Thursday, August 25, 2022

What Accounts for the Rise of Conservative Christian Right-Wing Latinos?

“Sí, se puede!” to us means 
we can work hard for it and we will!


My father taught me that we came to this country to work. I refuse anything that is free, and I don’t leech from anyone. 

I remember him with pride in his eyes, his head held high, and determination in his soul. When he would drive me to school in his 1979 Super Sport El Camino—loaded down, as it was, with two lawnmowers, one Weed Eater, and the other essentials of a small mowing business—those quick 10-minute drives were often filled with gems of wisdom. 

I didn’t fully understand those lectures on life at the time, but one day, as I am sure he understood, I would come to treasure them. My dad, the single father, immigrant, and self-employed man had every reason to lay down, cry, and feel sorry for himself. He didn’t. Rather, he woke up every morning, said his prayers, and—rain or shine, freezing temperatures, or the hottest record-breaking heat of Houston—he was off to work. He was determined to work hard and make ends meet. No matter what. 

There were no sick days. Ever.

This is what is normal to the vast majority of legal (and even some illegal) Hispanic immigrants. They come with a huge sense of pride, dignity, and work ethic. They chose to leave their homes in search of an opportunity to work hard and build for themselves the American Dream.

Leftists condescendingly try to pander to us by insinuating we are not capable of earning a living without their assistance. They lie about us. They say we are victims of circumstances beyond our control. Now they are left wondering why the children of those hard working, God-fearing Latino immigrants are now the fastest-growing coalition of the Republican Party. 

Today’s political climate is alarming for the Left because they have taken for granted the votes of these families. For too long they have put us in a box. They see us as voters who are incapable of making it in this country without big government (read: Democrats) becoming our new god and savior. They falsely claim that we are incapable of living the American dream without their assistance. Our faith in God and the value of hard work, they say, won’t be enough. 

The truth is, they wanted us to remain victims so they could exploit us and use government to create a floor for us to dwell on permanently. They want us to serve them as serfs instead of engaging with us so we and our children can become middle class and beyond as they and their families have done.

The Latino population has many characteristics that allow us to align with America’s key values. Fortitude in the face of hardship and deep faith in God and family. When we are pandered and lied to, it reminds many of us of what we left behind: our homelands where a ruling class kept us down. We came here not to serve new masters but in search for our own American Dream. 

Recently, the media was in an uproar over Myra Flores’ election to Congress as a Republican from south Texas. This was earth-shattering in Manhattan and Hollywood, but no surprise to millions of Latinos like me. Our political realignment with the GOP makes perfect sense. Our faith, work ethic, and love for the country that has given us freedom and opportunity is driving us into the arms of the only party with a base that supports those values.

More and more people are waking up to the fact that voting conservative feels more like home. This is the home of their hearts, and why they are here in the first place.

When the members of the other party cluelessly compare us to breakfast tacos and pander to us with fake broken English it’s not offensive anymore, it’s comical. They look like a joke. It makes me feel sorry for those who are so disconnected from actual people that they struggle to stand on a stage and resonate with a populace of which they have zero understanding. They display no dignity in their work ethic or any clear perspective of us as a community. They have no idea what we want or need. They don’t even know us and they make it clear that they don’t really want to. These displays show us that everything is merely a shameless attempt to read from a script for political optics and to gain a vote. Then drop us like a bad habit, and only come back when that vote is needed once again. We are not stupid. We see what they are doing.

If Democrats really wanted to connect with Latino voters, they would connect with our values and faith. We have seen, more than many native born Americans, the failures of socialism—the lawlessness it promotes, and the emptiness purely secular values provide. “Si se puede!” to us means we can work hard for it and we will! America is our home and the GOP, if it wants to be, is the vessel that will ensure our values and our voices are heard.




X22, On the Fringe, and more- August 25

 



Picking the best last item to put on your birthday wish list can be harder then it looks! (took me an hour to decide.). Here's tonight's news:


Will the Republicans Really Win Back the Congress? ~ VDH


There are a lot of ifs and time grows short.


The late spring scenario of a massive GOP win—in historic proportions analogous to 1938, 1994, or 2010—is said now to be “iffy.”

The Left boasts that it now has a chance at keeping the House, with even better odds for maintaining control over the Senate. 

Polls are all over the place. Now they show generic Republican leads, now Democratic. 

The general experience in polling is that they are more often conducted by left-leaning institutions and massaged to show Democratic “momentum.” 

