Sunday, January 19, 2020

Trump and the Strange Rebirth of Political Psychiatry



 Trump and the Strange Rebirth of Political Psychiatry
 Article by Clint Fargeau in "RedState":

Political opponents have long traded recriminations of insanity in an effort to discredit one another.

For the last three years Democratic lawmakers, pundits, and activists have floated the impeachment of President Trump for mental illness or the deployment of the Twenty-fifth Amendment to declare him mentally unfit to discharge his office. 

Unusual among these commonplace political theatrics are the bands of mental health professionals who have elbowed their way to the front lines.

Lead by Yale professor of psychiatry Bandy Xenobia Lee, one consortium published The Dangerous Case of Donald J. Trump: 27 Psychiatrists and Mental Health Professionals Assess a President

Lee’s book reawakened a furious debate going back to the 1960s about the ethics and common sense of psychiatrists’ and psychologists’ exploiting their position of trust to stigmatize politicians. 

The debate has focused mostly on legalistic arguments over medical guidelines. Lee and some of her fellow travelers seem to believe their activism avoids the American Psychological Association’s Goldwater Rule and similar ethical restrictions—or that semantics at least grants them plausible deniability. As Lee told Salon recently:

The American Psychological Association allowed for the spread of this misconception that we cannot speak about anything unless we have examined the president. But we’re not speaking about the president’s personal mental health. We’re speaking about the effects of his mental pathology and behavior on the public. So we are responding to our public health responsibility, not speaking as the president’s personal physician.
Other professionals believe the danger posed by the president supersedes all other ethical considerations. Lee’s colleague and Duty to Warn co-founder John Gartner, a psychotherapist at Johns Hopkins, told a conference at Yale School of Medicine:
We have an ethical responsibility to warn the public about Donald Trump’s dangerous mental illness … Worse than just being a liar or a narcissist, in addition he is paranoid, delusional and grandiose thinking and he proved that to the country the first day he was president. If Donald Trump really believes he had the largest crowd size in history, that’s delusional.

Forget “not speaking about the president’s personal mental health” or (as the Goldwater Rule says) “sharing expertise about psychiatric issues in general.” 
Gartner publicly and directly characterizes the president in a way that—said about a private rather than a public person—would form grounds for the mother of all defamation lawsuits, coming as it does from a mental health expert. Nobody pays attention when Hollywood celebrities and CNN pundits call the president “crazy”; but a doctor’s words carry social weight and affect careers and reputations.

Legalistic wrangling and semantics aside, the campaign of Lee and her colleagues raises monumental questions of government that dwarf quibbles over medical ethics.

When asked about screening future vice-presidential and presidential candidates, Lee said:

I think it’s reasonable, given our recent experience and given the history that those with pathological personality disorders disproportionately attain positions of power and wreak havoc on societies. It is far easier to prevent [their election] than to try to intervene after things have happened. And a simple fitness-for-duty test would allow for screening of many destructive personalities. I would advise that not just for our own country, but for the countries around the world. It would do them a lot of good.

That is, the people of the United States may elect their own leaders contingent on the approval of a psychiatric committee, who may veto candidates they do not find suitable.

No matter how softly Lee peddles this suggestion, it amounts to a new estate of government, a high priesthood of medical experts who may block leaders—or impeach them for removal—based solely on their professional opinion. In a very real sense, future presidents would serve at the pleasure of psychiatrists and those who control them, e.g., the AMA, APA, universities, and Legislative-Branch committees overseeing the medical profession.

Lee and her colleagues’ proposal—that they would screen for mental illness and block or impeach only those demonstrating objective signs—ring dubious in light of the criteria they have used so far.

Witness the symptoms (aside from “delusions of crowd size” and “tweeting attacks at political opponents”) they have referenced to assess President Trump. Lee said:

[W]e put out an urgent letter to Congress, signed by 250 mental health professionals, asking for constraining measures at the same time as proceeding with impeachment. Within three days of our letter, [the president] withdrew troops from northern Syria, allowed the massacre of our allies and handed over dominance to our enemies. This was the kind of thing we were afraid of.

Does a psychiatrist’s expertise extend to military and geopolitical strategy? Lee seems to have discovered psychosis in the president’s *foreign policy*. This is bizarre, to put it mildly.

