Saturday, April 30, 2022

Questions for Elon Musk

We should wish Elon Musk nothing but the best at Twitter. But we must also remain vigilant—and hold the tech titan accountable to his professed word.


The impending acquisition of Twitter by the world’s wealthiest man, Elon Musk, is one of the most improbable developments out of the business world—and, indeed, the political world—in decades.

Though a fairly modest percentage of adult Americans use Twitter, at least when compared with more popular social media outlets like Facebook and Instagram, the platform is disproportionately influential in shaping the news cycle and driving current events. Much like a major newspaper outlet, then, the composition of Twitter’s ownership matters, even if it matters more for social than for purely financial reasons.

Musk is famously inscrutable—perhaps even enigmatic. But his reasons for acquiring the social media company for a cool $44 billion seem reasonably clear. The Tesla and SpaceX magnate wants to bring free speech and open discourse back to Twitter, which suffered under the heavy-handed reign of its woke co-founder and former CEO, Jack Dorsey. For his efforts, and assuming he can cross the t’s, dot the i’s, and consummate the acquisition, Musk should be applauded by everyone opposed to the American ruling class’ censorious hegemony. That ruling class routinely got its way under Dorsey, as encapsulated by former President Donald Trump’s post-January 6, 2021, Twitter banishment.

Twitter under Musk’s imminent ownership augurs well for the future of open, dissident, ruling class-skeptical discourse in America’s 21st-century digital public square. But many questions remain for Musk. Here are just a handful of them.

Most important—as is the case for any incoming organizational owner, president, or chairman—what kind of personnel changes can we expect right out of the gate? Will Musk fire Dorsey’s hand-picked successor as CEO, Parag Agrawal? (He should.) Will Musk fire all the various software engineers and computer programmers behind Twitter’s many years of censorship, deplatforming decisions, and shadowbans (all of which, predictably, tended to skew in one ideological direction)? Even the human resources decision-makers must go.

Just as important, where will Musk go to recruit his personnel replacements? There is now a flourishing countercultural tech world replete with talented, woke-skeptical entrepreneurs, programmers, and software developers. The neoreactionary right-wing blogger Curtis Yarvin emanates from that world, and Peter Thiel is the single public figure probably most readily identifiable with it. Musk should aggressively tap into that network and meet with Thiel and venture capital firm Founders Fund early and often. He must clean house internally and completely revamp Twitter’s recruitment practices.

Furthermore, what public actions will Musk take to redeem Twitter’s image and restore its credibility among the broad subset of the population that no longer trusts it? A truth and reconciliation commission-style approach is needed here.

Within the confines of what is permissible under extant intellectual property law, Musk should publicly expose Twitter’s old algorithms that were used to ban and shadowban digital speech that ran counter to the ruling class’ preferred narrative. Public shaming is one of humanity’s oldest methods for restorative justice; good ol’ fashioned shaming will be a helpful tool for Musk as he seeks to reassure Americans that he means business.

Next, what specific standard will Musk use to secure open discourse and ensure dissident speech is not suppressed on Twitter? The most obvious standard is a First Amendment one; in other words, if the content of the speech is such that the government could not censor it if it were spoken on a public sidewalk, then it should be permissible on Twitter.

But even if such a standard were adopted, what steps will Musk personally take to ensure it is upheld? What kind of accountability measures will be put in place to forestall a rogue woke algorithm programmer from sneaking in some code that reverts to the pre-Musk censorship regime? If Musk means business, then he should govern as a hands-on owner—perhaps even CEO, if he can find enough time in the day away from his Tesla and SpaceX duties.

What will Musk do to tamp down speculation that he is too cozy with China? Jeff Bezos—who himself has zero credibility on the China question—mused on Twitter this week: “Did the Chinese government just gain a bit of leverage of the town square?” The context was a New York Times reporter who noted Tesla’s reliance on Chinese lithium batteries and its dependence upon China as a consumer market.

And there is more; for instance, Musk spoke last year at China’s World Internet Conference, a confab closely tied to the ruling Communist Party. Musk should take clear actions, once firmly at the Twitter helm, to ease the minds of those Americans who worry that our geopolitical archfoe may be able to get a little too close for comfort to the man who will control our digital town square.

Finally, what role will Musk play in America’s roiling Big Tech policy and legal debates? Will he become an outspoken proponent of the need to reform Section 230, the arcane 1990s-era statutory provision that has been interpreted to give Big Tech platforms effective carte blanche for their discretionary content-moderation decisions? Will he advocate for the use of antitrust to break up Google, Amazon, and Meta (i.e., Facebook)? Will he openly praise Justice Clarence Thomas’ recent suggestion that common carrier regulation may be legally appropriate for certain social networks? Musk now has the perfect platform to become a prominent spokesman on these pressing issues.