Since the polling meltdown of 2016—when most polls showed a Hillary Clinton Electoral College landslide—they have regained little credibility. 

Current progressive heartthrob and spoiler Representative Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) was polled at only 20 percent behind in her recent primary—only to be crushed in the end, losing by over 37 percent.

The corporate leftist media does its part by glorifying a now dynamic “Aviator Joe.” 

Biden in cool sunglasses is now constructed into a swaggering “Top Gun” Tom Cruise-like figure, rather than a cognitively challenged 79-year-old. 

Biden’s just passed reconciliation “Inflation Reduction Act,” according to most experts, will raise taxes even on the middle class and spur inflation. So, the media euphemistically renames it a “climate change bill.” 

With a stroke of his pen before the midterms, Biden forgives $300 billion in student debt—without a care for the dutiful who paid their loans off or those who did not go to college but will now pay for those that did.

If inflation is running at 8.5 percent over last July’s prices, the White House giddily announces inflation is “zero” because it did not climb at 9.1 percent over 2021 prices—as it did in June. 

That’s like saying someone entombed in a sinkhole 10 feet below ground is no longer trapped at all since he floated up one foot since falling.

In California, when $6.50 a gallon gas dipped last month to $5.50 a gallon, Biden pronounced the end of high energy costs. He forgets that during his watch, gas prices doubled and remain $2.50 a gallon higher than they were on Inauguration Day. 

Despite the propaganda, the Republicans seem confident nonetheless because of the dismal 40 percent approval ratings of Joe Biden and his even less popular agenda. 

Crime is out of control. The Left blew up the southern border. Biden has waged war on energy production and deliberately spiked gas costs. 

Foreign policy is in shambles. Racial relations are scary. Historically, presidents are shellacked in their first midterms. 

So, there should be a Republican tsunami.

But will there be? 

So far, the Republicans have not nationalized congressional races with a uniform Contract with America, an agenda that they will seek to enact the moment they take Congress.  

If all Republican candidates run on what the Left has done to America in less than two years and offer a systematic corrective, they will win. If they get bogged down in the 24-hour news cycle they will flounder. 

Conservatives seem oblivious to the current left-wing strategy. That is odd, since it is unchanged since the Russian collusion hoax and the psychodramatic Ukrainian phone call impeachment. 

The left-wing playbook is based on two pillars: the FBI raid on Donald Trump’s home, the January 6 “insurrection” investigation—and selective daily leaking about both. 

About every week, in efforts at mass distraction from the dismal record of Joe Biden, we will hear of a new “bombshell” and “walls-are-closing-in” Justice Department or FBI leak to an obsequious media. 

In 24-hour cycles, we will hear more about how Donald Trump supposedly stole “nuclear secrets”! 

And “informed but anonymous sources insist” that Trump is trying to sell memorabilia. Or is Trump trying to hide January 6 evidence at his home? Or was it those Russian collusion files?

Sanctimonious Attorney General Merrick Garland will fight tooth and nail not to release an unredacted historic fishing-expedition affidavit for a warrant to meander through the closets of the Trump home. But he certainly will redact—and leak.  

The January 6 committee will continue to subpoena and flip witnesses with threats of indictments, certain doom before biased Washington, D.C. juries, and crushing legal bills. 

Between the raid and the star-chamber House inquiry, we are supposed to forget unaffordable gas and food, dangerous U.S. cities, over 3 million people swarming the border, and the Afghanistan debacle. 

Big Tech in November as in 2020 will again flood registrars with billions of dollars in dark money—while denying it. 

They will censor and expunge anything unflattering to the Left on social media—and claim they do not. 

The Left will systematically try to ensure that, as in 2020, only 30 percent of the electorate vote in person on election day—as they plead they are underfunded and disorganized.

Yet if  the Republicans advance a coherent national plan of action to restore a pre-Biden America, if  Donald Trump will focus positively on national issues and not take the bait to obsess on the wrongs done to him, and if  grass-roots conservatives this time around prepare to preempt massive left-wing vote harvesting, they will achieve their blowout. 

But that is a lot of ifs. And meanwhile, time grows short.



Eye on the Target: 2024 Should Not Be About Donald Trump, It Must Be About Stopping the Radical Left


Mike Miller reporting for RedState 

To paraphrase Tom Petty, this doesn’t have to be the big get-even. 2024 should not be about avenging 2020; it must be about the Republican Party putting itself in the best possible position to defeat the radical leftist agenda shoved down our throats by Joe Biden and the Democrat-controlled Congress.

