Saturday, May 16, 2020

Sun Goes Into Cooling 'Lockdown' -- Greta Thunberg Hardest Hit


 
Article by Bryan Preston in "PJMedia":

The New York Post reports that the big, flaming ball in the sky is about to go into “lockdown” just like the rest of us.

The sun is currently in a period of “solar minimum,” meaning activity on its surface has fallen dramatically.
Experts believe we are about to enter the deepest period of sunshine “recession” ever recorded as sunspots have virtually disappeared.
Astronomer Dr. Tony Phillips said: “Solar Minimum is underway and it’s a deep one.”
“Sunspot counts suggest it is one of the deepest of the past century. The sun’s magnetic field has become weak, allowing extra cosmic rays into the solar system.”

Reached for comment, 17-year-old global warming scold Greta Thunberg had but one thing to say to the cooling sun that may render her global warming activism obsolete:


Greta Thunberg
 
The sun’s cooling ought to offset the alleged warming the earth has experienced over the past decade or century. In addition to (hopefully) muting global warming zealots for a while, it may cause 2020 to be the most memorable blur of a year in a long time. The last major sunspot minimum, the Maunder Minimum, ushered in a “little ice age.”

During the Maunder Minimum, temperatures across the Northern Hemisphere declined, relative to twentieth-century averages, by about one degree Celsius. That may not sound like much – especially in a year that is, globally, still more than one degree Celsius hotter than those same averages – but consider: seventeenth-century cooling was sufficient to contribute to a global crisis that destabilized one society after another. As growing seasons shortened, food shortages spread, economies unraveled, and rebellions and revolutions were quick to follow. Cooling was not always the primary cause for contemporary disasters, but it often played an important role in exacerbating them.

So we may have that to look forward to. 2020 continues to do everything but mess around.

But.

I’m old enough to remember when our science classes taught us that an ice age, thanks to the things they blame on global warming now, was inevitable. So, maybe the solar minimum gets offset by global warming. Add a little, subtract a little. If that’s the case, we should feel precisely no effects.

We could set about to burn more oil to warm things up if we need to. We have a glut of it now with storage filling up and it is as cheap as we’ll probably ever see it.

Aliens observing the sun over a long time span would note variations in its output. But its sunspot behavior and role in the earth’s climate remain poorly understood. There are few funds and no politics to be gained in proving or disproving its impact on climate. It has only been known to be a variable star for about 50 years, which is not a lot of time to study its effects on something as complex as planetary climate.

Like the COVID-19 models, scientists’ expectations for this solar cycle may be off. In 2010-11 they expected a powerful and disruptive solar maximum. We could have suffered solar storms that could have flaked with our electrical grid and communications. Instead, we got a solar max that was a little late and it came in and out with a whimper, not a bang.

Tellingly…

The polar fields have been slowly reversing at this maximum, Hathaway said, suggesting that they are not going get much stronger during Cycle 24. This also sets the stage for an even smaller maximum during Cycle 25, scientists believe.
“We’re seeing fields that suggest the next sun cycle will be even weaker than this one,” Hathaway said.

They don’t really know what to expect, and that’s fine. It’s science, unsettled, the way it’s supposed to be.

https://pjmedia.com/news-and-politics/bryan-preston/2020/05/15/sun-goes-into-cooling-lockdown-greta-thunberg-hardest-hit-n395711 

Joe Biden: If Voters Believe Tara Reade ‘They Probably Shouldn’t Vote For Me’



During an interview with MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell, presumptive 2020 Democratic nominee Joe Biden said if voters believe his accuser Tara Reade “they probably shouldn’t vote for me.”

O’Donnell started his line of lack-luster questioning by describing a New York Times opinion article titled “I Believe Tara Reade. I’m Voting for Joe Biden Anyways.”

“What do you say to women who were ready to vote for Joe Biden, eager to vote for Joe Biden, but this gives them serious pause because they do believe Tara Reade and you’re not going to change their mind about that. What would you say to them about their vote?” O’Donnell asked.

“Well, I think they should vote their heart and if they believe Tara Reade, they probably shouldn’t vote for me. I wouldn’t vote for me if I believed Tara Reade,” Biden said.

Video Player


Reade alleges Biden sexually assaulted during her time as his Senate staffer in 1993. During an interview with Megyn Kelly, Reade detailed the sexual assault allegation.
“He had his hands under underneath my clothes, and it happened all at once. So he had one hand underneath my shirt and the other hand, I had a skirt on. And he like went down my skirt and then went up,” Reade said.

Biden has denied the allegations and says he would refuse to allow a search of his Senate records for Reade’s name. According to the Washington Post, Biden’s Senate records are held at the University of Delaware and will remain sealed until two years after Biden leaves public life.

“Reade told the Daily Caller that she wants the records released since she believes they might contain a copy of the complaint filed over the alleged incident which she says led to her termination on Capitol Hill. Several Biden Senate staffers have denied the existence of any such paperwork,” writes Tristan Justice at The Federalist.

Women’s groups and left-leaning organizations have been silent on Reade’s accusations against Biden, meanwhile being outspoken in favor of Dr. Christine Blasey Ford when she accused now-Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. Groups such as Planned Parenthood and Time’s Up Legal Defense Fund have been silent on the issue of whether Reade is to be believed. 

Biden has previously said that women should be believed when they come forward as it’s difficult to make that decision, but in his denial of Reade’s accusation, he stated a different standard for Reade than he held for Ford. “They should come forward. They should be heard, and then they should be investigated,” he told Mika Brzezinski.

“We need to believe women like Colbie [Holderness]. We need to recognize the incredible courage it takes for women like her to come forward. And we need to change the culture so those who live in fear can safely get the support they deserve,” Biden tweeted in February 2018.



Those standards don’t apply to Biden in the 2020 election or to Reade, his accuser.

