Friday, November 8, 2019

Liawatha Warren Finds Something New To Pander To.

Elizabeth Warren: Black Trans, Nonbinary People Are ‘Backbone of Our Democracy’

“Black trans and cis women, gender-nonconforming, and nonbinary people are the backbone of our democracy,” said a Thursday statement from Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA). 

BWHAHAHA! This stupid bitch will say anything for votes.

How soon will she be offering blowjobs for votes like Petey Buttdigger?

America Is Not...

America Is Not A Democracy, 

And 

We Don’t Want It To Be

Our Founding Fathers were keenly aware about the risks of governing solely by majority rule, which is why they gave us a constitutional republic laden with checks and balances.

It is widely assumed today that the government’s most fundamental duty is to cater to the whims of popular opinion. The case for eliminating the Electoral College generally hinges on this misguided idea—that some form of national popular vote would better reflect the will of the country.

Leftist website MoveOn.org implores, “Hold presidential elections based on popular vote. One person one vote to determine the one leader who is supposed to answer to all the people of the country.” Hillary Clinton expressed on CNN, “I believe strongly that in a democracy, we should respect the will of the people and to me, that means it’s time to do away with the Electoral College and move to the popular election of our president.”

Similarly, the movement to “pack” the Supreme Court typically grounds its argument on the opinion that it would allow for government to conform more to popular demand: “It might sound drastic … But it [court packing] would help reverse something even more threatening to democracy: indefinite minority rule,” lectures one professor.

“Court-packing is bad, but allowing an entrenched majority on the Supreme Court to represent a minority party that refuses to let Democratic governments govern would not be acceptable or democratically legitimate, either,” warns the New Republic (emphasis added).

The idea of a national referendum whereby voters nationwide would have the right to vote directly on key issues has gained in popularity due to angst over perceived government gridlock. The pervasive attitude today suggests that government ought to bend more readily to the will of the majority. Such thinking, however, is not only shallow and dangerous. It lacks a fundamental understanding of American government.

To be sure, majority rule is a key principle of the U.S. government. It was never intended, however, to be the only principle. Throughout the constitutional convention and ratification debates, our Founders wrestled over how to make government responsive to popular will yet protective of our natural rights. Well-read in political theory and history, they understood that while rule by the people is the best guarantor of freedom, it is wholly sufficient for good government.

Human nature is often impulsive and weak. As such, rule by mere popular demand invites the likelihood of rash, uninformed, and immoderate collective action harmful to both individual rights and the common good. Just as we impose restraints upon personal conduct, the Founders knew we must restrain our collective conduct so we an uncontrolled majority cannot impose its unfettered will. As James Madison explained in Federalist 51:
If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary. In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself. A dependence on the people is, no doubt, the primary control on the government; but experience has taught mankind the necessity of auxiliary precautions.
The wisdom of “auxiliary precautions” has been grasped since antiquity. Plato, for example, critiqued radical democracy for putting excessive emphasis on freedom and thus opening itself up to injustice and eventual collapse. Unrestrained freedom, he argued, leads people to overindulge their appetites and act on foolish impulses. Such a state quickly deteriorates into anarchy and mob rule, ultimately betraying the common good. Eventually, this pervasive injustice can open the way for despotism.

As we’ve learned from the outcome of the French Revolution, what began as a democratic Enlightenment project to fulfill the “rights of man” and achieve total equality and freedom culminated in the “common folk” beheading King Louis XVI and vicious mob rule.

Maximilien Robespierre rose to power as a radical democrat who self-identified with the masses and whose pet cause was universal male suffrage. Suspicious of aristocratic elements in society he believed threatened the revolution, Robespierre unleashed horrific levels of violence and destruction during an infamous “Reign of Terror.” Tens of thousands met their fate at the guillotine. Order wasn’t restored until 1799, when Napoleon finally wrested control of the country.

Thankfully, our framers were wiser than their French counterparts were. Drawing upon history from ancient Greece and Rome, John Adams warned posterity to “Remember, democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself.”

Compatriot Benjamin Franklin likewise admonished: “Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote!” Thomas Jefferson agreed: “A democracy is nothing more than mob rule, where fifty-one percent of the people may take away the rights of the other forty-nine.”