Regaining control of the White House must be the singularly most important objective of every voting American who is sick to death with not only the disastrous Biden presidency but also the left’s hellbent quest to dismantle America as we know it, including a rewrite of history and the destruction of the moral fiber of the American people. In large part, the left is doing so by indoctrinating young children into believing they have the maturity to make gender-altering decisions, and programming kids not only to believe America is a racist country at heart and that “white supremacy” and “systemic racism” are the greatest threat to this nation. That is a complete load of crap.

Oh, I almost forgot: and that white Americans, simply by virtue of being born white, are “inherently racist” and as such, must spend their entire lives atoning for their whiteness through demonstrable acts of anti-racism. (See: Critical Race Theory.)

So, here we find ourselves, less than three months from the 2022 midterms, in which the Republican Party will likely regain control of the House — although I don’t believe the so-called “red wave” predicted by many political pundits will happen — and have a 50-60 percent chance of regaining the Senate majority.

Control of the House would be yuuge, which would then set the stage for taking back the White House, thus denying the Democrats the opportunity to continue destroying America, beyond January 2025.

As one might imagine, I have thoughts.

Internecine warfare: Never-Trumpers v. Always-Trumpers.

Internecine warfare is an ominous dynamic and remains the bane of the Republican Party. That is a fact; denying it only makes it worse. The GOP can’t afford the “luxury” of entering the 2024 presidential campaign season as divided as it now is. Again, denying the fact serves no one on either side of the chasm — and only plays into the hand of the Democrats.

While Trump Derangement Syndrome on the left is one thing, the continuing divisiveness with the party is quite another. The dynamic is made even more troublesome by the reality of each faction blistering the other, while generally denying its own respective role. Hence, Always-Trumpers summarily dismiss the notion that they even exist, pointing to the Never-Trumpers as the only problem. That simply is incorrect. And make no mistake: It is often bitter and benefits the Democrats.

Personal case in point: I voted for Trump in 2016 and 2020 and I will vote for him in 2024 if he is the Republican nominee. Period. Moreover, my votes were validated by Trump’s Supreme Court nominees, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney — three of the five associate justices to vote in the 5-4 overturn of Roe v. Wade.

In addition, Trump’s efforts to secure the southern border were largely successful, particularly in stark contrast to the continuing border crisis purposely created by Biden. Toss in tax and regulatory reform, putting the world’s bad guys on notice that there was a new sheriff in town who was not afraid to act, after eight years of the kowtowing Obama administration, and working to shore up the U.S. military, and I was generally pleased with Trump’s presidency from a policy perspective.

As most RedStaters are aware, I have also criticized Trump when I’ve disagreed with his actions and will continue to do so. That is the job of an objective, albeit conservative, political pundit. Yet, despite my overall support of Trump’s policies as president, I’ve been called every name in the proverbial book when I’ve dared to criticize him, including my recent favorite: “MAGA-hating communist piece of garbage.” It bothers me not; I’ve been at this for quite a few years. But what does bother me is that 2024 is going to be a tough, bitterly fought election, and the GOP simply cannot afford the baggage attached to Trump — whether attached by Trump himself or by his detractors.

For that reason, while Trump’s presidency was largely successful in the eyes of Republican voters, it’s time to move on. The windshield is larger than the rear window for a reason; 2020 is over and no amount of relitigating it will change a thing. While I understand the argument of those who suggest it must be “resolved,” I respectfully disagree. Frankly, the 2020 election and its aftermath will never be “resolved” to the extent that some continue to demand.

Trump-DeSantis ticket?

Dream team? It depends on who’s dreaming. Social media keyboard warriors and various pundits have run wild with the idea of Trump-DeSantis 2024, with memes popping up, regularly. The “logic” often goes something like this: “DeSantis would make a great vice president under Trump and then could run in 2028, giving us 12 years of Republican control of the White House.” Multiple problems exist with that pipedream but the bottom line is that it’s not going to happen.

While Trump himself has teased the idea, I’m not convinced he would even want DeSantis in the two-spot, given the Florida governor’s equally-strong personality and at least equal intelligence. Second, I don’t believe DeSantis would accept the offer, or believe it would be in his best interest to do so. Simply asked, why would he? What are the plusses for the governor, moving forward?

The fact is, Trump remains toxic to much of America. This is a reality.

