Some of the biggest movies ever were filmed in Ireland and we bet you never knew! Ireland has a wonderful history on the silver screen. From John Wayne’s famous The Quiet Man to Roddy Doyle’s utterly irreplaceable Commitments, Ireland has a huge legacy in the film world. However, there are a couple of movies.
“The Bible tells us that ‘to everything there is a season,’” (Ecclesiastes 3:1-9) said President Joe Biden in his inaugural address. Reiterating his campaign theme of ending hatreds and suspending ill-will among citizens, the president continued, “Now, let’s give each other a chance. It’s time to put away the harsh rhetoric. To lower the temperature. To see each other again. To listen to each other again.
“To make progress, we must stop treating opponents as our enemy. We are not enemies. We are Americans,” declared Biden.
This stirring refrain challenging Americans to mend fences echoes a major theme from President Thomas Jefferson’s first inaugural address. Our third president delivered it when deepening political divisions aroused suspicions whether our new-born nation might survive.
The First POWs of the Second American Revolution
Since January 6, Our Rulers and their partners in the corporate media have tirelessly exploited the Patriots’ rally in DC. Indeed, between them, these twin evils have refined the “false flag” and the slaughter those fakes require into oblivion. Hereafter, the propagandists at CNN, ABC-NBC-CBS, Bloomberg, Fox News, et al, need no actual event. Their treatment of January 6th proves that if they only lie, fabricate, mislead, exaggerate, quote sources stunningly biased in favor of officialdom, and pooh-pooh as baseless all facts that contradict their falsehoods, they can fool half the country. But then, Progressives are a notoriously gullible herd: they swallow Marxism’s nonsense, so why not the government-media complex’s?
Around noon on Aug. 24, 1812, at the height of the War of 1812, British Redcoats engaged with about 8,000 American soldiers defending a bridge spanning the Potomac River at Bladensburg, Md. The War of 1812 was sparked by a disagreement over naval.