis themselves, but rather on how Germany has worked in the decades after the war to reconcile its history," Wilkerson said in an interview with NPR. "But the deeper I got, and the more that I looked into this, the deeper I searched, I discovered these connections that I never would have imagined."

Did she clarify?

Some people who read the tweet assumed Hill was saying America is currently as bad as Nazi Germany, which Hill later clarified was not the case.

"Nowhere in my tweet did I say the current state of America is like Nazi Germany," Hill wrote in response to one critic. "I was referring specifically to our racial history. The parallels have been pointed out by plenty of historians, not just Isabel Wilkerson."

Hill said the comparison was based on the book's assertion that the Nazis studied America's Jim Crow laws when formulating the Nuremberg laws.

"What would you call it when a country that murdered millions of Jews learned their systems of genocide by watching America, and studying our history of radicalized slavery, and great knack for racial terrorism?" Hill wrote in another follow-up tweet.