Sunday, January 13, 2019
Nancy Pelosi Should Be Ashamed to Even Mention the Americans Dead Because of Her ProgDem Open Border Agenda
NANCY PELOSI TALKS GLIBLY ABOUT AMERICAN DEATHS BUT SHE KNOWS NOTHING OF DEATH. Pelosi says their deaths aren't as important as separating babies from their illegal alien parents. • • • PELOSI CALLS IT A "DISPARITY OF SHARED VALUES." BuzzFeed and CNS reported on Friday that Nancy said in her weekly news conference on Thursday : "Clearly, there is a disparity of shared values here, in terms of respecting the dignity and worth of everyone, being concerned about every death that happens because we live in an imperfect world. And, that’s very sad -- but, it is not a justification for having more children die in custody or be separated from their families. We’re not even going into that discussion -- taking babies out the arms of their parents. As the mother of five and grandmother of nine, I find that appalling -- they [Republicans] find it normal. We talk about what he [President Trump] might do tomorrow, today, as he’s at the border. I think he’s going to have to answer to his own party for usurping that much power." • Pelosi also said, according to the Huffington Post, that she believes President Trump staged the high drama at Wednesday’s meeting between party leaders over the partial government shutdown. “Not only was the President unpresidential ? surprise, surprise ? yesterday in his behavior, I think the meeting was a setup so he could walk out,” Pelosi told reporters on Capitol Hill. • House Minority leader Kevin McCarthy has already debunked the Pelosi-Schumer version of the meeting, saying the President was polite, offered candy, and did not walk out until it was clear that Speaker Pelosi was not going to discuss building the wall or make any proposal about how to end the government shutdown -- except by saying that she would not fund the wall. • Nancy Pelosi has no
idea what she is talking about. We have to wonder if she even realizes that it is her policies of open borders and a basket of benefits
for illegal aliens that IS the problem. Does Pelosi realize that her home state of California is one of the largest offenders when it comes
to making the southern border a magnet for Central American marchers? Does Pelosi realize that California's sanctuary state laws and the utterly unconstitutional "sanctuary for all who seek it' policy of California's new Progressive Democrat governor are leading illegals to cross into America? Does Pelosi know or care that thousands of Americans have been killed by the thugs and criminals and drug cartel gang members who enter the US with the flow of illegals at the southern border? Does Pelosi really believe that American lives are worth less than the open-border flow of illegal aliens into the United States?? Pelosi, like all her "champagne socialist" friends, is a privileged politician living in a bubble where she is protected from all danger and all reality beyond the Swamp. Pelosi and all her champagne socialist friends are protected by gated communities, fenced houses, and armed bodyguards. Nancy Pelosi is a Fraud, whose policy is simply to win at any cost, even if the cost is paid in American lives. • Does Pelosi care that Mexican authorities discovered five abandoned vehicles and at least 20 bodies at a rural location 56 miles west of McAllen, Texas, on Wednesday, as reported by CN, just hours after CNN White House correspondent Jim Acosta reported on the area’s apparent safety and tranquility : “We’re not seeing any kind of imminent danger. There are no migrants trying to rush toward this fence here in the McAllen, Texas, area,” Acosta said in a video posted to his Twitter account Thursday. “No sign of the national emergency that
[President Trump] has been talking about. As a matter of fact, it’s pretty tranquil down here.” THEN, Mexican federal police found four
burnt-out trucks, a sedan and the bodies, most of them charred, in a rural community near the town of Miguel Aleman, authorities told
CNN. The grisly scene appeared to be the result of a battle between rival gangs, Tamaulipas Attorney General Irving Barrios Mojica
