Monday, October 18, 2021

Our Representatives, Not J6 Protesters, Defile the ‘Sacred’ U.S. Capitol

The real heretics continue to rule while Robert Reeder is off to jail. 


The real heretics continue to rule while Robert Reeder is off to jail. 

When politics is your religion and government is your God, a public building is your church.

The four-hour disturbance at the U.S. Capitol building on January 6, according to Beltway aristocracy and the media, wasn’t a legitimate protest that turned violent in some areas—it was a sacrilege. Never mind that the building itself sustained minimal damage—early reports estimated $30 million for repairs but the actual figure is around $1 million—the real vandalism occurred when thousands of Americans wearing MAGA hats invaded the cathedral of government power occupied by America’s political deity.

And the alleged apostates are paying a dear price.

Since January 6, lawmakers, judges, and federal prosecutors have routinely described the Capitol building as holy ground. “To those who engaged in the gleeful desecration of this, our temple of democracy, American democracy, justice will be done,” Pelosi said after the breach. Representative Mario Díaz-Balart (R-Fla.) tweeted on January 6 that “the Capitol building is the center and sacred symbol of democracy.”

After the joint session reconvened later that evening, Senator Richard Durbin (D-Ill.) mourned how “this sacred place was desecrated by a mob today, on our watch. This temple to democracy was defiled by thugs who roamed the halls.” Senator Ed Markey (D-Mass.) thanked the first responders who protected “this sacred Chamber.”

Here is how Joe Biden’s Justice Department recently described the actions of Robert Reeder, a Maryland man whose life has been ruined since he was charged with four misdemeanors related to his participation in the January 6 protest: “The attack on the U.S. Capitol . . . was one of the only times in our history when the building was literally occupied by hostile participants,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Joshua Rothstein wrote in an August filing. “The Defendant chose to be a part of the desecration of the Capitol rotunda. The Defendant stood in the center of the rotunda, where Ruther (sic) Bader Ginsburg, John Lewis, Ronald Reagan, Dwight Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, and Abraham Lincoln, among others, lied in state. What the Defendant chose to record and celebrate at that place, at that time, was antithetical to the events that most Americans associate with the Capitol rotunda.”

Indeed, his very presence in the Capitol rotunda that day was a desecration of hallowed ground.” (emphasis added)

Now, for credentialed D.C. insiders like Joshua Rothstein, that undoubtedly is true. After all, Reeder, unlike Joshua Rothstein, did not attend Columbia Law School. Reeder was a FedEx truck driver until the company fired him after his arrest and now he can’t find another job. As he said during his sentencing hearing last Friday, he is “radioactive”—so he cannot afford to throw himself a 40th birthday party like Joshua Rothstein just did. Rothstein’s party, held at a rented-out D.C. restaurant, was complete with truffles and monogrammed cookies and attended by former Homeland Security director Jeh Johnson and other Beltway bigwigs, Politico reported.

In fact, Robert Reeder, thanks to people like Josua Rothstein and his journo pals, doesn’t have many friends any more. Reeder’s teenage son, who shares his father’s name, doesn’t want to go to school; he’s bullied because of his father’s involvement on January 6, even though Reeder didn’t attack anyone or vandalize any property.

Reeder’s family and neighbors have abandoned him, too. As Reeder tearfully explained to a federal judge on Friday, even his church told him to stop coming because he was a distraction. “That’s tough because it was my support group,” Reeder told Judge Thomas Hogan, who ignored Reeder’s desperate plea for compassion and sentenced him to three months in prison for pleading guilty to one count of “parading” in the Capitol building—a place Hogan described as “sacrosanct.”

Rothstein, who wanted Reeder in jail for six months, told the court Reeder walked around like “he was a congressman” on January 6.

While it’s true Reeder did enter the Capitol building twice, he acted nothing like a United States congressman.

Reeder didn’t vote to add trillions to the national debt in the name of COVID relief, climate change, or infrastructure. He didn’t put his legislative imprimatur on COVID tyranny such as lockdowns, mask requirements, and vaccine mandates or cower to the teachers’ unions random demand of $640 billion to open schools this fall.

The official congressional record does not show Reeder as a co-sponsor of Joe Biden’s $3.5 trillion boondoggle—a figure closer to $5 trillion according to some analyses—that will raise at least $2 trillion in new taxes and redistribute the windfall to Democrats’ pet projects including paid family leave, child tax credits, free college, expanded health care coverage, and “clean energy.”

Robert Reeder isn’t responsible for a wide open southern border that threatens our safety and our sovereignty. There’s no evidence he consented to deploy millions of U.S. troops and spend trillions of U.S. tax dollars on failed foreign wars that culminated with a humiliating exit from Afghanistan resuling in the murder of 13 American servicemembers while leaving behind $80 billion in weaponry and artillery.

