>>9054426 pb
>>9055079 pb
YES!
I only watch these press conferences for the idiotic press questioning. They never fail to entertain.
@15:39 "Before you were press secretary you worked for the campaign. You made a comment that Trump will not allow this virus to come to this the country. After what has happened would you like to take that back"
BOOM! Slam dunk on that question. Throwing it right back on them. She left one thing out. The push back from these media idiots and Democrats calling Trump a racist and xenophobic for those travel restrictions. They are nothing but a bunch of China lackeys and talking heads.
She called them Fake news in an epic way. They are going to go full tilt now on reporting about session. Thanks for taking the time and providing the full transcript!
Mark it down then. We'll re-address this in a few years when full disclosure has occurred.
Indeed. In my comment a little before yours I did just a quick transcript. Just for the question. It's very time consuming that it is.
The artist who redesigned her back in the 50's the son is not too happy nor are some of the Native American Women.
My Native American father drew the Land O’Lakes maiden. She was never a stereotype.
Mia was originally created for Land O’Lakes packaging in 1928. In 1939, she was redesigned as a native maiden kneeling in a farm field holding a butter box. In 1954, my father, Patrick DesJarlait (Red Lake Ojibwe Nation in northern Minnesota), redesigned the image again.
Maybe that’s why many Native American women on social media have made it clear that they didn’t agree with those who viewed her as a romanticized and/or sexually objectified stereotype. Instead, Mia seems to have stirred a sense of remembrance and place, one that they found reassuring about their existence as Native American women.
http://archive.vn/HiVWV#selection-1279.214-1279.547
Mia’s vanishing has prompted a social media meme: “They Got Rid of The Indian and Kept the Land.”