We should wish Elon Musk nothing but the best at Twitter. But we must also remain vigilant—and hold the tech titan accountable to his professed word.


X22, And we Know, and more-April 30

 



Evening. Here's tonight's news:


‘60 Minutes’ Enables FBI Dysfunction

CBS News’ Scott Pelley, like so much of the legacy media, helped 
FBI Director Christopher Wray sell lies to the American public.


Scott Pelley of “60 Minutes” didn’t tell his viewers whether FBI Director Christopher Wray imposed conditions before agreeing to be interviewed on camera by CBS. But his slobbering pro-FBI questions, which aired Sunday, had the feel of something Wray’s communication director may have fed the “news” program. The selection of topics seemed geared towards rehabilitating the FBI’s public image as a law enforcement agency. 

Pelley wasn’t educating the public. He was second banana on the production of an infomercial for the FBI. Instead of pressing the FBI director to answer critical questions about the bureau’s many lapses and scandals, Pelley puffed-up the FBI’s made-for-television image that so starkly contrasts with its incompetence, corruption, and politicization. Pelley disgraced himself as a journalist by protecting one of the most powerful men in America from accounting for his agency’s many misdeeds.

It’s What Pelley Didn’t Ask

Under Wray, the FBI has disgraced itself with misconduct and abuse of power. In the days leading up to the interview, victims of serial child molestor and Olympic gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar sued the FBI for $130 million after agents charged with investigating the abuse instead covered it up by fabricating victim statements. Pelly failed to ask Wray a single question about the scandal. 

Pelley also failed to ask Wray about the humiliating acquittal of two men the FBI attempted to entrap into the Governor Gretchen Whitmer plot engineered by the FBI to interfere in the 2020 election. Among the FBI agents involved, one was accused of perjury, another of wife beating (now convicted), and a third of using the investigation to help promote a side-business

Nor did Pelley ask about the FBI child rapist who rampaged across multiple states for years under the noses of his colleagues responsible for protecting such victims, some younger than 13. Nor did Pelley ask about the FBI’s failure to stop the Jeffery Epstein child-rape-for-profit business. 

An FBI lawyer pleaded guilty to falsifying evidence to help spy on a Trump campaign figure. Pelley didn’t ask about that, either. Did Pelley ask about the FBI’s spying and harassment of journalists (herehere, and here)? No, the obvious purpose of the interview was to help Wray make the FBI appear relevant and benevolent.  

The FBI Is Trying to Share the Ukraine Spotlight

Pelley begins his interview complimenting the FBI for “going on a war footing” to help fend off cyber attacks against Ukraine. Wray smiles approvingly at Pelley’s delivery of a question that sounds like it was planted by the FBI. Obviously, Wray’s well-lubricated political weathervane that guides bureau policy has now aligned with the winds blowing from Ukraine. 

But a real journalist would have asked, “What?! What is the FBI doing in Ukraine?”  

Wray boasted of the FBI’s new round-the-clock Ukraine cyber-command post. Shouldn’t the FBI be fighting crime in America? Is the FBI operating as its own independent government with its own foreign policy? Indeed, Wray bragged that within the FBI’s sprawling empire, it has over 50 offices around the world.

Pelley then surprises Wray with a question Wray should have expected: “Has Russia increased cyber attacks on the United States since it invaded Ukraine?” Wray drops his smile and takes a deep breath to stall. When he exhales, he admits he doesn’t know the answer to that question but assumes that Russia is continuing to do what it’s been doing for years.

Pelley goes on to spotlight a “disruption” of Russian malware to boost the image of the FBI as an international cyber crime cop. This splashy announcement came with no arrests, no convictions, and precious little corroborating evidence. 

One is reminded of the Justice Department’s 2018 breathless press conference announcing indictments alleging Russian cyber interference in the 2016 election. Again, had there been a real journalist in the room, he might have asked whether the FBI’s new Russian cyber-disruption story had any more evidence than the FBI’s election interference case against the Russian firm called Concord. Unlike the other Russian defendants who ignored the Justice Department’s political stunt, Concord appeared to contest the charges. After two years of legal wrangling, the Justice Department was forced to admit that it was unwilling to back up the allegations in open court. 

Did Wray offer any corroborating specifics with which the public could verify its new bold claims of disrupting Russian cyber operations against Ukraine? No, of course not.

Ignoring Real Crime to Pursue Narrative-Boosting Headlines

“On any given morning, I’m going to be hearing about a domestic terrorist trying to blow up a hospital in the middle of a pandemic,” Wray said after Pelley cut away from footage of Wray’s morning briefing. Pelley trotted out the old saw, “you have to be right 100 percent of the time,” suggesting that the FBI deserves credit for every crime that fails to materialize. “I believe deeply in the work, the mission of protecting the American people and upholding the Constitution.” Wray’s voice dropped to a bit of a mumble as the word “Constitution” seemed to stick in his throat.  