Were the president to introduce himself to the nation as Napoleon or wear his underpants on his head, Lee and Gartner’s assessment might spark less controversy. But presidential advisers, elected lawmakers, countless military and geopolitical experts, and tens of millions of Americans supported the president’s withdrawal from Syria. If the withdrawal is “crazy,” the only conceivable explanation is mass insanity. Lee has an answer for that:

Psychosis is a severe condition of mental impairment when you lose touch with reality, and shared psychosis happens when a highly compromised person is exposed to other people who would be otherwise healthy. But because of close contact, healthy people take on the symptoms of the person who is compromised. Because of the president’s position and his direct access to a large proportion of the population, either via Twitter or his direct rallies, there is a phenomenon of shared psychosis going on at a large scale, at a national scale.

That is, a voter may *believe* he supports the president and his withdrawal from Syria on rational grounds, but not really. The voter is sick. The voter disagrees with the psychiatrists only because he has lost touch with reality, courtesy of a lunatic president’s Twitter feed and rallies.

Is such mass psychosis within the realm of possibility? It certainly is. Societies have lost their collective minds in the past, and the United States—or rather half the United States (pick which half you dislike)—may turn out to be the latest example.

But diagnosis-from-policy raises uncomfortable questions. In the future, will the Standing Psychiatric Committee on Presidential Mental Fitness discover psychosis in a candidate’s policy on gun rights? On oil and gas energy? On transgender service in the military? On confronting Iran?

Will the Committee pathologize the candidate’s policies as extreme fear and paranoia, denial of climate catastrophe, creeping transphobia, and unconscious racism against Middle Eastern peoples, respectively? Will the Committee conclude in the end that political conservatism is a psychopathology rendering “sufferers” ineligible for public office?

PSYCHIATRY’S CHECKERED HISTORY
If Lee’s suggestions and pronouncements seem to carry the whiff of totalitarianism, color historians of medicine unsurprised. 

The mental health profession and Marxist totalitarian regimes share a storied background over the last 100 years. Punitive psychiatry was deployed extensively behind the Iron Curtain to suppress and discredit political dissenters.

These unfortunate souls received sham diagnoses and wound up in gulags or incarcerated in mental institutions, where they were “treated” with a gamut of forced drugging, isolation, “labor therapy,” shock therapy, and ditch executions (the last of which boasted a 100% cure rate).

Professionals in the USSR and Eastern Europe fabricated conditions such as “slow-progressive schizophrenia” and “philosophical intoxication” to transform political and ideological crimes into sickness—crimes that would otherwise merit embarrassing trials. 

Among the “symptoms” of these Marxist mental illnesses were criticizing or demonstrating against the government; speaking badly of communist leadership; speaking well of the West; evincing a “pessimistic attitude”; practicing the Christian religion; publishing unseemly literature; and advocating for human rights.

Unfortunately, punitive psychiatry does not confine itself to the past—reports suggest communist China is following the same playbook today, particularly in their treatment of Muslims.

Examine the time or country you like—not excluding the United States today—the mental health profession demonstrates a consistent and disturbing pattern of mission creep, starting with healing but veering into politics and social engineering of all sorts. For reasons that aren’t entirely clear, a portion of professionals seem unable to restrain themselves from moonlighting as sociologist-kings and arbiters of unified knowledge. As they do, activist psychologists and psychiatrists style themselves experts of law, hard sciences, philosophy, art, journalism, history, business, social mores, religion, and—as Bandy Lee exemplifies—politics and war. Professionals wind up parlaying their knowledge of psychology, medicine, and mental illness into a Theory of Everything and Everyone.

Psychology and psychiatry lack quantitative and objective diagnostic criteria, leaving the mental health profession singularly vulnerable to subjective judgements and motivated reasoning. Well-grounded psychiatrists and psychologist know their weakness well and cleave to diagnostic and ethical guidelines carefully. History suggests that—absent rigorous diagnostic guidelines—professionals have fallen to diagnosing behavior through the arbitrary lenses of intellectual fads, state dogmas, political hysterias, social prejudices, and biases in favor of atheistic scientific materialism (a metaphysics which psychology happens to share with Marxist dialectical materialism). Absent strict ethical guidelines, professionals have lapsed into equating mental illness with persons, lifestyles, political beliefs, religious beliefs, and social movements they find odious or threatening.

