Tuesday, October 15, 2019

John Kasich blasts Trump, says he will not support president in 2020


Former Ohio Gov. John Kasich ripped President Trump, accusing him of sowing division across the country with his presidency.
Kasich, a Republican who challenged Trump in the 2016 presidential primary, said Tuesday on "Your World" he will not be supporting him in 2020.
"No, I'm not because of the division," he said.
"I have no idea, maybe I'll write you in," he added, lamenting the fact he cannot write-in the late Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.
During the interview, host Neil Cavuto asked Kasich about his new book, "It's Up to Us," -- noting the former governor referred "obliquely" to Trump in the text.
Kasich said he does blame Trump for the tone he set in the White House.
"It's terrible," he said. "The division -- [the] attacking."
Kasich said he spoke to a principal at his daughter's former school who told him they noticed a wider acceptance of bullying in recent times.
"I blame Trump for a lot of that," he said.
He added he will not cast votes for either of Trump's Republican opponents, former Rep. Joe Walsh, R-Ill., and former Massachusetts Gov. William Weld.
He called the two men "fine people," maintaining he will choose someone else -- but also did not close the door on challenging Trump himself.
"I'm not going to do it if I couldn't win," he remarked.
Turning his attention to the left side of the political aisle, Kasich said although he sees Trump as a "divider," the "hard left" is wrongfully attacking Ellen DeGeneres for sitting with former President George W. Bush in Dallas Cowboys' owner Jerry Jones' suite at AT&T Stadium.
"The hard left is savaging her because she's at a football game with George Bush -- that's unacceptable on both sides, the division, the attacks, the personal things," he said.
"I want people to get out of their silos and I want people to realize they're special and they have gifts and that's what contributes to a stronger culture and a better world."
I hate to tell you Johnny but you're totally irrelevant...

Millennial Business Model

Starting about a decade ago, a fleet of well-known start-ups promised to change the way we work, work out, eat, shop, cook, commute, and sleep. 

These lifestyle-adjustment companies were so influential that wannabe entrepreneurs saw them as a template, flooding Silicon Valley with “Uber for X” pitches.

But as their promises soared, their profits didn’t. 

It’s easy to spend all day riding unicorns whose most magical property is their ability to combine high valuations with persistently negative earnings—something I’ve pointed out before. 

If you wake up on a Casper mattress, work out with a Peloton before breakfast, Uber to your desk at a WeWork, order DoorDash for lunch, take a Lyft home, and get dinner through Postmates, you’ve interacted with seven companies that will collectively lose nearly $14 billion this year. 

If you use Lime scooters to bop around the city, download Wag to walk your dog, and sign up for Blue Apron to make a meal, that’s three more brands that have never earned a dime or have seen their valuations fall by more than 50 percent.

These companies don’t give away cold hard cash as blatantly as Seated. But they’re not so different from the restaurant app. To maximize customer growth they have strategically—or at least “strategically”—throttled their prices, in effect providing a massive consumer subsidy. 

You might call it the Millennial Lifestyle Sponsorship, in which consumer tech companies, along with their venture-capital backers, help fund the daily habits of their disproportionately young and urban user base. 

And higher profits can only mean one thing: Urban lifestyles are about to get more expensive.

The idea that companies like Uber and WeWork and DoorDash don’t make a profit might come as a shock to the many people who spend a fair amount of their take-home pay each month on ride-hailing, shared office space, or meal delivery.

There is a simple explanation for why they’re not making money. 

The answer, for finance people, has to do with something called “unit economics.”

Let’s say you buy a subscription to a meal-kit company, which sends you fresh ingredients and recipes to cook at home. You pay $100 a month. The ingredients are tasty, so you renew for the second month. And the third. But by the fourth month, you’ve decided that you’ve learned enough basic tricks around the kitchen to handle roasted chicken or sautéed cod by yourself. You cancel the subscription.
Your lifetime value to this company is $400—or $100 for four months. Since you quit, the meal-kit company has to find the next “you” to keep growing. So they advertise on podcasts. Let’s say that, on average, this company can expect to add 100 new users if it spends $50,000 on podcast advertising—or $500 per new user.
If the company spends millions on podcast ads, its user base and revenue base will grow and grow. Outside analysts will gasp and marvel: This meal-kit thing is on fire! But look closer: If it costs $500 to add a new user, and the typical marginal user—like you—only spends $400 on meal kits, there is no path to profitability. 

The road leads to the red.

This example is not a hypothetical. The meal-kit company Blue Apron revealed before its public offering that the company was spending about $460 to recruit each new member, despite making less than $400 per customer. From afar, the company looked like a powerhouse. 

But from a unit-economics standpoint—that is, by looking at the difference between customer value and customer cost—Blue Apron wasn’t a “company” so much as a dual-subsidy stream: first, sponsoring cooks by refusing to raise prices on ingredients to a break-even level; and second, by enriching podcast producers. 

