Government Shutdown Day II: Cernovich, McInnes and Molyneux Form Competing Cannibal Rape-Gangs

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
January 21, 2018

It is day two of the fallout of the government shutdown – and Mike Cernovich, Gavin McInnes and Stefan Molyneux have become the leaders of competing cannibal rape-gangs, struggling for control of New York City.

The factions started to form last night after “Night for Freedom” became “Night for Feasting on Human Flesh,” when starving party attendants began to kill and eat one another.

Molyneux was the first one to take a leading role in the festival of blood, killing Bradley Manning, cutting his chest open with a bowie knife and eating his heart. He stood up on stage and screamed: “I am king now!”

From across the room, Gavin McInnnes pushed his way through the crowd, emerging completely naked with an object shoved up his butthole and carrying the severed heads of the gay twins. He said: “you will never rule me, Molyneux – I shall feast on your flesh and make soup from your bones!”

But outside, Mike Cernovich had climbed to the roof of the theater in an Aladdin costume, and was heard telling the crowd, “stick with me and you’ll never go hungry again!” as he threw body parts down to the starving party-goers.

As of noon Sunday, the entire city is being divvied-up into sections controlled by one of the three gangs. All three have vowed to kill and eat the other two.

Truly, Chuck Schumer has brought down hell on this city.

And there is no end in sight.

Washington Post:

President Trump pressured Congress Sunday to end the government shutdown that reached its second day, attacking Democrats and urging Republicans to change the rules of the Senate if the standoff isn’t resolved.

“If stalemate continues,” he wrote on Twitter, Republicans should use the “Nuclear Option” to rewrite Senate rules and try to pass a long-term spending bill with a simple majority.

Republicans are already 56%, so you wouldn’t think it’d be that hard…

The president’s statement came amid deep uncertainty over whether Democrats and Republicans could soon break an impasse to restore federal funding. Lawmakers were set for another tense day, with the start of the workweek for many federal employees less than 24 hours away.

Trump praised Republicans for “fighting for our Military and Safety at the Border,” while he said Democrats “just want illegal immigrants to pour into our nation unchecked.”

Trump has previously advocated changing a long-standing Senate rule requiring 60 votes to pass most legislation. On Sunday, it was again met by opposition from Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.)

“The Senate Republican Conference opposes changing the threshold for cloture votes on legislation,” said McConnell spokesman Don Stewart.

I have to wonder if McConnell is making money off the human flesh markets…

The Senate will gavel into session at 1 p.m. McConnell has vowed to take up a new spending plan by Monday morning, or sooner, that would fund the government through Feb. 8.

But the proposal does not contain a solution for “dreamers,” undocumented immigrants who were brought into the United States as children, raising doubts about whether the plan will win enough support to pass.

On Sunday morning news shows, Democrats and Republicans pointed fingers at each other for the shutdown and batted away charges of hypocrisy in light of past comments about shutting down the government.

Sen. Richard J. Durbin (Ill.), the second-ranking Democrat, said Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Trump appeared to be closing in on a broad deal Friday that would also address immigration. He blamed the White House for backing away from plan he said included a generous concession from Democrats on Trump’s border wall.

“I can’t answer that question directly,” Durbin said on ABC’s “This Week with George Stephanopoulos,” when asked whether the government would re-open Monday.

White House legislative affairs director Marc Short on the same program declined to provide assurances that the president would guarantee a vote on an immigration bill Democrats are seeking in exchange for supporting a short-term spending deal. Some lawmakers see this as a potential way to end the deadlock.

“We want to have the right resolution,” Short said, noting that bipartisan Senate negotiators have not yet released their complete immigration plan.

On CNN’s “State of the Union,” White House budget director Mick Mulvaney defended Trump’s “nuclear option” tweet, arguing that if “ordinary rules prevailed,” the government would be open.

The Democrats have sold us all down the river for the sake of illegal wetback trash.

It is harder than Dark Souls out there.