Saturday, September 25, 2021

Losing the American Mind

We are not creating the citizens we need to rise to challenges, 
but a generation of illiterates.


Modern compassion is less about the love of the other and more about the relief at not being among the unfortunate, caught between a proverbial rock and a hard place. 

During COVID, I felt great compassion for parents who could no longer outsource their kids to an educational establishment of medium-at-best competency. 

Now Labor Day is behind us, summer is over, and it’s back-to-school time for our nation’s citizens-in-the-making. 

While it is certainly a great relief to get your kids out of the house again, don’t delude yourself as to the quality of the education your kids are getting. Zoom gave many parents a window to see and hear what really is going on in the classroom, so there’s no longer any credible excuse. The three Rs have long ceased to be the focus. And this is not a new development. How you think—which requires rigor—has given way to what you think—which requires mere feelings. Sanctioned opinion, not free and rigorous thinking, is the desired and rewarded classroom activity. 

I was born at the tail end of the Meritocracy Era in American education. Kennedy’s “Don’t ask what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country” was still in the air—even after he, his brother, and Martin Luther King, Jr. were dead. Elementary and grammar schools still lived up to the reputation of the brand. We learned, most often by rote routine, our mental chopsticks—multiplication tables and math formulas, parts of speech and the key dates of our civic experiment—and let’s not forget the daily pledge of allegiance to the flag and the republic for which it stands.

The fruits of rational liberalism—a meritocracy of the mind—died in my lifetime. When I went to university, two books captured in their titles and their pages the consequence of the new Zeitgeist taking over—Allan Bloom’s Closing of the American Mind and Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.’s The Disuniting of America: Reflections on a Multicultural Society. Today, the American mind is closed and united in its commitment to disunity.

It was a different time, and if we were to take a genuine Pepsi challenge with it, our present Woke Coke would be found grossly wanting.

The old commitment to the three Rs has a new trinitarian focus: Race, Class and Gender, and—spoiler alert—it has a pre-K through PhD curriculum. The Jesuits would be impressed at the scale of the enterprise. If you can shape minds at scale, the future is yours. 

How is this new ruling orthodoxy doing? They are certainly doing well—for their own. If we look at the money per child that we are spending on education, we demonstrate that lack of money is not the problem. According to the Reason Foundation, inflation-adjusted K-12 education spending per student has increased by 280 percent since 1960—four-fold since 1955 —the majority of it going to administrators and a new Mandarin class of educators without classrooms. 

But how are the consumers of education doing? Are American students 280 percent smarter now than they were in 1960? Sadly educational outcomes—student achievement—has remained flat-to-down. Our outcomes are worse than Cuba’s. With no money to spend, Cuba, we are told, has achieved impressive literacy rates. As important, and possibly, as a result, their people know that communism is a lie. We, on the other hand, spend profligately to get a level of illiteracy and innumeracy that puts us at the bottom of the free, advanced world. In our educators’ defense, they graduate generation after generation who drink, salute, and defend the ideological Kool-Aid served up on ice. 

The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again expecting a different result. We have lost our American mind. We are not creating the citizens we need to rise to challenges, but a generation of illiterates. And every generation gets worse. Although parents are starting to stand up to protest in school-board meetings, most adults do not want to get involved with their children’s education. Soon, the parents will be so poorly educated they won’t know how to do so even if they have the will to do it.



X22, Christian Patriot News, and more-Sept 25

 




It's rally time tonight in Georgia! Here's tonight's news:

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2021/09/reasons-decertify-az-70000-ballots-duplicated-material-issues-7-times-bidens-margin-victory-devices-missing-data-deleted-criminal-activities-referred-authorities/

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2021/09/new-york-health-commissioner-howard-zucker-stepping-worked-cuomo-force-covid-patients-nursing-homes/

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2021/09/voterga-uncovers-people-registered-fulton-county-georgia-2020-election-eligible/


The Republic Is Dead

As fate would have it, the time for a rediscovery of man and 
the restatement of a philosophy of free men is now.


Two hundred and thirty-four years after Ben Franklin issued his warning on the occasion of its beginning, we couldn’t keep it. 

The Republic is dead. To pretend otherwise after the government usurpations of authority during the COVID “emergency” is delusional and self-destructive. The end was visible shortly after September 11th, 2001, with the panicked passage of an unconstitutional Patriot Act during the erstwhile war on terror, which has since been so terribly lost. 

