Friday, September 2, 2022

Finding Their Teeth, and Claws

The choices couldn't be clearer. The question, as always, is does the Republican Party have the courage to actually fight.


With every passing week and after years of growing evidence, it’s become clear the Department of Justice and Federal Bureau of Investigation are little more than politicized, corrupt, and weaponized agencies of the government that exist to go after the Left’s political opponents. In just the last six years, we have all the empirical evidence we need to know that the FBI is irredeemable and should be dismantled.

Exhibit A: This FBI secured four illegal FISA warrants as a result of the Steele dossier, which they knew was bogus, all to spy on the duly elected president of the United States. The same FBI in 2020 used Twitter and likely Facebook to suppress the Hunter Biden laptop story. No big deal? More than nine percent of swing state voters indicated they would have switched their votes from Biden to Trump had they known of the laptop (which means Trump would have sailed to re-election). 

The same FBI then raids the home of the former president of the United States in 2022, apparently for very spurious reasons, while the Justice Department refuses to release the affidavit as to why it felt it was necessary to take such extraordinary steps. Hint: it’s not justifiable. It’s about targeting someone they view as an existential threat to them and their beloved administrative state. This same corrupt Justice Department has spent $100 million pursuing Trump and his supporters, while almost nothing on pursuing the Black Lives Matter rioters who destroyed billions in property and killed dozens of people in 2020.

If you still think either of these institutions is trustworthy, you might actually be part of the problem.

So it’s time not to demand an apology or that they reform themselves because they never will. It’s time to bring the hammer down on them when Republicans take back the House and Senate this fall (and yes, I’m still very bullish on the prospect of that).

It’s not enough to say we need a new Church Commission for the FBI and Justice Department. What has become abundantly clear, particularly so with Biden and the Democrats bulking up the Internal Revenue Service with 87,000 new agents, is that there are plans to wage war against the American people. We need a far more invasive and broad investigation than a rerun of the Church Commission, and we need it quickly.

What is taking place with the Justice Department, FBI, IRS, and other agencies has proven to be far more interconnected than we imagined at first and it’s all part of a broader U.S. surveillance state. It’s clear that the FBI fully intends to use the bulked-up IRS to abuse everyday Americans and those it perceives as enemies. From the time of Lois Lerner to now, we have learned that the IRS is more than willing to use its powers to intimidate and prosecute innocent Americans via spurious audits and criminal investigations. The FBI often uses IRS agents as part of its coordinated intimidation and prosecutorial efforts with a compliant Justice Department looking on.

So when the GOP retakes the House and Senate, it’s time for a variety of things to take place and to put Democrats further on the defensive during this election cycle. Republicans should make commitments to real change in 2023. 

First, the GOP must commit now to forming a Joint Investigative Committee to investigate the Justice Department, FBI, IRS, DHS, and the surveillance state when it takes the majority. Perhaps the efforts are led by the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), and the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee—which cannot be Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), or John Cornyn (R-Texas). Perhaps Mike Lee (R-Utah), Ted Cruz (R-Texas), or Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) would fit the bill. The committee should be given broad and aggressive investigative powers with teeth: contempt, stonewalling, and refusal to comply should result in contempt of Congress with jail time. 

The GOP needs to commit to and promote this now. It must also pledge, with the power of the purse in the House, to a total hiring freeze and shrinking of the various agencies, with some exceptions made for defense. It must commit to serious efforts to unspool the energy moratoriums and fully fund southern border security, including the completion of the border wall. It must also boldly work on engendering an environment for economic growth and inflation reduction. 

It’s time to give the American voters a bold, clear, and aggressive agenda to vote for, and quite frankly, a mandate for which they can be held to account in 2023. Republicans can and should do this.

The Republican Party can either continue to have the life squeezed out of it by the massive boa constrictor of the administrative state and its Democratic allies or it can go for the head of the snake before the lights go out. The choices couldn’t be clearer. The question, as always, is whether the Republican Party has the courage to actually fight. It had better because this is about more than just the Republican Party: it’s about the continued existence of the free American republic.




X22, And we Know, and more- Sept 2

 



I need something to say. Here's tonight's news:


Scattered Pictures of the Files He Left Behind

A picture of scattered files on the floor of Mar-a-Lago isn’t helping make the regime’s case that this is a serious investigation undertaken by serious people.


