Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday February 21, 2020.
THE DAILY SIGNAL
Feb 21, 2020
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Happy Friday from Washington. Should parents have a say in whether their kids explore another gender identity? The ones suing a school district over its transgender policy sure think so. Fred Lucas reports. Believe it or not, tomorrow it will be 40 years since the “Miracle on Ice.” We look back on the podcast. Plus: hard-liners plan to tighten their grip in Iran, a word for secular conservatives, and why we must punish cheating in baseball. Fifty-five years ago today, black nationalist Malcolm X is assassinated by rival activists while speaking to his Organization of Afro-American Unity at a ballroom in New York City. Hello, weekend. |
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AMERICAN THINKER
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Stone Sentenced
Plus, a closer look at Richard Grenell’s promotion to acting director of national intelligence.
The Dispatch Staff | 2 hr | 9 | 6 |
Happy Friday! “What the hell was that all about?” That’s what Trump asked his rally goers in Colorado Springs last night on the subject of Parasite winning Best Picture at the Academy Awards. (It’s an excellent movie, by the way.) Coincidentally, it’s also what your Morning Dispatchers often find ourselves asking whenever we wrap up a conversation with Jonah. But we digress.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- Longtime Trump adviser Roger Stone was sentenced to 40 months in prison for obstructing Congress, lying to investigators, and witness tampering.
- More details emerged surrounding President Trump’s decision to make Richard Grenell acting director of national intelligence. According to The New York Times, intelligence officials briefed House lawmakers last week that Russia is attempting to interfere in the 2020 campaign to reelect Trump. The president is worried Democrats will use this against him.
- Some 2020 election numbers: Tuesday’s debate was the most-watched Democratic contest of all time, with nearly 20 million viewers tuning in. Elizabeth Warren has raised more than $5 million since the debate, while the Trump campaign reported $200 million cash on hand at the end of January.
The Criminal Justice System: ‘Get Me Roger Stone’
After an uproar over the Department of Justice’s revised sentencing recommendation, Judge Amy Berman Jackson sentenced Roger Stone to three years and four months in prison.
Last November, a jury found Stone guilty on seven counts of obstructing Congress, lying to investigators, and witness tampering. The evidence presented at trial was overwhelming that Stone had tried to thwart the House Intelligence Committee’s investigation into Russia’s role in the 2016 election because, in his own words, the truth would have “looked terrible” for President Trump. In doing so, he repeatedly lied to the Republican-controlled committee, denying that he had spoken to anyone associated with the campaign about his contacts with Wikileaks:
In one of the trial’s most revealing moments, [deputy campaign manager Rick] Gates recounted a July 31, 2016, phone call between Mr. Stone and Mr. Trump, just days after WikiLeaks had released a trove of emails embarrassing the Clinton campaign. As soon as he hung up with Mr. Stone, Mr. Gates testified, Mr. Trump declared that “more information” was coming, an apparent reference to future releases from WikiLeaks that would rattle his political rival.
While some of Stone’s ardent defenders, including the president, have pointed to the jury forewoman’s “significant bias” because of her association with the Democratic Party, our own David French has provided a lengthy analysis of why this argument doesn’t hold much legal water and a fellow juror has said “[w]ithout her in the room, we would have returned the same verdict, and we would have returned it more quickly and without looking as deeply into the evidence.” Regardless, as French noted, “[t]he question isn’t whether Hart is a Democrat, it’s whether she hid facts that would have provided a valid basis to challenge her presence on the jury.”
In its initial sentencing recommendation, Justice Department prosecutors asked for seven to nine years based on several aggravating factors, including threats Stone made against a witness he sought to block from testifying to Congress, Randy Credico, and his dog. (In his grand jury testimony, Credico testified that he was not living at home and had taken to wearing a disguise out of fear but later said he did not feel threatened by Stone’s comments.)
The next day, however, the department filed another, softer sentencing recommendation signed by the acting chief of the D.C. U.S. Attorney’s office criminal division, John Crabb. It stated that the initial calculation of 87 to 108 months was “excessive and unwarranted under the circumstances” and did “not accurately reflect the Department of Justice’s position” because the enhancements “disproportionately escalate” the sentence. Although it did not definitively provide a new recommendation, it suggested that a sentencing range of 37 to 46 months was “more in line with the typical sentences imposed in obstruction cases.”
This prompted all four of the prosecutors on the case to withdraw their appearances and one of them to resign from the department entirely. And, naturally, there were some presidential tweets during all of this.
But for anyone who has enjoyed a few (or in this Dispatcher’s case, all) episodes of Law & Order knows, prosecutors don’t decide sentences. In federal court, the judge must correctly calculate the proper range based on the sentencing guidelines—with or without contradicting DoJ memos—but then is free to depart from that range. (The guidelines used to be mandatory, but the Supreme Court struck down that part in 2005.)
And so entered Judge Amy Berman Jackson Thursday morning.
The first part of the hearing was dedicated to calculating the correct range under the guidelines. This included an interesting (and it appears unresolved) legal question about whether a victim’s “subjective understanding” of the threat—in this case whether Credico took Stone’s words seriously—is relevant to whether the enhancement should apply. Crabb stuck by the initial sentencing memo’s recommendation. In fact, he appeared to support all of the initial enhancements, including the ones that the supplemental memo tried to walk back “for the reasons set forth in the original sentencing memorandum.”
This raised a lot of eyebrows—inside and outside the courtroom—as to why there had been such a fuss over the original sentencing recommendations at all. As Aaron Blake put it, “[i]f the Justice Department was just going to argue the same points from the first recommendation, why overrule the sentencing recommendation and make it look like Trump was dictating how his Justice Department prosecuted his ally?” Indeed.
In the end, Judge Jackson split the difference between the two memos based on her own calculations and adopted a sentencing range of 70 to 87 months.
Next, Judge Jackson addressed the sentencing memo debacle with Crabb, which he in turn blamed on “a miscommunication between the attorney general and the United States attorney.” He confirmed that the initial memo had been consistent with DoJ policy and that it had been submitted after consultations with Main Justice (this is the shorthand used for the Offices of the Deputy Attorney General and Attorney General). He would not, however, answer whether he wrote or was instructed to write the second memo that he signed.
The judge went on to say that “the government’s initial memorandum was thorough, well-researched and supported” and rejected “any suggestion that the prosecutors in this case did anything untoward.” She continued, however, that she would have believed that seven to nine years was too long regardless of the memo controversy, and while she found the president’s comments “entirely inappropriate,” she would not be influenced by them or hold them against Stone.
Just before pronouncing the sentence, she finished by saying:
“[Stone] was not prosecuted, as some have claimed, for standing up for the president. He was prosecuted for covering up for the president. … The defendant lied about a matter of great national and international significance. This is not campaign hijinks. This is not just Roger being Roger. … There was nothing unfair, phony, or disgraceful about the investigation or the prosecution. … The truth still exists. The truth still matters. Roger Stone’s insistence that it doesn’t [poses] a threat to our most fundamental institutions, to the very foundation of our democracy. … The dismay and disgust at the defendant’s belligerence should transcend party.”
And with that, she sentenced Stone to 40 months, ending months of theatrics. But the drama at DOJ may just be beginning.
Trump’s ‘Acting’ Cabinet
President Trump provoked cries of protest on Wednesday from Democrats and many intelligence professionals when he announced that he would replace his acting director of national intelligence, Joseph Maguire, with Richard Grenell, who currently serves as Trump’s ambassador to Germany.
The move initially raised eyebrows because Maguire, who took over the acting job after Dan Coats’ term ended last August, had been considered likely to be nominated to fill the post for a full term. A former vice admiral in the Navy and director of the National Counterterrorism Center, Maguire had years of intelligence experience under his belt. Grenell, by contrast, is a career communications professional with no such experience: Prior to his ambassadorship, he worked as a spokesman at the United Nations for the Bush administration and had a stint on Fox News.
So why’d Trump make the switch? Reporting yesterday from the Washington Post and New York Times indicated that Trump decided to axe Maguire after he became concerned about his loyalty. Maguire’s offense? A Maguire deputy had warned the House Intelligence Committee last week that Russia was planning to meddle again — on behalf of Trump — in the 2020 election. Trump, the Times reported, was angry that the DNI shared that information with Democrats who could use it as a weapon against him.
There is no serious dispute that Russia interfered in the 2016 elections. “I am confident that the Russians meddled in this election, as is the entire intelligence community,” said then-CIA Director Mike Pompeo. “This threat is real.” Top national security officials of both parties have supported this conclusion.
Some of the problems here are obvious. If the reporting is accurate, removing Maguire for Grenell shows that Trump still puts a higher premium on personal loyalty than on having the proper qualifications for even the most sensitive government jobs; the DNI is a Cabinet-level position that oversees America’s 17 intelligence networks. It shows that he remains testy about acknowledging the fact that Russia has interfered in U.S. elections on his behalf and seems likely to do so again; a president whose instinct is often to cast doubts that such interference is occurring or to minimize its impact is unlikely to be a president who works diligently to prevent or punish such interference.
Yet the bigger problem is more subtle—and more systemic. Why is it that Trump is able to turn on a dime, fire Maguire, and promote Grenell, all totally unilaterally? Because Maguire was himself only serving in an acting capacity, never having undergone the process of Senate review and approval that top-level administration officials must undergo to be fully instated in their offices.
A look across the executive branch shows that Maguire—now Grenell—is not alone in this. Following the resignation of Kirstjen Nielsen as secretary of homeland security last April, President Trump assigned the role to Customs and Border Protection commissioner Kevin McAleenan. Under federal law, an acting Cabinet secretary can serve only 210 days, but Trump never nominated McAleenan to the full post; rather, when McAleenan’s time was up, he resigned, and Trump appointed another acting secretary—Chad Wolf—in his place. Other agencies currently headed by acting officials include Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Citizenship and Immigration Services. Even Mick Mulvaney, who has served as Trump’s chief of staff for more than a year, is still merely the acting chief of staff.
Relying on acting officials suits Trump’s ad-hoc managing style. “It’s easier to make moves when they’re acting,” Trump told CBS News last year. “I like acting because I can move so quickly. It gives me more flexibility.”
But it also strips a key aptitude and suitability check on appointees—the necessity of passing muster in the Senate—out of the executive branch. The president, of course, is entitled to have the people he wants running the executive branch running it; if he wants loyalists, he’ll have loyalists. But the Constitution requires loyalists who’ve gotten approval from the Senate, in this case a GOP-controlled Senate.
As Grenell himself clarified yesterday, Trump has no plans to install him in a permanent role as director of national intelligence. Rather, he’ll serve in the role until Trump gets around to finding someone else to nominate. But time will tell if Trump decides this is a status quo he can deal with after all.
Worth Your Time
- Bernie Sanders insinuated in Tuesday’s Democratic debate that some of the “Bernie Bros” wreaking havoc on the internet on his behalf might be Russian bots attempting to influence the election. Read Isaac Stanley-Becker and Tony Romm in the Washington Post on why experts aren’t so sure that’s the case.
- Some of the best writing out there pairs a subject that’s an utterly mundane, uninterrogated part of our lives with an author who’s fanatically devoted to that subject, knows everything there is to know about it, and is absolutely dying to share that fandom with you. Which is why you ought to take a minute to read this essay from Bon Appétit’s Alex Beggs, about potato chips, Frito Lay, and the creation, marketing, and cultural takeover of the culinary concept of “crisp.”
- We don’t know why, but writing that last entry sparked a recollection in us of one of the greatest and goofiest little essays Andy Ferguson ever wrote for The Weekly Standard, way back in 2001, on “Self-Distraction.” It’s short and amazing; we advise against reading it in the bathroom or a board meeting or anywhere else where it would be inappropriate to laugh aloud.
Presented Without Comment
Keith Ellison@keithellison
I have never seen @BernieSanders supporters being unusually mean or rude. Can someone send me an example of a “Bernie Bro” being bad. Also, are we holding all candidates responsible for the behavior of some of their supporters? Waiting to hear.
Presented With One Comment
Elizabeth Warren has been decrying super PACs and candidates who benefit from them the entire campaign.
Presented Without Comment: White House Chief of Staff Edition
“My party is very interested in deficits when there is a Democrat in the White House. The worse thing in the whole world is deficits when Barack Obama was the president. Then Donald Trump became president, and we’re a lot less interested,” Mulvaney said.
“We are desperate — desperate — for more people,” Mulvaney said during private speech in London. “We are running out of people to fuel the economic growth that we’ve had in our nation over the last four years. We need more immigrants.” w/@NickMiroff:
Something Fun
New Westworld. March 15. We’re ready.
Toeing the Company Line
- A Morning Dispatch/Remnant crossover! Andrew joined Jonah on the podcast yesterday to discuss the Democratic debate, movie references that go over Andrew’s head, and Midwestern charm.
- A bonus Vital Interests newsletter from Thomas Joscelyn a devastating takedown of an op-ed the New York Times ran from Sirajuddin Haqqani. Not disclosed in the op-ed: “Sirajuddin Haqqani has been designated as a terrorist by both the U.S. and the United Nations. He leads a designated terrorist organization, the Haqqani Network, which is an integral part of the Taliban. Other Haqqani Network leaders have been designated as terrorists as well.” And while the al-Qaeda-linked leader claimed yesterday to want peace, a video from the Haqqani network last month praised suicide bombing that kill “Crusader invaders.” Subscribe to Vital Interests here.
Let Us Know
McDonald’s announced a limited-edition set of Big Mac-scented candles. Question No. 1: How great is America? Question No. 2: What other foods deserve the candle treatment?
- Wendy’s spicy chicken nuggets
- Cinnabon’s … cinnabon
- Subway’s bread
- Ben & Jerry’s Americone Dream
- Krispy Kreme’s glazed donut
- Lou Malnati’s deep dish pizza
- Wild Wing Cafe’s Atomic Meltdown wings
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Sarah Isgur (@whignewtons), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
Photograph of Roger Stone by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images.
9 | 6 |
Top posts
AXIOS
Happy Friday!
🚨 Bulletin: Secretary of State Mike Pompeo tweeted this morning that the U.S. has “come to an understanding with the Taliban” that could lead to a peace deal in Afghanistan.
- A planned seven-day “reduction in violence” across the country is set to begin today, before the signing of a U.S.-Taliban agreement on Feb. 29.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios. Photo: Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Mike Bloomberg got into the 2020 race to stop Bernie Sanders and socialism. If he doesn’t bounce back from this week’s debate, he may seal the deal for both, Axios CEO Jim VandeHei writes.
- Why it matters: Bloomberg’s own campaign has warned that Sanders could lock up the nomination in mere weeks, thanks to rivals spitting the opposition vote. But Bloomberg’s own spending makes it harder for other rivals to cut through — and virtually assures he sucks up significant delegates.
- A top Bloomberg official tells me the response is simple: Recover at the next debate — Tuesday in South Carolina.
Bloomberg warned in Salt Lake City yesterday: “Look, the real winner in the debate last night was Donald Trump. Because I worry that we may very well be on the way to nominating somebody who cannot win in November.”
- “And if we choose a candidate who appeals to a small base, like Sen. Sanders, it will be a fatal error.”
Situational awareness: Bloomberg is polling at 15-plus in most states and his money can buy a viable floor, regardless of debate performances.
- Joe Biden and Pete Buttigieg could be viable alternatives, and Elizabeth Warren got her mojo back with her debate takedown of Bloomberg. But they’re all playing with pennies compared with the former New York mayor’s billions.
- Sanders, if anything, is rising. National and state polls show him getting stronger and performing similarly to — and sometimes better than — rivals in head-to-head match-ups with President Trump.
- Part of the Bloomberg theory of the case depends on a contested convention breaking his way. But David Plouffe, Barack Obama’s campaign manager in 2008, said on MSNBC’s post-debate show: “The notion that the Democratic Party is going to have party insiders overturn the will of the voters — I just don’t think it’s gonna happen. So the clock is ticking.”
Between the lines: For Bloomberg’s dream scenario to play out, other moderate candidates would need to drop out quickly. And that’s not happening, Axios’ Margaret Talev points out:
- The debate ramped up intrigue over this scenario: What if none of the remaining Democrats in the race drops out, no matter how poorly they perform through Super Tuesday, because they all want to hang on in case of a contested convention?
🥊 Quote of the day … Bloomberg to a crowd in Salt Lake City: “So, how was your night last night?”
Intelligence officials warned the House Intelligence Committee last week that Russia is interfering in the 2020 election to help President Trump get re-elected, AP reports.
- The briefing — by Shelby Pierson, the top election-security official in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence — focused on Russian efforts to influence the 2020 election and sow discord in the American electorate.