True, much of the public remains unaware.“I didn’t even know it was sick,” they might say, preoccupied as they always are with earning a living and cleaning the gutters. But this is usually the case, until it isn’t. 

A dark age of technologically enhanced authoritarian rule is descending—an age that I believe will not soon end. This brief time of passage must be taken as a last opportunity to recover our lost liberty. But what can the minority do? Certainly, any attempt at forcing the issue through violent revolution would only deepen the tragedy and coalesce support of the majority around the status quo. What then, can be done?

Going back to first principles would help. Reforming such an obviously corrupt system as ours is possible only if an alternative is evident. The general public might still be won over by a presentation of practical ideas that sound vaguely familiar (in that they are soundly based on the wisdom of the founders) if done with the kindness of friendly persuasion rather than with a gun. 

I think it is easy to see, despite the burgeoning population of individuals who would prefer to have the state take care of them, that the ruling oligarchs have at best a minority of support for their own agenda. That they currently control the reins of power might be taken as unsurmountable, but in truth is a liability. They will screw things up. The power grid will fail. It is not necessary to sabotage the sources of our energy. As the cost of fuel becomes prohibitive, trucks will not roll, brown-outs and then black-outs will become common. And the medical profession, already under great strain, will be forced to triage patients. Older people like myself will be the first to go. Then the children. 

Still, to understand just what has happened we will need a deeper look into the past. To answer the question, “What will we do?” we must first make clear, “What have we done?”

What is necessary now is a reconsideration of what has gone wrong, outside of the self-serving intellectuals who will make their excuses by candlelight, and why. Such an assessment must go to the root causes. How could these self-anointed intellects have so completely bought into the “suicide of the West,” as it has been well described? How did the authorities come by the idea that it was better to abolish man than to allow him freedom?

C. S. Lewis defined the “abolition of man” in his great three-part essay by that name. His particular religious affiliation is irrelevant to the truth of his observation. Of course, other great philosophers have engaged the problem of “natural philosophy” and “natural rights,” from Confucius to Roger Scruton, but, I think, none so well.

“Men without chests,” as Lewis explains in part one, are those who have dispensed with any “sentimental” ideas about good and bad, much less good and evil, while attempting to reason without regard to their own ignorance; those who call themselves “intellectuals” so that any disagreement with them is an attack on intelligence, much in the same way, more recently, some “scientists” accuse those who question their statements as being “anti-science.”

Part two, “The way,” illuminates the subtle means used by those hollowed-out men to subvert intellectual inquiry by dismissing traditional values through a careless skepticism based on a subversive ethical system of their own. Because their subjects must be “carefully taught,” public education is used to inculcate disrespect for tradition while developing contemporary obedience through social pressure. I was particularly reminded that Ernest Hemingway faced this exact conundrum in his most sentimental novel, For Whom the Bell Tolls, when Robert Jordan must choose between dying for what he perceives as the “true,” or living for the unlikely love he has found in the midst of war.

In part three of the essay, I was struck by Lewis’ prescient assessment, in 1943, of contraception as the ultimate act of an historic arrogance dictating values to future generations. A very real and bloody war was raging about him, but he manages to focus on the elemental truths. I think it likely that he foresaw the time when abortion would be used by government to alter the balance of our humanity. “Science” has been given political motive and used as a goal instead of a tool—an excuse for extermination. 

Please forgive any possible misinterpretation here. I am not a philosopher in any true sense. I am merely a user of philosophy. A consumer, not a creator. What I seek in philosophy is a predicate for the good, a reason to act for the good, but most certainly, a useful understanding of the good. In that way, I have attempted to use my own novels as an exploration of philosophy through narrative and I have always conducted my business as a bookseller as if philosophy mattered. 

My assumption is simply that man is not human without philosophy, which presumes the reality of the soul. Living as if there is no soul results in pain, degradation, and misery. We yet know very little about the universe and its contents, but we might know something of ourselves if we pay attention. Religion might offer solace to some, but which religion? Blind faith is so often deadly. I think achieving some appreciation of one belief or another requires philosophy. 

Science is a process for discovery, but no more than that. To make science an end in itself is little more than making math an ultimate. It doesn’t add up. It won’t help you appreciate the beauty of a September day, or any other. And a sense of beauty is a part of the life of man. As Thoreau made clear, a philosophy can grow from a simple aesthetic appreciation of the moment, or a seed.