Due to these well-grounded fears, our Founders prudently crafted a government that combined elements of monarchy (the presidency), aristocracy (the Senate), and democracy (the House), while further dividing power between state and federal governments (federalism). As good government requires checks and balances against the excesses of each type of government—and against human nature itself—they devised a selection process for the president to moderate the passions of the voting populace (the Electoral College). Make no mistake: our government was designed to be a democratic, constitutional republic.

Today, our affinity for democracy grows in proportion to our ignorance of both government and history, worsened by our naivety regarding human nature. Fortunately, however, the shallowness of the notion that government should be more responsive to popular impulse is easily exposed and is enough to invite suspicion toward movements premised on that idea.
Sadly, a superficial understanding of democracy and government is still far too widespread, and it’s a shame that American government must be defended against itself. 

Abraham Lincoln speculated that should we meet our demise it was likely to emanate from within. Our framers shared that foresight. Asked by a passerby following the constitutional convention what type of government was devised, legend has it that Franklin wisely replied, “A republic, madam, if you can keep it.” If, indeed.

David formerly worked at a public policy institution and is currently a freelance writer. In his free time he enjoys working out, reading nerdy subjects, cheering on Roger Federer, and playing "would you rather." Email him at dwdweinberger@gmail.com. Follow him on Twitter @DWeinberger03.

Under Socialism the Worst Get on Top

Under Socialism the Worst Get on Top

Under Socialism the Worst Get on Top
A new poll by the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation reveals “70% of Millennials say they would be at least somewhat likely to vote for a socialist candidate.”

Astonishingly, communism and Marxism are viewed favorably by about a third of Millennials.

To support their communist dreams, “around one-in-five Millennials think society would be better off if all private property were abolished.”

If all of this isn’t frightening, consider that "only 57% of Millennials believe the Declaration of Independence better 'guarantees freedom and equality' over the Communist Manifesto.”

Sixty-three percent of Americans believe “highest earners are not paying their fair share.” Meanwhile, 47 percent are ready for a “complete change of our economic system.”

Those supporting socialism and communism are our coworkers and neighbors. Many are ignorant of history. The poll reveals that millennials believe that Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are responsible for more deaths than Hitler and Stalin.

The great educator Lawrence Reed points out these naïve utopians “will forever be disappointed by the socialist outcome.” When socialism fails, they blame “persons rather than the system.”

Reed provides a useful definition of a statist: “Someone who learns nothing from human nature, economics, or experience, and repeats the same mistakes over and over again without a care for the rights and lives of people he crushes with his good intentions.”

Bryan Hyde broadcasting at Loving Liberty Radio shared the life experiences of a Romanian who “grew up” under communism and “fled to the UK.” “Living with communism” is like having the “worst person” you know be “empowered to control every aspect of [your] life.” Only the worst people “could and would do the things necessary to survive within the communist structure - and the higher up they are... the more ruthless and corrupt they have to be."

Collectivism, the Romanian expatriate warns, is “not a bunch of toddlers cheerfully sharing toys at daycare – it is an open-air prison."

The naïve might dismiss such testimony as anecdotal. In his 1944 book, The Road to Serfdom, Nobel laureate Friedrich Hayek explained clearly “why the worst get on top” in a socialist government.

Since central planning can never work, Hayek writes, “the democratic statesman who sets out to plan economic life will soon be confronted with the alternative of either assuming dictatorial powers or abandoning his plans.”

Think of today’s socialist candidates railing against the wealthy. Hayek points out that “it seems to be almost a law of human nature that it is easier for people to agree on a negative program — on the hatred of an enemy, on the envy of those better off — than on any positive task.”

Blaming an enemy is the playbook of all those with totalitarian tendencies. Hayek writes:
The contrast between the ‘we’ and the ‘’they,’ the common fight against those outside the group, seems to be an essential ingredient in any creed which will solidly knit together a group for common action. It is consequently always employed by those who seek, not merely support of a policy, but the unreserved allegiance of huge masses.

Notice the rhetoric of today’s socialists. Sanders has railed against“extremely greedy and selfish financiers.” Elizabeth Warren too rails against “corporate greed.”