The mental health profession’s extensively chronicled tendencies and checkered history highlight a less-discussed truth about the Goldwater Rule and similar restrictions: they not only protect the public figures and groups activist professionals sometimes defame in their polymathic frenzies—they also protect the fragile credibility of the field. Why have the medical community not leapt up in unison to embrace the strictest interpretation of the Goldwater Rule? Why do they not sanction and reign in activist professionals? Why are professional associations and universities seemingly unconcerned about discredit to their institutions and a new loss of public trust?

The complacency of mental health leaders suggests Lee’s ideas hold currency among her colleagues who remain in the background. The mental health profession votes overwhelmingly liberal-progressive today, and a symbiotic relationship between leftist politics and the mental health profession seems to be emerging. As Ian Tuttle coyly observes: “Freud and Foucault are dead, but their methods thrive. On the left [today], politics is not about debate; it’s about diagnosis.”

The mental health profession seems to be moving toward more activism and political involvement. Ethical guidelines on public commentary are disregarded or in process of rolling back. Professionals speak publicly not only about political figures but also policies ranging across transgenderism, red flag laws, climate change, abortion, and immigration.

It stands to reason the medical community would welcome an enlargement of their power and authority in government and culture. Should the medical profession come to function as the gatekeepers to elected office, we can expect future lawmakers and presidents to think twice before interfering with the medical profession’s self-determinism. 

Up till now, the government has regulated the medical profession, not visa versa; but that could change. The proposed enlargement of mental health powers does not constraint itself to a forced assessment of President Trump or future presidential candidates. During the Kavanaugh confirmation, Lee cosigned a letter calling for the psychological examination of Justice Brett Kavanaugh. Lee told Democracy Now!:

Some of the troubling signs that we saw were poor regulation of emotion, evasion of questions, exaggerated entitlement—which actually makes someone more likely to be capable of violating others’ rights. Other troubling signs that we’ve seen were paranoia, conspiracy theories and an inability to have empathy for others. Those were some of the signs that we feel, as mental health professionals—it is our duty to call out signs that are abnormal and signs that indicate possibly a troubling condition on the part of Mr. Kavanaugh.

One might ask these Lee and her cosigners: how should a man accused on television of a decades-old attempted rape behave? In what manner should he answer senators and inquisitors bent on ruining his career, reputation, and life, using only the word of one woman? Moreover, what is the proper amount of entitlement for a giant of jurisprudence on the doorstep of the most powerful court position in the land? Does Lee believe there wasn’t a coordinated behind-the-scenes effort (or conspiracy, if you will) to stigmatize Kavanaugh and make him unconfirmable? Since his elevation, has Justice Kavanaugh gone on an empathy-free rampage against “others’ rights,” staggering down the hallways of the Supreme Court in a beer haze and leaping on unsuspecting women? Lee and her colleagues provide answers to none of these questions, only vague aspersions.

John Gartner proclaimed the president a grandiose narcissist. He and other activist professionals bring to mind the adage: It takes one to know one.” For who else thinks he or she qualifies to “warn” the country of what’s in front of every citizen’s eyes for his own judgement? Who else desires to second-guess and veto the electors of the world’s most successful democracy, or the court appointments of the president and the Senate? Who else peppers Congress with letters and and entreaties to listen to his or her aspersions and speculations on a seemingly limitless array of persons and subjects? Who else believes that—no matter how egregious their profession’s mistakes and abuses in the past—they themselves can flout the guidelines that grew out of those mistakes and abuses?

A physician of my acquaintance once observed: “They taught us in medical school that we are gods. Unfortunately, some of us believed them.”

https://www.redstate.com/clint-fargeau/2020/01/19/trump-and-the-strange-rebirth-of-political-psychiatry/

Rep. Doug Collins: This Statement Made by the House Majority Leader Should Alarm Every American


Image result for cartoons about guilty until proven innocent

Article by Elizabeth Vaughn in "RedState":

Prior to Trump’s presidency, I mistakenly believed that, in the US legal system, all citizens were presumed innocent until they were proven guilty. “Ei incumbit probatio qui dicit, non qui negat. (The burden of proof is on the one who declares, not on one who denies.)” Further, one’s guilt had to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt. “If reasonable doubt remains, the accused must be acquitted.” For most Americans, this right cannot be violated. However, if you happen to be Donald Trump, or anyone associated with him, this right was stolen a long time ago.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD) delivered a floor speech on the day of the House impeachment vote during which he told his colleagues that they had provided the President “every opportunity to prove his innocence.”

