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Citizens Dedicated To Preserving Our Constitutional Republic

The Border & Illegal Aliens, And What We Are Doing About It.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions said.

“We are not going to let this country be invaded!

We will not be stampeded!

We will not capitulate to lawlessness!

This is NOT business as usual.

This is the Trump era!," the Attorney General said.
 

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Comment by Bullheaded Texan on December 25, 2018 at 2:48pm

Schumer says Republicans must “abandon the wall” to re-open Government



 Senate Democratic Leader chuck schumer, D-N.Y., called on President Trump to “abandon the wall” Saturday if he wants to reopen the government, saying Trump does not have the votes in the Senate to get it funded — hours after the government shut down over an impasse over funding for Trump’s signature 2016 campaign promise.

 “It will never pass the Senate, not today, not next week, not next year. So President Trump, if you want to open the government, you must abandon the wall, plain and simple,” Schumer said on the Senate floor.

 The partial shutdown began at midnight Saturday, a few hours after the House and Senate adjourned without getting a funding agreement to the president’s desk. The shutdown was expected to last at least a few days, with sources on both sides of the aisle telling Fox News that Washington could be in for a prolonged shutdown.

 The Senate adjourned Saturday afternoon and was not due to meet for a scheduled session until Thursday. Early Saturday evening, the House also concluded for the day.

 Vice President Mike Pence and Acting Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney arrived at the Capitol Saturday afternoon to meet with schumer to continue negotiations for an end to the stalemate. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said that “productive discussions are continuing.”

 “When those negotiations produce a solution that is acceptable to all parties — which means 60 votes in the Senate, a majority in the House, and a presidential signature — at that point, we will take it up here on the Senate floor,” he said.

Late Saturday afternoon, a Schumer spokesman said that “the vice president came in for a discussion and made an offer. Unfortunately, we’re still very far apart.”

 In a letter addressed to fellow Democratic colleagues on Saturday, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., wrote that “Last night, Republicans shut down the government.” She added that barring any developments, making “progress to end the Trump Shutdown in the next several days” was not anticipated.

 “Until President Trump can publicly commit to a bipartisan resolution, there will be no agreement before January when the new House Democratic Majority will swiftly pass legislation to re-open government,” Pelosi wrote, before expressing her wishes for a happy holiday.

With the standoff grinding on, the White House revealed on Saturday that the president planned to stay in the nation’s capital over the holiday.

“Due to the shutdown, President Trump will remain in Washington, D.C. and the First Lady will return from Florida so they can spend Christmas together,” White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said in a statement.

 The main sticking point for negotiations was funding for Trump’s signature 2016 campaign promise of a wall on the southern border. Trump had demanded $5.7 billion for wall funding, and a bill with that funding attached passed the House on Friday. But efforts have derailed in the Senate, where 60 votes were required for passage, and therefore Democrat votes are needed in conjunction with support by the GOP.

 Democrats have poured cold water on the idea that they would support anything close to that. schumer, in his remarks Saturday, said that the wall was a “bone to the hard right” and that they had proposed $1.3 billion for “border security.”

 “I’ve heard the president and his allies in the media say that Democrats don’t support border security. Nothing could be further from the truth. Democrats have always been for smart and effective ways to secure our border,” he said. “We are pushing for technology, like drones and sensors, and inspection equipment.”

 McConnell accused Democrats of backing away from past support for border security, and said they were rejecting a “reasonable request” for the $5 billion in funding.They’ve refused to meet President Trump halfway and provide even one-fifth of the resources for the border they were willing to provide just a few months ago,” he said on the Senate floor.

 Trump has been keen to blame Democrats for the impasse and on Friday urged McConnell to invoke the so-called “nuclear option” which would change Senate procedure to require only a simple majority to approve the bill — therefore allowing Republicans to override Democratic objections.

“Mitch, use the Nuclear Option and get it done! Our Country is counting on you!” he tweeted on Friday.

 Late Friday he emphasized the need for a wall in a video he posted to Twitter, and he blamed the shutdown on the Democrats.

We’re going to have a shutdown, there’s nothing we can do about that because we need the Democrats to give us their votes,” he said. “Call it a Democrat shutdown, call it whatever you want, but we need their help to get this approved.”

That contrasted with remarks he made last week during an explosive Oval Office face-off with schumer and pukelosi, in which he said he was “proud” to shut down the government for border security.

 “I will take the mantle. I will be the one to shut it down. I’m not going to blame you for it,” he said.

On Saturday, Trump held a lunch at the White House to discuss border security with staff and top conservatives including Reps. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah. The inclusion of some of the more hardline voices on immigration could likely serve to harden Trump’s resolve against backing down on the wall.

 The Senate appropriations bill passed on Wednesday is the base bill for funding, and that allocated $1.6 billion for border security. But it did not spend all money available under sequestration caps. There is an extra $900 million available, that could theoretically go toward funding the wall. If that was allocated, it could offer Trump a total wall/border package of about $2.5 billion.

 While there appeared to be little movement on Saturday, Sunday was expected to be a key day for negotiations to end the shutdown. Lawmakers were aiming for a tentative agreement on all seven outstanding appropriation bills, to be funded until the end of September 2019. A senior source close to the negotiations told Fox News that they will aim to “see by Sunday morning if there is a center of gravity” for nailing down a deal.

 Fox News is told Trump would accept the increase in wall funding, and that the administration believes it can find additional wall money across various federal programs that could be “reprogrammed” for the wall. White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said on “America’s Newsroom” this week that there were “other ways that we can get to that $5 billion.”

 Congress had a little bit of wiggle room for movement as it has a weekend, followed by Christmas Eve — for which Trump has given federal workers a day off — and then Christmas Day. So that means that the partial shutdown will not fully bite until Wednesday.

