Anonymous ID: 070b2a Oct. 12, 2020, 7:46 a.m. No.11037351   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7364 >>7639 >>7835

Twitter Won’t Confirm if Scully ‘Hack’ Is Under Investigation

 

Twitter declined to comment on whether the alleged “hack” of C-SPAN reporter Steve Scully’s account is under investigation, despite assurances from the Presidential Debates Commission that an investigation is taking place. “Steve Scully notified us that his Twitter account was hacked. CPD reported the apparent hack to the FBI and Twitter, and we understand that the federal authorities and Twitter are looking into the issue,” said the CPD on its official Twitter account.

 

Steve Scully notified us that his Twitter account was hacked. CPD reported the apparent hack to the FBI and Twitter, and we understand that the federal authorities and Twitter are looking into the issue.— CPD (@debates) October 9, 2020

 

However, responding to an email from Breitbart News, Twitter officially declined to comment on whether or not such an investigation is underway. Scully, who was set to moderate the now-canceled second debate between President Donald J. Trump and Joe Biden, claimed his account was hacked after he sent a public message to former Trump official turned critic of the President, Anthony Scaramucci, asking if he should respond to Trump’s allegations of pro-Biden bias “@Scaramucci should I respond to trump,” asked Scully on Friday. “Ignore. He is having a hard enough time,” responded Scaramucci.

 

Scully has been dogged by allegations of bias towards Joe Biden and against Donald Trump. As Breitbart News’ Kyle Olson recently reported, Scully even interned for then-Senator Biden in the 1980s:

 

When Scully spoke at Utah Valley University in 2010, this is how a biography described him: “Before coming to C-SPAN, Steve covered business, politics, and local government as a reporter and anchor at WHEC-TV (NBC Affiliate) in Rochester, NY, Prior to that, he was an anchor and reporter at WSEE-TV in Erie, PA, and WHBF-TV (CBS Affiliates) in Rock Island, IL. Steve taught several courses on the media & politics at St. John Fisher College & Nazareth College in Rochester, NY, between 1988-90.

https://www.breitbart.com/tech/2020/10/10/twitter-wont-confirm-if-scully-hack-is-under-investigation/

Anonymous ID: 070b2a Oct. 12, 2020, 7:58 a.m. No.11037489   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Staten Island GOP turns tables on Trump-hating teen TikTok trolls

 

Take that, Trump-hating TikTok tricksters! Thousands of teens tried to sabotage a Staten Island Republican rally last week by hoarding online tickets — just as they did to embarrass President Trump in Tulsa, Okla. in June. But the GOP bamboozled them into pouring nearly $16,000 into party coffers instead. On Sept. 19, out-of-staters using fake, frequently lewd names — including “Grabemby DePussay,” “Ivana Punchyou” and “F–kyou Trump” — began signing up online for the “TRiUMPh Rally,” a free get-out-the-vote event. “We had about 1,500 RSVPs from Staten Islanders. Then all of a sudden we started seeing the numbers tick up to 10,000, 15,000, 75,000,” Staten Island GOP chairman Brendan Lantry told The Post. “We knew something was not right.” Lantry’s wife Jessica, an avid TikTok user, soon traced the sign-ups to their source: a clip posted earlier that day by a 19-year-old from Brooklyn calling herself Felisrae. “Do you hate this orange bitch as much as I do?” the teen asks in a 51-second video. “It turns out that Trump is having a rally in Staten Island. “So what I did was, I reserved myself two seats. But I’m pretty sure that I have something to do that day,” she says gleefully. “So, do what you want with this information.”

 

The video rocketed around social media, racking up 523,000 views and 153,000 likes — and spurred scores of adults to spread the word. “Register for this. I did,” Debbie Ingber Deutsch of Armonk, NY wrote on Facebook. “Let’s learn from Gen Z and Tulsa!” “Order them so their numbers will be way off and they’ll expect more people,” explained Twitter user Earth Angel from Cheshire, Conn. As in Tulsa, the trolls’ goal was to snatch up as many tickets as possible, so that the event would become a sea of no-shows. Trump foes — led by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez — preened when the president’s first post-lockdown campaign rally in June was an attendance bust. “You just got ROCKED by teens on TikTok who flooded the Trump campaign w/fake ticket reservations,” AOC tweeted. “Y’all make me so proud.” To deter the troublemakers, Lantry added a nonrefundable $5 fee to the online sign-up form. “But they kept coming,” Lantry said. “From Colorado and California and Chicago and Houston, all over the country.” Multiple “Ruth Ginsbergs” — from Salisbury, Md., and Greensboro, N.C. — gladly paid for their ducats.