What I will do is remind Americans that the House provided President Trump every opportunity to prove his innocence. Instead, he ignored Congressional subpoenas for documents and for testimony by White House officials and ordered his subordinates not to cooperate. This itself is unprecedented. When Presidents Nixon and Clinton were asked to hand over documents and allow officials to testify, ultimately both complied. Because it is the law. Such actions of the President can be taken as further evidence of his obstruction and abuse of power. It is itself impeachable conduct, the subject of the second article in this resolution.

That’s an astonishing statement. If a Republican congressman had said it, there would be calls for his resignation. Hoyer is an attorney.

Rep. Doug Collins (R-GA) joined Mark Levin for an interview on Fox News’ “Life, Liberty and Levin” on Sunday to discuss the forthcoming Senate impeachment trial.

Levin addressed the partisan nature of the impeachment and the fact that President Trump has been denied due process. Levin says:

I’m not talking about the Bill of Rights, I’m talking about the kind of due process past presidents have had, judges have had who have faced situations like this. Basic Magna Carta type due process that people get. The President gets less due process than the terrorists on 9/11 get. They get habeas corpus. The President gets no rights. The Republicans, no rights.”
The Democrats didn’t call Bolton. Now they want to move through the Senate John Bolton, Mick Mulvaney, the OMB Director and the Secretary of State. They want all four.
Congressman, don’t we know because executive privilege and the separation of power, the small circle around the President, Congress doesn’t get them? So, they’re purposely creating this confrontation.

Collins brings up Rep. Hoyer’s statement on the day of the impeachment vote. He tells Levin:

Mr. Hoyer from Maryland made a very revealing statement for anybody who’s concerned about Constitutional rights – and especially for me – even those of my Democratic counterparts who worry about their communities, where they discuss police action and rights being violated
Hoyer said ‘We offered him every opportunity to come prove his innocence.’ I’m sorry, did we take a vacation and leave the United States? Did we all of a sudden suspend the Bill of Rights? Did we suspend any modicum of due process?
I don’t care if you think this president ought to be impeached or not. This is irrelevant. This should bother everybody that we’re going to make stuff up. And I talk about this on the floor of the House. If I just want to go around and accuse you of something, under the new standards and all you have to do is “prove your innocence.”
I think the American people are going to go back and see that the senators are going to look at it and the Senate is going to say, ‘Wait, this is what we’re getting?…This is what you have wasted so much time and now put us in a period of time in which we’ve got to do something?’
I think the American people are going to see through this.

The Democrats have no respect for the Constitution. But until a change is made, it is the law of the land.

Democrats denounce our two tier system of justice. They rail that there’s one system of justice for the rich and another for the poor. I would argue that there’s one system of justice for Republicans and another for Democrats.

President Trump has not committed an impeachable offense. Period. I have this fantasy that one day during the trial, Trump’s defense team will expose irrefutable evidence of the Democrats’ plot against him. Something so glaring, so determinative that they will be humiliated and utterly, finally defeated. Is that too much to ask?

https://www.redstate.com/elizabeth-vaughn/2020/01/19/768511/


Indoctrination Education: Public Schools Are Now Programming Facilities


 Image result for cartoons about public school indoctrination
  
 Article by John Klar in "The American Thinker":

When I was in eighth grade, a teacher announced we were going to study capital punishment.  The methodology for this process was that the class was divided randomly in half, and each side was assigned the task of writing an essay: one half pro, one half con.  After we had completed our essays, the students engaged in open debate about this complex issue.  

Perhaps this sort of objective process of critical thinking is still practiced in some American schools, but it surely seems scarce.  In its place, secular liberalism, and "progressivism," have become the Church of the American State, administered through public schools.

When Roe v. Wade was decided, the schools may have taught that abortion was legal, but they did not instruct children that it was moral — that was left to parents in the home.  By the time marriage was redefined so two men could claim it together as a constitutional liberty, the landscape had clearly changed — not only are children being instructed that homosexuality is the moral equivalent of heterosexuality (in conflict with numerous faith and cultural traditions), but they are being taught that they can select their gender orientation and gender "identity."   In Vermont, young children are offered transgender hormone treatment in preparation for transgender surgeries — and if the parents disagree, a court order can bypass them.

