Saturday, July 9, 2022

Highlights from the Alaska rally

 



Source: https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2022/07/short-video-clips-president-trumps-record-gathering-alaska/

Trump was on fire tonight in Alaska.  He was at his best.  

Below are some segments from tonight’s Trump rally in Alaska. 

The crowd set a new record in the history of Alaska.


The arena owner said this was a record gathering that won’t be beaten.

The five worst Presidents in history combined didn’t do the damage Biden has done in less than 2 years.

President Trump dropped an F-bomb when describing military officer sharing how to take out ISIS.  A few days later Trump gave the order.  A few weeks later 100% of ISIS was gone.  (Obama said ISIS would be around for a generation.)

President Trump also called out rank choice voting which is garbage.

My God the crowd was massive.  No way Biden won.

Trump in 2024? Bet on It!

Another 2 years of the current disaster, people will be begging for someone to get things back to normal, and that someone will be Donald Trump.


We’re going to get a massive red wave this fall. The 2021 results in Virginia, out of control inflation, Joe Biden’s dismal approval ratings in recent polls (for perspective, Obama’s approval rating was 44.7 percent in October 2010, just before the midterm mauling Democrats got that year), soaring gas prices, and a porous southern border indicate that even places Biden won by 20 points in 2020 are in play this fall. 

Perhaps that sounds crazy at first, but it shouldn’t. Democrats are already spending millions to defend incumbent senators in states like Washington and Colorado—states Biden won by 19 and 14 points, respectively. Why? Because they’re seeing the same dynamics I am. I’ll be very surprised if on the low end Republicans don’t pick up 40 seats in the House and three or four Senate seats. On the high end? Depends on how badly Grandpa Dementia’s administration implodes over the next four months or so. Looking at the current trajectory, we haven’t seen the bottom yet. 

We’re still months away from the November midterms—which will be devastating for Democrats at the state and local levels, too—and we’re already seeing people looking ahead to the presidential election in 2024 and more specifically who is going to run and represent the Republican party.

We should start with the fact that Donald Trump is going to run again. He’s 114-10 in his endorsements so far in 2022, in great health, raising significant amounts of money and will no doubt announce by January 2023, if not before (I suspect in November, post-midterms). Other names are being tossed about: Mike Pence, Kristi Noem, Nikki Haley, random names from the phone book . . .  essentially an assortment of political pygmies. None of them stand a snowball’s chance in hell against Trump. 

And then there is Governor Ron DeSantis, who has rocketed to national prominence for making Florida one of the best states in the entire country. He is easily the best Republican governor in America and it’s not even close. So now people think that Ron DeSantis is going to challenge Donald Trump for the Republican nomination in 2024. 

I’m here to tell you I don’t think so and for a variety of reasons. 

First, the dynamics are off for DeSantis in 2024. How do you raise over $140 million for your reelection campaign, win, and then turn around a mere six months later and become an absent governor after people have invested a significant amount of money into seeing you govern for a complete second term? That’s what he would need to do to run in 2024.

Reports are trickling out that DeSantis is working on building out his national infrastructure, but he doesn’t have enough to make a go at the presidency yet. 

People think he’s going to go up against the most popular Republican president we’ve seen in generations. A former president—who will have already declared his intention to run for president when DeSantis wins his gubernatorial reelection campaign and who consequently will be sitting on far more cash than DeSantis could hope to raise from his donors? That seems unlikely.

Look at the polls. The most recent Harvard/Harris poll had Trump up 56 percent to 16 percent over DeSantis, up from 41 percent to 12 percent a month earlier. Other polls have Trump up by significant margins as well. So, it’s not really a race. So why would a very successful, 43-year-old governor go out of his way to challenge Trump? Especially when he’ll only be 49 in 2028 and the clear favorite in that nomination fight. 

When you come at the king, you best not miss. There are a lot of indicators DeSantis would miss. 

Trump can win the general election in 2024, against Biden or whoever the Democrats decide to put up there. After another two years of the current disaster, who knows where inflation, energy, and the markets will be? Any vestiges of supposed enforcement on the southern border might have already collapsed. I suspect people will be begging for someone to get things back to normal, and that someone will be Donald Trump.

