Saturday, December 7, 2019

Presidential Proclamation on National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day, 2019

Seventy-eight years ago today, the course of our Nation’s history was forever altered by the surprise attack at Pearl Harbor on Oahu, Hawaii.  On National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day, we solemnly remember the tragic events of that morning and honor those who perished in defense of our Nation that day and in the ensuing 4 years of war.

Just before 8 a.m. on December 7, 1941, airplanes launched from the Empire of Japan’s aircraft carriers dropped bombs and torpedoes from the sky, attacking our ships moored at Naval Station Pearl Harbor and other military assets around Oahu.  Following this swift assault, the United States Pacific Fleet and most of the Army and Marine airfields on the island were left decimated.  Most tragically, 2,335 American service members and 68 civilians were killed, marking that fateful day as one of the deadliest in our Nation’s history.

Despite the shock of the attack, American service members at Pearl Harbor fought back with extraordinary courage and resilience.  Sprinting through a hailstorm of lead, pilots rushed to the few remaining planes and took to the skies to fend off the incoming Japanese attackers.  Soldiers on the ground fired nearly 300,000 rounds of ammunition and fearlessly rushed to the aid of their wounded brothers in arms.  As a solemn testament to the heroism that abounded that day, 15 American servicemen were awarded the Medal of Honor — 10 of which were awarded posthumously.  In one remarkable act of bravery, Doris “Dorie” Miller, a steward aboard the USS West Virginia, manned a machine gun and successfully shot down multiple Japanese aircraft despite not having been trained to use the weapon.  For his valor, Miller was awarded the Navy Cross and was the first African-American recognized with this honor.

In the wake of this heinous attack, the United States was left stunned and wounded.  Yet the dauntless resolve of the American people remained unwavering and unbreakable.  In his address to the Congress the following day, broadcast to the Nation over radio, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt assured us that “[w]ith confidence in our armed forces, with the unbounding determination of our people, we will gain the inevitable triumph.”  In the days, months, and years that followed, the full might of the American people, industry, and military was brought to bear on our enemies.  Across the Atlantic and Pacific, 16 million American servicemen and women fought to victory, making the world safe for freedom and democracy once again.  More than 400,000 of these brave men and women never returned home, giving their last full measure of devotion for our Nation.

While nearly eight decades have passed since the last sounds of battle rang out over Pearl Harbor, we will never forget the immeasurable sacrifices these courageous men and women made so that we may live today in peace and prosperity.  We continue to be inspired by the proud legacy left by the brave patriots of the Greatest Generation who served in every capacity during World War II, from keeping factories operating on the home front to fighting on the battlefields in Europe, North Africa, and the South Pacific.  Their incredible heroism, dedication to duty, and love of country continue to embolden our drive to create a better world and galvanize freedom-loving people everywhere under a common cause.  On this day, we resolve forever to keep the memory of the heroes of Pearl Harbor alive as a testament to the tremendous sacrifices they made in defense of freedom and all that we hold dear.

The Congress, by Public Law 103-308, as amended, has designated December 7 of each year as “National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day.”

NOW, THEREFORE, I, DONALD J. TRUMP, President of the United States of America, do hereby proclaim December 7, 2019, as National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day.  I encourage all Americans to observe this solemn day of remembrance and to honor our military, past and present, with appropriate ceremonies and activities.  I urge all Federal agencies and interested organizations, groups, and individuals to fly the flag of the United States at half-staff in honor of those American patriots who died as a result of their service at Pearl Harbor.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this sixth day of December, in the year of our Lord two thousand nineteen, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-fourth.
DONALD J. TRUMP



Image result for pictures of japanese attack on pearl harbor

Senate Republicans Request Interview With Alexandra Chalupa on Ukrainian Election Meddling



As Democrats and their allies in the media dismiss charges that Ukraine meddled in the 2016 election as a conspiracy theory, three top Republican Senators are working to prove them wrong just in time for the impeachment trial in the Senate.

Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-IA), Ron Johnson (R-WI) and Lindsey Graham (R-SC) announced Friday that they are requesting records from and interviews with Alexandra Chalupa, a Democratic consultant and Ukrainian-American activist who met with Ukrainian embassy officials throughout 2016, allegedly on behalf of the DNC. The trio are also seeking records from Andrii Telizkhenko, a former Ukrainian political officer who told Politico that Oksana Shulyar, a top aid to the Ukrainian ambassador, instructed him to assist Chalupa with research to connect Trump and Manafort to the Russians.

