US US Politics General 2 - Discussion of President Trump and other politicians

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Should be a wild four years.

Helpful links for those who need them:

Current members of the House of Representatives
https://www.house.gov/representatives

Current members of the Senate
https://www.senate.gov/senators/

Current members of the US Supreme Court
https://www.supremecourt.gov/about/biographies.aspx

Members of the Trump Administration
https://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/
 
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I don’t think I’ve ever heard of a Christian painting shit on their forehead. That’s what pagan scum like Hindus do. She’s doing a bad job pretending.
It's mostly a Catholic rite but most of the big denominations of Protestantism still at least recognize it, the rite is believed to have been started by a Pope in the 500s and is why Ash Wednesday is called Ash Wednesday
 
San Fagcisco is seething and I have no room for pity. The SF Conservatory of Music decided back in 2020 after the martyrdom of St. Floyd of Fentanyl that darkies be needing help an sheeit. One part of this initiative was launching the "Emerging Black Composers Project" to address systemic racism in classical music.

Rather than accept that modern music, especially in the Black sphere of classical composition, is shit and unpleasant to hear or see (Take the Central Park Five opera by Anthony Davis, which outright fabricated their collective innocence), the answer is simply racism. No, no, no, your music isn't worse than Florence Price, Moses Hogan, or William Grant Still, you're just being unfairly persecuted because you're Black!

Rambling aside, here's the article about the EBCP being halted and the seething response. Article (Archive)
Notice, if you will, the mealymouthed wording used to portray the program. Surely uplifting your community is a good thing, right?

WRONG. It's all drenched in gibs-water. Take a look at the official demands page of the spear-chucker alliance. Direct link (Archive)

SFCM Answering the Call to Action​

Equity and Inclusion Means ALL of Us​

June 12, 2020 by Tim Records

Last week we released a statement to our community reaffirming our opposition to racism and injustice. We referenced a series of ambitious projects, a new path of systemic inclusion, and bold steps to build a brighter future. In all these powerful ideas, we did not plainly state an essential truth:
Black Lives Matter.
Our Black students, staff, faculty, and alumni deserve our full-throated commitment – not only to welcome diversity, but also to be vocally and actively anti-racist. SFCM, like many other arts institutions, has work to do in order to create a truly equitable space for Black talent and leadership.

We are ready to do that work. Here is where we are starting:

Immediate Actions Taken​

  • Established a President’s Advisory Council on Equity and Inclusion, anchored by Black students, alumni, faculty, and community leaders. All actions and commitments below were developed in partnership with these voices.
  • Raised $1.5M to start funding the initiatives below.

Our Commitments – Beginning in 20/21​

  • Co-commission 10 pieces by Black composers over the next 10 years, in partnership with a major arts organization (more info coming soon)
  • Endow 10 full-tuition scholarships for Black students, to be fully funded in five years
  • Expand mandated diversity, inclusion, and anti-racist training as part of orientation for faculty, staff, and students
  • Program works by Black composers in all ensemble programs
  • Host at least one Black artist-in-residence for masterclasses and lessons each year
  • Create music coursework foregrounding Black contributions to classical music
  • Develop humanities coursework focused on the Black Experience in America
  • Increase outreach to area public schools with at least 20% Black enrollment
  • Expand existing community partnerships with Third Baptist Church, Congregation Emanu-El, and Koret Foundation via Bridge to Arts and Music Program
  • Create a staff position dedicated to diversity and inclusion
  • Recruit more Black faculty, staff, and board members for leadership positions
  • Fund three RJAM (Roots, Jazz, and American Music) student scholarships for the next four years
  • Fund 3 full-tuition scholarships for Black industry professionals for each Center for Innovative Leadership program

We are publicly committing to these actions because we want you to hold us accountable.​

SFCM’s ethos values mavericks, innovators, and champions who move the industry forward. To forge a truly inclusive path, we must first confront the structures of racial injustice that are built into our industry and our institution. When we practice active anti-racism, we strengthen our community – and when we ensure Black talent is nurtured, we strengthen our culture of excellence.