Regardless of how much of Trump’s baggage is self-inflicted, as opposed to the irrational obsession of the TDS-riddled left, the facts remain the same. In 2016, tens of millions of Trump votes were in fact not-Hillary votes; the script was flipped in 2020 when he was defeated in part by not-Trump votes, vs. votes for Biden. If Trump is the nominee in 2024, that reality will happen again.

The bottom line:

It’s my belief that Donald Trump isn’t the best option for the Republican Party in 2024, for the reasons outlined above.

As my colleague Susie Moore suggested in an August 19 piece:

It would be hard to argue that there’s a more polarizing figure in modern history than Donald Trump. He has his most devoted supporters and his most determined detractors. Over the course of the past seven years, we’ve largely divided ourselves into Trump camps – ya love him or ya hate him, and the people who feel the opposite? Well, they are the worst.

This is neither an indictment of Trump, nor a defense of him. It’s an observation – and a reflection on us. Too many have allowed their sentiments on one man – or, truthfully, what he represents to them – to steer most everything they say and do. And whether they’re operating under blind allegiance or blind hatred, they’re still flying blind.

Which is why it’s critical to fix your sights on principles, not people.

Susie’s point remains spot on. As I said at the top, 2024 doesn’t have to be the big get-even. Those who believe it does, and others who fix their sights on people instead of principles, might very well be the bane of the conservative cause in 2024. Let us hope not.




Biden’s Student Loan ‘Forgiveness’ Is An Unjust, Cynical Abuse Of Power


… not to mention a moral hazard, counterproductive, and fundamentally immoral.



“No Money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law.” That’s what it says right there in the Constitution. And yet, without any legislation, Joe Biden now promises to “cancel” up to $10,000 in student loans per borrower ($20,000 for Pell Grant borrowers), limited to those with annual incomes of less than $125,000.  

Let’s start by pointing out that President Joe Biden isn’t “canceling” or “forgiving” any student loans. Those are preposterous euphemisms favored by Democrats and the media. The debt in question already exists, it has been lent and spent, and those who borrowed the money of their own volition have already received services. This debt isn’t cancelable.

The president hasn’t “forgiven” loans, he’s unilaterally broken existing contracts and transferred the responsibility of payment to taxpayers—many of whom have either repaid their own student loans or never borrowed any money to begin with. Now, if you’re opposed to repaying some stranger’s loan, that’s too bad. A new batch of IRS agents will be there to ensure that you do.

It should also be stressed that capping loan “forgiveness” to those making under $125,000 means absolutely nothing because most borrowers are at the beginning of their careers and have yet to enjoy the durable benefits of a college degree. The average worker with a bachelor’s degree ends up making, on average, $1 million more in their careers (those with graduate degrees $2-3 million more) than a worker with a high school diploma. And yet, the Biden administration is going to compel truck drivers and clerks without college degrees to pay the loans of white-collar workers on their way to six-figure salaries.

Now, of course, even if the student loan “forgiveness” was a boon for the poor, it would still be completely unconstitutional, a moral hazard, counterproductive, and fundamentally unjust. But Biden’s plan—which is going to cost taxpayers around $300 billion, more than all the illusory “savings” that were going to be found in the “Inflation Reduction Act”—is little more than a vote-buying scheme for affluent millennials.

There already exists a slate of programs that help the poor pay for college – and most schools charge families in the lower economic quintiles less. According to a new University of Pennsylvania study, “[b]etween 69 and 73 percent of the debt forgiven accrues to households in the top 60 percent of the income distribution.” Another Brookings study found that 60 percent of all outstanding school loans debt was taken by families making over $74,000—with those borrowers making 75 percent of all payments. The lowest-income 40 percent of households “hold just under 20 percent of the outstanding debt and make only 10 percent of the payments.”

By the way, though there is clearly a problem with spiking higher education costs, it’s a myth that most students who graduate with bachelor’s degrees face debilitating debt. According to Brookings, around 30 percent of undergrads graduate with zero debt, and 25 percent with less than $20,000. Only 6 percent of graduates owe more than $100,000. Half of college debt is held by a quarter of borrowers: those who go to graduate school. Which is to say, Biden is compelling American taxpayers to foot the bill for graduate degrees.

