Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Why Trump is the Catholic Choice for 2020


Article by Brian Burch in The American Conservative

Why Trump is the Catholic Choice for 2020

Before 2016, Catholic notions of solidarity and subsidiarity had been ignored by both parties for decades.


The following is excerpted from the forthcoming book, A New Catholic Moment: Donald Trump and the Politics of the Common Good, by Brian Burch, out September 24.

In 2016 there was a broad unease simmering in America—and the media and the entire political class, both Republican and Democrat, were completely out of touch with this reality. Americans knew in their bones that something was not right, but the reasons for this feeling were hard to articulate. What Americans were really sensing was that our country’s leadership class had lost sight of the common good. In America, the common good was suffering. 

Viewed from Washington, D.C., New York City, Silicon Valley, or Los Angeles, in 2016 everything in America seemed, if not great, then at least “fine.” America had survived the Great Recession and there was sustained, if muted, economic growth: the GDP numbers looked “fine,” the Dow Jones average looked “fine.” There was a consensus among the political class—again, of both parties—about the general contours of public policy to be pursued in the years ahead, which were more or less the same policies that had been pursued for years or even decades. That consensus championed a frictionless globalized capitalism overseen by transnational expert-led institutions. The ever-freer movement of goods, services, capital, information, jobs, and people would generate greater and greater global wealth.

While this fluid global economy might lead to job losses for some Americans, the economists said, that was more than compensated for by lower consumer prices for all; in extreme cases there was always the welfare state. And if some Americans were made uneasy by the dizzying pace of cultural transformation brought on by mass immigration, feeling no longer at home in the land of their own birth… well, they would just have to get used to it.

America, in this view, was primarily not a nation but a marketplace, and America was midwifing into being a whole new world order, a borderless order of cosmopolitan market freedom that would in time extend to every inch of the earth. If there were nations that held out against the emerging global liberal consensus, they could be bribed or threatened into conformity through international aid (either given or withheld). Alternatively, American military power could be brought to bear to bring recalcitrant regimes to an end. 

This last point seemed to be a deeply held commitment among the Washington policy elite. President Obama had been elected in 2008 in part on a promise to end America’s costly and evidently futile wars in the Middle East. Nevertheless, after eight years of the Obama presidency, American troops remained in Afghanistan and Iraq; American power had been used to end Muammar Gaddafi’s regime in Libya; and American military assistance was owing to various groups opposing the Assad government in Syria. All that on the watch of a “peacemaker” president who had himself rejected the militarized Washington foreign policy consensus. America’s political class—elected Republicans and Democrats, unelected senior of officials in Washington—had become addicted to war.

One elementary aspect of Catholic social teaching is that the followers of Christ seek peace, not war. While war is sometimes necessary and just, exacting conditions must be met. As trillions of dollars and thousands of American lives—not to mention hundreds of thousands of our adversaries’ lives—were expended in America’s “wars of choice,” the American people could sense that something was not right. A nation fighting foreign wars without end was not attending to fractures in the common good at home.

Two other principles at the heart of Catholic social teaching are solidarity and subsidiarity. Solidarity is an aspect of the virtue of charity. It is willing the good of others as we sense a common bond that unites us. In political terms, it is preeminently a kind of “friendship” among fellow citizens, carefully cultivated by statesmen. Because we participate together in a political community, we share a common good, and so we spontaneously feel a responsibility to assist those within our political community who are experiencing difficulty. We want each part of the nation to contribute to the flourishing of the whole, and we want our fellow citizens to receive the respect due to that contribution. And so, we support public policies to foster such participation. Solidarity is “normal” in a well-functioning political community. This principle of solidarity is sometimes in tension with the “rugged individualism” that is usually celebrated in America. It is because of solidarity that Catholics were so prominent in the early labor union movement and in developing many aspects of America’s welfare state. Both were initiatives to bind up an America fractured along lines of socio-economic class. 

Subsidiarity is a principle that holds that matters of public concern should be addressed by the lowest competent authority. In other words, responsibility for addressing a societal issue should be local whenever possible. Responsibility should not be usurped by higher authorities unless absolutely necessary. This principle is, in the first instance, rather closer to another often celebrated American ideal: suspicion of big government. But there is also a difference. Subsidiarity is open to the involvement of higher authorities when lower authorities are failing to fulfill their ends: in fact, it demands it. But the involvement of higher authority must aim at creating conditions for restoring the lower authority to its rightful role and healthy functioning. The higher authority must not displace the lower. The vision behind subsidiarity is of a vibrant civil society in which families, businesses, professional associations, unions, municipalities, and much more are each vigorous in making their unique contributions to the good of the whole, the common good. 

These principles of Catholic social teaching may seem very abstract, but they illuminate something about America’s predicament in 2016. While metropolitan elites thought the economy was doing “fine,” in fact for a generation globalizing trade agreements and the offshoring of industrial employment had shattered the lives and communities of millions of Americans. But no one in charge had even noticed. It was during the 2016 election that most Americans learned for the first time that an opioid epidemic had long been raging in our country, with annual overdose deaths in recent years exceeding the total number of American dead during the Vietnam War, every year. And it was about the same time that Americans learned that “deaths of despair”—from suicide, overdoses, and alcohol- related liver disease—had grown to an alarming level. So much so that the life expectancy of white Americans had actually been declining for many years. 

Even today, these quite shocking facts about our society seem to be of no particular interest to our news media. Hollywood has not been producing poignant films about this American carnage. Public policy to address the “root causes” of so many ruined lives has not been anywhere near the top of the agenda for Congress. Again: in 2016, barely anyone in authority in our country had even noticed that any of this was happening. What this reveals is a crisis of solidarity. The prosperous classes that have benefited materially from global supply chains and the financialization of our economy seem to feel no special obligation toward their countrymen who have been left behind in this great transformation. The “winners” of the economic system built to facilitate globalization effectively treat their working-class fellow citizens as expendable, as cogs in a worn-out machine that is being discarded. It is difficult to imagine a deeper wound to the civic friendship that should animate the common good. 

