Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Senator Joni Ernst: Democrats Can ‘Reject Infanticide’ with Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act


ArticJoni Ernstle by Robert Kraychik in "Breitbart News":

The Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act offers Democrats the “opportunity to reject infanticide,” said Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA) during an interview on Tuesday’s edition of SiriusXM’s Breitbart News Daily with host Alex Marlow.

The legislation would require doctors, nurses, and other healthcare professionals to provide life-saving care to babies surviving failed abortion attempts, explained Ernst.

“The bill in question would require healthcare practitioners — our doctors, basically — to provide the same degree of care to any baby who survives an abortion as they would any other child born naturally premature at that same age,” Ernst stated. “That makes sense. These are babies that are born alive, and you would think this should be an easy moral decision to save the life of a child who is outside of the womb and is alive, but we don’t have that from our Democrats. They did block the bill.”

The Senate Judiciary Committee will hold a hearing related to the Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act on Tuesday, which will be chaired by Sen. Ben Sasse (R-NB), who introduced the bill.

“This is a bill that Senator Sasse introduced last year,” said Enrst, “and it was blocked on the Senate floor. I am an original cosponsor, of course, I support life. I believe in life.”

Republicans invited people who “had their lives affected by born-alive survivors of abortion” to testify at Tuesday’s hearing, added Ernst.

Ernst continued, “The Democrats have the opportunity to reject infanticide, but we’ll just wait to see if they have the moral courage that they talk so often about.”

Unborn children have “zero rights” to the “average Democrat,” Marlow noted.

Ernst concluded, “I look at my Democratic colleagues and I see where they are on the issue of life, and that they actually would support the killing of a child after it is outside of the womb is horrific. The thought of that just appalls me.”

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2020/02/11/joni-ernst-democrats-can-reject-infanticide-with-born-alive-abortion-survivors-protection-act/ 


Senator Joni Ernst Unveils MAKE CENTS Act to Break Wasteful Spending ‘Status Quo’

 WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 29: Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA) walks through the Capitol Building during the Senate impeachment trial of President Donald Trump at the U.S. Capitol on January 29, 2020 in Washington, DC. In the next phase of the trial, senators will have the opportunity to submit written questions …
 Article by Sean Moran in "BreitbartNews":

Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA) unveiled her new legislation to make government more transparent and slash wasteful spending exclusively on Tuesday’s edition of SiriusXM’s Breitbart News Daily.

Ernst, a leading advocate for cutting wasteful government spending, unveiled her newest legislation, the Making Americans Know about Excessive Spending through Commonsense Efforts to Notice and Target Shenanigans Act, or MAKE CENTS Act, on Breitbart News Daily. The MAKE CENTS Act is a package of common-sense reforms to Congress’s budgetary process and would create more transparency and accountability throughout the Washington bureaucracy.

The Iowa conservative explained to Breitbart News Daily host Alex Marlow that the MAKE CENTS Act “wraps all of these things together, the Billion Dollar Boondoggle Act, the COST Act, the End of the Year Fiscal Responsibility Act, and some of the favorites out there with some of the constituents: the No Budget, No Recess Act and the No Budget, No Pay Act, which are very common sense. You know, if Congress is not getting its job done, then we should not be paid. I’m a huge believer in reforming the way we do business here in Washington, DC, and if Congress won’t hold themselves accountable we couldn’t expect that our agencies and contractors are going to hold themselves responsible.”

]The Ernst legislation contains many reforms that would rein in wasteful government spending and require more transparency over the government’s spending, including:


  • The Billion Dollar Boondoggle Act, which would require an annual report listing every government-funded project that is $1 billion or more over budget or five years or more behind schedule.
  • The Cost Openness and Spending Transparency (COST) Act, which would require every federally funded project to include a price tag is easily available for taxpayers. Every government project would require the disclosure of the price tag and the percentage of the overall budget for any project, program, or activity would be disclosed in all public documents. The COST Act would also provide the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) the authority to withhold a portion of the grant if a project manager fails to close the cost of the project.
  • The End-of-the-Year Fiscal Responsibility Act, which would eliminate the “use-it or lose-it” incentive many government agencies feel at the end of the fiscal year. The bill would limit an agency’s spending in the last two months of the fiscal year to no more than the average it spent per month during the previous ten months.
  • No Budget, No Recess, which would not allow Congress to adjourn for a recess until they have approved a budget by April 15 or passed all 12 of its appropriations bills by August 1. If Congress fails to meet those deadlines, then Congress could not adjourn for longer than eight hours, they could not obtain funds for travel, and two quorum calls would be held per day to ensure that lawmakers stay in Congress to pass a budget.
  • No Budget, No Pay, which would stipulate that lawmakers could not receive a salary if they fail to pass a budget resolution or fail to fund the government by October 1.
  •  
Marlow cheered the MAKE CENTS Act, calling it “swamp busting stuff.”

Ernst said that there are some lawmakers that “think the status quo” on wasteful spending “is fine and we got to break these habits.”

The Iowa senator has served as a thought leader on reining in wasteful government spending. President Trump’s budget, which was released Monday, contains provisions first crafted by Ernst, such as the End-of-the-Year Fiscal Responsibility Act’s call to end federal agencies’ “use-it or lose-it” spending mentality.

Ernst said, “I’ve really focused on curbing wasteful spending in the federal government, and so I was really excited that President Trump specifically calls out some of the end-of-the-year ‘use-it or lose-it’ spending.” 