We’ve got work to do. Hold our feet to the fire.​

Timothy Foo, Chairman of the Board of Trustees
David H. Stull, President

President’s Advisory Council on Equity and Inclusion​

Rev. Dr. Amos C. Brown, Sr.
President, San Francisco NAACP
Pastor, Third Baptist Church

Rev. James Parrish Smith, M.Mus.
Director, Bridge to Arts and Music (B.A.M.) San Francisco Conservatory of Music
Secretary, San Francisco NAACP
Minister of Music, Third Baptist Church

Brandon Bell ‘18
DuMarkus Davis ‘18
David Dickerson ‘21
Kristopher Grant ‘20
Jason Hainsworth, Director of RJAM Program
Jasmine Johnson ’17, ’19
Michael Mohammed, Director of Musical Theatre Workshop
Marcus Jamal Paige ‘18
Chasiti Lashay Walker ‘20
Larry Joe Williams III ‘21

SFCM Senior Leadership​

Aubrey Bergauer, Vice President of Strategic Communications & Executive Director, Center for Innovative Leadership
Marina Kennedy, Executive Assistant to the President
Kathleen Nicely, Vice President of Advancement
Michael Patterson, Associate Vice President of Human Resources and Administration
Kathryn Wittenmyer, Vice President of Finance
Jonas Wright, Dean & Chief Academic Officer

We would like to thank:
  • The Jay Pritzker Foundation, which has pledged $1M to launch the scholarship campaign.
  • Arthur & Charlotte Zitrin Foundation, which has pledged $140,000 to support black students in RJAM
  • Laurence and Michèle Corash, who have pledged $250,000 to support emerging black composers with 10-year commissioning commitment
  • Caitlin and James Freeman (‘92 and SFCM Trustee), and David H. Stull and Jessica Downs, who have pledged $100K to support Black artist residencies and masterclasses for the next 5 years

There are good Black composers, but they are rare. Most of the shit I see is either disappointing or outright incendiary. Whether they've been completely consumed by racial grievance or they're profiting off of it, this does nothing but damage the reputation of anyone that deserves praise. Maybe I'm expecting too much, though. Even one of the featured composers in the first article, Jens Ibsen, seems unable to put the pieces together as to why he suddenly got a lot of government and institutional interest and aid after St. Floyd partook in Da Holy Comunion.
Give me tophats, I'm MATI.
 
There are good Black composers, but they are rare. Most of the shit I see is either disappointing or outright incendiary. Whether they've been completely consumed by racial grievance or they're profiting off of it, this does nothing but damage the reputation of anyone that deserves praise. Maybe I'm expecting too much, though. Even the featured composer in the first article, Jens Ibsen, seems unable to put the pieces together as to why he suddenly got a lot of government and institutional interest and aid after St. Floyd partook in Da Holy Comunion.
Give me tophats, I'm MATI.
This sounds like a very informative topic which you should consider making a whole thread for.
 
"I'm ignorant of a thing therefore that thing does not exist!"
“I’m a faggot retard who likes sticking my tongue all the way down a man’s throat!”
It's mostly a Catholic rite but most of the big denominations of Protestantism still at least recognize it, the rite is believed to have been started by a Pope in the 500s and is why Ash Wednesday is called Ash Wednesday
Oh, well I’m not a Catholic. They have too many rites for me to care.
 
People really do forget that until 9/11 America really was a free country.
You didn't need your balls Xrayed, you could arrive 15 minutes before you flight and catch it on time, you also only need do to be screened back in the day if you were going to fly on the plane.
Traveling anywhere was easy and housing seemed reasonable.
Honestly one of the things that sort of sways me toward 9/11 being an inside job is how much in society changed fundamentally and irreversibly to reduce our freedoms afterward. What are the odds that TPTB would get such a golden opportunity to institute these new programs to surveil the people and have the public be entirely okay with it because patriotism?
 
I've considered the first step to unfucking our currency and economy to be repealing Dodd-Frank and returning Glass-Steagle. Has there been any republican or populist push for this in the congress? Only politician I know who actually promoted this was sadly only Bernie Sanders.

It's mostly a Catholic rite but most of the big denominations of Protestantism still at least recognize it, the rite is believed to have been started by a Pope in the 500s and is why Ash Wednesday is called Ash Wednesday
I was confused the other day about it and didn't realize it was a Catholic tradition. Apparently Western Rite Orthodox churches do the ash thing but not my church.
 
I love how Trump happened to pick a guy who is also just accidentally memeable. This isn’t even the first time, recall the Walz debate when he kept glancing at the timer and it gave the exact effect of him doing the “Office” thing. Just a total coincidence that gave him a chuckle.
 
I am not joking when I say that watching both of these back to back almost made me vomit.
I spared myself the second video, my tolerance for CW Slop is high enough that I can weather it without too much of a problem. Despite my better judgment, I caved in and watched the second because why would I want to bring myself harm?

Not too bad. The retarded idle animation bouncing was questionable, I would argue exploitable even. This can easily be weaponized against them.

Also hooray, Johnny and Sammich are getting along! It's a March Miracle!
 
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