He didn’t participate in two preposterous impeachment trials against Donald Trump, one of which was a ruse to cover-up the Biden family overseas racket before the 2020 primaries, or the vile character assasination of a Supreme Court justice nominee.

He didn’t marry his brother to commit immigration fraud, repeatedly lie to the American public about an “abundance of evidence” to prove Trump-Russia election collusion, scream “we’re gonna impeach the motherfucker” after being sworn-in to Congress, encourage people to publicly harass Trump officials, or bend a knee in the “sacred” Capitol building to honor George Floyd. There is no statement from Reeder condemning America as systemically racist and supporting a new federal holiday to collectively repent for George Floyd’s death.

Reeder never made empty promises to hold Big Tech, the FBI, and China accountable. Nor is he responsible for skyrocketing consumer prices, a stagnant national economy, a looming supply chain crisis, or the fact that public approval ratings for everyone from Joe Biden to congressional leaders of both parties are tanking.

Joshua Rothstein was wrong when he claimed that January 6 was the first time the Capitol had been invaded by “hostile participants.” With the exception of a handful of decent lawmakers, the “sacred” ground of the Capitol building is occupied by “hostile participants” every day—congressmen of both political parties, who hold American citizens such as Robert Reeder and the other 630-plus January 6 defendants in open contempt. Those representatives have done far more irreversible damage to the country than a few thousand Trump supporters could ever do—and, unlike January 6, their rampage is ongoing.

But the real heretics continue to rule while Robert Reeder, who told the court last week he “is a good man” despite how his government portrayed him, is off to jail. My guess, however, is that our country would be much better off if it were run by men like Reeder rather than the people in charge right now.


X22, And we know, and more-Oct 18th


 



Sup? Here's tonight's news:

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https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2021/10/massive-world-freedom-rally-vaccine-mandates-takes-times-square-nyc-crowd-marches-streets-chanting-wake-ny-video/

What Happened to the Beloved Military? - VDH

There are too many concurrent Pentagon crises. Any one of them would be dangerous to our national security. Together they imperil our very freedoms and security.


The highest echelon of the U.S. military is becoming dysfunctional. 

There are too many admirals and generals for the size of the current U.S. military. It now boasts three times the number of four-star admirals and generals than we had during World War II—when the country was in an existential war for survival and when, by 1945, our active military personnel was almost nine times larger than the current armed forces. 

Somehow a gradual drift in the agendas of our military leadership has resulted in too many various emphases on domestic cultural, social, and political issues. And naturally, as a result, there is less attention given to winning wars and leveraging such victories to our nation’s strategic advantage.

The consequences of these failures are downright scary for a world superpower upon which millions at home and billions worldwide depend. 

There are too many concurrent Pentagon crises. Any one of them would be dangerous to our national security. Together they imperil our very freedoms and security. 

Reform? 

What is to be done? The Uniform Code of Military Justice must be enforced, and not selectively applied on the basis of rank: officers below the rank of general and admiral now face severe penalties for disparaging in personal terms the current administration, while one stars and above are given de facto exemptions for comments about the previous administration. If the code is not considered law but merely a recommendation, then it should be scrapped. 

The Department of Defense Office of Inspector General and the inspector generals of the various branches of the military must enforce existing laws that carefully define the limits of the Joint Chiefs of Staff activity. And they must punish those officers who violate such statues to interrupt the legal chain of command. 

There must be a cooling off period to prevent retiring military officers from rotating onto the boards and lobbying teams of corporate defense contractors, with the presumption that their knowledge of the operation of the Pentagon can be monetized to the advantage of particular corporations. Five years seems a reasonable period in which our top brass should refrain from joining firms that are seeking lucrative contracts from the Pentagon. 

Any former high-ranking retired officer who is paid to provide military commentary on news channels should not enjoy security clearances. The practice is currently much abused. A good example was the case of retired General James Clapper. For months, he went on television, with presumptions of superior wisdom, supposedly based on his access to confidential intelligence, and flat out deceived the American people about the so-called Russian collusion hoax and the supposed treasonous nature of the president.  

We are currently witnessing several scandals in the Department of Justice, the IRS, the CIA, and the FBI by careerist, unelected employees. But far more chilling is the crisis in the U.S. military upon which we all must depend. Its revered history and accomplishment must somehow remain a source of pride and inspiration to guide all of us in these frightening times ahead. 

So, What Happened to the Joint Chiefs? 

First, the Joint Chiefs have now gone astray. Laws passed in 1947, 1952, and 1986 explicitly defined—and incrementally but steadily narrowed—the mission of the JCS. The Chair may be the nation’s highest iconic ranking military officer. But his actual operational control over the military is carefully delineated by law and quite limited by design. 

In sum, the JCS is an advisory body. Members are made up of four-star officers of their respective branches of the military. But by statute they are not responsible for carrying out orders from the president as relayed through the Secretary of Defense. 

