By Bill Donohue | December 16, 2020 | 3:41pm EST
A car in flames is pictured during a demonstration over the death of George Floyd while in Minneapolis Police custody, in Santa Monica, Calif., on May 31, 2020. (Photo credit: AGUSTIN PAULLIER/AFP via Getty Images)
The media and left-wing activists never expressed anger when Catholic churches and iconic Catholic statues were being vandalized and destroyed by Antifa and Black Lives Matter, but now all of a sudden they are up in arms over BLM banners being torn down and burned outside black churches in Washington D.C. Their selective outrage is stunning.
On Dec. 15, the Associated Press (AP) ran a big piece on the BLM banners. It claimed that black churches were vandalized. They were not. It was BLM banners displayed outside the churches that were torn down and burned: The churches themselves were not damaged in any way. By contrast, to cite one example, last spring BLM supporters spray-painted obs
Best reasons to visit each of the San Antonio Missions
For starters, its free and socially-distant fun
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The San Antonio Missions National Historical Park was designed to protect and preserve four Spanish frontier missions: Mission Concepcion, Mission San Jose, Mission San Juan Capistrano and Mission Espada.
The park, which is open and operating with social distancing measures in place, is free and an official unit of the National Park Service. The outposts of the missions were established by Franciscan friars, in order to spread Christianity knowledge to the region’s Native Americans. When first built, each mission complex featured things like churches, housing establishments, farm fields, granaries, irrigation systems, livestock and workshops for carpentry, masonry, spinning/