Why it matters: The warning raises questions about the integrity of the presidential campaign and whether Trump’s administration is taking the proper steps to combat the kind of interference that the U.S. saw in 2016.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Despite historically low interest rates, U.S. companies are being unusually frugal, holding back on issuing new debt and pumping up their balance sheets with cash.
Why it matters, via Axios Markets editor Dion Rabouin: Historically, in such a situation, companies have moved to increase capital expenditures and buy assets in order to expand — but the opposite is happening now.
- In the short term, that means the country is less at risk for economic collapse, but it also shows that American businesses are investing less in the future.
What’s happening: Despite increased profits from President Trump’s tax cuts, CEOs and company leaders have told Axios the uncertainty of the U.S.-China trade war and fears of an imminent recession discouraged big-ticket spending during 2019.
- 📈 Sign up for Dion’s daily Axios Markets newsletter.
By the end of January, Mike Bloomberg had spent more in three months than the other top four candidates (Sanders, Biden, Warren, Buttigieg) had spent combined since they started running, the N.Y. Times writes from FEC filings.
- Bloomberg: $409 million
- Steyer: $254 million
- Sanders: $117 million
- Warren: $91 million
- Buttigieg: $76 million
- Biden: $63 million
Go deeper (subscription): Cash on hand, burn rate.
Big Tech weathered the regulatory threats of 2018’s techlash, with the five biggest companies adding $2 trillion in value over the last year, but there’s reason to believe that stormy waters could still lie ahead, The Economist writes.
- “The trouble is that if you think that tech firms will get much bigger and diversify into more industries … it is logical to assume that the backlash against them will not fade away but, eventually, get bigger.”
- “As Big Tech’s scope expands, more non-tech firms will find their profits dented and more workers will see their livelihoods disrupted, creating angry constituencies.”
- “When recession strikes it will fuel new resentments. Big Tech could face a storm that few have yet paid much attention to.”
The bottom line: “All this means that, far from having peaked, anger may be in the foothills.”
MGM Resorts International said it was the victim of “unauthorized access to a cloud server” that exposed guest info last year, after a report claimed 10.6 million hotel guests had information compromised, per Reuters.
- The information included names of guests and phone numbers, a spokesman said, without confirming the number of guests affected.
- No credit card information or password data was involved, and the guests were notified, a statement said.
Technology website ZDNet reported earlier that the “personal details of more than 10.6 million users who stayed at MGM Resorts hotels” were published on a hacking forum this week.
- “[I]ncluded in the leaked files are … personal and contact details for celebrities, tech CEOs, reporters, government officials.”
… one of D.C.’s old-school expense-account destinations, about an hour after he’d been sentenced to 4o months in prison for crimes that include obstruction of justice, lying to Congress and witness tampering:
- Roger Stone, former adviser to Donald Trump’s presidential campaign.
Our tipster says Stone jovially greeted a surprised Terry McAuliffe, former Virginia governor and now CNN contributor.
Page A27 of today’s N.Y. Times carries the stunning op-ed headline: “What We, the Taliban, Want … I am convinced that the killing and the maiming must stop, the deputy leader of the Taliban writes.”
- The byline is Sirajuddin Haqqani, deputy leader of the Taliban.
The lead author of that story, Mujib Mashal, the paper’s senior correspondent in Afghanistan, criticized his own paper for publishing the Taliban’s piece:
Ad-libbing in Colorado Springs, President Trump attacked “Parasite,” which this month became the first non-English-language film to win the Best Picture Oscar.
- “What the hell was that all about?” Trump said. “We’ve got enough problems with South Korea with trade. On top of that, they give them best movie of the year. Was it good? I don’t know.”
- “Can we get like ‘Gone with the Wind’ back, please? ‘Sunset Boulevard’ — so many great movies.”
The context: “Parasite” tells the story of how a family of four poor, unemployed people living in a slum basement apartment comically infiltrates a wealthy family’s mansion before things unravel violently and tragically. (AP)
Team USA celebrates its victory over the Soviet Union. Photo: Steve Powell/Getty Images
Tomorrow is the 40th anniversary of the “Miracle on Ice” — the U.S. hockey team’s upset of the mighty Soviet Union at the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics:
- The celebration begins this evening with a torch run featuring nine runners who carried the flame in 1980, AP reports.
- Most members of the U.S. team will celebrate in Las Vegas tomorrow with the NHL’s Golden Knights, on the exact anniversary of the electrifying triumph over the Soviets.
CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
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DESERET NEWS
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AMERICAN THINKER
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THE FEDERALIST
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NOQ REPORT
NOQ Report Daily |
- Is Russia feeding false intelligence about election interference to polarize us further?
- Washington’s mandatory K-12 sex-ed bill is Cultural Marxism squared
- Why nominating Doug Collins for DNI would kill three birds with one stone
- Female prisoner says biological male who identifies as a woman raped her
- Glenn Beck: China proves big central government will always prioritize control over lives
- These be thy gods, O Democrats
- Elizabeth ‘No Super PACs’ Warren reverses course, betrays supporters
- President Trump signals he won’t pardon Roger Stone… YET
- U.S. flag removed from stage before Democratic debate
- Conservatives react as Roger Stone sentenced to 40 months
Is Russia feeding false intelligence about election interference to polarize us further?
Posted: 21 Feb 2020 05:19 AM PST When news broke yesterday that an intelligence community official, Shelby Pierson, briefed the House Intelligence Committee on Russia’s alleged attempt to influence the 2020 election in President Trump’s favor, the “Russia Hoax” was reborn. “This is it,” editors and producers in newsrooms across the nation thought. “This is how we get him.” After over two years of trying and failing to connect 2016 election interference between Russia and the Trump campaign, Democrats and mainstream media were shell-shocked by the Mueller Report and Robert Mueller’s subsequent testimony before Congress. They had trumpeted the same talking points and claimed the walls were closing in on the President. Some were bold enough to say President Trump would be gone before the midterm elections. Others expected the list of people going to jail to be in the dozens if not hundreds. With such failure, we almost can’t blame them for latching onto this new story so quickly. Almost. Mainstream media and, predictably, House Democrats are accepting this speculation as facts above reproach. They aren’t questioning any of it from the same intelligence community that told us they weren’t spying on Americans until Edward Snowden showed they were. It’s the same people who hacked into the Senate Select Intelligence Committee’s computers and Senators’ emails during the last administration. It’s the same intelligence community that swore there were WMDs in Iraq. Surely they’re right this time! After all, we have the most sophisticated intelligence apparatus in the world. What are the chances that they’ve been duped once again? Unfortunately, the odds are high for one reason and one reason only: They WANT to believe whatever the Russians are feeding them. Let’s take a closer look at what’s being claimed. When trying to determine the validity of intelligence, experts will ask two basic questions about a data set. First, they’ll ask what’s possible. Then, they’ll assess what’s possible and determine the probability of the various hypotheses on the table. The intelligence community has compiled evidence they believe points to Russia’s intention to influence the 2020 presidential election in favor of President Trump. Based on what we know, there are three possibilities. The first is that it must be taken at face value and seen as accurate. The second is that the data itself is inaccurate. The third is that the data is accurate, but it’s being misinterpreted. Given the intelligence community’s recent track record, I’d put options one and two at 15% each and option three at 70%. Why? Because the first two options don’t make much sense and the third option, misinterpreted data, is the one that jibes best with the information we have available. Let’s start with why option two, inaccurate data, is unlikely. The intelligence community knows much more than they’ve told us about 2016 election interference. They can’t tell us everything because they need to be able to use what they know to identify and stop future election interference. Based on the patterns they’ve uncovered, they were confident enough in the data to present it to Congress. Therefore, the data itself is likely accurate, though not necessarily sincere. Option one, helping President Trump, makes very little sense prima facie. President Trump has been much harder on Russia than his predecessor. Moreover, the frontrunners among Democrats are all more favorable to Russia’s short- and long-term agendas than President Trump. Bernie Sanders has always been sympathetic to Russia—he took his honeymoon in Moscow—and his leanings towards socialism would greatly empower Russia on the world stage. Mike Bloomberg is friend of both Russia and China. He represents the capitalist partner the two nations would want because they’ve dealt with him in the past. Moreover, he’s against sanctions and tariffs. Then there’s Joe Biden; he’s practically family to the oligarchs. As for President Trump, Russia has watched policies and foreign affairs victories they definitely do not like.
The left conflates the President’s respect for a strong Russian leader, Vladimir Putin, as some form of puppet-to-puppetmaster relationship. They refuse to look at clear evidence that the President’s politeness towards Russia’s leader does not and has never translated into actual benefits for Russia. Unlike the Democrats who made a sweetheart deal for Russia’s Middle East ally, Iran, President Trump has crippled them to the point they’re no longer an actual asset to Russia. Based on the options available to Russia, President Trump is far less conducive to their agenda than any of his Democratic opponents. This is why the claims by the intelligence community have a high probability of being based on disinformation intentionally fed to them so they would come to the conclusion they desire. The fact that it’s likely the wrong conclusion is secondary because the Deep State has an agenda of its own, and it doesn’t include President Trump winning a second term. Russia is very clever. Unlike the Chinese, North Koreans, and Iranians, Russia has decades of high-level experience that allows them to manipulate any intelligence community, including our own, that refuses to see what they’re doing based on bias. Considering the data was enough for the intelligence community to brief Congress about it, we must assume a high probability that it was intended to mislead. Unlike most American endeavors that are quick and intended to deliver short-term results, Russia is willing to take its time. They’ve been seeding discontent and division in America for decades. By merely giving off the impression through leaked intelligence that they’re going to try to help President Trump win in November, they are splitting us apart even further. They really don’t have to do much other than let Democrats and mainstream media deliver false interpretations of the data. If their goal is to polarize the nation, this is exactly how they’d do it. If Democrats, mainstream media, and the intelligence community would take off their Trump Derangement Syndrome blinders for a while, they’d see they’re getting played like fiddles by Russia. But they won’t. They like the false intelligence they’re being fed. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The post Is Russia feeding false intelligence about election interference to polarize us further? appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes. |
Washington’s mandatory K-12 sex-ed bill is Cultural Marxism squared
Posted: 21 Feb 2020 01:56 AM PST School at the K-12 level is intended to prepare kids for life from a knowledge perspective. That means teaching them reading, writing, math, science, history, and other information we should have as adults. To a very limited extent, it’s also a proper venue to learn social skills. While this falls more on the parents’ lap than schools, the fact that interaction between peers happens the most at school makes it a proper venue for social practice and interaction. Over the last several decades, public schools in the United States have taken on increasingly intrusive roles in the lives of children. This isn’t a random opinion. Any honest teacher or school administrator who has been an educator for a while will acknowledge that public schools have increased their perceived scope and scale with the help of (mostly leftist) politicians. This is why in 2020, many schools are less about education and more about indoctrination. Washington is one of the most “cutting edge” states when it comes to scholastic incursions into the lives of children. They have advanced their roles far beyond the status of educators, or to be more accurate, they’ve determined that what they “educate” our kids about falls into a much broader spectrum than most states. And they’re not done. A recent push to mandate K-12 sex education is picking up steam in the far-left state, and it includes legitimate perversion being added to the curriculum. Radio host Todd Herman will be interviewing Washington School Superintendent Chris Reykdal today to discuss the legislation that would have grade-school-aged students learning about oral sex, masturbation, and gay sex.
Keep in mind, I’m not suggesting that kids today should not learn about these things. Some of them should. Some shouldn’t. Everyone’s situation is different, but one thing is nearly universal: It should be parents or guardians, not public schools, who are teaching their kids about these things. With so much access through the internet, kids are learning about such things already. Even kids who have limited or no internet at home are learning about it from their peers. This is why it’s imperative that parents are choosing what, when, and how to teach their kids about sex. It always has been the parents’ responsibility and it always should be. The problem in Washington state is a microcosm of the greater issue of Cultural Marxism. Sadly, the term has been subverted through a concerted effort by progressives to delegitimize it, associating it with anti-Semitism and the alt-right. It’s easier to stigmatize the term than to address the heinous challenges it imposes on modern American society. They would rather pretend like it’s a conspiracy theory like Pizzagate and flat-earth theory than acknowledge that what they’re doing falls squarely in line with old, sustained efforts to cripple conservative and/or Christian ideologies. Despite their attempts to make evil appear to be good and good appear to be evil, conservatives are seeing through the efforts of Governor Jay Inslee and his army of social justice warriors. Unfortunately for conservatives in the state, there just aren’t very many of them. Yet. Hopefully, citizens won’t wait until every city looks like Seattle before they realize the error of the Cultural Marxism that is working to make the state a broke but woke example of destitution. The radical progressives of Washington State aren’t satisfied with brainwashing children. They want to tear apart their moral fabric as they prepare them to be the next batch of victims, ill-prepared for the challenges of this world. Creative Commons image via Flickr. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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Why nominating Doug Collins for DNI would kill three birds with one stone
Posted: 21 Feb 2020 12:45 AM PST Many Republicans are crossing their fingers. After President Trump told reporters on Air Force One that he’s considering nominating Representative Doug Collins to be the next Director of National Intelligence, the benefits of such a move were not hard to calculate. It would be a huge win for the GOP on multiple fronts, not the least of which would be to put someone in the critical position the President could actually trust. The President has already assigned Richard Grenell to be acting DNI, replacing Joseph Maguire who, as an acting DNI as well, was required to step down soon. There hasn’t been a permanent, Senate-confirmed Director since Dan Coats resigned last July. Grenell, who is also the Ambassador to Germany, is the first openly gay cabinet member in U.S. history, even if only in an acting role. Collins represents three big wins for the President, the Republican Party, and the country if he were to accept the nomination and be confirmed. A trusted ally in an important roleNews that Grenell would be acting DNI stirred sighs of relief among Trump supporters. He is an outspoken proponent of the President who will make it more challenging for the “Deep State” to operate against the White House. Collins falls into the same category, having gone to political war on the President’s behalf on multiple occasions in his role as ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee. The military chaplain and lawyer has the knowledge necessary to meet the needs of the position and, while not an intelligence community insider, has demonstrated an understand of what needs to be done. Considering how intensely anti-Trump many in the intelligence community appear to be, it will be good to have Grenell tighten up the ship in preparation for a Collins entry into the position. Ending friction over a Georgia Senate seatCollins wanted to be named Senator by Georgia Governor Brian Kemp following the retirement of Johnny Isakson. President Trump publicly supported Collins to take the seat. But Kemp chose Kelly Loeffler for the role. Disgruntled conservatives were concerned Loeffler would be a RINO (Republican In Name Only) following revelations she had supported Mitt Romney’s campaign in 2012 heavily and had not contributed to the Trump campaign until recently. But so far, she has been acceptable in the short time she’s been in office, even chastising Romney for supporting the Democrats’ case in the Senate impeachment trial. Nevertheless, Collins announced his candidacy to challenge Loeffler for the seat late last month. The announcement was met with cheers from many Trump supporters and groans from Establishment Republicans who thought his candidacy was drama that could cost the party the seat altogether. If he’s tapped to be the DNI, he would almost certainly end his Senate bid, putting the Georgia GOP at ease so they could focus on making sure both Senate seats stay red. Personally, I would be rooting for Collins to defeat Loeffler, but DNI is a much more important role right now than Senator. A skeptic at heartOne of the biggest complaints the President and other Republicans have had about both Coats’ and Maguire’s tenure in the role is that there was too much opposition to President Trump’s policies coming from the intelligence community. Outright objections to some of his moves echoed throughout the community and often found their way to the pages of progressive mainstream media sites. Leaks continue to be rampant, and following a briefing last week by so-called “Election Czar” Shelby Pierson before the House Intelligence Committee, it is clear there are still plenty of anti-Trump activities happening in places ranging from the CIA and NSA to the Intelligence Branch of the FBI. Maguire could have prevented the briefing that will certainly be used as political fodder for Democrats, but chose not to. Collins would not be as apathetic towards something so clearly politically charged. He would know that such a briefing, which claims members of the intelligence community believe Russia is trying to help President Trump win the 2020 election, would not be used by House Intelligence Committee Chair Adam Schiff in any way other than for political gain. Neither the committee nor the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives will do anything to prevent Russian interference because they can use its specter as a way to scare voters away from the President. We need a skeptic as DNI. We need someone who wouldn’t listen to people like John Bolton swearing there are WMDs in Iraq. We need someone who will actually go after foreign election interference, unlike James Clapper who let it fly unabated. We need someone who will recognize when there are real threats and not fabricated political hit jobs like Spygate. The next Director of National Intelligence must be someone who addresses the current needs of the country while securing our future as well. If President Trump nominates Doug Collins for the role, it would be a huge win for the United States. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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Female prisoner says biological male who identifies as a woman raped her
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 09:28 PM PST A woman in jail in Illinois claims she was raped by a biological man who identifies as a woman. The jail and attorneys for the accused claim it was consensual. Even if she’s lying, it’s still a clear cut case against mixing jails. Otherwise, the majority of inmates in men’s prisons will be jumping at the opportunity to be transferred to an all-women jail. That’s assuming she’s lying. But based on the details in this story, it seems extremely likely that she’s telling the truth and was actually raped.