Lockdown Lawsuit: Doctors Hit Gretchen Whitmer...

Lockdown Lawsuit: Doctors Hit Gretchen Whitmer With Lawsuit Over Medical 'Time Bomb'


AP Photo/David Eggert

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer is having a tough time with the American legal system, which does not take kindly to dictators. Earlier in the week, she appeared to be losing a very public fight with 77-year-old Karl Manke, who continues to defy her orders to shut down his barbershop even after losing his license to operate without a hearing. He’s still cutting hair and the sheriff won’t stop him. A judge also slapped Whitmer down when she tried to get a restraining order against Manke, ruling instead to hear him out in court. She’s not having a good week. I would have paid good money to have been in the room when she was served with a new lawsuit brought by doctors and one patient claiming her draconian lockdown orders have created a medical “time bomb” for patients who were awaiting elective surgeries and now cannot get them.

The plaintiffs allege in federal court that Ms. Whitmer’s “drastic, unprecedented [and] unilateral executive actions” to cease economic activity that her office deemed nonessential were based on “grossly inaccurate” models that no longer apply and therefore should be lifted.

“Medical providers are on the brink of financial ruin, facing extreme revenue shortages caused by the Governor’s order forcing the postponement or cancellation of so-called ‘non-essential’ procedures,” said the suit filed by the Mackinac Center Legal Foundation and a private law firm, Miller Johnson. “Thousands of healthcare workers across Michigan have been furloughed or laid off.”

In addition to the economic devastation, Ms. Whitmer’s order has left hospitals and patients facing a dangerous backlog on procedures that will create a public health catastrophe of its own, said Dr. Randal Baker, a general surgeon and president of Grand Health Partners, a plaintiff based in Grand Rapids.

“This whole ‘elective-procedure’ thing is now a time bomb,” Dr. Baker told The Washington Times. “There is no good reason to have a ban on elective surgery any more. This is now a significant health problem for the people of Michigan and our patients, and I’ve had one patient attempt suicide — a very serious attempt.”

The lawsuit goes onto describe the very serious complications that patients have experienced as a direct result of being denied their elective procedures, including a patient who needed a damaged feeding tube repaired and another who needed gall-bladder surgery and didn’t get it, which led to gangrene. The lockdown has literally sentenced medically fragile people, who would have been fine if they had been able to seek medical care, to life-threatening or even deadly conditions. And there was no good reason not to allow them in the nearly empty hospitals in Michigan. “Graphics depicted that while Governor Whitmer’s administration anticipated 220,000 patients being hospitalized without social distancing efforts, there had only been 3,000 hospitalizations as of April 27,” the lawsuit states. “That is less than 1.4% of the projected COVID-19 hospitalizations underlying the governor’s declared states of emergency and disaster.”

The plaintiffs alleged that Whitmer tried to claim her order never meant to stop elective procedures, but Jordan Warnsholz, a physician’s assistant, told the Washington Times that her order specifically banned them. “She’s backtracking — she says her original order did not imply a complete ban of ‘non-emergency’ medical procedures and she’s right, it explicitly banned them,” he said.

Not only is Whitmer being sued by the medical community but she is also being sued by Michigan’s legislature in an effort to curb her emergency powers.

As an informative note, she is not the only idiot governor imperiling health. MA is doing so as well. You can have an abortion; however, if you have stage IV breast cancer and were scheduled for surgery, your surgery was canceled. 

Hillary Clinton Calls Michigan Lockdown Protests 'Domestic Terrorism'


Image

Article by Rick Moran in "PJMedia":

Put a sock in it, witch.

Armed men storming a legislature to disrupt its democratic proceedings is domestic terrorism. It cannot be tolerated.https://www.newsweek.com/michigan-closes-down-capitol-face-death-threats-armed-protesters-against-gov-whitmer-1504241 


First of all, armed men did not “storm” the capitol, nor did they threaten anyone. The threats appeared on social media from trolls and probably a few Democrats who wanted to protesters to look bad.
 
Secondly, the legislature wasn’t in session, so how could the protesters “disrupt” anything? Democratic lawmakers wanted to make a political point of their own by claiming that people with guns, by themselves, constituted a threat to democracy. So they adjourned the session out of “fear” for their safety.

Hogwash.

This attitude goes back to the notion that if you’re armed, you are a threat. That defending yourself is a reason for some to fear attack.
Or maybe liberals really are scared little rodents scurrying for cover at the first sign of danger.

The Hill:

Her tweet linked to an article by Newsweek about Michigan choosing to close down its Capitol and cancel its legislative session after armed protests and death threats to Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.
On Thursday, armed protesters had gathered outside the state Capitol for planned “judgment day” demonstrations against the state’s stay-at-home order, which opponents have demanded be lifted businesses and the economy suffer during the pandemic.
Some 200 protesters turned out for Thursday’s event, where one demonstrator was seen carrying an American flag with a doll hanging by a noose. The event mirrored a similar protest at the end of April, during which hundreds of protesters — many armed with rifles — entered the Capitol.

I guess the article forgot to mention that the lone protester with the doll was quickly surrounded by legitimate protesters and forced to flee. Is that significant? Guess not.

There were indeed horrible threats against Governor Gretchen Whitmer, but they were roundly condemned by both parties.

One man is reportedly facing charges over death threats to Whitmer, and Newsweek reports there have been posts online calling to lynch her as well as suggestions to crowdfund for a hitman.
State Senate Majority Leader Mike Shirkey (R) condemned the threats as “despicable.”
“Those who have populated a number of social media posts with crude, violent and threatening messages about our governor, these folks are thugs and their tactics are despicable,” he said, according to The Detroit News.

Is anyone stupid enough to believe that anyone is serious about lynching the governor of Michigan or crowdfunding a hitman? Hillary Clinton is.