told Carmen Aristegui, who works for CNN and hosts a radio show in Mexico. CNN reported on the incident Thursday evening. Did Nancy Pelosi weep her Crocodile Tears for these poor trafficked Central Americans who died horrible deaths in the hands of some of the illegals Pelosi thinks should be welcomed with open arms into the United States?? • Compare Nancy Pelosi and her Crocodile Tears for these illegal aliens to a man who worked for peace and humanity all his life. Ariel Sharon. • • • SHARON KNEW THE HORRORS OF WAR AND EXPERIENCED THE DEATH OF HIS FRIENDS IN BATTLE. On Saturday, the Times of Israel published a piece written by Mitch Ginsburg about the young soldier Ariel Sharon's memories of the Latrun killing fields of the 1984 war for the establishment of the state of Israel. Sharon knew what war was in reality, and what the slaughter of friends and comrades felt like when witnessed firsthand, and he wrote about it. "Arik" Sheinerman, his family name, was a battalion commander at the age of 20, shot in the abdomen at Latrun, and would have died, but for the heroism of a 16-year-old soldier, wounded himself, dragged Sharon through the Latrun killing fields to safety. Ginsburg calls that the formative moment of Ariel Sharon’s life. It was May 1948 -- the battle for Latrun, in which he was left for dead : "At the time, Jews and Palestinians had been fighting for six months. Arab forces controlled the ridges along the road to Jerusalem, barring the delivery of anything beyond sporadic convoys of food and water. The corridor to the capital, dominated by the town of Latrun and the Crusader castle looming over the Tel Aviv-Jerusalem road, was held by Jordanian troops and Palestinian militia. The Haganah’s 7th Brigade, a newly formed unit mostly manned by Holocaust survivors, some of whom had never before fired a weapon, was given the task. Sharon...commanded the 1st Platoon of B Company of the 32nd Battalion, the only battle-
hardened fighting force in the brigade. On May 25, in the afternoon, he lay in the shade of an olive grove and wrote a letter to his
parents. It was published years later in Ram Oren’s account of the battle, 'Latrun,' and speaks both to Sharon’s writing skills and his
view, as the quintessential sabra, of the European Jewish refugees and their plight." • Here is a recounting of Ariel Sharon's near-
death, with excerpts from his letter -- republished in “Ariel Sharon : A Life," a 2006 biography that Ginsburg translated.] : “My platoon
and I are lazing in an olive grove, passing the heat of the day, thinking pre-battle thoughts, blending with the water-smoothed stones
and the earth, feeling part and parcel of the land : a rooted feeling, a feeling of a homeland, of belonging, of ownership. Suddenly a
convoy of trucks stopped next to us and unloaded new, foreign-looking recruits. They looked slightly pale, and were wearing sleeveless
sweaters, gray pants, and striped shirts. A stream of languages filled the air, names like Herschel and Yazek, Jan and Maitek were
thrown around. They stuck out against the backdrop of olives, rocks, and yellowing grains. They’d come to us through blocked borders,
from Europe’s death camps. 'I watched them. Watched them strip, watched their white bodies. They tried to find fitting uniforms, and
fought the straps on their battle jackets as their new commanders helped them get suited up. They did this in silence, as though they
had made their peace with fate. Not one of them cried out : ‘Let us at least breathe the free air after the years of terrible suffering.’ It is
as if they’d come to the conclusion that this is one final battle for the future of the Jewish people.' " • The plan was to attack at
midnight. The commanders, though, quarreled through the dark hours of the night and only sent the troops into the field at 4 a.m. Sharon, 20 years old, led the battalion into battle. Shortly after five in the morning, “in a moment of startling swiftness,” the sun burnt away the haze, and the platoon, which had been leading several hundred men, found itself alone on an open patch of earth. The olive grove above them, on Latrun hill, "looked like it was spitting fire." Sharon led the platoon to a gully, a small indentation in the earth that provided the most meager cover, and took stock : his sergeant had been wounded. The platoon radio took a bullet and was unoperable. None of them had water, as canteens had not been found before the battle, and behind them, the wheat fields burned from the artillery rounds. Up ahead, through the billowing smoke, the Jordanian troops laid down long bursts of machine gun fire. They were trapped. “On the bright side,” Sharon wrote, “we had a good supply of hand grenades and ammunition for our Sten guns and Czech rifles.” The slightest movement from members of the 1st Platoon