Eye Inside The Classroom

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Eye Inside The Classroom

Eye Inside The Classroom

@EITC_Official

Indoctrination Bird Dog | Providing receipts that refute, “it’s not happening.” Videos belong to their respective owners.

Reality Katılım Nisan 2022
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Eye Inside The Classroom
Eye Inside The Classroom@EITC_Official·
🚨 After pushing her own political ideology, this English teacher at @AHSColonists told her students she wishes that Trump “would take himself out like Hitler did.”
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Jeremy Boreing
Jeremy Boreing@JeremyDBoreing·
Last week Candace Owens told the world the Daily Wire had laid off over 50% of its workforce — then updated it to “60% absolute bloodbath.” I’m sure it will shock you to learn those figures aren’t anywhere close to the truth. But there’s a much bigger story beyond Candace’s "mistaken" reporting. The story is how lying has become the default operating system for huge swaths of both legacy media and the new online right. The Grift Industrial Complex rewards speed, sensationalism, and telling the audience exactly what it wants to hear over anything resembling journalistic standards, due diligence, or basic honesty. I know this world because I helped build part of it. We broke past the old gatekeepers for good reason. The old gatekeepers broke all of their own standards. But too few in new media even have standards to break. They say bad money drives out good. It turns out bad journalism does too. youtu.be/z59rdbK7VR4?si…
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Billboard Chris 🌎
Billboard Chris 🌎@BillboardChris·
@BarackObama They banned using race as a reason to map out districts. This was anti-racism in action!
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Dan Bongino
Dan Bongino@dbongino·
The cowards won’t stop. Either will this POTUS. Don’t bet against President Trump.
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Sarah Fields
Sarah Fields@SarahisCensored·
If you still follow and listen to this psycho, please just log off the internet and go touch grass. Maybe seek therapy. First it was the French. Then the Jews. Then the U.S. government. Then the “deep state.” The CIA. Then Erika. Then Blake Neff. Then Pastor Rob McCoy. Josh Hammer. The DuPont family. Freemasons. Stacy Sheridan. Egypt… The list just keeps going. And now? Now she’s saying they’re hybrids. Machines. At some point, you have to ask yourself: why is this person still being taken seriously? This woman needs her mic taken away. Or maybe just sued into oblivion.
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James Lindsay, anti-Communist
James Lindsay, anti-Communist@ConceptualJames·
Sharing again just because of how many people are having a meltdown over it for our entertainment.
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Graham Allen
Graham Allen@GrahamAllen·
@RealCandaceO You are a sick woman in need of mental help. We are praying for your soul.
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Icecreamaker
Icecreamaker@LavenderPumpki1·
@amconmag What do the Japanese people think about this comment? 😭
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The American Conservative
The American Conservative@amconmag·
President Trump is asked why he didn't inform allies such as Japan about attacking Iran: "We wanted surprise. Who knows better about surprise than Japan? Why didn't you tell me about Pearl Harbor?"
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Jacktron
Jacktron@jacktronprime·
Here’s Matt Walsh last year advocating for exactly what’s happening now if there was sufficient evidence the Iranians tried to kill Trump. There’s plenty. If you’re are not familiar with the case of Asif Merchant, go look it up. How people’s opinions change when things get tough.
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Shawn Farash
Shawn Farash@Shawn_Farash·
@MattWalshBlog You said the US should personally kill every member of the Iranian regime if they tried to kill the President... In June of last year. Cmon dude. H/T @mazemoore
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Eye Inside The Classroom
Eye Inside The Classroom@EITC_Official·
This is spot on! The Israel Question is the modern rebranding of the Jewish Question.
James Lindsay, anti-Communist@ConceptualJames