How can this be? How can this fracture have been allowed to happen? Well, one reason is that the propaganda offensive in favor of the “high-tech economy” was so great, and so self-flattering to urban elites, that it warped their vision. An America dedicated to free markets must not try to save the jobs of the past! Americans must embrace the jobs of the future! That had been the optimistic message for decades, and American schools and universities responded by greatly expanding STEM programs. But most of the best tech jobs seemed to go to H-1B visa holders imported from India. For too many Americans, the “job of the future” turned out to mean driving for Uber. 

There is another reason why this socio-economic fracture had been allowed to develop. The attention of our political leaders was simply turned elsewhere. Specifically, their attention was focused on—and our leaders were often obsessed by—identity politics. 

When President Obama was first elected in 2008, nearly all Americans, whatever their partisan differences, could celebrate together the harbinger of a “post-racial” America. Slavery had been America’s original sin, and after the Civil War legal segregation continued to perpetrate a horrible injustice against African-Americans. Such policies and the racist attitudes that went with them had been a grotesque violation of the solidarity that white Americans owed their fellow citizens, and this abuse went on for decades. In recent decades, however, the country had rooted out the worst forms of racism and mandated legal equality, and even affirmative action, to draw the nation together. Over the course of two generations, African-Americans had clearly advanced, as was just. And now, America had elected a black man to the highest office in the land. It was an optimistic time. There was a sense of moral achievement, the coming together of one nation, the United States of America. 

But that sense of moral unity, of solidarity, of embracing the vision of a post-racial America did not last long. For President Obama staffed his administration with leftist activists strongly aligned with the tenets of multiculturalism and the latest academic theories of “intersectionality.” These activists were keen to push identity politics as far as it could go, and in a Democratic administration they had their hands on the levers of power. So while President Obama often gave voice to a stirring rhetoric of integration and unity, in fact, the doctrines of identity politics demand the cultivation of racial and ethnic division, a prickly minority resentment against the majority culture. Instead of a post-racial, color-blind America—e pluribus unum—identity politics demands a near obsession with race in every aspect of life. Failure to recognize and honor racial difference is seen as a kind of cultural “erasure,” a crime against identity. For the intersectional “woke,” there is no interest in integration: why, after all, would a black or brown or yellow American want to integrate into an odious “whiteness”? Their only concern is to “heighten the contradictions” so as to eventually overthrow the “power structures” of American freedom and democracy. What exactly they imagine will follow, and why exactly it will be better, is never quite clear. 

While these strange, cultural Marxist notions had once been confined to certain less reputable corners of the ivory tower, during the Obama administration they became the basis for public policies that touched all Americans. They also became the common coin of the media’s understanding of the moral baselines of American politics. As attention was turned to an ever-burgeoning list of “identities” and the markers of their “recognition” in society, America’s leadership class lost sight of the ordinary difficulties of working men and women, of all races and ethnic backgrounds, struggling to raise families under macroeconomic conditions that systematically disfavored their contributions to society. 

Identity politics was thus a great distraction from the globalist economic disruptions that affected the lives of millions. Because our leaders were focused on healing identity “wounds”—microaggressions—they felt entitled to give themselves a pass on binding up any systemic macroeconomic wounds. As Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO) noted:

Corporate America and the celebrities that hawk their products talk up corporate social responsibility and social justice at home while making millions of dollars off the slave labor that assembles their products. Executives build woke, progressive brands for American consumers, but happily outsource labor to Chinese concentration camps.

More than that, however, it was also becoming clear in this heyday of multiculturalism that a basic assumption of identity politics is that there can be no common good between identity groups. In the intersectional way of seeing the world, groups were necessarily caught up in a zero-sum game. It was not enough that one group go up: another must go down. Above all, identity must be reinforced by consciously rejecting any offer to come together; identity is reinforced, always, by pushing apart.

In 2016, American Catholics with ancestors who had built labor unions to heal the divisions caused by industrial capitalism knew, but could not quite articulate, that Americans needed a different deal than the globalist capitalism on offer from both parties. American Catholics with ancestors who had embraced the melting pot knew, but could not quite articulate, that identity politics was a social poison that needed to be rejected utterly. American Catholics knew that somehow, someone needed to step forward to break with the policy consensus of recent decades and restore a common American commitment to the common good.


https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/catholic-trump-common-good/

 






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Both Are In The Same Church, But Media Love Joe Biden’s Faith And Hate Amy Coney Barrett’s

 

Article by Elle Reynolds in The Federalist

Both Are In The Same Church, But Media Love Joe Biden’s Faith And Hate Amy Coney Barrett’s

Biden's faith has been celebrated, but potential SCOTUS nominee Amy Coney Barrett is already facing questions and criticism about her faith in the same religion.

The media loves to fawn over the pious and heartfelt Catholicism of Joe Biden. Now they’re talking about the Catholic faith of Amy Coney Barrett, the frontrunner to be appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court. But you’ll notice a very different tone. The key differences are their adherence to their faith’s actual teachings, as well as their political leanings.

The Washington Post can’t call Barrett a “devout Catholic” without including in the same sentence that she is “fervently antiabortion.” Meanwhile, Biden touts his Catholicism — despite his support for abortion, which church teaching expressly calls a “moral evil.”

The Post also notes that, when Barrett was first nominated to the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, “Democrats balked at her nomination, questioning whether the academic could be an impartial arbiter because of her deep religious convictions.” If Biden has deep religious convictions, it has never bothered the Post.

Newsweek went further, suggesting that the religious community Barrett and her family are part of was the inspiration for “The Handmaid’s Tale” by Margaret Atwood. In the book’s dystopian world, Newsweek says, “women’s bodies are governed and treated as the property of the state under a theocratic regime.” Newsweek later corrected the article’s wild claims to say that Atwood’s inspiration was in fact another unrelated group.