People have hesitations about Trump running again. “He’ll be divisive! It’ll be another four years of drama!” I’m sorry, but have you seen the current occupant of the White House? The Biden Administration truly loathes this country and its way of life. So I hate to break it to anyone who might not be paying attention: we’re already divided as a country. I’ll take someone in the White House who actually loves this country and who will make the American people his priority. Trump’s personnel will be different on Day 1; no more personnel disasters but the right picks from the very first day of the administration. Even better, after the experiences of his first term, the second Trump term will be a war against the unconstitutional administrative state.

You can be nervous about Trump in 2024; you can be frustrated and have concerns. As for me, I’m all in.



On the Fringe, Devolution Power Hour and more- July 9

 



Enjoy tonight's Alaska rally! Here's my Nostalgia break thread from earlier today in case you missed it:

https://wwwp-lives.blogspot.com/2022/07/nostalgia-break-2-more-gifs-of-linda-in.html

Here's tonight's news as well:


The Best Supreme Court Ruling in Almost 200 Years

Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization has done more to preserve the separation of powers, the rule of law, federalism, and the Constitution itself, than any decision in centuries.


Most of the focus on Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization has been on the policy ramifications of overturning Roe v. Wade, which are substantial to say the least. But Supreme Court justices are not supposed to focus on policy results (although, unfortunately, they often do). They are supposed to apply the Constitution and laws—as written by others—without funneling their own personal policy preferences into that document or into those legislative acts. 

When judges fulfill their proper role—applying the Constitution and laws as written, according to their plain and originally understood meanings—they play a crucial role in ensuring the perpetuation of republican government—of government of, by, and for the people. When they instead act like unelected, unchecked legislators—while disingenuously claiming that the Constitution makes them do it—they effectively replace republicanism with government by a robed minority of Ivy League elites. 

In terms of hijacking a major policy issue and resolving it from the bench in a way that the Constitution did not remotely require or justify, the two worst Supreme Court rulings in United States history have been Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857) and Roe v. Wade (1973). Obergefell v. Hodges [2015], in which the Court redefined marriage and imposed its new definition nationwide, may deserve the bronze medal for judicial adventurism. 

Dred Scott was never really overturned by the judiciary, as it was effectively overturned by the post-Civil War constitutional amendments. Dobbs, therefore, marks the first time that one of these all-time-worst rulings has ever been overturned by the Court. For this distinction, Dobbs merits being regarded as the finest Supreme Court ruling since the early days of the republic.

Legally, Dred Scott and Roe were remarkably similar cases (as is Obergefell). In Dred Scott, the Court proclaimed that Congress had no authority to ban slavery in the territories. In Roe, it proclaimed that state legislatures had no authority to ban pre-viability abortions in the states. Congress had been banning slavery in the territories from the Washington Administration onward, yet the Court imposed its will, sided with slavery, and invited the Civil War. Every state legislature had banned abortion at one time or another—as the majority in Dobbs notes—yet the Court imposed its will, sided with abortion, and overruled the people’s representatives. 

Both rulings (or at least Roe as reaffirmed 30 years ago in Planned Parenthood v. Casey ) rested on language designed to ensure that courts henceforth would follow appropriate legal processes. The Fifth Amendment precludes double-jeopardy, bars requiring self-incrimination, and guarantees the federal government shall not deprive anyone “of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” Identical language in the 14th Amendment applies the due process provision to the states.

In both Dred Scott and Roe, the Court effectively changed “without due process of law” to “unless we say so”—thereby transforming a procedural guarantee into a substantive guarantee and letting the Court determine the substance. This brazenness gave birth to the rather oxymoronic term “substantive due process” and empowered the Court to proclaim what substance, rather than what process, was due.

In the instance of Dred Scott, many people regarded the liberty of slaves as trumping the property claims of those who wished to keep them enslaved. With Roe, many people regarded the lives of the unborn as trumping the liberty claims of those who wished to end their lives. In both cases, many others thought the opposite. In neither case did the Constitution decide the matter or invite the Court to claim that the Constitution did so.

Justice Benjamin Curtis, expressing views shared by Abraham Lincoln, wrote in his exemplary Dred Scott dissent that the (pre-1865) Constitution granted Congress the power “to allow or prohibit slavery in the territory belonging to the United States.” In other words, the matter was left up to Congress to decide. 