Pelley then asked Wray how the FBI was doing at protecting the American people. “In 2020, there was a 29 percent jump in murder in the United States. Nearly 5,000 more people killed than the year before. What is behind this leap in homicide?”  

Wray gave a politically palatable answer blaming COVID and “interstate gun trafficking.” Could he say the FBI was making any headway against violent crime? Unable to answer “yes,” Wray dodged the question with a bunch of bureaucratic gibberish about “task forces” and “law enforcement partners.” Then Pelley asked about a 29 percent increase in police murders, many of which were ambush-style assassinations. Tellingly, Pelley suggested the real problem might be police brutality: “Mr. Director, some people are in their homes living in fear of the police coming through the door with a no-knock warrant and I wonder how the FBI can contribute to the reduction in police brutality which also occurs in our country.” It was an oblique reference to the highly distorted narrative following the officer-involved shooting of Breonna Taylor. 

The “police brutality” hype and the surge in crime aren’t nonsequiturs. The “Ferguson Effect,” the rise in crime following a police pullback in the wake of anti-police hysteria, is well-documented by social scientists. Wray emphasized the FBI’s priority to prosecute cops swept up in the hysteria. In other words, the FBI is helping to magnify the Ferguson effect by further chilling legitimate police intervention.

Wray Wants It Both Ways on January 6

Many mysteries surround the FBI’s role in the events of January 6, 2021. We’ve learned from the New York Times that at least two FBI informants entered the Capitol, one of whom participated in the “sacking” of the Capitol. Since then, the story has remained in the news through the highly partisan January 6 committee made up of all Democrats and two of their RINO schills. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) blocked any GOP member who might question her insurrection narrative. 

So why didn’t the FBI stop the incursion if it knew about it in advance? Pelley’s voiceover conceded, “The bureau has been criticized for failing to develop intelligence that might have predicted the assault.” Wray implied January 6 was an act of domestic terror. He claimed the FBI “shared information through a variety of intelligence products for a solid year leading up to January 6 that raised the potential for violent extremism,” but that he did not know “thousands of people were going to physically storm the U.S. capitol.”  

That’s a strange claim to make in light of the fact that the FBI had informants positioned among the people who entered the Capitol and that the FBI will not arrest Ray Epps, a man caught on video organizing and encouraging that incursion. The Justice Department is still preparing a “disclosure” about Epps. Apparently, Epps’ relationship with the government is sufficiently complicated to require weeks to explain.

So did the FBI know in advance of the Captiol incursion or not? That’s not important for Wray. The important thing is that the FBI is using January 6 as a pretext to launch nationwide investigations to entrap. . . excuse me, “prevent” January 6 from happening again.

Politics Prevents the FBI from Countering China

Wray identified the Chinese government as the biggest source of malicious cyber activity directed against the United States. Pelley failed to ask about the FBI’s recent humiliating defeat in its attempt to frame an innocent Chinese-American university scientist as a Chinese spy. Nor did Pelley ask why the FBI had not made arrests after a Chinese firm apparently bribed Hunter Biden with cash and a three-carat diamond. Nor did Pelley ask Wray to comment on the claim that the FBI supported the obvious lie that Hunter’s laptop, which contained evidence of China’s hold over Joe Biden’s son, was a product of Russian disinformation.  

And where was the FBI when a Chinese spy seduced and influenced multiple American politicians, including U.S. Representative Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.)? The compromised congressman remains on sensitive House committees, including intelligence, homeland security, judiciary, and the “modernization and readiness subcommittee,” which includes the intelligence-related activities of 17 elements of U.S. government and military intelligence programs.

Wray closed the interview with a lie, promising, “We do the work in the right way, that our process has integrity, has rigor, has objectivity . . . and that we will follow the facts wherever they lead, to whomever they lead.” He might have added, “Except when those investigations lead to my patrons in the Democratic Party.” Pelley, like so much of the legacy media, helped Wray sell lies to the American public.



It’s Not In Your Head:

It’s Not In Your Head: 

The Left Really Has Become This Miserable



Dear Abby: I’m a liberal Democrat and my entire political party is full of insufferable nags. What do I do?!

That was the entire point of New York Times columnist Michelle Goldberg’s article this week wherein she fretted that normal Americans are perhaps drifting to the political right because the left has become so indefensibly annoying.

“For those who get most of their politics online, this can be what the left looks like — a humorless person shaking her head at others’ insensitivity,” she wrote. “As a result, an alliance with the country’s most repressive forces can appear, to some, as liberating.”

Without saying it outright, Goldberg was getting at the left’s defining qualities today. Its allies have become so miserable, so toxic, so angry and weird that it’s repulsing voters. They call people “racist” for any reason at all. They push for the sexualization of children in public schools. And they shut down all discourse that threatens their delicate ideology.