Barrett and her family are part of a group called “People of Praise,” a Christian community that emphasizes members keeping each other accountable to biblical teaching. Members have spiritual mentors, some of whom have been smeared as “handmaids,” prompting Atwood’s novel and Newsweek’s apparent concern. Reuters also compared Barrett’s community to “The Handmaid’s Tale.”

The New York Times ran a story in 2017, when Barrett was appointed to the 7th Circuit, headlined “Some Worry About Judicial Nominee’s Ties to a Religious Group.” The story also noted Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s comment toward Barrett during Barrett’s confirmation hearing: “The dogma lives loudly in you.”

In an apparent criticism of Barrett’s views on abortion, Refinery 29 recently proclaimed that Barrett “hates your uterus.” No word about Biden’s hatred for uteruses even though he supports violently emptying them of human life.

Ron Charles, a writer for the Washington Post, tweeted about Barrett’s belief that a “legal career is but a means to an end … and that end is building the Kingdom of God.”

 Film director Arlen Parsa, in a now-deleted tweet, called Barrett a “Catholic extremist” who “wants the rest of American women to be stuck with her extreme lifestyle.

 In another tweet that has since been deleted, former Special Counsel for the Obama White House Norm Eisen called Barrett’s faith community, which is part of a religion that is 2,000 years old, a “secretive religious cult.” Edward Ongweso Jr., a writer at Vice, also tweeted about Barrett’s “cult.”

An op-ed published by the New York Times expressed concerns that adding Barrett would put simply too many Catholics on the Supreme Court. Ever see them publish an op-ed about how there are too many men on the court or too many Ivy League law school grads?

When coverage of Barrett’s faith isn’t downright bigoted like this, it’s usually used as an entry point into a discussion of Barrett’s views on abortion. Her faith is hardly applauded as an endearing, positive trait. Biden’s Catholicism, however, is a different story.

“How Joe Biden’s Faith Shaped His Politics,” is the headline of one article on NPR. “When Joe Biden seeks to inspire or comfort, he turns to his faith,” it continues. “Biden, who carries a rosary in his pocket and attends Mass every Sunday, is known as a deeply devout person of faith.”

This isn’t an old article either — it was published on Sunday, at the same time outlets have been criticizing Barrett. NPR goes on to quote Biden’s deputy political director, John McCarthy, on how Biden’s Catholicism is a positive attribute of his presidential run: “Because this is such a true part of Joe Biden, this is something that is just in the core messaging of our campaign.”

The Salt Lake Tribune tells an endearing story of young Senator Biden meeting Pope John Paul II and compares Biden’s faith to that of fellow Catholic John F. Kennedy. “Joe Biden’s Catholic politics are complicated, but deeply American,” the headline insists.

“Joe Biden is a man of faith,” praises CNN. “Biden grew up in a multigenerational Catholic home, where he says he learned the foundational principles of politics,” the article continues. It also highlights nice anecdotes of Biden slipping away to pray while vice president, and of his faith helping him through the loss of his son Beau. Biden even wears Beau’s rosary on his wrist, CNN tells us.

Another CNN article explains how “personal loss, pastoral instincts and his son’s rosary” are “what defines Joe Biden.” CNN also did a documentary about Biden’s faith; we hear a friend and fellow senator talk about Biden’s faith while birds chirp gently in the background, and then Jill Biden reminds listeners again that “Joe is really devout.” Next, Biden pulls Beau’s rosary out of his pocket to show CNN’s Gloria Borger, prompting Borger to blink back her emotions before telling Anderson Cooper what a “remarkable moment” it was.

The Washington Post adds, “Biden has spent his life drawing from his Catholic faith.” Rushing to defend against Trump’s accusation that the former vice president is “against God,” the Post reassures its readers that Biden “has been motivated by his faith throughout his long career in politics.”

Time reminds us that Biden is the country’s “first Catholic vice president,” and quotes his deputy political director praising his religious “authenticity.” And when Sister Dede Byrne, a nun speaking at the Republican National Convention, criticized Biden’s stance on abortion — a stance completely at odds with that of his church — Politico accused the “GOP” of “attacking” Biden’s faith.

The media can’t have it both ways. The drastically different portrayals of Biden’s and Barrett’s faith shows legacy media’s deep partisanship and subjection of every consideration to leftist power politics, like Melania Trump and Kamala Harris’s Timberland boots. Biden and Barrett’s faith should be treated equally, and if corporate media were fair and balanced, they would do so.

 

https://thefederalist.com/2020/09/23/both-are-in-the-same-church-but-media-love-joe-bidens-faith-and-hate-amy-coney-barretts/ 


 

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The ‘Trump train’: 'I'm tired of people putting down our president'

 Some Trump supporters in Democratic-leaning districts of Virginia, Wisconsin and other states say they feel maligned because of their conservative views. They are now banding together in convoys for solidarity. Here is what a ride on the "Trump train" looks like - and what it means for the nation. 

 

 

Scott Pio coasts through a neighbourhood in northern Virginia on a recent Sunday in his Jeep, a Wrangler draped in Trump flags. He waves at two women dressed in tank tops who are chatting in a front yard. They give him a hard stare.

Pio, a 36-year-old software engineer, is hardly surprised.

On weekends the president frequently comes here to play golf at his club, Trump National, and progressive activists gather in front of its entrance to protest his policies. Here in this Democratic-leaning part of Virginia, a Trump supporter like Pio (pronounced PIE-oh), gets a chilly reception.

One of the Democratic activists who congregates at the entrance to the president's club, Juli Briskman, became famous several years ago for making an obscene gesture at the presidential motorcade. She is now an elected county official, a position that she owes in part to her newfound celebrity-dom.

Pio heard about Briskman when he moved to the area about a year ago. Now he leads a convoy made of flag-draped motorcycles, Jeeps and big-wheelers that drives up and down on the street in front of golf club. The "Trump train", as it is also known, acts as a counterbalance to the actions of Briskman and the Democratic protestors.