Whether she was raped or not, this should be an unambiguous warning that mixing jails based on gender identity is a very bad idea. If it was consensual, then the fact that this biological male identifies as a woman doesn’t jibe with inmates having sex in an all-female prison. If it was rape, then those responsible for putting a male sexual predator in a jail full of women should be reprimanded for endangering them. Meanwhile, expanding gender “equality” is one of the top priorities of every Democratic candidate for president. The left will come up with some feeble defense of this because they value gender identity above every other consideration in the world. From many radical progressives’ perspective, if women have to be raped to keep biological men from having their gender feelings hurt, so be it. Conservatives have been universally against this type of anti-science, anti-biology sentiment since it sprung up in recent years. Unfortunately, mainstream media is now “woke,” which is why we are constantly asking our readers to help us spread the word by donating today. How many women have to be hurt by other “women” before leftists start realizing gender identity is not the lens through which all decisions must be made? Whether it’s sports, bathrooms, or jails, the gender scam is hurting people every day. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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Glenn Beck: China proves big central government will always prioritize control over lives
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 08:56 PM PST Could the coronavirus lead Americans to embrace an authoritarian state in order to “protect” ourselves from its dangers? Would we willingly subvert our own liberties in exchange for safety? Is there a scenario brewing right now that could turn millions of Americans towards the evils of socialism or even communism? These are questions that would have only been asked by unhinged conspiracy theorists just a few years ago, but today it’s not nearly as far-fetched as it should be. The perfect storm is brewing as the Democratic Party pushes to the authoritarian left while the coronavirus is coming at us with very little trustworthy information released by China about it. There is so much misinformation out there right now that people are being told incessantly not to worry. There is good reason to not panic just yet, but not worrying at all is one ingredient in the recipe for disaster. Glenn Beck took on the issue and gave us a warning of what may be coming to America sooner than we think. The timing of the coronavirus couldn’t be worse from a political perspective because Democrats have, for some strange reason, been able to position themselves in the minds of many voters as the party of science and proper healthcare. This is a ludicrous label to assign, but thanks to mainstream media and the GOP’s failure to put forth their own plan to fix the healthcare system, the coronavirus could play a major role in our elections if we start getting anywhere close to the numbers coming out of China today. What are they doing in China? It’s likely that anyone reading this is well aware that the CCP is an authoritarian regime that values its own geopolitical self-protection over protecting its people. But things seem to be much worse for the people of China than most Americans know. Part of the challenge with a nation that stifles its own people manifests in low levels of information given to the rest of the world. Anything negative videos or reports we see coming from China are invariably leaked out despite the many safeguards the nation puts on its internet. Their Draconian grasp over of the people means for every telling video showing death and turmoil, there are likely hundreds of thousands of similar videos that couldn’t breach their firewall. The limited information we are seeing from the Chinese people combined with the growing positive sentiment in America towards Marxism should worry us greatly. “I believe this is a warning for what’s to come,” Beck said. “And all it takes is one emergency situation, one crisis to be taken advantage of. Freedom is hard to obtain but it is harder to keep. And we are not prepared to keep it.” This isn’t really about China. They will do what they do and even after the dust settles and the virus is contained, we’ll likely never know how many people were infected nor how many were lost. While some are terrified by the risk the deadly disease poses to our health and others concern themselves over the impact this will have over the world economy, a handful are concerned about the long-term effects this could have on freedom. Just as 9/11 sparked laws that we’re still stuck with today and China’s emergency coronavirus laws will likely never be removed, so too could we face an existential threat to our liberty if the wrong circumstances come together at once. We’re already seeing those circumstances starting to present themselves today. Beck ended this segment by making listeners contemplate something. “I think it’s really wise to ask yourself right now: ‘How big of a government am I willing to vote for in a time of crisis?’” American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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These be thy gods, O Democrats
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 06:36 PM PST Watching the Democratic debate last night and reading the reactions from today have actually been entertaining endeavors, more so than previous debates. Perhaps my distaste for Mike Bloomberg fueled the enjoyment. I don’t like any of the remaining Democratic candidates (I liked Andrew Yang at least a little), but Bloomberg strikes an exceptionally foul chord, and not just because his words are like lyrics to a bad rap song. “If women wanted to be appreciated for their brains, they’d go to the library instead of to Bloomingdale’s,” he sings. But this is what the Democratic Party has. This is their moment of desperation. It’s their Trump-Derangement-Syndrome-
The story didn’t end well for many of the Israelites. When Moses came back down after being told by God that his people were going crazy, he took their idols, ground them up, and forced many to eat the golden dust. It killed them, a sacrifice that prevented the full wrath of God from descending upon all of the people save Moses. The same thing, though not quite as dramatic, is happening to the Democratic Party. They have fashioned themselves new gods to worship, gods who mostly do not adhere to the orthodoxy of the party as it has been known for decades. These aren’t acolytes of Barack Obama, though Joe Biden pretends to be. They’re not following in the footsteps of John F. Kennedy or even Bill Clinton. The base of the New Democratic Party now adheres to new gods who have established a new ideology that barely resembles where they were just five or six years ago. Before, social justice was a tool to promote semi-rational ideas like gay marriage and criminal justice reform. Today, social justice is no longer a tool but a goal. They don’t look at it as a way of achieving something new, but as an end unto itself. This is why support for better treatment of illegal aliens has morphed into calls for open borders and abolishing ICE. It’s why they aren’t pushing for LGBTQ rights but LGBTQ superiority. It’s why climate change hysteria has taken hold of millions based on a manufactured sense of urgency. It’s not about “saving the planet” any longer. It’s about delivering “environmental justice,” whatever that means. To this day I still get asked why I so fervently support the GOP after leaving the party in 2016. Even if we set aside the fact that President Trump has delivered better results than many of us expected, we need only look across the aisle to see the abomination the opposition party has produced in an effort to counter him. There are no common sense candidates. Other than Bloomberg, they’re all woke. Meanwhile, Bloomberg is a mess, a capitalist who’s trying to be a pragmatic vision of what the party thinks it no longer wants to be. If that sentence didn’t make much sense, then you’re getting the picture perfectly. If I didn’t appreciate President Trump (I do) and if I didn’t despise what the Democrats are becoming (I do), I’d still have a difficult time finding a valid reason to vote for any of them. They are about as inspiring as tooth decay and infinitely less interesting. They have no message of hope, which is an absolute necessity for a winning presidential candidate. “Make America great again.” “Change we can believe in.” “Compassionate conservatism.” “It’s the economy, stupid.” What are Democrats offering as their inspiring message? “Beat Trump no matter how many pigeons we have to kill in the process.” It would be foolish to say the Democrats have no chance of winning regardless of who emerges as their candidate. Some smart people (though mostly dumb ones) said that about candidate Trump four years ago. But when the best thing going for a party is news that distracts the people from looking at their candidates, it’s okay to say their chances are minimal. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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Elizabeth ‘No Super PACs’ Warren reverses course, betrays supporters
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 03:04 PM PST Senator Elizabeth Warren clawed her way back into the Democratic nomination race last night with her best debate performance, hammering billionaire Mike Bloomberg and cementing her position as the only other far-left candidate not named Bernie. Today, she reversed course on Super PACs and ended any hope that debate momentum could push her towards the nomination. After at least eight years of claiming Super PACs were the worst thing since unsliced bread, she embraced a new Super PAC that came to life on Tuesday to support her in Nevada and beyond. Her excuse was that if everyone else is going to use them, she should as well. Many of her supporters were left bewildered after embracing her “Say No To Dark Money” mantra since she announced he candidacy. What makes it even worse is that she turned it into a gender issue. Seriously.
“Yeah, except everyone on this stage except Amy and me is either a billionaire or is receiving help from PACs that can do unlimited spending,” she said during the New Hampshire debate last month. “So if you really want to live where you say, then put your money where your mouth is, and say no to the PACs.” Both Warren and fellow Senator Amy Klobuchar were against Super PACs before they were for them. Now, both have them buying ads on their behalf in upcoming primary and caucus states. Persist PAC formed for Warren and purchased $800,000 in ads before Saturday’s Nevada caucus. Kitchen Table Conversations formed for Klobuchar and bought $1,100,000 in ads for Nevada and the following week’s primary in South Carolina. Super PACs have been the bane of some Democrats for a while, though nearly all of them shooting for prominent office have at least one supporting them. The notion is this: an organization should have the right to support candidates just like individuals. Citizens United v. FEC a decade ago established this and launched the rules governing them. While most Americans do not like the idea of “dark money” influencing elections, it’s noteworthy that it is very difficult for those involved in Super PACs to parlay their contributions for influence of politicians. It’s not impossible, but the rules make it challenging for Super PACs to even contact campaigns, let alone collude with them for the sake of gaining political considerations in the future. It has been demonstrated time and again that Elizabeth Warren is a liar with horrible, fluctuating policy ideas. Now we can add hypocrite to her list of foul qualities. It’s hard for her to make the case that she supports the poor under these circumstances. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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President Trump signals he won’t pardon Roger Stone… YET
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 12:43 PM PST President Trump delivered remarks at the Hope for Prisoners Graduation Ceremony at the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Headquarters today. He brought up the topic of Roger Stone’s sentencing. The long-time friend of the President was sentenced to 40 months in prison today. As the President noted, the charges against Stone, including lying to Congress, were unfairly delivered to him even though no charges have been filed against others who committed similar offences. “They say he lied. But other people lied, too,” the President said. “Just to mention Comey lied. McCabe lied. Lisa Page lied. Her lover, Strzok, Peter Strzok, lied.” The President talked about the forewoman of the jury, Tomeka Hart, who made inflammatory anti-Trump remarks on social media that were not disclosed until after Stone was found guilty. Though not mentioning her by name, he alluded to her before noting that we would not intervene… yet.
“So if this woman was tainted,” he said. “I hope the judge will find that she was tainted, and if she isn’t tainted that will be fine, too.” Then, the President gave his first indication that he will not be using his pardoning powers immediately. “But I’m not going to do anything in terms of the great powers bestowed upon a President of the United States,” he said. “I want the process to play out. I think that’s the best thing to do because I’d love to see Roger exonerated. And I’d love to see it happen because I personally think he was treated very unfairly.” He concluded that segment of his speech, which was clearly off-the-cuff, by telling the “fake news” media that he will not intervene at this time but will watch the situation closely and let it play out. Then, he continued with his speech about those graduating from the penal system. A pardon of Stone would be used as political fodder by Democrats to try to paint the President as abusing his power on behalf of an ally. They’ve already been doing that based on his Tweets, so a pardon would send them over the edge. But considering all that has happened (and not happened) with the swamp and the lack of charges filed against its members, it seems likely the President will not let his friend spend a day in jail. The President left the door wide open for a future pardon, but he’s not going to act on it until all other options are exhausted. Those options seem to be limited, which means he’s likely going to have to act or let Roger Stone go to prison. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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U.S. flag removed from stage before Democratic debate
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 11:57 AM PST The American Flag is the most meaningful and recognizable flag in the world. Yet leftists have always viewed it as a symbol of whatever the woke outrage of the day happens to be. This is why it’s not surprising that before last night’s Democratic debate, the flag was removed from the stage before the candidates went on. Eagle-eyed patriot Steve Williams noticed it and posted it to Twitter.
Few things are more disgraceful than a political party that views patriotism as negative traits. The flag is a symbol of freedom that is proudly waved in Hong Kong, Iran, and other places where liberty is precious. But to the DNC, it’s an annoyance. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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Conservatives react as Roger Stone sentenced to 40 months
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 10:04 AM PST President Trump’s long-time ally, Roger Stone, has been sentenced to nearly three-and-a-half years behind bars for lying to Congress and threatening a witness. Judge Amy Berman Jackson invoked the President in handing down the sentence. “He was not prosecuted, as some have complained, for standing up for the president, he was prosecuted for covering up for the president,” said Jackson.
The judge still has to rule on a motion for a retrial after revelations emerged that the jury foreperson Tomeka Hart had many anti-Trump social media posts. But previous similar motions have been denied, leaving the most viable option for Stone’s freedom being a presidential pardon. The President retweeted a clip of Fox News host Tucker Carlson calling for a pardon.
Reactions on social media surrounding the news have ranged from furious to lucid calls for the President to deliver justice. Of particular note is how former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe and his former boss, James Comey, are also known to have lied to Congress.
Stone received an initial recommendation of 7-9 years from the Department of Justice legal team who handled the case. But their recommendation was reversed when it was revealed the DoJ had disagreed with the recommendation. All four attorneys resigned. The case for pardoning Stone puts the President in a pickle politically. If he allows the sentence to stand and for his friend to go to prison, it will not sit well with his supporters. But if he pardons him, it will be used by his opponents in the upcoming election as an example of corruption as their “above the law” narrative kicks into full swing. After the judge rules against a retrial, the ball will be in President Trump’s court to decide whether to pardon Roger Stone or not. In truth, both sides want him to for different reasons. The President should do it and face the left’s cries head on. American Conservative MovementJoin fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
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ARRA NEWS SERVICE
ARRA News Service (in this message: 16 new items) |
- The Secret Life of Wisconsin Kids
- Tim Tebow: I’d Rather be Known for Saving Babies From Abortion Than Winning the Super Bowl
- How Dare He? U.S. Sets Record In Reducing Carbon Emissions
- Las Vegas Brawl, Trump Honors Our Heroes, 1776 Unites
- Does Capitalism Destroy Culture?
- San Francisco Sheriff Says His Department Won’t Cooperate With ICE
- Dems’ Showdown in Vegas
- 32 Bloomberg Bans as Mayor of NYC
- China’s Government Is Like Something Out of ‘1984’
- Democrats Revive FDR’s Court-Packing Agenda . . .