Little surprise, then, that since Blue Apron went public, the firm’s valuation has crashed by more than 95 percent.

Blue Apron is an extreme example. But its problems are not unique. 

WeWork’s valuation crumbled when investors saw the company was losing more than $1 billion a year. 

Peleton’s stock got crushed when investors balked at its growing sales and marketing costs. 

Lyft and Uber may collectively lose $8 billion this year, in large part because the companies spend so much money trying to acquire new customers through discounts, promotions, and credits. 

Unit economics will have its revenge—just as it did after the last dot-com boom.


How long do these people think they can operate at No Profits?

The media blackout on...

Hot Air

The media blackout on 
the Equality Act 
and girls' sports
Just yesterday a heartbreaking op-ed written by the mother of a Connecticut girl described as a rising star in high school track and field events. Her daughter had been sidelined by a pair of boys who identify as girls and have been blowing away the competition in state-level girls’ track meets. One thing she touched on was the efforts by Democrats to pass a piece of legislation known as the Equality Act.

If that bill becomes law, it will spread the trend of boys being allowed to compete in girls’ competitive sports across the nation, basically eliminating women’s sports as it currently exists. But you haven’t heard anything about this topic during the debates and precious little on cable news or in the larger newspapers. This lack of coverage exists despite the fact that every major Democratic presidential candidate has endorsed the Equality Act and promised to sign it into law if elected. The Daily Caller has a deep dive into this media blackout that’s definitely worth a look.

Democrats have made girls’ sports a 2020 campaign issue, but establishment media outlets are keeping their viewers and readers in the dark.
Every Democratic frontrunner has pledged their support of the Equality Act, which would make “gender identity” a protected characteristic under federal anti-discrimination law. Among other things, the bill would force public schools to expand female athletic teams to include biological males who identify as transgender girls.
Every Democratic frontrunner for president has pledged their support for the bill, which passed the House in May with unanimous Democratic support. But when establishment media outlets have covered the Equality Act in relation to the 2020 election, the girls’ sports issue has gone missing.

The study goes on to point out that only a single article on CNN’s website(from May of this year) mentions the issue of transgender athletes in girls’ sports. They recently hosted a candidate forum focused exclusively on LGBT issues and the subject was never mentioned once.

But CNN was hardly the only major media outlet that’s been silent on this question. The New York Times provided coverage of the House passage of the bill but included zero mentions of the athlete question. The Washington Post briefly mentioned the athlete question back when the bill was voted on in the House, and to their credit, they also published an op-ed from three top-level female athletes on the subject, but since then they haven’t mentioned it again.

The list goes on. This subject is receiving zero media attention outside of conservative outlets. The vast majority of the public likely knows little to nothing about it as they prepare to vote. And all of this is taking place while polls consistently show that a majority of voters across party lines believe that biological males have an unfair advantage against actual female athletes. Why isn’t this issue receiving more attention? It might be because most MSM figures know how unpopular it would be so it’s probably better to simply not bring it up.

There’s another debate tonight with all of the potential nominees who have endorsed the Equality Act on the stage. Do you suppose any of them will be asked about this? I wouldn’t hold my breath waiting.

Denmark to strip jihadists of nationality amid fear of returns.

Denmark said Monday it planned to strip dual-national suspected jihadists of citizenship to stop them from returning to Danish soil, as Turkey's deadly offensive in Syria sends Isis members fleeing.

"These people turned their backs on Denmark and used violence to fight against our democracy and freedoms. They constitute a threat to our security. They are undesirable in Denmark," Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said in a statement.
The Social Democratic government's initiative, which is backed by a majority of parties in parliament, would involve stripping the citizenship of dual nationals while they are abroad, with only an expedited administrative decision.
Until now, a court ruling was needed.
"There is a risk that the Kurdish-controlled Isis camps in the border region collapse, and that foreign fighters with Danish citizenship make their way to Denmark," Frederiksen said.
The expedited bill will be considered by parliament in the coming weeks and could be adopted within a month.
In early September, Denmark's justice minister said there were 36 jihadists who had travelled from Denmark to fight in the region.
Among them, 10 had their residency permits withdrawn and 12 had been jailed.
In March, under the previous government, Denmark adopted a law depriving children born abroad to Danish jihadists the right to citizenship.
https://www.thelocal.dk/20191015/denmark-to-strip-jihadists-of-nationality-amid-fear-of-returns

Destroying America’s History

American Thinker

Destroying America’s History 
One Icon at a Time

Columbus Day brought a refreshing reminder that leftists are effectively erasing America’s heritage as an important step in transforming America into a socialist state. 