Justice Samuel Alito, rejecting misguided claims that a historically bad ruling that had constantly engendered controversy was somehow too settled or sacred to revisit, wrote in his outstanding Dobbs opinion: “The Constitution makes no reference to abortion, and no such right is implicitly protected by any constitutional provision.” In other words, the matter was left up to state legislatures to decide.

Having just celebrated Independence Day, Americans should be thankful for the historic Dobbs ruling. It has done more to preserve the separation of powers, the rule of law, federalism, republican government, and the Constitution itself, than any ruling since John Marshall and Joseph Story graced the Court.



Hey EU, Mind Your Own Business



In a 324-155 vote this week, the European Union Parliament passed a resolution condemning the Supreme Court of the United States for overturning Roe v. Wade. This is now the second time the EU Parliament has denounced the United States over the legal decision, claiming it undermines “human rights.”

Abortion isn’t even tangentially mentioned in the Constitution. But guess what? The European Union’s constitution, with its 448 articles and more than 70,000 words micromanaging the continent’s affairs, doesn’t mention “abortion” anywhere, either. Abortion isn’t a constitutional “right” in the EU. It isn’t a constitutional “right” in any EU member state. There is no pan-European law dictating the issue of abortion. If terminating an unwanted child is a fundamental human right, as so many Europeans now claim, why did they forget to mention it in a constitution that was only ratified in 2004?

It should also be noted that, for the foreseeable future, most U.S. states will have abortion laws that are laxer than those in most of Europe. The Czech Republic, Denmark, Austria, Belgium, Italy, Germany, France, and Spain all have tighter restrictions on abortion than Sith Lord Ron DeSantis’s Florida. In Ukraine, a nation cleared for EU membership, and the bulwark of all world freedom, women must request abortions in the first 12 weeks of pregnancy, unless the mother’s health is in danger — just like in Russia. Even nations like the Netherlands and Sweden, where laws are somewhat more permissive, are still stricter than places like Colorado, New York, or California.

Now, of course, even if European nations had policies that allowed abortions into the third trimester, as the Democrats are pushing to do nationally, or as many blue states already permit, it still wouldn’t make any difference. One, because Dobbs did not make any ruling on abortion. Two, because we have no reason to look to Europe for moral guidance.

Terminating the life of a baby because it is disabled or dying is a violation of basic human rights, and yet it happens with horrifying frequency in Europe — sometimes with the knowledge of the mother, sometimes without. 2002’s Groningen Protocol protects doctors who perform pediatric euthanasia — already widespread in Europe at the time of its passage. Two Lancet studies, for example, found that around 8 percent of all infants who die in the Netherlands are killed by doctors. But there is evidence that state doctors pressure women to kill unborn children with potential disabilities not only in nations with shoddy ethics, such as Belgium or the Netherlands, but across the continent. (I cover this topic in my recent book).

There are no genuine countervailing societal forces in Europe, no faith-based movements, powerful enough to spur a debate about the lack of ethical guardrails on life. Instead, government bureaucracies unilaterally decide what a life is worth. And often, it’s not worth much. We have absolutely no reason to listen to any lectures from these people.

But aside from all of that, it’s none of Europe’s business. A PBS story on the vote contends that the resolution “crystalized the anger seen in many of the EU’s 27 member countries since the U.S. Supreme Court handed down its ruling on June 24.” Who cares about their anger? After reading quotes from numerous European activists and parliamentarians, it’s clear that most of them have no idea what Dobbs does or how the American system even works. (In their defense, it’s also somewhat of a problem among our own experts.)

If we had a proper president, he would be blasting the EU for involving itself in the domestic affairs of its generous patron. Because it’s one thing for us to disagree on policy, and another to allow second-rate pseudo-democracies with long, bloody histories to reprimand our institutions for following the law. Has Congress ever condemned the domestic policy of any Western European nation, much less a legal decision? These nations are habitually undercutting religious freedom and free speech, and yet all our parliament does is send them more cash.




CNN Employees Having Meltdown Under New Management as Ratings Sink


Levon Satamian reporting for RedState 

David Zaslav, Warner Bros. Discovery CEO, says that CNN will focus on “journalism” again. Zaslav said:

“Journalism first. America needs a news network where everybody can come and be heard; Republicans, Democrats … I think you’re seeing more of that at CNN. We’re not going to look at the ratings and, in the long run, it’s going to be worth more.”