- Retiring GOP Representative Mac Thornberry Goes Full Pelosi On Wall Funding
- Banks and Cancel Culture
- Presidents Trump and Guaidó Versus the Anti-American Coalition
- Save Me, Good and Hard
- These Black Scholars and Leaders Rebuke 1619 Project’s Narrative of Victimhood
- How To Boil A Frog (or a Taxpayer)
The Secret Life of Wisconsin Kids
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 07:01 PM PST by Tony Perkins: Imagine dropping your son off at school, never knowing that he lives a completely different existence as a girl for eight hours a day — and everyone knows it but you. And not only do teachers know it, but they go to great lengths to hide it. That’s the reality in Madison, Wisconsin, where moms and dads have been furious to find out that not only is the district keeping their children’s gender expression a secret, but there’s an elaborate scheme in place to keep parents from ever finding out! Most kids can’t take an Advil at school without getting their parents’ permission — but they can create a whole new identity without anyone calling home? Thanks to a policy passed in April 2018, this is the new normal for anyone in Madison public schools. And unlike other areas of the country, who’ve had to deal with the rogue principal here or there, this is a systemic, district-wide campaign to lie to parents and exploit their children. Under the district’s official policy, a girl or boy — of any age — can “transition to a different gender identity at school” completely confidentially. They can go to their teacher and demand to be called a new name or pronoun, even use a different bathroom, without their parents’ okay. Even more amazingly, the district is forcing teachers and staff to take the lead in deceiving these families. Madison’s policy orders them keep up appearances by using the kids’ given names and pronouns whenever their parents are around. If a school employee is concerned that this new identity is creating problems or hurting the child, too bad. They’re forbidden from bringing it up with parents. In fact, the only time a mom or dad would be brought into the loop is if their son or daughter wanted to change their official records. Otherwise, they’re completely in the dark — something 14 parents in the district are hoping to change. Eight families are so outraged by Madison’s policy that they’ve turned to the Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty (WILL) and Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) to take the district to court. Luke Berg, deputy counsel for WILL, dropped by “Washington Watch” Wednesday to warn other parents and give his take on one of the worst attacks on parental rights any of us have ever seen “We sent a letter in the hopes that the district would just change the policy,” he explained. When that didn’t work, they filed a lawsuit. “They can either change the rules voluntarily,” Luke warned, “or they can wait for a court order.” Either way, he argues, “There’s a long line of cases that have said that parents have a right to direct the upbringing of their children.” In this case, Luke points out, what’s so egregious is that “the policies actually prohibit staff from notifying parents about this unless the child consents — and in some cases, even require staff to actively deceive parents by using one name at school and then another when the parents show up… [W]e think this violates that constitutional right, but it also comes close to violating a whole lot of state and federal laws…” After all, he argues, “schools require parental permission for almost everything — athletics, taking medication at school, field trips, and the like. So this is completely anomalous that a school district would take [something as] significant and controversial of an issue as [gender] and say this is one issue that we’re going to allow students to [decide] totally on their own. And we’re actually going to help them hide this from their parents, if they want.” This just goes to show how politicized the issue of gender identity is. A small fringe of LGBT activists are pushing this agenda on the local level, and it’s putting entire cities of children at risk. Just look at what’s happening in Madison’s elementary schools, where a male teacher is demanding access — not to the bathrooms of female staff, but to the bathrooms for girls‘. “I am an open and out transgender woman,” says the K-5 science teacher. Allis Elementary School parents were horrified enough that “Mx.” Vica Steele was showing five- and six-year-olds a video of him dressed as a woman — but fighting to use little girls’ restrooms is a bridge too far. “As a best practice,” a spokesperson has said, “the district does encourage adult staff to not use a children’s bathroom.” But Steele vows to keep fighting — and given Madison’s track record, he’ll probably win. “I have been warning for years that one of the central efforts of the moral revolutionaries is to use the power and the structure of the public schools to separate children from their parents. In particular, to separate children from the moral authority and influence of their parents,” Albert Mohler said. “That is also exactly what was undertaken in the former Soviet Union and throughout the communist bond. That is exactly what is championed in China and North Korea.” And now? It’s happening in Madison, Wisconsin. The liberals who’ve infiltrated this district know that the only way to open up this pipeline of transition and acceptance is to keep parents on the sidelines. It’s time for moms and dads to remind them that God, as well as the Constitution makes parents the authority — not the schools — in their children’s decisions. Thanks to this lawsuit, Madison may finally get the message. Do you know what’s happening at your son or daughter’s school? Learn what to look for in FRC’s “A Parent’s Guide to the Transgender Movement in Education.” |
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Tim Tebow: I’d Rather be Known for Saving Babies From Abortion Than Winning the Super Bowl
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 06:43 PM PST
by Marc And Julie Anderson: LIV-ing in victory, a reference to Super Bowl LIV, was the theme of Kansans for Life annual Valentine’s Day banquet held at the Overland Park Convention Center on Feb. 11. Nearly 1,200 people attended the event. Serving as master of ceremonies, Lamar Hunt, Jr., one of the owners of the Super Bowl Champions, the Kansas City Chiefs, offered opening remarks, during which he said, “I do not think it is a cliché to say we are in a life and death battle for the truth and authentic dignity of the human person. We need your full attention. You need to drop what you’re doing and join us, and this can be in so many ways: prayer, assistance to those in need, emails, phone calls, in-person meetings. Get educated about what we’re fighting about here. Really listen in and tune in.”Later, Hunt said, “Please do something about it. Pray. Take action. If you don’t know what to do, ask somebody. Place this as a major priority in your life.” Finally, Hunt said, he often heard the phrase “Live in victory” from another resident at the assisted living facility where he visits his mother. One day, the woman came up to him and said, “Super Bowl LIV. Live In Victory.” “Think about that tonight. Living in victory. That’s what we’re here for tonight.” During his remarks, Archbishop Joseph Naumann of the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas and the chairman of the United States Catholic Conference of Bishops Committee on Prolife Activities said, “I think the Chiefs are an inspiration for us. They came from behind several times. The game is not over in terms of the legislature this year. It’s not over until the fourth quarter, and I think we’re here tonight to kind of encourage each other, to support each other, to win this victory for the unborn, and it’s this victory for really the soul of our state and nation. Naumann was referring to the current fight to pass the “Value Them Both” state constitutional amendment. The amendment is needed to correct the April 2019 decision of the Kansas Supreme Court, a ruling that could be used to try to overturn decades of pro-life laws, including those that have reduced abortions by half in Kansas. Former Kansas governor, Dr. Jeff Colyer, spoke on the constitutional amendment fight, and former U.S. Senator Rick Santorum came to underline the need for funds to win that fight! As part of the evening’s festivities, Kansans for Life leader, Mary Kay Culp, was honored at the banquet by a brief video highlighting her pro-life work of more than 40 years for two National Right to Life state affiliates, Missouri Right to Life and Kansans for Life, all without leaving the KC metro area! Such was one reason that on the 150th anniversary of the Kansas City Star, she was honored as one of the top 150 most influential people in Kansas City. The highlight of the evening for many was the keynote address by Tim Tebow, former quarterback for the Denver Broncos. “It is such an honor to be here,” Tebow said as he thanked the archbishop, politicians, and Culp for work on behalf of the unborn. Tebow also thanked Hunt for “having courage in the face of a lot of other people who don’t have it and for your willingness to be up here and support this organization.” “It really does mean a lot more than winning the Super Bowl,” Tebow said. He added, “One day, when you look back and people are talking about you and they say Oh my gosh what are you going to be known for? Are you going to say Super Bowl, or we saved a lot of babies?” Speaking about Kansans for Life, Tebow said it’s not a philanthropy. “It’s a rescue mission. You know why we call it a rescue mission? Because when we say that, it puts a timeline on it.” “When’s the last time you heard a rescue mission taking place in a month or a few years. No, a rescue mission means now. It gives you a sense of urgency. It says we have to go not because it’s our time, but because it’s their time. … I have to live a sense of urgency because while I might have time, they don’t.” Later, turning toward Hunt and Chiefs punter, Dustin Colquitt, who was also in attendance, he told them it was “awesome they won the Super Bowl.” “It’s amazing. What an accomplishment! But you know the best part of that accomplishment is that it gets you an even bigger platform.” That platform, Tebow said, can be used to support causes such as the prolife movement. And it was obvious the pro-life mission is one he is personally invested in and has been all his life. “You see, my mom 32 years ago had doctors tell her she needed to abort me because if she didn’t, it was going to cost her life. And they didn’t even believe that I was a baby. They thought I was a tumor.” Tebow now laughingly reports that as the baby of a family of 5 siblings, that some occasionally enjoyed, as only siblings can, referring to him as “Timmy the tumor.” Getting serious though, Tebow said, “to make a long story short, when I was born, they found out the placenta wasn’t actually attached. So, the doctor looked at my mom after 37 years of being a doctor and said, ‘This is the biggest miracle I’ve ever seen because I’m not sure how he’s alive.’ … I’m so grateful that my mom trusted God with my life and her life.” In 1986, Tebow’s father, Robert, prayed for God to give him one more child. Showing more of the family’s easy humor he later said, “I prayed for a preacher and got a quarterback.” Culp, whose idea it was to feature Tebow at the event, said that both parents trusted God implicitly. They named him Timothy and prayed for him by that name prior to birth because Timothy means “to honor God,” Culp said, “of course, neither parent had any idea about just how powerfully their prayers would be answered: that the issues surrounding Tim’s birth, coupled with his athletic abilities and deep faith would offer their “preacher” progeny access to a worldwide audience most preachers can only dream of! Concluding his remarks at the banquet, Tebow said, “What you’re doing here matters. You’re fighting for life. You’re fighting for people that can’t fight for themselves. And my question to you is: Are you willing to stand up in the face of persecution, in the face of adversity, in the face of criticism, when other people are going to say it’s not worth it, when other people won’t stand beside you? Maybe not everybody is going to be with you. Will you stand up for what’s right?” |
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How Dare He? U.S. Sets Record In Reducing Carbon Emissions
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 06:27 PM PST
by Free Press International News Service: How dare he! (Insert finger wag). A report last week noted that the United States on President Donald Trump’s watch leads the world in reducing carbon emissions. In news that no doubt triggered climate change alarmists who so thoroughly revile the U.S. president, the International Energy Agency (IEA) announced: “The United States saw the largest decline in energy-related CO2 emissions in 2019 on a country basis – a fall of 140 Mt, or 2.9 percent, to 4.8 Gt. U.S. emissions are now down almost 1 Gt from their peak in the year 2000, the largest absolute decline by any country over that period.” Trump is “doing exactly what the climate scolds all claim they want, which is leading the world in energy saving,” Megan Fox wrote in a Feb. 16 analysis for PJ Media. But, Fox added, “Do not look to the Democrats to give Trump any credit for the energy reductions and number one status in the whole darn world for ‘green’ policies. They will continue to claim he wants to kill the planet and rape the earth of its bounties.” Carbon emission reduction isn’t the only win for Trump’s environmental policies. The IEA also reported that natural gas use is on the rise and coal-powered energy declined by 15 percent in the U.S. “A 15 percent reduction in the use of coal for power generation underpinned the decline in overall U.S. emissions in 2019,” the IEA’s report said. “Coal-fired power plants faced even stronger competition from natural gas-fired generation, with benchmark gas prices an average of 45 percent lower than 2018 levels. As a result, gas increased its share in electricity generation to a record high of 37 percent.” “Is there anything this president can’t do?” Fox wrote. “The air is cleaner, the stock market is booming, now, if we could only get him to tear down all the unsightly and ineffective wind farms that do next to nothing he’d be elected president forever.” Just last December The New York Times reported that several of Trump’s climate policy “rollbacks” would result in dirtier air and more emissions. The Times wrote: “All told, the Trump administration’s environmental rollbacks could significantly increase greenhouse gas emissions and lead to thousands of extra deaths from poor air quality every year, according to a report prepared by New York University Law School’s State Energy and Environmental Impact Center.” Fox concluded: “Well, suck it, NYU Law School’s State Energy and Environmental Impact Center! The results are in and Trump is winning again. None of the dire predictions came true and Trump has shown that federal regulations don’t equal good environmental outcomes.” |
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Las Vegas Brawl, Trump Honors Our Heroes, 1776 Unites
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 06:08 PM PST
by Gary Bauer, Contributing Author: The Las Vegas Brawl
Speaking of Sanders, he was endorsed today by Emgage PAC, the nation’s largest Muslim political action committee. You don’t get the endorsement of a group like that unless they are certain you are anti-Israel, and will, as Barack Obama did, reorient America’s foreign policy away from Israel and toward countries like Iran. Not surprisingly, Sanders has also been endorsed by anti-Semites Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib and Linda Sarsour. Down But Not Out But while Bloomberg is winning some praise for his defense of capitalism, don’t confuse him for a moderate. He wants to rejoin Obama’s absurd Paris Climate Accord and the Iran nuclear deal. He wants to take away your Second Amendment rights. He’s all in on abortion on demand. He’s an apologist for communist China. And he’s got lots of other crazy ideas like taxing the poor. Trump Honors Our Heroes There was an incredibly moving moment during the rally when two men carried, Ervin Julian, a 100 year-old World War II veteran, to a seat near the stage. This man fought real fascists, not imaginary fascists the Antifa mob beats up. I’m sure many Americans were very emotional watching that scene. They probably remembered a father or grandfather who served in World War II. I know it reminded me of my deceased father, Spike Bauer, who fought in the South Pacific, and my uncle, Ed Webber, who fought in Europe. Sadly, there are many Americans who have no clue about that history. But when Trump says he wants to make America great again, he’s talking about Ervin Julian. He’s talking about restoring our country to the greatness of the Greatest Generation. While the left obsesses over America’s flaws, it is imperative that we remind our children and grandchildren about our country’s tremendous accomplishments, including the importance of winning World War II. Just imagine if we had lost. The world would have sunk into complete darkness. Having saved the world from Hitler’s fascism and Soviet communism, it should be easy to make the case that America is a great nation, full of good and decent people. 1776 Unites Many historians have spoken out against the 1619 Project. And now several of the nation’s preeminent black scholars, pastors and activists are pushing back too, and speaking up for America through what they are calling “1776.” These black scholars are offering “alternative perspectives that celebrate the progress America has made.” They are also working to “highlight the resilience of its people.” As Professor Glenn Loury noted, it is wrong to blame American for slavery because, “Slavery was a fact of human civilization since antiquity. Abolition is the new idea. . . a Western idea not possible without the democratic institutions that were built in 1776.” Robert Woodson, one of the principals behind 1776, blasted the negative message coming from the New York Times, saying that it “discourages blacks” and that “nothing is more lethal than a good excuse for failing.” He said the creators of the 1619 Project “don’t believe in America,” adding “I get the impression that they don’t believe in black people.” Another participant in 1776 is former Vanderbilt Professor Carol Swain, who has done outstanding research on the impact of illegal immigration on the black community. Swain slammed the 1619 Project for offering a “very crippling message to our children.” Please, talk to your children about what they are being taught in their schools about America. If they are being exposed to the 1619 Project, contact their teachers, school administrators and your local school board members and insist that they incorporate material from 1776 for a more balanced and accurate history of America. |
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Does Capitalism Destroy Culture?
