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Apple
Right now Iâm using four apple devices. Iâm typing on my Mac, watching Netflix on my iPad, checking e-mail and calling people on my Apple Watch, and checking Instagram on my iPhone.Â

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Love already won. Love won over 2,000 years ago when Christ died for us on that cross.
MyHeartBelongsToChrist (via myheartbelongstochrist)
If you are among the many Americansâof whatever sexual orientationâwho favor expanding same-sex marriage, by all means celebrate todayâs decision. Celebrate the achievement of a desired goal. Celebrate the opportunity for a new expression of commitment to a partner. Celebrate the availability of new benefits. But do not celebrate the Constitution. It had nothing to do with it.
Chief Justice John Roberts, dissenting opinion
But this Court is not a legislature. Whether same-sex marriage is a good idea should be of no concern to us.Under the Constitution, judges have power to say whatthe law is, not what it should be. The people who ratified the Constitution authorized courts to exercise âneither force nor will but merely judgment.â
Chief Justice John Roberts, dissenting opinion

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Oops, I Did It Again (TSA Version)
Is there anyone that supports the TSA? Â Anyone?
The âConfederate Flagâ Never Called Me a Nigger: But Blacks and Liberals Have
Itâs interesting that liberals and Obama-lefties have little to say when the U.S. flag is trampled and burned by anti-American anarchists and Muslims. They call it âfree speechâ and âfreedom of expression.â But they somehow justify condemnation of the Confederate Flag as a âhate symbolâ.
For millions, the Confederate Flag is a symbol of their love for the New South, which has risen out of the ashes of the Old South.
The homosexual flag flies wherever it is wanted without a thought pursuant to how people who oppose homosexuality may feel or what they may think about it. Muslims are now flying their flags in America but it is the Confederate Flag that is worthy of condemnation.
From time to time I wear a confederate bandana on my head when Iâm riding the Harley Davidson. My friends do the same.
I add to that I have never feared the Confederate Flag. I have always been ambivalent about it. The Confederate Flag has never called me a nigger but white liberals have. The Confederate Flag has never threatened me with physical harm and called me sellout, Uncle Tom, or any of a host of other vitriolic racial pejoratives, but white liberals, Muslims, and blacks have.
The attention to the Confederate Flag is much ado about nothing. It is intended to do nothing more than foment unrest amongst âled through the noseâ blacks.
When John Kerry, Eric Holder, Bill Ayers, Hillary Clinton, the Obamas, et al, were burning and protesting the American Flag and defending those who decried our American Flag, their actions were viewed as noble.
But now because some big pharma sick wacko punk who draped himself in the Confederate Flag was smart enough to go into a gun-free zone to carry out his hate-filled attack â pusillanimous little sissies craving brownie points have determined the Confederate Flag must be punished. The real debt of thanks for the successful attack in Charleston goes to those like Obama, Karl Rove, Eric Holder, and all of the other fools who clamor an anti-gun message. Because as every reasonable-minded person knows, had that church not been a gun free zone, the shooter would have in fact come to the right place to meet his maker.
But now craven whites seeking to kiss the dirty end of those blacks who will milk this unimaginable tragedy for all they can extort, the Confederate Flag once again comes under attack. And of course, there are the garden variety of liberal dimwits who are convinced that the Confederate Flag goes âbump in the nightâ.
If it were me, I would fly the Confederate Flag on my property just to shove it in their faces. I further think that the people of South Carolina should put Confederate Flags on the dashboard of their cars whenever parking on government property. I would also put my bible and my Gun Owners of America resources one the dash.
Iâd see just how far these cowards are willing to go to infringe on our rights. Letâs see if these race-mongers then insist our automobiles be disallowed from parking on government property if they have Confederate Flags, bibles, and gun magazines on our dashboards.
About Mychal Massie Mychal S. Massie is an ordained minister who spent 13 years in full-time Christian Ministry. Â He was founder and president of the non-profit âIn His Name Ministries.â Â He is the former National Chairman of the conservative black think tank, Project 21-The National Leadership Network of Black Conservatives and a former member of its parent think tank, the National Center for Public Policy Research.
Read the entire Bio here
http://mychal-massie.com/premium/the-confederate-flag-never-called-me-a-nigger-but-blacks-and-liberals-have/
King v. Burwell
The SCOTUS is taking sides, its doing whatever it can to uphold Obamacare which is slowly becoming SCOTUScare. They need to read what the law says, not what they want it to say. I call them out for judicial activism.Â
I really recommend reading both the Courtâs opinion and the dissenting opinion on this case. I love Justice Scaliaâs scathing dissent but I also really enjoyed reading the argument of Chief Justice Roberts to try and work around and make the phrase âan exchange established by the stateâ to include the federal government.Â