But, as we have seen, not all philosophy is good. Before the age of dogma, knowing what is good,” or what has been judged to be the good, had generally been understood through a common sense derived from shared experience and passed down to each generation. In a world lit only by fire, guided by the seasons and measured by the stride, this understanding was sufficient. But with the momentum of the ages carried forward on the wheel, and the engine, and finally upon wings, a greater comprehension has become necessary. 

Philosophy’s responsibility for establishing our natural rights is and always will be an essential task for a coherent and open society. Rights propounded, dispensed, and enforced by an ideology that is not shared, are a guarantee of disorder and disunion, strife, and failure. The Reign of Terror that was the French attempt to artificially impose an ideology was an example of that, as were the Russian Revolution and the Cultural Revolution in China. 

Functionally, what we want is happiness. Our political founders of old attempted just this—as the Declaration of Independence makes clear. Where they failed is obvious, but where they succeeded, we should take note. We can honor them for that much, at the least.

I would let historians ponder the failures, as well as the successes. My own sense of it is that we may have come very close to the “city on the hill,” and might again if we make the effort. A city might be rebuilt upon the ruins. And the alternatives being bandied about by the nihilists, all of them dependent on more government and less individual autonomy, have been proven time and again to be worse. 

We cannot stand still while other world powers are moving around us, and capitulation means disaster. Such a retreat would only condemn our children, those who survive, to the job we have failed to do. Whether from a virus or a nuclear holocaust, starvation or a bullet to the head, this horror is not inevitable and historically not so very different from the burdens accepted by past generations. 

A positive philosophy for mankind might be derived from practical experiences, such as farming, or building, or repairing. For most individuals, a practical philosophy is existential in nature, and not studied for itself; but the study of philosophy can offer a larger framework upon which a society and its government can be based. Any political philosophy that inhibits or abolishes the individual right to discover and experience life, apart from the limitations of equal rights for other individuals, is a negative. We have seen this proved in microcosm during the recent COVID epidemic, not only in the incompetence of government, but in its inability to admit what it cannot do. As usual under an authoritarian regime, fear has been used as a whip. The last checks and balances of the old republic have been thwarted or ignored. 

As fate would have it, the time for a rediscovery of man and the restatement of a philosophy of free men is now. The oligarchy of the power-hungry, the greedy, and the lazy who control our present government will not agree to go away. And let it be understood: a violent revolution in these times would be deadly for all concerned. It is clear from recent elections that most of the citizenry is unaware of their own peril (never mind the corruption of the election process itself). Until it is obvious to the majority, and an alternative is in the offing, nothing can be done to change the status quo. 

But a virtual “Constitutional Convention” can be called, nonetheless, and a viable alternative can be fashioned. A viable system of term limits would be a good start. Professional politicians are a curse. And an enlargement of Congress to better represent the population would help. A limitation on the bureaucracy would be another boon, with an enforced turnover to the private sector. The cost of “knowing who to call” is simply too great. 

The great project of our age, then, is to build upon our ruins before they are lost beneath the sands. The founders had their inspirations. Let the more recent work of Thomas Sowell, Isaiah Berlin, Roger Scruton, Milton Friedman, Frederick Hayek, Harry Jaffa, and their kin offer guidance. We must reinvent ourselves. We cannot abide as did Ozymandias. Failure is guaranteed to those who do not try. 

 


Democrats Can’t Have It Both Ways on the ‘Great Replacement’

The illegitimacy of the European settlement of the Americas is the core of 
the Democratic Party’s open border policy; we should not pretend otherwise. 


Tucker Carlson sent the Left into a predictable frenzy of self-righteous rage this week by making a true, but politically incorrect, observation. 

The invasion that is unfolding at the southern border, Carlson said, is purposeful. Joe Biden and his Democratic allies have embraced open borders because they want to change America’s racial demographics. They see their political destiny in replacing white conservatives with poor, non-white dependents from the Third World who will remain loyal to Democrats. By doing this, Democrats hope to secure permanent control of our political system. 

Carlson, of course, was immediately denounced by the usual media hall monitors for promoting the “Great Replacement Theory.” Except Carlson was not saying anything that prominent Democrats do not already discuss, very publicly, and with unabashed enthusiasm. His only sin was suggesting that the Great Replacement might not be a good thing. 

As Carlson correctly pointed out, the Left gets so rattled when the Right talks about the “Great Replacement” not because it is false, but precisely because it is true. Not only is it true, but it is an incredibly important goal of the Left, which is why, more than almost any other topic they consider verboten, it excites them so much.