It is the picture that launched a thousand memes.

Attached to the government’s 36-page response to Donald Trump’s request for a third party to review the materials stolen from Mar-a-Lago on August 8, the Department of Justice included a photo of documents seized by FBI investigators during the raid. Several papers, concealed by either a white sheet or cover page alleging the document contained secret or top secret information, are seen scattered on the floor somewhere in Trump’s residence.

Prosecutors hope the exhibit will convince U.S. District Court Judge Aileen Cannon to deny Trump’s request for a special master to replace a “filter team” of federal agents tasked with determining which records were unlawfully taken from the White House. But the disclosure instead earned well-deserved mockery by social media accounts on the Right; creative users doctored the photo to show cover sheets referring to Hillary Clinton’s emails, Jeffrey Epstein’s victims, Hunter Biden’s laptop, the January 6 pipe bomber, Jussie Smollet’s alleged noose and so on.

Right on cue, however, Democrats and the new media went ballistic. “These are the secrets that protect our troops,” Representative Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) tweeted on Wednesday morning with a link to the picture. “Either you want them protected or believe they should be in the hands of a corrupt man who has used U.S. resources before to help himself. Are you with the troops or Trump?” Washington Post columnist and pretend conservative Jennifer Rubin raged over “a damning photo of scattered top-secret documents at Mar-a-Lago” and blamed Trump supporters for enabling the former president “in subverting our national security.” Former FBI director Andrew McCabe, busted for lying to his own investigators back in 2017, said he was “astounded” by all the “startling evidence” shown in the photo.

The Twitter account of the House Judiciary GOP was throttled for making fun of the framed front-cover of a 2019 issue of Time magazine, an item apparently confiscated by the FBI during the Mar-a-Lago ransacking. “Unbelievable that the GOP would ignore the obvious evidence of Trump’s criminality,” NBC News contributor Joyce Alene rage-tweeted. Missouri’s defeated former Democratic U.S. Senator Claire McCaskill could not contain her fury. “Think about this. This is the Republican Party, the part[y] that will be in charge of oversight of the rule of law in this country if they take control in Nov. They’re making fun of the FBI’s legal efforts to secure Top Secret files that could jeopardize US lives. Beyond disgusting.”

Predictable bleating notwithstanding, there still is no proof the trove included national security secrets or even classified information. In fact, it’s unclear who attached cover sheets to the records in question. Did Trump or members of his legal team do it? Or did FBI agents paperclip the alarming notices in an effort to dramatize evidence they knew would be presented to a judge and eventually disclosed to the public.

No one knows—and filings from both the Justice Department and Trump in the special master suit shed little light on the question. What is quite clear is that the Justice Department is pulling from a well-worn bag of tricks to stop the American people, and a potential special master, from viewing the stolen documents. In addition to informing Judge Cannon that their review is completed and has identified a “limited” number of attorney-privileged communications, government lawyers claimed in an August 30 response that the “appointment of a special master is unnecessary and would significantly harm important governmental interests, including national security interests.” A third-party arbiter would “impede the government’s ongoing criminal investigation and—if the special master were tasked with reviewing classified documents—would impede the Intelligence Community from conducting its ongoing review of the national security risk that improper storage of these highly sensitive materials may have caused.” (As I explained here, the sudden urgency to conduct a “national security” assessment, announced the same day that Judge Cannon signaled she would consider naming a special master, is a ruse by the Biden regime to keep the nature of the documents under wraps.)

If Cannon, a Trump appointee, proceeds with appointing a special master, the Justice Department has outlined its demands. The special master should only review attorney-privileged records; if Cannon allows the special master to review classified documents, the person must have top secret security clearance. All findings, the government’s lawyers insisted, must be filed under seal and the entire process concluded by September 30.

Not exactly a sign of confidence by a usually overly-confident Justice Department.

But one sentence in the government’s response appears to undermine the entire notion that Trump illegally absconded with classified material and suggests that this is merely the latest unsubstantiated witch hunt against him; the Justice Department astonishingly argued Trump should not have anypresidential record in his possession. “As an initial matter, the former President lacks standing to seek judicial relief or oversight as to Presidential records because those records do not belong to him,” assistant U.S. Attorney Juan Gonzalez wrote. “The Presidential Records Act makes clear that ‘[t]he United States” has “complete ownership, possession, and control’ of them.”