The government’s guaranteeing of student loans was one of the most corrosive policy ideas in recent history. It has incentivized schools to charge outrageous tuitions (Yale and Harvard now basically function as hedge funds, with massive endowments), encouraged students to rack up massive debt getting often useless degrees (there’s no bank on earth that would lend a kid 100k to get a degree in, say, journalism), and allowed banks to hand out giant loans without concern. Loan “forgiveness,” which is sure to become an expectation moving forward, only exacerbates all these problems.

Not long ago, Biden admitted he didn’t have the authority to “cancel” student loans “by signing with a pen.” Now his administration is rationalizing this power grab on the feeble idea that we are in a national emergency over Covid. Part of me suspects that the administration understands that the president can’t “forgive” debt, and that the effort will be stymied by any Supreme Court that adheres to the Constitution. Democrats likely see the issue as a cudgel they can use to further delegitimize the Supreme Court and hit Republicans as opposing aid of the “middle class.” There is no norm this administration isn’t willing to cynically destroy for political power.  




New Poll Shows Bad News for Liberals, Millions of Voters Surveyed


Levon Satamian reporting for RedState 

A new Morning Consult research poll shows a seven-point decrease over the past five years in those identifying as “very liberal,” “liberal,” or “somewhat liberal.” It dropped from 34 percent to 27 percent. However, it has not resulted in an extensive increase in conservative alignment.

The moderate camp of voters seems to be growing. Democratic data scientist David Short said:

“The historical march has been that ‘liberal’ is gradually increasing as the secular, college-educated population has increased in a way that’s been divorced from thermostatic forces … If it’s thermostatic backlash, thermostatic backlash affecting ideological identification is new.”

Per the newest Morning Consult’s annual State of the Parties survey, 73 percent of voters view the Democratic Party as liberal, increasing from 67 percent in mid-2017. Seventy percent of voters with college degrees view the Democratic Party as liberal compared to 62 percent in mid-2017. Hispanic voters went from 65 percent to 75 percent who view the Democratic Party as liberal.

In the recent survey, 42 percent of voters said that the Republican Party is “too conservative,” compared to 36 percent saying the party was too conservative in 2017. Forty-five percent of those surveyed said the Democratic Party is “too liberal,” up from 40 percent in 2017.

Republican pollster Patrick Ruffini said:

“In 2020, with all the talk of a Hispanic shift, and an African American shift to a lesser degree, it was really kind of a shift among Hispanic conservatives. It was like, people already have this fixed ideological predisposition, and they’re just aligning that to their vote choice … But what’s also happening, and reinforcing that, is the underlying ideological tendencies are also shifting in conjunction with, or caused by, vote choice.”

As Democrats identifying as liberal dropped from 60 percent to 55 percent, Republicans who identified as conservative increased from 70 percent to 77 percent.

The majority of independent voters identify as moderate. In 2017, 34 percent identified as moderate; now, 43 percent identify as moderate. The number of independents who leaned Democrat and Republican has dropped since 2017. In 2017, 30 percent of independents identified as liberal/slightly liberal; now, just 18 percent identify as liberal/slightly liberal. As for independent-leaning conservatives, in 2017, 31 percent identified as conservative/slightly conservative, compared to 26 percent in 2022.

Independents (Credit: Morning Consult)

Ruffini added:

“The Republican Party is a conservative party. The Democrats are not necessarily a liberal party. The problem is its elite actors are polarized … That’s what the last few years have been about, with Republicans hoping to capitalize on wokeness, the police and left-wing activist trends that get more play on the left than are actually warranted based on who their voters are.”

The independent vote remains in the air during elections; however, this is a better poll for Republicans because more Independents identify as conservative/slightly conservative than as liberal/slightly liberal.

As the Biden administration continues to implement far-left radical policies, more moderate voters will move away from their party. The Republicans should take advantage of this and win them over by proposing and implementing policies that work for hard-working Americans.

According to Morning Consult, the survey research was conducted among more than 8.6 million voters since 2017.




‘You Will Not Look At That Hunter Biden Laptop’: Johnson Whistleblowers Reveal More FBI Corruption In 2020



A new whistleblower report from Wisconsin Republican Sen. Ron Johnson’s office revealed new allegations of FBI misconduct over the Hunter Biden laptop during the 2020 election.

According to multiple whistleblowers, Johnson wrote in a letter to FBI Director Christopher Wray on Tuesday, agency officials “intentionally undermined efforts to investigate Hunter Biden.”