Today's children are being institutionally indoctrinated to be unreflective, uncritical automatons of the liberal cause — on immigration, climate change, abortion, and whatever the progressive cause du jour demands.  Preying on children is not just for predators anymore.  For instance, school walk-outs to ban firearms are not balanced with school walk-outs to uphold the vital Second Amendment and its protections against tyranny.  Those who label Donald Trump a tyrant do not teach children to study both sides and consider the importance of an armed citizenry when society is threatened with a tyrant.

The "climate justice warriors" have now taken America's schoolchildren hostage in their battle to impose their tyrannical carbon tax on the citizenry.  They encourage children to block traffic, lie in the streets, skip school — because "the world will end in 11 years!"  They are not studying both sides of the anthropogenic climate change debate, let alone critically assessing effective responses.  Even if the climate is changing from human activity, and even if the world will implode in 11 years, the carbon tax is an ineffective, patently regressive, and inegalitarian measure.  This would make a good two-sided essay assignment for critical young minds to weigh.

But children are not being taught to be critical thinkers — they are just being conditioned to be critical of "the other side," mobilized as pawns against their own parents and grandparents.  In George Orwell's 1984, the citizenry is kept in fear of fictitious foreign wars to ensure slavish compliance.  In today's real-life 1984, children are conditioned so that questioning the carbon tax, gun grab, or transgender mantras will lead to withering condemnation — perhaps even disciplinary action.  These kids most surely won't be blocking traffic in an "anti–carbon tax" march.

Critical thinkers might challenge the use of fossil fuels absorbed in these marches: both getting students to events and blocking traffic.  In one case, cows were stalled in the hot sun for more than 15 minutes while disruptive children blocked a parade, but no one complained about "bovine warming."  This is not an effort to aid critical thinking or introspection, but the opposite.  It is called indoctrination.

Education teaches always by comparison.  Complex issues proffer contrasts best weighed side by side.  This also nurtures civility — appreciating opponents' perspectives even if there is disagreement.  This ancient process has been swept aside with oversimplified conclusions that are then instilled as undeniable fact, and those who take exception are stifled as ignorant, backward, dangerous, even criminal.

But what is criminal is this process by public schools of indoctrinating the young?  This practice is blatant, unapologetic, and nearly universal.  "Black Lives Matter" flags fly at most of Vermont's schools — has there been consideration of what that group stands for, its objectives, the legitimacy of its complaints, the plight of children in Africa, or how it seeds racial division in direct conflict with the teachings of Martin Luther King?  No, there has not, which is evident every time a school announces its decision, always parroting the same ignorant claims of "raising awareness."  As if, when I was in eighth grade and the country was roiling with urban poverty, we children were somehow unaware of the issue.

Particularly flagrant is the institution of "active shooter alerts," which unquestionably terrify — even traumatize — many students instead of providing security to make them feel safe.  (I attended a school through the late 1970s where an armed female undercover officer patrolled the hallways and grounds daily — didn't seem very extreme.)

Intellectual oblivion is now instilled by vitriolic partisan ideologues who have infected America's public schools, themselves incapable of the critical analysis of which their charges are deprived.  How can teachers send kids out block traffic to call for an economically enslaving tax scheme without assessing its numerous shortcomings, alternative regulatory ideas (like installing pollution control devices on lawnmowers, or restricting fireworks displays), or actually teaching the children to pollute less?

This last issue is where the uncritical indoctrination is most evidently proved.  Teachers are not instructing children to turn down thermostats at home, turn lights off when not in use, or take short showers.  They surely aren't teaching them to spend less time on computers, TV, or videogames.  These decisions of consumption are "left to the home."  The uni-dimensional "solution" to curb consumption by a corporate-funded, government-imposed tax means they can go on consuming, externalize their anger at those who pollute less than they do, and just pay a tax to keep on polluting.  It takes a special kind of indoctrination, and an utter failure of education, to craft that degree of stupidity.

This simple-minded decline in public schools did not happen overnight.  Somewhere, the teachers were inculcated into the same brain-dead condition, or they would be the ones leading children out of, not into, the Orwellian Hell of unquestioning lockstep.  Ah, but what grand consumers these little proles will be when they grow up to be teachers — polluting and consuming more than ever, they will now pay an additional corporate-government fee in the confident delusion that they have made a difference. 

All that remains is for them to rally to confiscate all firearms so that Big Brother can fully protect them from the world.

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2020/01/indoctrination_education_public_schools_are_now_programming_facilities.html 

Blame Game Set for Va. Gov....