Hillary Clinton’s description of the protests as “domestic terrorism” is the lowest political blow you can make. It’s simply not true — not even in a metaphorical sense. It’s Hillary throwing crap against the wall and seeing what sticks while triggering liberals who stupidly nod their heads in agreement. Sure — terrorism. Just like the Moooslims, right?

https://pjmedia.com/news-and-politics/rick-moran/2020/05/16/hillary-clinton-calls-michigan-lock-down-protests-domestic-terrorism-n398162 

100,000 Businesses Have Permanently Collapsed Under Pandemic Lockdowns



More than 100,000 small businesses have permanently shuttered within just two months as pandemic lockdowns devastated the nation’s economy landing 36 million Americans out of work, according to a new survey this week.

A team of researchers at the University of Illinois, Harvard University, Harvard Business School and University of Chicago discovered at least 2 percent of the nation’s small businesses are now gone after conducting a representative survey of more than 5,800 enterprises between May 9-11.

“The broad conclusion of our research is that a lot of small businesses which make up a big share of U.S. employment have daily limited resources and are under a fair amount of financial distress,” said Illinois economist Alexander Bartik who co-authored the study.

Limited cash and limited time for conditions to change, Bartik told The Federalist, could drive up that number significantly in the days to come. The team of economists found that the median small business with expenses exceeding $10,000 a month had only enough resources to stay afloat for two weeks. About 75 percent of those surveyed, said they didn’t have the resources to last more than two months.

The researchers’ findings line largely consistent with a March poll by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce with MetLife showing one in four small businesses were preparing for permanent closure within about eight weeks absent of reopenings or new federal relief. Even after Congress replenished the depleted small business forgivable loan fund in the Payment Protection Program (PPP), complicated and cumbersome requirements to qualify for loan forgiveness made securing federal relief impractical.

On top of a wide array of tedious conditions to avoid having to pay back the low-interest loans, businesses became forced to compete with beefed up federal unemployment insurance with a flat $600 a week on top of state benefits that offer furloughed workers more money than full-time employment. Businesses under the PPP are required to rehire laid off staff resistant to remain eligible for loan forgiveness putting employers in a tough spot that need to bring back workers but don’t want to cut their pay.

“On what planet am I competing with unemployment?” Washington salon owner Jamie Black-Lewis told CNBC upon facing outraged employees upset at her securing the government loan.

A team of economists at the Heritage Foundation estimate that the ramped up benefits with radically expanded eligibility rules making it easier to qualify have pushed unemployment up by nearly 14 million as they incentivize staff to remain directly dependent on the government handout.

Tom Sullivan, the vice president of small business policy at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, told The Federalist he believes the increased emergency benefits have instead saved many who have applied for relief from overwhelmed state unemployment offices.
Sullivan estimates that the outlook for small businesses is likely to get worse before it gets better without a dramatic change in circumstances of new aid from the government.

“There is a recognition that more funding is necessary,” Sullivan said as limited reopenings have dramatically altered the landscape for how businesses are operating. Those in the hospitality industry in particular will be open with limited capacity, unable to cater to the same number of guests who had previously flocked to their services. “It’s better to be reopened, but it’s not just reopening with the same expenses you had in 2019. There’s going to be more expenses.”

Senate Republican Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky saidThursday there is a “high likelihood” that congressional lawmakers will be passing a fourth round of pandemic stimulus on top of the nearly $3 trillion already spent, but rejected the House Democrats’ $3 trillion bill proposed Wednesday more as a “liberal wish list.”

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has released a four-page guide to help small businesses navigate reopening.

ICYMI: Seals, North Korea and penguins at a museum

Here are some stories you may have missed this week.

The Bait-and-Switch Blues

The Bait-and-Switch Blues


Americans are coming to terms with the fact that too many of us are governed by liars and thugs.

Years from now, when the American public’s memory of the Wuhan virus craze has crystallized into something coherent, it’s a good bet most of us will see the economic shutdown that was the governmental reaction as the dumbest, most wasteful, and most abusive error made on this continent since a government not of the people passed the Intolerable Acts of the early 1770s and was shortly thereafter dispatched from the 13 colonies.

Unfortunately, we will not have the benefit of throwing off an out-of-touch foreign government this time. The stupidity and abuse of the shutdowns comes from people we elected.

Those have been our mistakes.
Americans have been baited-and-switched so many times by our political class, nobody’s really buying it.

In Michigan, Gretchen Whitmer won by a handy 53-44 margin in 2018 to become that state’s governor. Whitmer is, as Robert Stacy McCain aptly noted, America’s worst governor. She has proven that by doggedly repressing her state’s economy despite its people loudly telling her they will not continue to allow it. Whitmer’s shutdown was, like all of the state and local examples of economic seppuku, which, for some strange reason, are continuing in Democrat-run states but not so much in Republican ones, predicated on the idea that if everyone stayed at home it would “flatten the curve” of the virus’s spread and thus keep the health-care system from being overwhelmed.

Well, it wasn’t. And yet the shutdowns continue.

They continue in New York, where that state’s governor, Andrew Cuomo, has won election with 63, 54, and 60 percent margins in 2010, 2014, and 2018. Cuomo’s orders actually killed nursing home patients in that state by insisting that nursing homes take in patients with COVID-19, spreading the virus to the most vulnerable people in society and ratcheting up the nation’s worst fatality count. Cuomo, who answers outrage over his blatant malfeasance by repeating the mantra of “We did everything we could,” now is demanding much of his state stay closed until June 13. They’ve just closed the pop-up hospital at the Javits Center for lack of patients, as the state’s health-care system is in no danger of being overwhelmed despite New York having been harder hit by the virus than anywhere else, and yet Cuomo is locking it down for another month.