“After the FBI obtained the Hunter Biden laptop from the Wilmington, DE computer shop, these whistleblowers stated that local FBI leadership told employees, ‘you will not look at that Hunter Biden laptop’ and that the FBI is ‘not going to change the outcome of the election again,'” Johnson wrote. “Further, these whistleblowers allege that the FBI did not begin to examine the contents of Hunter Biden’s laptop until after the 2020 presidential election–potentially a year after the FBI obtained the laptop in December 2019.”

Johnson’s report comes one month after another whistleblower report published by Iowa Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley’s office made similar allegations against FBI leadership related to their handling of the computer abandoned by the president’s son. Contents from the laptop’s hard drive published by the New York Post weeks before the 2020 election revealed then-candidate Joe Biden lied about never speaking business with his son, “or with anyone else,” and actually stood to personally profit from foreign adversaries.

Washington Field Office Assistant Special Agent in Charge Timothy Thibault and Director of Election Crimes Branch Richard Pilger, whistleblowers alleged to Grassley’s office, coordinated to amplify defamatory information against President Donald Trump while giving cover to Hunter Biden, dismissing intelligence about Biden as disinformation.

“Multiple FBI whistleblowers, including those in senior positions,” Grassley’s office explained, “are raising the alarm about tampering by senior FBI and Justice Department officials in politically sensitive investigations ranging from election and campaign finance probes across multiple election cycles.”

Johnson’s latest whistleblower report comes as the federal law enforcement agency faces heightened scrutiny over its overt weaponization against political dissidents to the incumbent regime. Six years after the launch of Crossfire Hurricane, the deep state surveillance operation to smear Trump as a Russian agent, more than two dozen FBI officials raided the former president’s Florida residence at Mar-a-Lago. Attorney General Merrick Garland claimed at a press conference earlier this month the search was “narrowly scope[d],” though examination of the warrant shows authorization to confiscate any and all documents Trump may have come into contact with as president.



Republican Leaders Respond to Biden's Grotesque Impeachable Offense Exactly as You'd Expect


Bonchie reporting for RedState 

Are you ready for some strongly-worded letters? Because that’s apparently all we are going to get from top Republican leaders after Joe Biden announced he’s going to illegally “cancel” student debt for some of the nation’s most well-off individuals.

As RedState reported, the plan will wipe out $10,000 worth of debt ($20,000 for pell grants) for people making less than $125,000 ($250,000 for joint filers). It gets so much worse, though. Apparently, the administration is going to allow people to use their 2020 income to qualify, which means lots of people making lots of money today are going to be eligible based on an artificially down income during the pandemic.

For my money, this is one of the most grotesque, morally deranged moves in modern American history. Yes, the welfare state isn’t new, but this is different. It’s a direct, targeted redistribution of wealth from the lower-middle class (and many in the upper-middle class who did things right) to mostly liberal, college-educated individuals who make more money and have far better employment prospects. Truly, it’s late-stage republic kind of stuff.

As I wrote a day prior to the announcement, it’s also impeachable behavior. Given the magnitude of the situation, you’d hope Republicans would be running to the closest microphone to explain exactly what was happening and to let it be known that Biden has crossed a line with his illegal act.

Instead, we got this.

Notice what’s not mentioned in those statements. Despite Biden committing (once it becomes official) the most transparently impeachable act in decades, McConnell and the rest still can’t bring themselves to say that he needs to be impeached. You see, only bad orange men who make mean tweets can be impeached. That’s written into the constitution somewhere. But a president who blatantly breaks the law with full intent to do so in order to buy votes for a mid-term? Well, we just don’t want to be too rash, right?

What this really comes down to is the perversion of Washington being put on full display. To these beltway apparatchiks, breaking the law is fine as long as you do it in a way that can be described as “normal.” What Biden is doing is illegal, but it’s always couched in the machinations of the bureaucracy. Trump was loud and disrupted the status quo, though, so he had to be dealt with despite never committing a clear impeachable offense.

Returning back to the GOP’s old guard, the best these political mediocrities could come up with is to shout about how “unfair” Biden’s illegal student debt “cancelation” is. To reiterate, with all their overpaid consultants and years of experience in Washington, they couldn’t come up with anything better than crying on social media about fairness. Nothing about impeaching Biden, nothing about its illegality. Just shouting at clouds. It’s astonishing, and it’s infuriating. It’s also exactly why the GOP needs to make big changes at the top.




Joe Biden Claims He Had No Advance Notice of FBI Raid on Donald Trump Home, None, Zero, Not One Little Bit

Yesterday afternoon Joe Biden was questioned about how much notice he had regarding the FBI raid on President Trump’s home at Mar-a-Lago in Florida.


