by Ben Johnson Barack Obama has proven he is more efficient than his predecessor in one area: He managed to diminish the history of two Christian nations in one presidential proclamation -- on the eve of Easter. Obama campaigned in 2008 on a promise to call the Ottoman Empire's systematic destruction of 1.5 million Armenians in 1915-23 a "genocide," something none of his predecessors since … [Read more...]
Obama Fails to Recognize Muslim Genocide, Instead Bashes U.S.A.
April 26, 2011 By Ben Johnson
Filed Under: *Featured Top, Anti-Americanism, Anti-Christian bigotry, Citizen USA, Floyd Reports, Foreign policy, History, Islam, Jihad, Obama administration, War on Terror Tagged With: anti-American, Anti-Americanism, Armenia, Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Church, Armenian Assembly of America, Armenian Genocide (1915-1923), Cambodia, genocide, Holodomor, Meds Yeghern, Namik Tan, Ottoman Empire, Pol Pot, Raphael Lemkin, The Holocaust, Turkey, Ukraine
Anti-American Globalists “Defend” U.S. at the UN?
November 4, 2010 By Ben Johnson
From the moment Barack Obama joined the United Nations Human Rights Council, observers knew an international humiliation was coming. Last Friday, the rogue nations of the world and the left-wing dregs of American society provided it before an international audience in Geneva. However, perhaps most disturbing, the team President Obama sent to “defend” the United States themselves accuse the United … [Read more...]
Filed Under: Academia, Anti-Americanism, China, Constitution, Floyd Reports, Foreign policy, George Soros/Shadow Party, Islam, Left-wing Hatred, Left-wing Philanthropy, Liberal fascism, Obama administration, Obama appointees, Radical Left, United Nations/globalism, Video Tagged With: Abu Ghraib, al-Qaeda, American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), American Express Company, Arizona, Arizona S.B. 1070, Arthur Kinoy, Barack Obama, Ben Kiernan, Bloomberg, Brig. Gen. John Furlow, Cambodia, Carnegie Corporation of New York, Center for Constitutional Rights, Chandra Bhat-Nagar, Che Guevara, China, Constitution, Cuba, David Cole, Egypt, Eileen Chamberlain Donahoe, Elisa Massimino, Esther Brimmer, Ford Foundation, foreign law, General Electric, Georgetown Law School, Guantanamo Bay, Harold Hongju Koh, International Committee of the Red Cross, International Criminal Court, Iran, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, JP Morgan Private Bank Law Firm Group, Jules Lobel, Kampuchea, Khmer Rouge, Libya, Lt. Gen. Randall “Mark” Schmidt, Michael Posner, Michael Ratner, New York Mets, North Korea, Open Society Institute, Open Society Policy Center, Patrick Leahy, Pol Pot, Proteus Fund, Richard and Rhoda Goldman Fund, Russia, socialism, The Nielsen Company, Tibet, Time Warner Cable, United Nations, United Nations Human Rights Council, Venezuela, William Kunstler, Yale Law School