As I look, “Happy Indigenous Peoples” day is approaching 100K tweets, which is simply advancing the narrative that was already set in motion by leftists across America. 

teacher posted some of the proud pictures from her propagandized little ones with sayings like “Christopher Columbus didn’t find America,” and “Christopher Columbus is a really mean man.”  How charming. 

A Christopher Columbus statue was torn down in Los Angeles in 2018 and several others were vandalized this year. 

Americans were furious in 2001 when they saw that the Taliban had destroyed Bamiyan Buddha statues in Afghanistan.  The prevailing cultural zeitgeist at the time ran clearly against toppling statues.  Don’t these third-world barbarians know that they are destroying world culture?  It helped elevate the Taliban’s evil in the eyes of the world. 

Murderous Islamist thugs harboring terrorists?  That’s pretty bad.  Destroyers of world culture?  Call in the Marines!  Even the liberal American media were outraged.

Less than twenty years later, destroying monuments is becoming a national sport in America with little outcry and support from the media.  Leftists have become the Taliban, which is no surprise since the goals are similar.  When attempting to force a twisted worldview on society, overthrowing perceived enemies and any connection to a different past is essential.  

When a 200-year old monument of Christopher Columbus was smashed in Baltimore a couple years back, a sign was hung on it that read, “The future is racial and economic justice.”  In case anyone thought this was just America’s youth acting out as opposed to Marxist-inspired destruction, the act was narrated on YouTube and referenced “capitalist exploitation of labor.” 

The leftists started with Confederate monuments, which made a good test to see what kind of resistance they would face.  It was a crafty and evil first play.  The statue destroyers weren’t terribly discriminating. Monuments to peace and to those who opposed slavery were torn down next to the others.
Kicking a toppled Confederate monument in Durham, NC (Twitter video screen grab)

Few Americans roused themselves to resist, especially after media lies and manipulation around Charlottesville. 

The Left’s effort was never about destroying America’s legacy of slavery.  Democrats have been on the side of slavery and then racism at every turn in America’s history.  They were simply starting with the easiest target to normalize their far more insidious goal, which was overthrowing America’s attachment to its history and the ideals this represented.

The shock effect is long gone.  Tearing down a statue in America is now treated as little more than background noise.  This attack on American history will not end until every monument that can’t be co-opted for the leftist agenda is overthrown.

Of course, it starts before the toppling of the statues.  While on the official tour for George Washington’s Mount Vernon homestead, it was hard not to notice that more time was spent talking about Washington the slave owner than Washington the great general or founding father. 

The momentum to overthrow a national icon starts subtly, but it builds once the ground is set.  Tear down Columbus and then start mentioning Washington’s history fighting American Indians.  He becomes just another offender of a mythical “Indigenous People’s Day.” This couples nicely with the already rampant attacks on him as a slave owner.  It was seen as good news when a San Francisco school chose only to cover a George Washington mural instead of destroying it.   
  
My daughter recently told me that she was writing an essay on Thomas Jefferson in her high school class.  The topic?  Jefferson’s problematic history with slavery.  That Jefferson is the author of the Declaration of Independence and one of history’s greatest thinkers is irrelevant in the leftist mind.    

Icons are flawed men and women of their time.  But, they are icons because they did something great and meaningful for America.  We study George Washington and Thomas Jefferson because of the incredible contributions these great men made to freedom, liberty, and self-governance.  The Left uses them as an opportunity to destroy America. 

It’s not just monuments on the menu of destruction.  Kate Smith is a woman who was once awarded the Presidential Medal of Honor for her patriotism and powerful renditions of Irving Berlin’s “God Bless America.”  Her statues are now being torn down even as teams like the Yankees and Flyers refuse to play a song that was once representative of America itself. 

A colleague told me that he considers Lee Greenwood’s “God Bless the U.S.A.” to be a racist anthem because it is sung by people he considers racists.  If such a thing existed, I’m sure he would gladly tear down a Greenwood statue.  But, that’s not necessary.  There is already cultural pressure to avoid playing Greenwood’s powerful patriotic anthem in any place that is not a distinctly conservative setting.  The very idea of being patriotic and proud of America is under attack.     

All of this is an attempt to erase America’s history and it should be opposed fiercely.   It is part of the overall effort to undermine America’s values and freedom and is par for the course on the socialist menu.  It is also the toxic offspring of political correctness and racial tribalism.  It all serves the same purpose, which is the fundamental transformation of America into a Marxist state.

If you can damage Thomas Jefferson enough, then the Declaration of Independence must be compromised by extension.  I was mildly surprised when touring the University of Virginia recently that our tour guide spoke so positively about Thomas Jefferson and what he meant to the school.  That won’t last.  In a few years, that beloved statue will be either covered or vandalized, which will serve as a depressing bookend in the same town where American statue destruction exploded into the national consciousness.    
  
