>>/182725/, >>/182726/, >>/182727/, >>/182728/, >>/182729/, >>/182730/, >>/182731/, >>/182732/, >>/182733/, >>/182734/, >>/182735/, >>/182736/, >>/182737/, >>/182738/, >>/182739/, >>/182740/, >>/182741/, >>/182742/, >>/182743/, >>/182744/, >>/182745/, >>/182746/, >>/182747/, >>/182748/, >>/182749/
Glenn Beck @glennbeck - I want to tell you the story of a young woman who you have probably never heard of. Her name is Mary Anne. She was born on a remote island in Scotland, where life was harsh and unforgiving.
On May 2, 1930, when she was 18 years old, she got on a boat headed for Ellis Island to start a new life. She arrived here 11 days later.
She wasn't chasing fame, riches, or power. She came for the unique opportunity that America offered. Her sister was already here and had found a job as a maid. So, Mary Anne MacLeod joined her, listing her occupation as “domestic” on her Ellis Island immigration papers.
She came to America knowing that she would clean the houses and toilets of the wealthy families in New York. She and her sister lived and worked hard through the worst days of the Depression. And she persevered.
Six years later, she married a man named Fred. He was the son of German immigrants. Then In 1942, she became a citizen.
Mary and Fred would end up having five children: two daughters and three sons.
One of those sons, they named Donald.
A woman who came here as a maid, the lowest of jobs, would raise a son who would change the very skyline that greeted his mother when she arrived at Ellis Island.
After that, he would become the 45th and 47th President of the United States.
There is no other country in the world where a woman can arrive with nothing, and in ONE generation, her son would lead the entire world.
For America’s 250th anniversary, I wanted to present President Trump with this painting I did, and then I ran out of time and talent. So, I asked a good friend of mine, Mike Malm, to help me finish it. This is how I envisioned her coming into the United States.
Mary Anne MacLeod Trump should be a household name. Her story is everything that is great about America.
https://x.com/glennbeck/status/2051367322976235840
Hans Mahncke @HansMahncke - I can absolutely see where Alito is coming from. There's a certain enjoyment in debating people who are serious, who can argue in good faith, and who operate at a high level. That's the kind of dynamic that let people like Scalia and Ginsburg be friends in private. For a long time there was an unspoken baseline that, for the highest court in the land, and really the world, you could appoint ideological opposites, but you did not cheapen the institution by lowering the intellectual bar.
But the autopen removed that baseline, and with it degraded the level of discourse and eroded the professional respect that made those relationships possible in the first place. So for someone who has spent two decades on the Court, that has to be very painful to watch, seeing an institution slide into idiocracy and performative nonsense.
Hence, Alito didn't mince his words, and it's not going to get better because Jackson is too stupid to understand what is going on, so she will keep escalating by adding more and more stupidity into the discourse, and those who respect the institution will get less and less patient with it.
Quote:
Greg Price @greg_price11
Justice Alito has officially had enough of Justice Jackson.
https://x.com/HansMahncke/status/2051464968290128363
25