“There’s really no way to sugar coat it: Washington’s budget process is broken,” Ernst said in a statement Tuesday. “The president submits his budget, the House tears it up (no pun intended), and fails to pass its own budget. Then Congress kicks the can down the road on funding the government before cramming through a budget-busting bill at the 11th hour. This dysfunctional process and lack of transparency allows wasteful spending to continue year after year.”

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2020/02/11/exclusive-joni-ernst-unveils-make-cents-act-to-slash-wasteful-spending/

School Calls Cops on 6-year-old ...

School Calls Cops on 6-Year-Old With Down Syndrome 

Who Made Finger Gun Gesture

The little girl said, "I shoot you," but her mother says she didn't understand what she was saying.

Screen Shot 2020-02-11 at 12.36.13 PM
(Screenshot via CBS Philly) 
School officials at Valley Forge Elementary in Tredyffrin, Pennsylvania, called the police on a 6-year-old girl who made a finger gun gesture at her teacher and said, "I shoot you." The girl has Down syndrome and didn't understand what she was saying, her mother told CBS Philly.

The principal and teacher agreed that the girl, Margot, had not intended to make a threat. But they informed the authorities anyway, citing a district policy that mandates safety threat assessments in all such cases.

"I was fine with everything up until they said 'and we have to call the police,'" Margot's mother, Maggie Gaines, told reporters. "I said 'you absolutely do not have to call the police.'"

Indeed, it was completely unnecessary for the school to involve the cops, which had the effect of creating a police report referencing Margot's actions. Unfortunately, district officials follow a policy of automatically calling the cops anytime someone's safety is remotely threatened. Per The Washington Post:
According to SAVVY Main Line, the Tredyffrin/Easttown School District ramped up its threat assessment protocols in 2018 in response to a spate of school shootings nationally and a highly publicized incident where a local middle-schooler was subjected to anti-Semitic threats. At a January meeting, one former school board member said the changes were "driven by events that occurred in our middle schools or high school," and that the intent had never been to involve police when elementary school students made "non-substantive" threats.

Another former school member who had a hand in drafting the current policy testified last week that he never imagined it would be applied to a 6-year-old with Down syndrome.

Lawmakers and policy architects frequently suffer from failures of imagination: They presume their laws and policies will be followed in exactly the manner they intend. But the officials who carry out and enforce said policies do not always exercise good judgment. Instead, they over-comply with the policy and follow it to the letter, which produces absurd results like these.

Margot's situation is a good reminder that unthinking public panic about safety in schools—divorced from any actual danger that is statistically significant—has a cost: It drives bad policy that promotes overcriminalization and invites law enforcement to intervene unnecessarily in disputes between students and teachers. Kids who make mistakes should face proportionate punishment—like a timeout, in Margot's case.

5 Surprising Reasons From A Lefty Professor..


The Federalist

5 Surprising Reasons From A Lefty Professor To Oppose The So-Called Equal Rights Amendment

This week, House Democrats will reportedly pass a measure to lift the 1982 deadline on a feminist amendment to the U.S. Constitution that would actually hurt women and identity politics groups.

This week, House Democrats will reportedly pass a measure to lift the 1982 deadline on a feminist amendment to the U.S. Constitution, although the Supreme Court, legal scholars, and the U.S. Department of Justice have said the attempt is unconstitutional. The so-called Equal Rights Amendment was defeated in the 1980s by a woman-led coalition that argued women’s rights will be damaged by attempting to eliminate all distinctions between men and women in federal law.

That argument received unlikely support in the wake of Virginia’s legislature attempting to ratify the expired amendment when Democrats took power earlier this year. A University of Virginia law professor who specializes in identity politics explained why a lot of the messages about the Equal Rights Amendment are just plain false. The quotes below are from that interview with Kim Forde-Mazrui, director of UVA’s Center for the Study of Race and Law. To read the rest, click here.

1. The Constitution Already Guarantees Equal Rights for All

“First, the ERA would only prohibit sex discrimination by the government and that is already prohibited under the Constitution.”

In other words, women have equal rights already. We don’t need a constitutional amendment to get them. That means a constitutional amendment claiming to do so is actually doing something else.

2. The Amendment Wouldn’t Solve a Lot of Serious Women’s Issues

“Second, the ERA would not apply at all to the inequalities that concern its supporters. Because it would not apply to the private sector, it would have no effect on such issues as violence against women, unequal pay or sexual harassment in the workplace.”

By the way, violence against women, sexual harassment, and unequal pay for equal work are all also already illegal. Again, then what is this all really about?

3. The ERA Would Actually Harm Women

“Even worse, the ERA would harm women because it would not only bar government discrimination against women, like current law does, it would also ban all distinctions on the basis of sex, including policies designed to benefit girls and women. State and federal programs to increase female participation in STEM fields, corporate management and business ownership, for example, would likely violate the ERA. It would also jeopardize single-sex settings, such as schools, dormitories, prisons and locker rooms. This is because the ERA would require the government and courts to treat sex like they are required to treat race. The U.S. Supreme Court increasingly prohibits all race distinctions including when used to promote integration or to reduce inequality.”

In other words, the so-called “Equal Rights” Amendment is really about forcing women to be treated as if we are exactly like men in every respect, and very likely to be interpreted as forcing us to shower with men, sleep with men we didn’t choose to sleep with, and undress next to men we don’t want looking at our naked bodies. The amendment is a bait and switch based on the proposition that women are stupid about our best interests and can be led through the nose to support anything the corporate media label “pro-woman.”