When it comes to demographic change, Democrats try to play it both ways. On the one hand, they brag constantly about the imminent, irrevocable “browning” of America (or, if they are a little more subtle, the “blueing” of red states through mass migration.) But they condemn anyone who points out their gloating as a racist.

Michael Anton has a term for this: the “celebration parallax.” The Left is permitted to celebrate their success in radically transforming the country, but anyone who objects to their designs is forced to pretend that change is not happening at all. They are mocked as paranoid conspiracy theorists for noticing the very things the Left hopes, vocally, to accomplish. If anyone dares to notice the Left is winning, the Left passionately reminds us all that they are actually struggling underdogs fighting against “structural racism”—regular freedom riders.

Whatever you think of the Great Replacement, almost nobody, Right, Left, or center, believes any longer that it is not happening. It is widely acknowledged that, within a few decades, whites will become a minority in America. The only people required to pretend that this is not the case, oddly, are white people. 

Whether this demographic shift is a good, bad, or neither, Democrats are not withholding judgment. For them, having fewer white people around is definitely a good thing. It’s their political Rapture. Here’s Joe Biden in 2015:

Folks like me who are Caucasian, of European descent, for the first time in 2017 we’ll be in an absolute minority in the United States of America, absolute minority,” he said. “That’s not a bad thing, that’s a source of our strength.”

Biden is not alone in his belief that white displacement is an inexorable destiny worth celebrating. Senator Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) in July said pointedly that the Republican Party is doomed because the “the new voters in this country are moving away from them.” When the latest census found that the white population is shrinking for the first time, Jennifer Rubin called it “fabulous news.” 

There is no need to belabor the point with more examples, which are plentiful. That white replacement is laudable is a basic assumption of the Left and our leading institutions, widely shared by journalists, academics, most Democratic and Republican politicians, and the court jesters we still call “entertainers.” 

Since when did we, as a country, agree that white people should be replaced? This is a strange and obviously racist belief, but one that is now predominant in our culture, owing to its importance to the Left. 

Part of what makes their gaslighting on “the Great Replacement” so tiresome is that replacing whites is such a logically coherent, even necessary, part of their philosophy on race and justice. A core belief of the Left is that the Europeans who founded the United States were racist “colonizers” whose progeny continue to oppress nonwhite people today. 

If you believe this, then open borders is not an attack on America’s sovereignty, because America, a nation founded by wicked Europeans, is not legitimate in its current form, and neither are its borders. Instead, opening the borders is righteous, a reversal of fortuneIt is History’s pendulum swinging the other way—the nonwhite, rightful claimants to the land taking their inheritance back from whites, who stole it from them.

If you truly believed that whites are evil, rotten people living on occupied land, why would you not want to see them replaced?

This belief, in the wickedness of whites and the illegitimacy of the European settlement of the Americas, is obviously the governing belief behind the Democratic Party’s open border policy. It is insulting we are asked to pretend otherwise. 

If the Great Replacement really were a “conspiracy theory,” we would expect Democrats to support at least some form of border enforcement. But they don’t. Why? What reason could there be, if not the belief that white people are bad, America currently is too white, and open borders will make America less white, and therefore, better?

Can anyone seriously deny that Democrats believe this? At this point, overpowering hatred for white people has become the single unifying thread of the Democratic Party and its fractious coalition. 

The Great Replacement is not some wacky theory dreamed up by the Right. It is a project that aligns with what Democrats believe, desire, and profess publicly. Candor, on a topic like this, is obviously against their self-interest. But no society that calls itself free can be expected to stomach lies this big forever. The consequences of the Great Replacement are profound, and if we are still a republic, we must be able to discuss them openly.


Biden Isn’t Facing ‘Challenges.’ Biden Is The Challenge



Well-known Washington creature Amy Walters wrote this week on the “challenge” that Joe Biden is facing early in his presidency: “The former senator and vice president looks more like a helpless bystander than an experienced Capitol Hill deal maker…”

That, in a nutshell, is the national media’s preferred framing of the absolute breakdown we’re witnessing under Biden. A collapse that he created and is wholly responsible for.

The media want Biden to look like a “helpless bystander,” a victim of circumstances out of his control. He’s not. He’s the perpetrator of nearly every disaster anyone with eyes can see, from the obscenity at the southern border, to the loss of 13 service members (not fighting, but leaving a war zone), to the stratospheric inflation of household necessities.

We’re led to believe these are simply “challenges” Biden is facing rather than the results of his own deliberate screw-ups.