"I'm tired of people putting down our president," says Pio, explaining why he decided to organise the convoy. "And I'm tired of the disrespect." 

 

 

Pio likes the president's efforts at deregulation - removing restrictions on businesses - and his immigration policies, especially the US-Mexico border wall.

"He's a builder, not a politician," he says.

There are similar pro-Trump convoys across the US.

The processions roll along highways and dusty trails in liberal enclaves such as Sterling; Eau Claire, Wisconsin; and McAllen, Texas. In many of the towns, the people in the convoys may not see the president's motorcade, as they do in Sterling. Yet they are still demonstrating their support loudly and clearly.

For many people, the idea of Trump 2020 flags on trucks evokes harrowing images from Portland last month when Trump supporters in a caravan clashed with liberals. On that day one supporter, Aaron Danielson, was shot and killed. The convoys that take place in Sterling and other cities have been peaceful, though.

 

 

The people in the convoys are united both by their affection for the president and also by their own feeling of being marginalised within their communities.

The processions are driven by those who describe themselves as the president's base. As a demographic group, the president's base are white men and women who earn relatively high salaries but are less likely to have a college degree than Democratic voters, according to a study.

Many of these conservatives believe Democratic elites "look down on them because they're more religious and they're interested in guns", says Stephen Norwood, a history professor at University of Oklahoma in Norman, adding: "There's a lot of resentment that they've been overlooked."

Says Norwood: "They see Trump, and he's able to convince them that he's contemptuous of the elites."

Trump complains about how badly he is treated in Washington and celebrates his base, the "forgotten man and the forgotten women". 

 

 

The convoy, like many others across the US, formed spontaneously and without the help of Trump campaign officials.: "It was 100% organic," explains Pio, the organiser of the Virginia convoy.

Says 32-year-old Clare Krenzelok, a mother of four in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, who organised a 500-strong convoy in her state: "This was completely a movement of the people."

The vehicular processions have grown over time. The Virginia convoy has jumped from 30 people in the early summer to "168 patriots", says Pio. They do not all show up every weekend, but they come when they can. 

 

 

The convoys build solidarity among the Trump supporters, a group of people who describe themselves as "the common man".

One of them, Lee Jackson Shockey, 73, was sitting behind the wheel of a pick-up truck on a recent Sunday. He says Trump understands them in a way that few political leaders do.

The son of a hog farmer, Shockey grew up in Virginia and works as an accountant. "Lots of times I hear President Trump on TV, and I think: 'Damn. I would've said that.'"

A hunter who was raised around firearms, he says he likes the way that the president stands up for the Second Amendment, which protects a right to gun ownership.

And Shockey believes the president has been good for the economy, that he has "streamlined a lot of these regulations that strangled businesses".

On the Sterling convoy, some vehicles have signs that say: "Trump National Rapid Response Team". They head down Lowes Island Boulevard, a road that was carved into a hill not far from the Potomac River, and drive past the entrance to the president's golf club. 

 

 

One of the truckers, Mike Taylor, 62, a retired fire marshal in a '79 Kenworth, says that Trump stands up for the country and its workers: "He stopped taking second- or third seat to other countries, specifically China."

Standing on a sidewalk only yards away, progressive activists stage their own demonstration. They grip banners that denounce the president as a "Democracy Killer" and wear T-shirts emblazoned with the names of Joe Biden, the Democratic presidential nominee, and his running mate, Kamala Harris.

 

 


One of the progressives at the event, Meagan Donahue, 49, stood on the side of the road in a Biden-Harris shirt and watched the Trump convoy roar past. "You see these, like, semis with these flags," she says, referring to the trucks on the convoy. "They are like a cult."

The mood on the street is tense. Some of the Trump supporters shout at the progressive activists and call them names ("Losers!"). Sometimes, says Pio, the progressive activists throw water bottles at the drivers in the convoy. "Full ones," he says. 

 

The flag blocks the flying debris, he says: "The flag does protect me." It is secured with knots he learned as an Eagle Scout while growing up in Florida. Knot-tying, it turns out, is a useful skill for a convoy leader.

In a nearby parking lot, the air smells of pine needles and hand sanitiser, and people shout over the roar of four-cylinder engines. Pio tells them to keep an eye on their blue-and-red pro-Trump signs. "We've got to protect them," he says explaining that the progressive activists sometimes tear them down: "They threw them in the trees last time."

In the afternoon, the president leaves the club, and people start to head home.

Reflecting on the event, Pio seems pleased: "It was perfect." He walks along the side of the road, picking up signs. The election outcome and the fate of the president and his base is unclear. In the meantime, Pio plans for the next weekend and another convoy.

 

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-54238592 

 


 

 


 

 

Coming to a cinema near you: the life of UK’s Captain Tom

 

September 23, 2020

LONDON (Reuters) – British centenarian and charity star Captain Tom Moore, who raised millions of pounds for the health service by walking laps of his garden during lockdown, has signed a deal to film a biopic of his life, several media outlets reported on Wednesday.

The film, to be shot next year, will be made by Fred Films and Powder Keg Pictures, whose credits include “Fisherman’s Friends”, about a group of Cornish fishermen who signed a record deal, they added.

“This is a story about the power of the human spirit and Captain Sir Tom personifies that,” Screen Daily quoted Fred Films’ James Spring and Powder Keg’s Nick Moorcroft as saying.

Moore joked: “I don’t know of any 100-year-old actors, but I’m sure Michael Caine or Anthony Hopkins could do a wonderful job if they were prepared to age up!”

Neither Moore, who was knighted by Britain’s Queen Elizabeth for raising 39 million pounds ($50 million) for the National Health Service, nor his family were immediately available for comment on the reports.

The retired army captain made headlines in April by walking laps of his garden in the run-up to his 100th birthday in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic. He also broke two Guiness world records and scored a No. 1 single.

