“Beam Me Up Scotty!” ~ Larry Elder Day of WDBJ Murders

These are part of the opening minutes of Larry Elder’s Show the day of the murders. He ends this segment with “beam me up Scotty.” Perfect. Larry is insightful mainly because of his litany of Democratic hypocrisies noted (almost daily).

And in the case of Vester Lee Flanagan II (AKA, Bryce Williams), like Floyd Lee Corkins II, these and the many others seemed to be groomed by the left to feel soo disadvantaged that it requires a sort of “war.”

The latest example coming from Hillary Clinton:

Hillary Clinton on Thursday likened the Republican presidential field to terrorist extremists based on their views of women.

“Extreme views about women, we expect that from some of the terrorist groups,” Clinton said during a campaign speech at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland. ”We expect that from people who don’t want to live in the modern world. But it’s a little hard to take coming from Republicans who want to be president of the United States. Yet, they espouse out of touch and out-of-date policies. They are dead-wrong for 21st century America. We are going forward. We are not going back.”

(The Blaze)

Listen To Larry On-Line at CRN-Talk Radio [LIVE: 12-2pm]:

http://crntalk.com/shows/1144-the-larry-elder-show

Re-broadcast on 870AM (The ANswer) from 9-11pm:

http://www.am870theanswer.com/weekdayprogramguide.aspx

For more clear thinking like this from Larry Elder… I invite you to visit: http://www.larryelder.com/ ~AND~ http://www.elderstatement.com/

 

If This Were A Tea Partier ~ It Would Be On Every Channel

“Atheism is a disease of the soul before it is an error of the mind.” ~ Plato

A woman who lives near the scene described Hicks as short-tempered. “Anytime that I saw him or saw interaction with him or friends or anyone in the parking lot or myself, he was angry,” Samantha Maness said of Hicks. “He was very angry, anytime I saw him.”

Hicks’ ex-wife, Cynthia Hurley, said that before they divorced about 17 years ago, his favorite movie was “Falling Down,” the 1993 Michael Douglas film about a divorced unemployed engineer who goes on a shooting rampage.

“That always freaked me out,” Hurley said. “He watched it incessantly. He thought it was hilarious. He had no compassion at all,” she said. 

(My Way)

Gateway Pundit hit a home run, and this will go under my long list of people acting out the violence of the Left. GP quotes two good points, here they are:

Pajamas Media reports:

A review of the Facebook page of the man charged in these murders, Craig Hicks, shows a consistent theme of anti-religion and progressive causes. Included in his many Facebook “likes” are the Huffington Post, Rachel Maddow, the Southern Poverty Law Center, Freedom from Religion Foundation, Bill Nye “The Science Guy,” Neil deGrasse Tyson, gay marriage groups, and a host of anti-conservative/Tea Party pages.

Instapundit explains why this story didn’t lead the national news:

IF HE WERE A TEA PARTIER, THIS WOULD BE THE #1 STORY NATIONALLY:

Killer of 3 UNC-Chapel Hill Muslim Students Was Hardcore Anti-Religion Atheist Progressive. “Included in his many Facebook ‘likes’ are the Huffington Post, Rachel Maddow, the Southern Poverty Law Center, Freedom from Religion Foundation, Bill Nye ‘The Science Guy,’ Neil deGrasse Tyson, Gay Marriage groups, and a host of anti-conservative/Tea Party pages.” The ABC story shockingly omits that information.

I’m placing the SPLC on my list of “groups associated with hate killings” now. After all, this isn’t the first such incident….

This video is only meant for those who wish to see the affiliated likes the Chapel Hill killer has on his Facebook. It is in 1080p, so you can pause it and take a gander. I edited out innocent persons and movies he liked. AGAIN, could you imaging the ruckus if a Tea Party Patriot killed three Muslims and on his Facebook there were similar (but conservatively religious) “likes” ~ front page news.

Gateway then posts a video I was previously unaware of. And it is in regard to that domestic gay, anti-Christian terrorist, Floyd Lee Corkins II:

From FBI interrogation footage. Confessed terrorist Floyd Lee Corkins II, who attacked Family Research Council on August 15, 2012, shooting and injuring Leo Johnson (before Johnson subdued him and took his weapon) explains to FBI interrogators that he used the Southern Poverty Law Center’s list to find his target.

(See more)

Shooter Targeted Conservative Group Via SPLC Website

Via HOTAIR:

I have little to add to what you’ve read from Ace, John Sexton, R.S. McCain, Erick Erickson and others. We’re all thinking the same thing — see Twitchy for proof — and we’re all correct: Why yes, this is eerily similar to the left claiming after Gabby Giffords was shot that Palin’s “crosshairs” election map inspired Jared Loughner. With two differences. First, Loughner was not, in fact, inspired by Palin whereas this guy, per his own plea bargain, did consult the SPLC website in choosing people to kill. Second, you’ll see zero coverage of this inconvenient entry in the canon of political hate in wider media because it can’t be used as a blunt object with which to bludgeon the right. Sometimes facts that undermine the Greater Good need to be politely omitted. That’s what responsible journalism is all about.

Prosecutors say Corkins, who had been volunteering at a center for gay, lesbian and transgender people, was carrying ammunition and Chick-fil-A sandwiches in his bag. Chick-fil-A was making headlines at the time because of its president’s stated opposition to gay marriage.

Corkins intended to smear the sandwiches in the faces of his victims to make a statement about gay rights opponents, he acknowledged during a hearing Wednesday

In his plea agreement, Corkins acknowledged he identified the [Family Research] Council as “an anti-gay organization” by visiting Southern Poverty’s website. The head of the Council, Tony Perkins, called on the group to stop labeling his organization and others hate groups because of their stance on gay issues. A spokeswoman for the Alabama-based Law Center did not immediately return a telephone message

“He targeted us because we had been labeled a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, which we think is very reckless,” [FRC employee Leo Johnson] says.

[….]

Funny thing, though: The SPLC itself was verrrrry quick to try to tie Jared Loughner to the “far right”, and kept at it long enough that they were posting speculative pieces about “political rhetoric” and its role in the Tucson shooting as late as 13 days after it occurred. Not only are they comfortable with a free-speech slippery slope when it’s right-wingers who are at risk, they’re willing and eager to add some grease. They richly deserve the bad PR they’re getting today, even if they’re blameless in the shooting. If you doubt that, visit Reason’s extensive archive on SPLC nonsense.

I also have an inquiry of sorts into the SPLC here.