 About one-quarter of the government will be affected in a shutdown. Nine of the 15 Cabinet-level departments are to shutter, along with dozens of agencies. Those departments are: Agriculture, Commerce, Homeland Security, Housing and Urban Development, Interior, Justice, State, Transportation and Treasury.

 Essential personnel would still be required to work but without pay. Nearly 90% of the Homeland Security staff is deemed essential.

 Roughly 420,000 workers will be deemed essential and will work unpaid, while more than 380,000 people will be furloughed in the shutdown – meaning they will experience a temporary leave from their work

 This will include most of NASA, Housing and Urban Development, Commerce and National Park Service workers. Additionally, about 52,000 IRS workers would be furloughed.

 The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) will remain open as usual during a partial government shutdown because it is “an independent entity that is funded through the sale of our products and services, and not by tax dollars,” a spokesman told Fox News.

 TSA agents, air traffic controllers and border security agents also will be required to work through a shutdown – albeit they might not get a paycheck right away.

 Amtrak, a government-owned corporation, also will continue with normal operations during a short-term shutdown, a spokeswoman confirmed to Fox News.

 Of course, Members of Congress will continue to be paid, as legislative branch appropriations had already been approved back in September, and the 27th Amendment bars ““varying the compensation” for lawmakers until after each election.

Comment by Bullheaded Texan on December 25, 2018 at 2:36pm

https://storage.googleapis.com/topolio6640/2018-12-25_7-49-51.jpg"/>  Joshua Caplan

 President Donald Trump claims he has awarded a contract to construct 115 miles of border wall in Texas as a partial government shutdown over the U.S.-Mexico border wall extends into Christmas Eve.

“I am in the Oval Office & just gave out a 115-mile long contract for another large section of the Wall in Texas,”   

 President Trump tweeted. “We are already building and renovating many miles of Wall, some complete. Democrats must end Shutdown and finish funding. Billions of Dollars, & lives, will be saved!”

 The announcement comes after President Trump met with Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen and other officials on Monday to discuss border security issues as a partial government shutdown over the 

 U.S.-Mexico border wall entered Christmas without a clear resolution in sight. Though both sides have traded offers over the dollars, they remain far apart on the wall. The White House insists Trump will reject any deal that does not include money for a wall or fence; Democrats were holding firm in their opposition to a wall or other physical barrier. In a joint statement Monday, Democrat leaders, Sen. chuck schumer (D-NY) and Rep.nancy pukelosi (D-CA), vowed that as long as the president keeps listening to the Freedom Caucus and others on the right flank, there is no easy resolution to the impasse.

 “It’s Christmas Eve and President Trump is plunging the country into chaos,” the leaders said. They pointed to problems beyond the shutdown, including the plunging stock market and the president’s firing of the defense secretary. “The president wanted the shutdown, but he seems not to know how to get himself out of it.”

 Acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney said a counteroffer was presented over the weekend to Senate Democratic leader chuck schumer of New York. Mulvaney would only say the offer was between President  Trump’s $5.7 billion request and the $1.3 billion Democrats have offered.

 “We moved off of the five and we hope they move up from their 1.3,” he said Sunday, a day after a senior administration official insisted Congress would have to cave into Trump’s spending demand for the shutdown to end. The comments highlighted Trump’s unpredictable negotiating style.

 Mulvaney said he was awaiting a response from Schumer, whose office said the parties remained “very far apart.”

 Further, President Trump told his over 50 million Twitter followers Monday that he is waiting in the White House for Democrats to make a deal on border security. “I am all alone (poor me) in the White House waiting for the Democrats to come back and make a deal on desperately needed Border Security,” President Trump tweeted.

 “At some point the Democrats not wanting to make a deal will cost our Country more money than the Border Wall we are all talking about. Crazy!”

 President Trump put off plans to head to his Florida estate for Christmas and remained in Washington.

First lady Melania Trump, has returned from Florida to spend the holiday with him at the White House.

Comment by Bullheaded Texan on December 24, 2018 at 10:27pm

 President Donald Trump signaled Sunday he is not backing away from his border wall funding demand.

President Donald Trump and other key Republicans said Sunday that he is not backing down from his border wall funding demand that will leave nine Cabinet agencies and smaller federal offices closed until after Christmas.

“It’s very possible that this shutdown will go beyond the 28th and into the new Congress,” White House Budget Director and Acting Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney told Fox News Sunday. The 116th Congress gavels in Jan. 3, at which point Democrats take the majority in the House and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., is expected to become speaker.

Mulvaney said Pelosi is “beholden to her left wing to where she cannot be seen as agreeing with the president on anything until she’s actually speaker.”

 Administration officials have offered $2.1 billion for the border barrier and another $400 million for a "border security" account that would finance other technologies. But Democrats oppose the latter, long referring to such proposals for that kind of border security account as a "slush fund."

 White House officials said Saturday the president intends to hold firm on his demand for $5 billion for his border barrier project. Democrats in both chambers oppose that much, and say they would only support a shutdown-ending spending package with a lesser amount for border “fencing” and other security tools like unmanned aerial vehicles and sensors.

But Trump on Sunday mocked those ideas and returned to his hardline rhetoric about a wall.

 “The only way to stop drugs, gangs, human trafficking, criminal elements and much else from coming into our Country is with a Wall or Barrier,” he tweeted. “Drones and all of the rest are wonderful and lots of fun, but it is only a good old fashioned Wall that works!”

Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel and Trump’s personal attorney, Rudolph Giuliani, also made pitches for the barrier on Twitter.

Day Two of Shutdown

Talks between Senate Democrats and senior Trump administration officials continued this weekend after about 40 percent of the federal apparatus ran out of funds and was shuttered Saturday morning.