According to the Daily Caller, the request is a continuation of Grassley’s 2017 inquiry into possible coordination between the DNC and the Ukrainian embassy to dig up dirt on the Trump campaign.
Chalupa met throughout 2016 with Ukrainian embassy officials, and sought to trade information related to Manafort, who worked through 2014 for former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, on Jan. 11, 2017, Politico reported. Telizhenko told Politico he was directed by his bosses to help Chalupa in the effort.
In addition to Chalupa’s efforts, multiple Ukrainian government officials spoke out against Trump during the 2016 campaign.
One official scrutinized by Republicans is Serhiy Leshchenko, a former Ukrainian parliamentarian who gained international attention in August 2016 for helping publicize the so-called “black ledger” that detailed payments that the Ukrainian Party of Regions allegedly made to Manafort.
Manafort denied receiving the payments, but was forced off the Trump team following reports of the “black ledger.” He was convicted in the special counsel’s investigation of financial crimes related to income from his Ukraine work.
Citing the Politico report in his July 2017 letter to the DOJ, Grassley—then the chairman of the Judiciary Committee—wrote that Chalupa’s actions appeared to show that “she was simultaneously working on behalf of a foreign government, Ukraine, and on behalf of the DNC and Clinton campaign, in an effort to influence not only the U.S voting population but U.S. government officials.”

The Iowa senator wrote in the July 24, 2017 letter to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein that Chalupa’s activities in Ukraine constituted a possible Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) violation.
Indeed, Telizhenko recalled that Chalupa told him and Shulyar, “[i]f we can get enough information on Paul [Manafort] or Trump’s involvement with Russia, she can get a hearing in Congress by September.”[7] Later, Chalupa did reportedly meet with staff in the office of Democratic representative Marcy Kaptur to discuss a congressional investigation. Such a public investigation would not only benefit the Hillary Clinton campaign, but it would benefit the Ukrainian government, which, at the time, was working against the Trump campaign. When Politico attempted to ask Rep. Kaptur’s office about the meeting, the office called it a “touchy subject.”
Aside from the apparent evidence of collusion between the DNC, Clinton campaign, and Ukrainian government, Chalupa’s actions implicate the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA). As you know, the Committee is planning a hearing on FARA enforcement. Given the public reporting of these activities in support of a foreign government, it is imperative that the Justice Department explain why she has not been required to register under FARA.
A Kyiv court in December of 2018 ruled that Leshchenko and Ukrainian “anti-corruption” official Artem Sytnyk interfered in the U.S. presidential election by publishing the black ledger documents.

Additionally, Nellie Ohr, a former contractor for Fusion GPS, and wife of DOJ official Bruce Ohr, told lawmakers in October of 2018 that Leshchenko was a source for Fusion, which commissioned the infamous Steele dossier.

Leshchenko has denied that he ever knowingly met with anyone from Fusion GPS however, telling the Caller that he met with Chalupa at least once in 2016 at an event held for the Ukraine diaspora.

Politico reported on Monday that the Senate Intelligence committee, led by Sen. Richard Burr of North Carolina, conducted its own investigation into the matter and found no evidence that Ukraine interfered in the 2016 presidential election, however, Burr refused to confirm the “Fusion” Natasha Bertrand story in an interview with NBC.

“If I investigated I wouldn’t even tell you” he told NBC reporter Frank Thorp.


Chalupa reportedly denied serving as an intermediary between the DNC and Ukrainian Embassy during her testimony and also alleged that “a Russian active-measure campaign had targeted her.”

The DNC paid Chalupa $412,000 for consulting work from 2004 through June 2016, according to the Daily Caller, although they claim that she communicated with the Ukrainian Embassy on her own accord.

She also worked briefly with a convicted domestic terrorist-turned-activist known as the “Speedway Bomber” while she was digging up dirt on Trump in late 2016, the Caller reported in March of 2017.

The liberal activist was identified as one of nine witnesses Republicans wanted to testify publicly in the House impeachment proceedings.

Chalupa told Politico last month that she was “itching” to testify in the House’s public impeachment hearings “to beat back Republican assertions that Ukrainian officials used her as a conduit for information in 2016 to damage Donald Trump.”

In a statement Friday, Johnson, the chairman of the Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee, criticized the media for dismissing the possibility that Ukraine meddled in the 2016 election.

“Contrary to the popular narrative in the ‘main stream media’ that Ukrainian involvement in the 2016 election has been debunked, or ‘no evidence exists,’ there are many unanswered questions that have festered for years,” Johnson said.

Grassley, who chairs the Senate Finance Committee, said the DNC-Ukraine link has not yet been “sufficiently examined.”

“While there was no collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia, we know that Russia meddled in our democratic processes. However, certain reports of collusion and interference involving Ukrainian officials have not been sufficiently examined, and the few answers that have been given are inadequate,” the Iowa Republican said.

Secret Subpoena Adventure Could End with...

WSJ Columnist: 

Adam Schiff’s Secret Subpoena Adventure Could End with Legal Buckshot in His Face

WSJ Columnist: Adam Schiff’s Secret Subpoena Adventure Could End with Legal Buckshot in His Face
Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), high Chancellor of the Trump impeachment effort, might be getting away with murder. The impeachment circus that has engulfed D.C. has overshadowed the House Intelligence Committee chair’s egregious abuse of power. He executed a secret subpoenas adventure of phone records of prominent Republicans. He got their phone records and published them in the committee’s 300-page impeachment report. Now, the report is a work of fiction. Schiff is a liar, and nothing from House Democrats on this whole fiasco should be believed. This isn’t about the Constitution, or the framers, or the rule of law. It’s not about upholding the integrity of our institutions; Democrats have already perverted those with their deep state antics against this administration. It’s about the Democratic Party’s inability to grasp that it lost the 2016 election. Democrats wanted to boot Trump since day one of his presidency. The ironic twist is that their impeachment fetish could very well be what secures him a second term. This is not popular in swing states. No one cares. And the liberal media has been so wrong, so stupid, and so corrupt in their coverage of this White House, even Democrats in these states cannot believe what they hear. But let’s get back to that pencil head, Schiff.