Instead, these highest-ranking officers of the various services, led by a chairman, are to present various options during times of policy debate, consultation, and crisis. 

Nothing could be clearer about such an important though advisory role. Yet the present chairman, General Mark Milley, if media accounts are accurate, has apparently violated both the spirit and letter of the law. He reportedly called together top officers of the military services and ordered them to reroute long-held protocols in reference to the nuclear defense of the United States in times of peril—and to channel such operational decision-making through himself. 

That clear and dangerous usurpation of power is certainly contrary to the law—no matter what his fellow officer corps defenders plead. It is entirely irrelevant whether Milley acted in good faith, or was swayed by the emotions of the time, political and media pressures, or his own outsized ego. His job is to stay cool and offer calm advice strictly within the letter of the law. And he failed on that critical account. 

Milley additionally contacted his Chinese Communist military counterparts to inform them that he so believed that his own country was in a state of crisis—perhaps after a conversation with the speaker of the House and de facto head of the opposition party in the Congress. Further, in freelancing fashion, he apparently promised to warn the Chinese in advance should his own country undertake any aggressive action against Beijing. 

Such an act is certainly unprecedented in U.S. military history. And if de facto such acts were to be institutionalized, then the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, with impunity, could ignore the law and place the operation of the military in his own hands, on grounds of his own hunches about the current wisdom or stability of his commander-in-chief. Freelancing psychiatry is not in the job description of the Chairman.

Milley at the time claimed—and later denied—that he feared in late 2020 that Donald Trump, one of the rare presidents to have eschewed optional wars and preemptive attacks, might be too trigger happy to entrust with his constitutional appointed powers under the Constitution as an elected president. 

Aside from the fact that the Constitution has ample remedies for such a scenario—from conviction of an impeachment indictment in the Senate to removal under the 25th Amendment—that is an absurd excuse for a veritable coup. 

In truth, Trump took an enormous amount of criticism from the current and active officer corps for eschewing a retaliatory strike against Iran, and for choosing not to insert American troops into a volatile standoff between Kurdish troops and the forces of NATO ally Turkey in Syria. Trump is the first president in memory not to have ordered a new major military campaign during his tenure. 

Would Milley have acted in such fashion had House Minority leader Representative Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) called him, warned him that Joe Biden was dangerously non compos mentis, and then expressed worry that the president’s cognitive disability threatened the entire 20-year effort in Afghanistan, and thus demanded action by Milley to short-circuit the chain of command? 

The civilian-military tradition of U.S. national security cannot survive a Joint Chiefs chairman who informs Washington journalists that he believes his commander-in-chief exhibits Hitlerian characteristics, appropriates power from the elected president, violates the chain of command, freelances in foreign policy with a foreign and hostile military, and communicates directly to take such action with the opposition leader speaker of the House—after circumventing an elected president. Whether he knows it or not, Milley’s resignation is not a matter of if, but only of when. If Milley were not to resign, then we essentially have no civilian control over the military, and his dereliction will be a green light to other would-be usurpers of rights denied the Joint Chiefs of Staff by law

A Uniform Code of Military Whatever? 

Second, the once hallowed Uniform Code of Military Justice is now a mere construct. It is widely ignored to the point of parody—at least for officers above the rank of colonel who violate Article 88’s prohibition of using “contemptuous words against the President.” 

Remember the statute was aimed at forestalling military officers condemning unpopular or controversial presidents, not beloved leaders—in the manner that the First Amendment protects heterodox, not orthodox, expression. That obvious fact was totally lost in the mob-like rush to vilify the president by an entire cadre of four-star retired generals and admirals in 2020-21. 

Indeed, for the last four years, the nation’s most decorated retired officers have consistently attacked their commander-in-chief in the most personal and venomous invectives that make General Douglas MacArthur’s ridicule of the unpopular Truman Administration look tame in comparison. The only precedent after the adoption of the UCMJ for such slurs is the checkered career of General Edwin Walker (he had earlier called President Truman “pink”). Under pressure, Walker was the only general to have resigned his commission, left the army, and reentered civilian life in the 20th century. 

The recent spate of public disparagement has been truly as astonishing as it was frightening. Our esteemed retired officer corps have variously called a president a Mussolini-like character, a liar, crazy, Nazi-like, comparing his border policy to the death camps at Birkenau-Auschwitz. Milley himself was said to have compared his commander-in-chief to insider journalists to the Nazis under Adolf Hitler. A retired four-star general, Michael Hayden, just retweeted a crazy suggestion to deport any unvaccinated supporters of the former president to Afghanistan with one-way tickets—a jest perhaps, but one implying a death sentence as well. 

And all this is not mere rhetoric, but an amplification of insurrectionary prompts without precedent in recent history. Former Defense Department officials such as Rosa Brooks, in print, had raised the issue of military intervention in the first weeks of the Trump Administration by suggesting that the military might have to stage a coup to expel him from office. 