If you can do enough damage to the founding fathers, then it is far easier to overthrow the Constitution, or just ignore it.   

I was at Hillsdale College for their 175th Anniversary a couple weeks back.  While there, I walked past all the statues on campus; statues of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Ronald Reagan, Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln, and a “Last Full Measure of Devotion” statue dedicated to the many students who died fighting for the Union in the Civil War.  There are also two statues of non-Americans who advanced the ideals of liberty; Winston Churchill and Margaret Thatcher.  The students study the great words of all of these patriots who contributed so much to America and freedom.

It was a stark reminder of what is being lost in this country.  The school looks to its past and the unchanging values that have sustained America since its founding.  It is inspiring to see.  But, it is also a sad reminder that it is now an anomaly.  In today’s America, a student would learn more about America’s history and government by watching a couple hours of School House Rock videos than what they will get in twelve years of school.     

Americans need to recognize these attacks on America’s history for their intended purpose.  A made-up Indigenous People’s Day is not intended to honor American Indians.  It is just one more front in the war to destroy America.   

Fletch Daniels blogs at deplorabletouchdown.com and can be found on twitter @fletchdaniels.              

The Timely Resurgence of Refined Paleoconservatism


 

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not represent the views of Townhall

Most people considered Donald J. Trump’s successful 2016 bid for the Republican nomination a monumental intra-party shift. In one respect, this holds merit. Trump’s unique modus operandi did set him apart, as he gained popularity by neglecting to use a politician’s filter, and “telling things how they were.” He said (and still says) whatever he wants, whenever he wants. His policy prescriptions, however, do not wield the same pristine originality. In fact, his political orientation resembles that of Patrick J. Buchanan, a wildly influential former Nixon aide (among other accolades), and lifelong “Paleocon.” Paleoconservatism is a political stance that posits the importance of strong borders, economic protectionism, and vehement anti-interventionism. Does this sound familiar? That’s because it’s made a return of Lazarus-scale proportions.        

For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. This is, of course, an axiom of Newtonian physics — but also an oddly consistent phenomenon in the political sphere. Moderation and polarization have mirrored each other across party lines for decades, and our current predicament follows suit. The contemporary political scene is one of partisan dipoles in gladiatorial combat, both seeking to reinvent themselves in a time of identity crisis and contention. For the Democrats, this (so far) involves careening towards sinistral madness. Hollow promises of “free everything!” fused with deafening shrieks for impeachment are just two elements of the Left’s rhetorical cacophony. Even Barack Obama, Messiah not long ago, is an anachronism in the eyes of the emergent radical faction. Obamacare? Why not do away with private insurance altogether, as Senator Warren (D-MA), Senator Sanders (D-VT), and NYC Mayor de Blasio have all suggested? Deportation of illegal immigrants? No, no, Barry, per Julian Castro. That’s how fascists operate a country! In fact, ICE needs to be abolished, pronto, as Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez asserts.

While it’s true that the mirroring effect mentioned earlier is a clear chicken vs. egg dilemma, one thing arises as certain: the Democratic Party’s leftward skid is being catalyzed in the face of an unfamiliar beast that had been dormant for over forty years pre-Trump — a refined resurgence of Paleoconservatism headed by the blunt and unapologetic 45th President. The Republican votership has abandoned the failed doctrine of John Bolton and Bill Kristol for a rejuvenated Pat Buchanan-style philosophy. Neoconservatism is in the midst of a long-overdue swan song. Gone are the days of shortsighted yet perpetual intervention; of mindless adherence to globalism under the appeasement guise of Laissez-Faire capitalism; of timid behavior in the face of career liars and charlatans. The time is optimal for conservatives, and all Americans for that matter, to embrace the patriotism, peace, and prosperity that Trump’s distilled Paleoconservatism strives to offer. These are ideals worth protecting, and long-standing pillars of the American identity, all of which serve to combat the dismal dogma of the modern Left. 

The American Left of today is hellbent on monopolizing the past, present, and future. They revise and scrutinize our history, reminding us constantly of our nation’s past moral missteps. Yet, somehow, the present is also worse than ever! Ideologues like Senator Bernie Sanders (D-VT) tell us that we are currently living under “the most corrupt president in modern American history.” Not even the future is spared from the Democrats’ doomsday outlook. Remember, if we don’t fork over more of our income, the planet will implode in 12...10...5...1 year(s)! The pigtailed prophet, Greta of Stockholm, warned us! Were Bill Nye’s propaganda clips not enough to sway you stubborn fools? Alas, it’s time to trust the folks who brought you San Francisco and its feces-paved boulevards with saving the planet! 

Spare me… I’d sooner trust Edward Scissorhands to give me a back massage. 