($1 = 0.7860 pounds)

 

https://www.oann.com/coming-to-a-cinema-near-you-the-life-of-uks-captain-tom/   




Keeping a Lid on Hidin’ Biden

Here a lid, there a lid, every day a lid-lid.

posted by Dianny at Patriot Retort

For the eighth time this month, a lid has been called by Team Biden first thing in the morning.

Now, before 2020, nobody had any idea what this “inside baseball” term meant. Then along came old “Lid” Biden, and we’ve all become experts.

The campaign calls a “lid” as a way to let reporters know not to bother turning up for the day because nothing’s gonna happen with the candidate. He won’t be emerging from his basement for a public event, speech, interview or campaign stop.

And Team Joe puts a lid on Hidin’ Biden quite a lot.

In fact, the morning after the death of Leftist icon Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Team Biden called a lid before nine a.m.




Joe didn’t peek out of his basement to address the death of RBG until Sunday for crap’s sake.  And when he did emerge, he was winded, coughing and looked like hell.




But what choice does the Biden campaign have, really?

They know Joe Biden is hanging on by a thread. And they sure as hell know that increasing his campaign presence would only make it glitteringly obvious that the old coot is not up to the job of President.

We are a week away from the first scheduled Presidential Debate, and at this point, does anybody think it’s actually going to happen?

I suppose it’s possible the reason the campaign keeps calling a lid on their candidate is because old Joe is spending all this downtime prepping for a debate.

Hahahahaha! Who am I kidding?!

How can you possibly prep someone who will completely forget 99% of what you prepped him on before you break for lunch?

No. They’re keeping a lid on Joe because Joe is on the verge of completely unraveling.

We’ve entered the stage of the election season when most of the people who haven’t been paying attention are now starting to clue in. And they’re going to be wondering where in the hell is Joe Biden?!

There’s only so many campaign events you can pawn off on surrogates.

At some point you have to put the guy at the top of the ticket into the spotlight.

But I don’t see that happening in the 42 days remaining. Do you?


Joe Biden Isn’t Running For President, His Teleprompter Is

 Joe Biden has regressed to the point of reading cues out loud, giving hand signals to scroll up the text, and botching words as they appear on the screen.


posted by Samantha Strayer at The Federalist

Election 2020 has seen its fair share of the comical and bizarre, of the heartening and debased. There is something to be learned from it all, I believe, even from a simple machine designed to facilitate clear communication to the general public. Once the prized, not-so-secret weapon of President Obama’s supposed rhetorical prowess, the teleprompter has become the conspicuous centerpiece of Joe Biden’s third attempt to capture America’s highest office.

Saving Obama from his tendency to uhhhh and errrr his way through the English language, the teleprompter made him appear oh-so-presidential and caused his swooning supporters’ chests to swell with pride, and gormless Republicans to quake in their loafers. The teleprompter was so essential to preserving Obama’s carefully crafted image that someone started a parody blog with the catchy tagline, “There is no POTUS without TOTUS.” No matter what the teleprompter says or what its handler does, Biden is bound to gaffe it up.




Stepping on a rake has been part of Biden’s shtick for ages, and we’ve been gaslighted to think this is the essence of charm. That’s just Joe, folks! But in 2014, then-Vice President Biden’s blunders caught up with him again, this time embarrassing the Obama administration.

So The New Yorker published an article about his verbal doozies that riled allies at home and interests abroad. That was not that long ago, but six years can have a profound, compounding effect on the brain. It’s now a crapshoot what’s going to come out of Biden’s mouth on or off the prompter.

Biden has regressed to the point of reading cues out loud, giving hand signalsthat we can see—to scroll up the text, and botching words as they appear on the screen. At one point during a remote interview with “The Late Late Show with James Corden,” Biden held up a picture of himself with sons Hunter and Beau, and the frame’s reflection revealed a teleprompter—a big fat warning sign that he needed help for such a non-serious, televised appearance.

It’s become clear that Biden is also using a teleprompter during interviews with “journalists,” press conferences, and townhall events. Rather than merely a normal and expected part of a campaign for making speeches and policy addresses, the teleprompter has become a crutch for the befuddled Biden. It of course says something very serious about the state of his mental affairs that he’s better on prompter than off.

Off, he meanders aimlessly about chicken manure and “you know, the thing” (equal rights in the Declaration of Independence). He tells oddball stories about Corn Pop and hairy legs and gets aggressive with voters who challenge his record and policy positions. These are but a few examples, and not the actions of a well-adjusted human being.

Last Wednesday, the Trump campaign released a scathing one-minute ad entitled, “Joe’s Teleprompter,” showing Biden struggling to communicate, awkwardly filling the gaps with exhausted-sounding sighs and noises. The ad also shows Biden’s national press secretary T.J. Ducklo avoiding Fox News anchor Bret Baier’s pointed question whether Biden uses a teleprompter in interviews and Q&As.


At campaign rallies last week in Minnesota and North Carolina, President Trump hit hard the point that Biden clearly lacks the mental capacity and energy to defend America against her greatest threat: China. Putting aside his well-aimed and comically timed jibes, Trump zeroed in on his ultimate point. To the huge crowd in Bemidji, Minn., he asked:

Would you rather go teleprompter or freelance? Isn’t it nice when you have the option because you have this [pointing to his head] and you have the option to go either? See, Joe doesn’t have the option. He doesn’t have the option. But if Biden wins, China wins, and it’s very simple.

Biden has skirted the topic of China or lauded the country outright, soft-pedaling the communist regime’s shenanigans, including its complicity in the coronavirus, intellectual property theft, and dubious trade practices. Biden’s financial interests in China have dovetailed conveniently with his political ambitions, leveraging the latter to secure the former. Great research by Peter Schweizer and others highlights the problematic Biden-China relationship, and the Trump campaign rightly targets this glaring weakness, and how Biden’s antics in front of the teleprompter exacerbate the dynamic.

