Michael Eric Dyson’s Holder/Moses comparison inspires ridicule

http://twitter.com/#!/hale_razor/status/340244804044722176

Dr. Michael Eric Dyson’s claim that Attorney General Eric Holder is “the Moses of our time” was met with an initial wave of shock and disbelief, which Twitchy handily chronicled, along with video proof that we weren’t hearing things. The Twitterverse was quick to correct comedian Chris Rock’s delusion that the president is like “our boss” and “the dad of the country,” and it wasn’t about to let Dyson off easy on his claim that Holder — or any attorney general, ever, for that matter — is the nation’s “chief lawgiver.”

http://twitter.com/#!/AceofSpadesHQ/status/340229887283580928

Moses: I bringeth thee God's law, graven into these Tablets.

The Crowd: Share God's law with us!!!

Moses: Sure. Off the record.— DepressiveBlogger69 (@AceofSpadesHQ) May 30, 2013

http://twitter.com/#!/AceofSpadesHQ/status/340233622315483136

Moses: We have all sinned, even I!

The Crowd: You have sinned, Moses?

Moses: Yes. I read about it in the Washington Post.— DepressiveBlogger69 (@AceofSpadesHQ) May 30, 2013

http://twitter.com/#!/AceofSpadesHQ/status/340234411930972161

Moses: Hear me! Pharaoh is a co-conspirator with Satan!!

The Crowd: Really?!

Moses: Off the record– not really. I said it for effect.— DepressiveBlogger69 (@AceofSpadesHQ) May 30, 2013

http://twitter.com/#!/GPollowitz/status/340252766612119552 http://twitter.com/#!/hale_razor/status/340233708256772096 http://twitter.com/#!/LJCambria/status/340253645775962112 http://twitter.com/#!/Doc_0/status/340238393319510017 http://twitter.com/#!/AndTheRest/status/340253643834011649 http://twitter.com/#!/wtc/status/340254051348389888

Georgetown, where Dyson teaches sociology, isn’t the only school that comes out of this looking bad; guess what Dyson studied at Princeton?

http://twitter.com/#!/JayCaruso/status/340258156900909058

Read more: http://twitchy.com/2013/05/30/michael-eric-dysons-holdermoses-comparison-inspires-ridicule-of-biblical-proportions/

Clint Eastwood’s wife gets a reality show

http://twitter.com/#!/kevinddaly/status/179664861104574464

It seems like these days if you’re famous, or even know somebody who’s famous, you can have your own reality show. Some people have enough willpower to turn the money down and avoid having cameramen record every second of their lives. Others just simply can’t say no.

Mrs. Eastwood & Company, a 10-part series that centers on Eastwood’s wife, Dina, and daughters Morgan and Francesca (her mom is Frances Fisher, but she also calls Dina “Mom”), premieres on E! on May 20.

“I know my limitations with Clint so I don’t push him too hard,” Dina told me in an exclusive interview.

Oh God the E reality series following Clint Eastwood's wife and daughters has been greenlit. This is wrong on so many levels.

— Jenny Priestley (@jennypriestley) March 13, 2012

Just got press release about reality tv show Mrs. Eastwood & co.aka Clint's last wife;cried a lil inside that family is famewhoring his name

— Melissa Chapman (@MelissaSChapman) March 13, 2012

Read more: http://twitchy.com/2012/03/13/clint-eastwoods-wife-gets-a-reality-show/

‘Breaking Bad style’: Ferguson, Mo., looters load ATM onto truck

http://twitter.com/#!/AntonioFrench/status/498672996085936128

Looters in Ferguson, Mo., are now stealing pretty much everything they can get their hands on, including QuickTrip’s Automated Teller Machine.

http://twitter.com/#!/michaelcalhoun/status/498672516366622720

We can’t confirm that the looters actually got into the machine. (According to the TV series Breaking Bad, stealing it is easier than breaking into it.)

http://twitter.com/#!/kennerparish/status/498676331308015616

Related:

‘And the riots have started’: Protest escalates in Ferguson Mo. [pics, Vine, video]; Updated: Looting, vandalism, violence

New Black Panthers reportedly at protest, riots in Ferguson, Mo. [pics, Vine video]

Now someone is shooting at Ferguson, Mo., police

Tensions rise in Ferguson, Mo., as angry anti-police protests intensify [Vine video]

‘F*ck the police’: ‘Disturbed’ online protesters want #JusticeForMikeBrown

 

 

 

Read more: http://twitchy.com/2014/08/10/breaking-bad-style-ferguson-mo-looters-load-atm-onto-truck/

Matt Lauer touts McDonalds’ commitment to your wellbeing of kids

http://twitter.com/#!/Laurie_David/status/406088138982191104

McDonald’s is a good American company, but “Today Show” host Matt Lauer’s declaration during these days’s Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade hit some viewers, including liberal producer Laurie David and Politifact reporter Steve Contorno, as slightly odd.

http://twitter.com/#!/StephenBeard/status/406088375125303296 http://twitter.com/#!/SetMeOnFYYYYAH/status/406087848249815040

Up-date:

Our commenters explain that Lauer had been probably talking about Ronald McDonald home charities — a worthwhile cause without a doubt.