Blame Game Set for Va. Gov. Northam's 

Gun-Free Kill Zone

The political battle lines have been drawn over Virginia governor Ralph Northam's declaration of an emergency kill zone on the Capitol grounds for Lobby Day, Jan. 20.  As of Friday night, after a Virginia district court rejected a legal challenge to the governor's gun ban, the ban appears to be in place, unless a last-ditch appeal to the Virginia Supreme Court can succeed in overturning the ban this weekend.

As it stands, an area bounded by 9th, Broad, Bank, and Governor streets around the Richmond Capitol has been declared an emergency gun-free zone.  One section of the appeal to the Supreme Court argues:
These events merely underscore the Petitioners['] concern raised at oral argument before the trial court, that people who choose to show up armed to Lobby Day — and there will be many who seek to — will be forced by this EO into the unprotected chaos of the surrounding streets, rather than the "shelter" of the Capitol grounds.  The EO's ban on firearms on the grounds for this permitted event has increased the risk of problems despite the purported justification of "avoiding another Charlottesville."

Philip Van Cleave, president of the VCDL, discussed the logistics of the rally on the Cam Edwards YouTube channel on Thursday:
... 9th Street is right there, that's the street that touches the Capitol square ... 9th street will be blocked off so that people can stand there and they will be able to hear the speakers[.] ... If you are on that street, you can carry[.]
Capitol police expect to funnel as many as 10,000 people through magnetometers into the outdoor gun-free kill zone that will be contained by fencing around the Capitol grounds.  Thus, any violent extremists motivated by mass murder will be able legally to carry their weapons onto 9th Street and have a free fire zone into the trapped and defenseless crowd. 

Similarly, it will be legal to carry anywhere on the streets surrounding the kill zone.  Trapping people in an enclosure won't make them safe, and the prospect of mixing bad and good actors in the streets is an object lesson in the futility of gun-free zones.

On Lobby Day, should people need to escape the gun-free kill zone, they will be funneled into exit choke points along the fence, where they will be vulnerable to further concentrated violence.  This is the same type of plan used in Charlottesville to trap Unite the Right demonstrators behind metal barricades, and then to funnel them through exits targeted by the Antifa mob. 

The only people who might be protected by this plan will be the people inside the Capitol building itself — i.e., mainly lawmakers. 

On Wednesday, in his prepared remarks, Gov. Northam went to significant lengths to justify the emergency declaration and explicitly tied the current threats to similarities with the events in Charlottesville in 2017:
[W]e have received credible intelligence from our law enforcement agencies that there are groups with malicious plans for the rally that is planned for Monday.  This includes out of state militia groups and hate groups planning to travel from across the country to disrupt our democratic process with acts of violence.  They are not coming to peacefully protest.  They are coming to intimidate and cause harm.  State intelligence analysts have identified threats and violent rhetoric similar to what has been seen before other major events such as Charlottesville. 
After warning of unspecified haters, Gov. Northam then made a vague and confusing reference to various "off-line and on-line" sites in "mainstream" but "dark web" channels as the source of the intelligence.  This was followed by an incoherent non sequitur about some unknown "conversations" involving "conspiracy theories":
This intelligence comes from main stream channels, both off-line and on-line, such as alternative dark web channels used by violent groups and white nationalists from outside Virginia.  These conversations are fueled by misinformation and conspiracy theories.
Thus, on Wednesday, Gov. Northam threw the first grenade in the blame game.  The Democrats' political tactics are straight from the Charlottesville playbook.  First, prior to a legal rally, delegitimize your opponents by calling them dangerous extremists, haters, and intimidators, then paint your opponents  as outsiders, and then warn them to stay away from "your" territory.  Lastly, set up your opponents to take the blame should anything violent happen.

In his remarks, Gov. Northam set up some unspecified infiltrators as dangerous white nationalists who may be coming here to do harm.  On Wednesday, the Zman blog presented a cogent analysis of the problems associated with calling someone a white nationalist.  Peter Brimelow of VDare is suing the New York Times for $5 million in damages for libel after the paper repeatedly called him a white nationalist. 

Who defines, and how do you define, a white nationalist?  Is it a libel to call someone a white nationalist or not?  Gov. Northam is going with the libel angle.  If "white nationalist" is not a slur on your character, then the term must represent a legitimate identity, and that doesn't get you very far in declaring a state of emergency against white nationalist invaders. 