Look what’s happening with the Elon Musk-Twitter drama. A billionaire wanted to buy a publishing company — not something unheard of — and it was an unnecessarily drawn out, messy fight for him to do it because the left wing and Democrats believe they alone dictate what counts as fair discourse.

Goldberg declared the left “stagnant,” but what she really means is that it’s miserable. It’s stuck in a rut because its activists are singularly motivated by negative emotions now. What do they talk about these days? Persecuting Trump supporters who were in Washington on Jan. 6, Covid as a means of controlling the populace, and “equity” for anyone who claims to be oppressed (i.e. the Democrat voter base).

“When the left becomes grimly censorious, it incubates its own opposition,” wrote Goldberg. “The internet makes things worse, giving the whole world a taste of the type of irritating progressive sanctimony…”

She says this like it’s a problem created by the right, or even unassuming independents who must not be able to distinguish between the “online” left from the real left. It’s not. It’s people like Goldberg who wanted to teach children about transgenderism and how it sucks to be white. That people were repulsed by their weird fixations isn’t their own fault. It’s the fault of the left for being so creepy, unhappy, and maladjusted.

Look at Florida. The hottest controversy there now is whether kindergarten teachers should be able to explain to students what it means to be “gender queer.” Leftists are adamant that they get to talk about sexual identity with kids. It’s dumb. Even a majority of Democrats in that state know it’s dumb.

Look at the reaction to the district judge in Florida who struck down the airline mask mandate. Leftists are furious that they can’t tell people to cover up their noses and mouths anymore (at least for now).

Look at the election of GOP Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin. His central campaign theme was that public school kids shouldn’t be instilled with the idea that being white is an irredeemable sin. The left nearly needed an exorcism.

Look at your own encounters with these people. The funny thing about left-wingers is that they feel absolutely no reservation about showing up to a social function and popping off with their political opinions on race, sex, and equity. 

Any normal person thinks to himself, “I’d rather not.” Leftists don’t. They see it as their duty to ensure that everyone knows how they feel (miserable).

You don’t like it? Tough.

Goldberg knows her movement is an emotional and mental mess. She just can’t bear to break the news.

They’re always angry. They’re always upset. They’ve lost their grip. Goldberg could have just said that, but instead, she whined about conservatives and independent Americans who aren’t into the gross and distasteful things that the movement she belongs to has produced.

“In the short term, however, it’s frightening to think that backlash politics could become somehow fashionable, especially given how stagnant the left appears,” she continued.

The left doesn’t “appear” anything. It’s undeniably vulgar, and fewer people want to be part of it. Maybe Goldberg should just admit it and stop making excuses for how awful the left-wing Democrat movement is.


Eddie Scarry is the D.C. columnist at The Federalist and author of "Privileged Victims: How America's Culture Fascists Hijacked the Country and Elevated Its Worst People."

The Left Is United By Who They Despise, Not What They Support

The theories of a French philosopher might hold the key to understanding the left’s organizational success – and the means to defeat the regime.



While the right continues to undergo a process of factional introspection, it can be easy to forget that our opponents in the culture war aren’t a monolith either. And while it seems that the Cathedral pushes our society to the left via a unified front, the progressive coalition’s unity is not just unsustainable, it’s artificial.

The left’s ability to patch together a truly bizarre coalition is, however, undeniably impressive. It’d appear they’ve learned how to apply the Saul Alinsky-esque tactics of community organizing across, rather than just within, communities. How else can one explain the puzzling composition of the coalition? Consider just how divergent the interests and identities of so many of the Democratic Party’s supporters truly are. 

What, for example, do the drug-addled Antifa of Seattle, the residents of CHOP, have in common with old money East coast liberals with summer homes in Nantucket? What do the technocratic middle managers in the hills of Palo Alto share with illegal immigrants on the other side of Silicon Valley? What does your average attendee of the Women’s March share with an H1B recipient from China or India, and what do either have in common with a hardcore Black Lives Matter activist? Perhaps more glaring than the rest, what is it exactly that a transgender activist in San Francisco and a traditional Muslim can bond over? 

Is the progressive mythos of “global citizenry” really that binding? The reality that this coalition is maintained while leftwing messaging amplifies, not downplays, the role of identity makes it all the more intriguing. Unifying this bloc is no small feat.  

Progressivism’s Enemies Provide Scapegoats

In trying to discern how the left has effectively bound together a coalition of disparate interests, it is vastly more useful to examine what they oppose rather than the policies they support. It’s much easier too. 

One would think that natural political discord would occur between those who want to “eat the rich” and the rich themselves, or between those who abide by a patriarchal sexual ethic and a movement that endured a collective aneurysm when Florida told them teachers couldn’t talk about sexuality with elementary schoolers. The natural splintering of this leftwing coalition is delayed through what the French philosopher Renee Girard referred to as the scapegoat mechanism.