But with little progress toward a deal, both the House and Senate adjourned until Thursday, meaning hundreds of thousands of federal workers will face uncertainty on Christmas — and beyond.

Democratic aides reported little progress as lawmakers headed home.

“The vice president came in for a discussion and made an offer. Unfortunately, we’re still very far apart,” a spokesman for Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., said Saturday evening, referring to VP Mike Pence.

Aides declined to describe any Pence offers and Democratic counter-offers, but Trump’s mocking tweet provides a window into the talks.

For his part, Trump tweeted Saturday he and his team were negotiating “hard” with Democrats. But when he hosted a border security lunch in the White House residence, he didn't invite a single Democratic lawmaker or leader. (A White House spokeswoman was unable to describe why, given Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has said repeatedly it will be up to Trump and Schumer to strike a deal.)

pukelosi has repeatedly said she's ready to put a bill on the floor re-opening the government shortly after House Democrats reclaim the majority in January.

But in an ominous sign for the federal workers wondering about future paychecks, the president on Saturday warned of his remaining in Washington to oversee negotiations: “it could be a long stay.”

Comment by Bullheaded Texan on December 24, 2018 at 10:19pm

Trump Signals He’s Not Backing Down on the Border Wall.                                        Mulvaney also suggests partial shutdown could go into the new year.  President Donald Trump signaled Sunday he is not backing away from his border wall funding demand.

 

President Donald Trump and other key Republicans said Sunday that he is not backing down from his border wall funding demand that will leave nine Cabinet agencies and smaller federal offices closed until after Christmas.

“It’s very possible that this shutdown will go beyond the 28th and into the new Congress,” White House Budget Director and Acting Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney told Fox News Sunday. The 116th Congress gavels in Jan. 3, at which point Democrats take the majority in the House and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., is expected to become speaker.

Mulvaney said Pelosi is “beholden to her left wing to where she cannot be seen as agreeing with the president on anything until she’s actually speaker.”

Administration officials have offered $2.1 billion for the border barrier and another $400 million for a "border security" account that would finance other technologies. But Democrats oppose the latter, long referring to such proposals for that kind of border security account as a "slush fund."

White House officials said Saturday the president intends to hold firm on his demand for $5 billion for his border barrier project. Democrats in both chambers oppose that much, and say they would only support a shutdown-ending spending package with a lesser amount for border “fencing” and other security tools like unmanned aerial vehicles and sensors.

But Trump on Sunday mocked those ideas and returned to his hardline rhetoric about a wall.

“The only way to stop drugs, gangs, human trafficking, criminal elements and much else from coming into our Country is with a Wall or Barrier,” he tweeted. “Drones and all of the rest are wonderful and lots of fun, but it is only a good old fashioned Wall that works!”

Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel and Trump’s personal attorney, Rudolph Giuliani, also made pitches for the barrier on Twitter.                                                                                                          Day Two of Shutdown:

Talks between Senate Democrats and senior Trump administration officials continued this weekend after about 40% of the federal apparatus ran out of funds and was shuttered Saturday morning.    

 But with little progress toward a deal, both the House and Senate adjourned until Thursday, meaning hundreds of thousands of federal workers will face uncertainty on Christmas — and beyond.

 Democratic aides reported little progress as lawmakers headed home.

“The vice president came in for a discussion and made an offer. Unfortunately, we’re still very far apart,” a spokesman for Senate Minority Leader charles e. schumer, D-N.Y., said Saturday evening, referring to VP Mike Pence.

 Aides declined to describe any Pence offers and Democratic counter-offers, but Trump’s mocking tweet provides a window into the talks.

For his part, Trump tweeted Saturday he and his team were negotiating “hard” with Democrats. But when he hosted a border security lunch in the White House residence, he didn't invite a single Democratic lawmaker or leader. (A White House spokeswoman was unable to describe why, given Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has said repeatedly it will be up to Trump and schumer to strike a deal.)

 pukelosi has repeatedly said she's ready to put a bill on the floor re-opening the government shortly after House Democrats reclaim the majority in January.

 But in an ominous sign for the federal workers wondering about future paychecks, the president on Saturday warned of his remaining in Washington to oversee negotiations: “it could be a long stay.”

Watch: Remember When Donald Trump Wanted Mexico To Pay for the Wall?

  https://www.rollcall.com/news/politics/trump-signals-hes-not-backin...

 

Comment by Bullheaded Texan on December 24, 2018 at 10:07pm

 

Mulvaney also suggests partial shutdown could go into the new year

Trump Signals He’s Not Backing Down on the Border Wall.

Mulvaney also suggests partial shutdown could go into the new year

Comment by Bullheaded Texan on December 24, 2018 at 10:03pm

See What’s Next For "Rowdy" Gowdy.

 The South Carolina Republican is retiring from Congress in January after serving five consecutive terms.

The Charleston Post and Courier confirmed Gowdy’s return to Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough, the Columbia, South Carolina-based firm that represents private individuals as well as corporate clients and provides lobbying services in the state and in Washington, D.C.

 Gowdy’s wheelhouse, though, is the courtroom. He was an assistant U.S. attorney for six years before running for South Carolina’s 7th Circuit Solicitor in 2000.

Rep.Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., is retiring in January after five terms in Congress.

 

As a member of Congress, he carved out a reputation as a partisan bulldog chairing the House Select Committee on Events Surrounding the 2012 Terrorist Attack in Benghazi, which eventually discovered Hillary Clinton used a private email to conduct official government business while she was secretary of state.

Since 2017, Gowdy has chaired the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. Gowdy’s critics have condemned him for not fulfilling his duties to conduct proper oversight over the Trump administration, instead pursuing an investigation into perceived political bias among top officials at the FBI and Justice Department in 2016 and 2017 as those bodies investigated the president's campaign, transition, and inauguration teams.

