Obama And Black Lives Matter Planned Charlotte Riots

This guy nails it!

Black Trump supporter Taurus Rachel unloaded on Barack Obama and the Black Lives Matter terrorist movement after this week’s rioting and looting in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Taurus Rachel accused Obama of planning the rioting in Charlotte.

Taurus Rachel: Trump family divide and conquer is being pushed to the extreme tonight in North Carolina. Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Democratic machine, George Soros, they’re so happy. This is their doing. A few weeks ago when Barack Obama had a meeting with Black Lives Matter, DeRay and all these other fake-ass people, they planned this. The end justifies the means. They don’t care about America. They don’t care if poor urban neighborhoods are destroyed and set aflame.

Obama may not plan riots but he sure celebrates the riot organizers as black communities burn across the country.

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American History: Sarah Malinda Pritchard

Sarah Malinda Pritchard
Sarah Malinda Pritchard Blalock, Southern Historical Collection, UNC.

Sarah Malinda Pritchard, perhaps the most famous female soldier from North Carolina, served alongside her husband in the Confederate army, and later assisted the Union military. Born in 1839, she married William McKesson Blalock at the age of seventeen, and settled on a farm near the base of Grandfather Mountain. William, who went by the nickname “Keith,” remained loyal to the Union at the outbreak of the war, and refused to enlist the Confederate army. However, in March 1862, faced with new conscription laws requiring all men between the ages of eighteen and thirty-five to serve in the army, Keith Blalock and his wife, disguised as “Sam” Blalock and claiming to be Keith’s younger brother, enlisted in Company F, 26th North Carolina Infantry.

Six days prior to the Blalock’s enlistment, the 26th North Carolina had fought in the Battle of New Bern, and the regiment was recovering near Kinston. “Sam” gave her age on enlistment as twenty, but was described in later accounts as a “good looking sixteen-year-old boy” weighing “about 130 pounds, height five feet four inches.” It was noted that for the next month Sam , tenting and eating with Keith, did all the “duties of a soldier,” and was “very adept at learning the manual and the drill.”

Sarah Malinda’s Confederate service was quite short-lived, however. Keith, ever anxious to find a way out of the army, approached the regimental surgeon, Thomas J. Boykin, with a complaint of a “rupture” (hernia) and “poison from sumac.” The injury may have been a preexisting condition however it is thought that he rolled around in sumac in order to gain the rash. Initially the surgeons thought he was suffering from smallpox due to the severity of the disorder. On April 20, 1862, Keith was discharged from Confederate service for “disability.” That same afternoon, “Sam” came clean to the regimental commanders, including Colonel Zebulon Vance, and immediately was discharged from service.

After their release, the Blalocks made their way back to their mountain home. Precisely what happened to them in 1863-1864 is unclear. One account states that Keith was subsequently wounded in the arm as the couple were pursued into the wilderness atop Grandfather Mountain by Confederate conscription and enrolling officers attempting to force Keith to rejoin the army. If he had been properly discharged, however, and had papers proving that, they could not have legally reenlisted him. In his later years, Keith asserted that he had never been properly discharged. Tradition also states that he helped Union escapees from Salisbury prison cross the mountains into Tennessee.

At some point in the fall of 1863 or spring of 1864, Keith made his way across the mountains into eastern Tennessee, where on June 1, 1864 he enlisted at Strawberry Plains in Company D, 10th Michigan Cavalry. The company records indicate that at least four other eastern Tennessee or western North Carolina Unionists joined the same company. He later claimed in his Union army pension that he spent the majority of his time in service as a scout. He acknowledged two injuries in his pension that do not appear in his service records: a gunshot to the arm while operating in Caldwell County in the summer of 1864, and a second wound, which cost him his left eye, on January 15, 1865.

Historians as well as fiction writers have made numerous claims that Sarah Malinda Blalock took part in many of Keith’s scouting forays. One story involves Malinda being wounded in the shoulder in an early 1864 attack on the home of Carroll Moore, the father of a former friend and comrade of the Blalocks. She indeed may have helped him, but one must account for the fact that she had a one-year-old child at the time that needed care, and Keith does not mention her presence alongside him in any of his pension correspondence postwar.