That, on its face, is preposterous and certainly without precedent. Are Americans supposed to believe that some unknown archivist in the nation’s capital technically owns tens of millions of presidential papers, notes, correspondence, internal deliberations, letters, memorabilia, reports, schedules, and other material accumulated over Trump’s term and that the former president should possess none of them? Are Americans supposed to believe that Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama don’t have one single memento from their years in the White House?

Or did the Justice Department just admit this has nothing to do with the possession of unlawful super secret records and prosecutors are instead relying on a vague civil statute—a ridiculous technicality that will be almost impossible to prove in any courtroom outside of Washington—to finally take down Trump?

Time will tell.

In the interim, as both sides await Judge Cannon’s decision—journalists who covered the hearing reported she seemed inclined to grant Trump’s request—the Justice Department is preparing new legal maneuvers to keep its Trump-related contraband outside of the public eye. But what remains in the public eye for now—a picture of scattered files on the floor of Mar-a-Lago—isn’t helping make the regime’s case that this is a serious investigation undertaken by serious people.




The Fake History of the 20th Century


It’s one of the most famous moments in sports history, or 20th Century American history, period. Jackie Robinson, the first player to break the pro baseball color barrier, took the field for the Brooklyn Dodgers on the road against the Cincinnati Reds. A hostile racist crowd poured abuse down onto him. But then, Robinson’s teammate Harold “Pee Wee” Reese shamed and quieted the crowd by walking over to Robinson and putting his arm around him in a gesture of support. It’s a moment immortalized in film, in children’s books,and even in bronze.

But as the Wall Street Journal revealed in a recent article, the whole episode never happened:

No newspapers reported the event at the time. In fact, the New York Post said Robinson had been “the toast of the town” in Cincinnati. The Cincinnati Post reported the day after the game: “If anyone had any objection to Jackie’s presence on the field, he failed to make himself heard.” Writing in his weekly newspaper column, Robinson called his visit to Crosley Field “a nice experience.”

The story of the Cincinnati embrace surfaced decades later in an interview with one of Robinson’s teammates, pitcher Rex Barney. But Barney got one of the key details wrong. He said he was warming up to pitch in the first inning of the game when Reese shut down the hecklers. The fact is, Barney didn’t pitch that day until the seventh inning.

In interviews I conducted with Robinson’s wife, Rachel, for my book on his breakthrough season, she insisted that no such hug occurred in 1947.

[WSJ]

This wasn’t just a harmless myth. For decades, ordinary people in Cincinnati were tarred as hateful racists in order to further a specific narrative about America. They weren’t the only victims of myths related to Robinson. Enos Slaughter of the St. Louis Cardinals has been villainized for decades for slashing Robinson with his spiked cleats during a play at first base. But Slaughter always insisted the injury was accidental, and sportswriters at the game from both St. Louis and New York City agreed, saying that nothing appeared deliberate about the incident. Similarly, in the 2013 film about Robinson, Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Fritz Ostermueller is portrayed intentionally hitting Robinson in the head with a pitch before insulting him with a racist comment. In reality, the pitch hit Robinson on the wrist and there is no evidence of such an insult at all.

But all three myths will live on, because they are useful. They promote a certain story about America: That until very recently the country was overwhelmingly bigoted and hateful, and good for very little else. In fact, America’s entire 20th-century history, as it is taught in schools and portrayed on screen, is essentially “fake.” It is a sequence of myths atop myths, created to make Americans hate their ancestors and their history.

A full list of these myths could fill several books. For now, we will illustrate the point with some central examples.

The Tulsa Riot

As America steadily replaces pride in its achievements with a new white guilt national ideology, the nation has craved greater atrocities to further fuel a deep sense of shame. Lynchings and segregation were bad, but they lack the electric spark of a Kristallnacht.