This all-tense-encompassing negativity corrodes our national pride and cohesion, blow by blow. If our Founding Fathers are presented as nothing but racists and subjugators, then why are the nation’s founding documents even worth reading? If our president is a despotic traitor, then why should anyone be satisfied with the present state of affairs? And if our planet is on the brink of catastrophe, then what’s the point of raising children? Aren’t they destined to drown in a tidal surge, or be burned to a crisp by a raging solar flare? 
This is nothing but a coercion effort — one which the Left hopes will convince us to cede freedoms in exchange for vaguely defined progress, and “disaster prevention.” President Trump, despite his crude nature and Twitter addiction, offers a fresh brand of Paleoconservatism that lacks the religious sanctimony and fundamentalist undertones of prior decades, countering this power grab in utero. It is a philosophy which allows us to take pride in our country’s history; to recognize and appreciate the timeless values enshrined in our Constitution; to cherish our many freedoms; to realize our potential, and contribute confidently towards our nation’s economic might; to enjoy peace through strength while avoiding costly foreign conflicts; to perhaps create, love, and care for a family without imposed guilt; and finally, to look into the future with wide-eyes and the internal assurance that things will turn out just fine.  


All the World’s a Stage

American Thinker

All the World’s a Stage 
for 
Left-wing Activism

Why doesn’t someone do something about left-wing activism?
I’d always comfortably assumed that, despite the clamor of LGBT activists, there were really very few gays and transgenders. But the Audacious Epigone says that studies show that in the 18-29 cohort 13 percent now identify as gay or lesbian and 3 percent identify as transgender. Oy.

Of course they do. Their diversity administrators and the activists are telling them, K thru grad school, that gay rights is exactly the same as civil rights by race and sex. And Obergefell says that gay marriage is equivalent to traditional marriage. Plus, gay is cool. What do you expect the kiddies to think?

Look, I’m all in favor of being nice to gays. But telling kids that gay marriage is the same as living as man and wife? Having a full-on Democratic presidential debate about gay issues? It’s getting close to a crime against humanity. But you’d better not disagree, if you want to keep your job.

Then we have the spectacle of a spectrum teen being used as a stage prop to push the end-of-the-world cult presently called Climate Change. It’s interesting, isn’t it, how this parallels the Children’s Crusade. La Wik:
A boy begins to preach in either France or Germany, claims that he had been visited by Jesus, who instructed him to lead a Crusade in order to peacefully convert Muslims to Christianity.
A girl begins to preach in Sweden, claims she knows the science, that instructs her to peacefully save the planet.

The point is that, whether we are talking about a boy in 1212 or a girl in 2019, no boy or girl of tender age is thinking about saving Moslems or modern-day deplorables unless he or she is prompted by the moral campaigns of activists. And that goes for Joan of Arc. The climate change frenzy is getting close to a crime against humanity. But where is the notable or the politician that dares to oppose it?

Or homelessness. In Venice Beach, California, it is really getting out of hand. But what can you do after the activists have litigated
last year’s ruling in Martin v. Boise, when the Ninth Circuit held that punishing homeless people for sleeping on the street when there was no shelter available elsewhere violated their Eighth Amendment right against cruel and unusual punishment.
Or the Kavanaugh nomination. What do you do when the Dems and the activists get together to plunge a knife in a nominee’s back because he might be the fifth vote to reverse Roe v. Wade? And the media cheers it on.

I guess this all came together for me after watching Jordan B. Peterson being interviewed by a BBC North London luvvie over his 12 Rules. Was the luvvie interested in Peterson’s ideas? Oh no, he was all worried about the impact of 12 Rules on the left’s sacred agenda: the white male threat, equality, women’s rights, gay rights. He wasn’t really interested in investigating the issues raised in Peterson’s book, but in pushing back against Peterson’s critique of the left in the context of the threats from Trump, populism, and the alt-right. Why was the luvvie taking that line? Because left-wing activism.

But then I watched the BBC’s Andrew Neil gently suggesting to a young Extinction Rebellion activist lady -- who was wearing a tasteful pendant featuring the XR logo -- that the science, the UN’s IPPC reports, doesn’t agree with XR’s emotional appeal. So why don’t they just cool it and leave climate change to the adults? Sometimes the activists can go too far, even for North London luvvies.

What are we going to do about the activists? They are the tip of the spear of the progressive project and we don’t know what to do about them and how to counter them. The activists and their protests provide a moral framework, a decent drapery, to clothe the nakedness of ruling class power lust.

Now I have attempted to begin the task of dismantling the moral pretensions of the activism culture, and last week I hauled in Nietzsche to show that our modern activists are stage actors, just putting on political theater.
This is the way to understand our lefty activists, from AntiFa to Extinction Rebellion. AntiFa is acting out the idea of a street mob. But it is all just a show. Extinction Rebellion is going through the motions of a revolution to force the powers-that-be to get serious about climate change. But really, it is all theater.
They are merely actors acting out a show, and behind the scenes the real power players are the ones pulling the strings.