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 05:42 PM PST by Michael Matheson Miller: One of the most enduring critiques of capitalism is that it is morally and culturally corrosive. Even if we grant that capitalism is more efficient than planned economies, the question remains: are the economic gains worth the cultural cost? Now if the critique came only from a handful of Marxist academics who long for the good ol’ days of the Soviet Union, it might tempting to ignore it. But since the cultural critique comes from political observers at almost every point on the political spectrum, and since the bureaucratic-capitalist economies of the world really are cultures in crisis, the criticism is worth attending to seriously. If we are going to analyze the cultural effects of market economies then I think the one of the first things we need to do is distinguish between those things Peter Berger called “intrinsic” to capitalism and those “extrinsic” to it. We need to distinguish among at least three things: If we are going to analyze the cultural effects of market economies then I think the one of the first things we need to do is distinguish between those things Peter Berger called “intrinsic” to capitalism and those “extrinsic” to it. We need to distinguish among at least three things:
I will say from the outset that I support open, competitive economies that allow for free exchange, but I would not call myself a “capitalist.” Capitalism is generally a Marxist term that implies a mechanistic view of the economy and a false dichotomy between “capital” and “labor.” Capitalism also comes in a variety of forms and can mean many things. There is corporate capitalism, oligarchic capitalism, crony capitalism, and managerial-bureaucratic capitalism, such as we have in the United States. However, cultural critics of capitalism usually don’t make those distinctions and, even if they did, many would still be critical of an authentically free market. So without trying to tease apart all of these strands at the outset and so risk never getting anywhere let me use the term “capitalism” and ask and answer the question with the broadest of brushstrokes. Does capitalism corrode culture? I think the answer is yes and no. Creative Destruction One of the main ways the market does this is through innovation. As new technologies, industries, and goods and services emerge, they make older ones obsolete; old industries are shut down and new ones emerge. New forms of management and technology and division of labor transform traditional work and social relations, and new technologies alter traditional roles of women and men in the house. These sweeping changes can also destroy traditional work and social relationships that play an essential cultural and economic role in the lives of a community or nation. At the same time it is important not to understate the real positive social benefits that come from economic growth and the reduction of extreme poverty. This is what Joseph Schumpeter called “creative destruction,” and it would be naïve to deny that creative destruction doesn’t come with serious trade-offs. Some traditional and artisanal trades are lost forever and this can be a cultural impoverishment. At the same time, because we associate global capitalism with modernization we assume it only has negative effects on traditional culture. Yet there are cases when the opening of markets has actually enhanced local cultural production. As Tyler Cowen notes in Creative Destruction, global trade and new imports have stimulated the local music industry in Ghana where local musicians now control about 70 percent of the Ghanaian market. Global markets have also provided producers of traditional goods and music a bigger market to sell their wares and take advantages of economies of scale. When I was in Rwanda I interviewed Janet Nkbana, a entrepreneur who produces traditional baskets and sells them not only locally but at Macy’s in the United States. As more people travel and live abroad and tastes become more eclectic, Janet has potential consumers she would never have if her market were limited to Rwanda. Her business success has also brought with it positive social benefits to her community. Though basket making is a traditionally female industry, her company’s success has attracted Rwandan men to seek employment, and this has not only raised family incomes, but also reduced the incidents of alcoholism and violence against women and children. This is an example of cultural transformation afforded by global capitalism, and it is clearly a positive one. HOMOGENIZING HOMO SAPIENS It is a mistake to conflate modernization and broad use of technology with Westernization. A young Asian eating McDonald’s while listening to an iPod likely knows little if anything about the culture, traditions, and religion that shaped Western civilization and set the ground for technological developments that he enjoys. There are traditional Muslims and Buddhists who work in technology sectors, but have absorbed little or nothing of Western culture. The use of modern technology does not make one a Westerner any more than the use of Japanese technology educates one about Zen, tataemae, senpai-kohai, obon, or Shintoism. The world may be less flat than we imagine. One of the most passionate critiques of capitalism is really aimed at something else: industrialization. Capitalism and industrialization are related, of course, but they are not the same thing. The rise of capitalism predates the industrial revolution by centuries. As Rodney Stark and Raymond de Roover have noted, international banking and a capitalist economy emerged in Northern Italy as early as the 8th century, and among the Dutch and English and other parts of Europe by the high Middle Ages. Even more obviously, industrialization has taken place in non-capitalist societies like the Soviet Union and communist China, and at times with with a soul-crushing aridity that makes an American mall seem aesthetically pleasing by comparison. The reality is, many of the critiques of modern capitalism, especially aesthetic and cultural critiques, are more precisely critiques of industrialism than of capitalism or the free market per se. CULTURAL IMPERIALISM There now exists what the New York Times has called a “daughter deficit” and what The Economist has labeled “gendercide.” Millions of baby girls are being aborted in the developing world as people are encouraged by international agencies and NGOs to have small families. For a variety of cultural reasons, when forced to choose, many of the families choose to have baby boys and abort their unborn daughters. The consequences of the loss of all these human lives is of course incalculable, but that isn’t the extent of it. The birth ratio of boys to girls is now so skewed that this will have devastating social and political consequences. This is not the result of free markets. It is a product of selfish consumerism, bad anthropology and faulty economics—an outgrowth decades of educational policy and top-down social and economic planning that grows out of the zero-sum-game fallacy, which in turn fosters an anti-natalist ideology that dominates development insiders. Not surprisingly, these insiders are rarely proponents of the free market, and if they do give the market a nod it is a kind of techno-bureaucratic capitalism ruled by elites who haunt Davos each year. SOLIPSISTIC INDIVIDUALISM AND CONSUMERISM A market economy can help spread these ideas, but it is not their source. I am not arguing that a market is neutral. Markets have clear positive and negative effects, but exacerbating a problem is not the same thing as causing it and it is simplistic to attribute to capitalism alone the effects of a host of intertwined forces of social change. Perhaps the most powerful critique of capitalism is its relationship to consumerism. The consumerist ethic, with its hyper-sexuality and advertising to young children is especially troubling. In Born to Buy, Boston University Professor Juliet Schor details the marketing and advertising that bypasses parents and tries to market directly to children as young as three and four years old. Companies spend millions in marketing research and advertising to every age category from toddler to a new category called “tween” to the seemingly ubiquitous marketing aimed at teenagers in mega-malls. Benjamin Barber in his book Consumed, reports that “businesses spend over $11 billion per year advertising to children, teens, and young adults.” Barber also discusses the troubling trend of individuals defining themselves by the brands they use. Brands, he argues, have replaced families, religion, and communities as a source of identity. He writes, “The boundary separating the person from what she buys starts to vanish—and she starts to become the products she buys—a Calvin Klein torrid teen, a politically conscious Benetton rebel.” These are serious problems. But the question again is whether this is the result of the free market per se? There is undoubtedly a relationship between the two, yet consumerism exists in socialist societies as well. There have also been capitalist societies that have not been consumerist and have encouraged high levels of savings and investment. As several commentators including William Leach in Land of Desire have noted, America has seen a cultural shift from productive capitalism with focus on saving and investment to a consumerist mentality where we consume on borrowed money. The reasons for this are a complex interaction of cultural shifts, education, increased individualism and centralization, much of it incentivized by public and monetary policy (Keynsianism) which have encouraged consumerism and borrowing. Consumerism is a toxic malady and will undermine a free society. Wilhelm Röpke, the Swiss economist who was instrumental in rebuilding German after World War II and an ardent free marketer, once asked if there was “any more certain way of desiccating the soul of man than the habit of constantly thinking about money and what it can buy? Is there a more potent poison than our economic system’s all pervasive commercialism?” A market economy with an abundance of goods can encourage consumerism, and while policies that limit vulgarity and abuse in advertising can help, consumerism is ultimately a spiritual disease that cannot be remedied by economic changes alone. DOES THE ECONOMY CONTROL THE CULTURE? 1. First, there remains a tendency toward economic determinism influenced by Marxian analysis which views the economy as the source of social organization. This is not limited to the left. Distributists for example, who are quite traditional and religious, tend to appropriate the Marxian view of the economy as the driving force of culture and thereby see structural economic change as the source of cultural renewal. 2. Second, capitalism often becomes a proxy for a critique of problems that lie deep within modern liberal society such as the effects of nominalism, rationalism, radical concepts of autonomy and the like. It is much easier to blame inanimate market forces than to attempt to dissect the effects of nominalism and Enlightenment rationalism on culture and social relations. 3. Finally, capitalism also acts as a proxy for other issues which would be politically incorrect or at least politically imprudent to address directly. Criticizing capitalism is easier and more politically acceptable than it would be to critique democracy, egalitarianism, or the welfare state. Alexis de Tocqueville, for example, worried about the negatives effects of equality and individualism on culture and the human soul and that equality led to a love of comfort. Can you imagine a contemporary politician in the United States or Europe standing up today and talking about the dangers of too much equality or democracy? What would happen if a politician blamed consumerism on equality instead of corporate greed? Capitalism has profound effects on culture and it is a mistake to think that that the market economy is neutral or that markets left to their own devices will work everything out for the best. It is also a mistake to blame capitalism as the cause of cultural destruction. Market economies come with trade-offs and cultural dysfunction and cultural renewal are complex and cannot be explained by economic analysis alone. As Christopher Dawson reminds us, it is not economics, but cultus, religion, that is the driving force of culture. It is also a mistake to think that secularism is neutral. Modern secular progressivism has become the cultus of Western life and this plays a much more potent role in shaping culture than economics. Capitalism is not perfect. Like democracy, it needs vibrant mediating institutions, rich civil society and a strong religious culture to control its negative effects. But we wouldn’t trade democracy for dictatorship. Nor should we trade the market for some bureaucratic utopia. For all their fallen, human faults, free and competitive economies have enabled millions of people to lead lives of human dignity and pursue human flourishing, and funded the creation of beautiful architecture, music, and cultural products of all sorts. If we are going to take cultural decay seriously then simply blaming capitalism will not get us very far. There are much bigger fish to fry. |
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San Francisco Sheriff Says His Department Won’t Cooperate With ICE
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 03:19 PM PST by Jason Hopkins: Law enforcement in San Francisco will no longer be cooperating with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, per a directive by San Francisco’s newly elected sheriff. Paul Miyamoto, who was elected to be the top law enforcer in San Francisco in November 2019, declared to a local media outlet Tuesday that his department will not help with federal immigration enforcement. While San Francisco has long opposed most cooperation with ICE, the announcement further cements the progressive city’s status as a sanctuary jurisdiction. “Our department is not involved in immigration enforcement,” Miyamoto, the first Asian American sheriff of San Francisco, told KTVU Fox 2. “We feel that is a federal matter, and our realm of interest is public safety, and you can’t really have a safe community if the community members are afraid to come to us to report crimes.” Namely, his department will not honor immigration detainers lodged by federal agents. If an illegal alien in San Francisco is placed into local custody for an unrelated crime, and ICE asks that the individual be transferred into the agency’s custody, that request will simply be ignored. Miyamoto argues that the policy promotes public safety, despite that there are many documented cases of illegal aliens committing additional crimes after they have been released from local custody. The directive appears somewhat redundant given that authorities all across California have already been greatly prohibited in how they can work with ICE. Having been in effect since January 2018, the California Values Act bars state and local agencies from honoring ICE detainer requests, making it impossible for illegal aliens to be directly transferred into the agency’s custody. While giving his latest State of the Union address earlier in February, President Donald Trump specifically highlighted California as an example of the dangers of sanctuary policy. The president invited as his guest the brother of a man who was killed by an illegal alien. That particular alien had been arrested by local authorities and had an ICE detainer placed on him, but because of the California Values Act law, he was released back into the public. The Trump administration took its opposition to California’s sanctuary policies a monumental step farther this month when the Department of Justice announced a complaint against a state law that prohibits the operation of private detention facilities. Attorney General William Barr said at the time that the law was intended to forbid the detention of aliens in the state. San Francisco Mayor London Breed, a Democrat, declared that the city was being unfairly targeted by the Trump administration, but she remained adamant about the city’s protection of illegal aliens. “We’re being targeted on so many levels,” Breed said. “But, the fact is we’re a strong city, we’re a resilient city and we will fight against those attacks and we will protect the people of this city.” |
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Dems’ Showdown in Vegas
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 02:24 PM PST . . . Did a strong challenger to Trump emerge from the brawl? “In this corner, Michael ‘Mini’ Bloomberg, weighing in at more than 60 billion dollars, in the biggest fight of his career.” Bloomberg trained for the bout by running New York City and showing people how to be farmers in five minutes. In this bout, he would be the primary punching bag. Bloomberg billed himself as the candidate who could beat Trump, “the worst president we’ve ever had,” and run the country. “I’m a manager, I’m a philanthropist,” Bloomberg said. He had made a lot of money but “I’m spending that money to beat Trump.” Democrats weren’t buying it, and went after Bloomberg on his record with stop-and-frisk. Bloomberg acknowledged that he was sorry and had asked for forgiveness. He touted the “right to live” and said he cut murders in New York from 650 a year to 300. The Democrats pivoted to his record with women. “He calls women fat broads and horse-faced lesbians,” said a breathless Elizabeth Warren, like a character in a ’40s gangster movie. Bloomberg said he had “no tolerance for the behavior the MeToo movement has exposed,” but others wondered about the non-disclosure agreements. Joe Biden said people had been paid to keep quiet. Bloomberg said the agreements had been made consensually and the parties, “wanted to keep it quiet.” On other fronts, the New York billionaire got in some shots of his own. The surest way to get Trump reelected, he said, was “the ideas on this stage.” They had been tried before, and, Bloomberg said, “Communism just doesn’t work.” That drew gasps from the audience, which cheered the ideas Bloomberg rejected. Bernie Sanders said the use of Communism was a “cheap shot,” and touted his “democratic socialism.” A poised Bloomberg shot back that the nation’s “best known socialist is a millionaire with three houses.” Even so, Bloomberg said he would raise taxes on the rich and roll back the tax cuts of the Trump administration. So he did have something common with the others who also have much in common with Bernie Sanders. “The number one place to live out the American dream is Denmark,” said Pete Buttigieg. “I was into Bernie before it was cool,” added the mayor, who moved the climate-change deadline to 2020, our “only chance to defeat Trump.” Amy Klobuchar said she could beat Trump, but the Minnesota Democrat drew fire from Vanessa Hauc of Noticias Telemundo for not knowing the name of Mexico’s president, and for ignorance of Mexican policy. Questioner Hallie Jackson noted that Trump tax cuts had helped some small businesses. Would the candidates raise those taxes? Joe Biden avowed that taxes would not go up on small businesses, and said with typical incoherence that he would “change the tax code the way it is.” Biden took the offensive on Obamacare, which he still championed, and attacked the “greed of Wall Street.” Nobody asked Joe Biden about the Ukrainian prosecutor he got fired. Nobody asked Elizabeth Warren why she didn’t resign after exposure as a fake Cherokee, instead of running for president of the United States. Nobody asked Bernie Sanders why he went to the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, not Denmark, and why his basic ideas are right out of the 1936 Stalin Constitution. Nobody asked any candidate if they ever read The Road to Serfdom. “We’re not talking enough about Donald Trump,” said Amy Klobuchar, and that was true. Whatever the question, the Democrats rehashed their tired ideas, wrapped in slogans such as “Galvanize, not polarize,” from Mayor Pete, who at one point broke into Beto-style Spanish. Viewers might have mistaken it for the opening of Greg Gutfeld’s show on Fox News. On the other hand, there was a possible subplot. The previous CNN debate was a setup for Warren to accuse Bernie Sanders of being anti-women. Something different went down at the Paris Theater in Las Vegas on Wednesday. As Joe Biden delivered his closing statement, protesters struck up a loud chant that for the television audience was hard to understand. Much of the debate had been like that, and may have left voters confused about the winner, both on Wednesday and moving forward. In Nevada, Caucus Day is February 22. The election takes place on November 3. As President Trump says, we’ll have to wait and see what happens. |
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32 Bloomberg Bans as Mayor of NYC
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 02:14 PM PST
by Craig Bannister: Democrat presidential hopeful Michael Bloomberg banned, or attempted to ban, far more than just large sodas during his dozen years as mayor of New York City, according to a list published on the eve of his departure from office. On New Year’s Eve 2013, Gizmodo published a list if compiled of 32 Bloomberg bans, some of which were overturned or merely promoted by Mayor Bloomberg. The majority of bans fell into one of three categories: smoking, transportation and food/beverage – but, music, grass clippings and heating oils were also targeted, the list reveals. By general category, the bans addressed the following areas of New Yorkers’ lives:
The full list compiled by Gizmodo, including links to sources such as The New York Times, The Huffington Post and CBS News, is presented below. Read Gizmodo’s original 2013 article here.
* Overruled/appealed ban ** Suggested/voluntary ban *** Proposed/pending ban —————————– |
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China’s Government Is Like Something Out of ‘1984’
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 01:40 PM PST
by Dr. Victor Davis Hanson: The Chinese communist government increasingly poses an existential threat not just to its own 1.4 billion citizens but to the world at large. China is currently in a dangerously chaotic state. And why not, when a premodern authoritarian society leaps wildly into the brave new world of high-tech science in a single generation? The Chinese technological revolution is overseen by an Orwellian dictatorship. Predictably, the Chinese Communist Party has not developed the social, political or cultural infrastructure to ensure that its sophisticated industrial and biological research does not go rogue and become destructive to itself and to the billions of people who are on the importing end of Chinese products and protocols. Central party officials run the government, military, media and universities collectively in a manner reminiscent of the science-fiction Borg organism of “Star Trek,” which was a horde of robot-like entities all under the control of a central mind. Thirty years ago, American pundits began gushing over China’s sudden leap from horse-drawn power to solar, wind and nuclear energy. The Chinese communist government wowed Westerners. It created from nothing high-speed rail, solar farms, shiny new airports and gleaming new high-density apartment buildings. Western-trained Chinese scientists soon were conducting sophisticated medical and scientific research. And they often did so rapidly, without the prying regulators, nosy elected officials and bothersome citizen lawsuits that often burden American and European scientists. To make China instantly rich and modern, the communist hierarchy — the same government that once caused the deaths of some 60 million innocents under Mao Zedong — ignored property rights. It crushed individual freedom. It embraced secrecy and bulldozed over any who stood in its way. In much the same manner that silly American pundits once praised Benito Mussolini’s fascist efforts to modernize Depression-era Italy, many naifs in the West praised China only because they wished that their own countries could recalibrate so quickly and efficiently — especially in service to green agendas. But the world is learning that China does not just move mountains for new dams or bulldoze ancient neighborhoods that stand in the path of high-speed rail. It also hid the outbreak and the mysterious origins of the deadly coronavirus from its own people and the rest of the planet as well — a more dangerous replay of its earlier effort to mask the spread of the SARS virus. The result was that thousands of unknowing carriers spread the viral plague while the government covered up its epidemic proportions. China, of course, does not wish to have either its products or citizens quarantined from other countries. But the Chinese government will not allow foreign scientists to enter its country to collaborate on containing the coronavirus and developing a vaccine. No wonder internet conspiracies speculate that the virus was either a rogue product of the Chinese military’s bioengineering weapons lab or originated from bats, snakes or pangolins and the open-air markets where they are sold as food. It is hard to believe that in 2020, the world’s largest and second-wealthiest county, which boasts of high-tech consumer products and gleaming cities, has imprisoned in “re-education camps” more than 1 million Uighur Muslims in the manner that Hitler, Stalin and Mao once relocated “undesirable” populations. China seems confident that it will soon rule the world, given its huge population, massive trade surpluses, vast cash reserves and industries that produce so many of the world’s electronic devices, pharmaceuticals and consumer goods. For a year, the Chinese government has battled massive street demonstrations for democracy in Hong Kong. Beijing cynically assumes that Western nations don’t care. They are expected to drop their characteristic human rights advocacy because of how profitable their investments inside China have proven. Beijing was right. Few Western companies complain that Chinese society is surveilled, regulated and controlled in a nightmarish fashion that George Orwell once predicted in his dystopian novel “1984.” All of these recent scandals should remind the world that China got rich by warping trade and stealing technology in much the same way that it deals with epidemics and dissidents. That is, by simply ignoring legitimate criticism and crushing anyone in its way. If the Chinese communist Borg is willing to put millions of its own citizens at risk of infection and death, why would it care about foreigners’ complaints that China is getting rich and powerful by breaking international trade rules? The truth about President Trump’s decision to call China to account over its systematic abuse of international trade norms is not that Trump’s policy is reckless or ill-considered. It’s that at this late date, the reckoning might prove too little, too late. |
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Democrats Revive FDR’s Court-Packing Agenda . . .