Through the scapegoat mechanism, internal social conflict between groups or individuals can be deferred by identifying a villain, the scapegoat. The scapegoat is held responsible by the conflicting parties, who mutually, although not always consciously, cast the blame on those who simultaneously fulfill the role of the victim and the villain.

This scapegoat then cannot be regarded as a guiltless Christ figure who dies with the sins of its sacrificers, but is identified as the very source of the sin — the inciter of conflict. Accordingly, overcoming this scapegoat is naturally regarded as a necessary prerequisite to the avoidance of conflict. 

The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy explains: “the victim must be thought of as a monstrous creature that transgressed some prohibition and deserved to be punished. In such a manner, the community deceives itself into believing that the victim is the culprit of the communal crisis, and that the elimination of the victim will eventually restore peace.”

Identifying our woke regime’s scapegoats isn’t difficult. Simply observe the cultural messaging from any of the institutions that are owned and operated by progressives. The regime media and their allies throughout much of the government, academia, and the non-profit complex offer frequent reminders of who you are supposed to disdain.

Masculine men are turned into scapegoats when they are dubbed toxic, sexist enforcers of patriarchy. Christians similarly face accusations of oppressing women and those who are LGBT. White people are also approved targets, thought to be inherently racist and privileged, simultaneously the beneficiaries and the managers of an intangible but ever-present system of oppression. Even stable nuclear families are to be viewed with skepticism, either for perpetuating gender roles or straining the environment by daring to have kids.

The terms for the regime’s scapegoats are many. Hostility for the “deplorables,” the sexists and the racists, the rednecks and the retrogrades, the bigots, the “karens” and all different stripes of -phobes, is what holds together such a fragile coalition. Party operatives blame their internal conflicts on those who are regarded as the oppressors and pit Americans against one another. The terms differ but serve the same purpose: to designate a scapegoat as a regime-approved target.

Those who fall into one of the several oppressor identity categories but align with the left are offered the opportunity to prove themselves – but never absolve themselves – as dutiful allies through ritualistic self-degradation. If they’re servile enough, they might even get promoted to the rank of “co-conspirator,” delaying their inevitable designation as scapegoats until their expediency runs dry. 

The grand irony is of course that none of these collectives wield significant power and are instead openly maligned by the ruling class. Nevertheless, we are constantly told that America and her institutions are engaging in organized oppression on a mass scale.

In the left’s worldview, our institutions enforce the patriarchy and the gender binary, all while they are governed by white supremacy. It’s a self defeating argument when one realizes that it is these very power structures that pay diversity consultants their exorbitant fees, fund pride parades, push transgenderism, and adopt discriminatory affirmative action policies. It is, of course, vital to note that the right’s gripe should be with these hostile institutions, not the everyday Americans who are influenced by them, to the detriment of all.

Bloc-Busting

The simplest way to expose the incongruity of the leftwing coalition is to merely ask questions that highlight the absurdity of the progressive bloc. Raise ethical inquiries about abortion or transgenderism among Democrat-aligned Muslims, or ask Austin tech workers why they support H1B visa programs that threaten their job security. Ask progressive white women if they truly believe that they and their “white tears” will be able to maintain their rapidly deteriorating status among the oppressed and the immunity that comes with it.

Question radical feminists who rage against toxic masculinity, asking why they support mass immigration from highly patriarchal Islamic countries. Or ask a Seattle communist what the appropriate tax rate is for the millionaire who funded the neoliberal candidate he ended up voting for.

This must be done without trafficking in the same dangerous divisiveness that the left used in their ascent to power, without engaging in scapegoating ourselves. The goal is not to weaponize the coalition’s parts against itself because the coalition isn’t the problem — it is the institutions that sought to bind their base together by haphazardly casting blame on entire collectives. 

Done correctly, this approach will offer much needed nuance and obstruct the woke regime’s attempt at fostering conflict. It will also expose how Democrat apparatchiks and their co-conspirators across sectors have taken advantage of their constituency while they constructed it, weaponizing identities in cynical power games.

It’s a necessary step in ensuring that whatever unity our country attains is based on healthy, sustainable foundations — not institutionally manufactured disdain for the regime’s scapegoats.



Heading for an election wipeout, Joe Biden is doubling down on every failed policy

Heading for an election wipeout, Joe Biden is doubling down on every failed policy

President Joe Biden
The White House insists President Joe Biden amplify his pathetic policies to boost Democrat votes in the midterm elections. AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

As Joe Biden’s Hindenburg of a presidency continues its fiery descent into historically low popularity, the whiz kids at the White House think they have a solution. Their answer, amazingly, seems to be to double down on their cavalcade of failed policies and get Mumbly Joe out in front of the American people more. 