He may have opened himself up to oodles of lawsuits by those he decided to go after with these secret subpoenas. Rudy Giuliani, the president’s attorney, was included in this hit list, and we now have to factor in attorney-client privilege into this whole mess. Seldom is this cast aside concerning an investigation unless the evidence of wrongdoing is overwhelming. Schiff decided to ignore those protocols because he wants to boot Trump before the 2020 election, or at least severely damage his re-election chances. It’s funny. The man who says he’s doing this for the country and the rule of law thinks he can break the rules…because he feels he’s right. What an arrogant, self-righteous little snake, huh? Wall Street Journal columnist Kimberley Strassel has a good column about how Schiff engaged in gross congressional overreach:
Fanatics can justify any action, and House Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff this week demonstrated where that mindset leads. In his rush to paint Donald Trump as a lawbreaker, Mr. Schiff has himself trampled law and responsibility.
That’s the bottom line in Mr. Schiff’s stunning decision to subpoena the phone records of Rudy Giuliani and others. Mr. Schiff divulged the phone logs this week in his Ukraine report, thereby revealing details about the communications of Trump attorneys Jay Sekulow and Mr. Giuliani, ranking Intelligence Committee member Devin Nunes, reporter John Solomon and others. The media is treating this as a victory, when it is a disgraceful breach of ethical and legal propriety.
If nothing else, Mr. Schiff claims the ignominious distinction of being the first congressman to use his official powers to spy on a fellow member and publish the details. His report also means open season on members of the press. Mr. Giuliani over months has likely spoken to dozens of political figures and reporters—and the numbers, dates and length of those calls are now in Democrats’ hot little hands. Who gets the Schiff treatment next?
[…]
Whatever his role in the Ukraine affair, Mr. Giuliani remains the president’s personal lawyer. Law enforcement must present a judge with powerful evidence to get permission to vitiate attorney-client privilege. Mr. Schiff ignored all that, and made himself privy to data that could expose the legal strategies of the man he is investigating.
Mr. Giuliani did have notice that Democrats wanted some of his phone records. The Intelligence Committee sent a subpoena on Sept. 30, and gave him until Oct. 15 to comply. Yet before Mr. Giuliani even had an opportunity to respond, Mr. Schiff separately moved to seize his records from a phone carrier, sending his subpoena to AT&T on Sept. 30 as well.
Mr. Schiff purposely kept that action secret. This guaranteed that the only entity involved with a decision over whether to release the records was AT&T. And that gave Mr. Schiff all the cards, since companies fear political retribution far more than violating their customers’ privacy.

Well, when it comes to “powerful evidence” to wipe away an attorney-client privilege, this Trump-Ukraine fiasco has none of that. There is no compelling evidence that the president was asking for the Ukrainians to investigate the Bidens' ties to some of its energy companies or risk having military aid withheld. Ukraine got aid. And all the witnesses who testified before the House Intelligence Committee were career bureaucrats that disagreed with Trump on policy. That’s not impeachable. Also, this whole circus is grounded in hearsay. Pretty much Democrats didn’t like how Trump spoke to the Ukrainians on a phone call. Also, its star witness, Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, admitted that the president could legally withhold aid temporarily. So, what the hell are we doing here, besides being witness to a quasi-coup that’s being pushed by Democrats and members of the anti-Trump deep state? In the crusade to impeach Trump, Schiff also appears to have abused his power—and it’s all in plain sight. It’s meant to be that way. It’s to show off that he can get away with it.

How To Prepare For The Impending Justice Department Inspector General Report




What can we expect from Inspector General Michael Horowitz's probe into abuses at the Department of Justice and FBI? 

For starters, don't get your hopes up.

The Department of Justice’s Inspector General announced on March 28, 2018, that he was going to look into the application to wiretap Carter Page, who had been an advisor to the Trump campaign. The review would analyze whether policies and procedures related to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act had been properly followed.

Earlier that year, the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, then led by Republican Chairman Devin Nunes, had released a report about FISA abuse. The Justice Department fought the disclosure of the report bitterly, claiming it would egregiously harm national security. 