These are things happening to Biden.

CNN did a remarkable job handicapping Biden’s presidency earlier this week. In a Sept. 20 segment on Jake Tapper’s show, correspondent Phil Mattingly said Biden was “grappl[ing] with one of the most consequential weeks of his first year in office.” The graphic on screen noted that Biden was “faced with foreign policy turmoil…” Mattingly later said Biden was in “a key moment, particularly in the wake of a bumpy last several weeks.”

Let’s take stock of what’s happened during those “bumpy last several weeks”: On Sep. 20, there had been a total of 676,718 COVID-related deaths. Roughly 270,000 of those happened under Biden.

Pretty bumpy!

Also, on Aug. 26, 13 members of the U.S. military were killed during a suicide bombing attack at the airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, where operations were underway to withdraw from our decades-long effort in that sandpit. Eleven of the brave men and women were under the age of 24.

That feels bumpy, too.

In just the month of August, U.S. Customs and Border Protection encountered nearly 209,000 migrants illegally crossing into the country. That’s the second-highest monthly number of illegal border crossings of Biden’s presidency (far eclipsing the rates under Donald Trump) and his administration still won’t say how many of them — undoubtedly most — will be allowed to indefinitely stay here on the American taxpayer’s dime.

The Wall Street Journal reported last week that skyrocketing inflation “is eroding household-spending power,” and that “for the lowest-paid Americans,” wages fell half of a percent compared to last year.

We’re in the middle of a pandemic — a pandemic that Biden promised to “shut down” — and wages are falling for our most vulnerable people. The Journal attributed the problems in large part to “trillions of dollars in federal aid” that has “coursed through the economy.” That’s a reference to the massive welfare program, sometimes referred to as “COVID relief,” passed by Biden and congressional Democrats earlier this year.

That’s kind of bumpy, right?

This is all “bumpy” in the same way that flying on American Airlines Flight 11 was turbulent.

Biden politicized the COVID vaccines by saying he would hesitate to receive one produced by the Trump administration. Now we’re going through the second-worst wave of new infections since the pandemic started. Biden invited all of the world’s destitute to America by promising to take them in at the newly opened border. Now they’re all here.

Biden oversaw our incompetent withdrawal from Afghanistan. Now more than a dozen of our service members are dead and scores more are injured. Biden wanted to pump trillions more into our economy to keep would-be workers at home and give out goodies in hopes to reelect more Democrats. Now we’re suffocating under astronomical food and gas prices.

Biden is not a “helpless bystander” to all of this. These are not “challenges” he is facing. Biden is the accident. He is the challenge.


Migrant Crisis Shows States Must Secure Themselves



The Biden administration's malicious neglect of border states has reached new heights, as the small town of Del Rio, Texas, has been awash in a massive migrant wave, overwhelming federal border patrol. A crowd of more than 12,000 illegal aliens, primarily migrants from Haiti, was detained beneath the Del Rio International Bridge, which joins the city with Ciudad Acuna, Mexico.

The influx of Haitians is linked to a May 2021 decision by the Biden administration to grant Temporary Protected Status (TPS) to Haitians. Center for Immigration Studies fellow Todd Bensman noted that the Mexican government's decision to release a hold on migrants in the city of Tapachula likely also contributed to the influx. Many of these migrants are in fact not traveling directly from Haiti at all, as evidence of abandoned Brazilian and Chilean identification documents along the border show.

The Biden administration has finally, after weeks of bad press, begun to deport single adult Haitians (typically males). It is utilizing Title 42 authority, which allows the immediate return of illegal aliens as a public health measure due to the COVID pandemic, despite having repeatedly sought to end the Trump-era statute. An Associated Press report noted that Haitian migrants were being admitted to the country on what one official said was a "very, very large scale," numbering in the thousands.

The massive flow of migrants utterly overwhelmed Border Patrol's processing capability. Migrants are now simply provided a ticket upon arrival. When their number is called, they are processed, receive temporary travel papers and then released into the United States.

Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) and Texas National Guard units were moved to the border to physically blockade prominent illegal crossing points, and to help guard the migrant camp to allow Border Patrol officers to carry out processing. The head of the Border Patrol union's Del Rio Chapter told the Washington Examiner that without Texas troopers, the situation would be even more dangerous:

Literally, we could not have any semblance of control down here without DPS.... DPS has thankfully come out here and helped us out dramatically. We literally could not control this or have even some semblance of control without DPS, National Guard, all the other local stakeholders that are out here.

