Why do the Editorial Board of The Philadelphia Inquirer hate America?
In an editorial that reads suspiciously like it was primarily written by far-left columnist Will Bunch, I found this:
After all, it is difficult to be proud when masked federal agents kill U.S. citizens in broad daylight.
Mr Bunch, oops, sorry, the Editorial Board somehow failed to mention that Renee Good tried to run over an ICE agent with her car, or that Alex Pretti was pulling a gun in a struggle with law enforcement agents. Both are stone-cold graveyard dead now because they just couldn’t think Pretti Good. If they had been exercising their constitutional right to peaceably assemble to protest immigration enforcement, they’d still be alive today.
It is difficult to be proud when U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents round up migrants while they work on farms in California, repair a roof in Louisiana, or wash cars in North Philadelphia.
It’s not difficult for me to be proud of immigration agents doing something really radical like enforcing our immigration laws. The Board do not mention that ICE was arresting people who were in this country illegally.
It is difficult to be proud when a hapless defense secretary celebrates the killing — in violation of international law — of more than 200 civilians in tiny boats, who may be transporting drugs or just fishing.
High speed boats heading to our country are not out fishing, but doing exactly what you know they were doing: smuggling drugs. That the drug smugglers were killed while smuggling drugs bothers me not in the slightest.
It is difficult to be proud when a nation founded by immigrants sends migrants with no criminal record to maximum-security prisons in foreign lands without any due process.
Again, we have immigration laws, and the illegals here are violating them.
Pride does not come easily when you live in a country whose leader dismantles higher education, shakes down law firms, slashes scientific research, tramples the rule of law, and cuts off health insurance for the most vulnerable citizens.
The federal Department of Education has been a miserable failure, and should be dismantled. The United States was number one in education when the Department was created under President Jimmy Carter, and now we’re way down the list. And it is not the job of the federal government to provide health insurance for anyone.
Where is the pride in watching the world’s richest man parade across a stage with a chain saw to celebrate the firing of hundreds of thousands of federal workers? Or when he ends foreign aid for the poorest lands, leading to mass deaths?
I’m pretty proud of the Trump Administration slashing unnecessary federal workers and cutting foreign aid; we do not somehow ‘owe’ people living in foreign countries the taxpayers’ dollars of hard-working Americans. My only complaint is that not enough useless federal workers have lost their jobs, and not enough wasteful spending has been cut.
The Inquirer kept telling readers that the 2024 election was about saving democracy. Well, the American people voted, in a free and fair election, for the candidate who promised to do all of the things the Board lamented. 77,302,580 of us voted for exactly what President Trump has been doing. It seems that the people who were telling us that the 2024 election was about saving democracy are thoroughly upset at the result of democracy.




There’s considerably more at the newspaper’s original, including Mr Krasner’s statement that others may be involved. Mr Abdulmalik allegedly helped his stepson flee the city. But, once again, with yet another opportunity, this time 22 hours later, the Inquirer declined to publish the photos of the accused killers. But for our $6.99 per week digital subscriptions, the Inquirer doesn’t want to give readers all of the news. 

A climate change activist has filed a court case against the government’s plans to prevent companies being sued over their greenhouse gas emissions.
Senate President Pro Tem Monique Limón, a Santa Barbara Democrat, told reporters earlier this week that there was no perfect plan for redesigning the tax and that the Senate still has concerns, but the proposal they voted through is one that would bring in money quickly.