But we won’t put the lefty activists to shame until we turn up the lights on a new moral narrative that makes lefty activism look like back-street game of Three Card Monte.

Christopher Chantrill @chrischantrill runs the go-to site on US government finances, usgovernmentspending.com. Also get hisAmerican Manifesto and his Road to the Middle Class.

Selling U.S. Manufacturing To China Did Not Make It More Free



It’s prudent to keep an eye on China. But what if the bigger threat is within?

A section of foreign policy realists has written a lot about why a U.S. rivalry with China is inevitable. In the liberal idealist heydays of the 1990s, when the Clinton administration was paving the way for “normalizing” China through the World Trade Organization, the conventional wisdom was that once the U.S. market was open to China, everything would fall into place, and the power of the market and capitalism would lead to the spread of human rights, democracy, and rule of law.

This liberal idealism, which is enormously common and often comes up in strategic talks, is needless to mention naïve and utopian. Nevertheless, it was the conventional wisdom that China, due to the burden of its global responsibilities, would become a responsible stakeholder and global citizen through greater market access.

Learning from Historical Rising Powers

A few conservatives and a section of the foreign policy realists warned that would never happen because the history of great powers suggests otherwise. John Mearsheimer, in his seminal work “The Tragedy of Great Power Politics,” outlined why China, like every other rising great power in history, would try to create its own sphere of influence and try to push the United States out of Asia-Pacific, which the United States, as a maritime power, can never afford to allow.

Naturally, the chance of a rivalry remains. In his book Graham Allison talked about the Thucydides Trap, where he charted 16 historical instances in which a rising power tried to push an established power, resulting in a rivalry, or worse, a conflict. But the best and most underrated work in the last few years was an essay by Robert Kaplan, who wrote:
The American foreign policy elite does not like to talk about culture since culture cannot be quantified, and in this age of extreme personal sensitivity, what cannot be quantified or substantiated by a footnote is potentially radioactive. … Anyone who travels in China, or even observes it closely, realizes something that the business community intuitively grasps better than the policy community: the reason there is little or no separation between the public and private domains in China is not only because the country is a dictatorship, but because there is a greater cohesion of values and goals among Chinese compared to those among Americans.
Even though China is nominally Marxist, it also has a Confucian cultural backbone, and “within that system, Confucianism still lends a respect for hierarchy and authority among individual Chinese, whereas American culture is increasingly about the dismantling of authority in favor of devotion to the individual,” said Kaplan. “Confucian societies worship old people; Western societies worship young people.”

China Is Indeed a Rising Power Threat

Anyone who has observed the last few days with the NBA fiasco should go back and read Kaplan’s essay and see how prophetic he was. China is one of the greatest rising great power threats the United States now faces, greater than imperial Spain, imperial Germany, Nazi Germany, imperial Japan, and even the Soviet Union.

The reason is simple. America was a rising power when it faced imperial Spain as well as Kaiser’s Germany. America had allies such as the British empire when it was locked in an existential struggle with the Nazis and the Japanese. And America was the only country without any damage to its own mainland. With the biggest economy in the globe, it faced an autarkic Soviet Union, which was more damaged by its own ideological dogma than anything else.

The role is now reversed. Washington is now the tired hegemon, carrying the security burden of the world with a stagnating economy and a lost manufacturing base, with its military spares manufactured in China. More importantly, Washington is beset by the same ideological free-market dogma the Soviets had with autarky, and facing a growing power.

Consider this. If the Soviets were not autarkic and could enjoy the benefits of free trade with the West, do you think America or the West would have enjoyed the technological advantage it had during the 1980s? The answer is no.

American businesses would have outsourced all the jobs to cheap Soviet labor, and the USSR would have simply ripped off the technical knowhow and intellectual property, while maintaining the advantage of the iron core discipline of the Soviet state. This is exactly what China is doing: benefiting from Western trade and hollowing out Western manufacturing, while maintaining a hawk’s devotion to the pursuit of great power and glory.

Why Woke Corporations Are the Real Threat

China is a threat, but far bigger threats are the woke corporatists who would sell their mother for the market. Footballers and female soccer players can take a knee against the American flag, but they’re silent and self-censorious about any atrocity in Hong Kong.
Apple can silently delete the Taiwan flag emoji to appease its overlords in Beijing. Google can refuse to work with the Pentagon, while helping Beijing implement the strongest secretive surveillance state. Hollywood actors can stop working in the Southern states because local abortion laws hurt their feelings, but they have no problem prostituting themselves for the vast Chinese market despite actual concentration camps in Xinjiang. This is the logical extreme of the free-market dogma, which is a dogma because it has forgotten that sometimes the market should be subservient to national interest.