4. ERA Would Disadvantage Other Identity Politics Groups

“[I]t could harm equality for other groups to take the position that only groups that are explicitly protected in the Constitution are protected. The Constitution does not mention any group in its equality clause (not even race), which has allowed the courts to expand the groups protected as their discrimination has become recognized, including different racial and national-origin groups, women, and gays and lesbians. If women are equal to men only if the Constitution expressly says so, then the message to other groups, such as gay, transgender, mentally or physically disabled and poor people is that they are not equal until they can amend the Constitution in their favor, a practical impossibility.”

Do we really want to start embedding identity politics into the highest law in the land? If we start, the chances it will ever end are close to zero. There will always be some other way of dividing people up to parcel out their rights in accordance with their perceived political power. Best to stick with equal rights for all, no exceptions, no additions, no subtractions.

5. Virginia’s Passage Was Basically Illegal and Pointless

“My colleague, UVA law professor Saikrishna Prakash… concludes that Congress cannot change the deadline to validate the three ratifications that have occurred in recent years, including Virginia’s. I have not studied these issues as closely as he has, but it seems to me that, at a minimum, Congress would have to eliminate the 1982 deadline and do so by two-thirds of each chamber. This conclusion is contrary to the hopes of some ERA supporters that Virginia’s ratification made the ERA law without any further action by Congress. In short, the next steps will be in the hands of Congress and the courts.”

It’s doubtful that either house of Congress is going to pass the ERA again with a two-thirds majority in the near future. Democrats hold the House, but not anywhere near that big a majority. Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell says the revival bill is going nowhere in the Senate.

There are a lot of lies and rule-breaking going on to push this amendment on Americans yet again. If it’s really that wonderful, why does it have to be rushed through legislatures in the dark and against the laws setting out the the ground rules for advancing constitutional amendments?

Joy Pullmann is executive editor of The Federalist, a happy wife, and the mother of five children. Newly out: the second edition of her ebook recommending more than 400 classic books for young children. She is also the author of "The Education Invasion: How Common Core Fights Parents for Control of American Kids," from Encounter Books. She identifies as native American and gender natural. Find her on Twitter @JoyPullmann.

President Trump honors U.S. soldiers killed in Afghanistan in repatriation ceremony

OAN Newsroom
UPDATED 7:16 AM PT — Tuesday, February 11, 2020
President Trump honored two American service members who were recently killed in Afghanistan. He traveled to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware on Monday to participate in a repatriation ceremony.
This comes after Sgt. 1st Class Javier Jaguar Gutierrez and Sgt. 1st Class Antonio Rey Rodriguez were killed in an apparent insider attack over the weekend. The president cut his reelection campaign rally in New Hampshire short to pay his respects alongside the families of the fallen soldiers.
On Sunday, the Defense Department confirmed the soldiers were fatally shot by a man in an Afghan uniform, during a mission Saturday night. The servicemen were supporting Operation Freedom’s Sentinel.
Six other troops were also injured during the shooting. According to officials, the gunman was an Afghan soldier who had got into an argument with U.S. forces before opening fire. The shooter was not associated with the Taliban.
“The operation is ongoing there, we still do not know whether he was an infiltrator or if it was done by mistake,” explained Shah Mahmood Miakhel, Governor of the Nangarhar province. “A delegation has gone there for a comprehensive investigation, whenever we receive more details will share that with you.”
 Further details on the incident are slim, but authorities confirmed the alleged gunman has been killed. An investigation into the attack is ongoing.
https://www.oann.com/american-forces-attacked-in-afghanistan/

Socialism Always Fails

Socialism Always Fails

The Nation, which enthusiastically has supported every totalitarian communist regime that has existed in the past century (and that includes Pol Pot’s Cambodia and North Korea) is now firmly riding the Bernie Sanders bandwagon. This article, entitled “Why American Socialism Failed—and How It Could Prevail Today,” unwittingly gives away the mentality of American socialists which claims all economic issues as being “solved” by the implantation of socialism—regardless of the actual economic outcomes.

Three years ago, I wrote “The End of Socialists is Socialism, Not Prosperity,” and this article follows some of the same themes. In that article, I argued that socialists do not necessarily believe that socialism produces better economic outcomes than capitalism—indeed, one would have to be willfully blind to fail to recognize the differences—but that socialists believe it doesn’t matter. Socialism is a moral imperative, and the only thing holding back the implementation of this system in the USA has been the failure of socialists to present a plausible alternative—something that socialists claim now is being done.

People who follow the arguments based in Austrian economics are intimately familiar with the economic calculation problem of socialism as laid out by Ludwig von Mises in 1920 and Murray N. Rothbard on numerous occasions, as well as the secondary “knowledge” argument presented by F. A. Hayek in 1945. Mises and Rothbard presented what clearly are irrefutable claims that the only kind of socialist economy that could exist would be a primitive, extremely basic economy that could not support any kind of complex economic activity. Even a die-hard socialist like Robert Heilbroner would admit to as much in his 1989 commentary in The New Yorker:
The Soviet Union, China & Eastern Europe have given us the clearest possible proof that capitalism organizes the material affairs of humankind more satisfactorily than socialism: that however inequitably or irresponsibly the marketplace may distribute goods, it does so better than the queues of a planned economy….the great question now seems how rapid will be the transformation of socialism into capitalism, & not the other way around, as things looked only half a century ago. 