The report was released, showing among other things that the Clinton campaign’s Russia collusion “dossier” formed an essential part of the application to spy on Page, that the role of the Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee was not properly disclosed to the court that approved the application, and that dossier author Christopher Steele’s relationship and posture was not appropriately disclosed. The report noted that the application cited a Yahoo News article written by Michael Isikoff without noting that the source of that article was Steele. It revealed that Bruce Ohr, a DOJ official, continued to talk to Steele after Steele was terminated as a source to the FBI, and that Bruce’s wife Nellie was a colleague of Steele’s on the Russia collusion project. Her role was not disclosed to the court. Bruce Ohr disclosed Steele’s extreme political bias to the FBI but that bias was not mentioned to the court. The report also showed that the dossier was not validated before being used for the application or before a portion of it was briefed to President-elect Trump in January 2017. The report also noted the extreme political bias against Trump and in favor of Clinton on the part of Lisa Page and Peter Strzok, two officials involved in the process. Text messages between the two included discussions of coordinated leaks to the media and an attempt to have an “insurance policy” in the unlikely case Trump won.

The Democratic minority, led by current chairman Adam Schiff, said that there was no FISA abuse.

The review dragged on from weeks to months to more than one year and eight months. It is reportedly being released on Monday and will be several hundred pages long. If reporters’ handling of previous Inspector General reports is prologue, few will read it substantively before opining on its meaning.

Instead, many have allowed themselves to be used by their sources to spin the reports’ meaning in advance. Samples of that effort include this whitewash of Lisa Page’s various unseemly actionscartoonishly biasedpieces about Attorney General Barr not agreeing with Horowitz’s alleged exoneration of the Department of Justice, and pieces implausibly suggesting that surveillance of Trump campaign affilites did not constitute “spying,” in any meaningful sense, among many others.

What should people expect from the report?

1) First off, lower expectation of justice for wrongdoing

The widespread surveillance of the Trump campaign, according to published reports, included the use of human informants, overseas intelligence assets, wiretaps and national security letters. Many critics of that surveillance hope that this Inspector General report will bring some justice. They should get rid of that hope as soon as possible.

Inspector Generals are like the human resource arm of a corporation. Human resource divisions do not exist to help employees but to help corporations. They take care of problems and protect the corporation. Similarly, Inspector Generals exist to help their agency deal with problems and messes. Sure, they may be forced to admit wrongdoing on the part of the agency and its employees, but they will always downplay it. If there’s a conceivable way to say that the department didn’t violate the policy or law, they will do that. And they will characterize the bad behavior that they must concede as limited to rogue employees and not representative of the larger agency.

Now having said that, Michael Horowitz has actually been willing to admit some of the wrongdoing by James Comey and Andrew McCabe, both of whomhe referred for criminal prosecution. He has harshly criticized Peter Strzok and Lisa Page, and many other people whose politicized decision-making reflected poorly on the department. Of Lisa Page and Strzok, he said that they “brought discredit to themselves.”

But if Horowitz were an actual prosecutor, he would have rung up dozens of employees on crimes. Instead, we’re hearing rumors of just a couple of employees are being held slightly accountable for what they did in 2016. That’s not an impressive number given what we already know about what they were doing.

2) Don’t rewrite history

Some defenders of the surveillance of the Trump campaign have been claiming that critics of the surveillance have placed all of their hope in the Inspector General report. That’s simply not true, even for those who seek some level of justice through the Inspector General’s investigation. As evidence, here’s a February 2018 tweet from President Trump upon hearing the news that then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions was going to ask Horowitz to look into the abuse:

Perhaps the report will show that Trump’s skepticism was unwarranted but there is no question that the informed critics of the DOJ’s actions were unimpressed with what an IG report would do or show.

3) Remember that constraints on Horowitz’s probe are significant

People expecting a thorough look at the widespread surveillance on the Trump campaign likely will be disappointed for several reasons.

First off, the IG said he was looking only into the surveillance of “a certain U.S. person,” presumably Carter Page. But Page is just one of the campaign affiliates who was surveilled. Horowitz said that “if circumstances warrant,” he’ll “consider including other issues that may arise,” but it’s unclear how many were looped into his sluggish probe.

Horowitz is also constrained by the fact that he is only allowed to speak with people who work at the Department of Justice at the time of his questioning. If they’ve retired or been fired, he can’t force them to cooperate with his probe. If they work at a different agency or department, he can’t compel cooperation. And that’s significant since many other agencies were involved in the Russia collusion theory that was disseminated throughout the government. The dossier — secretly funded by Hillary Clinton and the Democratic National Committee, for instance — was fed through multiple agencies, not just the FBI and Department of Justice.

These limits don’t make his probe meaningless, but just much less effective than a real investigation. This could explain why the Attorney General assigned an actual federal prosecutor to look into the matter, even if he started his probe years’ too late, giving the implicated opportunities to hide evidence and let trails run cold.
The Department of Justice has revealed that the probe led by federal prosecutor John Durham has become a criminal investigation due to the wrongdoing it has found.

4) Don’t believe spin

Having said all this, it’s also important not to believe the spin being fed to reporters by the implicated parties. Reporters colluded with Justice Department leakers to perpetuate the Russia hoax, so they’re the furthest thing from impartial at the outset. The implosion of that conspiracy theory was humiliating to reporters, none of whom have admitted how they got the overarching journalistic narrative of 2017, 2018, and 2019 so wrong. They promised readers bombshell support of the frankly ridiculous theory that Trump was a traitor who had colluded with Russia to steal the 2016 election. Instead, a limitless probe of Trump and his campaign found no evidence of such collusion.