 Trey Gowdy has openly expressed a distaste for politics and has no intention to return to elected office.

“You'll never see me on the ballot again,” he said on Fox News earlier this month.

“I will get back in politics if Tim Scott runs for president, and he says, ‘Look, I need you to go to Iowa and New Hampshire and knock on doors,’ which he probably won’t because I’d hurt him,” Gowdy said of his Republican colleague in the Senate and co-author of a book about their unlikely friendship.

Comment by Bullheaded Texan on December 24, 2018 at 9:52pm

See What’s Next For Gowdy.

Rep. Trey Gowdy will return to the private law firm in South Carolina where he worked in the 1990s and will be a white collar criminal defense attorney.

The South Carolina Republican is retiring from Congress in January after serving five consecutive terms.

The Charleston Post and Courier confirmed Gowdy’s return to Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough, the Columbia, South Carolina-based firm that represents private individuals as well as corporate clients and provides lobbying services in the state and in Washington, D.C.

Gowdy’s wheelhouse, though, is the courtroom. He was an assistant U.S. attorney for six years before running for South Carolina’s 7th Circuit Solicitor in 2000.

Comment by Bullheaded Texan on December 24, 2018 at 9:40pm

Senate Scrambles to Tackle Wall Funding Before Shutdown.

 12/21/18 GOP Presidential Staff

The Senate on Friday was scrambling to take up a spending package with billions in funding for a border wall, as President Trump made clear there’s a “good chance” for a partial government shutdown at midnight.

 The House on Thursday approved $5.7 billion for a border wall as part of a measure to fund the government through early February. But the Senate on Friday afternoon was struggling to overcome a procedural hurdle to even set up a vote on the bill, amid Democrats’ refusal to give in on a border wall.

 “President Trump: you will not get your wall,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said on the floor. “Abandon your shutdown strategy. You’re not getting the wall today, next week or on January 3rd, when Democrats take control of the House.”

 The Senate needs a simple majority to simply take up the spending package — after which the measure would need an even more daunting 60-vote majority to pass. But as of Friday afternoon, the procedural vote remained open for more than an hour as Republicans struggled to cobble together support. Things were complicated by outgoing GOP Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake voting against proceeding and other lawmakers traveling for the holidays.

Comment by Bullheaded Texan on December 23, 2018 at 11:19pm

Toughest Players To Ever Play In The NFL.

To put on an NFL uniform, one of the requirements is that you have to be tough. Even if you’re a kicker, you need to be able to 'tackle' if a ball is returned passed everyone else, but more importantly, you’d need to take a tackle from a 300 plus pound beast if they were able to get through.

 But kickers are rarely put in those positions. Imagine having to wrestle a 300 pounder every play, that’s exactly what most offensive and defensive linesmen do each and every game. Or worse, getting sacked by one of them when you’re a quarterback that’s half the size. Now that requires extreme toughness.

Here are the toughest NFL players to ever step foot on the field:

50. Doug Flutie, Position: Quarterback

Toughness goes beyond just the physical, and the first player on the list had great mental tenacity as well as physical toughness. Most people thought Doug Flutie would never succeed in the NFL, being less than 6’ tall and half the size of everyone, but he sought out to prove them wrong.

 When experts said Flutie was too small and unable to play the game at a professional level, he excelled at all stages of the game and provided inspiration to “under-sized” quarterbacks who are now some of the stars of the league.

 Flutie didn’t just play in the NFL, but had a career that lasted until he was 43. He may have been smaller than most, but his career was lengthy.

49. Bruce Matthews, Position: Offensive Line

One of the most desirable traits in an offensive lineman is reliability, and number 49 on our list personifies that.

Over a 19 year career, Bruce Matthews dominated every position on the offensive line. He showed his durability by not missing a single game in the final 14 years of his career. Some kickers don’t last 19 years in the NFL, and it is safe to say offensive line takes a little more of a beating.

 

48. Jerome Bettis, Position: Running Back

Football is a game of aggression, and Jerome “The Bus” Bettis built his career off that basest instinct. To run over anyone in your way. “The Bus” never saw a path around defenders, but rather saw it much simpler to run through them and did that as well as anybody in the history of the league.

47. Texas's "Dandy"Don Meredith,Position: Quarterback

Bob Lilly once described Don Meredith as really tough! He recalled a story of when Meredith was beat up so bad, he was sent to the hospital in Cleveland. Instead of getting the proper treatment he needed, he left to play with a broken rib, pneumonia and a punctured lung. That’s coming from the Hall of Famer, “Mr. Cowboy” Bob Lilly, need we add more?

46. Lynn Swann, Position: Wide Receiver

Before you start freaking out, give us a chance to explain. As opposed to the current league, where 15 flags may fly in the first half, the league Swann played in was very different. Defensive contact rules were just about nonexistent. This resulted in teams just hitting Swann just so he couldn’t explode as a deep threat. In the AFC title game, Swann got a concussion so bad he was hospitalized for two days. He then went on to play in and win Super Bowl X. For someone severely concussed, Swann held his own. He was able to rack up 161 yards and a touchdown on his way to securing Super Bowl MVP honors, which was the first time a wide receiver had won the award!

45. John Riggins, Position: Running Back

Riggins was what you want in your fullback. One of his favorite things to do was hit defending players.

When “the Diesel” got his engine going, opposing linebackers didn’t stand a chance! “Riggo” got hit about as many times as he dealt the punishment, but still had a respectable, 14 year career.

44. Jackie Slater, Position: Offensive Tackle

In today’s NFL, offensive linemen often don’t get the credit they deserve. That’s what we’re here for.