Admiral William H. McRaven wrote an op-ed in which he attacked the president in terms clearly in violation of UCMJ. He stated, just months before a scheduled election, that Trump should be removed from office: “[I]t is time for a new person in the Oval Office—Republican, Democrat or independent—the sooner, the better. The fate of our Republic depends upon it.” 

 Since when in an election year does a retired admiral determine that a president should be removed apparently “sooner”? And is it reckless for such an esteemed officer to advocate such action when many of his former subordinates still serve in the military? 

Two retired officers in late 2020 urged Chairman Milley to use force if necessary to remove Donald Trump from office if he felt that Trump had improperly questioned the election results and might not leave office on January 20, despite there being no evidence that Trump ever even considered such a step. When did military officers assume the roles of psychiatrists, professors, constitutional lawyers, inspector generals, and clergy? 

The legacy of our retired top brass is that now military officers feel they can appeal to their own sense of justice rather than fealty to the law to consider either removing an elected president or to so damage him by slurs and smears they render him ineffective. For all their talk of the Constitution, the law, and the republic, they have shown that they regard the UCMJ simply as a mere construct to be ignored. 

Social Justice Warriors 

Third, this selective politicization of the military has now reached dangerous levels. After various officers wrote vociferously about the dangers of using military troops to restore order during 120-days of continuous rioting, violence, and arson during the summer 2020, they went absolutely quiet when Joe Biden ordered tens of thousands of federal troops, barriers, and barbed wire to militarize Washington, D.C. in winter 2021—the greatest militarization of our nation’s capital since the Civil War. 

The retired officer corps apparently were entirely ignorant of the long history of presidents employing troops to restore order when police seemed overwhelmed. That was an odd amnesia given that former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Colin Powell once made it clear to then President George H. W. Bush that he was happy to send in the Marines to Los Angeles during the Rodney King riots. And he did so with Biden-like “dispatch.”  

Note that former members of the Joint Chiefs blasted Trump for a purported photo-op in conjunction with a supposed order to use military personnel to clear Lafayette square with tear gas. Yet their melodramatic public outrage was based on a media-concocted lie, as revealed by a later careful investigation by the inspector general of the Department of the Interior. 

Yet the untruth was never corrected by any of the retired generals who whipped it up in June 2020 and did their own part to fan a national hysteria. 

As a result, in June 2020 Joe Biden boasted that former top-ranking generals would help to remove Trump from office if he contested the election: “I’m absolutely convinced they will escort him from the White House with great dispatch.” One wonders what would have happened had Trump boasted that if Biden should not accept a contested verdict of a 2020 defeat, the military would prevent him from entering the White House? 

Former chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Mike Mullen, claimed that Trump was essentially treasonous by giving aid to our enemies by his actions. “[He] gave succor to the leaders of other countries who take comfort in our domestic strife,” Mullen said. Note that the same General Mullen defended the Milley call to the communist Chinese military leadership. 

Former four-star General James Clapper called Donald Trump a veritable traitor (a “Russian asset”), despite the failure of the 22-month, $40 million Mueller investigation to find any truth in the Russian collusion hoax. 

Again, none of these officers offered corrections following either the inspector general’s report of the June 2020 violence or the end of the Mueller investigation. 

Too many of our officers, retired and active, lecture the country on controversial issues from “white rage” to the need for women in front-line combat units to transgender policies. Thereby, the Pentagon has cultivated and won the support of the politicos traditionally deeply suspicious of the U.S. military. In such a novel quid pro quo understanding, the Left has gone strangely quiet as retired military officers revolve into defense contractor boards and as weapons procurement lobbyists. 

Victory or What? 

Four, these types of politicization and violation of a variety of laws do come at a price, either in distracting the military command from its primary mission of defeating the enemy and securing victory in American conflicts or contextualizing such failure through embrace of social activism. 

Since the Korean War, and with the exception of the first Gulf War, the military’s record has not been especially stellar, given a chronic inability to achieve a military victory in a cost-benefit sense acceptable to the American people: optional interventions in Lebanon, Somalia, and Libya, the defeat in and retreat from the Afghanistan war, and strategic stalemate and withdrawal from Iraq. 

Many of these setbacks were due to political loss of will, but the military might have prevented such fickle and fluid civilian policies had it been able to present a strategy for victory, one that justified to the American people the resulting costs in blood and treasure. 

The above pessimistic appraisal is not mine nor conservatives. It is now likely the consensus of our enemies from Afghanistan to Russia to Iran and other parts of the Middle East to North Korea. Our enemies hope that the once most powerful military in the history of civilization is going through a sort of people’s liberation army internal revolution, one in which ideological purity, not battlefield competence, is deemed the better measurement of today’s high-ranking officer corps. 