provoked enemy fire. Soldiers who shifted carelessly were shot and dragged to the back of the gully, where an oozing, muddy trickle of water turned red with blood. Flies and gnats descended on the wounded. Jordanian Bedouin soldiers began flitting out of the olive grove and launching frontal assaults. Only when they were within 40 yards of the position, and only after the Hagannah soldiers heard the calls of Itbah al-Yahud, kill the Jews, did they open fire, repulsing wave after wave of Arab offensives. Sharon was plagued by thirst and desperate for the day to darken into night. He re-wound his watch so often...that the stem came off in his hand. By one in the afternoon, half of the platoon was dead and nearly all the rest were wounded, and Sharon, who had entered the battle with one arm in a cast, was shot in the abdomen. “Raising myself to see what was happening, I felt something thud into my belly, knocking me back. I heard my mouth say ‘Imah’ -- mother, and the instant it was out I glanced around to see if anybody had heard,” he wrote in [his autobiography] “Warrior.” • A little later in the afternoon, a palpable shift descended on the battlefield. The Israeli guns opened fire, and Sharon, completely cut off from the rest of the force, told his men to get ready for a charge. He was sure the Israeli artillery was the precursor to a larger offensive. But looking over his shoulder, amid a
sudden calm in the barrage, he saw how mistaken he had been: the artillery fire had enabled the brigade to retreat. The hills behind
him, where the 72nd Battalion had guarded their flank, were covered with Palestinian villagers. “I looked back and saw that I had
misinterpreted the sudden silence,” he wrote in a piece for Yedioth Ahronoth in 1998....“The entire mountainside behind us was covered with Arab villagers. They butchered our wounded, the ones left in the field by other units. All around me,” he continued, “the dead and the wounded. All friends, all from the Sharon region [where Ariel Sharon was born], most from a single village. People you grew up with. Here they were, right in front of you, in this awful field, close to death, and there was nothing you could do for them. They were lost. ” One of them, Simcha Pinchasi, described in “Warrior” as “a wonderful boy from Kfar Saba,” had been hit in both legs and couldn’t move. He’d been manning the machine gun all day. “With a look and a quick nod he indicated that he would cover the withdrawal,” Sharon wrote. “But Arik,” he said, “before you go, give me a grenade.” I gave it to him, knowing there was no hope whatsoever, not for him and most likely not for the rest of us either. There was no one whom I could ask to carry him, just as there was no one who could carry me. Our eyes caught for a moment, then I turned to go. And as I did I had a momentary image of his parents as they were when I last saw them in their village.” The order to retreat and leave men like Pinchasi behind, he said years after the battle, was the most difficult one he ever had to issue. “There were others, of varying magnitudes, of different degrees of responsibility, but none was as grave as that one,” he wrote in the Yedioth Ahronoth article. “I looked at my wounded. I knew I was seeing them for the last time. I knew they would be butchered. I gave the order. For the first and last time in my life as a commander, I gave the order : retreat, retreat and leave the wounded in the field. There was no choice. I had to save the few that were still alive. I lay there, tormented by pain. The few who were able to move, passed me by. “Should we leave you here, too?” Yes, me too. I saw the eyes of those who fled. They contained shock and sorrow, immense pain. That look accompanies me to this day, always.” • Eventually, after pointing the way and parting with Pinchasi, Sharon set out on his own, dragging his body across the smoldering earth. Sure that he would not be able to clear even one rocky terrace, he slithered along, with “the sounds of the pillage and the slaughter being perpetrated by the villagers knock[ing] upon my eardrums.” One soldier, a native of one of the villages near his hometown of Kfar Malal, “looked at him long and
hard” at the nature of his wound and his blood-soaked uniform, and “parted with him in silence,” according to the account in Nir Hefez
and Gadi Bloom’s “Ariel Sharon : A Life.” • Yakov Bugin, a 16 year-old soldier under his command, who had just joined the platoon