5) However downplayed, facts will likely show significant wrongdoing

The best thing the Inspector General report will have is factual information. Few people actually read his previous, sprawling reports on abuses at the Department of Justice and FBI but those who did learned a great deal about the sorry state of affairs at those agencies. Sure, he may have said he couldn’t definitively show that Lisa Page’s bias against Trump affected her actions against him, but he still clearly showed her extreme bias and the actions she took against him. Reasonable people who are not paid to support the Department of Justice, then, can make their own determination about whether she’s as sanctified as the liberal media claim.

The Republican memo outlined particular facts. The Democrats’ memo disputed those facts. Regardless of whether Horowitz joins Trump’s critics in defending all the actions of the agency he serves, the facts will enable people to make their own decisions.

Cheer Up Progressives...

Cheer Up, Progressives: 

It’s Not Donald Trump’s America and 

Never Has Been

Every writer out there can learn something from reading the work of his or her fellows, but when the mass of a polarizing election pulls even apolitical work into its gravity well, avoiding ambushes becomes a challenge.

It wasn’t until I found the same cliché in two recent books and an opinion column that I realized how much discontent can be attributed to ignorance or wistfulness. Progressive writers sneer about “Donald Trump’s America,” and whenever that characterization makes an appearance, you’re sure to find resentment served like a side salad. Ted Kennedy pioneered that toxic formula in 1987, when — as the so-called “Lion of the Senate” — he blindsided Ronald Reagan’s Supreme Court nomination team with a mendacious speech about the evils of “Robert Bork’s America.” Judge Bork never made it to the Supreme Court. Thirty-two years later, progressives still play at dragon-slaying by pretending that their enemies shape attitudes all over the country. When that doesn’t work, they use the same phrasing on the other end of the teeter-totter to suggest that whomever they’ve targeted should be stopped before right-wingers board up the last safe space.

“Donald Trump’s America” is a curious place where liberals trust federal intelligence agencies more than conservatives do, but community activists call anything they don’t support a threat to “democracy.” Some activists don’t understand the structure of the U.S. government. Others misuse the word democracy on purpose because doing so helps to marginalize anyonewho challenges their assessment. If democracy can be redefined as a synonym for progressive policy, then it’s easier to duck questions about misuse of executive power, easier to trash the Electoral College, and easier to forget that the United States is actually a constitutional republic. Ironically, anti-communist protesters in Hong Kong grasp democratic concepts better than progressive politicians in America ever will. But political argument used to be found only in opinion pages and on Sunday morning talk shows. Progressive reluctance to accept the results of the 2016 election let politics plant muddy paws in genres where it had never roamed before. In this context, the answer to the old hip-hop musical question about who let the dogs out is “Hillary Clinton.”

Nature writing suffers under the new regime. Describing life on her Colorado ranch in a recent collection of essays called Deep Creek: Finding Hope in the High Country, Pam Houston takes time to say that President Trump reminds her of her sexually abusive father. She also scorns his Cabinet full of “oil barons,” which means she is unclear about the meaning of “full of” and not above taking a shot at former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. Wikipedia notes that Tillerson was an Eagle Scout years before he joined ExxonMobil. Even a guided tour of his Eagle service project or a second look at definitions of stewardship and what it means for the preservation of biodiversity would not have affected Houston’s willingness to libel Republicans as hostile to wild things.

I borrowed Deep Creek because I hoped to read something inspirational set in the rhythms of the American West. What Houston delivered instead was a love letter larded with political asides. Edward Abbey did a better job of that four generations ago because he was honest about the polemical satire in his nature books. Houston’s editor does not seem to have warned her that complaining stupidly about sexism in the U.S. Forest Service and small-mindedness throughout the Trump administration might not resonate with everyone in her potential audience.

Pam Houston would have seemed like an outlier had I not run into a similar problem in a column by Dana Miller Ervin, who was exploring what might happen “if white evangelicals continue to overwhelmingly support the president after evidence indicates he’s broken the law” (I wrote in more depth about that last month). Given the opinion column format, I did not expect Ervin to maintain objectivity throughout, but she surprised me by assailing the logic of the pastors whom she quoted. She was not, in other words, taking North Carolina’s public pulse, however speculatively; she was trying to convince “ignorant” Christians of the error of their ways. This passive-aggressive stance toward her own sourcessabotaged an otherwise workmanlike approach to persuasion.

Punditry depends on pattern recognition, and it was Peter Zheutlin’s account of a road trip with his dog that built on what I’d noticed in Houston and Ervin to seal the deal on the idea that progressive ideology warps public discourse. Zheutlin drove a BMW convertible from Massachusetts to California in the company of a mixed-breed rescue dog named Albie. His conversations along the way are notable for gratuitous swipes at Donald Trump, and while part of the motivation for his homage to a similar road trip by John Steinbeck in 1960 was to expand his own horizons, the only people that Zheutlin seems truly comfortable with are those as progressive as he is.