That’s right, the man who rode to the presidency hiding in his basementis supposed to electrify voters and save the Democrats in the midterm.

But the headwinds faced by the party of Jefferson and Jackson are not stylistic. This isn’t a messaging problem, its a policy problem. It’s several policy problems.

Take education. At a time when Republicans are having electoral success taking aim at critical race theory and gender ideology in our schools, the White House’s answer is to say that none of it is even happening, a demonstrable lie to almost everyone with a kid in a public school. All of this while Biden is telling teachers they, not parents, should decide what kids learn: “They are not somebody else’s children. They’re like yours when they’re in the classroom.” Just utterly erasing the influence of outraged suburban moms who are flocking to the GOP. Let’s just pretend Republican Glenn Youngkin was elected governor of Virginia for this exact reason.

On the economy, inflation is so high that a trip to the grocery store almost requires taking out a second mortgage. Biden’s answer: To that is to spend and print more money, which is obviously how we got here in the first place. Meanwhile the Gross Domestic Product is in the red by 1.4% all while the president pretends he’s doing a fantastic job with his American comeback. In addressing this stark decline in the economy the president blamed “technical factors.” Technical factors? This is meaningless gibberish at a time when Americans are financially suffering.

Another move the Democrats are pondering, which seems designed specifically to piss off every American without a college education, is the forgiveness of student loan debt. Every plumber who decided not to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars for a degree in Gender Studies would pony up to pay the tab for those who did. 

Down on the border, to the extent we even have a border, the administration wants to abandon Title 42, the last vestige of Donald Trump’s effective policies, and throw open the gates to illegal migrants, gang members, terrorists, and deadly drugs. Despite poll after poll showing people want a stronger border, Biden’s “plan” is to make it easier to transfer illegal immigrants around the country.

The list of bad issues for Biden is a CVS receipt of crime, rising gas pricesand hapless foreign policy — and that doesn’t even include his constant gaffes and the White House having to walk back every other thing that comes out of the president’s mouth.

Migrants stranded in Tapachula participate in a caravan to the United States after becoming impatient waiting for a humanitarian visa to cross the country, in Tapachula, Mexico April 26, 2022.
The Biden administration reversed Trump’s successful border policies — unleashing millions of migrants into the country.
REUTERS/Jose Torres

It honestly seems as though the Democrats want to lose. How else is there to explain their absolute refusal to pivot on anything? They are like a blackjack player raising the bet when they already busted. There have been no firings or resignations, not a single significant policy shift on anything, the polls are in the tank and the Democrats want to send Joe Biden all across the country to say, actually, I’m doing great!

Maybe they have already thrown in the midterm towel in anticipation of a mighty red wave. Maybe they have admitted to themselves that Biden’s reelection prospects are dimmer than dusk. Maybe they really think the best thing they can do is fill up their remaining months in power with their woebegotten wish list of progressive priorities and the wishes of the American people be damned. If the White House made adjustments to any of the parade of policy nightmares listed above they might catch a spark, they might create some energy and support. 

But they won’t, and so the slow motion car wreck continues apace. The only polling and electoral question left is how low can they go? At this rate, they are far, far from the bottom. 


Biden Breaks the Economy, as Dow Plunges Almost 1000 Points in One Day


Bob Hoge reporting for RedState 

The Dow Jones Industrial Average plummeted almost 1,000 points Friday, with the Nasdaq Composite and the S&P 500 suffering brutal losses, too. Amazon and its founder, Jeff Bezos, were among the big losers, with the e-commerce company’s shares dropping 14 percent and Bezos losing $13 billion. It’s unlikely he’ll be selling any of his yachts, though, as it still leaves him with an estimated $148.8 billion.

According to Bloomberg, the world’s 500 richest people lost a total of more than $54 billion. Whoa!

Regarding Amazon’s struggles, they write that the company is:

…contending with higher labor costs following a hiring binge during the pandemic and a surge in inflation that may hold back sales.  The company posted a net loss of $3.8 billion in the quarter ended March 31, compared with profit of $8.1 billion in the same period last year.

Earlier this month, we brought you the story of how Amazon is imposing an onerous five percent “inflation fee” on its third-party sellers, making it likely that at least some won’t survive.

The Nasdaq and S&P were down 4.2 and 3.6 percent respectively, with both finishing at new lows for this year.

Biden’s economy was already having a bad week. Notes The Hill:

U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) fell at a yearly pace of 1.4 percent during the first quarter, the Bureau of Economic Analysis said Thursday, marking the first economic contraction since 2020. A spike in imports and a decline in exports subtracted enough from GDP to push growth in reverse.

Naturally, the White House was quick to lecture (gaslight) us into believing the GDP numbers weren’t that bad, and even if they were, it was somebody else’s fault. Here, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki takes the podium Thursday to give us a lecture on what the GDP is, before issuing a word salad saying in effect, “don’t believe the numbers—everything is awesome!”