Under Chris Licht, the new head of CNN after Jeff Zucker was ousted, CNN reduced the use of “breaking news” and replaced it with “happening now.” A well-placed source told the New York Post:

“The problem is we are not a neutral country … The ratings are getting worse because they are taking out all the bells and whistles. CNN’s ratings are as bad as local news ratings … New management is not freaking out but everyone else at CNN is … They want to fix the shows first, but they don’t realize the shows and ratings are connected.”

CNN’s highest-rated show was “Cuomo Prime Time,” as Chris Cuomo competed with MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow and Fox News’ Sean Hannity. Cuomo had the highest-rated show on the network because he brought on Republicans and Democrats to make their arguments heard. That doesn’t mean that Cuomo wasn’t biased; it just means that because he brought on both viewpoints, people tuned in to his show. It seems like that’s what Zaslav’s goal is.

Since Cuomo’s departure, the network has not been able to recover from its ratings dive.

According to Axios, Licht is assessing whether the staffers can adjust to this new approach. Anyone who doesn’t fall in line “could be ousted.”

Since Donald Trump left office, CNN’s ratings saw a dive by 90 percent.

The two networks that currently get the most views are Fox News and MSNBC.

The left-wing of the Democratic Party tunes into MSNBC, particularly because they spend most of their time trashing the GOP and only featuring never-Trumpers while bringing on no Republicans to argue their viewpoints.

On Fox News, “The Five” gets the most viewership, where they have both perspectives on the show. Tucker Carlson dominates in the primetime slot.

If CNN wants to return to “journalism,” they will have to get rid of the more biased hosts such as Don Lemon, Jim Acosta, and Brian Stelter.



1st Amendment Praetorian Goes After Jan. 6 Committee For ‘McCarthy-esque’ Defamation Tactics

 In short, the committee’s treatment of 1AP 

‘is a gross affront to the First Amendment.’ 



A lawyer for 1st Amendment Praetorian, a nonprofit organization dedicated to protecting free speech rights, is slamming the Jan. 6 Committee for its McCarthyite and anti-American tactics, in a letter obtained exclusively by The Federalist. Subpoenas shared exclusively with The Federalist confirm the congressional inquiry is McCarthyism on steroids. 

To the public, the Jan. 6 Committee pushes false narratives premised on guilt-by-association, while behind the scenes the committee demands its targets abandon their constitutional rights. But now, 1st Amendment Praetorian is pushing back, with the group’s lawyer going public with the committee’s anti-American machinations.

On Thursday before the long Independence Day weekend, the New York Times reported that Democrat Rep. Jamie Raskin stated that when the Jan. 6 Committee reconvenes public hearings in July, “he intends to lead a presentation that will focus on the roles far-right groups like the Proud Boys, the Oath Keepers and 1st Amendment Praetorian played in the Capitol attack.” According to the Times, “Mr. Raskin has also promised to explore the connections between those groups and the people in Mr. Trump’s orbit.” 

“No matter what you think of the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers, 1st Amendment Praetorian in no way resembles those groups,” Leslie McAdoo Gordon, an attorney for 1st Amendment Praetorian, told The Federalist. 1st Amendment Praetorian provides pro bono security services at events to ensure a heckler’s veto does not interfere with the speakers’ constitutional right to express their viewpoint, McAdoo Gordon explained. 

Court documents obtained by The Federalist provide more background on the organization, which Robert Lewis, a retired United States Army Green Beret and recipient of the Bronze Star and a Purple Heart, founded in 2020 as a Delaware nonprofit. In the legal filing, Lewis explained that he started the nonprofit “to ensure that every American can freely associate, freely gather and freely speak on matters of public concern to them without threat or fear of intimidation, retribution, bodily harm or death.” 

However, for the last year, the Jan. 6 Committee and a complicit press have falsely portrayed 1st Amendment Praetorian, also known as 1AP, as right-wing, paramilitary, or even a militia, McAdoo Gordon said. “They are none of those things,” the lawyer told The Federalist.