New York is actually getting off easy. In California the lockdown is practically interminable, with Los Angeles’ totalitarian mayor Eric Garcetti declaring, “We’re not moving beyond it,” as he extended the stay-at-home order for three months.

Some 40 percent of the deaths from COVID-19 across the country have come in nursing homes, and that industry’s connection with politicians of a certain stripe is fairly well known — something that is going to need a proper airing as lessons are learned from the virus. But it isn’t just in New York where the nursing homes have become shining beacons of abuse. In Pennsylvania, the Democrat Gov. Tom Wolf appointed a man in a dress to run the state health department and found that transvestism is no remedy for malfeasance in public office:

Pennsylvania’s secretary of Health revealed this week that her 95-year-old mother was transferred from a nursing home facilities into a hotel — as the state government was ordering those facilities to accept patients who had tested positive with the coronavirus.

That state policy, issued on March 18, stipulated that elderly care facilities “must continue to accept new admissions and receive readmissions for current residents who have been discharged from the hospital who are stable,” including residents who had contracted COVID-19. The policy was meant to “alleviate the increasing burden in the acute care settings.”

That rule may have contributed to the significant death toll the pandemic has wrought in the state’s care facilities: The overwhelming majority of deaths in the state have occurred in nursing homes, more than 2,400 of the state’s nearly 4,000 deaths.

Yet even as coronavirus-positive patients were being funneled into state nursing homes, the state’s Secretary of Health, Rachel Levine, removed her mother from one of those facilities, lodging her instead in a hotel.

Levine made that admission on Tuesday while speaking to Pennsylvania media, stating that “she and her sister complied with their mother’s request to move from a personal care home to another location,” the Allentown Morning Call reported.

The admission raises concerns that state health officials may have been aware of the potentially devastating threat that COVID-19 posed to nursing homes even as they ordered those facilities to accept COVID-19 patients.

Tom Wolf won reelection two years ago with 58 percent of the vote.

In Wisconsin, the bars are packed and the governor is unhinged following that state’s Supreme Court ruling, a breath of fresh constitutional air, that draconian measures to shut down economies cannot be unilaterally taken by the executive branch without at least the acquiescence of the state legislature.

Almost nowhere have state legislatures been consulted. And without that consultation we’ve seen the bait-and-switch: what was about flattening the curve is now about “preventing a second wave,” which moves us into an intrusive, wasteful, and useless regime of testing and contact tracing seeking to stop the spread of a virus that has already spread. This must continue until there is a vaccine, we’re told.

The founder of Barstool Sports, Dave Portnoy, captured the sentiment of most of America in his reaction to the coronavirus bait-and-switch.

The mismanagement, abuse of civil liberties, policymaking divorced of any rational basis of examination, and outright dishonesty exhibited by mayors and governors across the country is going to contribute to the breaking down of what’s left of American faith in government. It’s clearly happening — just drive around your town, and what you’ll see is people out living their lives regardless of these shutdowns. Businesses are reopening even when they’re supposedly barred from doing so, people are declining to wear masks in public (they should; the masks are worthless), and folks are going back to work.

And the party that has adopted the economic shutdown as its No. 1 domestic policy agenda item is beginning to reap what it has sown.

You saw Mike Garcia’s resounding win this week in that California congressional special election. That victory echoed a GOP hold in Wisconsin. Things are beginning to turn.

And it’s funny that they are, because we’re seeing COVID-19 being thrown out as a barrier against the pursuit of Obamagate. “People are dying,” the narrative goes. “We can’t afford that distraction.”

But Americans have been baited-and-switched so many times by our political class, nobody’s really buying it. Sure, there are polls that say the public is for the shutdowns. Those are easy to manipulate, particularly when the question is framed as whether or not you’d rather make a little money while Grandma dies. But when folks are voting with their feet and heading out of their homes while local pols scramble to stay relevant by sending cops out to do dirtier and dirtier work pulling licenses and writing summonses, it’s clear things are falling apart.

As Portnoy complained, Americans agreed to cooperate when it was about giving the health-care system a chance to ramp up for the virus. We’re far beyond that, and the health-care system is collapsing from layoffs and empty beds. The deal has changed, and it changed unilaterally, and Americans are waking up to the scam.

And not a moment too soon. The virus will now be with us forever, just like the flu is. But the fruit-of-the-poisonous-tree extended shutdowns, despite the babblings of the Gavin Newsoms and Jared Polises about New Normals that must continue until there is a vaccine, must end. Now.



Suicide of the Woke Republicans

What Team Pelosi could not accomplish in 2018, 
RINOs want to do in 2020.


New revelations of the perfidy of Obama administration officials and government careerists in framing Gen. Michael Flynn and fomenting the Russian collusion hoax have cast a harsh light on Capitol Hill.

It is clearer than ever that the chairman of a legislative committee overseeing national intelligence misled the American public and, by undermining the Trump administration’s ability to govern, harmed our national security.

What’s more, we’re not talking about the odious Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), whose perfidy at the service of partisanship and ideological madness is obvious. We’re talking about the nominal Republican who up until a few hours ago was chairman of the Senate intelligence committee, North Carolina’s Richard Burr.

Schiff’s conduct has been what one would expect of a Nancy Pelosi protégé.

Burr’s is quite a different case. If one imagines a Forrest Gump–like cipher as putty in the hands of K Street lobbyists, that is the portrait of Richard Burr. For more than a quarter-century of ineffectiveness in public office, he has been maintaining the convenient profile of a nonentity while accumulating wealth and power.

In 1994, the tobacco lobbyists in Washington needed a candidate for an open House seat in their holy-of-holies, Winston-Salem. They hand-picked — and quite possibly flue-cured — Burr, a 38-year-old lawn mower salesman and graduate of the Cigarette City’s R. J. Reynolds High School. The national Republican landslide handed the seat to the young man. The tobacco interests secured the freshman congressman a seat on the panel that oversees their industry, the commerce committee. Freshmen almost never get assigned to this committee.