Investors clearly aren’t buying what she was selling though, as seen by Friday’s Massacre at the Markets.

The all-around bad economic numbers have brought recession fears among weary consumers and some economists.

When this administration came to power, they vowed that they would be the “adults in the room” and would always be held accountable when things went wrong. In reality, we’ve repeatedly seen Biden and Psaki accept blame for nothing and constantly blame other people or outside forces—it’s Putin, it’s the damage Trump left us, it’s the weather, it’s the supply chain, yadda yadda yadda.

These are Biden’s (horrific) economic numbers now, and he needs to own them. He’s been in office well over a year, and they are the results of his policies, from shutting down pipelines to handing out money like candy. This is the Biden economy–and let’s just say, it’s not good.



‘I Can’t Believe You’ve Been Nominated’: Sen Hawley Grills Biden Judicial Nominee Over Her Work For Southern Poverty Law Center


"I can’t believe that the president of the United States would nominate someone from this organization with this record"

LOL! Consider the source, Senator


Article by Laurel Duggan in The Daily Caller


‘I Can’t Believe You’ve Been Nominated’: Sen Hawley Grills Biden Judicial Nominee Over Her Work For Southern Poverty Law Center

Republican Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley grilled Biden’s judicial nominee for the Eleventh Circuit for her involvement with the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) during her nomination hearing Wednesday.

“I have to tell you, I find your answers absolutely extraordinary,” Hawley said to Nancy Abudu at the hearing. “Absolutely extraordinary. I can’t believe you’ve been nominated for this position. I can’t believe that the president of the United States would nominate someone from this organization with this record, and I can’t believe that you would sit here today and refuse to condemn this hateful, frankly, violent rhetoric.”

Abudu, the strategic litigation director at SPLC, said she joined the organization in February 2019.

“2019 was the year the SPLC paid $3.4 million in response to defamation lawsuits. 2019 was the year Charity Watch gave your organization an ‘F’ rating. The SPLC has been labelled by the left-wing policy journal Current Affairs as an outright fraud that uses willful deception designed to scare liberals into writing checks,” Hawley said.

The SPLC publishes an annual “Hate Map” which features several conservative and Christian organizations, including the Family Research Council, which was targeted in an attempted mass shooting in 2012, Fox News reported. The shooter, Floyd Corkins, saw the FRC on the map, which is labeled as anti-LGBTQ, in the lead-up to the shooting, CNN reported

“The progressive journalist Alexander Cockburn said this about SPLC: ‘I regard it, the southern poverty law center, collectively as one of the greatest frauds in American life,'” Hawley said. “Liberal death penalty abolitionist Stephen Bright refused to accept an award named after the founder of the SPLC, saying in his words ‘the SPLC has long been run by a conman and a fraud.’ Also in 2019, SPLC employees told the press, ‘We were part of a con and we knew it.’”

Hawley grilled Abudu about the organization’s record and asked if she was concerned by the criticism SPLC had received, prompting her multiple times to answer the question directly.

“Senator, again, my work with the Southern Poverty Law Center has been to uphold the constitutional rights of individuals who without pro bono counsel would not be even able to have access to justice,” Abudu responded.

 The SPLC did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.

https://dailycaller.com/2022/04/27/josh-hawley-nancy-abudu-southern-poverty-law-center-splc-judiciary-confirmation/ 


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TheLeft Is United By Who They Despise, Not What They Support

The Left Is United By Who They Despise, Not What They Support



While the right continues to undergo a process of factional introspection, it can be easy to forget that our opponents in the culture war aren’t a monolith either. And while it seems that the Cathedral pushes our society to the left via a unified front, the progressive coalition’s unity is not just sustainable, it’s artificial.

The left’s ability to patch together a truly bizarre coalition is, however, undeniably impressive. It’d appear they’ve learned how to apply the Saul Alinsky-esque tactics of community organizing across, rather than just within, communities. How else can one explain the puzzling composition of the coalition? Consider just how divergent the interests and identities of so many of the Democratic Party’s supporters truly are. 

What, for example, do the drug-addled Antifa of Seattle, the residents of CHOP, have in common with old money East coast liberals with summer homes in Nantucket? What do the technocratic middle managers in the hills of Palo Alto share with illegal immigrants on the other side of Silicon Valley? What does your average attendee of the Women’s March share with an H1B recipient from China or India, and what do either have in common with a hardcore Black Lives Matter activist? Perhaps more glaring than the rest, what is it exactly that a transgender activist in San Francisco and a traditional Muslim can bond over? 

Is the progressive mythos of “global citizenry” really that binding? The reality that this coalition is maintained while leftwing messaging amplifies, not downplays, the role of identity makes it all the more intriguing. Unifying this bloc is no small feat.  