However, as I pointed out three years ago, the collapse of the USSR and the eastern European socialist states did not “convert” Heilbroner to becoming an advocate for capitalism, nor did China’s transformation from Mao’s giant commune to a quasi-capitalist economy (and subsequent economic growth) change his mind. Indeed, socialists seem almost impervious to factual arguments, and despite a gaggle of “what would a socialist economy look like” articles in publications such as Jacobin, socialists have never refuted the Austrian arguments. For that matter, socialists really cannot appeal to economics at all despite their claim that their goal is to provide a better economic society for those ubiquitous workers. Jacobin declares:
For socialists, establishing popular confidence in the feasibility of a socialist society is now an existential challenge. Without a renewed and grounded belief in the possibility of the goal, it’s near impossible to imagine reviving and sustaining the project. This, it needs emphasis, isn’t a matter of proving that socialism is possible (the future can’t be verified) nor of laying out a thorough blueprint (as with projecting capitalism before its arrival, such details can’t be known), but of presenting a framework that contributes to making the case for socialism’s plausibility.

(Note that the Jacobins are famous for unleashing the infamous Reign of Terror during the French Revolution, in which thousands of so-called enemies of the state were murdered. That American socialists today willingly associate themselves with genocide speaks volumes of what these people will do if they ever gain real power here.)

In other words, the implementation of a socialist order is not so much dependent upon a plausible model of a socialist economy, but rather is an exercise that depends upon convincing people that somewhere over the rainbow we can make the whole thing work, despite the failures of the past. And that is where the recent articles in The Nation and the Daily Mailreveal much about the socialist mentality.

In The NationRoss Barkan argues that the barriers to implementing a socialist system are political, not economic. Indeed, in “Why American Socialism Failed” he writes that there was just too much political resistance to reorganizing the United States into something like what at that time was being done in the Soviet Union. (It should be noted that he seems to view the Russian Revolution with much sympathy—and fails to note that perhaps Americans at that time were not interested in implementing a regime that would mirror the atrocities being committed by the Red Army and the new Soviet government.)

Instead of following the old political strategy of having people run as members of a socialist party, Barkan says that the better plan is for socialists simply to take over the modern Democratic Party by electing socialists from the presidency on down. He writes:
Today’s Democratic Party is a shell waiting to be inhabited by whoever claims the prizes of elected office. If Bernie Sanders, a democratic socialist, is elected president of the United States, the Democratic Party will slowly become his party. And if he loses, inspiring still more DSA recruits and fueling down-ballot victories, socialists can continue to win council, legislative, and even congressional seats on Democratic lines, wielding tangible clout.

In New York, there is one socialist in the state legislature: DSA member Julia Salazar. She has helped lead campaigns for public control of power companies and a universal right to housing. Five DSA-backed candidates are seeking legislative seats this June, challenging establishment-backed Democrats. If they all win, they will start to gain back the momentum of the 1920s.

This time, there will be no reactionary legislative leaders to unseat the new socialists, no Red Scare to feed a public frenzy against their anti-capitalist views. Salazar is a member of the Democratic majority, an ally of the progressive block, unlikely to lose an election anytime soon. The DSA members seeking to join her will be free to advocate for radical change. It’s a future that would have surprised the class of 1920 because Socialists never took over New York, let alone America. But today’s socialists march into the 2020s without the daunting roadblocks of a century ago. They don’t need their own party anymore. They can just take someone else’s.

In other words, the entire question of socialism is political; socialists can speak about their utopian visions, be elected on those platforms, but really don’t have to explain how they actually will make a socialist economy perform in a way that will even begin to match the output of a private enterprise–based economy. Yet, when confronted with the reality of the actual performance of a socialist economy, all the writer can do is to appeal to the election of socialists, which should not be surprising, since the end of socialism is political power and nothing else.

The death of a Canadian teenager of leukemia while waiting for the government’s permission to have a bone marrow transplant speaks volumes both of the performance of socialist systems and the way that people under socialism submit to the system. Laura Hillier, 18, of Ontario died before she could receive a transplant, which is not particularly unusual in the Canadian system, as “standing in line” for care is the typical experience, even when a life is at stake. From the Daily Mail:
Laura might have experienced a few more milestones if a Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, hospital had been able to accommodate a bone marrow transplant for the young woman. Numerous donors were a match with Laura and ready to donate, but Hamilton's Juravinski Hospital didn't have enough beds in high-air-pressure rooms for the procedure. Hospital staff told her they had about 30 patients with potential donors, but the means to only do about five transplants a month.

Although Hillier’s obituary “slammed” the wait times in Canada, nonetheless, nothing will be done because Canada’s “single payer” system is both politically sacrosanct and a socialist politician’s dream. It is sacrosanct because it provides the “free healthcare” that socialists promise and a politician’s dream because it provides unending opportunities for “reform.” In reality, the economic calculation problem is front and center, making it impossible to “fix” the Canadian single-payer system, something no Canadian politician will admit.

One doubts that Hillier would have died in the same way in the United States. For all of the criticism American medical care receives from the left (and the current system hardly fits the claim by socialists that it is “free market”), one can be reasonably assured that a young woman here would not die because of a lack of hospital beds.

In Canada, however, such deaths are a matter of course, and for all of the “this shouldn’t happen” statements from both politicians and victims’ families, it will continue to happen. (Canada, perhaps not surprisingly, has relatively poor cancer survival rates.) Under socialism, one stands in line and does not challenge the system, since the system is based not upon the successful delivery of services, but rather on the prospect of such services being made available “to the people” for no fee, the product of a “compassionate” socialist state.