As Epictetus once wrote, “He is a wise man who does not grieve for the things which he has not, but rejoices for those which he has.” The seeds of destruction are often within, and the loss of a way of life is often felt when it is lost. One should keep that wisdom in mind as a former Cold War rival returns to form in the Far East.​

Sumantra Maitra is a doctoral researcher at the University of Nottingham, UK, and a senior contributor to The Federalist. His research is in great power-politics and neorealism. 

Donald Trumps Needs To..

Townhall

Donald Trump Needs To Be Careful

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not represent the views of Townhall.com.
Donald Trump Needs To Be Careful
Source: AP Photo/Evan Vucci
There are a lot of people in this country who would crawl naked over broken glass to vote for President Donald Trump again, and there are likely just as many who’d do the same to vote against whichever Democrat ends up behind the wheel of that clown car primary. Of course, there is a slice of the electoral pie for whom the exact opposite can be said. The question the president has to concern himself with is whether or not there are enough of the remaining slices of the population who’ll pull the lever for him just over a year from now. That’s the argument he has to make.

There’s a belief that the economy will be enough to push the president over the line, and traditionally that would be true. But Donald Trump is anything but a traditional president.

The thing about the economy is people, once it’s been good for awhile, start to take it for granted. It’s like the tax cuts – where people saw a noticeable increase in their take-home pay, then voted out a bunch of the very people who cut taxes to put it there. Elections aren’t about rewarding what someone has done, they’re about getting behind what someone wants to do.

President Trump needs to spend a little more time making the case for what he’d do in a second term, not just how bad a first term of whatever Democrat wins the nomination would be.

The strength of the economy does weird things to voters. When they don’t have to worry about finding a job, when things are good, the minds of the public can wander to crazy ideas.

The thing about liberty is it’s always under threat from unscrupulous people. When people are struggling, they’re more likely to follow someone telling them they have the answers, that a government plan will solve or address whatever it is they’re up against. But when things are good, minds are open to the same seductions, just for different reasons.

With the unemployment rate at an incredible 3.5 percent, and more people working now than ever before, Democrats can effectively appeal to people’s better nature with one of their favorite tactics: making emotional appeals.

To sell their horrible programs, Democrats always try to make an emotional argument. Their proposals don’t stand up to logical thought, but emotion overrides logic. That’s part of why they’ve turned their “crazy” up to 11, keeping their base in a “TRUMP IS A RUSSIAN PUPPET” or “TRUMP’S TAX RETURNS” frenzy. As 2018 showed, it works.

The emotional appeal in good economic times is about those who are still struggling. “If things are going well, why not do something for those who aren’t keeping up?” the argument goes. That is usually coupled with a threat, subtle but important, that, “Things could go south for you, and you could need this help in the future too.”

They seem absurd when you think about them rationally, but they aren’t rational arguments, they are emotional ones. And while they won’t work on most people, to win a presidential election you don’t have to appeal to most people.

So as crazy as student loan debt forgiveness or “free” health care are to rational people, those pitches aren’t being made to rational people. And they vote too.

To counter this, President Trump needs to make an affirmative case for a second term beyond Democrats are awful. Because Democrats are awful, and have been awful for a long time, yet voters have elected them; voters gave them the House of Representatives just last year.

The media will be working to defeat the president, Democrats will be working to defeat the president. The fight for the undecided voters will be a struggle to convince people to ignore their emotions and embrace their logic, but some voters don’t have that ability. Luckily, that’s where Donald Trump excels.

No Republican is better at stirring up emotional support in his base while advancing conservative accomplishments. But the president needs to expand that base. Red meat is great, and the base will always eat it up, the trick will be to dangle enough chicken or fish into the middle to get other voters to run to his side. It’s a very narrow tightrope to walk.

Derek is the host of a free daily podcast (subscribe!) and author of the book, Outrage, INC., which exposes how liberals use fear and hatred to manipulate the masses.

Why Trump Is Absolutely Right To Get U.S. Troops Out Of Syria



Moving American troops from Syria would be perhaps the most far-sighted thing Trump does as president, and would benefit the United States in the years to come.

In a surprising late-night statement (late for the U.K., anyway), last week the White House declared that American troops will move aside and let Turkey invade Syria. “Turkey will soon be moving forward with its long-planned operation into Northern Syria,” the statement said, adding, “The United States Armed Forces will not support or be involved in the operation, and United States forces, having defeated the ISIS territorial ‘Caliphate,’ will no longer be in the immediate area.”

The statement continued, “The United States Government has pressed France, Germany, and other European nations, from which many captured ISIS fighters came, to take them back, but they did not want them and refused. The United States will not hold them for what could be many years and great cost to the United States taxpayer.”