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 01:41 PM PST . . . Their goal is the acquisition and maintenance of power, by any means necessary. Nonetheless, for today’s equally rapacious Democrats and their media allies, everything old is new again: Several Democrat presidential candidates have announced their intention to pack the Court, despite the reality that, as The Washington Post put it, the idea “fell into lengthy disrepute after 1937.” Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s reason for doing so was unintentionally hilarious. “It’s not just about expansion, it’s about depoliticizing the Supreme Court,” she stated. Others were less amusing. “It’s no more a departure from norms than what the Republicans did to get the judiciary to the place it is today,” asserted Pete Buttigieg. “Bold, ambitious ideas need a hearing right now.” Sen. Amy Klobuchar was more pragmatic, saying, “You always want to look at all ideas, but I think right now the most reasonable thing is to win the elections and to try to stop the bad judges.” As the Democrats’ orchestrated debacle at the Brett Kavanaugh hearings indicated quite clearly, “bad judges” are seemingly those appointed to the Court by President Donald Trump. Thus, the evisceration of a decent man’s reputation, courtesy of rank political maneuvering and an unprecedented level of media smearing, was perfectly acceptable. By contrast, Sen. Bernie Sanders would attempt to achieve the same result by a different means. “I do not believe in packing the court,” he said. “We’ve got a terrible 5-4 majority conservative Court right now. But I do believe constitutionally we have the power to rotate judges to other courts and that brings in new blood into the Supreme Court and a majority I hope that will understand that a woman has a right to control her own body and that corporations cannot run the United States of America.” A “terrible 5-4 majority” is in the eye of the beholder. As George Washington University associate professor Brandon L. Bartels inconveniently pointed out in 2018, swing-vote Justice Anthony Kennedy’s retirement gave Trump and a GOP Senate “the chance to cement a reliable conservative majority on the Supreme Court for the first time since the New Deal began.” The New Deal was initiated in 1933. Thus, what Democrats really want is what they had for more than three-quarters of a century, as in a Court willing to implement agendas rejected by state legislatures and/or voters themselves. Toward that end they have no problem whatsoever when a majority of justices “discover” previously undiscovered constitutional rights that align with leftist ideology. In short, no one is more pleased with a “politicized” Supreme Court than the same Democrats who would pack it when that agenda may no longer be realized. Moreover, their appetite for judicial supremacy is hardly satiated by SCOTUS. In a speech at the American Law Institute on May 21, 2019, Attorney General William Barr noted as much. “Since President Trump took office, federal district courts have issued 37 nationwide injunctions against the executive branch,” he stated. “That’s more than one a month. By comparison, during President [Barack] Obama’s first two years, district courts issued two nationwide injunctions against the executive branch, both of which were vacated by the Ninth Circuit. And according to the [Justice] Department’s best estimates, courts issued only 27 nationwide injunctions in all of the 20th century.” There’s a method to the madness of judicial activism favored by the American Left. As columnist David Horowitz has pointed out, SCOTUS only heard 60 cases in 2018. “Meanwhile,” he notes, “the lower courts heard tens of thousands of cases, and their dockets are full of every political issue under the sun.” Why is that important? Because the sheer volume of cases advantages the activism. Despite that advantage, it’s still not enough for a party seeking unassailable power. “More and more Democrats are becoming convinced that we cannot resign ourselves to the third branch of government being captive to partisan Republican forces for the next 30 years,” stated Brian Fallon, a former Hillary Clinton advisor who now heads the group Demand Justice. On the other hand, being captive to partisan Democrat forces is fine, even if it requires stacking the court. “To many leftists and left-liberals, such drastic action is needed if any progressive legislation in the future is to survive,” Vox columnist Dylan Matthews wrote in 2018. “The concerns in question have less to do with hot-button social issues like abortion and LGBT rights and more to do with the constitutionality of economic regulation and redistributive programs.” Aaron Belkin, San Francisco State University associate professor and executive director of Pack the Courts, echoes that sentiment. “The strategy is to make the 2020 [Democrat] candidates understand that if they don’t come up with an agenda to deal with the courts, everything they are talking about is going to be dead on arrival,” he insists. Again, note that if “progressive legislation” aligned itself with a majority of Congress or voters themselves, SCOTUS rulings would be irrelevant. That it not only isn’t but also requires court packing to pass a legislative agenda that would otherwise “be dead on arrival” speaks volumes. Fortunately, Democrats would have to gain complete control of Congress and the presidency to make it happen. The Constitution grants Congress the power to determine the number of justices, and it passed the Judiciary Act of 1869, setting the number at nine. Democrats assert that packing is justified due to Republicans refusing to hold a vote on Judge Merrick Garland in 2016. Republicans countered that it was not proper to hold a vote during an election year, a position supported by Joe Biden in 1992, when he insisted a “lame duck” president should not be in a position to nominate a justice. (It should be noted that Garland would have changed the ideological composition of the Court, and Republicans wanted voters to weigh in.) Democrats’ fury intensified when Donald Trump beat “sure thing” Hillary Clinton and put Neil Gorsuch on the Court. Democrats have convenient memories. Prior to 2013, nominees for federal courts and SCOTUS effectively needed 60 votes, meaning a filibuster could thwart a nomination indefinitely. Former Democrat Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid was incensed by such GOP-led filibusters holding up his judicial picks, so he invoked what is known as the nuclear option, lowering the threshold to a 51-vote majority for all judges except those appointed to SCOTUS. Following Trump’s victory, Republican and current Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell extended the nuclear option to SCOTUS justices, paving the way for the appointment of Gorsuch by a 54-45 margin. Tit for tat? Absolutely. But Democrats have no one to blame but themselves, mostly for assuming Republicans would never behave like … Democrats. Hence, court packing becomes the next “logical” step in a dangerous game of one-upmanship. Leftists’ real agenda? Like their desire to eliminate the Electoral College, abolish or reconfigure the Senate, and give voting rights to felons, 16-year-olds, and illegal aliens, court packing is about what it has been since FDR first attempted it: the acquisition and maintenance of power, by any means necessary. Americans should remember that agenda next November. |
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Retiring GOP Representative Mac Thornberry Goes Full Pelosi On Wall Funding
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 12:57 PM PST . . . Reprogramming he voted for. Ranking House Republican on the House Armed Services Committee Mac Thornberry (R-Texas) joined Democrats in attacking President Trump’s choice to move $3.8 billion within the Defense Department approved spending from weapons programs into the counter-drug fund with the intention of using these monies for additional wall funding on the southern border. The Hill reports that the soon to be retired Thornberry claimed, “The re-programming announced today is contrary to Congress’s constitutional authority, and I believe that it requires Congress to take action. I will be working with my colleagues to determine the appropriate steps to take.” Thornberry continued with the incredible charge that the reprogramming plan, “undermines the principle of civilian control of the military and is in violation of the separation of powers within the Constitution.” To begin to deconstruct the absurdity of Thornberry’s comments, one must understand that in 2017, President Trump’s first year in office, the Defense Budget for military projects was $568.9 billion, rising to $600 billion, $683 billion in 2018, $653.9 in 2019 and to a projected $689.6 billion in 2020. A massive increase over the first three years of the Trump presidency – an increase of $85 billion in just three years. The $3.8 billion that the President is planning to move represents about two-thirds of 1 percent of the DoD funding for 2019. What’s more, Congress chose not to prevent the shifting of funds within the Pentagon to accommodate additional funding for the wall on the southern border, during the appropriations process with full knowledge that the Supreme Court had allowed the transfer of funds for the same purpose just a few months earlier by including the same exact language as before that allowed the transfer to take place. This simple fact makes the Thornberry separation of powers argument almost laughable on its face, but what makes it particularly embarrassing for House Armed Services Committee ranking member is that he voted in favor of the legislation which funded the Pentagon without the prohibitions that he now wants to imagine into it. The law Thornberry voted for explicitly provides for reprogramming the funds, stating in part in Division A, Title VIII, Section 8005 “Upon determination by the Secretary of Defense that such action is necessary in the national interest, he may, with the approval of the Office of Management and Budget, transfer not to exceed $4,000,000,000 of working capital funds of the Department of Defense or funds made available in this Act to the Department of Defense for military functions (except military construction) between such appropriations or funds or any subdivision thereof, to be merged with and to be available for the same purposes, and for the same time period, as the appropriation or fund to which transferred…” Maybe read the bill next time? To be fair, the legal question is still technically pending after the Supreme Court stayed an injunction by a district court against transferring the monies on the grounds that the party lacked standing to bring the complaint. The effect of the stay was to allow the funds, $2.5 billion, to be transferred and spent on the wall. The transfer authority is clear in the law, and so it becomes a political question with which the executive branch has discretion when a determination is made that expanding the border wall is in the national interest. Congress authorized that discretion. And in response to Thornberry’s almost crazy idea that the shifting of the funds undermines the Constitutional requirement of civilian control over the Pentagon, perhaps the 23 years spent in the swamp has impacted the former House Armed Services Committees basic reasoning capacity, but even his lowliest press staffer should be able to follow this logical syllogism. The President is the Commander and Chief of the military. The President is a civilian. Hence, the President taking the step to shift resources to better meet the nation’s security needs is the essence of “civilian control” of the military. While it may seem unfair to pick on Representative Thornberry over his poorly thought out complaints to the media, it cannot be lost that it is the House Republicans who have pushed hard for massive increases in defense spending over the past half-decade, breaking the budget sequestration deal with the Democrats in order to dramatically plus-up Pentagon spending. In exchange for increased military spending, the Democrats demanded increases in non-defense discretionary spending be added to the baseline budget, whether it was needed or not. This mutually agreed upon spending escalation has been a primary driver, along with increased mandatory spending, of the expanding budget deficit which Democrats seek to blame on the President. Democrats play this blame Trump game even as they and their conjoined defense hawk spending pigs keep adding more and more money to the appropriated spending bills, acting as if we are flush with cash rather than $23 trillion in the hole. The alleged rationale for massive Defense increases has been the need to meet our national security needs around the world which presumably includes at our own border. The idea that a GOP Congressman from Texas doesn’t understand the challenges of an unsecured border when an Iraqi Al Qaeda leader had been arrested in Arizona just a few short weeks before is beyond absurd. And while Thornberry represents the northern-most district in the state, the fact remains that Texas is a border state increasingly vulnerable due to its long, difficult to manage 1,241 shared miles with Mexico. President Trump promised and has fought to secure the southern border, and it is unfortunate that in his last year in Congress, Mac Thornberry has chosen a fight that benefits the Beltway Bandits at the expense of our national security. |
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Banks and Cancel Culture
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 12:31 PM PST by Kerby Anderson: One weapon used by progressive activists is the “cancel culture.” It is an organized attempt to ruin your reputation or destroy your business. Vince Vaughn was the target of leftists because he was caught on camera talking to President Trump and shaking his hand. Another example was the attempt by students at Oberlin College to put Gibson’s bakery out of business. Vince Vaughn’s career will probably survive, and a court actually awarded the Gibson family millions from the school. We might not fare so well if the progressive mob targets us. That would certainly be true if government or business starts working against you. A few years ago, I wrote of the Obama administration’s program known as Operation Choke Point. Pressure was put on banks to decline loans to gun manufacturers and other operations. When the Trump administration put a stop to Operation Choke Point, progressive activists decided to start targeting banking institutions with smear campaigns so they would stop lending to businesses and industries they define as undesirable. That would not only include gun manufacturers but fireworks manufacturers, oil and gas companies, companies doing business with Israel, and just about any business owned by a conservative or Christian. Bank regulations prohibit such discrimination, but that hasn’t stopped some of these activists from weaponizing these banks for their political purposes. That is why the House Financial Services Committee held a hearing on the subject. The chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, along with more than a dozen other US senators, sent a letter of concern to regulators before the hearing. These progressive activists have found a way to force their views on society without winning an election and without convincing Congress to implement their desires. We cannot let a liberal mob intimidate banks into denying credit to legitimate businesses and industry. |
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Presidents Trump and Guaidó Versus the Anti-American Coalition
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 12:17 PM PST by Newt Gingrich: President Trump earned a standing ovation during his State of the Union Address this month when he recognized Venezuelan President Juan Guaidó in the audience. For many, it was an electrifying moment – Guaidó is a symbol of courage and of freedom pitted against a bad and destructive anti-American dictatorship. As President Trump said: “We are supporting the hopes of Cubans, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans to restore democracy. The United States is leading a 59-nation diplomatic coalition against the socialist dictator of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro. Maduro is an illegitimate ruler, a tyrant who brutalizes his people. But Maduro’s grip on tyranny will be smashed and broken. “Here this evening is a very brave man who carries with him the hopes, dreams, and aspirations of all Venezuelans. Joining us in the Gallery is the true and legitimate President of Venezuela, Juan Guaidó. Mr. President, please take this message back to your homeland. … that all Americans are united with the Venezuelan people in their righteous struggle for freedom…. Socialism destroys nations. But always remember: Freedom unifies the soul.” Even Speaker Nancy Pelosi stood and applauded the man who free countries were backing as the legitimate leader of Venezuela. This was a powerful message, but it raises an important question: If the most powerful country in the world, along with 58 other countries, favor President Guaidó, why is the dictator Maduro still in charge? One of the current weaknesses in American national security planning is a failure to recognize how much the world has changed and how much we need new language and new strategies and structures to keep America safe in the new era. Venezuela is a perfect case in point. We keep taking on Maduro as though he were the key to defeating tyranny in Venezuela. Yet that is simply not true. If Maduro were the key, he would be gone and Guaidó would be leading a free country. In fact, there is pretty good evidence that Maduro had at one point lost his nerve and was heading to an airport to flee when Russian President Vladimir Putin called and ordered him to return to Caracas and allow his allies to keep him in office. Just as Bashar al-Assad has only survived in Syria because of Iranian and Russian backing, Maduro has survived in Venezuela only because of a widespread anti-American coalition. Cliff May, the remarkable head of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, wrote a powerful column in the Washington Times explaining the dilemma of American policy in Venezuela. As May pointed out, from the moment Hugo Chávez won the presidency in 1999, he began a reign of corruption. He put in place socialist laws which destroyed jobs and businesses. He embarked on a collaboration with communists in Cuba, Nicaragua, and Russia. And Chávez empowered a network of local militias – maintained by corruption and theft – who were prepared to harass and attack middle class defenders of democracy. The result has been an astonishing collapse of what was once the wealthiest country in South America. This once-successful country (with the world’s largest oil reserves) degraded into a system of deprivation. Millions of refugees fled the country, and almost 90 percent of the Venezuelans who remained live in desperate poverty. When Chávez died in 2013, his successor, Nicolás Maduro, had a lot less charisma. Therefore, Maduro had a much greater need to rely on outside forces to survive. The Russians – always looking for beachheads in the Western Hemisphere – have been loyal supporters of the dictatorship. They control 70 percent of Venezuelan oil production and earn an estimated $2 billion a year from it. They have a vested interest in propping up the Maduro dictatorship. The Cubans have long supported Chávez, and now bolster Maduro. There are an estimated 25,000 Cubans propping up the regime – including some of the toughest internal security agents Cuba can mobilize. Cubans are scattered throughout the government providing spies and managers to block dissent and anti-Maduro subversion. Meanwhile, the Chinese have loaned billions to the Maduro dictatorship and have a deep interest in his survival. The anti-American coalition in the Middle East is also playing “an especially nefarious role” in propping up Maduro. As May reported: “Research conducted by Emanuele Ottolenghi, my colleague at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, reveals that the Maduro regime makes passports and travel documents available to Iranian agents. “Tehran’s regional propaganda headquarters is in Caracas. The two regimes collaborate in a disinformation war against the United States. Their Spanish-language television networks, Hispan TV and Telesur, respectively, share journalists across Latin America. “Hezbollah, a proxy of the clerical regime, is firmly ensconced within Venezuela’s large (about 200,000) Lebanese Shia community. ‘Simply put,’ Mr. Ottolenghi notes, ‘Maduro and his cronies use the trappings of a sovereign state to run a criminal syndicate involved in pillaging state resources and taking commissions from organized crime to use Venezuela as a staging ground for their global smuggling operations.’ “He adds: ‘Hezbollah supporters, concentrated in several areas of Venezuela and along the Venezuela/Colombia border, have, over the years, lent their businesses to trade-based money-laundering schemes designed to repatriate drug money for the cartels — minus a hefty commission for Hezbollah.’” Given all the forces aligned to prop up Maduro, it should come as no surprise that the United Nations is on the side of the dictator. After all, the United Nations is dominated by the anti-American coalition and its willing allies. President Guaidó has been recognized as the legitimate leader of Venezuela since he was elected by the National Assembly on January 23, 2019. For over a year, the United States and allies have been trying to drive Maduro out of power and replace him with the democratic leader recognized by 59 countries. As May summed it up, “Trump administration efforts to bring about regime change in Venezuela have been principled, persistent and, so far, ineffective.” Driving Maduro out of power and helping Guaidó achieve power requires defeating the entire anti-American coalition. As of today, the United States simply does not have a strategy large and tough enough to achieve this big a victory. There is a lesson to be learned from the communist dictatorship in Cuba, which we have now opposed for 60 years (since 1960). Small steps against our enemies may make us feel virtuous, but they do not achieve large victories. |
