Sunday, January 5, 2020

Iranian Official Announces $80 Million Reward For Trump’s Head as MP Calls for Strike on White House


 Article by Elizabeth Vaughn in "RedState":
Image result for picture of soleimani car after his death by drone
 Immediately after Iran’s t0p general, Qassem Soleimani, was killed in a US drone strike early Friday morning outside the Baghdad airport, regime leaders including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and President Hassan Rouhani, vowed they would retaliate.

Al Aribaya reports that the eulogist at Soleimani’s funeral procession offered an $80 million reward for President Trump’s head. The procession was broadcast live on Iranian state television from the Iranian city of Mashhad.

He told mourners, “We are 80 million Iranians, if each one of us puts aside one American dollar, we will have 80 million American dollars, and we will reward anyone who brings us [Trump]’s head with that amount.”

London-based pro-western Iranian news editor M. Hanif Jazayeri has video from the broadcast. For some reason, I’m unable to import this particular video, but the clip in which the eulogist announces the reward can be viewed here.
Vows of retaliation have been escalating on both sides since Soleimani’s “termination.”

On Saturday night, President Trump warned that retaliation would be met with U.S. attacks on 52 Iranian sites. His tweet read:

Let this serve as a WARNING that if Iran strikes any Americans, or American assets, we have………targeted 52 Iranian sites (representing the 52 American hostages taken by Iran many years ago), some at a very high level & important to Iran & the Iranian culture, and those targets, and Iran itself, WILL BE HIT VERY FAST AND VERY HARD. The USA wants no more threats!

On Sunday, Iranian MP Abolfazl Aboutorabi upped the ante.

According to the The Iranian Labour News Agency, he said:

We can attack the White House itself, we can respond to them on the American soil.
We have the power, and God willing we will respond in an appropriate time.
This is a declaration of war, which means if you hesitate you lose. When someone declares war, do you want to respond to the bullets with flowers? They will shoot you in the head.

Another MP called Trump a “terrorist in a suit.”

Iranian revenge will come. Its severity will depend upon how deeply they want to engage with the U.S. The more ruthless their retaliation against us, the more brutality they can expect in return. How much punishment are they willing to tolerate?

Following Trump’s decision to reinstate sanctions against Iran over a year ago, the country’s economy is in pretty dire straits. One wonders if they have sufficient resources to mount a serious response. Maybe they still have something left from the stash Obama turned over to them in 2015.

But I’m pretty sure if they made an attempt to assassinate President Trump, they would live to regret it. All 52 targets would be hit immediately, and likely more.

The Iranians just got one rude awakening. They know there’s a new sheriff in town. Should they try to assassinate the President or strike the White House, they will no doubt get a second rude awakening.

https://www.redstate.com/elizabeth-vaughn/2020/01/05/iranian-regime-announces-80-million-reward-for-trumps-head/

Considering Everything, Watch This Again – “A President Who Believes in His Message”


This speech was originally delivered in late November 2012 after the presidential election.  Setting aside nuances in the Romney aspect watch this video again… in hindsight… and contrast specifically against current events.

Stay with it… watch it all the way through.  Pay attention to the specific subject matter outlined, the details as encapsulated, and contemplate what Bill Whittle says in this video against VERY CURRENT events: “a president who believes in his message“…




Donald Trump showed restraint...

Donald Trump showed restraint, then resolve, in killing of Iran's Qassem Soleimani


Faced with years of Iran's escalating aggression in the Middle East, Donald Trump has been a model of restraint. Finally, Iran had gone too far.


Qassem Soleimani was a violent man who lived a violent life. The Iranian major general lived by the sword and died by the drone. Soleimani’s death was a long time coming, and it is chiefly mourned by those who are seeking a similar end.

We can dispense with questions over whether the attack that killed Soleimani was an illegal assassination as opposed to a legitimate act in the war on terrorism. The United States has been conducting such strikes for years, and President Barack Obama faced no serious pushback for using drones to prosecute the conflict.

The Iranian Revolutionary Guard's Quds Force that Soleimani commanded was a U.S.-designated foreign terrorist organization, which gave its members the same status as al-Qaida, the Islamic State or any other terrorist group. According to the Pentagon, Soleimani was actively planning attacks against American forces, something he had done many times. Those politicians who question whether President Donald Trump had the legal right to conduct the strike can suggest adding it as another article of impeachment, if they dare.