After the war, Keith Blalock murdered a man who was responsible for the killing of his stepfather during the conflict. He managed to escape prosecution. For a brief time the family moved to Texas, but eventually returned to North Carolina, settling as farmers in Mitchell County (in an area that is present-day Avery County). Malinda died in 1903, and is buried in the Montezuma Community Cemetery alongside Keith, who was killed in 1913 in an accident on the railroad.

Sarah Malinda Blalock’s month-long enlistment in the Confederate army, and her later assistance to the Union military, made her unique among North Carolina’s women veterans.

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Little Girl

This video by Amy Carrickhoff, from November 2010, shows the special bond she had with a deer named “Little Girl”. In the video she feeds the deer powdered goat’s milk in her kitchen, a routine she performed every morning.

The excerpt below the video explains the rest of the story.

The video is heartwarming with a dash of absurd. Carrickhoff stands outside her house in Oakridge, North Carolina, calling for a deer she has christened “Little Girl.” The deer comes out of the woods and jumps on Carrickhoff like a dog wanting to be petted. She scampers up the driveway and follows Carrickhoff into the house, where she then sucks down a baby bottle of goat’s milk. When the milk is gone, Carrickhoff dabs the deer’s mouth with a tissue.

One of our producers initially spotted the video on YouTube in 2010 and encouraged Carrickhoff to upload to our site. The video was popular with readers from the start, but more than two years later, the iReport resurfaced on several hunting sites and took off anew this past January.

While some animal lovers were touched by the obvious bond Carrickhoff had with the deer, hunters and wildlife rehabilitators felt she wasn’t doing the doe any favors. They said she was allowing the deer to get too comfortable around humans and could have been hit by a car, been shot by a hunter, or hurt someone.

“You just gave this animal a DEATH SENTENCE – you also have put all your neighbors and their children at risk of being attacked where this deer matures and when she doesn’t get fed, she attacks someone,” one reader wrote, one of about 250 comments on the iReport.

We recently caught up with Carrickhoff (username deermommy2), a ticket agent for United Airlines, and asked her a few questions about her viral iReport.

Carrickhoff’s first comment was that if she had known the video would get so many views she would have changed out of her gym clothes. As for the deer, sadly, the update isn’t a happy one.

Little Girl continued coming back for bottles until around January 2011, when she moved onto regular deer food, Carrickhoff said. The size she is in the video is as large as she ever got. Carrickhoff last saw Little Girl in October of that year. Something just seemed wrong, she remembered. Carrickhoff watched as the deer appeared to have a seizure.

“She walked off into the woods and we never saw her again,” she said. “We combed those woods … we never found anything.”

Looking back, Carrickhoff said getting to know the deer was a special experience that she doesn’t regret.

Friends had brought Little Girl — apparently orphaned as a baby — to Carrickhoff’s home because the woods in their backyard were protected, and the deer would be safe from hunters. School children loved visiting the gentle creature who would lick them with her soft tongue and didn’t mind being petted.

Carrickhoff is confident that she didn’t overly domesticate the animal. Even when Little Girl was bottle-fed, she lived in the woods and did “deer things,” Carrickhoff’s daughter said. The deer gave birth to a baby of her own the following June, and toward the end, she wouldn’t come when she was called. She was becoming wild again.

She and her husband got so attached to Little Girl that they don’t ever want to take care of another animal.

“I just watch the videos and she kind of lives on,” she said.

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Little Girl

 

Moonshine Cologne

Moonshine Cologne

Moonshine Cologne

Smelling like a man is more complicated than just working outside all day and basking in the aroma of your own sweat and booze. It means smelling like manly things. Things like the forest, black pepper, tobacco, leather, and gin — all scents you’ll find in Moonshine Cologne.
 

It used to be something nobody wanted to talk about, but these days a touch of Southern heritage has become almost fashionable.

Moonshine has a strong connection to Nascar and North Carolina, and now it’s part of a local success story.

Charlie Holderness along with his friends Matt Moore and Colin Newberry started Moonshine Cologne in his parent’s house in Greensboro where the three would set up their own bottling operation on weekends.

The first 500 bottles were supposed to last for months. It sold out in three weeks.

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