Hayek warned that collectivists will claim that their “system is superior to one in which the ‘selfish’ interests of the individual are allowed to obstruct the full realisation of the ends the community pursues.”

Out of professed good intentions, the horrors of collectivist regimes begin. Hayek writes, “Once you admit that the individual is merely a means to serve the ends of the higher entity called society or the nation, most of those features of totalitarian regimes which horrify us follow of necessity.”

To those holding self-professed “noble” goals, the rights of individuals do not matter. Hayek explains,
There is always in the eyes of the collectivist a greater goal which these acts serve and which to him justifies them because the pursuit of the common end of society can know no limits in any rights or values of any individual.

Hayek’s explanation of why the worst get on top supports testimony about the viciousness of those who carry out the orders of collectivist leaders:
To be a useful assistant in the running of a totalitarian state it is not enough that a man should be prepared to accept specious justification of vile deeds, he must himself be prepared actively to break every moral rule he has ever known if this seems necessary to achieve the end set for him.
Here is one final powerful warning from Hayek for those who think there can be kinder, gentler socialism:
The probability of the people in power being individuals who would dislike the possession and exercise of power is on a level with the probability that an extremely tenderhearted person would get the job of whipping-master in a slave plantation.

Americans who support socialism and communism want us to believe that next time it will be different – central planning will succeed, and fundamental liberties will stay intact. “Naïve utopians,” think their brand of socialism will be kinder. Both history and economics say they are wrong.
--
[Image Credit: Flickr-Charles Edward MillerCC BY-SA 2.0]

WWWP Open Thread




So yeah, we're back with another open thread. I've missed a few music threads and open threads lately. The homework ate the dog, and that's my excuse. Killer paper from out of space. Trust me, you don't want to mess with it, or do your homework on it. Of course this excuse fell apart for myself when I remembered I haven't had homework in decades, and even back then I didn't do it too often. Yes, I admit it ... I was not a good student. I still was a 4.0 student, I just didn't do anything that wasn't graded. It was boring and I hated it. I learn different from how they do it in classrooms. I go backwards. I learn hands on starting with the end and working my way back. I have a hard time learning something if I don't know the "why" behind it, so going backwards gives me the foundation I need to learn. You should've seen me learning to ride a bike. I could ride backwards better than anyone. Driving .... always in reverse. I listen to all my vinyl backwards. It's a lifestyle and this meme is already not funny and epstein didn't kill himself.




We're going in a little bit of a different direction in our next segment today. It's getting cold outside, we're down to a freezing 62º today ... and we'll be in the high 20's by Monday which means the city will come to stop because people don't know how to handle anything under 50º here and they all freak out. Alright, now that I'm done ADHD-ing out about the weather .... it's getting cold, and what's better than chili when it's cold? Well, lots of things, but chili is still good. This video is from Sam the Cooking Guy. He's funny in his own way, sarcastic, a bit dry, but his recipes are good. I've made quite a few of them.
In true WWWP Open Thread style, I have to throw something odd into the mix. So here is Sam being weird for a recipe, making fun of the Salt Bae meme.



Tip of the week: 
Control your text size inBlogger.

The text size options in Blogger are weak; however, if you do this you can control the exact size of the text. It's a bit of a pain since you have to do it for each paragraph individually.

1. Go into the html section while building your post

2. In front of the text you want to resize either type or copy and paste this:
 <span style="font-size: 20px;">

3. Change the number to the size text you want

4. At the end of your paragraph type </span> to close the html tag

5. Remember, if you used more than one html tag, you'll have to close them in reverse  order.

Example: Let's say you made a sentence bold, italic, and changed the size, here is how your tags would look.
<b><i><span style="font-size: 20px;">It would look like this, and it would closed out in reverse.</span></i></b>

Next week we'll go into selecting a custom text color, since Blogger's options are also weak in this area.


 



Now, on to the tunes! It's no secret that I'm a huge fan of techno and many of its subgenres, lately I've really been listening to a lot of dub techno. It's a lot more laid back and atmospheric. I've had this mix on repeat all week.


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No crazy long jam this week. Here's an album version of a song for once.