Question: “Mr. President, how much advanced notice did you have of the FBI’s plan to search Mar-a-Lago?

BIDEN: “I didn’t have any advanced notice. None, zero, not one single bit.”

{Direct Rumble Link} – WATCH:




If This FBI Spy’s Scorched-Earth Legal Strategy Backfires, He’ll Finally Pay For Russia Hoaxing

This would be quite the turnabout given that for more than five years Halper has avoided indictment for lying to the FBI.



Stefan Halper may have sidestepped a congressional subpoena and escaped charges for making false statements to the FBI, but his comeuppance may be coming soon, recent court filings suggest. 

Soon after the FBI launched Crossfire Hurricane in the summer of 2016, longtime confidential human source Halper officially joined the government arm of the Russia-collusion hoax. Meeting with FBI agents on August 11, 2016, Halper falsely claimed to have witnessed the Russian-born British citizen Svetlana Lokhova leave a 2014 dinner at Cambridge University with Michael Flynn. According to the FBI’s summary of its interview with Halper, Halper also claimed to be “somewhat suspicious of LOKHOVA,” stating he believed “LOKHOVA’S father may be a Russian Oligarch living in London.” 

While at the time of the Cambridge event, Flynn served as Barack Obama’s director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, by 2016, when Halper framed Flynn as embroiled in an intrigue with Lokhova, Flynn had changed to the other side of the political aisle, serving as an adviser to Donald Trump’s presidential campaign. And shortly after Halper told the FBI of Flynn’s supposed connection to Lokhova, the bureau opened an investigation of Flynn under the umbrella operation of Crossfire Hurricane. 

However, contrary to Halper’s representation to the FBI, he had not attended the 2014 Cambridge University dinner and thus could not have witnessed any interactions between Lokhova and Flynn. And although Halper claimed Lokhova had jumped into a cab with Flynn and then joined him on a train ride to London, nothing of the sort occurred. 

The false fingering of Lokhova as a Russian honeypot soon made the news, causing Lokhova to sue Halper for defamation. She filed that case too late, though, leading a federal court to dismiss the lawsuit as barred by the statute of limitations. Lokhova then filed a second lawsuit against Halper, alleging that Halper defamed her in pushing her publisher to drop the deal it had with Lokhova to write a book about Halper and SpyGate and that he intentionally interfered with that contract.

Halper’s lawyer pushed for the dismissal of Lokhova’s second lawsuit. Last month, the same federal judge who tossed Lokhova’s first lawsuit denied Halper’s motion to dismiss, ruling the second case against Halper could continue. Significantly, in rejecting Halper’s motion to dismiss the lawsuit against him, presiding federal Judge Leonie Brinkema noted that documents uncovered since Lokhova’s first case indicate that Halper “may have made clear misstatements to the FBI” and may be responsible for “some falsehoods” about Flynn and Lokhova. 

While Brinkema did not identify the “documents” to which she was referring, it was the FBI notes of the Halper interview from August of 2016 that provided the most concrete proof to date of Halper’s role in launching the Lokhova-honeypot narrative. Further, that Brinkema referenced the notes and Halper’s apparent responsibility for “some falsehoods” about Lokhova and Flynn proves significant because it suggests that the federal judge finally understands the seriousness of Lokhova’s case and her allegations.

That the federal court in Virginia both rejected Halper’s attempt to toss Lokhova’s second lawsuit and also acknowledged that an evidentiary basis for her claims exists means there may finally be a forum where Halper is held accountable. And the probability of such a comeuppance became even strong over the last month as Halper’s attorney launched a scorched-earth “defense” of the case. This is sure to bristle Brinkema, who “put[] both counsel on notice” that she “expects this case to be properly litigated by counsel, that I want the rhetoric kept cool, both in terms of the pleadings, the written pleadings, and oral argument.”

Notwithstanding the clarity of Brinkema’s command, a series of court filings from Friday reveal Halper’s attorney took no heed of the warning. For instance, Lokhova’s attorney, Leslie McAdoo Gordon, was forced to file a protective order because Halper’s lawyer hit McAdoo Gordon, who is a sole practitioner, with discovery demands in the midst of an out-of-state federal felony criminal trial. As McAdoo Gordon’s memorandum details, the Virginia court directs attorneys to the American College of Trial Lawyers Code of Pretrial and Trial Conduct, which instructs lawyers to “schedule pretrial events cooperatively with other counsel,” “respect[ing] the legitimate obligations of colleagues and avoid disputes about the timing, location and manner of conducting the event.” 