After a decade of faithful service to the coffin nail manufacturers, Burr moved up to the Senate in 2004. Following the Republican midterm victory in 2014, Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) installed Burr, who has no military, diplomatic, or other national security experience, as chairman of the intelligence committee. This was a feel-good moment for those who sentimentalize democracy. It was affirmation that in our post-Tocquevillian land of liberty, equality, and fraternity, any boy or girl could grow up to be custodian of the national security sieve known as the Senate intelligence committee.

Burr at last has attained his 15 minutes of fame for being in the soup with federal prosecutors for suspected crimes of using non-public information to make stock transactions. The investigations began after Burr, the recipient of daily classified intelligence briefings on the coronavirus pandemic, dumped as much as $1.7 million in stocks in February, before the stock market plunge precipitated by traders who had not had access to Burr’s national security secrets. This week, the FBI confiscated his cell phone as evidence, after which raid Burr stepped down from his chairmanship.

For many years while Burr was watching his stock portfolio grow and was coasting through a charmed existence on Capitol Hill, Flynn was on duty in the combat zones of Iraq and Afghanistan as the senior military intelligence officer.

For more than three years, Burr has either ineffectively defended, or actively harmed, Gen. Flynn and other victims of John Brennan, James Clapper, James Comey, Susan Rice, Joe Biden, and Barack Obama in what Attorney General William Barr has called “one of the greatest travesties in American history.”

In marked contrast to Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.), who was chairman of the House intelligence committee before the 2018 elections, Burr has been a willing dupe of the Democrats and the Deep State. Instead of clashing with Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), the slimy senior Democrat on the intelligence panel, Burr always has behaved obsequiously towards the Senate’s Adam Schiff Tweedle-Dee.

Burr was asleep at the switch or worse when James Wolfe, his committee’s director of security, had a years-long affair with a college-age newspaper writer who took runner-up honors from the Pulitzer Prize committee for her — surprise, surprise! — publications of leaks from Burr’s committee denigrating Gen. Flynn and promoting the Russia hoax. The leaker went to prison, but not before Burr demeaned himself and the Senate by begging the sentencing judge to keep the criminal out of the slammer. This disgrace was the moment when Burr should have been removed from his chairmanship.

Unlike Devin Nunes, Burr never accorded fairness to Flynn. Today it should be clear that Flynn was targeted by Team Obama not because he is dishonest, but because he is a truth-teller.

Flynn enraged Obama and the national security establishment when he dared to tell the truth about the war in Afghanistan.

In an extensive interview with the special inspector general examining that war, Flynn said, “From ambassadors down to the low level [they all say] we are doing a great job. Really? So, if we are doing a great job, why does it feel like we are losing? There is corruption in reporting and not just corruption in the theft that occurred … That also includes from the State Department. There is no way that over the years, to include this year [2015], that we can say things are wonderful.”

Flynn’s candid remarks were not made public until after his dismissal as President Trump’s national security adviser. But surely, within the government, they were known to Barack Obama, Joe Biden, and to Trump appointees who had the knives out for Flynn, such as Bill Kristol’s one-time choice for president, Gen. James Mattis.

While Burr, the Country-Club Republicans, the sob-sisters of the Michael Gerson type, and the bellicose band of Kristol’s Kind-of-Blue-State persuasion were doing their part to throw the decorated general to James Wolfe and the other wolves, a Republican House member proudly shared a stage with Gen. Flynn following Flynn’s guilty plea.

Unsurprisingly, this House member, who represents conservative, rural northwest Iowa, faces a primary challenge from a candidate bankrolled by the national corporate lobbyists and other outsiders who have probably never been within a four-hour drive of Sioux City.

The House member is Steve King, a conservative who has represented his corner of Iowa since 2003. He and Flynn both attended the annual conference of Phyllis Schlafly’s Eagles in St. Louis in 2018, where each was presented an award for public service. I attended the conference and had conversations with each of them. I have met a boatload of congressmen over the years; Steve King gave a better impression of decency and thoughtfulness than most of them.

As for the conversation with Gen. Flynn, who was accompanied by his gracious wife and by his son, who had been threatened with indictment by Comey’s dirty, bluffing G-Men, I can report that each of them displayed Hemingway’s definition of courage: grace under pressure.

What Team Pelosi could not accomplish against King in 2018, RINOs want to do in 2020.

If one wants to have a deeper understanding of why both the Left and “moderate” RINO elitists hate him, listen to Flynn’s remarks praising the late Phyllis Schlafly and the pro-life movement. The bicoastal Establishment’s hatred of men such as Flynn has very much to do with their differences with him on abortion and other social issues, and not really much at all to do with actual issues of international affairs. They cannot abide a White House national security adviser who speaks warmly of the March for Life.

Since Donald Trump’s election, the Left and the RINOs have become utterly lazy about real issues of international politics. They have largely abandoned even going through the motions of performing any genuine, serious national security analysis and policy development. All they do is make strident noises, boiled down into inane tweets and headlines for CNN, the East Coast papers, and the infantile cyber-rag Foreign Policy, against every move Trump makes. If it’s a Trump policy, no other rationale is needed for it to be denounced in wild, apocalyptic terms. Call it the triumph of the shrill. Before Trump’s candidacy became a threat to their power, these well-larded phonies were all for improving relations with Vladimir Putin’s Russia.

Hatred of Steve King also is based on his pro-life and other conservative social positions. King is well-liked in his district. During the Democratic wave election of 2018, King won reelection while Democrats defeated Iowa’s other two Republican incumbents, whom the Establishment had considered safer. This was despite massive expenditures — almost four dollars for every one of King’s — by the left-wing Democratic challenger.

What Team Pelosi could not accomplish against King in 2018, RINOs want to do in 2020.