Governor Gregg Abbott has sought to bolster Texas Guard and Public Safety capabilities at the border. He recently signed a $1.88 billion funding bill, which includes funds to construct a 730-mile border wall. The Biden administration abruptly terminated construction of a border wall upon taking office, leaving significant gaps and unsecured areas, including at the Del Rio sector.

State governors have repeatedly urged the Biden administration to uphold its legal responsibility to secure the nation's borders. In a September 20 letter to President Biden, 25 governors asked for a meeting to demand action on the border crisis.

States have already beaten the Biden administration in court, winning a reinstatement of the Trump administration's "Remain in Mexico" policy, which the Biden administration abandoned upon taking office in contravention of a legal agreement between the federal government and the state of Texas.

Yet the ongoing crisis makes clear that there are few legal processes capable of forcing a recalcitrant federal government to carry out its obligations. The Biden administration continues to use Border Patrol agents—whose job it is to keep those who would illegally cross the border from doing so—to process, transport and release into the country migrants who have no legitimate claim to entry, often relocating them in states without the consent of state governments.

Federal, state and local leaders are struggling to find ways to force the Biden administration to meet its obligations. Representative Chip Roy has called for the impeachment of both the president and DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas for their blatant refusal to fulfill their constitutional duties. In a Twitter thread, Rep. Roy urged Texas to take "extraordinary measures" to protect its citizens and secure the border, in the absence of federal leadership:

Our communities are in danger because the federal government refuses to do its Constitutional duty. Therefore - we have an obligation to push back & must take action irrespective of Biden/fed orders.

We should

 1) maximize the guard, law enforcement, volunteers willing to go, & hold the line & turn people away / back to Mexico regardless of what the feds say,

2) Request support from every state in the union (to extent not already) to hold the line.

3) Take specific steps, with whatever personnel necessary, to track & ensure all persons apprehended by the feds a) get deported under Title 42, b) are in ICE custody & get a hearing and (90%+) get deported, or c) get shipped out of Texas (perhaps DC, San Francisco, NY).

4) pressure Mexico as a state to work with Texas to carry out MPP and to work with us to knock knees out from under cartel(s) in Taumalipas... and

5) if all else fails - shut the border down, including highways.

Roy is right. As long as the federal government under the Biden administration continues to stubbornly refuse its constitutional obligation to the states, the states are obliged to pick up that slack and defend their citizens.

This is likely to require states to increase their own budgets for public safety and security, including for law enforcement and the National Guard, and if necessary, to think creatively about new units and capabilities to meet increasing needs.

National Guard units across the country remain overworked. Many have still not received federal reimbursement following numerous deployments, including for the quixotic mission to secure the U.S. Capitol building, which outraged some U.S. governors after guard units were forced to endure humiliating accommodations and accusations of extremism.

A future Congress may also consider ways to help states acquire assets useful for their immediate security, in cases where federal action is either undesirable or will not be forthcoming due to a derelict administration. For too long, state National Guards have borne the burden of supporting federal priorities (for example in Afghanistan), while state security concerns, especially on the border, played second (or even third) fiddle.

All 50 states have a right to expect that the federal government will fulfill its obligations in areas where the Constitution delegates specific powers to it. But the Constitution does not absolve state governments of their responsibility to protect their citizens in the absence of federal willingness to uphold the law. Thankfully America's Founders recognized the value of a federal system which supports the overlap of police powers necessary for the protection of citizens and their rights.


Maher: ‘Woke Segregation’ Will Destroy a Country Where Most Black People Have Good Lives, ‘Ask Yugoslavia’

 

By Ian Hanchett 

On Friday’s broadcast of HBO’s “Real Time,” host Bill Maher said that “Balkanizing our nation will certainly cause us to lose” a country “that most black people now have found a decent life in, with a relatively high standard of living, and don’t want to lose.” And that we must “stop regarding this new woke segregation as if it’s some sort of cultural advancement. It’s not. Ask Yugoslavia.”

Maher began by saying, “The only time there should be two national anthems is when the other team is from Canada.”

He added, “I am what you might call an old-school liberal who was brought up with the crazy idea that segregating by race is bad. That’s what I was talking about. And again, when it comes to an anthem, it doesn’t have to be the one we currently use, but it has to be just one. You know, because it’s a national anthem, and symbols of unity matter. And purposefully fragmenting things by race reinforces a terrible message, that we are two nations, hopelessly drifting apart from each other. That’s not where we were even ten years ago, and it’s not where we should be now.”