I recently did an interview when I was in Jerusalem and dropped a concept I've been working on for a bit (with a podcast of my own forthcoming). That concept is this: The Israel Question My case is that before WWII and the Holocaust and the re-establishment of the state of Israel in 1948, almost everywhere in the world, and certainly Europe, was consumed with something called "The Jewish Question." After WWII, the Holocaust, and the re-establishment of the state of Israel, the Jewish Question rightly became unaskable* because its intrinsic evil was deeply recognized (*except in Islamist states). Because of these two things: 1) The Jewish Question becoming unaskable in civilized society; and 2) The state of Israel being re-established, I insist that the Jewish Question got relocated to something I call "the Israel Question." All the "just asking questions" crap we hear today is just asking the Israel Question. So what is it? We start with the Jewish Question. What is "the Jewish Question"? The Jewish Question is "what do we do with the Jews, on the presumption that we don't want them?" It is intrinsically antisemitic and shouldn't have taken the Holocaust to show how bad it is. Why is that presumption part of the question, which has historically been framed merely as "what do we do with the Jews?"? The reason is simple: if your answer to "what do we do with the Jews?" is roughly "let them be part of our society with freedom to be themselves," you wouldn't ask the question about what to do with them at all. The question wouldn't just be unasked because there's a ready answer; it would be moot and irrelevant. There's no need to ask the question at all unless you see Jews as a problem to begin with. Thus, the question rests on that presumption ("we don't want them (here)") and is intrinsically antisemitic. So that's the Jewish Question: What do we do with the Jews, on the presumption that we don't want them (here)? Different people proposed different answers throughout history. The Romans didn't want them in "Palestine" anymore and chased them into Diaspora in AD 70-74, for example. Martin Luther suggested horrible things in the 1530s after he kinda went nuts in his latest years. Karl Marx suggested you make them not Jewish anymore, and preferably Communist, and the problem solves itself because they're not Jewish anymore but Communist comrades. Hitler suggested first to relocate them all to Madagascar and, upon recognizing that's ridiculous and impossible, the "Final Solution," which was to find and murder ALL of them, in order to rid Europe of them entirely. Again, my case is that we don't ask the Jewish Question anymore in civilized parts of the world because we recognize it as being not just antisemitic but a gateway to hell. The Jewish Question is anathema in modern civilized societies. Roughly at the same time as humanity finally started that realization baldly in the face, the state of Israel re-established itself in its historical homeland. Not only is this good on its own, but it also provides a failsafe should the morality slip and the Jewish Question arise in earnest again. With Israel, and its IDF and thus the ability to defend themselves at need, Jews can make aliyah and escape any society that decides to ask the JQ and thus reopen the gates to hell within its own borders. And good luck dealing with the IDF, as history has shown. Thus arose a replacement question, a proxy for the Jewish Question that could be asked even though the JQ was off the table: the Israel Question. What is the Israel Question? Simple: "What do we do with Israel, on the presumption that we don't want it (not just there, but anywhere)?" The Israel Question seems distinct from the Jewish Question, and on technicality (but not in substance) it is. This allows the Israel Question to pose itself as a high-minded, fully socially acceptable geopolitical topic of debate instead of the rank antisemitism that it's actually serving. The Israel Question is "just asking questions" about the state of Israel and its role in the world (on the presumption that we don't want it, thus the relentless impossible standards Israel is held to under its gaze). It's very high-minded. It's just global politics, you know. The Israel Question takes forms like -whether Israel destabilizes the Middle East by its mere presence, -if Israel is really legally entitled to be there at all, -if Israel defending itself against its hostile neighbors is a form of implicit aggression that causes secondary problems like mass migration, -whether Israel should be forced to share its land with people who want to kill Jews because they are Jews and do impossible things to make it work even when it cannot work by definition, -whether Israel is really defending itself or just starting random wars, -if Israel's military (IDF) or intelligence service (the Mossad) secretly controls other countries including its putative allies, -whether Israel is really a good ally or an ally at all to the countries with which it is in alliance, -if Israel has secret ambitions to illegally conquer foreign lands for its own and force, coerce, blackmail, or trick other nations to do its dirty work in the process, -if Israel deserves any kind of aid packages, moneys, or alliances and if it actually deserves to exist if any such things help its security, -and on, and on, and on. See, these questions aren't about JEWS. They're just high-minded geopolitical questions about Israel and its role in the world. But these "just asking questions" questions are the Israel Question in disguise: ultimately, what do we do with Israel, on the presumption that we don't want it? The Israel Question, and its "just asking questions" disguises, again, simply don't exist without the presumption of not wanting Israel. If your answer to "what do we do with Israel?" is "treat it like any other sovereign nation," there's no impetus to ask the Israel Question at all, and many of its disguises are moot too. All of them are moot once the impossible standard lurking beneath them is exposed, and that impossible standard is the hidden Israel Question. The thing is, the Israel Question is just the Jewish Question by proxy, though. The question is ultimately "what do we do with the one place Jews can unequivocally defend themselves, presuming we don't want such a place?" (Again, if that presumption isn't there, there's no reason for the question and thus no question to begin with.) In other words, the Israel Question is still "what do we do with Jews, presuming we don't want them?" with only the slightest caveat in possibility but only very rarely in intention. Of course, the presumption of the Jewish Question is called "antisemitism," as we already discussed, which makes the Jewish Question itself antisemitic. Similarly, the presumption of the Israel Question is called "anti-Zionism," as should be obvious, which makes the Israel Question itself anti-Zionist. But the Israel Question is the Jewish Question by proxy, so the underlying anti-Zionism is antisemitism by proxy too. We spend a lot of time these days seeing not just the reinvigoration of the anathema Jewish Question itself but far more the Israel Question, which would rob the JQ of its failsafe, which the Jews call making aliyah. And we're supposed to tolerate it and pretend it's just high-minded policy discussion about big geopolitical matters that are detached enough not to be immoral, or, in some cases, people fool themselves into believing that first. We flatter ourselves with high-minded platitudes like, "of course anyone should be able to question the activities any state at any time" or "of course people should be allowed to criticize and question a government," as though those are actually what the Israel Question is about. Yes, "of course," those things are on the table, and every Israeli debates them daily, but not on the presumption that Israel's existence is not actually wanted. This is why the formal definition of antisemitism is correct to name holding Israel to an impossible standard or one beyond that any other nation would be held to when discussing matters of its sovereignty, existence, security, or role in the world. It is right to name what amounts to the Israel Question as antisemitism because it is antisemitism, only thinly veiled. We should learn to recognize the Israel Question for what it is, both for the evil, potentially genocidal antisemitism it actually expresses and for its presentation as a hidden presumption tucked underneath seemingly high-minded, fair-game "just asking questions" questions. The rise of the Israel Question is the rise of the Jewish Question by proxy, and the response to the Jewish Question we have all understood as moral bedrock for civilized societies is "never again." Thus, the response to the Israel Question is also "never again." In light of its undeniable and rampant rise, it is therefore wholly appropriate and necessary to take the bold, righteous, and courageous stand of our time. Join me in saying, then, NEVER AGAIN IS NOW!

