« June 07, 2020 - June 13, 2020 | Main | June 21, 2020 - June 27, 2020 »

June 18, 2020

Christ Falling on the Way to Calvary, Raphael (1483-1520)

4AA9624A-D5F7-409E-BB74-20A60FB6543C.jpeg

Posted by JD Hull at 08:25 AM | Comments (0)

Be Here Now.

Get off your knees today. Resist the Mob. Be in the World. Think on your own. All that.

Posted by JD Hull at 07:00 AM | Comments (0)

June 17, 2020

I’m done.

150 years of white liberals enabling a failed culture is long enough. Let American blacks come up with a plan and do some real work for a change. I’m tired of Afro-American bullshit, excuses, self-lies, laziness, lack of discipline and self-pity. Get to work y’all. I’m done.

155158B0-3001-40C1-890D-CB44B1A25E64.jpeg

Posted by JD Hull at 09:24 AM | Comments (0)

June 16, 2020

Cops v. BLM

Please support our cops. Do not support BLM (“Black Lives Matter”)—a world class scumbag organization with scumbag leaders since its scumbag start 7 summers ago. However, the US Bureau of Land Management “BLM” is very cool and not scumbags. Support good cops. Condemn bad killings. Love black people. And good crops. Support Motherhood. But Black Lives Matter is a major piece of shit.

Posted by JD Hull at 05:51 AM | Comments (0)

June 15, 2020

Happy 805th Birthday to The Magna Carta (b. June 15, 1215)

Today, June 15, the great human rights document known to most of us as the Magna Carta--also the Magna Charta or the Great Charter--celebrates its 805th birthday. The Charter was of course imposed by feudal barons on the English King John Lackland at the banks of the Thames near Windsor, England, on June 15, 1215. By limiting the king's absolute power, and protecting the rights of at least some of his subjects, the document wisely signed that day by King John (1199-1216) became a critical building block in both English and American constitutional law.

The Magna Carta did two groundbreaking things. It acknowledged that punishment of citizens must be under the law of the land. More generally, it also gave rise to a settled notion, and expectation, that a monarch should not and cannot act on a completely arbitrary basis. What spurred the barons to confront King John? Answer: Taxes, mainly, without notice, over and over again, to pay for John's lackluster military campaigns on the continent.

Magna-Charta (1).jpg
A reprinting in London in 1600s.

Posted by JD Hull at 12:29 AM | Comments (0)