How strange that in the midst of a humiliating defeat and withdrawal from Afghanistan our military still assured us that culturally sensitive food was awaiting refugees upon landing in the United States—a group, we were told, flown out with acceptable gender ratios and unvaccinated, but shepherded by soldiers who will shortly be discharged if they likewise remain unvaccinated. 


Democracy vs. ‘Democracy’

Spontaneous resistance is powerful simply for taking place, because the system wants you to feel hopeless and alone. These parents remind us that we are legion.


School board meetings lately have been the scene of irate parents and scared officials. Used to conducting their work without much citizen engagement, school boards have been irritated as parents have been showing up and shouting and chanting—sometimes to the point of being escorted off the premises—for opposing such policies as mask mandates and critical race theory. 

The powers that be are alarmed. Attorney General Merrick Garland has invited the FBI and Assistant U.S. Attorneys to monitor these developments and investigate ordinary Americans. He makes vague suggestions of threats and violence, but incidents seem to consist of civil disobedience at worst. In a nation where murders went up 30 percent in the wake of the George Floyd riots, it is hard to believe intimidating and running down ordinary parents for standing up for their children is a high priority. But it is.

Incidentally, the Democrats are the same group that made a fetish of Trump being a threat to Our Democracy™. But their idea of democracy is a special one. Actual democracy really does involve pissed off parents and voters “throwing the bums out” and generally embraces the idea that the consent of ordinary people, not elected officials, is the ultimate source of the system’s legitimacy. 

For the Left, democracy loses all of its luster when it goes against progressivism. When the people engage the system by participating with passion, this is doubly alarming. Participating in politics, like voting, is supposed to be merely decoration, as meaningful as that childish sticker they give out proclaiming, “I Voted.” Voting and elections serve as a source of legitimacy to the system, buttressing the real power centers that are mostly unaffected by voting, whether they be part of the military industrial complex or the major textbook companies and university education departments.  

While it is rarely said out loud, thwarting the popular will and labeling this “Our Democracy” is an essential part of the leftist program.

Stopping the People

Consider the role of the courts. In a sane system, they guarantee procedural due process, fairly applying democratically-enacted laws, while also infusing popular sentiment from the jury system. But much of the work of the courts, particularly the federal courts, has been devoted to thwarting popular laws on the basis of imaginary constitutional rights. 

The courts have shown little respect for democratic decision making by interposing newly minted constitutional rights that no one ever heard of or voted for and, indeed, actually voted against when given the opportunity. Even when voters have spoken in the most democratic format of all, the referendum, courts have stepped in to overturn the people’s will. This happened both to bans on gay marriage and withholding government benefits from illegal aliens, which were enacted in the not-terribly-conservative states of Oregon and Arizona. 

Conservatives have been vaguely hostile to the courts and judicial activism for some time, but rarely state what the problem actually is: anti-democracy to serve elites and their preferences. From the 1960s onward, the left-wing parts of the judiciary have followed a simple formula: When the people choose wrong, the choice will be taken away from them. 

The original foundation of such robust court action was the civil rights movement, where anti-democratic restrictions of Jim Crow increasingly were overturned by outsiders from Washington D.C., through an army of lawyers and enforcers. Even long after Jim Crow disappeared and far outside of the deep south, the federal overseers stayed hard at work, policing local schools, local police, and local decisions, lest democracy go in the wrong direction. 

This political revolution is the basic thesis of Christopher’s Cadwell’s The Age of Entitlement, and it explains a lot. He argues that in the name of democracy, the courts created a parallel constitution, which acquired a life of its own, growing up alongside and then completely enveloping the actual Constitution.

Tilting the Scales With Imported Voters

Another important change directed from the top looms large in all of this: mass immigration. By the mid 1980s, the old America had thoroughly rejected the Left, in part from the impact of school bussing, higher crime, and other disruptions to their lives associated with elite-supported social changes. In those days, “liberal” was a dirty word, and Democrats ran away from it. 

The old America was still intact; the post-1965 immigration wave was only starting to be felt, and then only in a handful of large cities. Instead of reaching a new modus vivendi with the country’s conservative majority, the Left, abetted by the business class, slowly made sure the old America would be completely overwhelmed. It’s as if a few family members were having a dispute, and someone showed up with 20 newcomers to take his side. To paraphrase Bertolt Brecht, the party “elected a new people.” 

This is not democracy, or at least not the positive thing most people imagine by the word democracy. The moral legitimacy of democracy depends in part upon the participants being part of the same society. In other words, there must be something in common before democracy that binds people together before they submit to majority rule. They must be a people, not merely people. 

No one seriously supports worldwide democracy for a hypothetical worldwide government, because we know that Indians and Chinese and Frenchmen and Russians and Americans all have different habits, different priorities, and, most important, different loyalties from one another. Transforming a nation to have the same level of disconnection internally through radical, fast, and massive immigration creates the same problems. 