Even though I am a conservative foreign policy realist, my research deals with great powers and neorealism, and I regularly advocate restraint and retrenchment and amoral realpolitik in these pages, I never in my wildest dreams anticipated waking up to an actual realpolitik move from the White House.

Naturally, the laments are severe. From Sen. Lindsey Graham to The Guardianand BBC, everyone is accusing the White House of giving up on U.S. responsibilities, and worse, “stabbing the Kurds in the back.” None of those is true. Moving American troops would be perhaps the most far-sighted thing Trump does as president, and it would be beneficial to the United States in the years to come.

Why Some Don’t Think So

Two separate arguments arise in opposition to this decision. One, that Americans have backstabbed the Kurds. The argument is false prima facie because the Americans were not in Syria to be the Kurds’ bodyguards.

The Kurds have been fighting the Turks for centuries, and the modern Kurdish forces, who are mostly followers of heavy left-wing Stalinist ideology, were allies due to their convergence of interests. In international relations, the theory of balance of threat suggests that whenever a new threat emerges, a balancing coalition develops. Historically, that might even include some fairly different and opposite forces, such as a revolutionary Joseph Stalin and reactionary Winston Churchill coming together to square off against Adolf Hitler.

Likewise, the American troops were positioned in the Middle East due to the simple reason that an Islamist sect had metastasized and formed a statelet, which turned expansionist, and a balancing coalition was needed. The balancing coalition had strange bedfellows. When Russians were bombing Aleppo, Western forces were simultaneously bombing Raqqa.

But that threat of ISIS as a state is over. ISIS is still there, but not as a state and definitely not as an expansionist nation. In fact, the majority of ISIS fighters and their families, including those deemed to be poor, brainwashed refugees by bleeding-heart nongovernmental organizations, are now threatening to take over refugee camps. Regardless, they are not an expansionist nation-state and should not require regular American presence.

While the Kurds were allies during the war against the Islamic State, they were also benefiting from generous American aid, weapons, and air cover. That need has now disappeared. If the U.S. Senate wishes to continue the new mission of “protecting the Kurds,” it has to authorize that.

The U.S.’s Biggest Challenge Is China, Not the Middle East

The second argument is about American presence itself in the region, something every foreign policy realist worth their salt opposed. The reality is this: America faces the biggest challenge ahead, not from the Middle East but from China. China — a great power, the second-largest economy in the world, with massive naval buildup, research in AI and genetics, a revanchist attitude in Asia, and which acts as the biggest influencer in American domestic politics — deserves the most attention, not some strategic backwater in Mesopotamia.

The idea that Iraq and Syria are important to American interests is from the 1980s and refuses to die. In reality, it has always been a battleground of three rival forces in the region: the Shiite Persians, the Sunni Ottomans, and the Orthodox Russians. They are still the three forces still vying for power in the same region. It is understandable given that dissident rebel groups within the three powers are directly related to what happens in the region, something Westerners have no need to worry about.

Turkey, Russia, and Iran were never historically natural allies, and they do not have natural alignment. Their proxies and satellites also differ from each other in the region. The only reason the three powers are not at each other’s throats is that a Western troop presence is stopping an all-out proxy war and providing all the three forces an alternative target to channel their rage.

The Turks support the Sunni proxies in the region, which are naturally opposed to a Shia Iran and Russian alliance with their satellite Bashar Assad. The most prudential course of action is, therefore, to let these forces duke it out and carve out their equilibrium. If in the process these forces get bogged down, bleeding each other in the region, and taking the security burden for stabilizing the region, it’s a win for the Western forces looking for ways to bail out.

U.S. Interests in the Middle East Have Shifted

Unfortunately, this balance of power-focused, amoral realpolitik is a way of foreign policy that doesn’t come naturally to the current establishment in London and Washington, which are used to thinking in post-Cold War humanitarian terms. A colder, rational strategy of offshore balancing, a preferred realist alternative, is often discarded.

I am fairly certain President Trump has not read the details of offshore balancing, or for that matter, the grand strategy of “bloodletting,” in which you let your opponents bleed each other. But he is nevertheless correct in his instincts.

The need to form a balancing coalition against the Islamic State disappeared with the end of the official Caliphate. The Europeans who are supposed to be the most affected by refugees should be spending their own money and manpower in guarding Europe’s border with Turkey. And Turkey, Russia, and Iran should balance each other in Mesopotamia with their own blood and treasure.

It is still early, and the bureaucrats and politicians have a way of slowing things down, but if Trump can pull out of the Middle East, conserve his resources, and focus all his attention to the growing menace of China, that is more farsighted a move than any post-Cold War American president thus far, and should be applauded.

Sumantra Maitra is a doctoral researcher at the University of Nottingham, UK, and a senior contributor to The Federalist. His research is in great power-politics and neorealism.