After talking with a veteran whose support for gun ownership he finds disconcerting, Zheutlin consoles himself with the thought that Donald Trump’s America must coexist with his own very different America. But he more often bets on his own certainty without even knowing that he’s doing that, as by writing that “In Oklahoma, you can see the energy past and the energy future in one sweep of the eyes: fracking wells to your right and wind turbines to your left.” A proper footnote for that sentence might have explained why he pegged past and future to those technologies (windmills have been around for centuries!). Instead, Zheutlin uses even the footnote there to make fun of Donald Trump as being anti-science.

Travel writing used to be less political and more entertaining. Misbegotten references to “two Americas” are needlessly divisive, because (as President Trump himself understands and appreciates) America is bigger than Donald Trump, and it can’t be written off as one of his tacky possessions. America did not belong to Barack Obama before Donald Trump, either. But now we’re at the point where even professors of law seem to have trouble recognizing that.

Progressive nostalgia for the Obama presidency makes our vast and unruly country sound like a banana republic. Even singer/songwriter Woody Guthrie — one of Zheutlin’s heroes — didn’t make the mistake of subdividing the country he called home. How can you sing “This land is your land; this land is my land” while stepping cautiously around people who disagree with you? Yet Zheutlin is discomfited by the “Thank You Jesus” yard signs he sees in the rural south. Ignorant of basic Christian theology, he chalks them up to unconscious bigotry or tribalism rather than to humble echoes of the Great Commission in Matthew 28:16–20. Like progressive writers across multiple genres, he’d rather avoid what he deplores than struggle to understand it, and that’s a shame.

Pensacola NAS shooting victim 'saved countless lives with his own'

Family members have identified Joshua Kaleb Watson, 23, a recent graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, as one of the victims of Friday’s shooting at Naval Air Station Pensacola.
"Joshua Kaleb Watson saved countless lives today with his own," wrote his brother, Adam Watson, late Friday. "After being shot multiple times he made it outside and told the first response team where the shooter was and those details were invaluable.
"He died a hero and we are beyond proud but there is a hole in our hearts that can never be filled.”

When reached on the phone, Benjamin Watson said his son, Kaleb, was the officer on deck at the time of the shooting. His son was shot at least five times, he said.
“Heavily wounded, he made his way out to flag down first responders and gave an accurate description of the shooter,” Benjamin Watson said. “He died serving his country.”
Benjamin Watson said his son had dreamed of becoming a Navy pilot and reported to Pensacola for flight training the week of Veterans Day.
A native of Enterprise, Alabama, about 125 miles northeast of Pensacola, Kaleb Watson was a natural leader, a huge Auburn football fan and a person who put others first and strived to bring out the best in them, according to his family.
"Kaleb was starting grade school when Sept. 11 happened," his father said. "His uncle, Richard Lindsay, was a former Marine who served in (Operation) Desert Storm."
Lindsay was killed in a tragic vehicle accident, and his military service was an inspiration to Kaleb Watson.

"He's wanted to be in the military since he was 5 years old," his father said.
At the Naval Academy, Kaleb Watson was a small arms instructor, a wrestling coach and a captain of the rifle team, his father said. With pride, he recounted that the Academy's rifle team had beat the Army's for the first time in a decade under his son's leadership.
In the hours after the shootings, "I was texted by one of the officers who said Kaleb had saved lives," Benjamin Watson said.
He said two men had been killed at the scene of the attack, and that after Kaleb Watson contacted law enforcement outside the training building, medical personnel had transported him to Baptist Hospital. Sadly, he succumbed to his wounds.
Michael Johnson, who lives next door to the Watsons described the family as great neighbors. He said Kaleb Watson was a kind and brave young man.
He said the young man once helped him rescue a neighbor’s German Shepherd after it became entangled in a rope and was yelping for help.
“He immediately jumped the fence, unclipped the thing and we left a little note for the owner,” Johnson recalled. “Amazing young man.”

Benjamin Watson said his late son is survived by two older brothers, and the best thing people can do for his family is to pray for every family that was affected.
"There are young sailors in the hospital fighting for their lives, and others in great pain and distress from the actions of this shooter," he said.
Pain, pride and solemnity heavy in his voice, Benjamin Watson said he just wanted people to know the true story of his son's life.
"His mission was to confront evil," he said. "To bring the fight to them, wherever it took him. He was willing to risk his life for his country. We never thought he would die in Florida."
https://eu.pnj.com/story/news/2019/12/07/nas-pensacola-shooting-victim-identified-joshua-kaleb-watson-saved-countless-lives/4364516002/

Booming Jobs Report Puts Democrats Further In a Hole On Impeachment



Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., makes a statement at the Capitol in Washington, Thursday, Dec. 5, 2019. Pelosi announced that the House is moving forward to draft articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

The new jobs numbers are out and they are pretty staggering. My colleague T.LaDuke Duke did a full write-up about the figures and how it’s great news for Americans.
All told, the U.S. economy added a whopping 265,000+ new jobs. The unemployment rate is sitting at 3.5%, which is typically considered full employment (we are in the orange man bad era though, so old rules may not apply).