As the nation has become disconnected, and the Left’s legitimacy rests in large part upon condemning the old America as racist and evil, a new kind of ruthless tribal politics has emerged. Whether it is in calls for reparations or knee-jerk condemnations of police when coethnics are involved, the appeal to a neutral standard of justice that applies to the whole community is now absent. There is no community, nor an associated common good. Today, the only communities are these affinity groups, the “Asian” community or “LGBT” community or whatever affinity group happens to be salient. 

The ongoing friction of whites and blacks, a complicated story with deep roots, was not fully resolved by the civil rights movement or even the election of a black president. But in the new polyglot America, it has spawned the proliferation of special pleading by everyone. Newcomers have each spun their own tale of moral superiority and moral claims upon the old America. In business and educational settings, this has now coalesced around critical race theory, which says, in effect, white people of the old America are bad, and that equity demands a never-ending, never-lessening recognition of white guilt. 

Parents, of course, are concerned for their children’s futures and their educations, as well as how their children see themselves. Most imagined and hoped schools would not be so different from the ones they attended. They also thought they had some control over these things. In their defense, they pay for the schools and have a few fairly practical goals in mind: safety, basic knowledge, and preparation for adulthood. 

Nonstop condemnation of their ancestors, their country, and their faith is not something any of them asked for, whether for their children or the many newcomers whom we all live among. But this is what is being done, because teachers have come to think of themselves not as humble service providers, but as the vanguard . . . foot soldiers for the managerial elite, liberating children from the superstitions and ignorance of their parents. 

Needless to say, after a year of no sports, zoom classes, and then the mask wars, this has not gone over well. When two weeks to flatten the curve became a year-and-a-half, and Kafkaesque harassment interfered with travel and work and much else, patience is at an all-time low. Hoping for a return to some normalcy, parents have gotten excited, angry even, at the permanent revolution within the classroom. In other times and places, their efforts would be applauded as the noble will of the people and the expression of authentic, grassroots democracy. 

But when normal people do this for normal reasons, it is verboten

The Two Faces of Progressives

In this sense, modern progressives have much in common with the original Progressives, who praised democracy, even though many were also partial to professional governance by experts. The administrative state, the city manager, and the civil service were all products of that era, which deemed the old spoils system and the hodge-podge of local ordinances as both irrational and corrupt. The idea of politics as a “science” to be conducted by a trained managerial class has little use for the participatory part of democracy. After all, what do parents know about education? 

The Left in power is not particularly concerned about violence, whether against school boards, or otherwise. Nor do they want democracy, if it means they do not get their way. They instead want to win, and one important part of securing their wins requires demoralizing their opponents in the hinterland. Thus, by exaggerating January 6, and letting it be known FBI informants are everywhere, they have cast a cloud over ordinary political organizing, particularly any issue advocacy conducted outside the party system. 

This approach is now metastasizing. By promising local school board protesters that they will be treated like the January 6 protesters, Merrick Garland and the partisan Justice Department aim to impose a similar chilling effect against ordinary parents who have the temerity to stand up for common sense.

The system depends a great deal upon perceptions of omnipotence, inevitability, and popularity. Thus, it polices dissent very aggressively. The beauty of participatory democracy is that it does not require elections or parties or much else to have an effect, other than ordinary people standing up for themselves. Such spontaneous resistance is powerful simply for taking place, because the system wants you to feel hopeless and alone. These parents remind us that we are legion. 

The incredible, disappearing — incompetent — Team Biden


Last week was another bad one for the continually disappearing Biden administration.

As Americans took to social media to post pictures of bare Dunkin’ Donuts shelves, sold-out milk at big-box stores and other signs of an America in trouble, we learned that Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg has been on paternity leave since August.

Buttigieg was always going to be a lightweight transportation chief. He got the job as a reward for dropping out of the presidential race and throwing his support to Joe Biden — and also because he said he likes trains, having gotten engaged at a train station.

My 5-year-old likes trains, too. Yet just because he can say “Choo choo!” with enthusiasm doesn’t mean he can oversee the country’s transportation system. When the country is having supply-chain problems, the transportation secretary’s skills and experience, let alone availability, become rather, uh, indispensable.

Buttigieg can take a two-month paternity leave, but the guy who runs the pizza shop down the block can’t just disappear for two months without putting someone else in charge. Someone has to make the calzone. 

The public didn’t even learn about Buttigieg’s break at the start, but only after transportation-related problems exploded around us. Who’s running the shop? Anyone?

This is all in keeping with the way a distracted, carefree, ideological Biden administration has operated the whole time. In September, the president took a weekend beach trip as the disaster on our southern border blew up and 14,000 Haitian migrants camped out under a bridge in Del Rio, Texas. As the US pullout from Afghanistan turned into an unmitigated disaster, the president disappeared — surfacing later to claim it was an enormous “success.”