Maher further stated, “If we have two anthems, why not three, or five? Why not a women’s anthem, a Latino anthem, a gay, trans, indigenous people’s, and Asian-Pacific islander anthem? Because I’m not dealing with you, I’m not speaking to you is not a way you can run a country and most people of all backgrounds understand that already and don’t even want to try to do it that way. I’m not out of step. Believing in separate but equal, that’s out of step, by 67 years.”

He added, “[A] recent survey of 173 colleges found that 42% offer segregated residences, 46% offer segregated orientation programs, 72% host segregated graduation ceremonies. Well, congratulations, liberal parents, you’ve just paid 100 grand for your kid to move to Biloxi, MS in 1948. … I mean, we’re a nation that professes diversity is our strength, but now half the kid’s dorm rooms are determined by racial purity? The University of Michigan-Dearborn thought it would be super-progressive to set up one virtual cafe for people of color and a separate one for white people. You see what I mean about becoming so woke you come back out the racist side?”

He concluded, “Yes, America was born from the original sin of slavery, and redress for that is certainly still in order. But not at the cost of destroying a country that most black people now have found a decent life in, with a relatively high standard of living, and don’t want to lose. And Balkanizing our nation will certainly cause us to lose it. We need to stop regarding this new woke segregation as if it’s some sort of cultural advancement. It’s not. Ask Yugoslavia.”


Biden Security Adviser Jake Sullivan Tied to Alleged 2016 Clinton Scheme to Co-Opt the CIA and FBI to Tar Trump

 

https://www.realclearinvestigations.com/articles/2021/09/23/biden_security_adviser_sullivan_tied_to_16_clinton_plan_to_co-opt_cia_and_fbi_to_tar_trump_795498.html

 

 * Authors Note:  this article has been edited for length, I suggest you follow the link and read the sordid details of this bold act of Sedition for yourselves   

White House National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan figures prominently in a grand jury investigation run by Special Counsel John Durham into an alleged 2016 Hillary Clinton campaign scheme to use both the FBI and CIA to tar Donald Trump as a colluder with Russia, according to people familiar with the criminal probe, which they say has broadened into a conspiracy case.

Last week, Michael A. Sussmann, a partner in Perkins Coie, a law firm representing the Hillary Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee, was indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of making false statements to the FBI about his clients and their motives behind planting the rumor, at the highest levels of the FBI, of a secret Trump-Russia server. After a months-long investigation, the FBI found no merit to the rumor.

The grand jury indicated in its lengthy indictment that several people were involved in the alleged conspiracy to mislead the FBI and trigger an investigation of the Republican presidential candidate -- including Sullivan, who was described by his campaign position but not identified by name.

The Clinton campaign project, these sources say, also involved compiling a "digital dossier” on several Trump campaign officials – including Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, Paul Manafort, George Papadopoulos, and Carter Page. This effort exploited highly sensitive, nonpublic Internet data related to their personal email communications and web-browsing, known as Internet Protocol, or IP, addresses.

To mine the data, the Clinton campaign enlisted a team of Beltway computer contractors as well as university researchers with security clearance who often collaborate with the FBI and the intelligence community. They worked from a five-page campaign document called the "Trump Associates List."

The tech group also pulled logs purportedly from servers for a Russian bank and Trump Tower, and the campaign provided the data to the FBI on two thumb drives, along with three “white papers” that claimed the data indicated the Trump campaign was secretly communicating with Moscow through a server in Trump Tower and the Alfa Bank in Russia. Based on the material, the FBI opened at least one investigation, adding to several others it had already initiated targeting the Trump campaign in the summer of 2016.

One of those campaign agents was Sullivan, according to emails Durham obtained. On Sept. 15, 2016 – just four days before Sussmann handed off the materials to the FBI – Marc Elias, his law partner and fellow Democratic Party operative, "exchanged emails with the Clinton campaign’s foreign policy adviser concerning the Russian bank allegations," as well as with other top campaign officials, the indictment states.

The sources close to the case confirmed the "foreign policy adviser" referenced by title is Sullivan. They say he was briefed on the development of the opposition-research materials tying Trump to Alfa Bank, and was aware of the participants in the project. These included the Washington opposition-research group Fusion GPS, which worked for the Clinton campaign as a paid agent and helped gather dirt on Alfa Bank and draft the materials Elias discussed with Sullivan, the materials Sussmann would later submit to the FBI. Fusion researchers were in regular contact with both Sussmann and Elias about the project in the summer and fall of 2016. Sullivan also personally met with Elias, who briefed him on Fusion's opposition research, according to the sources.