Iran raised the stakes

The criticism that this move was escalatory ignores the fact that Iran has been escalating conflict in the Middle East for years. Iran supports insurgent and militia groups in Yemen, Afghanistan, Gaza, Lebanon and Syria, among others. Iran, using Soleimani’s Quds Force as its spearhead, was responsible for more than 600 American deaths in Iraq from 2003 to 2011, 17% of all U.S. dead in that conflict. President George W. Bush's administration never adequately made Tehran pay, and the Obama administration was more interested in paying Tehran.



Trump had been a model of restraint in the face of increasingly aggressive moves against American allies and interests by Iran and its proxies. These included attacks on Saudi oil refineries and tankers in the Persian Gulf, as well as aggressive moves against Israel in Syria, which the Jewish state has been responding to ably with strikes of its own. Trump even called off a planned retaliatory mission last June, after Iranian forces downed a U.S. drone, so it’s difficult to argue Trump was looking for pretexts for war.

But the red line for Trump is and has been attacks that threaten or take American lives. When an American civilian defense contractor was killed Christmas week by rocket fire in a Quds-backed Shiite militia attack near Kirkuk, Iraq, the United States mounted a punitive strike. When members of the militia group attacked the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, Trump immediately sent in Marine reinforcements. The president then issued a threat to Iran, to which the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, responded that America “can’t do a damn thing.” 

Soleimani's taunts, Trump's response

This was not simply a taunt; Khamenei employed an effectively official slogan that Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini used repeatedly against President Jimmy Carter during the 1980 hostage crisis. The implication of another election-year embassy takeover was plain, so when Soleimani brazenly traveled to Baghdad, Trump demonstrated that the United States can do things, and damn well.

Tehran now threatens revenge, of course, and it will likely seek it soon. Soleimani had boasted of Iran’s “power in the region and capability for launching asymmetrical war.” Force protection is critical to prevent another episode like the 1983 bombing of the Marine Corps barracks in Beirut. And there is also the possibility of an Iranian-backed domestic attack, like the planned bombing, according to U.S. officials, in Washington, D.C., which was broken up in 2011.

"We are near you, where you can't even imagine,” Soleimani had said. But it is safe to assume that any attack on the American homeland that was traceable to Tehran would be met with a significant, 9/11-style response. Despite Tehran’s bluster, the United States maintains escalation dominance, and there is really no question about the degree of punishment America could inflict on Iran should matters deteriorate further.

Of course, maybe Tehran doesn’t care about the “great and overwhelming force” President Trump threatened last June. Tehran claims that its “strategic patience” is not a sign of fear. “We are the nation of martyrdom,” Soleimani had boasted. “Come; we are ready.”

President Trump’s response: Challenge accepted.

US Government Agency Website ‘Defaced’ by Group Claiming to Be Iranian Hackers



A group claiming to be hackers from Iran breached a U.S. government website on Jan. 4, just one day after the Department of Homeland Security warned of potential cyberattacks on the United States.

Timeshots of the website on the Wayback Machine show the homepage for the the Federal Depository Library Program, fdlp.gov, replaced with a page titled “Iranian Hackers!” which displayed images of Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the Iranian flag.

“This is a message from Islamic Republic Of Iran,” the page read, alongside further messages written in Arabic and Farsi.

“We will not stop supporting our friends in the region: the oppressed people of Palestine, the oppressed people of Yemen, the people and the Syrian government, the people and government of Iraq, the oppressed people of Bahrain, the true mujahideen resistance in Lebanon and Palestine [they] always will be supported by us,” the message read in English.

The Federal Depository Library Program website is run by the Government Publishing Office and makes federal government documents and information available to the public, including bills and statutes, court opinions, and other material produced by the government.

A separate image displayed on the site showed a doctored image of a bloodied President Donald Trump being punched in the face by what appears to be the fist of an Islamic Revolutionary Guard.

Text under the image read: “Martyrdom was his (Shahid Soleymani) reward for years of implacable effort. With his departure and with God’s power, his work and path will not cease and severe revenge awaits those criminals who have tainted their filthy hands with his blood and blood of the other martyrs of last night’s incident.”

The website went down shortly after the alleged hacking but still appears on google with a tagline stating: “In the name of god. >>>>> Hacked By Iran Cyber Security Group HackerS … ;)<< <<<. This is only small part of Iran’s cyber ability ! We’re always ready.”