Now, as Americans start to worry about stocking their cupboards and buying Christmas presents, Biden goes more than a week refusing to take any questions. Sorry, but this is unacceptable, no matter who’s president.

Maybe we should’ve known: After all, Biden hid in his basement for much of his presidential campaign, and his aides routinely called early “lids,” telling the press the candidate would be unavailable for the day.

But he wasn’t president then; now he is.

Nor are those of his surrogates not on paternity leave offering more reassurance. Last week, Biden chief of staff Ron Klain retweeted a tone-deaf reference to the supply-chain issues as “high-class problems.” Really? It sure doesn’t feel that high class when people are worrying about getting staples for their home. We all remember the toilet-paper shortages during the pandemic last year; did that feel “high class”?

Asked if holiday gifts would arrive on time, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki was positively arrogant: “We’re not the Postal Service,” she huffed.

Thanks for your concern, Madam Press Secretary.

The supply nightmare has also helped feed inflation: When you manage to find milk on the shelf, a gallon can cost over $8.

What’s Psaki’s answer? “The American people are not looking at cost-to-cost comparisons from this year to two years ago.” Huh? Prices have been up well over 5 percent over last year for the past several months; the nation hasn’t seen spikes so sharp in 13 years.

And why wouldn’t we make comparisons? Biden made lavish promises as a candidate for president about how everything would run super well when he was elected. The country had been wrecked by Orange Man, and Biden would bring normalcy, sanity back to fix it all. Why shouldn’t Americans expect that? Instead, they’re getting just the opposite.

“Look, folks,” Uncle Joe vowed last year, “we’re going to bring the Republicans and Democrats together and deliver economic relief for working families and schools and businesses.” No mention of struggling to find and buy cereal. No mention of administration officials who’d openly sneer at the problems of regular Americans.

No, Jen Psaki, you’re not the Postal Service. You’re worse at your job.

Biden & Co. never stop claiming they “inherited” all their problems from the previous administration. Yes, Joe Biden ran and won on not being Donald Trump. Someone needs to tell the president he can’t govern on that.


The Insidiousness of the Radical Left: How Can We Fight It?


Mike Miller reporting for RedState

In “Tyranny of the Minority — How the Left Is Destroying America,” bestselling author, keynote speaker, and political commentator Ed Brodow asked a simple question — four years ago: “Can America be saved?”

The chilling question was all but unthinkable not all that long ago — certainly in the aftermath of 9/11, which not only rocked America to its very core; the worst terrorist attack on American soil in history ultimately proved that this country could withstand anything the rest of the world might dare to throw at us.

But now, just 20 years later, the question is this:

Can America be saved? From us. More precisely, can freedom-loving, U.S. Constitution-cherishing, patriotic Americans save this country from within?

Can we save America from those who seek to destroy it as we know it?

“We are engaged in an ideological war for the future of America,” wrote Brodow in 2017. And as Brodow correctly nailed it, the Left, led by radical minority interests, is hellbent on destroying what remains of American values after eight, purposely divisive years of Barack Obama. Every one of Brodow’s bullet points hit the bullseye. Among them:

  • Expanding government at the expense of individual rights
  • Replacing free speech with political correctness
  • Destroying the American economy by redistributing income
  • Opening the borders to Stone Age people who want to kill us
  • Reversing the achievements of the civil rights movement by dividing the nation into racial and ethnic enclaves under the guise of “diversity” and “social justice”
  • Forcing college students to accept the Left’s racist agenda
  • The radical American Left and its senior partners, the Democrat Party and the mainstream media, want to turn the United States into Venezuela

Incidentally, Brodow quotes Fox News “Life, Liberty & Levin” host Mark Levin in the book. On Levin’s radio show, he said, in 2017: “We’re fighting for the whole enchilada.” To the point, Levin’s current bestseller, “American Marxism” continues to enjoy tremendous success — for the ominous reasons Levin drives home with example after example. Via Amazon:

Levin explains how the core elements of Marxist ideology are now pervasive in American society and culture—from our schools, the press, and corporations, to Hollywood, the Democratic Party, and the Biden presidency—and how it is often cloaked in deceptive labels like “progressivism,” “democratic socialism,” “social activism,” and more.

Levin digs into the psychology and tactics of these movements, the widespread brainwashing of students, the anti-American purposes of Critical Race Theory and the Green New Deal, and the escalation of repression and censorship to silence opposing voices and enforce conformity.

Levin exposes many of the institutions, intellectuals, scholars, and activists who are leading this revolution, and provides us with some answers and ideas on how to confront them.

Levin’s analysis couldn’t be more spot-on, yet we are told on a daily basis by Biden, his smug, clueless White House secretary, his hapless Cabinet members, and the left-wing media that we should admire the Emperor’s New Clothes, while the disastrous Biden presidency — including the radical-left-wing threats to America as we know it — is laid ever more bare on a daily basis.