Jackie Slater definitely earned his Hall of Fame Gold Jacket. Slater was drafted in the third round of the 1976 draft during the Gerald Ford administration. When Slater hung up his pads, clinton was in office. Slater played for the Rams organization for 20 years, with their first year in St. Louis being his last.

43. Bruce Smith,Position: Defensive End

For most defensive linemen, having a few seasons with double digit sacks is something to be proud of. During his 19-year career, Bruce Smith was able to accumulate 10 or more sacks in 13 of those seasons. He was able to accomplish this even as he was "double teamed" most of the time and hit with many cheap shots to slow him down. None of that mattered.  

42. “Iron Mike” Mike Webster, Position: Center

“Iron Mike” Webster is one of the most legendary Pittsburgh Steelers, helping to anchor their offensive line as they won four Super Bowls. Webster wasn’t the most physically imposing player on the field, but he still worked to be one of the greatest on the field! “Iron Mike” was one of the first players to draw attention to potential brain damage caused by football, but played his career until he decided he was done. He still holds the record as the player to longest wear the Steelers uniform!  

41. Roger Craig, Position: Running Back

While being the first NFL player to accumulate 1,000 yards both rushing and receiving, Craig was as hard a hitter as he was hard to bring down. Craig was a defensive player’s worst nightmare as he brought the pain to them instead of the other way around.    

40. Tom Rathman, Position: Fullback

It seems only right to have one of the most bruising backfields of all-time ranked side by side.

The 49ers may have been the “finesse” team of the day but Rathman brought some extra pack to the punch!

39. Brian Dawkins, Position: Safety

A member of the most recent 2018 inductee class to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Brian Dawkins earned his jacket. Dawkins had 13 bruising years with the Eagles before he ended his career in Denver. Dawkins cracked the code for cracking skulls in football: just hit that guy.

38. Randy White, Position: Defensive Tackle

“The Manster” put grown men in their place for as long as he played football. A pillar of the Dallas “Doomsday Defense”, opposing offensive lines and quarterbacks would quake in their boots when Randy White was on the other side of the ball. White wasn’t usually the biggest guy on the field, but this Hall of Famer’s grit enabled him to be exceptionally successful in the league! 

  

37. Mark Bavaro, Position: Tight End

Mark Bavaro was what the Giants strived to be in the 1980s. He played games with a broken jaw, made clutch catches, and helped lead the G-men to the Super Bowl. He wouldn’t just carry his own team on his back, but in 1986 famously carried most of the San Francisco defensive backfield on Monday Night Football.

36. Walt Garrison, Position: Running Back

Walt Garrison not only played for the Dallas Cowboys, but would actually compete on the professional rodeo circuit during the offseason. In the 1970 NFC championship game against the 49ers, he played just about the whole game with a cracked collarbone and serious ankle injury. That's Tough!! 

35. Mel Hein, Position: Offensive Line

There are two things you need to know about Mel Hein:
1.) He became the first (and only) offensive lineman to ever win NFL MVP.
2.) His nickname was “Old Indestructible”  Yeah, that sums it up.

34. Reggie White, Position: Defensive End

Reggie White has cemented his place in the record books. White’s path to success was not easy, but was paved with double-teams, which he was fighting as soon as he stepped into the league. Despite being the main focus of every opposing O-line coach, White chalked up 198.0 sacks in his career, the second most career sacks to date. Not just anyone can rack up those kinds of numbers.  

33. Kellen Winslow Sr., Position: Tight End

Kellen Winslow Sr. was a tough player, but there’s really one game in particular that guaranteed him a spot on this list. His performance in the 1982 playoff game against the Miami Dolphins will forever be one of the greatest.

He led his team to victory with over 100 receiving yards, a touchdown, and a blocked game-winning field goal. And, he did that with four injuries.  

 

32. Conrad Dobler, Position: Guard

Conrad Dobler is considered to have been one of the dirtiest players in the league. When opponents expect dirty, they’re going to try to beat you to the punch. Dobler could never let his guard down (pun not intended). He had a target on his back, and his toughness is the only thing that made him last.




31. Emmitt Smith, Position: Running Back

Emmitt Smith has rushed for considerably more yards than anyone who has ever played the game of football.

It was more than just his offensive line that led to his success as Emmitt Smith was a crucial part to bringing three Super Bowls to Dallas in four years.  

  

30. Y.A. Tittle, Position: Quarterback

In one of the most iconic photographs of all time, Tittle had just thrown a pick six while having his face bloodied, sternum cracked, and became concussed. That didn’t stop him from playing the rest of the season.

Often forgotten, but one of the toughest quarterbacks to play the game!   

29. George Atkinson, Position: Safety

After Atkinson had knocked Lynn Swann unconscious with a concussion twice in two years, some said that Atkinson had “the criminal element.” People often forget that Atkinson was an undersized safety, so being known as one of the hardest hitting is a testament to his strength and grit.

28. George Blanda, Position: Almost Everything

There was nothing on the field Blanda didn’t do! Blanda was best known as a quarterback, but was just as comfortable as linebacker before he finished his career as a kicker.

27. Earl Campbell, Position: Running Back

Teammates and coaches often admired Campbell’s punishing running style saying he would run with “reckless abandon.”  

26. Sam Huff, Position: Linebacker

Huff was one of the first great defensive players as he used a combination of brains and brawn to bring the new 4-3 defense tactic to life.

25. Bob Lilly, Position: Defensive Tackle

Bob “Mr. Cowboy” Lilly is regarded as one of the greatest defensive players in football history, but he’s also one of the toughest. Lilly didn’t miss a game in 14 years. Most people can’t say that about what they do every day, and they didn’t have broken bones. He was as much as you can ask for in a defensive tackle.