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Save Me, Good and Hard
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 12:07 PM PST by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: The problem with making my own decisions? I might make a mistake. That’s not good for me, is it? So what you government boys ought to do is make me scrape and bow and beg for permission. Make me fill out more forms, struggle with invasive new privacy-invading requirements. Make it super-hard to comply — so I give up before I do anything . . . ill-considered. That way, you prevent me from taking actions that might just possibly go badly — like investing my own hard-earned money the way I want to. The SEC is seriously considering meeting this demand. Give it to me good and hard, SEC! But let me clarify. By “me” I mean every small independent investor. By “give it to me” I mean “don’t give it to me.” Don’t do what Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Jay Clayton and other SEC commissioners are considering: imposing a regulation to “effectively ban many middle-class investors from buying mutual funds and exchange-traded funds.” Don’t make it lots harder to use the Robinhood app to make certain low-fee or no-fee purchases. Don’t prevent investors from buying funds through discount brokerages and apps like Robinhood unless they first fill out an intrusive questionnaire about their personal finances and pray for permission. Don’t make us beg to invest. Don’t. Stop mulling whether to further harass Americans who want to be free to make their own choices and live their own lives. Don’t enslave. Liberate. Laissez nous faire, you condescending thugs. This Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob. |
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These Black Scholars and Leaders Rebuke 1619 Project’s Narrative of Victimhood
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 11:53 AM PST by Jarrett Stepman: An initiative featuring the writings of black Americans will counter and rebut a New York Times Magazine project that “reframes” all of U.S. history around slavery and racism. The Woodson Center last week announced sponsorship of “1776,” a collection of essays and other material mostly written by black scholars and community and business leaders, among other backgrounds. Their goal is to tell “the complete history of America and black Americans from 1776 to present.” The “1776” initiative directly rebuts the so-called 1619 Project introduced in August by The New York Times Magazine. The purpose of the 1619 Project, according to an initial mission statement, is “to reframe the country’s history, understanding 1619 as our true founding.” The creators chose the year 1619 because it is when African slaves first were brought to Britain’s Virginia colony in America. The 1776 project will take an entirely different track. “Our focus is on solving problems,” the mission statement reads. “We do this in the spirit of 1776, the date of America’s true founding.” Bob Woodson Sr., founder and president of the Washington-based Woodson Center, said that at the very least the 1619 Project has stimulated “a much-needed debate in the black community.” The problem “is that it defines America as being racist,” Woodson said of the Times’ endeavor. “Simply put, all white people are beneficiaries of privilege and are victimizers and all blacks are victims.” That message, he said, is dangerous for the future of the country because it teaches Americans to make excuses for failure. Worse, it defines America as an “evil empire” with fundamental principles that are “corrupt and hypocritical.” Woodson, 82, who has worked for decades to lift black neighborhoods out of dysfunction, said the “1776” essays would be an “aspirational and inspirational” alternative to the Times’ project, embracing the Founders and their ideas rather than rebuking them. Other contributors noted their criticisms of the 1619 Project at a Friday event at the National Press Club announcing “1776.” Coleman Hughes, an undergraduate student at Columbia University, said the prevailing attitude at American universities is that oppression and racism is in our country’s DNA, that they are essential elements of what we are. “Today, we are challenging that false narrative,” Hughes said. “Any argument that says the institution of slavery is what makes America unique must grapple with the fact that slavery was practiced in almost every society on earth until just a few centuries ago, as well as the fact that most of those societies have done far less to acknowledge and atone for it.” “To point to America’s worst sins,” Hughes said, “is to point out what is least unique about us.” Other “1776” contributors were critical of the way the 1619 Project connects the institution of slavery with the lives of black Americans today. “The 1619 Project offers a very crippling message to our children,” said Carol Swain, an author and former professor at Princeton and Vanderbilt universities who is host of the “Be the People” podcast. “I was spared from having that message brought to me,” Swain said. “And I believe that if I had been exposed to that, if I had internalized that negative message, I don’t believe I would have been able to do the things I’ve done in life.” Swain said white children are being shamed for their skin color and black children are being taught that they can’t accomplish things because of discrimination. She said “1776” will help counter those destructive messages. “The idea that the specter of slavery still determines the character of life among African Americans is an affront to me,” said Glenn C. Loury, an economics professor at Brown University and “1776” contributor. “We have shown, and will continue to show, that we are not merely bobbles at the end of a historical string, being pushed this way and that by forces beyond our control.” The 1619 Project has partnered with the Pulitzer Center to push its material in high school classrooms around the country as many high school districts are now considering how to use it as a part of their curriculum. This despite the fact that historians—from highly diverse political backgrounds—have criticized it for inaccuracies and distortions. Allen Guelzo, a historian and visiting fellow at The Heritage Foundation, called the Times’ project a “conspiracy theory” used to tarnish the concept of capitalism. Gordon Wood, a historian and author of numerous books on early American history, said in an interview last year with the World Socialist Web Site that he was surprised the 1619 Project could be “so wrong in so many ways.” And an editorial on the same socialist website said the Times’ project was “a racialist falsification of American and world history.” Nicole Hannah-Jones, a New York Times writer who wrote the first essay for the 1619 Project, had a response to “1776” on Twitter (but has removed her twitter commet). Hannah-Jones’ disrespect aside, “1776” represents an important addition to Americans’ understanding of our history and how to think about it. This work is essential in an age in which young Americans have worryingly little grasp of history or the foundational ideas and institutions that the country was founded on. Worse, they are being fed a steady diet of distortions about America’s past, as I highlight in my book “The War on History: The Conspiracy to Rewrite America’s Past.” “1776” resources and essays are available at 1776unites.com. |
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How To Boil A Frog (or a Taxpayer)
Posted: 20 Feb 2020 11:13 AM PST by Conduit For Action: The old tale goes… You can’t just put a frog into boiling water because the frog will just jump out, but if you put the frog in cold water and continue to turn up the temperature one degree at a time and the frog won’t realize it. Eventually the water is boiling and the frog is cooked without ever realizing what is happening. That tale probably doesn’t work for frogs, but the same strategy has proven to work on Arkansas taxpayers. Just consider how the Arkansas sales tax became one of the highest in the nation. Arkansas’ first sales tax was a temporary 2% sales tax passed in 1935. The tax was sold as temporary but in 1937 when it was about to expire the legislature extended it. You will hear this line again, “We are not imposing a tax, we are just continuing it.” The current sales tax was passed in 1941 and was still at the rate of 2%. It increased to 3% in 1957; 4% in 1983; 4.5% in 1991; 4.626% in 1997; 5.126% in 2001; 6% in 2003; and 6.5% in 2012. ONE OF THE HIGHEST RATES IN THE NATION Working one degree at a time, the politicians have increased the Arkansas state sales tax to 6.5% so it is now the ninth highest rate in the nation. It gets even worse. The legislature authorized cities and counties to also impose sales taxes. The cities and counties have been adding to your sales tax burden one degree at a time and now the average local sales tax is 2.93%. When the average local sales tax is combined with the state sales tax that produces a combined rated of 9.43%. Arkansas’ combined sales tax rate is the third highest combined rate in the nation. What is the lowest state sales tax rate in the nation? Zero! (The comparison of Arkansas rates to other states is from State and Local Sales Tax Rates, 2019 by the Tax Foundation.) TEMPORARY TO PERMANENT TAX The last sales tax increase of ½% was a temporary tax to pay off a highway bond issue and it is scheduled to expire in 2023. But just like in 1937, now that the legislature is getting the money from a temporary tax, they don’t want to let it go, saying, “We are not imposing a tax, we are just continuing it.” The proposed new ½ percent sales tax will be on your November ballot. If passed the ½% sales tax is to be collected once the temporary tax expires in 2023. The politicians want to make sure you will never be able to end the new tax and are putting it in the Arkansas Constitution where it will be nearly impossible to repeal. Want to see if your legislators voted for this new tax which will be on your November ballot? Here are links to the Senate votes and the House votes. ONE DEGREE, ONE DEGREE, ONE DEGREE … MAY NOT WORK ON FROGS BUT ARKANSAS POLITICIANS ARE USING IT ON YOU. |
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NBC
From NBC’s Chuck Todd and Carrie Dann FIRST READ: Sanders is gaining ground with black voters. That’s a big deal heading into the race’s next phase. If you’d asked us this time last year about what the most obvious tangible challenges for Bernie Sanders would be in the 2020 primary electorate, Exhibit A or B would have been his limited past success with minority voters, specifically African Americans. Getty Images/Mark Ralston A white septuagenarian from one of the whitest states in the country, Sanders struggled in the 2016 primary in states with high black populations, losing every county in South Carolina, Mississippi and Alabama, all but one in Georgia, and all but two in Louisiana. In fact, nearly eight-in-ten black primary voters picked Hillary Clinton over him, according to exit polls.
And throughout 2019, Vice President Joe Biden dominated with black voters, comfortably getting as much as half their support nationwide, with no other candidate even in the same ballpark.
But now, that seems to be changing — and it may be the surest sign yet that the train is leaving the station for any of Sanders’ rivals to blunt his momentum heading into Nevada, South Carolina and the diverse Super Tuesday states.
A new NBC News/Wall Street Journal oversample of black voters finds that Sanders now essentially enjoys the same level of support as Biden among black Democratic primary voters, with each getting the backing of about a third, while no other Democratic candidate comes anywhere close to that.
In fact, the only other candidate demonstrating even a small sign of traction nationally among black primary voters appears to be former NYC Mayor Mike Bloomberg, and we’ll note that the poll was in the field BEFORE his pummeling over the stop-and-frisk policy on the debate stage Wednesday night.
What’s more, all registered black voters express about the same level of comfort about Sanders as they do about Biden.
A combined 65 percent are either enthusiastic (20 percent) or comfortable (45 percent) with Sanders, while a combined 30 percent express some discomfort. For Biden, it’s a combined 69 percent either enthusiastic (16 percent) or comfortable (53 percent), with 28 percent feeling more negative.
Much of Sanders’ strength here has to do with the same generational differences that we’ve seen among the electorate at large. The lion’s share of Sanders’ support among black primary voters comes from his standing with those under 50, while Biden gets by far the largest share of older African Americans.
By the way, the new numbers from the NBC/WSJ poll dovetail with some other data we saw yesterday: a new Winthrop University poll of South Carolina primary voters that found Sanders cutting Biden’s lead in the state to just five points.
DATA DOWNLOAD: And the number of the day is … 14 percent 14 percent.
That’s President Trump’s job approval rating with African American registered voters, according to[14 percent. That’s President Trump’s job approval rating with African American registered voters, according to our latest NBC/WSJ oversample of black voters. Eighty-four percent of them disapprove of the president, with 69 percent saying they disapprove strongly. There is, however, a significant gender gap. Among black men, 24 percent approve of the president, while among black women, it’s just 6 percent. ] our latest NBC/WSJ oversample of black voters.
Eighty-four percent of them disapprove of the president, with 69 percent saying they disapprove strongly.
There is, however, a significant gender gap. Among black men, 24 percent approve of the president, while among black women, it’s just 6 percent.
Four things we learned from the latest round of FEC reports Now that we’re well into 2020, the presidential candidates now must file FEC reports MONTHLY — which means we get more frequent peeks at their war chests.
NBC’s Ben Kamisar dug into the latest round of numbers after yesterday’s filing deadline, which covered the month of January. Here are four takeaways.
The New York billionaire shelled out $220.6 million in January alone. It’s an absolutely staggering figure, considering that the rest of the field — including billionaire Tom Steyer — spent $136.2 million in the same month COMBINED.
There’s a reason that both candidates have been working hard to tout recent fundraising bumps; they’d both been running VERY low on cash with the pricey Super Tuesday contests looming. Elizabeth Warren had $2.3 million cash on hand; Amy Klobuchar had $2.9 million.
Sanders ended January with $16.8 million in the bank — significantly more than everyone BUT self-funders Steyer and Bloomberg. Biden ended the month with $7.1 million in the bank, while Pete Buttigieg ended with $6.6 million.
Again, with the exception of the self-funders, every candidate spent more than they took in during the month of January, a sign of the spending frenzy heading into the Iowa caucuses. But Buttigieg and Warren had the highest burn rates by a significant margin (amount spent divided by amount raised), at 227% and 203%, respectively.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Minute millions
2020 Vision: Warren won’t reject super PAC money Speaking of campaign cash: One thing that may have been overlooked Wednesday night amid that brawl of a Democratic primary debate: Elizabeth Warren now says that she will NOT reject a super PAC that’s spending on her behalf in Nevada and South Carolina.
That’s a reversal for a candidate who has decried such big-money outside spending, and it’s another sign of how her campaign is taking a more aggressive approach in the effort to stay competitive in the narrowing field.
The group, called Persist PAC, has now placed about $850,000 in TV ads in South Carolina on Warren’s behalf, according to Advertising Analytics. That’s in addition to about $800,000 that the group has placed in Nevada.
Here’s what Warren said yesterday when questioned about her reversal on the issue of allowing a super PAC to boost her campaign, per NBC’s Deepa Shivaram:
“[W]e reached the point a few weeks ago where all of the men who were still in this race and on the debate stage all had either super PACs or they were multi-billionaires and could just rummage around their sock drawers and find enough money to be able to fund a campaign. And the only people who didn’t have them were the two women. And at that point, there were some women around the country who said, you know that’s just not right. So here’s where I stand, if all the candidates want to get rid of super PACs, count me in. I’ll lead the charge. But that’s how it has to be. It can’t be the case that a bunch of people keep them and only one or two don’t.”
On the campaign trail today: Most of the candidates spend at least part of the day in Nevada with one day to go until the caucuses. Pete Buttigieg, Joe Biden, Tom Steyer and Elizabeth Warren are in Las Vegas — as is President Trump for a rally. Amy Klobuchar is in Elko and Reno. Bernie Sanders starts the day in California before returning to a rally in Vegas in the evening. And Tulsi Gabbard has a pair of events in Utah.
Dispatches from NBC’s campaign embeds: Joe Biden, who has been protested throughout the campaign by activists against the deportations done during the Obama administration, said during a CNN town hall that he would halt all deportations in the first 100 days of his tenure, NBC’s Marianna Sotomayor reports. “Nobody is going to be deported in my first 100 days until we get through the part that we find out the only rationale for deportation will be whether or not, whether or not you’ve committed a felony while in the country,” Biden said.
And Amy Klobuchar retreated to friendlier territory after the heated Democratic debate, NBC’s Amanda Golden reports from Colorado: “Klobuchar started off her remarks by commenting on last night’s Democratic debate, saying, ‘As you know we had a debate last night. And I just thought it would be kind of nice to come to a place where, you know, everyone knows your name. People maybe are nice to you.’ She commented off-hand about the debate a few times during her remarks, saying at one point, ‘there’s a lot of great friends of mine up there on the debate stage, you couldn’t tell we were friends but yeah you know, we are.’”
THE LID: That escalated quickly Don’t miss [Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we reviewed some of the most intense moments from the Democratic debate. ]the pod from yesterday, when we reviewed some of the most intense moments from the Democratic debate.
ICYMI: News clips you shouldn’t miss Elizabeth Warren is stepping up her attacks on Bloomberg over NDAs, even writing up a contract for him that would let women out of the agreements.
Trump ousted his acting director of national intelligence after a briefing on Russia’s plan to interfere in the 2020 election, NBC’s Ken Dilanian and Andrea Mitchell report.
Nevada caucus-goers are struggling with what many see as a head-vs-heart decision.
Confused about how the Nevada caucuses work? Here’s your explainer.
The Democratic debate pulled in record viewership. |
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THE BLAZE
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One last thing … A surrogate for the presidential campaign of Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) got into a very testy exchange with a CNN host over the unpopularity of socialism. Brooke Baldwin accused Nina Turner, the co-chair of the Sanders campaign, of pivoting away from a question about socialism when she subtly accused her of bias. “There was just new polling … Read more
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POLITICO PLAYBOOK
DRIVING THE DAY
BREAKING — MORGAN ORTAGUS (@statedeptspox): “.@SecPompeo announced that the U.S. reached an understanding with the Taliban on a significant, nationwide reduction in violence across Afghanistan that will help to move our #AfghanPeaceProcess forward. This will advance progress toward a political settlement in #Afghanistan.” With Pompeo’s statement
NEW … IMPEACHMENT, THE ACQUITTAL OF PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP AND THE DURABILITY OF SEN. BERNIE SANDERS (I-Vt.) as a presidential candidate have scrambled the battle for control of Congress, and both Republicans and Democrats are working behind the scenes to gauge the impact, potential upside and pitfalls as they gear up for a pricey battle for control of the House of Representatives.