She further stressed this point in her Thursday letter to the Jan. 6 Committee, noting that 1st Amendment Praetorian is not an “anti-government” group and “did not, would not, and will not advocate, condone, or excuse violence in the pursuit of political aims. Doing so contradicts its core mission and values.” The letter continued: “Any suggestion that Mr. Lewis or Mr. Luelsdorff would do so is categorically false and deeply offensive.”

Nor does the politics of the volunteers or speakers enter the equation, McAdoo Gordon added, saying: “1st Amendment Praetorian screens individuals interested in helping protect free speech, most of whom are former military or law enforcement officers, to confirm they are who they say they are, that they have been honorably discharged, and have no criminal record or other concerning background information.”

Raskin’s reported comments to the Times, however, indicate that the Jan. 6 Committee is poised to feed the country more false and misleading information, this time about 1st Amendment Praetorian. Raskin’s assertion that 1st Amendment Praetorian played any role in the Capitol attack is blatantly false, McAdoo Gordon said. “My clients had nothing to do with the Jan. 6 riot,” McAdoo Gordon told The Federalist, adding that their planned tasking to provide security in D.C. ended after the Jan. 5 rally. 

“While the Committee and its members may be able to defame American citizens and organizations from the floor of the Congress with impunity due to the Speech and Debate Clause of the U.S. Constitution,” McAdoo Gordon noted in the letter she sent to the committee yesterday, she reminded the “members that they are not legally at liberty to do so in the media.” And the remarks attributed to Raskin by the Times last week, that the 1st Amendment Praetorian is a “far-right” group with a “role” in the “Capitol attack,” are “false and defamatory,” the letter stressed. “1AP is a mainstream, nonpartisan group with no role whatsoever in the attack on the Capitol.”

1st Amendment Praetorian’s letter added that it “will vigorously defend its reputation, including through defamation lawsuits.” Here, the group noted that “1AP has sued lawyer/Twitterer Seth Abramson for defamation in federal court in New Hampshire (where Mr. Abramson resides) for his defamatory statements that 1AP and its members were involved in the Capitol riot and are ‘insurrectionists’ or ‘seditionists.’” The nonprofit “will be no less vigorous in pursuing its rights against others who defame it, Mr. Lewis, or Mr. Luelsdorff,” the letter continued.

In her letter, McAdoo Gordon also corrected many of the false stories being peddled about the group by detailing exactly what they did and did not do on Jan. 6. Most of the members of 1st Amendment Praetorian had left D.C. after the Jan. 5 rally. But the next day, Lewis and other members of 1st Amendment Praetorian, who had remained in D.C., including Philip Luelsdorff, who is a former U.S. Army Ranger, were asked to provide some additional protection services for the media outlets covering the protest at the Ellipse, which they did, according to McAdoo Gordon. When the rally ended, 1st Amendment Praetorian released the remaining volunteers.

“My clients, Lewis and Luelsdorff, then returned to Willard Hotel, where they were spending the day with the sponsors of the Jan. 5 rally,” McAdoo Gordon told The Federalist. While there, she explained, the hotel staff asked if 1st Amendment Praetorian could help maintain order given the flood of people into the lobby and around the hotel after the Ellipse events ended. 1st Amendment Praetorian agreed, and Luelsdorff voluntarily escorted three individuals to a hotel room where Trump’s lawyers were working and then left a minute later. Neither Luelsdorff nor Lewis had anything to do with the legal team’s work at the Willard Hotel. Nor did they enter the Capitol, Capitol grounds, or even march to the Capitol, McAdoo Gordon stated.

“I was working with the Jan. 6 Committee staff to arrange for my clients to voluntary meet with investigators, within the limits of their First Amendment rights,” McAdoo Gordon explained, when news broke that the Jan. 6 Committee was arguing in federal court that Trump’s former campaign attorney John Eastman should be forced to turn over attorney-client-privileged emails because of a supposed criminal conspiracy between them. “The committee’s pushing of a preposterous Section 371 conspiracy theory left me with no option but to recommend that my clients assert their Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination,” McAdoo Gordon told The Federalist.