24. Jerry Kramer, Position: Guard

Kramer was a versatile player who was able to anchor the Green Bay offensive line as Vince Lombardi coached them to five NFL titles and winning the first two Super Bowls. Kramer was known for playing through fatigue and injury. Over his 11-season career, Kramer underwent 22 surgeries. TOUGH!

23. Larry Csonka, Position: Fullback

Larry Csonka’s coach once said if he went on a safari, the lions would roll their windows up. Csonka was one of those offensive players we love to see who craved contact and would generally be the first one to initiate it with the defense instead of the other way around.

22. Jim Marshall, Position: Defensive End

Marshall played 282 consecutive games. In that time span, he suffered an ulcer and literally got shot with a shotgun. I’m going to say it again, he played, and started in, 282 consecutive football games. That’s the most by a defensive player in NFL history. Now,That’s tough.

21. Jim Otto,Position: Center

Otto didn’t always get the credit of being one of the strongest or most athletic men on the field, but he was able to play in the league for 15 years. In that time span, he put even Jim Marshall to shame by undergoing 35 surgeries in that time span. Jim Otto spelled football T-U-F-F, and if you didn’t like it, you could go play with the girls.

20. Hines Ward,Position: Wide Receiver

Just because he was on Dancing with the Stars doesn’t mean Hines Ward isn’t one of the toughest wide receivers to play the game. Ward doled out some of the hardest hitting blocks given by any receivers, and he also had some of the most reliable hands when the game was coming down to the wire.

19. Deacon Jones, Position: Defensive End

This man is honestly just terrifying! Sacks weren’t a statistic when he played the game, but he got so many of them he literally coined the term, “sack”.

Deacon Jones always said he was the toughest guy on the field, and he sure played like it.

18. Ray Nitschke, Position: Linebacker

Another Lombardi player, Nitschke once had a 1,000-pound coaching tower fall on him during practice and once Lombardi found out it was Nitschke underneath he stated, “He’ll be fine. Get back to work!” Yeah that’s right.

17. Steve McNair,Position: Quarterback

With little practice time, "Air" McNair was still able to make that ball fly when it mattered most.

Steve McNair was able to make magic happen whenever he took the field, which is all the more impressive considering how often he would sustain a new injury. McNair was tragically murdered in 2009, another player taken too soon. RIP Air McNair.

16. Rocky Bleier, Position: Running Back

Rocky Bleier deserves all of our respect and admiration for his story. After being drafted into the NFL and playing his rookie season for the Steelers, Bleier was drafted again. This time by the U.S. Military.

After taking a bullet to the leg and shrapnel from a grenade and earning himself a Purple Heart, doctors told him he’d never play football again. After receiving a personal postcard saying the team needed him from the Steelers’ owner, Rocky began training again. From the time he returned to the Steelers’ camp, it took him four years to work his way back jnto the starting lineup, where he helped forge the 1970s Steelers dynasty.

15. Johnny Unitas, Position: Quarterback

Unitas is more of a household name than some of the men on this list, but that doesn’t mean he wasn’t just as tough as some of the other bone-rattling players on this list. The league Unitas played in was about as different as could be from the current NFL, because defensive players could do just about anything they wanted to a quarterback. But Unitas never caved, even after being injured for the majority of the season with most of the muscles in his throwing arm being torn, he still came off the bench and played in Super Bowl III.

14. Jack Tatum, Position: Safety

Tatum was known as “the Assassin”, and for good reason. Tatum, paired with George Atkinson, created one of the most punishing secondaries in NFL history. Tatum’s hits were nothing short of brutal. People were knocked unconscious and even left paralyzed by some of the hits Tatum dealt out.

13. Mike Ditka, Position: Tight End

Mike Ditka embodied everything you want in a tight end. He had a good head on his shoulders, had reliable hands, and had no problem taking a hit. Ditka was not easy to bring down, and even some of the bigger linebackers had to figure out new ways to tackle him, which Ditka did not shy away from.

Ditka has become a cultural icon, but he was first and foremost a great football player!

Comment by Bullheaded Texan on December 23, 2018 at 11:15pm

My Christmas "Gift" to all my friends. 

Back when Football was a SPORT that was fun to watch!    BULL

Toughest Players To Ever Play In The NFL.

To put on an NFL uniform, one of the requirements is that you have to be tough. Even if you’re a kicker, you need to be able to 'tackle' if a ball is returned passed everyone else, but more importantly, you’d need to take a tackle from a 300 plus pound beast if they were able to get through.

 But kickers are rarely put in those positions. Imagine having to wrestle a 300 pounder every play, that’s exactly what most offensive and defensive linesmen do each and every game. Or worse, getting sacked by one of them when you’re a quarterback that’s half the size. Now that requires extreme toughness.

Here are the toughest NFL players to ever step foot on the field:

50. Doug Flutie, Position: Quarterback

Toughness goes beyond just the physical, and the first player on the list had great mental tenacity as well as physical toughness. Most people thought Doug Flutie would never succeed in the NFL, being less than 6’ tall and half the size of everyone, but he sought out to prove them wrong.

 When experts said Flutie was too small and unable to play the game at a professional level, he excelled at all stages of the game and provided inspiration to “under-sized” quarterbacks who are now some of the stars of the league.

 Flutie didn’t just play in the NFL, but had a career that lasted until he was 43. He may have been smaller than most, but his career was lengthy.

49. Bruce Matthews, Position: Offensive Line

One of the most desirable traits in an offensive lineman is reliability, and number 49 on our list personifies that.

Over a 19 year career, Bruce Matthews dominated every position on the offensive line. He showed his durability by not missing a single game in the final 14 years of his career. Some kickers don’t last 19 years in the NFL, and it is safe to say offensive line takes a little more of a beating.