Non-lawyers or non-litigating lawyers may not appreciate the point, but Brinkema will, and such gamesmanship won’t go well for Halper’s attorney, especially in light of the second warning Brinkema gave the attorneys when they appeared before her last month. 

“My biggest concern about this case is making sure that it remains focused, and that the discovery is not a ridiculously broad discovery. I’m not going to permit that,” the federal judge told the attorneys.

Yet Halper’s lawyer served 15 pages of interrogatories on Lokhova that included not just irrelevant questions but continued to imply she served as a Russian spy. “Identify any Russian intelligence member with who you have discussed Stefan Halper and state when and where this occurred,” one discovery request asked. “Identify any Russian intelligence member with whom you have discussed the 2016 U.S. Presidential election,” another inquiry ran.

The irony of these interrogatories abounds when one remembers that Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, previously asked the Office of Net Assessments (ONA) for the Department of Defense for details on a contract awarded Halper in September 2015 that “list[ed] former Deputy Foreign Minister for Russia, Vyacheslav Trubnikov, as a consultant and advisor to a paper delivered to ONA.”

“Trubnikov is a known Russian intelligence officer, who was listed by Christopher Steele as a source in the now-debunked Steele dossier, which was used as a predicate to obtain a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrant to surveil Trump Campaign adviser Carter Page,” Grassley wrote, before asking if “Halper paid Trubnikov for his assistance in gathering information for this paper, or in what capacity Professor Halper interacted with Trubnikov during the course of performing work for this contract.”

While Lokhova’s attorney will likely object to Halper’s irrelevant interrogatories, a cut-and-paste of the same question for Halper would sure be more fun: “Identify any Russian intelligence member with whom you have discussed the 2016 U.S. Presidential election.” 

The document requests Halper’s attorney served on Lokhova proved even more outrageous with him asking for all communications by her about Halper, “including but not limited to” “Twitter users,” various named journalists, Grassley, former Rep. Devin Nunes, and several other high-profile names such as Flynn.

Of course, those communications have no relevance to Lokhova’s defamation and intentional interference with contract claims. Likely anticipating that problem, Halper’s attorney filed a “tit-for-tat” cross-complaint against Lokhova, alleging Lokhova defamed him in her book and to folks in England, as well as for supposedly interfering with his ONA contracts. 

On Friday, Lokhova’s attorney moved to dismiss those claims, noting that the defamation claims were all barred by the statute of limitations, which ironically is precisely the grounds on which Halper avoided liability to Lokhova in her first lawsuit. Halper’s intentional interference claim based on the ONA contracts also fails, according to Lokhova’s motion to dismiss, because Halper did not allege “a specific, existing contract or business expectancy or opportunity.” Instead, Halper merely alleged that “[b]y 2016, Halper had accumulated multiple national security consulting contracts.” 

Under Virginia law, such a generic allegation appears insufficient to state an intentional-interference-with-contract claim, but how fun would it be if instead of seeking dismissal of that claim, Lokhova defended it and obtained discovery on all contracts Halper had with ONA? Such a discovery might provide an explanation for “a syllabus for the intelligence seminar at the University of Cambridge where Halper taught alongside the former head of MI6, Richard Dearlove, listed Halper as leading a discussion of ‘The Afghan End Game.’” A summary of Halper’s seminar presentation then “noted that he had ‘recently completed a major survey of Allied end game options in Afghanistan for the then Secretary of Defense Robert Gates.’” Strangely, however, no such ONA contract appears for that work for Halper.

While such an approach would be entertaining and informative, Brinkema made clear that no such games would take place in her courtroom. Lokhova’s attorney heard and heeded the message — Halper’s counsel, not so much. And now that Brinkema realizes from the declassified notes of Halper’s conversation with FBI agents that Lokhova’s complaint against Halper isn’t pushing some wild conspiracy theory, gamesmanship from Halper’s attorney may be viewed by the court as an attempt to further hide the truth. 

Given that after discovery, Halper will have a second opportunity to request that the court toss the case before Lokhova gets to a jury, this litigation strategy could well be Halper’s undoing, which would be quite the turnabout given that for more than five years he has avoided indictment for lying to the FBI and also sidestepped a congressional subpoena.