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y'all know what's up 
memes, gifs, music, pics, random thoughts ... 
post 'em if you got 'em 
 

Michael Bloomberg May Enter The 2020 Race

Red State

Michael Bloomberg May Enter The 2020 Race, 
Even Though He Said He Wasn’t, But He Still Might Not

Make up your mind Mr. Mayor.

Considering the weakness of the current field of 2020 Democratic presidential candidates, it doesn’t come as too much of a surprise that the former mayor of New York City, billionaire Michael Bloomberg, is once again thinking of tossing his hat into the ring. Earlier this year, Bloomberg squashed talk of a possibly run. However, according to a statement provided to NPR by his adviser, Howard Wolfson, he is now “increasingly concerned that the current field of candidates is not well positioned to defeat President Trump.” Wolfson added that Bloomberg views President Trump as “an unprecedented threat to our nation.”

Wolfson said that the former mayor spent heavily on the 2018 midterms and most recently on “this week’s off-year races in Virginia.”

“We now need to finish the job and ensure that Trump is defeated — but Mike is increasingly concerned that the current field of candidates is not well positioned to do that. If Mike runs he would offer a new choice to Democrats built on a unique record running America’s biggest city, building a business from scratch and taking on some of America’s toughest challenges as a high-impact philanthropist. Based on his record of accomplishment, leadership and his ability to bring people together to drive change, Mike would be able to take the fight to Trump and win,” saidWolfson.

If Bloomberg does decide on a run, it would immediately change the dynamics of the race, hurting Biden the most. Aside from drawing centrist support away from Biden, Bloomberg would be a self-financed candidate. That would hit Biden especially hard, because his campaign’s recent fundraising results have been lackluster at best.

Bloomberg would likely find himself leading the pack as the candidates head into the primary season. As I see it, his candidacy would pose the only real threat to a Trump victory.

Former Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell spoke to NPR’s Jessica Taylor about a possible Bloomberg run. Rendell, a Biden supporter, believes that Bloomberg “would be a fine president.” His concern is that “Bloomberg and Biden would split the moderate vote if the mayor entered the race. The trouble is he and Joe would have the same effect that Elizabeth [Warren] and Bernie [Sanders] are having: it would make it difficult for either of them to get to 50 percent.”

The New York Times reported that Bloomberg sent staffers to Alabama this week to “gather signatures to qualify for the primary there. Tomorrow is the last day for a candidate to formally enter the race in the state.

Rendell speculated that might have been “a holding action to see how Biden does in the early primaries.”

Rendell said, “It’s a smart thing to do. I’m a big Bloomberg fan. If he’s the alternative, and Joe was for some reason or another not in the race or didn’t have a chance to win, I’d be all for him. A lot of us would be for Bloomberg if Joe wasn’t in the race, but I don’t think Joe is going anywhere.”

If only he would.


The great impeachment confection...


The great Democrat impeachment confection starts to curdle

Democrats have puffed up impeachment as their latest bid to overturn the 2016 election and now polls show the public is getting wise to them. 

Support for President Trump's impeachment slipped 4 percentage points since mid-October, according to a poll released Wednesday. 
The Morning Consult survey found that 47 percent of respondents now back impeachment. In mid-October, a record-high majority — 51 percent — supported it. 

and this, from Twitter, linking RealClearPolitics:
Brutal impeachment numbers for Dems in new Monmouth poll: 73% have little/no trust in process, 60% say Dems are more interested in destroying Trump than finding facts, 51% oppose impeachment, only 37% say Trump's actions are clear grounds for impeachment. https://t.co/xmpCMujZn6
— Sean Davis (@seanmdav) November 5, 2019

So much for the claims 51% of the public wanting President Trump out. Not after record-low unemployment numbers. Not after taking the thug leading ISIS out of circulation. Something is turning.

More to the point, both polls show a common denominator in what Peggy Noonan (yes, we are mad at her for her latest tripe) noted earlier was the critical element, the public perception of fairness. Any public perception of a lack of fairness in the process, she argued, would ruin the Democrats' dream of overturning the 2016 election via impeachment. She said it almost as an aside. But that's exactly the dynamic we see now, as public support tumbles.

The turning point, according to the Morning Consult poll, seems to have come right at the point whe Democrats announced their quickie-fast formal impeachment inquiry, a kangaroo court whose verdict was already known. 