Note that at no point in his article does Barkan write of any way that socialism would improve the lives of Americans. Socialism is not about providing needed services to those who cannot receive them otherwise, nor is it about raising the living standards of the poor, despite socialist claims to the contrary. Socialists do not create goods and services; they commandeer them for political purposes, and such things are useful only as a means of putting and keeping socialist politicians in power.

No politician in Canada will be voted out of office for the premature death of Laura Hillier, nor will any hospital administrators be sacked. Had medical officials given in to sentiment and bumped Hillier up the transplant list, someone else would have died for lack of space. The enemy here is scarcity, and under socialism, scarcity is multiplied. Canadians have come to accept this situation, all the while convincing themselves that theirs not only is a morally-superior system to anything that exists in their neighbor to the south, but also enables them to receive medical services that they believe would be denied them if their government were not paying. They have become like the cave dwellers in Plato’s allegory, believing that the medical shadows they see on the wall represent the best care possible.

Socialists might well take over the Democratic Party; indeed, American voters are capable of putting someone like Bernie Sanders in the White House. They well could make the electoral gains that the writers at The Nation have coveted for decades. What they cannot do, however, is tell the truth about socialism. Another article in Jacobin, written by Sam Gindin, demonstrates this last point:
Murray Rothbard, a lifetime disciple of the archconservative Ludwig von Mises, lamented that when he entered grad school after World War ii “the economics establishment had all decided, left, right, and center, that…socialism’s only problems, such as they might be, were political. Economically, socialism could work just as well as capitalism.” With socialism carrying such a degree of economic credence, the elaboration of the details of a functioning socialist society seemed decidedly less pressing for socialists than developing the politics of getting to it.

Gindin then goes on to “refute” Hayek’s “knowledge problem” critique of socialism (while ignoring the Austrian “economic calculation” issue). The rest of the piece essentially can be shortened into this one sentence: forget the past failures of socialism; this time we will make it work.

We have been hearing this kind of thing for more than a century. Socialists tell us that if the rest of us will give them total power over our lives, this time they will provide prosperity, and unlike previous socialist regimes, they won’t strip us of our liberties. We should have as much confidence in their words as the loved ones of Laura Hillier had in the empty promises of Canadian medical officials.

William L. Anderson is a professor of economics at Frostburg State University in Frostburg, Maryland.

Germany may face early Merkel exit, election after protegee stands aside

February 11, 2020
By Madeline Chambers
BERLIN (Reuters) – Chancellor Angela Merkel’s plan for an orderly succession is in ruins and the chances of an early election in Germany have risen after her conservative protegee, Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, gave up her ambitions for the top job.
Merkel’s Christian Democrats (CDU) will in the coming months choose who they want to lead the party and run as chancellor in the next federal election, due by October 2021. The same person will probably, but not necessarily, hold both posts.
It is to early to forecast how the situation will play out, but following are three possible scenarios.
1. MERKEL OUT, NEW ELECTION WITHIN SIX MONTHS
Merkel, an anchor of stability in Europe’s biggest economy during her nearly 15 years in office, has said she will not seek re-election and stood down as party chair in 2018, handing over to Kramp-Karrenbauer.
But with the new possibility of a rival as party leader following Kramp-Karrenbauer’s exit, Merkel might be forced to stand down early, which could prompt her Social Democrat (SPD) coalition partners to walk away and trigger a snap election.
Pressure to get the issue sorted out quickly and to have the same person fill both posts could bode ill for Merkel.

Leading contenders for the CDU party chair and to be the chancellor candidate of the conservative “Union” alliance, compromising the CDU and its Bavarian sister party, Christian Social Union (CSU), are already circling.
Several senior conservatives, including CSU chief Markus Soeder, have urged the CDU to decide on its leadership soon, arguing that dragging out a contest until a party conference in December would hit the Union’s poll ratings.
Support for the CDU in the eastern state of Thuringia has plummeted by nearly 9 percentage points since its lawmakers last week broke a post-war taboo and voted with the far right to install a state premier. Nationally, support is also ebbing.
Concern over such a decline might mean that the CDU acts by the summer or early autumn to choose a new leader and chancellor candidate such as Friedrich Merz, a long-time arch-rival of Merkel, with whom the chancellor may find it impossible to work.
For its part, the SPD may refuse to work with right-wingers Merz or Jens Spahn – especially if one of them was to replace Merkel as chancellor before an election – and pull the plug on the coalition, sending Germany to the polls.
2. MERKEL STAYS THROUGH EU PRESIDENCY; ELECTION EARLY 2021
Stability-loving Germans, however, prefer gradual change and want to avoid voting in the middle of Germany’s presidency of the European Union in the second half of 2020.
Many conservative and Social Democratic lawmakers would like Merkel to play a leading role in negotiations with post-Brexit Britain and in shaping EU relations with China which will be top of the EU agenda in the presidency.

Merkel has declared she is looking forward to the EU presidency where she can employ her negotiating skills and deep experience in EU affairs – from the euro zone debt crisis to the 2015 influx of migrants. The presidency could help the conservatives show off their credentials ahead of an election.
Another factor is Merkel’s largely undiminished popularity. Pollsters say many voters view her almost as a presidential figure and would prefer her to serve a full term.
All of this increases the chances of Merkel staying at least until the end of the year but could also allow a new leader to benefit from a bounce in the polls.
3. MERKEL SERVES FULL TERM, ELECTION IN AUTUMN 2021
Even if the CDU makes its leadership decisions quickly, some candidates could work with Merkel until the end of her term although she would be something of a lame duck.
Continuity candidate Armin Laschet, premier of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, is one such candidate and as a centrist would probably also be acceptable to the SPD.
This could also be the case if the conservatives pick Bavaria’s Soeder to run as chancellor.
Although many regard Soeder as a strong candidate, no CSU leader has yet been German chancellor.
https://www.oann.com/germany-may-face-early-merkel-exit-election-after-protegee-stands-aside/

Bigger than Vindman: Trump scrubs...