Read more: http://twitchy.com/2013/11/28/matt-lauer-touts-mcdonalds-dedication-to-the-well-being-of-kids-everywhere/

Notice anything off about this photo of Obama’s ‘morning commute’?

http://twitter.com/#!/jlangdale/status/526822132748402688

The coolest:

“Commute.”

OK, golf jokes aside, a few tweeters couldn’t help but notice that there’s something about that photo that doesn’t seem quite right …

Or maybe he’s not going to work at all:

Guess his work there is done.

Read more: http://twitchy.com/2014/10/27/notice-anything-off-about-this-photo-of-obamas-morning-commute/

Anti-Muslim Group Pegida Outnumbered By Opponents At First UK Rally

The German-born movement held its first British rally in Newcastle today. A counter-demonstration outnumbered Pegida’s supporters by at least five to one.

Chris Stokel-Walker

NEWCASTLE-UPON-TYNE — The German movement Pegida (Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the West) held its first demonstration in the UK today, countered by a coalition of religious leaders, politicians, trade unions, and locals that outnumbered Pegida’s supporters by at least five to one.

Paul Weston, chair of Liberty GB and a speaker at the Pegida rally, which was held in Newcastle’s Bigg Market, claimed that 300 people were in attendance to oppose what they perceived as the encroaching Islamisation of the United Kingdom. Organisers of the Newcastle Unites counter-protest claimed that 1,500 people or more attended their rally. Northumbria police subsequently estimated the figures at 375 and 2,000 respectively.

Pegida holds weekly rallies in Dresden, and a UK-based movement that has links to the original group (profiled by BuzzFeed News recently) chose Newcastle for its first official event in the UK.

Chris Stokel-Walker

4. At the Pegida event, speeches by Winston Churchill and songs such as “Land of Hope and Glory” played over the PA.


One Pegida supporter brandishing a National Front flag — he did not wish to be named — said he was present at the protest because “I want to let the government and the politicians know that what’s happening is wrong. They need to tackle immigration. We’re getting killed and getting bombed. Immigration is destroying our country. This is a Christian country.”

Marion Rogers, a spokesperson for Pegida who travelled up to Newcastle from her home in Cornwall, said before the event that the group was expecting “well in excess of a thousand” people to attend.

“We are not a hatred campaign,” she asserted. “I know Newcastle Unites have said we are a hatred campaign but that’s exactly the opposite. We’re against extremism, and against extreme Islamic terrorism and its effects on the UK.”

Arne Lietz, a German MEP, flew over to Newcastle to oppose Pegida. He told BuzzFeed News that “singling out hate speech against a group is not acceptable. We have to stand together.”

5. The protest and counter-protest were carried off without violence, except for a brief skirmish when a pair of protesters unfurled a flag with the insignia of Golden Dawn, the Greek neo-Nazi party.


The organisers of the Pegida protest had refused to deny access to anyone, regardless of their political affiliation. At that point pro-Pegida protesters broke ranks into the 150-yard buffer zone that police had established between the two groups.

“Somebody pulled out the Nazi flag,” explained Rogers. “That is not what we’re about. Our people wanted to get the flag off them. And that is good. It showed we are not Nazis. It’s not what Pegida is about, and that’s why we stopped it.”

Chris Stokel-Walker

7. Northumbria police confirmed that five people were arrested, two from within the region, two from outside the region, and one of unknown origin.


Chief superintendent Laura Young said: “Both demonstrations passed without any problems and I’d like to thank people in Newcastle for their cooperation and support throughout. The vast majority of those that took part in today’s events were peaceful and both groups stuck to their agreed times, routes and plans.

“Disruption was kept to a minimum in the city centre and we are very grateful for the assistance and patience shown by the public and those in Newcastle this morning.”

Planning for the Pegida event had been hectic and confused. Lack of local knowledge meant the organisers had failed to realise it was a Newcastle United match day on February 28, and that this compact northeastern city would become a one-way path to the Gallowgate end of St James’ Park. What was envisaged as a vibrant, moving, afternoon protest became a static morning standing in the Bigg Market, best known for television images of skimpily dressed women vomiting into gutters late at night. For some Pegida sympathisers from around the country, an 11am start was also too early for them to catch a train up to Newcastle.