Immediately following King’s reelection in 2018, the Republican House caucus caved in to a heinous smear campaign against the congressman. They were frightened by hit pieces in the New York Times falsely claiming King to be a racist. This is the sort of thermonuclear flak from Big Media that Donald Trump faces and stares down every day.

But the wusses of the House Republican caucus could not overcome their fear of being bad-mouthed by dishonest leftists. They made fools of themselves by voting to remove King from his committee assignments. At the same time, Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell, who could not be bothered to deal with Burr’s malfeasance at the intelligence committee, joined in the RINO chorus against Steve King.

Real conservatives know how painful, and often embarrassing, it is to be a member of the Stupid Party because there is no alternative except the Evil Party. Republicans who are terrified into becoming “woke,” who team up with the Left on social issues, have a death wish, both figuratively and literally.

The RINOs are financing a primary challenger with a fount of corporate PAC money and funds from high-dollar donors. They have raised and spent more than King. The RINOs’ candidate has raised most of his money from outside the district; King has gotten most of his from within the district. The RINOs’ candidate has raised more money from Los Angeles than King has gathered from Sioux City. A RINO Super PAC — it should be called a suicide pact — is pouring even more money into its effort to defeat King and kill chances for a Republican majority. The dinosaurs of the useless U.S. Chamber of Commerce are wasting unsuspecting members’ money in the Chamber’s own campaign against King. Just think of an alternative universe wherein this “Republican” money would have gone to reelecting President Trump instead of trashing one of his most loyal allies.

Meanwhile, almost all of the big buckets of money collected by the Democrat who will face the Republican nominee in November have been from San Francisco, New York City, San Jose, and Los Angeles.

The Iowa Republican congressional primary is on June 2. The choice is clear. Steve King is one of those rare members of Congress who is in accord with the voters who nominated Donald Trump in 2016. His RINO opponent represents everyone and everything Republican voters repudiated four years ago. If the RINOs defeat King in the primary, theirs could prove to be Pyrrhic victory. Voters who would be fired-up to reelect King in November would be tepid at best as to rallying for the RINO cause.
Steve King is an Iowan, not a PAC man.

The primary likely will have a low turnout because of the coronavirus. Conservatives in Iowa and across the nation still have time to make a difference in a contest with huge implications for the future of the Republican Party.

No Justice, No Freedom

No Justice, No Freedom

When justice is stripped of her blindfold - and her scales are tampered with.


The opening credits of the Perry Mason television drama featured a statue of justice as a blindfolded woman raising aloft a pair of scales. This common visual metaphor captures the two critical dimensions of justice: balancing the punishment with the crime, and the equality of all under the law.

Four years ago the Obama administration and rogue partisans in the FBI and DOJ abused their powers in order to keep Donald Trump from being elected, and then to hamstring and sabotage his administration. Now we are nearing the end of the investigations into those crimes, and the truth long obvious to many will finally be confirmed. But if the verification of these crimes is not followed by indictments and the malefactors put on trial, our political system will be seriously damaged, and we citizens will lose faith in the integrity of our justice system and its role in protecting our political freedom.

Like freedom, our view of justice as embodying fairness and balance has not been universal to all peoples. They may have had laws, but those laws were not necessarily just. Our notion of justice arises from the creation of constitutional states that first took form in ancient Greece. Before then, power over others was a personal possession of rulers based on their assumed superiority of wealth or birth, and as such was unaccountable to the masses. These rulers made the laws and enforced them, but they were not always subject to the same laws nor were they enforced fairly. Like governing, applying justice, then, was a function of the ruler’s status and privilege, or his alleged connection to the all-knowing gods. Justice, like political power, resided in men, not in laws equally applied.

The constitutional city-states of ancient Greece invented the transformational ideas that political power should be separated from flawed mortals and enshrined in laws and institutions that men managed and applied, but always remained the possession of the political community that outlived any particular man. By the time of the Athenian democracy, citizen males whether rich or poor, illiterate or educated, brought indictments against malefactors, made prosecution and defense speeches, and sat with several hundred “jurors” to adjudicate innocence or guilt, and determined the punishment. That they did so at times wrongly or corruptly, merely confirms their flawed humanity.

That responsibility and privilege of meting out justice given to all citizens reinforced their political equality and freedom. Our system avoids the excesses of the direct democracy of Athens by having professional judges and prosecutors, but they too are still accountable to the people through their elected representatives, or in some states directly through the ballot box. An important exercise of our freedom is to demand that justice, which can involve incarceration that takes away our freedom, be applied equally to all, and balanced with the offense. Anything else is tyranny.

We just saw an example of tyrannical “justice.” A state district court judge in Texas sentenced a salon owner to a week in jail because she opened her business so she and her employees could feed their families. She did not violate a law, but a proclamation from the governor to keep “non-essential” businesses closed. Such ad hoc proclamations are problematic because they frequently reflect subjective or arbitrary judgments of risk that are not based on reasonable, let alone scientific, evidence. Yet the judge in Texas imposed a draconian punishment for no reason other than the business-owner’s refusal to grovel before his authority and admit she was “selfish.” He violated the foundations of true justice––balancing the punishment to the offense, and applying it equally––which led to the woman losing her freedom until the state’s Supreme Court intervened.

Such distortions of justice characterize the lockdown orders issued mainly by blue-state governors. As insulting to the citizens’ freedom as those have been, more serious is the corruption of the Obama administration, especially his FBI and DOJ, that began in the last days of his second term. The President of the United States became involved in a concerted partisan effort to damage the campaign of his potential successor. After Trump was elected, deep-state operatives continued to undermine his administration for four years, spawning a two-year illicit investigation by a special counsel, and preposterous Articles of Impeachment from the Democrat-controlled House. All were riddled with violations of investigatory laws and protocols ranging from the fraudulent FISA court warrants to the withholding of exculpatory evidence.