Bigger than Vindman: 

Trump scrubs 70 Obama holdovers from NSC

President Trump is making good on his promises to “drain the swamp” and cut Obama-era holdovers from his staffs, especially the critical and recently controversial National Security Council.

Officials confirmed that Trump and national security adviser Robert O’Brien have cut 70 positions inherited from former President Barack Obama, who had fattened the staff to 200.

Many were loaners from other agencies and have been sent back. Others left government work.

The NSC, which is the president’s personal staff, was rocked when a “whistleblower” leveled charges that led to Trump’s impeachment.

Last week, one key official who testified against Trump at a House hearing on the Ukraine affair that led to impeachment was sent packing. Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman was returned to the Pentagon. His twin brother, Lt. Col. Yevgeny Vindman, was also given the boot. Trump had expressed displeasure that Alexander Vindman had testified against him when the Ukraine specialist said he did not like the phone conversation between the president and a newly elected president of Ukraine.

Since entering the White House, Trump has relied on staffs smaller than previous administrations and has noted how prior presidents had a much smaller NSC team.

O’Brien recently said that former President George W. Bush handled the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan with 100 NSC aides, a model he is instituting.

“This month, we will complete the right-sizing goal Ambassador O’Brien outlined in October, and in fact, may exceed that target by drawing down even more positions,” John Ullyot, the NSC’s senior director for strategic communications, told Secrets.

Watch: New MSNBC Anchor Annoys..

Watch: New MSNBC Anchor Annoys Chuck Todd, 

Says Quiet Part out Loud About Media Collusion With Democrats

MSNBC Anchor Joshua Johnson
MSNBC host Joshua Johnson on “Meet the Press” – 2/9/2020. Screen grab via NBC News.

That the mainstream media have long been in the tank for Democrats at all levels of government and frequently plays favorites come election time is not exactly breaking or surprising news, and hearing them admit to it is a rare thing. 

But that is exactly what happened on Sunday’s “Meet the Press” program on NBC News, where host Chuck Todd had on a number of guests to talk about the state of the 2020 Democratic presidential race, including the Iowa Democratic caucus debacle, which is still ongoing and which has created deeper divisions within the Democratic party base.

In segwaying from talking about the upcoming New Hampshire primary to discussing the “electability” of the Democratic candidates for president, Todd spoke with new MSNBC anchor Joshua Johnson and former Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MO) about how all the candidates had a “fatal flaw” but that one of them was “gonna have to become the nominee.” It appeared Todd was trying to get Johnson to speculate on who he felt was the best candidate. 

To that, Johnson reminded Todd and the rest of the panel of how Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and his supporters felt cheated in 2016 by the DNC and how that was playing out in 2020.

But it was his mention of the media’s role in “whipping votes” that seemed to visibly rankle Todd. Here’s what Johnson said (bolded emphasis added):
Going further, Johnson shifted to discussing what the media’s role was in 2016. “So, one of the things I’m interested in seeing in 2020 is how much we will allow Democrats to make their own choice? The story of who the party is supposed to support is not up to us, it’s up to Democrats.” In the midst of saying that, he gestured to the people sitting around the table.

Todd, who often fights the losing battle of claiming there’s no such thing as media bias in favor of Democrats, didn’t seem pleased. He gave an annoyed sounding “yeah” to Johnson’s comments and a quick glimpse of his face seemed to confirm the tone.

[…]

[Johnson] then admitted there were those in the media who found that notion uncomfortable. “It’s not comfortable. It makes it hard for us to prognosticate,” he explained. “But if there’s one thing, at least, the people I talked to came out of 2016 feeling it’s that they were told what the narrative was supposed to be and they felt like votes were kind of being whipped from the top down.”

“I don’t know who Democrats are going to pick, but I would presume they’d like to pick for themselves,” he concluded with a bit of panache.

Watch Johnson make the admission below, and Todd’s facial expressions (especially at the 4:33 mark):


Johnson is 100% right here. It is not the media’s role to decide who nominees are in any primary, nor who the eventual winner of any election should be. The media’s job is to report the news without slant and let voters do the deciding when it comes time to cast their votes.

I have to admit – before this interview I had not heard of Johnson, and as of this writing it’s unclear what show he’ll be anchoring on MSNBC (though he’s teasing it on his Twitter account). But right out of the gate, Johnson is starting to make waves on what is arguably the most liberal of all the cable news networks. 

If he keeps this up, look for MSNBC’s loyal viewers (all five of them) to want to “cancel” him soon. But until then, the network that features the wacky Joy Reid, the conspiracy-theory-pushing Rachel Maddow, and the unhinged Chris Matthews might have just accidentally hired someone who on some level gets it.

Sister Toldjah
Based in North Carolina, Sister Toldjah is a former liberal and a 16+ year veteran of blogging with an emphasis on media bias, social issues, and the culture wars.

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Will the Census Be a Wakeup Call to High Taxes?