The identity of the so-called hackers has not yet been confirmed.
The Department of Homeland Security said in an emailed statement to The Epoch Times that it is monitoring the apparent hack, which they referred to as a “defacement.”

“We are aware the website of the Federal Depository Library Program (FDLP) was defaced with pro-Iranian, anti-U.S. messaging,” said Sara Sendek, a spokesperson for DHS’ Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.

“At this time, there is no confirmation that this was the action of Iranian state-sponsored actors. The website was taken off line and is no longer accessible. CISA is monitoring the situation with FDLP and our federal partners.”

Meanwhile, chief public relations officer for the U.S. Government Publishing Office, Gary Somerset, told CNN that his office is “coordinating with the appropriate authorities” to investigate the matter further.

“An intrusion was detected on GPO’s FDLP website, which has been taken down. GPO’s other sites are fully operational,” he said.

The incident comes shortly after the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Acting Secretary Chad F. Wolf issued a new National Terrorism Advisory System (NTAS) bulletin on Jan. 4 following the killing of top Iranian military General Qassem Soleimani.

Wolf said that the DHS doesn’t have information about any “specific, credible threat” to the United States at this time but warned that “Iran and its partners, such as Hizbollah [also spelt Hezbollah], have demonstrated the intent and capability to conduct operations in the United States.”

The acting secretary also warned of Iran’s cyberwarfare capabilities, adding that the country “can execute cyber attacks against the United States.”

Soleimani was killed alongside 25 others during a lethal U.S airstrike on Iranian-backed Iraqi militia group Kata’ib Hezbollah, which was ordered by President Trump on Jan. 3, 2020.

Democratic impeachment case collapses under...

Democratic impeachment case collapses under weight of time

As the House and Senate continue their bitter struggle over the coming impeachment trial of President Trump, a judge in the District of Columbia issued an opinion that was largely lost in the crush of New Years stories. The opinion could loom large in the Senate trial, however, and one line in particular, which states “the House clearly has no intention of pursuing” the witness, may be repeated like a mantra by the Trump defense team.

The witness was Charles Kupperman, a deputy to former national security adviser John Bolton. Other than Bolton himself, Kupperman is one of the officials most likely to have direct knowledge of an alleged quid pro quo on aid to Ukraine. After subpoenaing him last fall, the House withdrew its request before the court could rule on compelling his testimony for the record. The House also decided not to subpoena Bolton or any other key witnesses in the administration. Judge Richard Leon dismissed the case before New Years Eve with a hint of frustration, if not bewilderment, that the House did not seem interested in hearing from a possible eyewitness. Historically, that lack of attention in not only witnesses but also a triable case will remain one of the most baffling blunders of this impeachment.

When I testified in the House Judiciary Committee impeachment hearing, I cited this case in my criticism of the pledge by Democrats to impeach Trump by Christmas despite a very incomplete record. While I opposed some of the proposed articles of impeachment that were subsequently dropped by the panel, I said Trump could be legitimately impeached on abuse of power and obstruction of justice if the House could establish such violations. But the House refused to wait just a couple months to build a much stronger case to remove Trump. In the mad rush to push impeachment, Democrats could not have made it easier for his team.

Securing an impeachment so fast does not earn you a historic prize. It simply earns you a historic failure. By not seeking to compel numerous key witnesses, the House now relies on the Senate to complete its case. Since the House has maintained that the record overwhelmingly proves that Trump is guilty, the Senate could simply try the case on the record supplied by the House. Indeed, in the 1999 impeachment of President Clinton, Senate Democrats, including Minority Leader Charles Schumer, fought against any witnesses and sought a summary vote without a trial.

I was particularly concerned about moving forward by Christmas on the second article of alleged obstruction of Congress. The House elected to push through impeachment with an abbreviated period of roughly three months and declared any delay by Trump, even to seek judicial reviews, to be a high crime and misdemeanor. The administration is currently in court challenging demands for witnesses and documents. Just a couple weeks ago, the Supreme Court accepted one such case for review then stayed the lower court decisions ordering the production of the tax and finance records of Trump. The House impeached Trump before that court or other federal courts could rule on the merits of claims of presidential privileges and immunities. Both Bill Clinton and Richard Nixon had been able to take such challenges to the Supreme Court before they faced impeachment.