Something clearly is wrong with Biden’s mental acuity, and the magical powers of a teleprompter can only do so much. As we veer wildly toward Nov. 3, Biden sounds increasingly tired—that is, when we see him at all. “Calling a lid” (taking a break from campaigning) first thing Saturday morning—less than two months before Election Day and less than 24 hours after Supreme Court Justice Ginsberg passed away—skywrites to the world a total lack of interest and vigor to campaign, let alone govern.

The cynical conduct of the Democratic Party, not to mention Biden’s own family, who let it get this far tells us how low they are willing to go, and what it will cost the rest of us if we let them win. As if we needed further proof in a year as lit as 2020.


BREAKING: Hunter Biden Received Millions From Wife Of Ex-Moscow Mayor, Paid Suspects Allegedly Tied To Trafficking, Had Contacts With Individuals Linked To Chinese Military, Senate Report Alleges

 

Article by Ryan Saavedra in The Daily Wire

BREAKING: Hunter Biden Received Millions From Wife Of Ex-Moscow Mayor, Paid Suspects Allegedly Tied To Trafficking, Had Contacts With Individuals Linked To Chinese Military, Senate Report Alleges

 

A bombshell report from the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs (HSGAC) and the Committee on Finance makes a series of damning new allegations against Hunter Biden, the son of Democrat presidential nominee.

The investigation launched after Finance Committee Chairman Charles Grassley (R-IA) publicly raised conflict-of-interest concerns about the sale of a U.S. company to a Chinese firm with ties to Hunter Biden a month before Congress was notified about a whistleblower complaint that was the catalyst for Democrats’ impeachment of President Donald Trump. The Senate’s investigation relied on records from the U.S. government, Democrat lobbying groups, and interviews of numerous current and former officials.

The report outlined the following key findings from the investigation:

  • In early 2015 the former Acting Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv, Ukraine, George Kent, raised concerns to officials in Vice President Joe Biden’s office about the perception of a conflict of interest with respect to Hunter Biden’s role on Burisma’s board. Kent’s concerns went unaddressed, and in September 2016, he emphasized in an email to his colleagues, “Furthermore, the presence of Hunter Biden on the Burisma board was very awkward for all U.S. officials pushing an anticorruption agenda in Ukraine.”
  • In October 2015, senior State Department official Amos Hochstein raised concerns with Vice President Biden, as well as with Hunter Biden, that Hunter Biden’s position on Burisma’s board enabled Russian disinformation efforts and risked undermining U.S. policy in Ukraine.
  • Although Kent believed that Hunter Biden’s role on Burisma’s board was awkward for all U.S. officials pushing an anti-corruption agenda in Ukraine, the Committees are only aware of two individuals — Kent and former U.S. Special Envoy and Coordinator for International Energy Affairs Amos Hochstein — who raised concerns to Vice President Joe Biden (Hochstein) or his staff (Kent).
  • The awkwardness for Obama administration officials continued well past his presidency. Former Secretary of State John Kerry had knowledge of Hunter Biden’s role on Burisma’s board, but when asked about it at a town hall event in Nashua, N.H. on Dec. 8, 2019, Kerry falsely said, “I had no knowledge about any of that. None. No.” Evidence to the contrary is detailed in Section V.
  • Former Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Victoria Nuland testified that confronting oligarchs would send an anticorruption message in Ukraine. Kent told the Committees that Zlochevsky was an “odious oligarch.” However, in December 2015, instead of following U.S. objectives of confronting oligarchs, Vice President Biden’s staff advised him to avoid commenting on Zlochevsky and recommended he say, “I’m not going to get into naming names or accusing individuals.”
  • Hunter Biden was serving on Burisma’s board (supposedly consulting on corporate governance and transparency) when Zlochevsky allegedly paid a $7 million bribe to officials serving under Ukraine’s prosecutor general, Vitaly Yarema, to “shut the case against Zlochevsky.” Kent testified that this bribe occurred in December 2014 (seven months after Hunter joined Burisma’s board), and, after learning about it, he and the Resident Legal Advisor reported this allegation to the FBI.
  • Hunter Biden was a U.S. Secret Service protectee from Jan. 29, 2009 to July 8, 2014. A day before his last trip as a protectee, Time published an article describing Burisma’s ramped up lobbying efforts to U.S. officials and Hunter’s involvement in Burisma’s board. Before ending his protective detail, Hunter Biden received Secret Service protection on trips to multiple foreign locations, including Moscow, Beijing, Doha, Paris, Seoul, Manila, Tokyo, Mexico City, Milan, Florence, Shanghai, Geneva, London, Dublin, Munich, Berlin, Bogota, Abu Dhabi, Nairobi, Hong Kong, Taipei, Buenos Aires, Copenhagen, Johannesburg, Brussels, Madrid, Mumbai and Lake Como.
  • Andrii Telizhenko, the Democrats’ personification of Russian disinformation, met with Obama administration officials, including Elisabeth Zentos, a member of Obama’s National Security Council, at least 10 times. A Democrat lobbying firm, Blue Star Strategies, contracted with Telizhenko from 2016 to 2017 and continued to request his assistance as recent as the summer of 2019. A recent news article detailed other extensive contacts between Telizhenko and Obama administration officials.
  • In addition to the over $4 million paid by Burisma for Hunter Biden’s and Archer’s board memberships, Hunter Biden, his family, and Archer received millions of dollars from foreign nationals with questionable backgrounds.
  • Archer received $142,300 from Kenges Rakishev of Kazakhstan, purportedly for a car, the same day Vice President Joe Biden appeared with Ukrainian Prime Minister Arsemy Yasenyuk and addressed Ukrainian legislators in Kyiv regarding Russia’s actions in Crimea.
  • Hunter Biden received a $3.5 million wire transfer from Elena Baturina, the wife of the former mayor of Moscow.
  • Hunter Biden opened a bank account with Gongwen Dong to fund a $100,000 global spending spree with James Biden and Sara Biden.
  • Hunter Biden had business associations with Ye Jianming, Gongwen Dong, and other Chinese nationals linked to the Communist government and the People’s Liberation Army. Those associations resulted in millions of dollars in cash flow.
  • Hunter Biden paid nonresident women who were nationals of Russia or other Eastern European countries and who appear to be linked to an “Eastern European prostitution or human trafficking ring.”