 Will the Census Be a Wakeup Call to High Taxes?
 Article by Janson Quinlan Prieb in "Townhall":

Across the nation, people are fleeing states like Illinois and New York for greener pastures. In the last year alone, the Northeast lost around 300,000 people due to migration while the Southern states gained around a million residents. Apart from looking for a better climate, high taxes have caused many Americans to consider moving. Now, as the 2020 census approaches, many states will lose federal funding and a congressional seat, something that will hopefully be the wakeup call legislators need to realize how disastrous high taxes really are.

Over the past decade, people have been moving to low tax states in hopes of having more money in their pocketbooks. States like Idaho, Texas, Florida, and Arizona have all seen explosive growth rates in the past decade and are expected to continue growing. Although most of these states have warmer climates than their northeast counterparts, it doesn’t explain the whole picture as California had a net loss of 200,000 people last year alone, despite having one of the most temperate climates in the world.

But what is causing this exodus? Unsurprisingly, finances are a major influence on people’s decision to relocate. A Berkeley IGS Poll found that 58 percent of Californians cited high taxes as a reason for why they would want to leave their state, and other research confirms it.

The Cato Institute found a negative linear relationship with states that had a tax burden less than 8.5 percent had a positive migration rate while states that had a tax burden higher than 8.5 percent had a negative migration rate. This should come as no surprise, as a Newark family earning less than $75,000 could save around $6,000 annually in taxes if they moved to Houston, Texas, as the study suggests.

Not only has cheaper cost of living attracted many to the sunbelt, but those that are staying in high tax states are seeing worsening conditions. The Illinois Policy Institute shows that as Illinois’s population decreased, it has started to cause real problems for the pension system in the state. Because the pension liabilities are fixed regardless of population, the remaining residents are seeing higher taxes as a result to fund the system.

On top of this looming issue, and as people continue to flee these high tax states, businesses as well are forced to find better opportunities elsewhere. In 2016, high taxes caused1,800 businesses to flee the Golden State along with 275,000 jobs. Coincidentally, California currently ranks 48th for the worst business tax climate in the nation.

With such a myriad of issues looming for these states, perhaps the only thing that will force legislators to re-examine their policies is the upcoming census. The census, which decides where a whopping $880 billion in federal funds is allocated, is quickly becoming the most expensive one yet.

To encourage participation in the Federal Census, New York recently added an additional $10 million to its budget while California alone has allotted $187 million to theirs (in 2010 they only spent $10 million). As states spend unheard of amounts of money to encourage residents to participate in the census, it ultimately comes at the cost of the taxpayer as these funds would’ve gone to education or health care services instead.

Indeed, instead of massive spending going towards the census, states should pass policies that do not force people to leave in the first place. Yet, it’s not just funding that states will lose.

Currently, New York is on track to lose one or two congressional seats, while California is in danger of losing a seat for the first time ever. As these state’s number of representatives are reduced as a result of population loss, so too will be their influence in Congress.

Despite the strong economic growth continuing to soar nationwide, some have felt that the price they pay to live in their state has become too outrageous. As people continue to flee high tax states like California, New York and Illinois, they take with them federal funding and congressional seats as well.

Hopefully, these migration patterns will be a wakeup call to legislators that the cost of high taxes might be a congressional seat.

https://townhall.com/columnists/jansonquinlanprieb/2020/02/11/will-the-census-be-a-wakeup-call-to-high-taxes-n2561104

Progressives Find New Ways To Discriminate Against Conservatives

 Image result for quotes from john adams Article by Derek Hunter in "Townhall":

Imagine starting a business, risking everything and deciding to give it a go on your own. That entrepreneurial spirit is what sets the United States apart from most of the rest of the world; the American Spirit. Now imagine, after all that hard work and risk, some leftist decides they don’t like you or what you’re doing and sets out to ruin what you’ve built, to destroy you.

It happens all the time, actually. The “cancel culture,” as it’s called, is just one of many tools in the progressive arsenal. And while stories like the attempted destruction of Gibson’s Bakery by radical Oberlin College students and administrators made national news after the Gibson family was awarded $44 million from the school, most stories don’t get that much attention. They simply don’t help the liberal narrative, so they’re ignored.

While protests and attempted boycotts get brainwashed drones to activate on social media (and the “news” stories driven by them), the left is employing other tactics to wipe out businesses they deem unacceptable, and those tactics don’t garner any attention at all.

One of the worst and most dangerous was an Obama administration initiative by the Justice Department to target firearms manufacturers called Operation Choke Point (OCP). The DOJ didn’t go directly after manufacturers, they applied pressure on banks doing business with them. Under the guise of being concerned with fraud and money laundering, Obama officials let it be known that banks doing business with legitimate companies engaging in legal commerce would face extra regulatory attention and harassment for doing so. 

The Trump administration put an end to it in 2017. But progressive activists, with the encouragement and help of elected Democrats, have picked up where it left off.

Activists are pressuring banks to refuse business from the aforementioned industries as well as oil and gas companies, companies that do business with Israel, conservative-owned businesses, anything deemed insufficiently “woke” by the liberal mob.

And banks are starting to cave. 

There’s a slight problem for the left, however; banks aren’t allowed to discriminate against legal industries. This was the central theme at a recent House Financial Services Committee hearing which sought to determine if the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) is undermining the effectiveness of the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), which protects low- and moderate-income communities’ ability to secure loans.

In a letter to regulators before the hearing, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Mike Crapo (R-ID) and his Republican colleagues warned, “We reject the notion that the New York values of a handful of banking executives and asset managers can hold our constituents hostage and force them to sacrifice their beliefs.”