This attack on President Trump by partisan members of executive agencies of which he is the head has serially demonstrated the corruption of the two prerequisites of true justice: balance and equality under the law. The hounding of Michael Flynn is perhaps the most egregious deformation of true justice. The pretext for investigating him, that he violated the archaic Logan Act, was facially absurd. As the incoming National Security Advisor, speaking with the Russian ambassador was unexceptional, indeed required of his position. That conversation was recorded, as all such contacts are, and then Flynn and others mentioned in the talk were illegally “unmasked.” Even though FBI agents said Flynn didn’t lie, the FBI still set a “perjury trap” with questions about the conversation that they already knew the contents of, and that was perfectly legal. The FBI slyly discouraged Flynn from having a lawyer present, and presto, an American hero who had served his country in war and peace was now a criminal sentenced to prison after having been bankrupted paying for his defense.

Justice was seriously violated because Flynn, though innocent, was treated much differently than many other people who actually committed crimes. The most egregious of whom is Hillary Clinton, who clearly is guilty of using a private server to transmit classified information, which  constitutes a felony. For that crime, she was questioned unsworn, with her two lawyers present, both of which would have been material witnesses in any prosecution. Clinton’s “bleaching” of the server and destruction of tens of thousands of emails, which constitutes obstruction of justice, were matters of indifference to James Comey’s FBI. So much for equality under the law and punishment balancing the crime.

So Clinton committed crimes and went scot-free, while Flynn did not commit the crime of lying to the FBI (which Obama seems to think is “perjury”), and underwent the ordeal of having his son threatened, his savings wiped out, and his reputation besmirched, as were other victims like Carter Page. The DOJ has asked the court to vacate the case against Flynn, and that happened only because Donald Trump became president and appointed an Attorney General who understands what true justice is.

Numerous other examples from this corrupt scheme likewise illustrate the violation of justice. Flynn did not commit lie to the FBI and suffered like Jean Valjean, while agency functionaries like James Clapper, John Brennan, and Andrew McCabe lied under oath with impunity. FISA warrants marred with 17 violations were based on the transparently bogus Russian kompromat known as the Steele Dossier paid for by the Clinton campaign and the DNC––facts the petitioners did not reveal to the court––all for dubious partisan purposes that required treating some people differently from others. So far, these violations have gone unpunished except for a few miscreants getting “fired,” which means pulling down a cushy federal pension while enjoying an equally cushy gig with MSNBC.

When such offenses committed by “public servants” sworn to uphold the Constitution go unpunished, our whole political order that protects our freedom is compromised. When justice that is supposed to be blind and balanced becomes corrupted by inequality and excesses, the equality of all free citizens before the law is endangered, for then, to paraphrase Orwell, some pigs are more free and equal than others, hollowing out and weakening those critical political goods. After all, that same sort of corruption provided the offenses that justified the American Revolution in the Declaration of Independence, the bulk of which is a catalogue of George III’s unjust violations of the colonists’ rights, “a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States.” 

Similarly, the “soft” tyranny of concentrated power created by our technocratic “managerial elite” is the aim of those who would not accept the legal election of Donald Trump, and who continue trying to damage his administration and forestall his reelection. For such ruling class, true justice must give way to “social justice,” a mask for the further concentration of power at the expense of our liberty. This warping of justice is camouflaged by its claims to eradicate inequality, racism, sexism, homophobia, xenophobia, and other crimes they have hung on Donald Trump and his supporters. But like all tyranny, it’s really all about power.

Over the last few years we’ve seen Justice stripped of her blindfold, and her scales tampered with. As for their victims, the perpetrators and their media hirelings respond as the Gallic chieftain Brennus did to the Romans when they protested the crooked scales that he was using to weigh out the tribute they owed. Throwing his sword on the scales, he sneered, “Vae victis!”––To hell with the conquered.

If we want to avoid becoming a world where sheer power determines justice, all these investigations must end with indictments, trials, and condign punishment in order to hold the malefactors accountable, and deter future ones. But if they are left unpunished, then we will find ourselves increasingly living in a world where justice is not blind, and all are not equal under the law. 

Bruce Thornton is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center.


Memo To Mitch McConnell:


You Won’t Get Judges If You Don’t Hold Resistance Accountable For Russia Hoax


McConnell better figure out quickly that if he doesn't hold the Resistance accountable for the Russia hoax that harmed his party and the entire country for many years, he won't have a majority in the next term.


For Americans hoping Senate Republicans might finally engage the Russia collusion hoax seriously, last night’s interview of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell by “Special Report’s” Bret Baier was a tremendous disappointment. McConnell better figure out quickly that if he doesn’t hold the Resistance accountable for the Russia hoax that harmed his party and the entire country for many years, he won’t have a majority in the next term. If it helps to motivate him, he should remember that not having the majority in the next term means he won’t get to confirm judges, an issue he hopes will be his defining legacy.

For three years, a false and dangerous narrative of treasonous collusion with Russia to steal the 2016 election was woven throughout the media and government. This conspiracy theory harmed international relations, domestic governance, and the lives of many individuals. It ended when a special counsel probe was finally forced to admit in 2019 that there was no evidence that any American had colluded with Russia to steal the 2016 election, much less anyone close to President Donald Trump.

Debunking this false narrative was for many years left to a very small band of reporters and congressional investigators. Most of the attention-getting congressional work was done on the House side, including the revelation that Hillary Clinton’s campaign had secretly paid for the false narrative and that there was serious abuse of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act in how the government secured wiretaps to spy on Trump campaign affiliates.

Despite being controlled by Republicans throughout the ordeal, the Senate was largely absent from the fight with the exception of just a few senators — Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa and Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin being the primary investigators whose oversight work and document demands paid off. And their work should not be underplayed.