and who himself had been shot in the jaw and was missing a large part of his face, found Sharon on his back, eyes open, looking at the
sky. Sharon, unable to remember the soldier’s name, told him to “run, escape, save yourself.” Bugin, though, wordlessly helped him
through the hellish vista, boosting him up over terraces and relying on Sharon’s infallible sense of direction to guide them back through
the killing field. “We had no choice but to stand tall and walk through the field in full view of the armed Palestinian peasants,” Bugin told
Hefez and Bloom. “Once we stood up, we could see the Arabs shooting our wounded right beside us. They saw us, but luckily they were too busy looting the bodies to raise their weapons and kill the two miserable, bleeding soldiers limping past...All they would have had to do to kill us is raise their weapons to their shoulders. They wouldn’t even have had to run. That’s how Arik and I made our way through the field, surrounded by Arabs, until we slowly distanced ourselves from them. We were lucky that Arik knew the area well and that he had binoculars, which helped us find the area for wounded soldiers.” They continued like that for hours, until Sharon, spotting the jeep that would rescue them, passed out. • But Ariel Sharon never forgot the experience. As commander of the Paratroops and Unit 101, Israel’s first true elite force, he made it an ironclad rule that the injured never be left in the field. And Goldburg reminds us that when, in September 2001, Ariel Sharon "became the first Likud prime minister to say that Israel “wants to give the Palestinians what no one else ever has : the opportunity to establish a state of their own,” he did so, not by coincidence, at Latrun." • • • DEAR READERS, that is war. It is the particular hell that is civil and border war. It is the story of young soldiers fighting for their homeland. • That, we point out to Nancy Pelosi, is the reality of war. It is the reality writ large by Ariel Sharon of dead Israelis -- Jews -- fighting for their homeland. • Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban held his first government news conference of 2019 last Thursday, where he drew a distinct line between European ideologies : "There will be two civilizations in the EU. One mixed Moslem-Christian in the West, and one traditional European-Christian in Central Europe....We have reached a point in Europe where liberals have become enemy number one of freedom.” Orban was spelling out another kind of border -- between western civilization and those who seek to destroy it. • And, in a real sense, Ariel Sharon's memories of the battle of Latrun is today's reality of the "dead Americans" so casually dismissed by ProgDem liberal Nancy Pelosi. Sharon was a soldier, and soldiers know the human cost of war. Right now, on the southern US border, American soldiers, Border Patrol officers, and ICE field personnel know the cost of war for the Americans they are trying to save from terror and slaughter at the hands of criminals and terrorists who want to steal part of America's homeland as a prelude to stealing all of America. You, Speaker Pelosi, know nothing about such war. And you should be ashamed even to speak of
the dead Americans who are its casualties. • • • Remember to follow Caseypops on Twitter @caseypopsblog
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The Nancy Pelosi’s of the continuing far left moving factor of American politics has neither shame or a conscience, neither consideration for or against, and neither pride nor disguise in what they want for America.
ReplyDeleteThey want our Republic to crumble and fall. They want our beautiful papers that spell out our unique approach to self government to be burned in mockery to the trash set forth by their own “philosophers” of meaningless ideas and thoughts.
America is a land brought forth from dreams of freedom, not continuance of what was left behind in servitude.
The American Dream is not dead. But the dream of a different America is one of selfish self reward garnished through lies and falsehoods. Did Donald Trump ever work for the Russians? Certainly not. But some consideration should be given to the level of Russian involvement by the
Kennedy clan starting with Ambassador & Rose Kennedy.
The Democratic should clean out their own house before doing house cleaning of the Trump White House.
Searching for truth among the words of Nancy Pelosi and her friends is akin to believing in the Easter Bunny at age 21.
ReplyDelete