Cheryl K. Chumley
Columns by Cheryl K. Chumley
Charlottesville fallout: Confederate flag sales hike
A company that makes Confederate flags, Alabama Flag & Banner, reported an increase in sales post-Charlottesville -- post-leftist mayhem and madness over monuments and statues that tell our nation's history. Published August 24, 2017
Donald Trump’s Phoenix speech fires up hate-filled media
President Donald Trump touched a media nerve in Arizona -- and how. Members of the supposed celebrated Fourth Estate tore into the president, post-Phoenix, adopting a "how dare he!" approach to deal with their bruised egos. Published August 24, 2017
Colin Kaepernick finds new support in Linda Sarsour
Colin Kaepernick, at this point, may very well be known more for his anti-American political activism than his football play. So it's no wonder the queen of anti-Americanism, Linda Sarsour, jumped into the fray herself and joined with the NAACP to protest outside NFL headquarters in New York City, and demand that the former 49er be picked up by a team. Published August 24, 2017
Monument mayhem, history hysteria, rooted in poor public education
It's the education, stupid. That, in a nutshell, is why America's monuments and national symbols are being torn down, removed, relocated and otherwise blotted from the public square. Published August 24, 2017
Georgia State University hiring progressive propagandists to train students
Georgia State University administrators have kicked off a hiring spree for "multicultural ambassadors" who will help fellow students learn to view the world through a pro-progressive prism. The school can call it what it wants. The truth is: they're seeking pro-progressive propagandists to teach the upcoming generation in the leftist way its members should go. Published August 23, 2017
Valerie Plame Wilson on quest to buy Twitter, boot Donald Trump
Valerie Plame Wilson is reportedly trying to raise enough money to purchase Twitter -- and boot President Donald Trump. Wow. Don't the anti-Trumpers get that the more they try to silence this president, the louder and deeper dug in his supporters become? Published August 23, 2017
CNN’s Don Lemon dares to pin Donald Trump as liar
CNN's Don Lemon reacted with swift outrage to President Donald Trump's rally in Phoenix, shredding the White House chief in a television rant for -- get this -- fake statements. That's kind of the pot calling the kettle black, yes? Published August 23, 2017
Sheriff Joe Arpaio — yes, let him go
President Donald Trump hinted -- well, more than hinted, really -- during his Phoenix rally he was going to pardon former Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio soon. And well he should. What happened to Arpaio was a political hit job. Published August 23, 2017
Monument madness a leftist cover to crumble America from within
Don't for one minute think this past week of Charlottesville-tied mayhem has been over a statue of Robert E. Lee. It's not. It's about power, control and the political course our nation will take as we head into the future. Published August 19, 2017
Donald Trump lashes at Lindsey Graham’s ‘moral equivalency’ quip
President Donald Trump lashed back at Sen. Lindsey Graham in a tweet, calling out the South Carolinian for falsely portraying his remarks about racism and bigotry so that it seems he supports the KKK. Isn't it bad enough that Trump has to correct the media for misstatements all the time? Et tu, his own party? Published August 17, 2017
Jeff Sessions delivers much-deserved slap to sanctuary cities
U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions struck a hard tone in his sanctuary city speech from Miami, publicly lashing out at Chicago as a "sad example" of a community that's lost its law and order compass. Go, Jeff Sessions. This is music to patriotic ears. Published August 17, 2017
Charlottesville, Baltimore, Chicago: Where will it end?
Charlottesville has had a cascade effect, and cities and counties around the nation are looking to their own backyards for signs of racism, monuments of offense, statues that bring bad feelings -- and the Founding Fathers are weeping. Published August 17, 2017
Charlottesville and the loss of America’s sanity
President Donald Trump, bombarded in a speech on infrastructure with repetitive and aggressive questions about Charlottesville, made clear -- again -- that violence, bigotry and racism in all its many forms, in all its various shapes, were not to be tolerated. He dared to defend his initial Charlottesville comments, and for that, the mainstream media has determined, he must die. Published August 17, 2017
Charlottesville: The Boston Massacre, John Adams matter of modern times
In 1770, on the heels of the Boston Massacre that saw occupying British troops shoot and kill five colonials, eight soldiers were indicted on murder charges. Now walk forward in time to 2017, to Charlottesville, Virginia, and parallels between the collective responses to the violence can be drawn. Published August 16, 2017
Charlottesville solution: Build more monuments
Charlottesville is coming to a city near you -- count on it. In fact, it just did in Durham, North Carolina. So what's the solution? More building; less tearing down. Published August 16, 2017
North Korea, post-Trump ‘fire and fury’ rhetoric, caves on Guam strike
North Korea just backed away from its wildly wild vow to take out Guam, turning down the heat a notch on what was becoming the media's most favored message of late -- the one that painted President Donald Trump as the crazed White House madman, steadily leading America toward a path of fire and destruction. Hmm. Guess who's red-faced now? Published August 15, 2017
George Soros hitting U.S. Lobby Town hard
Billionaire George Soros, no doubt still reeling from the White House win of President Donald Trump, has decided to pour even more money into Congress, in hopes of furthering his progressive visions, a new report finds. And this, ladies and gentlemen, is why you shouldn't trust any member of Congress Published August 15, 2017
Confederate statues today, book burnings tomorrow
A crowd of ignorant protesters pulled down a bronze Confederate statue that stood before a county government building in Durham, North Carolina -- the angry national backlash to the Charlottesville brouhaha over the Robert E. Lee monument. Published August 15, 2017
Donald Trump on Charlottesville Danged if he does, danged if he doesn’t
The immediate aftermath of the widely reported Charlottesville violence wasn't so much a media look at the issues, or the car-plowing suspect and victims, or even the demographics of the protesters -- that many came from out of state to stand strong against a small-town statue of Robert E. Lee -- as it was a cause to criticize President Donald Trump. But why all the angst against the president? Published August 15, 2017
Trump ex-aide threatens Drudge: I’ll ‘blow him’ up if Bannon’s fired
Holy cow, a war is waging against Matt Drudge, of Drudge Report fame, and given the Internet god's massive media presence -- it doesn't seem smart Published August 14, 2017