This reference to a Section 371 conspiracy concerns a section of the federal criminal code that makes it a crime to “conspire to defraud” the United States. In litigation involving Eastman, the Jan. 6 Committee alleged “that President Trump, Dr. Eastman, and others conspired to defraud the United States by disrupting the electoral count,” supposedly in violation of Section 371. But McAdoo Gordon, a longtime white-collar criminal defense lawyer, eviscerated the theory, pointing to recent Supreme Court precedent holding that the scheme or artifice “to defraud” language in another criminal statute could not be interpreted so broadly. 

While 1st Amendment Praetorian had nothing to do with any disruption of the electoral count, much less the violence that occurred on Jan. 6, the committee’s McCarthyite tactics raise even graver concerns for McAdoo Gordon. In her letter, she noted her surprise “to see the Committee play a portion of the video testimony of its deposition/meeting with Lt. General Michael Flynn in one of its prior hearings, in which he apparently asserts his privilege under the Fifth Amendment.”

“The Government presenting a person asserting their Fifth Amendment privilege in order to imply to the public that the person is ‘guilty’ of some crime is a McCarthy-esque tactic that offends the Constitution and is unworthy of the United States Congress,” 1st Amendment Praetorian’s lawyer wrote. Given the Committee’s past actions, McAdoo Gordon noted in her Thursday letter that she is “forced to anticipate that the Committee will use the same totalitarian tactic to improperly smear 1AP.” 

1st Amendment Praetorian’s letter then stressed that it “has asserted its Fifth Amendment privilege before the Committee solely because the Committee is asserting that groups and persons who never went to the Capitol on January 6, 2021, but had some role in the events that led up to that ultimate riot there, are participants in a criminal conspiracy.” While 1AP “believes itself to be innocent of any wrongdoing or criminal conduct,” the group’s attorney stressed that “since it may find itself as a target of an unfounded criminal investigation, I have advised my clients to assert their Fifth Amendment privilege so that their truthful testimony is not twisted and used against them.”

Quoting from the Supreme Court, McAdoo Gordon then reminded the committee that the high court has described the Fifth Amendment privilege thusly:

[W]e have emphasized that one of the Fifth Amendment’s “basic functions . . . is to protect innocent men . . . `who otherwise might be ensnared by ambiguous circumstances.'” 

The letter continued: 

“The circumstances in which an innocent citizen finds himself faced with an out-of-control prosecutor, or a mistaken theory of criminality, or an overzealous legislative inquiry — which is the situation 1AP finds itself in — is precisely when the citizen most needs the protection of the Fifth Amendment. For the Congress to attempt to turn that protection into a weapon against a citizen, or a group of citizens, is repellant. I urge the Committee not to engage in such un-American behaviors. Unfortunately, I have little faith that the Committee will heed my appeal. This leaves me with no choice but to pre-emptively speak publicly about these issues before the Committee engages in wholesale defamation of 1AP from its powerful national platform.”

The committee seeks to prove guilt by association, McAdoo Gordon told The Federalist, pointing to the subpoenas issued to 1AP, Lewis, and Luelsdorff, which demand that the nonprofit provide “all documents and communications concerning the participation of individuals employed by or in any way affiliated with 1AP” related to two other rallies in D.C. at which the group provided security, one in mid-November and the second in mid-December. Those rallies had nothing to do with the Jan. 6 violence at the Capitol, but the committee claims an interest in the material because of the identity of the speakers.

The subpoenas also demand that “documents sufficient to identify all employees, officers, and board members” of 1st Amendment Praetorian be turned over to the committee, as well as “all agendas, minutes, notes, or other records related to meetings” of the nonprofit.

The committee, in essence, is demanding a list of 1st Amendment Praetorian’s members — a clear violation of their 1st Amendment rights to free speech, association, and to petition the government, the non-profit’s lawyer told The Federalist: “I told the Committee that they should approach my client like they would the ACLU or the NAACP.”

“If you wouldn’t ask the ACLU or the NAACP the question, don’t ask my client either,” McAdoo Gordon told investigators.

McAdoo Gordon’s reference to the NAACP holds specific significance because the U.S. Supreme Court in NAACP v. Alabama, 357 U.S. 449 (1958), unanimously ruled that the First Amendment protected the right of the organization and its members’ rights of association and assembly and that the government could not demand that the NAACP reveal its membership list. 

Further, for the committee to use subpoenas “to demand financial and fundraising records (including bank account information) and ‘recruitment’ information from a non-profit civic organization, especially a civil liberties group, is wholly unacceptable,” McAdoo Gordon added in the letter. In short, the committee’s treatment of 1AP “is a gross affront to 1st Amendment.” 