As Levin writes:

“The counter-revolution to the American Revolution is in full force. And it can no longer be dismissed or ignored for it is devouring our society and culture, swirling around our everyday lives, and ubiquitous in our politics, schools, media, and entertainment.”

And as he has done since the early days of his nationally syndicated radio show, Levin continues his crusade to rally everyday Americans to defend their liberty — which scares the hell out of the far-left.

Levin is blasted as a far-right extremist (and worse), not only by the Left but also by high-profile “conservatives” — I personally know several of them — and “we” are told that the constitutional expert only makes “things” worse, or even that Mark Levin himself is to blame. Both assertions are nonsense.

So how can Conservatives fight the radical-left?

Rather than sit by, argue with strangers on social media, bitch among ourselves, et al., what can we do to stop those who seek to destroy us from within? Certainly, what began with angry parents in Loudoun County in protest of so-called “Critical Race Theory,” and then began spread across America, including protesting mandated vaccines for our kids — and the fundamental issue of whether parents should have a say in what their kids are being taught — was an effective beginning. These and similar protests must continue.

J. Allen Cartright, author at The Federalist, wrote a piece on American Thinker in September titled How Conservatives Can Fight the Rabid Partisanship Plaguing America, in which he argued that while “conservatives “never voted on it’ or “gave society [our] consent,” “somehow every decision [we] make has political ramifications.”

Or fail to make — my words — such as sitting out an election, or simply bitching and moaning.

After listing a litany of the Left’s transgressions, Cartright got to the gist of his headline. Examples:

On an individual level, conservatives should be tolerant: don’t end friendships over politics, and don’t politicize every topic on God’s green Earth within your social circles. […] However, on a societal level, conservatives must exercise collective economic power: companies that promote far-left policies must be boycotted until they change their policy.

Similarly, we should “buycott,” or provide additional economic support, to companies that promote conservative values.

The power of protest is equally important: the political right can learn a thing from liberals, who have successfully pressured corporations to enact politically motivated policies. Just as left-wing activists influenced Major League Baseball to move the All-Star game, right-wing activists must pressure Hollywood to reduce its involvement with China on humanitarian grounds.

Participation in local politics is also powerful, as demonstrated by recent grassroots movements against the teaching of criticalr ace theory. More conservatives are needed in academia, and support networks for conservative faculty may help these efforts.

Because conservatives favor individual liberties over government intervention, we are often reluctant to wield political power. Many in the conservative movement vehemently defend, for example, Big Tech providing a platform for the Taliban while banning Donald Trump as simple free speech and free enterprise.

For our nation to survive, our culture must be a source of unity that transcends political differences. It is therefore imperative that the political right leverage its economic, political, and social power to provide a check on the leftist takeover of our culture.

It all sounds good, right? Yet — and let’s be honest — how well are we conservatives doing the “unity” thing within the Republican Party as a voting bloc? In a word? We’re sucking at it — bigly — nearly a year after the 2020 election. Then again, we sucked at it throughout the entire presidency of Donald Trump. I’ve said this before and I continue to say it because it’s true:

Within the “conservative” world, there exist two primary factions: Never-Trumpers and Always-Trumpers. In the minds of the Never-Trumpers, Donald Trump could never do anything right; he still can’t. Trump could singlehandedly cure cancer, and these people would blast him for putting oncologists out of work.

And the Always-Trumpers?

Trump himself put it best during the 2016 primaries when he joked that he “could shoot someone in the middle of Fifth Avenue” and his supporters would still vote for him. I’ve seen perfectly intelligent Always-Trumpers twist themselves into pretzels defending, justifying, rationalizing, or outright dismissing everything Trump does, says, or (used to) tweets. Same people who are today obsessed with all things  Marjorie Taylor Greene, Lauren Boebert, or Kyrsten Sinema, to name a few examples. Disagree? Look around.

Here’s the thing. Both groups are full of crap. Not even Donald Trump can always be wrong or always be right. Yet the infighting continues at a fever pitch. Will it continue, through 2024, given that Trump is obviously champing at the bit to announce he’s running?

The point?

As Cartright suggested, without unity, the right — as a splintered voting bloc — will struggle in 2024, regardless of the protestations to the contrary by the “second group,” above. The radical, other point? The Left is insidious. They aren’t going to stop. They’re eating our elephant, one bite at a time.

2024 must not be redux of 2000. We do know where that got us in 2020, do we not? That includes the two Georgia runoff elections, as well — after “someone” called those elections “illegal” and “illegitimate.”

Finally, I won’t waste my time admonishing “those among us so inclined” to move beyond the “stolen election” mantra and look out the front window, but I will suggest doing so “might” not be a bad idea at all.

Slings and arrows? All good.