The report also stated that the investigation found that the Obama administration “knew that Hunter Biden’s position on Burisma’s board was problematic and did interfere in the efficient execution of policy with respect to Ukraine.”

 

https://www.dailywire.com/news/breaking-hunter-biden-received-millions-from-wife-of-ex-moscow-mayor-paid-suspects-allegedly-tied-to-trafficking-had-contacts-with-chinese-military-senate-report-alleges 


 


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The Battle of November 3rd Is Coming

 


Article by E.M. Cadwaladr in The American Thinker

The Battle of November 3rd Is Coming

Most Americans have lived their lives watching politics as though it were a bad TV show.  They have found it boring and distasteful.  They've preferred to think it doesn't matter.  For thirty or forty years, the shift of power from local and state governments to the federal government has been insidiously gradual.  It has been just gradual enough to comfortably ignore.  The Constitution has not been broken so much as it's been eroded.  The rot has long been with us.  We have gotten used to it.  We've even spawned a couple of generations of genteel conservative pundits and columnists who've lived quite well by eloquently complaining — and doing nothing.  There has always been enough normalcy left to allow ordinary people to mow the lawn, save for a vaguely plausible retirement, and watch a football game or two.  Now and then, our leaders have even gotten something right.  Now and then, you win while playing slots at a casino.  It's a good strategy for the casino to let you win now and then — to keep you playing.

I have a coworker, a man whom I would not consider an idiot, who said about the upcoming election: "Well, I just don't know.  I'm not comfortable with Trump's tweets.  I really don't like the way he treats people."

"Have you seen Joe Biden lately?" I asked him, thinking that might be a bit more polite than "Are Trump's tweets more offensive than the decision of Democrat mayors to let their cities burn?" or "How would you feel if they started calling you Hitler even before the election?" or, even more bluntly, "Are you outta your f------ mind?!"

My friend is not out of his f------ mind.  He's a decent and thoughtful man.  His problem, I think, is that he isn't ready to accept that all the anchors on the broadcast news, people who he confidently assumed were just more recent versions of Edward R. Murrow or Walter Cronkite, are straight-up propagandists.  That's a hard pill to swallow, especially when you are surrounded by plenty of other people who will shun you if you swallow it.  But there are some irksome, irreconcilable facts.  That boring policy wonk who showed up at the 1976 Democratic Convention has now been replaced by the Mermaid Queen-King.  Our opponents are talking seriously about eliminating fossil fuels in ten years to avert a climate crisis predicted by computer models that have failed to predict even the present.  The Democrats are running a candidate who, if the police saw him wandering down the street, would bundle him into the back of the cruiser and take him home to his exasperated wife.

My associate said he hadn't seen Biden lately and that he'd go look at a few interviews.  To be fair, Creepy Joe has become less attracted to the light of day than Dracula with a case of the measles.  Could I have pushed my case for Trump a little harder?  Sure.  But my coworker is a director, corporations don't like boat-rockers, and I'm strongly inclined to keep my job.  Put a million votes in the balance, and perhaps I'll pull the pin on that grenade.  I am not quite willing to chance my career on one.

I'm sure there are millions of people in the country like my coworker — people who, believe it or not, still haven't noticed.  They believe that the stability of their lives is something they can take for granted.  That politics is still a mild nudge in this direction or that, which they can easily ignore.  Man's capacity to rationalize is strong.  People can, through blind hope and active imagination, still convince themselves that the election is merely a protracted personality contest in which the nicest smile wins.  They can believe that the decent person's duty is to think and say Trump is a vulgar and offensive pig.  What they will actually do when they stand in the illusory privacy of a poll booth is unknown.  I wince to think about it.  "Eeny, meeny, miny, moe..."

Whether Trump wins or loses, these people are going to have a shock in store when they wake up on November 4.  A civil war now stares us in the face.  You don't have to be a kook to see it coming anymore.

I expect that, on Election Day, Trump will win by a healthy margin.  Most ordinary working people, always the real majority, are unfazed by Trump's language and have a natural aversion to looting, arson, and public beatings.  We've noticed.  We get it.  We have gotten tired of being made to cower before a pandemic that is heavy on economic and social destruction but rather light on actual fatalities.

I am far less certain that an electoral victory will settle the matter.  The Democrats have already said, in no uncertain terms, that they aren't going to accept defeat.  The prospect of mail-in voting worries me a little, but the grumbling of the political generals in the Pentagon worries me a lot.  The globalist left now knows that it has lost the electoral battle, just as it lost the battle of ideas decades ago.  These people have seen their own internal polling.  They almost shiver with anxiety and rage.  They are up against the wall.  There is nothing more for them to do but pull the handle for some kind of revolution.

The left has been at war with America for as long as there has been a left.  For decades, it has been a cold war — but it's beginning to leave bodies on the streets again.  It is still too early to see what 2021 is going to be like, but we all know that it won't be peaceful.  The true hardcore Marxists on the left don't see the world in terms of peace, social justice, or minimizing the suffering of individual human beings.  That is merely pretty window dressing for their naïve followers.  The only god that their ideology acknowledges is power.  Trump, and the millions upon millions who support him, are a threat to that power.  "The long march through the institutions," proposed by communists of the 1960s, has reached its zenith.  They run the schools.  They run the bureaucracy.  They run the media.  They run everything but the American people themselves, Trump, and the remaining patriotic remnant of the Republican party.  What can't be broken by steady pressure must now be broken and destroyed by force.  The battle lines are drawn.