The House refused to seek to compel several witnesses in court, burning months in which it could have secured not just decisions in its favor but also testimony. Indeed, a year ago, I testified before the House Judiciary Committee and encouraged it not only to hold a vote on impeachment but to go to court to force testimony of figures like former White House counsel Donald McGahn. While refusing to use its impeachment powers with such a vote, it did take him to court. It won that case shortly before its impeachment vote. The case will be heard by the appellate court this week, even without being expedited for the impeachment investigation.

When faced with the embarrassing timing of that ruling after the hurried impeachment vote, House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff insisted there was no time to waste in getting the case to the Senate and that “it has taken us eight months to get a lower court ruling” to compel McGahn to testify. But after members claimed there was a “crime spree in progress” and no time to waste, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi blocked any submission to the Senate to demand witnesses that the House unwisely omitted in its investigation. So it seems time is no longer of the essence.

Schiff also was wrong on McGahn. The House waited until August to go to court to compel him to appear. That was roughly four months to secure a ruling and without proceedings under an impeachment inquiry ordered by the House, which historically places cases on a fast track to the Supreme Court. In the Nixon case, it took three months from the ruling of the trial court to the final decision by the Supreme Court that ultimately led to his resignation. Even if the House had waited until October to seek to compel witnesses, it could have had ample time to secure rulings or testimony by a springtime impeachment. We will never know because Democrats chose to do nothing due to the need to get to a trial that they have now delayed.

Schiff is not the only Democrat undermining the case for the obstruction article. Representative Eric Swalwell, who seeks to be a House manager at the Senate trial, recently declared that not only should a sitting president be impeached if he goes to the courts rather than submit to Congress, but that contesting demands for evidence is actually evidence of guilt on all of the charged offenses. In a complete denial of the critical concepts of the rule of law and due process, Swalwell claimed “we can only conclude that you are guilty” if someone refuses to give testimony or documents.

It is unclear if his concept of due process would be extended to President Obama, who refused both critical witnesses and documents to Congress on the basis of claims that were eventually dismissed by federal courts as untenable. Likewise, former Vice President Joe Biden has made headlines by declaring that, if subpoenaed, he would defy the Senate. But someone must have explained to Biden that the man he seeks to replace was just impeached for defying the House, even without a subpoena, because he clarified his earlier remarks by stating the opposite in a later interview.

None of this bodes well for the Senate trial. Developments are unfolding from a former aide to Rudy Giuliani, who seeks to give new evidence that is relevant to impeachment. Giuliani himself was never subpoenaed and recently said he would be willing to testify. It is like pushing for a murder trial before an autopsy is completed because everyone has holiday plans. There are also new documents showing that Trump may have moved to freeze the military aid after speaking with the Ukrainian president. Those documents were produced after a trial court ordered their release under the Freedom of Information Act, and the administration did not appeal.

However, none of that is part of the impeachment record because it was more important to vote on it before Christmas than to build a full record before a trial. The nation will likely witness the collapse of a Senate trial on an incomplete record, as the witnesses and documents are still coming forward. Those Democratic voters who supported this premature act will be left to wonder, as did Doctor Seuss, “How did it get so late so soon?”

Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law for George Washington University and served as the last lead counsel during a Senate impeachment trial. He testified as a witness expert in the House Judiciary Committee hearing during the impeachment inquiry of President Trump.


Soleimani Frenzy: Crazy Young Liberals Who Think They're About to Be Drafted Crash the Selective Service Site



Media and Democrats have whipped up folks on the left into a frenzy thinking that we’ve just seen the start of World War III with Iran because of the killing of IRGC terrorist leader Qasem Soleimani.

Because of that, “World War III” trended on Twitter and many young people apparently thought they were about to be drafted and crashed the Selective Service site trying to find out information.

Selective Service even had to tweet about it to advise people why the site was down.


Yes, maybe Democrats should stop spreading that “misinformation?”


The New York Times described one reaction: 
But on Friday, after a United States drone strike in Iraq killed Iran’s top security and intelligence commander, prompting concerns about the possibility of a new war in the Middle East, that oft-forgotten paperwork became a reason for spiking anxiety among many Americans.
“World War III” started trending on social media. Young men suddenly recalled registering after their 18th birthdays, many having done so while applying for college financial aid. One Twitter user posted that he had blocked the account of the United States Army, with the (faulty) reasoning that: “They can’t draft you if they can’t see you.”

Well, that’ll work. Not.

You also got responses like this:


This is what some of these folks sound like:



This, of course, is crazy. There is no “World War III” and there is no draft, and anyone who understands civics or history would understand that neither is imminent from this event. But that’s a big part of the problem, some millennials can be hoodwinked because many don’t have that grounding.