It is due to them that the detailed texts got out about the anti-Trump machinations of FBI investigator Peter Strzok and FBI lawyer Lisa Page. They sounded the alarm about Christopher Steele, author of the Clinton research, whom the media and government had falsely claimed was trustworthy. They detailed FISA abuse. They were concerned about the Flynn case from the very beginning, and fought with the FBI for information about it. They were also responsible for seeking information about the unmaskings that recently made the news. It all should have been much bigger news.

After the Russia collusion hoax helped Democrats win the House of Representatives in the 2018 election, the Senate needed to step up the fight. Yet McConnell didn’t prioritize the issue in any way. He never noticeably supported the senators or committees who were doing actual work. He instead deferred to Richard Burr of North Carolina, the ostensible head of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, which for years has in effect been run by Democrat Mark Warner.

Burr was a Russia hoaxer, threatening legislation to protect Robert Mueller, the Republican who was presented as heading the probe. When Mueller appeared before Congress to defend the special counsel report, he had very little knowledge of it and appeared extremely befuddled. Read more about the failures of the Senate Intelligence committee with regard to the Russia hoax.

Only yesterday, after Burr’s cell phone was seized by the FBI as part of its investigation into alleged insider trading, did he finally step down from chairing the committee. That committee’s major addition to the Russia collusion storyline was the arrest of a staff member for lying about leaks to the reporter(s) with whom he was having extramarital relations.

McConnell didn’t just whiff on the Russia collusion hoax investigation in general, he failed to investigate after the implosion of the Mueller probe, and he failed to investigate after the inspector general report showing the problems with how the Trump campaign was spied on. He appears ready to fail once again in the aftermath of the Mike Flynn case being withdrawn.

McConnell Can’t Be Bothered

In last night’s interview, McConnell appeared not just uninterested but uninformed on the scandal of Democrats weaponizing the intelligence community for partisan gain. Baier asked McConnell to comment on the case of Flynn, Trump’s first national security advisor who was a major victim of the Russia collusion hoax. Here’s McConnell’s limp response:
Well, If there were in fact misbehavior surrounding the Flynn case, the American public needs to know. And clearly that was the view of the attorney general. I gather it’s now in a rather unusual procedure of being reviewed by the district judge before whom the case was. I think we’re just anxious to get the facts. what actually happened. The American public needs to know; all of us would like to know. And one thing about Washington: you guys are so good at your job, truth always comes out, sometimes it takes a little longer than other times, but we’ll find out what in fact did happen.

Oh dear, where to begin. Let’s leave aside the blasé attitude McConnell has toward Flynn and those who went after him — the criminal leaks, the destruction of evidence, the failure to supply mandated exculpatory evidence, the campaign to undermine, and the game-playing with plea deals. Let’s focus instead on McConnell’s view that the media — yes, the media — are good at their job of uncovering the truth and that it’s their job to do that and not Senate investigators who are actually charged with oversight of federal agencies.

McConnell is shockingly wrong on both counts. The media are complicit in the hoax, as anyone with even the most modest knowledge must know, and the Senate is desperately needed in this fight. The Senate can subpoena records and compel testimony — holding hearings if necessary — to get to the bottom of the effort from inside the U.S. government to use a false and dangerous conspiracy theory that threatened the health and safety of the republic.

If that’s not the Senate’s business, what in the world is? And if the Senate majority leader won’t care even about how this scandal uniquely harmed Republican voters, then who will?

At the end of the interview, Baier asked McConnell if he agrees with President Trump that former President Obama should be called into a Senate hearing and whether he agreed with President Trump calling the scandal Obamagate. Obama’s personal role in the scandal was confirmed in additional documents released as part of the Justice Department’s motion to dismiss charges against Flynn. Here’s McConnell’s response:
Look, that will be up to [Judiciary Committee] Chairman [Lindsey] Graham to make those kind of decisions — I think he may have addressed it already. I’m not certain… Look, that would be up to Chairman Graham to determine how to handle this. I have a lot of confidence in him and he knows what he is doing and I’m going to follow his lead.

Graham took over the Judiciary Committee last year and is known for going on television to claim that he will investigate the Russia collusion hoax. His track record with actually investigating the Russia collusion hoax is extremely spotty. While Graham is good with funny aphorisms, his work ethic and focus are noticeably lacking. For a scandal as complicated as the Russia collusion hoax, both are desperately needed.

If McConnell Wants a Majority and Judges, Get To Work

McConnell is praised throughout the Republican Party for his focus on confirming originalist judges to federal courts. It’s easily his greatest legacy, and one I wrote about at length in “Justice On Trial,” my book with Carrie Severino. But he should remember that he can’t confirm good judges if Republicans are not in the majority and if a stalwart person isn’t president to nominate them. Both of those key factors are threatened by his long-time lack of interest in holding Russia hoaxers accountable for what they did.

If McConnell and Graham want to confirm judges after November, they need to understand how viscerally outraged many Americans are by the spying and leaking scandal. They need to know that refusal to do anything about it will hurt Republicans, not Democrats, at the ballot box.

They should remember how once they got aggressive in pushing back on the campaign to destroy Brett Kavanaugh’s life and reputation, it redounded to their benefit. Even in an election year where Democrats swept into the House majority, they picked up Senate seats by fighting for Kavanaugh and against the dirty tricks deployed against him and the voters who elected Republicans to the Senate and presidency. Channeling Republican anger in those hearings, at least by the very end,  helped them.

They should remember that. They should know that the Republican base is every bit as angry about the Russia hoax as they were about Kavanaugh. And they should know that Americans who care about corrupt government are not seeing nearly enough effort coming from the Senate.

If McConnell doesn’t start demanding more be done to hold the Resistance responsible for its damaging and dangerous Russia collusion hoax, his party will lose, and he won’t confirm another judge in his lifetime.