Here’s the numbers.
The United States added 266,000 jobs in November as the jobless rate decreased to 3.5 percent, reflecting a surge of strength in the labor market that has muscled through recession fears that flared over the summer.
The data, released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, beat expectations. Analysts had forecast roughly 180,000 new jobs for the month. The 3.5 percent unemployment rate is back at a 50-year low.
Of course this report “beat” expectations by nearly 100k jobs because the experts that judge this stuff generally stink at their jobs. You could quite literally have a monkey throwing darts at a board of numbers and probably come close to whatever “projected” jobs numbers these other outfits routinely come up with.

CNBC rightly points out that all Democrats have is impeachment at this point. There’s no chance they want to actually talk about the robust economy and booming jobs numbers.



But seriously, let’s impeach a President for vague accusations of abuse of power, in which there’s no crime spelled out and no actual proof any wrongdoing took place (no matter how many assumptions others want to make). Makes sense, right?

If impeachment wasn’t already dead, these new jobs numbers only further complicate matters for Democrats. At the end of the day, people care much less about tweets and inside baseball than they do having more money in their pockets. Wage growth continues apace, unemployment is bottoming out, and the economy as a whole is growing a steady pace.

Trying to remove Trump in this environment plays right into his hands. Perhaps Democrats are really just too clueless to realist that, and that’s a good thing for the country.

MAGAnomics; STILL WINNING


NEC Director Larry Kudlow: “President Trump Has Restructured The U.S. Economy” – Main Street USA is Back On Top

National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow appears on Fox Business news to discuss the November jobs report, economic growth and the China trade discussions.
Kudlow highlights the primary point that President Trump has reestablished Main Street USA as the primary focus of policy.  U.S. companies invested in the U.S. economy are doing exceptionally well and receiving the majority benefit.  U.S. multinational companies who are invested overseas are not benefiting as much.  Wall St -vs- Main Street.



Director Kudlow is correct, if the House can ratify the USMCA trade deal, North America will see a massive influx of investment.

In essence Titan Trump is winning the economic battle by: (a) repatriating wealth (trade policy); (b) blocking exfiltration (main street policy); (c) creating new and modern economic alliances based on reciprocity (bilateral deals); and (d) dismantling the post WWII Marshal plan of global trade and one-way tariffs (de-globalization).


MAGAnomics – November Jobs Gains +266,000, Unemployment Rate 3.5%, Wage Growth +3.1%, Inflation 1.4%

“These are the best jobs numbers of our lives”…

The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) has released the jobs number for November and the results are astoundingly excellent.  November jobs gains 266,000; the year-over-year wage growth is 3.1% with non-supervisory wages growing double the rate of supervisory wages. The unemployment rate dropped slightly to 3.5 percent.


Additionally, September was revised up by 13,000 from +180,000 to +193,000, and the change for October was revised up by 28,000 from +128,000 to +156,000. With these revisions, employment gains in September and October combined were 41,000 more than previously reported.  [Full BLS Report Here]

Also in November, 1.2 million persons were marginally attached to the labor force. This is a reduction of 432,000 from a year earlier. Those additional jobs are not counted in any labor report because those returning workers were previously not looking for employment; they came off the sidelines and entered the workforce.  AMERICA IS WORKING AGAIN !

The pundits are shocked, s.h.o.c.k.e.d!



How Can We...

WaPo Columnist: 

How Can We, The Media, Better Convince Americans To Support Impeachment?

Nothing wrong with a columnist having a strong opinion about whether Trump should be impeached or not. That’s sort of the job.

There is, perhaps, something wrong with a columnist wanting the media to operate as a hive mind in service to that opinion and actively use its influence to convince voters to share it.

Bear in mind that the columnist in question, Margaret Sullivan, used to be the “public editor” (or ombudsman) of the New York Times. The public editor’s job was to provide space for readers’ grievances about the paper’s coverage. That is, if anyone in journalism should be mindful of the fact that the average person doesn’t always — and shouldn’t always — share the media’s outlook, it’s Sullivan. Yet here we are.

Of course, it’s not like the Times’s core readership is a diverse snapshot of the American population. Among the sort of left-leaning educated white men and women who form the paper’s base, opinion on impeachment isuniform. Same goes for WaPo, I’m sure. Go figure that Sullivan would be frustrated that the entirety of U.S. media isn’t doing a better job addressing that readership’s concerns:
If anything, weeks into the House of Representatives’ public impeachment hearings, Americans’ positions seem to have hardened on whether President Trump should be impeached and removed from office.
So, is the media coverage pointless? Are journalists merely shouting into the void?…
[F]ar too often, [news] broadcasts fall prey to false equivalency: This side said this, and this side said that, and we don’t want to make anyone mad, so we’ve got to cut to a commercial now…
[H]ere’s the thing: There are facts. There is truth. We do live in a country that abides by laws and a Constitution, and nobody ought to be above them.
Despite the hardened positions, some members of the public are still uncertain. Some are persuadable, and yes, it matters.
Maybe, just maybe, it’s the job of American journalism in this moment to get serious about trying to reach these citizens.
It’s not “the job of American journalism” to command the attention of people who aren’t that interested in impeachment and to get them to form the right opinion. The job of American journalism is to gather facts and present them fairly and impartially. Sullivan is intrigued by a recent FiveThirtyEight article suggesting that as many as 12 percent of Americans are Republicans who are persuadable on impeachment, and therefore she’s noodling ways to persuade them. Why, I don’t know: Even if you ceded all 12 percent to the pro-impeachment column, the Senate GOP still isn’t voting to remove Trump. And we’re assuming a lot by assuming that everyone who *says* they’re persuadable really *is* persuadable. FiveThirtyEight notes that there are more self-styled “moderates” in the persuadable group than there are in the group that’s more certain in its view of impeachment. It may be that people who view themselves as moderate also pride themselves on keeping an open mind in all things — so naturally they’d claim that they’re persuadable on something as important as removing the president.

