1. Nikki Goeser: It Shouldn't Take a Bullet to the Head for the Criminal Justice System to Take Stalking Seriously
2. Kenneth Rapoza: The WTO and Others Unite in China's Favor
3. Daniel Greenfield: What Happens When You Don't Prosecute Criminals and You Lie
About Crime
4. James Hirsen: Ben Roethlisberger's Football and Faith
5. David Horowitz: What Happened to BLM?
It Shouldn't Take a Bullet to the Head for the Criminal Justice
System to Take Stalking Seriously
By Nikki Goeser, Executive Director of the Crime Prevention Research Center
This month is the 18th Annual National Stalking Awareness Month.
Nikki Goeser, Executive Director of the Crime
Prevention Research Center is an expert on this topic since her
husband, Ben, was murdered in front of her by her stalker on April 2, 2009. Nikki’s
stalker has been incarcerated since then, but he has continued over many years
to stalk her from prison via twisted love letters to her. Unfortunately, her stalker
is currently set to be released from prison early in 2028. Nikki helped get a Lifetime
Order of Protection Law established in her state of Tennessee in 2021 for
victims of violent crime. So, what exactly is stalking? Stalking is a pattern
of repeated, unwanted behavior toward a specific person, which would cause any
reasonable person to feel fearful, intimidated, or harassed. [more...]
The WTO and Others Unite in China's Favor
By Kenneth Rapoza, China Expert/Industry Analyst for the Coalition for a Prosperous America
Why are more than 100 Democrats and Republicans uniting in favor
of ending China trade war tariffs? Meanwhile, the WTO gives China the
greenlight to put two times the amount of tariffs on the U.S. as the U.S. has
on China. The corporatists and their allies in D.C. are on the march, hoping to
wear down the Biden administration, which until now has kept with Trump-era
policies on China, even tightening them a bit. [more...]
What Happens When You Don't Prosecute Criminals and You Lie
About Crime
There are, roughly speaking, two types of hate crimes: the
stereotypical one, like a cross burning, is carried out specifically to
terrorize or intimidate a minority group. It has no criminal motive beyond the
bigotry it seeks to express. But the far more common form of hate crime
experienced by Asians, Jews, and many others, including white people, is simply
crime - assaults, muggings, and robberies committed for criminal motives by
thugs who also happen to be bigots. These bigots, often members of minority
groups, may single out targets from a particular race, religion or ethnicity,
but their primary motive is criminal. They’re not engaging in hate crimes to
express their hate, they’re expressing hate as part of their crime sprees. Dealing
with this far more common form of “hate crime” doesn't require solidarity,
hashtags, or even hate crime enhancements, just a functional justice system
that locks up criminals. [more...]
Ben Roethlisberger's Football and Faith
By James Hirsen
He knew it and his fans knew it too. Ben Roethlisberger's time
as a professional football player was coming to an end. At what would be his
final home game after 18 seasons with the Pittsburgh Steelers, the star
quarterback experienced something most athletes only dream of – the pure
unadulterated outpouring of love from fans that had been with him from the
start. Right back at them went the love from Big Ben. [more...]
What Happened to BLM?
Who is running Black Lives Matter
these days? More importantly, who is accounting for the approximately $60 million brought
in from BLM since 2020? It appears BLM
has no senior executive to account for the nonprofit's vast fortune. With no
one known to occupy the office at present, the group's finances are seemingly
without oversight. Don't public charities have an
ethical responsibility to be transparent with the public about how they are
operating and how the donations they receive are being used? Get
David's latest book: I Can't Breathe: How a Racial Hoax Is Killing America. [more...]
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