Exactly. The NY Times wrote the draft story but nowhere in there do they say: it ain’t happening. Thus, not disabusing anybody of the fiction.



The Selective Service tried to clarify for these folks, but that only made some think that it was more likely.






Iran Loses It’s Terror-Master


Iran Loses Its Terror-Master

The Iranian flag flutters in Vienna, Austria, March 4, 2019.  (Leonhard Foeger/Reuters)
Trump’s red line against the Iranian regime harming Americans was very real, and Qasem Soleimani is dead.

The U.S. killed the Iranian terror-master at the Baghdad airport where he reportedly had just arrived from Syria. The head of the Revolutionary Guard’s elite Quds Force, Soleimani was the instrument of Iranian imperialism around the region, building up proxy forces, overseeing operations, and executing a geopolitical vision. He existed at the very center of the Iranian regime and was uniquely skilled at his role, honed over decades of ruthlessness and cunning.

He was also a cold-blooded killer of Americans, responsible for the deaths of hundreds of our servicemen during the Iraq war. He deserved to die for that alone. According to a Pentagon statement, Soleimani was developing plans to attack American diplomats and service members in Iraq and around the region, which isn’t hard to believe, since that was his job.

The Trump administration and Tehran have been involved in a cat-and-mouse game for months now, with Iran engaged in provocations designed to elicit an American response. Trump had been hyper-cautious, only setting out a warning against harming Americans. After an attack by an Iranian-supported militia, Kataib Hezbollah, on a base in Iraq killed an American contractor, the U.S. retaliated with airstrikes against the group. That led to the Iranian-organized storming of the U.S. embassy in Baghdad. The killing of Soleimani, a legal act against an enemy combatant under the rules of war, is a stunning counter-move by President Trump.

Neither George W. Bush or Barack Obama dared to take such a step, and it surely has rocked the Iranian regime to its core. The question is how it reacts. It has cards to play, whether in stirring the pot further in Iraq, hitting our allies via its proxies, or carrying out terror attacks in the West or even on U.S. soil. But the U.S. has the power to see and raise Iran in any escalation, and Tehran, already struggling under stringent U.S. sanctions and facing internal unrest, has more to lose.

The decades-long conflict with Iran may be about to enter a phase of open hostilities not seen since the Reagan administration. President Trump has made a bold move. In the weeks ahead, he and his team will have to match it with planning, canniness, and perseverance. We face a determined enemy that is, thankfully, down one proficient, bloody-minded commander courtesy of the business end of an American drone.

Democrats Prove They Are Enemies Of America

Rep. Slotkin (D-MI 8) admitted on January 3rd that despite Soleimani’s contribution to the slaughter of her colleagues and friends, she did not think he was worth targeting.
Her comments in theDetroit paper say it all:
“As a former Shia militia analyst who served multiple tours in Iraq and worked at the White House under both Presidents Bush and Obama, and later at the Pentagon, I participated in countless conversations on how to respond to Qassem Soleimani’s violent campaigns across the region.
“If you worked on the Middle East over the past 20 years, you dealt with the growing organization and sophistication of Soleimani’s covert and overt military activities, which have contributed to significant destabilization across the region.
“I watched friends and colleagues get hurt or killed by Iranian rockets, mortars and explosive devices that were provided to Iraqi proxies and used against U.S. forces under Soleimani’s guidance.
“We watched as his power increased and he brought strength and capability to groups in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen, and to smaller cells around the Middle East and the world, with devastating consequences.
“What always kept both Democratic and Republican presidents from targeting Soleimani himself was the simple question: Was the strike worth the likely retaliation, and the potential to pull us into protracted conflict.

 https://www.clickondetroit.com/news/politics/2020/01/03/michigan-rep-slotkin-ex-cia-analyst-reacts-to-death-of-irans-soleimani/

Once again we see how Democrats worked to make Iran stronger so it could take over the Middle East and threaten America! 