 

By the time the Oct. 3 rally began in a commercial parking lot on the South Shore, the Trump-haters had shelled out $15,785 to buy more than 3,000 vouchers they had no intention of using. “They hate this president so much that they’re willing to donate to the Republican Party to troll him,” Lantry said. And the thousands of Trump-hating no-shows were barely missed. No seats were provided at the open-air rally, and the event drew 2,500 locals, who filmed a get-well message for Trump as he recuperated from his bout with COVID-19. “Thank you, progressives, for helping us put on a successful rally,” Lantry said.

https://nypost.com/2020/10/10/staten-island-gop-turns-tables-on-trump-hating-teen-tiktok-trolls/

Anonymous ID: 070b2a Oct. 12, 2020, 8:17 a.m. No.11037725   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7758 >>7835

Canceling Columbus: How it started years ago, and escalated in 2020

 

Much of the hostility toward Christopher Columbus can be traced back to Howard Zinn's popular book of polemical history, "A People's History of the United States."

 

Attacks against statues of Christopher Columbus and calls to replace Columbus Day with Indigenous People's Day have become a Columbus Day ritual in recent years. This year they began early, shortly after the May 25 death of George Floyd while in the custody of Minneapolis police, as protests against police and "systemic" racism quickly turned into riots. This year's riots differed from others, such as Watts in 1965 and Ferguson in 2014. This summer's destruction rippled outward beyond the communities where the alleged police brutality took place. Symbolic vengeance for what was seen as the murder of a black man by white police officers was exacted in the widening desecration, destruction and removal of public historical monuments: first, statues of Confederates, then Columbus and, finally, an increasingly indiscriminate sweep of figures from American history, including even abolitionists, black Union soldiers, and the commander of the Union Army, Ulysses S. Grant. Much of the hostility toward Columbus can be traced back to Howard Zinn's popular book of polemical history, "A People's History of the United States," in continuous publication since 1980. The claims in this book are now widely accepted as conventional wisdom. Wikipedia, for example, attributes this summer's wave of attacks on and removal of more than 30 Columbus statues to the explorer's "enslavement of and systemic violence against the indigenous people of the Caribbean, including the genocide of the Taino people."

 

"A People's History" is used increasingly as a core history textbook in schools. The Zinn Education Project offers lessons based on Zinn's book, as well as "Abolish Columbus Day" kits. Zinn, ten years after his death, remains an icon of the political left and a profound influence in shaping unwary students' understanding of our national history. What happened in New Haven, Conn., this summer provides a case study. A statue of Columbus had stood in the city's Wooster Square Park since 1892. But on June 24, 2020, the statue, defaced with red paint, was taken down by workers, as fights erupted between supporters and opponents of the removal. Randall Beach, New Haven Register columnist, used Zinn's book to advocate for the statue's removal in a June 25 column headlined "With the Columbus statue gone, let the healing begin." Beach described the fights as occurring between Black Lives Matter members and opponents. One man told Beach he wanted the statue to stay because Columbus was not "a murderer and a rapist." This unnamed man echoed letter-writer Frank Mongillo, III, who objected to the removal of the statue, which had been funded by donations from "a group of Italian societies" and which, he said, symbolized pride and helped "build a sense of connection between the Italian community and America's history." Beach wrote that he had asked the man in the park "if he had read the historian Howard Zinn and his 'People's History of the United States' … Zinn used Columbus' journal and the observations of a writer-priest to amass extensive evidence that Columbus committed atrocities. …"

 

Beach was repeating claims from his June 18 column, which relied on the famous opening pages of Zinn's book, which, as demonstrated in my own "Debunking Howard Zinn," Zinn actually plagiarized from a book for high school students by his fellow anti-Vietnam War organizer, Hans Koning, a novelist. Zinn also quoted deceptively from Columbus' journal. One of these deceptive quotations cited by Beach formed the basis for a scene in "The Sopranos." The teenage A.J., doing homework, reads from Zinn's book: "They would make fine servants. … With fifty men we could subjugate them and make them do whatever we want." The passage, A.J. says, is proof that Columbus was a "slave trader." Television viewers did not see the ellipses, and they should not have needed to, for ellipses are used to eliminate short, nonessential passages. Zinn's, however, leave out pages — two days' worth of the explorer's log entries, including such sentences about the native inhabitants he encountered as: "I know that they are a people who can be made free and converted to our Holy Faith more by love than by force."

https://justthenews.com/nation/culture/columbus