Sullivan maintained in congressional testimony in December 2017 that he didn’t know of Fusion’s involvement in the Alfa Bank opposition research. In the same closed-door testimony before the House Intelligence Committee, he also denied knowing anything about Fusion in 2016 or who was conducting the opposition research for the campaign.

In a statement, Durham said his investigation "is ongoing."

Indictments for a single-count process crime such as making a false statement normally run a page or two. But Durham’s filing charging Sussmann spans 27 pages and is packed with detail. FBI veterans say the 40-year prosecutor used the indictment to outline a broader conspiracy case he’s building that invokes several other federal statutes.

"That is what we call a 'speaking indictment,' meaning it is far more detailed than is required for a simple indictment under [federal statute] 1001,” which outlaws making false statements and representations to federal investigators, former assistant FBI Director Chris Swecker said in an interview with RealClearInvestigations.

"It is damning,” he added. “And I see it as a placeholder for additional indictments, such as government grant and contract fraud, computer intrusion, the Privacy Act and other laws against dissemination of personally identifiable information, and mail fraud and wire fraud – not to mention conspiracy to commit those offenses."

"I definitely see more [indictments] to come,” emphasized Swecker, who knows Durham personally and worked with him on prior investigations. The sources close to the case said former FBI general counsel James Baker, who accepted the sketchy materials from Sussmann and passed them on to agents for investigation, is cooperating with Durham’s investigation, along with former FBI counterintelligence chief Bill Priestap, who has provided prosecutors contemporaneous notes about what led the bureau to open an investigation into the allegations Trump used Alfa Bank as a conduit between his campaign and Russian President Vladimir Putin to steal the election.

Jake Sullivan’s Golf Cart Rounds

In late July 2016, during the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, the CIA picked up Russian chatter about a Clinton foreign policy adviser who was trying to develop allegations to “vilify" Trump. The intercepts said Clinton herself had approved a “plan" to “stir up a scandal” against Trump by tying him to Putin. According to hand-written notes, then-CIA chief John Brennan warned President Obama that Moscow had intercepted information about the “alleged approval by Hillary Clinton on July 26, 2016, of a proposal from one of her foreign policy advisers to vilify Donald Trump.” That summer, Brennan had personally briefed Democrats, including then-Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, on the Alfa Bank-Trump server rumors, according to congressional reports. Reid fired off a letter to Comey demanding that the FBI do more to investigate Trump's ties to Russia.

During that convention, Sullivan drove a golf cart from one TV-network news tent in the parking lot to another, pitching producers and anchors a story that Trump was conspiring with Putin to steal the election. CNN, ABC News, CBS News, and NBC News, as well as Chris Wallace of Fox News, all gave him airtime to spin the Clinton campaign’s unfounded theories. Sullivan also gave off-camera background briefings to reporters.

"We were on a mission," Clinton campaign spokeswoman Jennifer Palmieri later admitted in a Washington Post column. “We wanted to raise the alarm."

Then, on the eve of the election, Sullivan claimed in a written campaign statement that Trump and the Russians had set up a “secret hotline” through Alfa Bank, and he suggested “federal authorities” were investigating “this direct connection between Trump and Russia.” He portrayed the shocking discovery as the work of independent experts — “computer scientists” — without disclosing their attachment to the campaign.

“This could be the most direct link yet between Donald Trump and Moscow,” Sullivan claimed.

Clinton teed up his statement in an Oct. 31, 2016, tweet, which quickly went viral. Also that day, Clinton tweeted, “It’s time for Trump to answer serious questions about his ties to Russia,” while attaching a meme that read: “Donald Trump has a secret server. It was set up to communicate privately with a Putin-tied Russian bank called Alfa Ban

Biden has never been questioned about his own role in the investigation of Trump. However, it was the former vice president who introduced the idea of prosecuting Trump’s national security adviser appointee, Gen. Flynn, under the Logan Act of 1799, a dead-letter statute that prohibits private citizens from interfering in U.S. foreign policy and which hasn’t been used to prosecute anyone in modern times. According to notes taken by then-FBI counterintelligence official Peter Strzok, who attended a Jan. 5, 2017, Oval Office meeting with Obama and Biden, in which Trump, Flynn and Russia were discussed, Biden raised the idea: “VP: Logan Act,” the notes read.