It comes on top of the other evidence that Democrats have run their impeachment process spectacularly unfairly.

Led by Rep. Adam Schiff, an unfit partisan operative with spectacular conflicts of interest, Schiff is the worst sort of guy to be leading the effort - a rabid partisan who ought to be a witness in the hearings for orchestrating the whole whistleblower opener - not the puppetmaster.

Then there was the secrecy of the initial hearings in some dank Capitol basement, something Schiff claimed was needed to prevent witnesses from corroborating stories. As those went on, it grew pretty obvious that what Schiff wanted was to scope out witnesses in order to cherrypick the most useful ones and sideline the ones who didn't say what he wanted. He even coached and coaxed witnesses, telling some to not answer Republican questions. Nice fair process...

As that went on, selective leaks followed, all of them favorable to Schiff's partisan position, pretty well blowing apart the argument about corroboration. The non-leaks, from those who exculpated Trump, was even more proof that the whole thing was a railroad job, not a fair hearing.

Then came the unilateral rules-setting for the formal impeachment inquiry, which came solely from the Democrats. Their way or the highway, bi-partisanship is only touted when Democrats are in positions of weakness.

Democrats could call any witness they liked. Republicans would be reduced to asking permission to call witnesses from Adam Schiff alone. 

Participation in the hearings was cut by two thirds, with the rather relevant Judiciary and Foreign Affairs committee members cut out, the better to keep sharp Republicans, such as Reps. Jim Jordan and Mark Meadows, from asking any questions. (Republicans got around it by moving Jordan to the Intelligence committee where Jordan, lucky him, now gets to sit in a room with Schiff.)

Trump's attorney would be shut out from the hearings, despite his obvious interest and past precedent -- that was additional fuel on the burnt offering of unfairness.

Who the heck could see the process as fair? As more and more evidence comes out through other means exculpating President Trump and highlighting the coordinated plot that came beforehand, of course public support is falling.

Which would explain why Democrats aren't saying as much as they did earlier about impeachment on the campaign trail. Elizabeth Warren is making her campaign issues all about how she wants to tax everyone to pay for her vastly expanded social programs. She's annoying big banks and Silicon Valley with her yellings about them. Joe Biden is waxing about his woikin' class roots and supposed support for the little guy. Kamala Harris is dancing in Iowa as her state burns. She's not talking about impeachment, either.

Maybe that's because they all know the public is getting sick of the whole thing. Even President Trump, making a speech in Louisiana, spoke of local issues rather than the outrage of impeachment as he did earlier in Kentucky, where his endorsed candidate lost. 

Obviously, the Schiff show is a loser. And as more and more information gets out about the rank unfairness of it all, public support is now falling. The trendline is clear and Democrats are now forewarned that they're the ones who are going to be paying the price.

Image credit: Photo illustration by Monica Showalter from public domain sources

Evidence Key Player In Dems Impeachment Probe May Have Perjured Herself, And That’s Not All


 
Tucker Carlson broke some important news on his program tonight. 

It pertains to a key player in the Democrats’ impeachment probe, the former Ambassador to Ukraine, Maria Yovanovitch, who was appointed by Barack Obama and recalled by President Donald Trump earlier this year when serious questions were raised about her political bias. 




Carlson says they have an email written to Yovanovitch from a Democratic staffer on the House Foreign Affairs Committee sent by private email on August 14 asking to talk with her about “Ukraine related oversight questions we are exploring.” The email said it wanted to “ground-truth” some things with her in regard to “quite delicate/time sensitive” things. 

August 14 is two days after the Ukraine whistleblower’s complaint was filed and after the whistleblower had already been in contact with Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) and his Congressional aide who told the whistleblower to bring his complaint to the ICIG. August 14 was a month before the complaint became public. 

So, as Tucker notes, how long did other Democrats know about this and how long did it play out in secret before we became aware of it? 

Carlson’s show asked the House Foreign Affairs Committee who responded, “The Committee wanted to hear from an ambassador whose assignment was cut short under unusual circumstances. This staff outreach was the culmination of a months-long effort that culminated in the September 9 launch of an investigation into these events.”

Oh, really? Months long? Exactly when did this effort to try to target the president start? August is only one month. And once again, we’ve been lied to as likely more people pretended they knew nothing while this was all going on behind the scenes.

Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-NY) asked Yovanovitch during her testimony about the email and she testified under oath that she never responded to the email. But according to Carlson, she did indeed respond, saying “she looked forward to chatting with the staffer.” If true, that makes her testimony before the House committee false.

So exactly how long has this been going on? Who knew about it? And what other Democrats or committee members knew or were involved while not saying anything or pretending they were being denied information publicly? And how many other Democratic “witnesses” may have been prepped ahead of time for this game? 

First question from any of the Republicans for any of the “witnesses” should be – what has been your contact with any Democrats or staffers in the House and were you told to say anything or prepped in any way?

Mexico Turns Down..

American Thinker

Mexico turns down a generous offer from the big orange gringo?

Mexico, which just saw its troops chased out of Sinaloa in an ignominious defeat by filthy drug cartels and now has seen the massacre of a group of American families on its soil, got a rare and generous offer from President Trump:


This is the time for Mexico, with the help of the United States, to wage WAR on the drug cartels and wipe them off the face of the earth. We merely await a call from your great new president!

That's the same Trump who just decapitated the brutal ISIS leadership and who pulled U.S. troops out of Syria on the grounds that he can't stand endless wars. No U.S. troops for Syria, no U.S. intervention for Venezuela ... but Mexico is different. Mexico is special. If Mexico wants help, Mexico gets help.

And this is coming from a neighborly leader with a very fresh track record of blowing extremely powerful non-state actors straight to hell.

Trump didn't even argue or push for it, he just let the president of Mexico know that all he has to do is make a call. The VIP treatment would be his. The power was there, the good will was there, and an extended track record of success was there. The U.S., remember, also did a helluva a job helping Colombia clean up its cartel-narcoterrorist problem, too. That's in addition to the ISIS victory. An offer of help from a guy like this can only be a good thing, particularly because he doesn't like extended military involvement. 

It's an offer the Kurds and Venezuelans can only dream of.

The Mexican response?

Usual garbage, President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said he didn't want it. 
According to the Daily Caller:
Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador flatly rejected President Donald Trump’s offer to “wage war” on drug cartels following the massacre of a U.S.-Mexican family along the border.
During a Tuesday press conference, López Obrador rejected Trump’s public offer to send U.S. military forces to Mexico and help his government combat organized crime. The leftist president — reiterating a position he’s long held — argued that war with the drug cartels was not the best approach.
“We have to act independently and according to our constitution, and in line with our tradition of independence and sovereignty,” López Obrador said Tuesday. “War is irrational. We are for peace. It is a characteristic of this new government.”

He was still into his "hugs not bullets" policy, despite the clear evidence of a pretty significant threat to his state and cries from Mexico's locals to take the offer. Here's one and I'm watching the Mexican press for more.

 It's pretty much a sign he's in denial about the problem. 

Yes, there are explainable reasons for it, very old ones: 

One, the Mexican elites have always had contempt for the people and culture of northern Mexico, the carne asada belt, meaning, they could care less if that area endures attacks. 

Two, Mexico has nursed its grievances for more than a hundred years over the U.S. invasion of Mexico in the 1840s, which ridded them of the curse of a clown dictator, General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, but left them hostile to the U.S. military. It was that grievance-nursing, taught in Mexican schools, that AMLO was appealing to.

Three, cartels aren't just bad guys out in the badlands -- they have tentacles all through the Mexican government. There's a reason Mexico sends its Navy in for big cartel sweep operations. They don't trust either law enforcement or the army. And the corruption extends well beyond the gunned professions, and well into the soft-handed political classes.

But there are also signs that this isn't going to go over all that well with Mexico's public. Even the Guardian is noticing. Lopez-Obrador is under significant pressure to scrap the hug thing and fight the killers.

The threat, after all, is pretty real. The cartels are fattened and enriched on the U.S. opiate epidemic profits and the billions they have earned in smuggling and crossing fees from the organized border surgers. That's made them ambitious and mean.

And Mexican public attitudes are changing. AMLO himself was elected on a change wave election, signaling that people are thinking differently. That AMLO has gone into denial and retreated into the comfortable old truisms, imagining that gringos on U.S. soil are a bigger threat than cartels massacring both locals and Americans (which will do wonders for Mexico's tourism industry) is insane.