So he is using the term as a libel, and a specific libel to mean that white nationalists, by virtue of being white, are racists, as opposed to some other kind of nationalists who are not white and not racists.

The hypocrisy about racism here is absolutely staggering.  After initially apologizing for being in a medical school yearbook photo painted in blackface (standing next to someone in a KKK costume, or perhaps being the one in the KKK costume), he later recanted the admission, and a private investigation costing $368,000 (paid for by the state medical school) said there was no conclusive evidence that it was Gov. Northam in the photo.  He now claims that he doesn't know how the picture appeared on his personal yearbook page, though he also claims that he did darken his face that same year to dress up as Michael Jackson.

Though there were bipartisan calls for his resignation, after creating a new top advisory position for diversity, equity, and inclusion, and after hiring a black woman to be the first ever director in the position, Gov. Northam saved his job.  Now Gov. Northam is wholly owned by the race industry.  He has no choice but to define white nationalists as evil. 

Could he be sued for libel by someone who is in Richmond on Monday?  What if it gets out where you work that you went to Lobby Day with the white nationalists?  Might you face job discrimination as a white nationalist?

Gov. Northam was not done setting up targets for blame.  He's also lining up the VCDL for blame should anything go badly on Monday.  After stating that he believes the VCDL when it says it intends this to be a peaceful event, he said this:
Unfortunately, they have unleashed something much larger, something that they may not be able to control.  And so I call on them to disavow anyone who wishes to use Monday's rally to advance a violent agenda, and I call on them to discourage people from other states from coming to Virginia with violent intent. Hate, intimidation, and violence have no place here.
As it turns out, it's actually the Democrats who have unleashed something much larger, something that they may not be able to control.  In fact, they may have created a national opposition movement.  Lawmakers in West Virginia have invited Virginia counties to leave Virginia and rejoin their historical family, a prospect that is entirely possible.

According to news reports, the VCDL's Van Cleave responded to the governor by saying:
Excuse me, the governor caused all of this stuff[.] ... This is on him, not on us.  All of these people are stirred up because of what he is doing, trying to remove guns from law-abiding citizens.
Notice that Gov. Northam is using a Stalinist tactic when he requests that private citizens disavow people they don't even know.  The implication is that if you don't become a state-controlled denouncer, a stooge of the government, you will be held responsible for anything bad that happens when you express your First Amendment rights.

Moreover, the governor is requesting that the VCDL discourage people from other states from coming to Virginia.  This is a double-whammy.  You must disavow and discourage, or you will be held accountable.

In another part of his remarks, Gov. Northam said,
Now, I call on the Virginia Citizens Defense League and its members to follow the NRA's example, and make your event a peaceful display too[.] ... Please do not dishonor Virginia or your cause.
So let me get this straight.  Gov. Northam has declared a state of emergency based on credible threats from the dark web that violent white nationalist militias may storm the capitol in response to his anti-gun legislation, and somehow the VCDL is supposed to be responsible because he claims it's "your event."   
The pre-emptive blame game now is in full swing.  It sounds as though Gov. Northam is going with his yearbook strategy.  I don't know how this happened!  Someone else must have done it!  Blame him!

Image: Craig via Flickr.

President Trump Official Response to Senate Trial Notification



[Via White House]  THE HONORABLE DONALD J. TRUMP, 
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, HEREBY RESPONDS:

The Articles of Impeachment submitted by House Democrats are a dangerous attack on the right of the American people to freely choose their President. This is a brazen and unlawful attempt to overturn the results of the 2016 election and interfere with the 2020 election—now just months away. The highly partisan and reckless obsession with impeaching the President began the day he was inaugurated and continues to this day.



Previously adopted by unanimous consent:

  • A Summons to the White House notifying them of the impeachment trial will be issued by the Senate.  A deadline for WH response: Saturday January 18th, 2020, 6:00pm,
  • The House of Representatives (impeachment managers) have a deadline of 5:00pm Saturday, January 18th, 2020, for the filing of their impeachment brief to the Senate.
  • The White House (defense lawyers) have a response deadline of 5:00pm Monday, January 20th, for their response to the House impeachment brief.
  • The House of Representatives (impeachment managers) have a deadline of Noon Tuesday, January 21st, for their rebuttal brief to the White House defense brief.
  • The Senate Trial begins at 1:00pm Eastern, Tuesday January 21st, 2020.
Senators will not be allowed to bring their cell phones or any electronic device into the Senate chamber while the trial is underway.