Fed: “We don’t have a really good understanding of why it’s been so difficult to get inflation back up”

creditsundance at CTH

A good day for a MAGAnomic pause and reminder…
In 2015 we discussed candidate Trump’s economic positions and how they would impact the economy.  CTH anticipated that MAGAnomics would be reversing three decades of federal reserve monetary policy. After about a year of analysis and discussion, in 2016 CTH presented a theory: “A new Dimension in Modern Economics“.
CTH shared a possibility of what could happen if Trump Economic Policy was shifted to favor Main St. over Wall St.  One aspect we presented was how Federal Reserve monetary policy would be oddly disconnected from its ability to influence inflation… Today:
SAN DIEGO (Reuters) – The Federal Reserve could find itself fighting too-low inflation for years to come, San Francisco Federal Reserve President Mary Daly said on Friday, and may need a new policy framework to lift inflation back up to the Fed’s 2% goal.
“We don’t have a really good understanding of why it’s been so difficult to get inflation back up,” Daly said at the annual American Economics Association meeting in San Diego.
But with global growth slowing and the populations of most advanced economies aging, Daly said, “this new ‘fighting inflation from below’ is going to be with us, I would argue, for a longer period of time than just a few years.” (read more)
While the Federal Reserve is perplexed, the underlying reason for monetary policy to be incapable of impacting the rate of inflation is not too complex when you think about the focus of federal economic policy reversing in the era of Trump.
For 30-years +/- U.S. economic policy was geared toward Wall Street.  Corporations looked to maximize profits, manufacturing was shipped overseas, jobs were lost and Main Street suffered.  The Fed monetary policy followed the economic influences of a Wall Street created outcome. U.S. multinationals benefited; U.S. main street companies did not.
A Wall St. economic engine was created. The FED policy followed the new engine. The two entirely different economic engines then detached:
  • The Wall Street economy, an engine of sorts, is a “service driven” economy, with manufacturing of cheap imported goods done overseas.
  • The Main Street economy, again another engine, is a more balanced “manufacturing” economy; with a balance of imports and finished goods produced in the USA.
Bush, Clinton-Clinton, Bush-Bush and Obama-Obama terms focused on the Wall Street economy.  However, Donald Trump focuses on the Main Street economy.  In 2016, immediately after the election, we wrote about what we might expect to see happen:
2016 […]  Understanding the distance between the real Main Street economic engine and the false Wall Street economic engine will help all of us to understand the scope of an upcoming economic lag; which, rather remarkably I would add, is a very interesting dynamic.
Think about these engines doing a turn about and beginning a rapid reverse.  GDP can, and in my opinion, will, expand quickly.  However, any interest rate hikes (monetary policy) intended to cool down that expansion -fearful of inflation- will take a long time to traverse the divide.
Additionally, inflation on durable goods will be insignificant – even as international trade agreements are renegotiated.  Why?  Simply because the originating nations of those products are going to go through the same type of economic detachment described above.
Those global manufacturing economies will first respond to any increases in export costs (tariffs etc.), by driving their own productivity higher as an initial offset, in the same manner American workers went through in the past two decades.  The manufacturing enterprise and the financial sector remain focused on the pricing.
♦ Inflation on imported durable goods sold in America, while necessary, will ultimately be minimal during this initial period; and expand more significantly as time progresses and off-shored manufacturing finds less and less ways to be productive.   Over time, durable good prices will increase – but it will come much later.
♦ Inflation on domestic consumable goods ‘may‘ indeed rise at a faster pace. However, it can be expected that U.S. wage rates will respond faster, naturally faster, than any monetary policy influence because inflation on fast-turn consumable goods becomes re-coupled to the ability of wage rates to afford them.
The fiscal policy impact lag, caused by the distance between federal fiscal action and the domestic Main Street economy, will now work in our favor.  That is, in favor of the middle-class. (full outline)
What we are seeing in 2019 is precisely this outcome.

Why Is the United Nations Hiring...

Why Is The UN Hiring English-Speaking Disarmament Officers In New York?


As the Second Amendment conflict heats up across the United States, here’s another “crazy conspiracy theory” that has turned out to be true.

The United Nations is hiring in New York. What positions are they trying to fill?

English-speaking DISARMAMENT, DEMOBILIZATION, AND REINTEGRATION OFFICERS.

This job was posted the day after Christmas. So for all the folks who have been saying “nobody is trying to take your guns” you might want to read this job listing and reconsider your opinion.

Is this in response to the Virginia crisis?

You may recall that citizens of Virginia have become outraged recently by new laws that are likely to pass this month, effectively banning all semi-automatic weapons. Sanctuary counties, cities, and municipalities now cover all but the most urban parts of the state. These sanctuaries have vowed to support the Second Amendment and are refusing to enforce unconstitutional gun laws.