Every American should be outraged at the attack on our fellow citizens’ First Amendment rights of association, speech, and assembly, McAdoo Gordon, a former long-time member of the ACLU who resigned from the organization after the group abandoned its civil liberties mission, told The Federalist. “And now Congressman Raskin is telling the Times he plans to ‘explore the connection between those groups and the people in Mr. Trump’s orbit.’”

That is precisely what the First Amendment protects Americans from: being investigated because of the individuals with whom they associate. But not only does the Jan. 6 Committee not care, neither does the legacy media. The question remains whether Americans will, or whether they have lost their sense of decency. 



Prepare for the Biden Tantrum: These Are the Lowest Poll Numbers Yet


Nick Arama reporting for RedState 

The Biden team declared that the problem was just messaging, that they were going to have Joe Biden go out and talk more. Biden had allegedly complained that his people were undercutting him by trying to walk back when he gaffed or said something that wasn’t true; he didn’t want them to do that anymore.

So, how has that approach worked out for them?

He already hit his lowest average poll number, according to Real Clear Politics, about a week ago at 38 percent approval.

But now Biden has reached his lowest poll number ever. His number in the Civiqs poll just hit 30 percent approval and 57 percent disapproval.

Not only hasn’t Roe v. Wade angst helped to turn his numbers up — his numbers have gotten even worse since the case was overturned.

What’s hurting him badly is that he’s at 21 percent approval with white people, as well as with people between the ages of 18-34. With independents, Biden is at 19 percent approval and 67 percent disapproval. Yikes. Check how unpopular he is in Georgia and Pennsylvania, two states likely to have tough Senate races. That’s going to hurt the Democrats badly. But he’s underwater in every state, except Hawaii and Vermont. The only thing that is stopping him from dropping into the 20s is that he’s at 38 percent with the 65+ segment. But all the numbers have continued to drop, so expect that one to come down as well.

Biden is also far lower now in the Civiqs poll than President Donald Trump ever was. Biden is now lower than Trump was the day he left office, even after the media attacked Trump over the Jan. 6 riot. Trump was at 40 percent, at that point. Biden is now ten points lower than that.

It’s not just the Civiqs poll. Biden has also hit his lowest number ever in the Rasmussen poll with a 37 percent approval there, 61 percent disapproval. Again, he is now lower than Trump’s lowest number (38 percent approval). That’s gotta sting for Biden, who reportedly has been upset that he’s now coming in lower than Trump. And Trump’s numbers were influenced by very negative media despite having very successful policies.

In both polls, the Democratic approval number has to also be very concerning for Joe Biden. In the Rasmussen poll, it had been in the low 70s, now it’s just 65 percent–another record low. In the Civiqs poll, it’s 63 percent, also his lowest point. That’s a 28-point drop from what he started with when he came in on his first day, with 91 percent approval from Democrats. For context, something in the 80s is a healthy number. Being in the 60s is big trouble.

No wonder Democrats running for office such as Rep. Tim Ryan (D-OH) and Ohio gubernatorial candidate Nan Whaley are having “scheduling conflicts.” Appearing with Biden is like jumping in a pool with an anchor around your neck, and no candidate wants to do that right now in a tough race.



Nostalgia break 2: More gifs of Linda in her youth days of acting! 🥰

 



Another quiet Saturday in summer. Time for another nostalgia break to pass the time! :)

I've got more gifs of 👑 Linda from her actor youth days to share. Hope you enjoy them!

Dune (1984) (I know a few of you folks know her well from this movie):






She-Devil (1989):












Pret a Porter (1984):



Damn, that is so adorable! 🥰






She definitely had fun filming this



Loving those shades!

And I got more 'Space Rangers' episodes gifs!

Episode 5:

Ah, that old pointy finger. 🥰


Meow!




Pretty outdoor scenery. :)






She gets her points across very well!


Episode 6 (this was the final one that aired. Real shame.):



I get so annoyed when people try to interrupt me when I'm trying to eat.






Ending with her smiling. Can't think of anything better. :)

(Maybe someday, I'll do a thread with the NCIS LA gifs that I enjoy making.)