 

48. Jerome Bettis, Position: Running Back

Football is a game of aggression, and Jerome “The Bus” Bettis built his career off that basest instinct. To run over anyone in your way. “The Bus” never saw a path around defenders, but rather saw it much simpler to run through them and did that as well as anybody in the history of the league.

47. Texas's "Dandy"Don Meredith,Position: Quarterback

Bob Lilly once described Don Meredith as really tough! He recalled a story of when Meredith was beat up so bad, he was sent to the hospital in Cleveland. Instead of getting the proper treatment he needed, he left to play with a broken rib, pneumonia and a punctured lung. That’s coming from the Hall of Famer, “Mr. Cowboy” Bob Lilly, need we add more?

46. Lynn Swann, Position: Wide Receiver

Before you start freaking out, give us a chance to explain. As opposed to the current league, where 15 flags may fly in the first half, the league Swann played in was very different. Defensive contact rules were just about nonexistent. This resulted in teams just hitting Swann just so he couldn’t explode as a deep threat. In the AFC title game, Swann got a concussion so bad he was hospitalized for two days. He then went on to play in and win Super Bowl X. For someone severely concussed, Swann held his own. He was able to rack up 161 yards and a touchdown on his way to securing Super Bowl MVP honors, which was the first time a wide receiver had won the award!

45. John Riggins, Position: Running Back

Riggins was what you want in your fullback. One of his favorite things to do was hit defending players.

When “the Diesel” got his engine going, opposing linebackers didn’t stand a chance! “Riggo” got hit about as many times as he dealt the punishment, but still had a respectable, 14 year career.

44. Jackie Slater, Position: Offensive Tackle

In today’s NFL, offensive linemen often don’t get the credit they deserve. That’s what we’re here for.

Jackie Slater definitely earned his Hall of Fame Gold Jacket. Slater was drafted in the third round of the 1976 draft during the Gerald Ford administration. When Slater hung up his pads, clinton was in office. Slater played for the Rams organization for 20 years, with their first year in St. Louis being his last.

43. Bruce Smith,Position: Defensive End

For most defensive linemen, having a few seasons with double digit sacks is something to be proud of. During his 19-year career, Bruce Smith was able to accumulate 10 or more sacks in 13 of those seasons. He was able to accomplish this even as he was "double teamed" most of the time and hit with many cheap shots to slow him down. None of that mattered.  

42. “Iron Mike” Mike Webster, Position: Center

“Iron Mike” Webster is one of the most legendary Pittsburgh Steelers, helping to anchor their offensive line as they won four Super Bowls. Webster wasn’t the most physically imposing player on the field, but he still worked to be one of the greatest on the field! “Iron Mike” was one of the first players to draw attention to potential brain damage caused by football, but played his career until he decided he was done. He still holds the record as the player to longest wear the Steelers uniform!  

41. Roger Craig, Position: Running Back

While being the first NFL player to accumulate 1,000 yards both rushing and receiving, Craig was as hard a hitter as he was hard to bring down. Craig was a defensive player’s worst nightmare as he brought the pain to them instead of the other way around.    

40. Tom Rathman, Position: Fullback

It seems only right to have one of the most bruising backfields of all-time ranked side by side.

The 49ers may have been the “finesse” team of the day but Rathman brought some extra pack to the punch!

39. Brian Dawkins, Position: Safety

A member of the most recent 2018 inductee class to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Brian Dawkins earned his jacket. Dawkins had 13 bruising years with the Eagles before he ended his career in Denver. Dawkins cracked the code for cracking skulls in football: just hit that guy.

38. Randy White, Position: Defensive Tackle

“The Manster” put grown men in their place for as long as he played football. A pillar of the Dallas “Doomsday Defense”, opposing offensive lines and quarterbacks would quake in their boots when Randy White was on the other side of the ball. White wasn’t usually the biggest guy on the field, but this Hall of Famer’s grit enabled him to be exceptionally successful in the league! 

  

37. Mark Bavaro, Position: Tight End

Mark Bavaro was what the Giants strived to be in the 1980s. He played games with a broken jaw, made clutch catches, and helped lead the G-men to the Super Bowl. He wouldn’t just carry his own team on his back, but in 1986 famously carried most of the San Francisco defensive backfield on Monday Night Football.

36. Walt Garrison, Position: Running Back

Walt Garrison not only played for the Dallas Cowboys, but would actually compete on the professional rodeo circuit during the offseason. In the 1970 NFC championship game against the 49ers, he played just about the whole game with a cracked collarbone and serious ankle injury. That's Tough!! 

35. Mel Hein, Position: Offensive Line

There are two things you need to know about Mel Hein:
1.) He became the first (and only) offensive lineman to ever win NFL MVP.
2.) His nickname was “Old Indestructible”  Yeah, that sums it up.

34. Reggie White, Position: Defensive End

Reggie White has cemented his place in the record books. White’s path to success was not easy, but was paved with double-teams, which he was fighting as soon as he stepped into the league. Despite being the main focus of every opposing O-line coach, White chalked up 198.0 sacks in his career, the second most career sacks to date. Not just anyone can rack up those kinds of numbers.  

33. Kellen Winslow Sr., Position: Tight End

Kellen Winslow Sr. was a tough player, but there’s really one game in particular that guaranteed him a spot on this list. His performance in the 1982 playoff game against the Miami Dolphins will forever be one of the greatest.

He led his team to victory with over 100 receiving yards, a touchdown, and a blocked game-winning field goal. And, he did that with four injuries.  

32. Conrad Dobler, Position: Guard

Conrad Dobler is considered to have been one of the dirtiest players in the league. When opponents expect dirty, they’re going to try to beat you to the punch. Dobler could never let his guard down (pun not intended). He had a target on his back, and his toughness is the only thing that made him last.