8. The organisers also appeared confused about the make-up of the region and its social stance.


Matthew Pope, a 29-year-old from Cambridge who was in charge of the rally until he stepped down days before the event, told The Telegraph that Newcastle was chosen because it lacked a far-right rump that could turn the protest violent.

Rogers, who took over from Pope as Pegida’s media liaison on Thursday, told BuzzFeed News that “it was people from Newcastle who contacted Pegida with an interest in having something in the UK”. She insisted that those who had contacted the German arm of Pegida were largely made up of Newcastle United supporters.

Chris Stokel-Walker

10. That’s something NUFC Fans United, an umbrella body of the club’s supporters groups, disagreed with.


It released a statement ahead of the protest saying that “this rally is unacceptable, uncalled for and not welcome on the streets of Newcastle”.

Those football supporters — and a good deal more people, including trade union members, anti-fascist groups, members of various religious bodies, and the general public — took to the streets in the counter-demonstration, branded under the slogan Newcastle Unites. As they marched towards their meeting point near the Bigg Market, the crowd waved signs including one reading “Auf Wiedersehen, Pegida” and chanted, “We are black, we are white, we are united.”

Gavin Wort, vicar at the Holy Cross Church in Fenham and chair of the Newcastle Diocese for Interfaith Relations, told BuzzFeed News that he was in attendance “in solidarity with my Muslim brothers and sisters who are suffering from Islamophobia”. He added that “Newcastle Unites is sending a loud message: Our city is diverse, and we want to celebrate that”.

Also in attendance were a group from the Islamic Diversity Centre (IDC), a local Islamic organisation. They had brought forward by a month the planned launch of a nationwide campaign titled “Against Racism, Against Hatred”, which aims to survey people in eight cities, including Newcastle, about their perceptions of racism and Islamophobia.

Chris Stokel-Walker

“I was intending to launch the campaign on 21 March, which is Stand Up Against Racism day,” Abu Tayeb, chairman of IDC North East, told BuzzFeed News, “but since Pegida are in my home city, I’ve brought it forward a month. We want to send out a very strong message into society saying that all forms of extremism are not tolerated in our beautiful, diverse city, whether that’s in the Muslim community or the extreme far right.

“We know the Muslim community does a lot of positive work in society, and we’re trying to highlight that by showing some of the good work we do, like blood donation campaigns, neighbourhood clean-up campaigns, and visiting sick children. We’re trying to give a truer picture of what Islam really stands for rather than the majority of the negativity that is pushed out there by the extreme minority.”

Tayeb added: “We consider Pegida and their supporters as extremists, and there’s no place for that extremism and hatred in our city.”

Katja Leyendecker, a Newcastle resident of 20 years who originally came from Germany, told BuzzFeed News that “hate doesn’t have a place anywhere. It’s important to make a stand, to look back at history, and learn from it. Hate is not an answer to anything. It just destroys.”

Chris Stokel-Walker

14. Pope told the media after Pegida’s supporters dispersed that “we’re always going to get labelled as racist and bigoted by people who don’t actually understand what we’re about”.


He blamed the media for attracting a right-wing element to what he said was a “political awareness campaign”.

Both he and Rogers insisted that a subsequent Pegida demonstration, in London, would likely be held at the end of March. Rogers told BuzzFeed News that Pegida was in negotiations with the Metropolitan police, and would confirm details of its first protest in the capital shortly.

Predictions of violence, whipped up by the national media, did not come to anything. Northumbria police and the Tyne & Wear Metro, the local light railway network, said that although they had extra staff on duty, there were few more police and staff on patrol than on a normal Saturday match day.

Rogers said the Newcastle event went “extremely well. Had it been later, we would have had in excess of two or three thousand people. It went very well, and London’s going to be massive.”

15. George Galloway, the Respect Party MP for Bradford West, told the press that Pegida was a “German fascist import”.


Speaking at the protest, he claimed that Pegida “are just people who want to cause chaos in their country, and they hope out of that crucible of chaos, some kind of political purchase for them might occur. That’s why they chose Newcastle: because the northeast of England is a depressed area, and they hope to feed on the economic and social fears of people here.” Asked about the rally’s success, Galloway said “it looks like it failed.”

Fifty yards away from the site of both protests, in the historic Grainger Town district, beyond the police cars and the mounted officers, families ate their Happy Meals as normal in McDonald’s. A few hours later, the Muslim Newcastle United striker Papiss Cisse scored the only goal in a 1–0 win against Aston Villa. The roar of appreciation rippled across the city, just as it had on many weekends before.

Read more: http://www.buzzfeed.com/chrisstokelwalker/pegida-outnumbered-by-opponents-in-first-uk-rally-17b68