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Nick Freitas
Nick Freitas@NickJFreitas·
So I’m going to be doing a lot of tabling events with TPUSA this year and I just want to put something out there…just in case. If something bad were to happen and someone claiming to be my friend implicated my wife in my death, without any real evidence…just “vibes.” I would hope to God that you would support my wife instead of a malicious hack making millions by perpetuating half baked conspiracy theories while trying to destroy the most important person in the world to me. Just something I thought I would put out there…just in case.
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Eye Inside The Classroom
Eye Inside The Classroom@EITC_Official·
Terrible take, Matt! The Iranian regime did pose a serious threat to our country. One other thing, I think Trump has a solid track record with foreign policy.
Matt Walsh@MattWalshBlog

As always I only support military action anywhere, in any context, if it directly serves the interests of American citizens. It’s troubling that the arguments we’re hearing for this war in Iran, including from Trump himself, seem to revolve primarily around “bringing freedom to the Iranian people.” As Americans, the freedom of Iranians is not our responsibility. If a single American life is lost in the service of that goal, it will be a travesty. What nobody has even come close to sufficiently explaining is how this war will first and foremost directly benefit American citizens. That is a case that needed to have been made clearly and convincingly before this move, and it wasn’t. We’re also told how this will benefit Israel, and I’m sure it will. But Israel is not America. What does it do for America? How does it help us? That needs to be explained to us. And it isn’t “panicking” or demonstrating “disloyalty” to demand those very basic answers about how American tax money, and potentially American lives, are being spent. We hear about the danger of a nuclear Iran, but that’s odd because we were told that Iran’s nuclear capabilities had already been set back decades. We hear that this war will be over quickly and easily because Iran is powerless, which I hope and pray is the case, and maybe it will be. But that’s odd, too, because if Iran is such a paper tiger then how were they a danger to us in the first place? It seems hard to argue both that Iran is an existential threat to the United States and that we can topple them in 20 minutes with no casualties or negative downstream effects. Also the political calculation really matters here. A huge majority of American oppose this. That’s just a fact. If it costs Republicans in 26 and 28, then, no matter how things work out in Iran, it will not have been worth it. A free Iran at the cost of Democrat rule here at home is a bad deal. A free Iran for an unfree America would be just about the worst trade of the century. I’m praying for our great country today.

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