31. Emmitt Smith, Position: Running Back

Emmitt Smith has rushed for considerably more yards than anyone who has ever played the game of football.

It was more than just his offensive line that led to his success as Emmitt Smith was a crucial part to bringing three Super Bowls to Dallas in four years.  

  

30. Y.A. Tittle, Position: Quarterback

In one of the most iconic photographs of all time, Tittle had just thrown a pick six while having his face bloodied, sternum cracked, and became concussed. That didn’t stop him from playing the rest of the season.

Often forgotten, but one of the toughest quarterbacks to play the game!   

29. George Atkinson, Position: Safety

After Atkinson had knocked Lynn Swann unconscious with a concussion twice in two years, some said that Atkinson had “the criminal element.” People often forget that Atkinson was an undersized safety, so being known as one of the hardest hitting is a testament to his strength and grit.

28. George Blanda, Position: Almost Everything

There was nothing on the field Blanda didn’t do! Blanda was best known as a quarterback, but was just as comfortable as linebacker before he finished his career as a kicker.

27. Earl Campbell, Position: Running Back

Teammates and coaches often admired Campbell’s punishing running style saying he would run with “reckless abandon.”  

26. Sam Huff, Position: Linebacker

Huff was one of the first great defensive players as he used a combination of brains and brawn to bring the new 4-3 defense tactic to life.

25. Bob Lilly, Position: Defensive Tackle

Bob “Mr. Cowboy” Lilly is regarded as one of the greatest defensive players in football history, but he’s also one of the toughest. Lilly didn’t miss a game in 14 years. Most people can’t say that about what they do every day, and they didn’t have broken bones. He was as much as you can ask for in a defensive tackle.

24. Jerry Kramer, Position: Guard

Kramer was a versatile player who was able to anchor the Green Bay offensive line as Vince Lombardi coached them to five NFL titles and winning the first two Super Bowls. Kramer was known for playing through fatigue and injury. Over his 11-season career, Kramer underwent 22 surgeries. TOUGH!

23. Larry Csonka, Position: Fullback

Larry Csonka’s coach once said if he went on a safari, the lions would roll their windows up. Csonka was one of those offensive players we love to see who craved contact and would generally be the first one to initiate it with the defense instead of the other way around.

22. Jim Marshall, Position: Defensive End

Marshall played 282 consecutive games. In that time span, he suffered an ulcer and literally got shot with a shotgun. I’m going to say it again, he played, and started in, 282 consecutive football games. That’s the most by a defensive player in NFL history. Now,That’s tough.

21. Jim Otto,Position: Center

Otto didn’t always get the credit of being one of the strongest or most athletic men on the field, but he was able to play in the league for 15 years. In that time span, he put even Jim Marshall to shame by undergoing 35 surgeries in that time span. Jim Otto spelled football T-U-F-F, and if you didn’t like it, you could go play with the girls.

20. Hines Ward,Position: Wide Receiver

Just because he was on Dancing with the Stars doesn’t mean Hines Ward isn’t one of the toughest wide receivers to play the game. Ward doled out some of the hardest hitting blocks given by any receivers, and he also had some of the most reliable hands when the game was coming down to the wire.

19. Deacon Jones, Position: Defensive End

This man is honestly just terrifying! Sacks weren’t a statistic when he played the game, but he got so many of them he literally coined the term, “sack”.

Deacon Jones always said he was the toughest guy on the field, and he sure played like it.

18. Ray Nitschke, Position: Linebacker

Another Lombardi player, Nitschke once had a 1,000-pound coaching tower fall on him during practice and once Lombardi found out it was Nitschke underneath he stated, “He’ll be fine. Get back to work!” Yeah that’s right.

17. Steve McNair,Position: Quarterback

With little practice time, "Air" McNair was still able to make that ball fly when it mattered most.

Steve McNair was able to make magic happen whenever he took the field, which is all the more impressive considering how often he would sustain a new injury. McNair was tragically murdered in 2009, another player taken too soon. RIP Air McNair.

16. Rocky Bleier, Position: Running Back

Rocky Bleier deserves all of our respect and admiration for his story. After being drafted into the NFL and playing his rookie season for the Steelers, Bleier was drafted again. This time by the U.S. Military.

After taking a bullet to the leg and shrapnel from a grenade and earning himself a Purple Heart, doctors told him he’d never play football again. After receiving a personal postcard saying the team needed him from the Steelers’ owner, Rocky began training again. From the time he returned to the Steelers’ camp, it took him four years to work his way back jnto the starting lineup, where he helped forge the 1970s Steelers dynasty.

15. Johnny Unitas, Position: Quarterback

Unitas is more of a household name than some of the men on this list, but that doesn’t mean he wasn’t just as tough as some of the other bone-rattling players on this list. The league Unitas played in was about as different as could be from the current NFL, because defensive players could do just about anything they wanted to a quarterback. But Unitas never caved, even after being injured for the majority of the season with most of the muscles in his throwing arm being torn, he still came off the bench and played in Super Bowl III.

14. Jack Tatum, Position: Safety

Tatum was known as “the Assassin”, and for good reason. Tatum, paired with George Atkinson, created one of the most punishing secondaries in NFL history. Tatum’s hits were nothing short of brutal. People were knocked unconscious and even left paralyzed by some of the hits Tatum dealt out.

13. Mike Ditka, Position: Tight End

Mike Ditka embodied everything you want in a tight end. He had a good head on his shoulders, had reliable hands, and had no problem taking a hit. Ditka was not easy to bring down, and even some of the bigger linebackers had to figure out new ways to tackle him, which Ditka did not shy away from.

Ditka has become a cultural icon, but he was first and foremost a great football player!

 

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