THE TUMULTUOUS POLITICAL CLIMATE has given fresh hope to REPUBLICANS, who were privately skeptical of TRUMP’S prediction that House Minority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY will be the next speaker come 2021. Internal polling commissioned by the NATIONAL REPUBLICAN CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEE showed that voters in districts targeted by both parties are skeptical of SANDERS — his approval rating is 42%, and disapproval stands at 53% — which they believe will help boost their candidates for the House. In these districts, voters prefer TRUMP, 48% to 43%. If SANDERS is atop the ticket, Republicans believe, they can credibly label every Democrat a socialist without fear of overreach.
BUT AT THE SAME TIME, DEMOCRATS feel they have intensity on their side. A private battleground district poll conducted by House Majority PAC — the Democratic super PAC — showed that a majority of those who supported convicting TRUMP and removing him from office said impeachment will be “very important” in their decision about who to vote for in November. Just 23% of those who supported acquittal said it was “very important” to their vote, and 37% said it was not important at all.
THAT SAME POLL showed dangers for TRUMP: His approval sat at 44%, while 53% disapproved. The president was underwater with voters when asked whether they approve of the job he is doing on health care and immigration. Forty-one percent approve of the job their own incumbent representative is doing, compared with 34% who disapprove.
NOTABLY, however, in the Democratic poll, the majority of voters — 52% — said they believed TRUMP should have been acquitted. And there are warning signs for Democrats running for Congress: A generic Democrat leads a generic Republican, 45-40, which indicates the GOP is within striking distance.
IN 2016, THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION discounted control of the House as being inconsequential. The White House said at the time that it was the Senate that mattered, since they could stop anything the House did dead in its tracks. Of course, TRUMP allies later came to regret that sentiment after the House impeached the president.
IF NOTHING ELSE, the TRUMP era has shown that the political winds blow stiff, and then not at all. In a few months, we could be talking about something completely different. The Republican poll … The Democratic poll
ALEX ISENSTADT: “The GOP’s new 2020 strategy: Invoke President Sanders”: “Bernie Sanders hasn’t won the Democratic primary — but down-ballot Republicans are having a field day acting like he has.
“Republicans up and down the ballot are already casting their Democratic rivals as socialist puppets who would remake the economy in Sanders’ collectivist vision. The play is straightforward: President Donald Trump has repelled college-educated suburban voters since he took office; Republicans want to win them back by arguing the alternative is worse.
“Arizona Sen. Martha McSally launched a TV ad titled ‘Bernie Bro’ likening her Democratic opponent, retired astronaut Mark Kelly, to the Vermont senator. North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis held a press conference last week linking his Democratic rivals to the Sanders-backed Green New Deal. In Michigan, a conservative group has aired a series of commercials that go after Democratic Sen. Gary Peters by invoking Sanders and his support for Medicare for All.” POLITICO
THE PRESIDENT told reporters on Air Force One on Thursday night that “he is considering [Rep.] Doug Collins among the candidates for permanent replacement for director of National intelligence.” OF COURSE, COLLINS (R-Ga.) is running against Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-Ga.), and Republican leadership would like to stop that intra-party fight. NYT’s Julian Barnes and Maggie Haberman on the maneuvering
WHY MAGUIRE WAS AXED … WAPO, by Ellen Nakashima, Shane Harris, Josh Dawsey and Anne Gearan: “A senior U.S. intelligence official told lawmakers last week that Russia wants to see President Trump reelected, viewing his administration as more favorable to the Kremlin’s interests, according to people who were briefed on the comments.
“After learning of that analysis, which was provided to House lawmakers in a classified hearing, Trump grew angry at his acting director of national intelligence, Joseph Maguire, in the Oval Office, seeing Maguire and his staff as disloyal for speaking to Congress about Russia’s perceived preference.
“The intelligence official’s analysis and Trump’s furious response ruined Maguire’s chances of becoming the permanent intelligence chief, according to people familiar with the matter who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive matter.” WaPo
— @SpeakerPelosi: “American voters should decide American elections — not Vladimir Putin. All Members of Congress should condemn the President’s reported efforts to dismiss threats to the integrity of our democracy & to politicize our intel community. … We await the election security briefing for Members on March 10.”
Good Friday morning.
DAY TWO OF BLOOMBERG-WAS-BAD COVERAGE … NYT, A1: “How Bloomberg Bungled a Debate That He Had Been Prepped For,” by Matt Flegenheimer, Alex Burns and Jeremy Peters: “Several people close to the Bloomberg campaign, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private concerns, said that the former New York mayor’s advisers had quietly acknowledged that Mr. Bloomberg would have to take a wholly different approach to the next debate, in South Carolina on Tuesday night.
“Mr. Bloomberg himself signaled plans to ratchet up attacks on the party’s nominal front-runner, Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, trying to shift focus to a progressive foil.”
— THE DEBATE drew nearly 20 million viewers. Deadline
THE BLOOMBERG NDA … ABC’S JOHN SANTUCCI (@Santucci): “@ABC has spoken with several women who expressed interest in telling their stories, but feared the prospect of retribution from the company, including significant financial losses for violating the terms of their confidentiality agreement by speaking out.”
WAPO’S PAUL KANE spoke to HARRY REID in Las Vegas: “Harry Reid says Sanders needs more than plurality to win Democratic nomination”: “Former Senate majority leader Harry M. Reid said Thursday that Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) or any presidential candidate should not get the Democratic nomination if they end the primary process in first place but are shy of the requisite majority of delegates. …
“‘Here is how I feel about this: I do not think that anybody — Bernie Sanders or anyone else — should simply get the nomination because they have 30 percent of the delegates and no one else has that many,’ Reid said in an interview in his office at the Bellagio, where he has a post with the MGM Resorts Public Policy Institute. ‘Let’s say that he has 35 percent. Well, 65 percent he doesn’t have, or that person doesn’t have. I think that we have to let the system work its way out. I do not believe anyone should get the nomination unless they have 50-[percent]-plus-one.’”
THE MONEY CHASE … MAGGIE SEVERNS: “Dems race to avoid going broke before Super Tuesday”: “Joe Biden, Pete Buttigieg, Amy Klobuchar and Elizabeth Warren each started the month scraping perilously close to the bottom of their campaign bank accounts, posing an existential threat to their candidacies as the Democratic primary goes national.
“They’re up against well-funded machines threatening to dominate the Democratic race: Bernie Sanders, whose recent rise in the polls has come during a major spending streak fueled by his online donors, and billionaire Mike Bloomberg, whose personal fortune has vaulted him into the middle of the campaign to take on President Donald Trump.
“While Sanders started February with nearly $17 million in the bank, according to campaign finance disclosures filed Thursday night, his next closest rival (non-billionaire class) was Biden, at $7.1 million. Warren was closest to the red, with just $2.3 million left in her account, while Buttigieg ($6.6 million) and Klobuchar ($2.9 million) were in between.” POLITICO
— “Dem megadonors stand pat as Bernie soars,” by Maggie Severns
WHERE THEY ARE … BIDEN will be in Las Vegas for a “precinct captain training with the Amalgamated Transit Union,” and an event in the evening. … BUTTIGIEG will be in Las Vegas for a roundtable with environmental activists and Native American leaders, an AFSCME pre-caucus event and a get-out-the-caucus rally. … KLOBUCHAR has an event in Elko and then in Reno. … WARREN will hold a get-out-the-caucus event with Julián Castro in Las Vegas. (Scheduling information for SANDERS was not available.)
TRIP PREVIEW — “As Trump prepares to visit, a wall rises in India,” by WaPo’s Joanna Slater in Ahmedabad: “The 49-year-old tailor has lived in this western Indian city for his entire life, but he has never seen anything quite like this.
“Ahead of President Trump’s visit to India next week, workers have descended on his modest neighborhood, resurfacing roads, laying concrete sidewalks where none existed, fixing street lamps and painting an overpass with fresh white paint. On a recent afternoon, they gingerly placed row upon row of saplings into a barren road divider.
“Trump arrives Monday for his first visit as president to the world’s largest democracy, and although he is staying for only 36 hours, the Indian government is leaving nothing to chance. The iconic Taj Mahal is being buffed and scrubbed before a sunset visit by Trump and the first lady. The world’s largest cricket stadium — so new it is not officially open — will host a rally for up to 120,000 people dubbed ‘Namaste Trump,’ or ‘Hello Trump.’” WaPo
TRUMP’S FRIDAY — The president will arrive at the Las Vegas Convention Center at 11:20 a.m. Pacific time. He will speak at a political rally at noon. Afterward, he’ll head to the airport, en route to Washington. He will return to the White House at 9:10 p.m.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
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CBS
“Face the Nation”: Joe Biden … Anthony Salvanto and Ed O’Keefe. Panel: Dan Balz, Susan Page, Jamelle Bouie and Lanhee Chen.
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CNN
“State of the Union”: Panel: Rick Santorum, Bakari Sellers, Linda Chavez and Alexandra Rojas.
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ABC
“This Week”: Panel: Rahm Emanuel, Chris Christie, Yvette Simpson and Sara Fagen.
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FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Josh Holmes, Jane Harman, Gillian Turner and Juan Williams. … Power Player: Bertie Bowman.
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NBC
“Meet the Press”: Panel: Kimberly Atkins, Hugh Hewitt, Dan Pfeiffer and Betsy Woodruff Swan.
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CNN
“Inside Politics”: Julie Pace, Abby Phillip, Paul Kane, Tamara Keith and Laura Barrón-López.
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Sinclair TV
“America This Week with Eric Bolling”: Rod Blagojevich … Bill O’Reilly … Gabby Orr.
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Gray TV
“Full Court Press with Greta van Susteren”: Rep. Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.) … Cat Zakrzewski.
PLAYBOOK READS
NEVER TWEET — “Intelligence employee pleads guilty to leaking classified info to journalists,” by USA Today’s Savannah Behrmann: “Henry Kyle Frese pleaded guilty Thursday in federal court to illegally transmitting national defense information to journalists. Frese, 31, was employed as a counterterrorism analyst for the Defense Intelligence Agency from February 2018 to October 2019, and held a top-secret clearance.
“Federal prosecutors say he researched multiple classified intelligence reports – some of which were unrelated to his job duties – and leaked information about a foreign country’s weapons systems to two journalists. Prosecutors said that Frese, who worked as both a contractor and a full-time employee for DIA, was in a relationship with one of the journalists [CNBC’s Amanda Macias] and sought to advance the reporter’s career.” USA Today
— NYT: “On at least two occasions, Mr. Frese retweeted Ms. Macias when she tweeted her articles containing classified information, prosecutors said.”
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THE DEBATE-WATCHER-IN-CHIEF — “Trump savoring scrambled Dem race, Bloomberg’s debate debut,” by AP’s Zeke Miller and Jonathan Lemire: “[A]fter a campaign rally in Phoenix, Trump summoned reporters to his office aboard Air Force One to join him in watching a replay of the debate on the return flight to Las Vegas. … Trump on Thursday placed a round of calls to confidants, echoing the thoughts he had posted on Twitter — at times with more colorful language — and opining that Bloomberg did not appear ready for the moment, according to two Republicans close to the White House who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about private conversations.” AP
MAXIMUM PRESSURE WATCH — “Global Terror-Finance Watchdog Set to Sanction Iran,” by WSJ’s Benoit Faucon and Ian Talley: “A global terror-finance watchdog agency is set to blacklist Iran, broadening a U.S. effort to isolate Tehran financially and potentially straining the already sanctions-battered Iranian economy.
“Iran’s blacklisting by the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force is expected to take place Friday and comes after European governments decided to join the U.S., according to American and allied officials.
“The task force’s decision will place financial transactions with Iran under additional scrutiny and escalate the pressure on the dwindling number of banks and businesses still dealing with the Islamic Republic to cut their ties.” WSJ
FUN READ … VANITY FAIR’S JOE POMPEO: “Inside the Building of Bernie’s Grassroots Celebrity Army,” with cameos from Sonic Youth, Cat Power, Cardi B, Killer Mike, Ariana Grande, Emily Ratajkowski, Chloë Sevigny and Boots Riley: “For the Sanders campaign, which has soared to the top of the fractious Democratic field, [the power of celebrity] is precisely the calculation. The candidate’s support is largely built on small-dollar donations and grassroots organizing, underpinned by a fervent cohort of millennial and Gen Z constituents who are fed up and fired up and clamoring for change. What better way to spread the gospel than through the social-media channels of influential tastemakers who resonate with the Generation X-and-under vote?”
PLAYBOOKERS
Send tips to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.
SPOTTED: Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin in first class on an American Airlines flight from LAX to DCA on Thursday. … Jared Kushner and Brad Parscale standing outside of the Mizumi restaurant at the Wynn hotel in Las Vegas on Thursday night. Pic … Andy McCabe at the Charlotte airport heading to D.C. Pic
SPOTTED at the 11th annual DVF Awards on Wednesday night at the Library of Congress, where Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was honored with a lifetime achievement award: Hillary Clinton, Diane von Furstenberg, Marty Baron, Maureen Dowd, Margaret Brennan, Brooke Baldwin, Karlie Allows, Chris and Jen Isham, Andrea Whittle and Iman.
TRANSITION — Diane Rinaldo is now SVP at Beacon Global Strategies. She previously was acting administrator of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration and acting assistant secretary of Commerce for communications and information.
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. How she got her start: “First, I worked at Brookings and then, when I was working in New York on Wall Street and I read a CBO report — I couldn’t put it down. It was so well-done and there was clearly a problem (the deficit was about $200 billion then). Since I am a committed political independent, I didn’t want to have to pick a side, so running the bipartisan Committee has been the best job I could have imagined.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.) is 8-0 … Rep. John Shimkus (R-Ill.) is 62 … Rep. Steven Palazzo (R-Miss.) is 5-0 … Rep. Scott DesJarlais (R-Tenn.) is 56 … Paul Teller, special assistant to the president for legislative affairs, is 49 … Mark Smith … Bob Sherman … Jeremy Gaines … Kevin Sheridan, founder of Sheridan Media Group (h/t Tim Burger) … Kristie Greco Johnson … former Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) is 73 … former Rep. Charles Boustany (R-La.) is 64 … former Rep. Phil Hare (D-Ill.) is 71 … Ryan Rudominer is 42 … Reuters’ Ross Colvin … Elise Lewis … Rodney Kazibwe … Stefan Smith is 33 … Rebeccah Propp … POLITICO’s Mona Zhang … Tricia Nixon Cox is 74 … LinkedIn CEO Jeff Weiner is 5-0 … King of Norway Harald V is 83 … Jordan Zaslav is 3-0 … retired Navy Capt. Mark Kelly is 56 … Scott Kelly … Joxel Garcia … James Callan …
… Ashley Etienne, communications director and senior adviser for Speaker Nancy Pelosi … Stand Up America’s Brett Edkins and Eloise Goldsmith (h/ts Ryan Thomas) … Yale President Peter Salovey is 62 … Kilmeny Duchardt … Jonathan Safran Foer is 43 … Shawn Reinschmiedt, co-founder and principal at M Street Insight (h/t Blain Rethmeier) … Philanthropy Roundtable’s Tori Bell … Anna Hubbard (h/t Brandon Shaw) … Ron Pollack, chair emeritus of Families USA … Sarah Beisler … Terry Mulcahy is 35 … NanHee Kim … Mitchell Delk … Karl Frisch is 42 … Lee Powell, WaPo video reporter … Holland & Knight’s Beth Viola (h/t Jon Haber) … Justin Vollmer is 31 … Paul Raymond is 37 … Stephen Smith, managing director at Purple Strategies … Jeong Lee … Michelle Cordero … Bob Chlopak, founding partner of CLS Strategies … David Geffen … David Wessel
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GATEWAY PUNDIT
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FRONTPAGE MAG
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They need a candle that smells like Russian interference. Unscented.
I don’t know what Russia did to interfere this time but this is a tremendous strategy
Step 1) interfere in a way that nobody can explain or even vaguely describe
Step 2) Congress and the media use all of their resources to convince Americans their votes don’t count
It’s like Trump’s strategy for winning where you never need any actual evidence of wins. Somewhere Putin is giving a speech:
“We are going to do so much interfering that you may even get tired of interfering. And you’ll say “please, please, it’s too much interfering”……”
Where are those ‘Without Evidence’ headlines when you need them?
Anybody who has watched every episode of Law and Order has been subjected to a huge amount of left wing bias.