In response, a member of the state congress suggested that Governor Northam could call up the National Guard to disarm residents of Virginia despite the wishes of local governments. In response to that, at least one county has formed a militia and others are expected to spring up. The state’s Attorney General says that these sanctuaries carry no legal weight.

Despite the AG’s opinion and threats from the state government, Virginians appear to have no plans to give up their guns or register them. Many members of law enforcement entities and the National Guard have said that they will not act on unconstitutional orders.

One has to wonder if this is why the UN is hiring “disarmament officers?”

What is the job description?

Here are the responsibilities for the new hires, as per the United Nations job listing.
Within delegated authority, the Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration Officer will be responsible for the following duties:
  • Acts as a Focal Point for Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration (DDR) components for two to three missions, responsible for planning, support to implementation and evaluation;
  • Participates in DPO and Integrated Task Force planning meetings for the establishment of a new peacekeeping mission with a potential DDR component;
  • Provides technical assistance to peace negotiations;
  • Participates in technical assessment missions;
  • Advises, develops and reviews (as appropriate) initial DDR functional strategy and concept of operations for further development into a full programme by the DDR component and the National DDR Commission;
  • Drafts and reviews DDR inputs to SG report, code cables, and talking points;
  • Develops initial result-based framework and budget for new DDR components in new mission;
  • Liaises with UNDP and donor community to raise voluntary contributions for DDR programmes;
  • Presents and/or defends new and subsequent DDR budgetary requirements in the ACABQ and the 5th Committee of the General Assembly;
  • Develops staffing structure and terms of reference for a DDR component, including terms of integration with other UN agencies, funds and programmes;
  • Provides technical clearance for applicants to DDR units in new and ongoing missions;
  • Provides Headquarters support in planning the civilian and military logistics support for DDR;
  • Continually reviews DDR programme strategy and implementation through relevant documents, reports and code cables;
  • Conducts field missions to assess implementation of established DDR programmes;
  • Identifies potential problems and issues to be addressed and suggests remedies to DDR units in the field;
  • Liaises with Member States, UN actors and other DDR interested partners to represent the mission’s DDR component at the Headquarters level;
  • Establishes and maintains an outreach network with CSOs and IGOs active in the area of DDR.
  • Supports the doctrine development work in the area of DDR in the department, with the Inter-Agency Working Group (IAWG) on DDR and other relevant national and international actors working on DDR issues;
  • Contributes to Department-level or Policy Committee-level policy development work on DDR and related issues;
  • Maintains and further develops the Integrated DDR Standards – a set of inter-agency policies, guidelines and procedures on DDR;
  • On behalf of the Chief of the DDR Section, co-chairs the IAWG on DDR, contributes to bringing coherence to the interaction of the UN system and its partners on DDR;
  • Supervises the Associate Expert (Junior Professional Officer) in the development and maintenance of the web-based United Nations DDR Resource Centre;
  • Liaises with others (UN, regional organisations and Member States) providing DDR.
  • Other duties as required. (source)

Also notable is the required language fluency – English – and the desired experience.
Seven years of relevant experience in disarmament affairs, political analysis or in national military or paramilitary service, preferably related to the design, implementation or review of DDR. (source)

Employees would answer to the Secretary-General of the United Nations.

As per the UN, here are some specifics about this job description. Of special note:
Disarmament is the collection, documentation, control and disposal of small arms, ammunition, explosives and light and heavy weapons of combatants and often also of the civilian population. Disarmament also includes the development of responsible arms management programmes. (source)

As well, the UN especially wants women to apply for this job, citing gender equality. But is it possible they think that a gun owner might have more ethical difficulty firing on a woman trying to take their weapons than a man?

The US is no longer part of the UN Arms Trade Treaty.

You may recall back in 2013, the United Nations convinced then-Secretary of State John Kerry to sign a treaty that “unequivocally bans arms transfers that are in violation of a U.N. arms embargo or that exporters have reason to know will be used to commit genocide and other grievous war crimes.”


However noble that may sound, anti-gun control activists were concerned this would lead to the UN being able to disarm Americans on US soil.

So why is the UN looking for English-speaking disarmament experts?

Don’t be silly, “no one is coming to take your guns.”


How many times has someone told you not to worry – that nobody is coming to take your guns away? That all they want is “common-sense gun laws?”

In light of the current political climate and this job listing, I’d say that is an outright a lie.