Time | Text |
---|---|
One of my two major talks on Yom Kippur will be, how do you explain religious people who do bad? | |
How do you explain that? | |
And when religious people, as religious people, endorse Kamala Harris, They're endorsing bad. | |
Not evil, but bad. | |
Do they not know that she and Tim Walz have announced they oppose the First Amendment? | |
They've announced it. | |
This is not an inference that I draw. | |
They've announced it. | |
Wall Street Journal again. | |
They've got it. | |
Criticize Harrison Walls while you still can. | |
That's the headline. | |
One thing they haven't been able to hide is hostility to free speech. | |
So I am curious. | |
I'd like to ask these religious morons. | |
In Judaism and in Christianity and Protestant, Catholic, Mormon, I'd like to ask a question. | |
Is your dislike of Donald Trump more important than free speech in America? | |
Yes or no? | |
Wall Street Journal-Royal. | |
Writing for Reason Magazine, Robbie Suave notes that at this week's vice presidential debate, this is last week, Governor Tim Walz repeated his false claim that the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment does not protect misinformation or hate speech. | |
That's mind-blowing. | |
It doesn't protect misinformation or hate speech. | |
Mr. Suave writes of Mr. Walz, Walz defended his position by glibly asserting that it is constitutionally impermissible to yell fire in a crowded theater. | |
Oh, that's it. | |
So if you say, let's see, if you say that masks don't work, you're yelling fire in a crowded theater. | |
Get it? | |
It doesn't matter. |