"You can't make an omelet," said Lenin about his revolution, "without breaking a few eggs."  Lenin's eggs were the kulaks, the richer and more industrious peasants who, not surprisingly, grew most of Russia's food.  You and I, and my reluctant coworker, too, are the eggs of the postmodern globalist left — the middle and working classes who are the unwitting heirs of Western civilization.  We are the kulaks of our time.  We can't afford the consequences of losing this one.

 

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2020/09/the_battle_of_november_3rd_is_coming.html 

 




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Media Will Try To Personally Destroy Trump Nominee, Just Like Kavanaugh

Unlike Kavanaugh, Trump's next nominee won't be a precedent-driven conservative replacing another Republican-appointed 'swing vote.' Whomever Trump puts forward will be a staunch conservative replacing a leftist hero.



posted by Kylee Zempel at The Federalist

If the presidential election had been held the day after Brett Kavanaugh was confirmed to the Supreme Court, Donald Trump would have won re-election in a landslide. The no-holds-barred smear campaign against the now-Supreme Court justice was so severe and so abhorrent, conservatives extending far beyond Trump’s so-called base would have turned out in droves to ensure Democrats and their media sycophants would never achieve the power they desired.

Now, following the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg — not only an accomplished justice but also a media darling with a near-deified degree of celebrity — Democrats and the media are gearing up to launch their next attack. Make no mistake, the media will try to personally destroy Trump’s nominee just as they did Kavanaugh.

Kavanaugh Was a Preview of Media Debasement

The Kavanaugh confirmation battle two years ago was wrought with corruption from the start. Everything from Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s shady leak and release of Christine Blasey Ford’s letter alleging sexual assault against the judge, to the media’s slander standard of journalism, whereby they uncritically published uncorroborated and outlandish accusations, indicted the mainstream press and Democrats of malpractice.

The New Yorker article by Ronan Farrow and Jane Mayer was just the beginning. The duo published the story of Deborah Ramirez, who claimed Kavanaugh had drunkenly exposed himself to her when they were Yale students despite the fact that no eyewitnesses could confirm that he was even at the alleged party, that Ramirez was hesitant to come forward because she wasn’t certain whether the exposer was in fact Kavanaugh, and the existence of one supposed informant who ultimately denied that the incident happened at all. Mayer later admitted her biased motivation.




After a third accuser, Julie Swetnick, represented by creepy porn lawyer Michael Avenatti, under oath accused Kavanaugh of gang rape, the media were all over it. Despite zero corroborating evidence, NBC aired an interview with Swetnick in which she contradicted parts of the account in her sworn statement.

“Swetnick provided four names of friends she says went to the parties” with Kavanaugh, NBC’s Kate Snow said after the interview concluded. “One of them says he does not recall a Julie Swetnick. Another of the friends she named is deceased. We reached out to the other two and haven’t heard back.” This pattern of media malfeasance repeated itself.

Network television couldn’t help but pile on. “If you sexually assault someone in high school, your life should be ruined,” spouted Jeffrey Toobin on CNN, flouting the principle of due process. Countless pundits likewise dispensed with the presumption of innocence for the accused.




Meanwhile, Senate Democrats tried to fashion a perjury trap, with now-vice presidential nominee Sen. Kamala Harris as the ringleader.




But the media went right along with the charade, pushing stories about “how we know Kavanaugh is lying” and his “unbearable dishonesty.” Of course, the perjury claims were all later debunked.

After all the false accusations, the media had the gall to lambaste Kavanaugh’s temperament as he defended himself against the slew of unrighteous attacks.

“One of the people who knew him as a young man said that he was an angry drunk. And that’s all I could think about when he was acting like that,” said Joy Behar on “The View” of the then-judge’s impassioned attempts to defend his honor. “That must have been how he was when he was an angry drunk.”

Trump Nominee Is Replacing a Leftist Hero

That was 2018. This is 2020. Every time it seems things can’t get any worse nor the stakes any higher, they do — from a hyperpartisan impeachment, to a deadly global pandemic and subsequent economic downturn, followed by lawlessness consuming our major cities — now a Supreme Court justice has died within 50 days of the election, to be replaced by a nominee chosen by the Bad Orange Man whom Democrats have vowed to take down at all costs.

Unlike Kavanaugh, Trump’s next nominee won’t be a precedent-driven conservative replacing another Republican-appointed “swing vote.” Oh, no. Whomever Trump puts forward, likely within the next few days, will be a staunch conservative replacing a leftist hero, the “Notorious R.B.G.” — a reliably progressive vote on the bench and a woman whom the media and Democrats have elevated to a dangerous degree of stardom. From documentaries and dramas to laptop stickers, board games, and Halloween costumes, Ginsburg was no ordinary justice. She was a celebrity.


The Media Will Drag the Nominee

In all likelihood, the nominee to replace the legal champion of abortion rights will be a devout Catholic working mother of seven children, two adopted and one with special needs. If Amy Coney Barrett is indeed Trump’s pick, expect the media to defame her as a religious bigot and probably a racist. She’ll be a woman-hating extremist and a raging homophobe and transphobe. Her lifestyle choices will be dragged as prudish and intolerant, and the progressive women of the leftist media complex will decry her motherhood decisions as a product of the patriarchy, rather than the empowered choices of a competent and successful female.

Aides on Capitol Hill and investigative journalists are no doubt combing through old papers and records as I type, scouring for any misstep or anecdote to misconstrue. Given the despicable circus that was the Kavanagh confirmation and the fact that the stakes are now undeniably higher, it would be foolish to assume the media will behave itself this time around. It might be more difficult to convince the public that Barrett is a gang rapist, but rest assured nothing will be off-limits.

Perhaps Barrett won’t be the nominee. It could be Barbara Lagoa or Allison Jones Rushing or a number of others, but that’s no matter. No choice out of the loathed Trump White House will satisfy the left’s insatiable desire to transform America to a progressive paradise from the bench. Replacing Ginsburg will be a bloodbath, no matter the pick.

If we learned anything from Brett Kavanaugh, it’s that if it’s up to the media, there’s no way the nominee’s character makes it out of the next 42 days alive.