Even though, secretly, they’re pretty firmly for or against.

Here’s what Sullivan’s up against in hoping that the media might somehow magically move public opinion if only it condenses the daily impeachment coverage to movie-trailer-length bites or whatever:
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) told the House GOP conference Wednesday that he huddled with several senators Tuesday night who told him if Republicans hold the line in the House, they should be able to deliver a unanimous vote against impeachment in the Senate, according to Rep. Peter King (R-N.Y.).
They might not even get Romney. And that’s despite the fact that, apart from Fox, the media coverage of the Ukraine matter has been thorough and relentlessly critical. That’s why Sullivan is left stumbling around for out-of-the-box ideas to reach those somewhat remote, allegedly persuadable voters. The press has thrown everything they’ve got at the story. And yet support for impeaching and/or removing Trump remains a plurality position at best.

Can you imagine the crisis within this industry when this guy gets reelected next year?

Sullivan’s only hope is that John Bolton or Mick Mulvaney surprises everyone by testifying and drops a bombshell about Trump’s guilt. In lieu of an exit question, here’s Pam “Professor Resistance” Karlan at yesterday’s hearing making the case for sending military aid to Ukraine so that we can, uh, fight the Russians over there instead of here. Point one: Although there are merits to teaching Russia a lesson about the costs of expansionism in Ukraine, they’re not coming over here. Point two: Did you ever expect to live to see the day where hard leftists are making the case for funding proxy wars against Moscow?

Swing Voters Unhappy with Democrats Supporting Impeachment



A survey released earlier today indicates some bad news for Democrats whose mouths are still watering with the thought of impeaching President Donald Trump. Yesterday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced that the House would be drafting articles of impeachment. But according to the study, they might also be drafting their walking papers as well. 

The American Action Network (AAN) just released the results of a poll that surveyed voters in the congressional swing districts of Reps. Susie Lee (D-NV), Anthony Brindisi (D-NY), and Kendra Horn (D-OK). The survey found that voters in these districts were less likely to vote for their representatives in 2020 if they continued to pursue impeachment. 

According to the study, 53% of the voters in Rep. Lee’s district indicated that they would be less likely to support her if she backed impeachment. The same percentage of voters in Rep. Brindisi’s district indicated similar attitudes. In Rep. Horn’s district, 48% said they would be less likely to support their representative if she voted for impeachment. 

What’s even more intriguing is the fact that these three representatives serve three of the 31 districts that Trump won in 2016. They were later flipped blue in the 2018 midterm elections. The GOP is hoping to regain 19 of the districts they lost last year, and the result of this poll indicate that it might be a possibility if Democrats continue to tilt at the impeachment windmill. 

One of the individuals polled in Lee’s district said: 
“She wasn’t unaligned with the impeachment and then she talked with her liberals or whatever you want to call them, then she did. And on what lines, it’s so shaky. It’s a waste of taxpayers’ time and money. What have they done for three years other than try to get rid of Trump?”
Another voter in Rep. Horn’s district gave similar feedback: 
“They certainly did not need (Horn) to vote to proceed with the so-called impeachment inquiry hearing but she picked a side. I think we got a lot of people in Washington who haven’t done their job in three years. That’s about it.”
Unfortunately for the Democrats, it seems that they have failed to learn their lesson, and it is doubtful that this poll will compel them to reconsider their impeachment stance as other House Democrats have. It seems like a no-brainer, doesn’t it? Their constituents elected them to get things done. But instead, House Democrats have prioritized their “Orange Man Bad” initiative since they took office earlier this year. 

This is not the first poll indicating that impeachment could cost the Democrats control of the House. The progressive media has been pounding the impeachment drum since five minutes after Trump was elected. But now, it appears that the American public might have finally grown weary of the attempts to remove him from office. 

First, it was “Russiagate: The Collusion Delusion.” After that movie flopped, they followed up with the sequel: “Ukraine: Now We’ve Really Got Him!” And if the words of Rep. Al Green (R-TX) are true, when this latest effort fails, they will concoct another story with which to bore the country. 

Perhaps this is the reason why President Trump urged them to go through with impeachment quickly. If your opponents are tying the noose around their own necks, why stop them?