His idiotic response calls to mind a 1990s story about Mexican President Miguel de la Madrid telling Singapore's founding father, the famous Lee Kuan Yew about how unfortunate Mexico was to have a U.S. border. Lee slapped sense into the dolt by telling him he'd practically kill to share just one tiny piece of the American border.

De la Madrid ended his term office unpopular and in disgrace, the public still screaming at him as he made his exit. AMLO is setting himself up for a whiff of that Mexican tradition, too.

'Ice eggs' cover Finland beach in rare weather event

Thousands of egg-shaped balls of ice have covered a beach in Finland, the result of a rare weather phenomenon.
Amateur photographer Risto Mattila was among those who came across the "ice eggs" on Hailuoto Island in the Gulf of Bothnia between Finland and Sweden.
Experts say it is caused by a rare process in which small pieces of ice are rolled over by wind and water.
Mr Mattila, from the nearby city of Oulu, told the BBC he had never seen anything like it before.
"I was with my wife at Marjaniemi beach. The weather was sunny, about -1C (32F) and it was quite a windy day," he told the BBC.
"There we found this amazing phenomenon. There was snow and ice eggs along the beach near the water line."

Mr Mattila said the balls of ice covered an area of about 30m (100ft). The smallest were the size of eggs and the biggest were the size of footballs.
"That was an amazing view. I have never seen anything like this during 25 years living in the vicinity," Mr Mattila said.
"Since I had a camera with me I decided to preserve this unusual sight for posterity."

BBC Weather expert George Goodfellow said conditions needed to be cold and a bit windy for the ice balls to form.
"The general picture is that they form from pieces of larger ice sheet which then get jostled around by waves, making them rounder," he said.
"They can grow when sea water freezes on to their surfaces and this also helps to make them smoother. So the result is a ball of smooth ice which can then get deposited on to a beach, either blown there or getting left there when the tide goes out."
Similar sights have been reported before, including in Russia and on Lake Michigan near Chicago
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-50338447

As the Flynn Case Disintegrates, Parallels with Ukraine Emerge




As in the Ukraine impeachment inquiry currently underway, the establishment became incensed by the incoming president using trusted advisors to conduct foreign policy instead of deferring to the permanent bureaucracy.

Brandon Van Grack, the Robert Mueller Justice Department holdover who continues to prosecute Michael Flynn for lying to the FBI, just filed a new “notice” with the court including the stunning admission that he had “misidentified the authorship of the handwritten notes from the January 24, 2017 interview with the defendant.”

That’s the critical interview the government is using as the sole basis for prosecuting President Trump’s former national security adviser.

It’s a mistake Van Grack could never have made in good faith if he had bothered to inform himself with the basics of his case. He should start paying attention because the case not only has ruined a man’s life, it has also undermined public confidence both in the Justice Department and the FBI.

This is the latest crack in a case that is disintegrating in plain sight.

That Van Grack did not know which agent wrote which set of interview notes suggests a fatal weakness in his case. Van Grack cannot answer this fundamental question: What exactly did Flynn say to FBI agents Peter Strzok and Joe Pientka in their January 24, 2017 interview?

Nearly two years after Michael Flynn pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about calls with the Russian ambassador, the answer to that question remains unclear. As I reported here and here, the FBI produced multiple drafts of the “FD-302” which is the form the agents used to record Flynn’s statement. The government, in effect, has conceded that it cannot account for all drafts of this form and that there may be at least one version that remains unaccounted for.

Since the time Flynn spoke to Strzok and Pientka, senior FBI figures Lisa Page, Bill Priestap, and Andrew McCabe all had a hand in editing the account of Flynn’s statement. These changes were made without the knowledge or consent of the person whose words were being edited: Michael Flynn.

Worse yet, as noted by Flynn’s attorney and Twitter sleuth Techno Fog, these edits were far from superficial. But there’s actually another half to this equation. The thing he “lied” about remains a secret. This is because the government withheld the transcripts of the phone calls with the Russian ambassador. It made this representation to the court on May 31, 2019, “The government further represents that it is not relying on any other recordings, of any person, for purposes of establishing the defendant’s guilt or determining his sentence, nor are there any other recordings that are part of the sentencing record.”