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The Courtâs decision reflects the philosophy that judges should endure whatever interpretive distortions it takes in order to correct a supposed flaw in the statutory machinery. That philosophy ignores the American peopleâs deci- sion to give Congress â[a]ll legislative Powersâ enumerated in the Constitution. Art. I, §1. They made Congress, not this Court, responsible for both making laws and mending them. This Court holds only the judicial powerâthe power to pronounce the law as Congress has enacted it. We lack the prerogative to repair laws that do not work out in practice, just as the people lack the ability to throw us out of office if they dislike the solutions we concoct. We must always remember, therefore, that â[o]ur task is to apply the text, not to improve upon it.â
Justice Antonin Scalia, dissenting opinion in King v. Burwell
King v. Burwell
Justice Antonin Scalia, in his dissent of Chief Justice Roberts opinion of the Court, is fuming. He is criticizing the SCOTUS for rewriting the law, pretty much making SCOTUS Care.Â
The SCOTUS is rewriting the law when it is clear in its statement. As Scalia said, this is just a bunch of âinterpretive jiggery-pokeryâ and it is âpure applesauce.â The IRS is taking more power for itself. The statement of an âexchange established by the stateâ is clear as can be. I am tired of the Court swaying from the ordinary reading of the law to support Obamacare in everything.Â
I wholeheartedly agree with the Court that sound interpretation requires paying attention to the whole law, not homing in on isolated words or even isolated sections. Context always matters. Let us not forget, however, why context matters: It is a tool for understanding the terms of the law, not an excuse for rewriting them.
Justice Antonin Scalia, Disenting Opinion on King v. Burwell
Rand Paul is fighting to bring transparency to government and ensure that the President is checked by Congress as the Constitution requires.
Written by Dr. Rand Paul for Breitbart:
I welcome Senator Cruz to the battle against giving more power to President Obama. My consistent...
The problem of racism should be solved in the hearts and minds of Americans. By censoring free speech, by brushing under the table a major part of American history, we canât solve the problem. The Confederate flag is a symbol of heritage, of a war for states rights. People died for that flag and for what it meant. It is a symbol of peoples heritage, it is a symbol of MY heritage. I had ancestors fight on both sides of the War Between the States. One of my great, great uncles was held as a prisoner of war by the Union. He died in a POW camp in Union territory. This flag is for him and for all those who fought in the war.
Yes, some people abuse this symbol for their own personal hatred; this is wrong and evil. It is not synonymous with slavery or racism, but that is without a doubt a part of it.
My personal belief: We canât erase this part of history because we are ashamed of it. We need to remember history so we donât repeat it. Everyone who fought for that flag was not a racist or a slave holder, that is a historical fact. We canât deny the blood spilt on the battlefield for this flag.
If a legislature wants to remove the flag, go for it. More power to you. Just donât let the lives for which this flag symbolizes be trampled on as a sign of racism. Think of that.Â

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The Supreme Court is scheduled to issue decisions Thursday, with six cases remaining on the docket. Here's a list of the remaining cases.
These six decisions will have major ripple effects. Â Brace yourselves! Iâm never optimistic about anything that rests in the hands of the Supreme Court.
1. Execution Methods
Glossip v. Gross At issue: Whether the sedative midazolam presents an unconstitutional risk of severe pain in executions of condemned criminals.Three men on Oklahomaâs death row claim that midazolam, the anesthetic the state plans to administer before introducing paralytic and heart-stopping drugs to their bloodstreams, is unreliable, exposing them to an unconstitutional risk of severe pain as they are put to death.
2. Power-Plant Emissions
Utility Air Regulatory Group v. EPA et. al. Issue: Whether the EPA unreasonably disregarded costs when it decided to regulate power plant emissions of mercury and other air toxics. The regulations would cost $9.6 billion annually, according to EPA estimates. But the agency said it was appropriate to consider only public health risksânot industry costsâwhen it decided to regulate coal- and oil-fired generation plants.
3. Congressional Redistricting
Arizona State Legislature v. Arizona Independent Redistricting Commission Issue: Whether a state may transfer redistricting authority from the legislature to a nonpartisan independent commission. Arizona voters in 2000 passed a ballot initiative that shifted responsibility for drawing congressional districts from the state legislature to an independent redistricting commission made up of two Democrats, two Republicans and an independent.
4. Housing Discrimination
Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs v. Inclusive Communities Project Issue: Whether Fair Housing Act of 1968 prohibits practices that have a disparate impact on minorities unless otherwise justified. The court is looking at whether the current system for doling out tax subsidies promotes racial segregation and violates the Fair Housing Act of 1968. The suit began in 2008 as a Dallas housing dispute brought by an advocacy group against the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs.
5. Affordable Care Act
King v. Burwell Issue: Whether the Affordable Care Act authorizes tax credits for insurance bought on healthcare.gov, as well as on state-operated insurance exchanges. The case turns on a single word in the 2,000-plus-page statute, in a clause authorizing the tax credits for policies purchased on an exchange established âbyâ the state. Only 13 states and the District of Columbia currently run their own exchanges. The court could potentially strike down subsidies in as many as 37 states that depend on HealthCare.gov.
6. Same-Sex Marriage
Obergefell v. Hodges et. al. Issue: Whether the 14th Amendment permits states to deny marriage to same-sex couples, or to deny recognition to same-sex marriages performed in states or countries that allow them. On a national right to marry, the outcome could be headed for a 5-4 split one way or another. But the court also is weighing an incremental step that potentially could attract more justices: upholding state marriage restrictions while compelling states to recognize legal same-sex marriages from other states.
Letâs hope SCOTUS stands with the Constitution in all of these cases
Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same.
President Ronald Reagan