Several wounded as violent protests erupt in Iraq

OAN Newsroom
UPDATED 12:30 PM PT — Sunday, January 19, 2020
Violence erupted in Iraq as citizens voiced their outrage over what they claimed is a slow pace for reforms. Sunday reports said protesters blocked roads in Baghdad and the city of Najaf.
Demonstrations occupied three key bridges of entry in the capital, where a dozen people were reportedly wounded in a standoff with security forces.
 Protesters used burning tires to block the roads in Baghdad and threatened further escalation if their demands are not met.

“The burning tires is an expression of our protest and anger. We have endured the cold and hunger, we left our work and families. The government does not care, does not consider that the people are protesting and that they are demanding their rights. Our demands are legitimate and they must give them to us.” – Unnamed protester
Protests have now spread from the capital to the city of Najaf, where demonstrators have been repeatedly torching the Iranian consulate.
https://www.oann.com/several-wounded-as-violent-protests-erupt-in-iraq/

Does it matter if Trump’s inner thoughts were only about re-election?




The best persuasion play of the past year has been Democrats/press brainwashing the public to not ask the only relevant question about the “perfect call” with Ukraine.
The only relevant question is this: Is there a legitimate national interest in finding out if the guy leading the polls to be our next president has any blackmail potential from Ukraine? 
That should be a top national concern. Especially since Russia probably finds out anything Ukraine knows. 
Ukraine corruption in general matters, but nothing so much as possible influence over our next president. So treating it as the top corruption risk involving Ukraine is sensible. 
Does it matter if Trump’s inner thoughts were only about re-election? No. As long as he is working on a national priority, he is allowed to benefit politically. 
Imagine a President Biden negotiating with Ukraine when he knows they probably (or might) know more about Hunter than we know. Does he go hard at them when it could be bad for his son? 
Lev Parnas tells us that getting Ukraine to announce an investigation was the focus because no one trusted Ukraine to do the actual investigation. Getting them “a little bit pregnant” with a public announcement creates pressure for them to follow through. Smart play. 
If we accept the obvious, that finding out if Biden could be unduly influenced by Ukraine is a top national priority, and no one trusted Ukraine to do the right thing via normal lower level contacts, what option did Trump have? 
He used Rudy to “hack” a broken system, shake the box, and put pressure on Ukraine, any legal way he could. 
We don’t impeach presidents for operating differently than we would have done in the same situation. Trump ONLY operates differently, hacking one system after another, generally successfully. 
If the way I just framed things is the first time you have thought of it this way, and it probably is, you know why I say making you blind to it is the best persuasion play of the past year. 

Will Police Enforce..

Will police enforce Virginia’s anti-masking law at Monday’s rally?

Monday’s pro Second Amendment rally in Richmond will surely attract left provocateurs bent on inciting violence.  And why not?  They know that Governor Northam and compliant media will blame any physical confrontations on gun rights advocates, making them the villains and obscuring their message.  

Ostensibly to keep public order but more likely to foment trouble (as detailed in James G. Robertson’s article here), Northam took the constitutionally suspect step of banning lawful carry in an area around the Capitol’s grounds.  As of this writing, the order stands.
Virginia State Capitol (Photo credit: Ron Cogswell)
On the subject of keeping the peace, there’s something else the Governor and local authorities could do but haven’t, as far as I know: declare they will rigorously enforce the following section of Virginia’s code on masking:
§ 18.2-422. Prohibition of wearing of masks in certain places; exception
It shall be unlawful for any person over 16 years of age to, with the intent to conceal his identity, wear any hood or other device whereby a substantial portion of the face is hidden or covered so as to conceal the identity of the wearer, to be or appear in any public place, or upon any private property in this Commonwealth without first having obtained from the owner or tenant thereof consent to do so in writing. [Exceptions include holiday masks, protective masks used by tradespeoplemedical personnel, etc.]  The violation of any provisions of this section is a Class 6 felony.
The risk of violence would be greatly reduced if Northam or police authorities cited the statute and declared that wearing a mask in or around the demonstration would be grounds for arrest.  That would eliminate the cloak of anonymity used by the left’s shock troops to avoid responsibility for their actions. 
So, why isn’t this message being proclaimed?  Have police been told to ignore the law and stand down on masks?  If so, why?  Inquiring minds want to know.