If the government were forced to take this case to trial, it would have to proveto the jury exactly what Flynn said in the January 24, 2017 interview. But the government apparently has no audio recording of the actual Flynn interview, it has only the notes and summaries prepared by the FBI agents. Indeed, the original charged “lies” as charged in the indictment aren’t even direct quotes, just general paraphrasing of the gist of what Flynn said in the interview. The jury would need to know exactly what Flynn said before convicting him of lying.

How odd. We know Strzok possessed a smartphone with which he could have recorded the conversation with Flynn. We know this because we’ve read the text exchanges with his lover Lisa Page in which they discussed, among other things, their intent to use the power of the FBI to “protect” the country from the results of the 2016 election.

To prove that Flynn violated 18 USC 1001, the government must clearly demonstrate Flynn’s statement was false. But how can it do that without actual transcripts of the calls with the Russian ambassador? A jury would need to know exactly what Flynn said to the Russian ambassador in order to gauge whether Flynn’s retelling of those calls was false.

Van Grack would also have to prove, “the falsity concerned a material matter.” That means Van Grack will have to explain what the FBI was investigating and why Flynn’s misstatement statement was relevant to that investigation. The FBI is not supposed to be able to strike up a random conversation about innocent behavior in order to turn inadvertent misstatements into felony prosecutions. Neither the original indictment nor the “statement of offense” explain what crime the FBI was investigating in the January 24 interview with Flynn.

The government’s December 4, 2018 sentencing memo claims, “the FBI had an open investigation into the Russian government’s efforts to interfere in the 2016 presidential election, including the nature of any links or coordination between the Russian government and individuals associated with the campaign of President Donald J. Trump.” But, as noted by Flynn’s recent filing,

the agents asked him nothing relevant to ‘efforts to interfere in the 2016 election.’ Likewise, nothing about his calls to Kislyak in late December 2016 as part of the transition into office had anything to do with coordination between anyone in the campaign and Russia. The agents did not ask even a single question about any coordination.

Van Grack would have to argue to a jury that Flynn lied about “an important fact” that had “a natural tendency to influence or is capable of influencing a decision of a department or agency in reaching a required decision.” That’s hard to do when the government already has a recording of the call in question.

Van Grack would also have to prove that Flynn made the “false” statements “willfully, knowing that the statement was false.” But consider this testimony quoted by Powell in her brief,

On Dec. 19, 2017, McCabe told the House Intelligence Committee in sworn testimony: “[T]he conundrum that we faced on their return from the interview is that although [the agents] didn’t detect deception in the statements that he made in the interview . . . the statements were inconsistent with our understanding of the conversation that he had actually had with the ambassador.” McCabe proceeded to admit to the Committee that “the two people who interviewed [Flynn] didn’t think he was lying, [which] was not [a] great beginning of a false statement case.”

Van Grack wears two hats and now leads the powerful Justice Department unit in charge of prosecuting Americans acting as “agents” of disfavored foreign interests. The definition of an “agent” remains highly discretionary and tends to mean different things depending on whether the politics of the prosecutor match those of the target.

Van Grack continues to pursue a prosecution that has publicly imploded. At this point, it doesn’t appear he can prove a single element of the alleged offense. This leads one to wonder whether Van Grack really is part of an effort to isolate American foreign policy from the elected president.

As in the Ukraine impeachment inquiry currently underway, the establishment became incensed by the incoming president using trusted advisors to conduct foreign policy instead of deferring to the permanent bureaucracy. In the Ukraine farce, the president outraged the foreign policy establishment by tapping his personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani. In the Flynn case, the FBI acted with outrage over the president using his future national security advisor instead of the foreign relations apparatus held over from the Obama Administration.

Both the Ukraine farce and the Flynn case involve the media and Trump’s political opponents criminalizing legitimate contacts with foreign leaders and activities the president was elected to handle. If they succeed in wresting control of foreign affairs from our elected leader, it will sever all such issues from the ballot box. While this might serve the interests of bureaucrats, it’s very bad for democracy. Van Grack and Adam Schiff are on the front lines of that effort.