Progressivism’s Enemies Provide Scapegoats

In trying to discern how the left has effectively bound together a coalition of disparate interests, it is vastly more useful to examine what they oppose rather than the policies they support. It’s much easier too. 

One would think that natural political discord would occur between those who want to “eat the rich” and the rich themselves, or between those who abide by a patriarchal sexual ethic and a movement that endured a collective aneurysm when Florida told them teachers couldn’t talk about sexuality with elementary schoolers. The natural splintering of this leftwing coalition is delayed through what the French philosopher Renee Girard referred to as the scapegoat mechanism.

Through the scapegoat mechanism, internal social conflict between groups or individuals can be deferred by identifying a villain, the scapegoat. The scapegoat is held responsible by the conflicting parties, who mutually, although not always consciously, cast the blame on those who simultaneously fulfill the role of the victim and the villain. 

This scapegoat then cannot be regarded as a guiltless Christ figure who dies with the sins of its sacrificers, but is identified as the very source of the sin — the inciter of conflict. Accordingly, overcoming this scapegoat is naturally regarded as a necessary prerequisite to the avoidance of conflict. 

The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy explains: “the victim must be thought of as a monstrous creature that transgressed some prohibition and deserved to be punished. In such a manner, the community deceives itself into believing that the victim is the culprit of the communal crisis, and that the elimination of the victim will eventually restore peace.”

Identifying our woke regime’s scapegoats isn’t difficult. Simply observe the cultural messaging from any of the institutions that are owned and operated by progressives. The regime media and their allies throughout much of the government, academia, and the non-profit complex offer frequent reminders of who you are supposed to disdain. 

Masculine men are turned into scapegoats when they are dubbed toxic, sexist enforcers of patriarchy. Christians similarly face accusations of oppressing women and those who are LGBT. White people are also approved targets, thought to be inherently racist and privileged, simultaneously the beneficiaries and the managers of an intangible but ever-present system of oppression. Even stable nuclear families are to be viewed with skepticism, either for perpetuating gender roles or straining the environment by daring to have kids.

The terms for the regime’s scapegoats are many. Hostility for the “deplorables,” the sexists and the racists, the rednecks and the retrogrades, the bigots, the “karens” and all different stripes of -phobes, is what holds together such a fragile coalition. Party operatives blame their internal conflicts on those who are regarded as the oppressors and pit Americans against one another. The terms differ but serve the same purpose: to designate a scapegoat as a regime-approved target. 

Those who fall into one of the several oppressor identity categories but align with the left are offered the opportunity to prove themselves – but never absolve themselves – as dutiful allies through ritualistic self-degradation. If they’re servile enough, they might even get promoted to the rank of “co-conspirator,” delaying their inevitable designation as scapegoats until their expediency runs dry. 

The grand irony is of course that none of these collectives wield significant power and are instead openly maligned by the ruling class. Nevertheless, we are constantly told that America and her institutions are engaging in organized oppression on a mass scale.

In the left’s worldview, our institutions enforce the patriarchy and the gender binary, all while they are governed by white supremacy. It’s a self defeating argument when one realizes that it is these very power structures that pay diversity consultants their exorbitant fees, fund pride parades, push transgenderism, and adopt discriminatory affirmative action policies. It is, of course, vital to note that the right’s gripe should be with these hostile institutions, not the everyday Americans who are influenced by them, to the detriment of all.

Bloc-Busting

The simplest way to expose the incongruity of the leftwing coalition is to merely ask questions that highlight the absurdity of the progressive bloc. Raise ethical inquiries about abortion or transgenderism among Democrat-aligned Muslims, or ask Austin tech workers why they support H1B visa programs that threaten their job security. Ask progressive white women if they truly believe that they and their “white tears” will be able to maintain their rapidly deteriorating status among the oppressed and the immunity that comes with it. 

Question radical feminists who rage against toxic masculinity, asking why they support mass immigration from highly patriarchal Islamic countries. Or ask a Seattle communist what the appropriate tax rate is for the millionaire who funded the neoliberal candidate he ended up voting for.

This must be done without trafficking in the same dangerous divisiveness that the left used in their ascent to power, without engaging in scapegoating ourselves. The goal is not to weaponize the coalition’s parts against itself because the coalition isn’t the problem — it is the institutions that sought to bind their base together by haphazardly casting blame on entire collectives. 

Done correctly, this approach will offer much needed nuance and obstruct the woke regime’s attempt at fostering conflict. It will also expose how Democrat apparatchiks and their co-conspirators across sectors have taken advantage of their constituency while they constructed it, weaponizing identities in cynical power games.

It’s a necessary step in ensuring that whatever unity our country attains is based on healthy, sustainable foundations — not institutionally manufactured disdain for the regime’s scapegoats.