Their GOP counterparts in the House further drove the concern home by explicitly pointing out the renaissance of OCP throughout the country. Unfortunately, OCC’s Comptroller’s response was weak, to say the least. “We believe the banking industry should serve all legal businesses in America. However, we do leave that up to the boards and management of those financial institutions to make those decisions,” Comptroller Joseph Otting said.

It’s important to mention that these bad banking practices are currently illegal under the official OCC policy which states, “The Agencies will not tolerate lending discrimination in any form.”

But left-wing activists aren’t about to let the law or decency stand in the way of their agenda. They’re working hard to circumvent any regulation or law in their way to implement OCP-like punishments to impose their will throughout the economy, particularly in rural communities where the “disfavored” businesses tend to thrive.

Democrat-controlled cities across the country are already moving to block contracts with any company that is involved with immigration enforcement, for example. Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez cheered the decision by Bank of America to stop doing business with private companies running prisons and illegal alien detention centers. 

If they can’t win at the ballot box, the party that loves to chant “this is what democracy looks like” will use any anti-democratic tactic they can to impose their will.  
  
The OCC wields enormous power over the banking industry. It’s time for them to use it to ensure American companies are free to engage in legal commerce and to not be discriminated against because the fascist “woke mob” is upset that they exist. 

Long Before Trump, We Were a Divided People

 Long Before Trump, We Were a Divided People
 Article by Pat Buchanan in "Townhall":

In a way, Donald Trump might be called The Great Uniter.

Bear with me. No Republican president in the lifetime of this writer, not even Ronald Reagan, united the party as did Trump in the week of his acquittal in the Senate and State of the Union address.

According to the Gallup Poll, 94% of Republicans approve of his handling of his presidency, in his fourth year, despite the worst press any president has ever received and the sustained hostility of our cultural elites.

Only Bush I in the first months of the 1991 Gulf War and Bush II in the first months of the 2003 Iraq War registered support like this.

Only one Republican, Sen. Mitt Romney, and only after having consulted God himself, joined Speaker Nancy Pelosi and voted with Sen. Chuck Schumer's caucus to bring down the president.

When have Republicans ever exhibited the home-team enthusiasm they demonstrated during that State of the Union address and the post-acquittal gathering in the East Room? When have working- and middle-class voters shown such support for a Republican as they do for Trump at his mammoth rallies? Heading for November, this is a party united.

But not only is Trump the great uniter of the GOP. He is the great uniter of Democrats. Every Democrat but three in the House voted to impeach and remove him. Every Democrat in the Senate voted to convict and expel him from office and prevent his ever running again.

In Iowa and New Hampshire, evicting Trump from the Oval Office seemed the one issue that animated every candidate. Getting Trump out of the White House seems far more important to Democrats than getting U.S. troops out of the endless Middle East wars.

But while he has made more than a small contribution to our savage partisanship, is Trump really the cause of the uncivil war in America? Or is his presidency, like Gettysburg, simply the battlefield upon which America's cultural and political war is currently engaged?

Consider. Bernie Sanders' nationalization of health care and abolition of private health insurance for 150 million Americans is grounded in a socialism that has never been reconcilable with Trump's belief in the superiority of the private sector, a belief reflected in Trump's tax cuts for corporations and individuals and his deregulation policies.

Democrats' unanimous support for "reproductive rights" is in eternal conflict with the traditionalist belief in a God-given right to life, as well as with Trump's pledge to nominate justices who will overturn Roe v. Wade.

Still, the battles over the Supreme Court nominations of Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas predated by decades the battle over Brett Kavanaugh.

Immigration may determine the destiny of the West.

Yet, Democrats believe in tearing down Trump's wall, an end to deportations, extending welfare benefits to border-crossers and granting sanctuary from border security agents for criminals here illegally.

That Americans of European descent, 90% of the nation in 1960, close to 60% today, will, in 20 years, be less than half of the population, is for Democrats a cause of ceaseless celebration.

America, they contend, will be a far, far better place than we have ever known when a far smaller share of the population is white. The greater the racial, credal, cultural and ethnic diversity, the better the country.

Yet, Americans of European descent, headed for minority status, provide 85-90% of all Republican votes in presidential elections. What Democrats are cheering portends the demographic death of the GOP.

Republicans are a more nationalist and populist party than they were in the Bush presidencies. But the Democratic Party has become a politically correct institution where Joe Biden is forced to explain stands that he took when he was a moderate Democratic senator from Delaware.

His opposition to the forced busing of children from neighborhood schools into inner-city schools was attacked as racist. He had to apologize for his friendship with Southern senators like Jim Eastland and his role in the Clarence Thomas hearings. He has been made to confess for voting to authorize the 2003 war on Iraq.

Biden is far to the left of where he used to be as a senator. Apparently, he has not moved far enough.

Even James Carville is castigating his own party's candidates for talking about "reparations or any kind of goofy left-wing thing out there."

"It's like we're losing our damn minds," said Carville.

Is Trump responsible for what Carville himself sees as an irrationality and irresponsibility taking on epidemic proportions inside the Democratic Party?

Or has Trump's success maddened Democrats into manifesting who they are and what they believe, and what may yet prevent them from being taken seriously as a party that can lead the nation?

We were divided long before Trump got here, and we will remain so long after he departs.

https://townhall.com/columnists/patbuchanan/2020/02/11/long-before-trump-we-were-a-divided-people-n2561097