For Americans desperate to hate their grandparents, then, the Tulsa Riot of 1921 has become the perfect symbol. Over the past few years, the riot has been promoted with a strange amount of glee. It was used to open HBO’s awful “Watchmen” adaptation, and both the press and President Biden made a major show of the riot’s 100th anniversary last year. Biden’s remarks on that anniversary repeat what is, essentially, the mainstream understanding of events:

[T]he mob terrorized Greenwood [the black neighborhood affected by the riot] with torches and guns shooting at will. A mob tied a Black man, by the waist, to the back of their truck, with his head banging along the pavement as they drove off. A murdered Black family draped over the fence of their home outside. An elderly couple knelt by their bed, praying to God with their heart and their soul, when they were shot in the back of their heads. Private planes dropping explosives, the first and only domestic air assault of its kind on an American city here in Tulsa.

10,000 people were left destitute and homeless, placed in interment camps. As I was told today, they were told, “Don’t you mention you were ever in a camp or we’ll come and get you.” That’s a survivor story. … The death toll records by local officials said there were 36 people. That’s all, 36 people. Based on studies records and accounts, the likely number is much more than the multiple of hundreds. Untold bodies dumped into mass graves.

[Rev.com]

But as Scott Greer wrote for Revolver last year, every part of Biden’s statement is a gross factual distortion. Even the most exhaustive investigation of the event could only confirm 39 deaths (13 of them white), with the supposed “hundreds” of other victims lacking bodies, causes of death, or even names. There is little evidence of any aerial bombing happening. The “internment camps” were temporary housing for those displaced by the massive fire (apparently they were supposed to just be left without shelter?). Lurid tales of elderly couples executed while praying have remained just that, lurid tales, a kind of racist pornography passed down through the years without any serious effort to verify them.

Emmett Till

We don’t need to narrate to you the story of Emmett Till. You’ve heard it, your kids have heard it, everyone has heard it. Publications like the New York Times provide breaking Emmett Till news every few months. The constant drumbeat regarding the case has, ironically, fueled lynch mobs which have burst into nursing homes on the hunt for Carolyn Bryant, who accused Till of making sexual advances on her while she worked at a general store in Drew, Mississippi.

Emmett Till’s story isn’t a myth in the sense that it didn’t happen, or that Till deserved to die (he certainly did not). Rather, the myth of Emmett Till lies in how it is treated as a symbol of “typical” behavior in the Deep South shortly before desegregation. Till’s death, and the acquittal of his killers by an all-white jury, supposedly represent what was still normal behavior in the South even in the 1950s. But in fact, nothing about the case was typical, which was precisely why it generated so much attention. Mississippi’s governor, Hugh White, put enormous pressure on authorities to find the culprit. The largest law firm in Tallahatchie County, where the murder occurred, refused to represent Till’s killers. Mississippi’s white newspapers unanimously condemned the slaying and demanded justice:

The Greenwood Commonwealth, in a front-page editorial, stated, “The citizens of this area are determined that the guilty parties shall be punished to the full extent of the law.” The Vicksburg Post said, “The ghastly and wholly unprovoked murder . . . cannot be condoned, nor should there be anything less than swift and determined prosecution of those guilty of the heinous crime.” … The Clarksdale Press Register said, “Those who kidnapped and murdered Till have dealt the reputation of the South and Mississippi a savage blow. It is a blow from which we can recover only by accepting this violent and insane challenge to our laws and by prosecuting vigorously the individuals responsible for this crime.”

[A Case Study in Southern Justice: The Murder and Trial of Emmett Till]

Even the label of “lynching” is a misnomer. Till’s death wasn’t ad hoc mob justice, carried out in public. It was just a normal murder, carried out in secret and denied afterwards. When Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam went on trial for the murder, they didn’t proudly defend their actions, but instead denied them. Only after being acquitted did they admit the truth to “Look” magazine, at which point whatever support remained for the pair evaporated completely. The Bryants and Milams were essentially “canceled,” not by Northeastern elites but by their own Mississippi peers. Neighbors who had supported them during the trial were disgusted, and the hatred was so intense that both families had to leave the state.

Matthew Shepard

What Emmett Till has been for black activists, Matthew Shepard has become for the gay rights movement: the martyr whose violent death is supposedly emblematic of routine, homicidal violence that gays supposedly suffered routinely before the arrival of gay rights.

The traditional story is as simple as it gets: Matthew Shepard was a vivacious gay college student in conservative Wyoming, a budding activist with a lifetime of potential ahead of him, when he was brutally murdered for his sexuality by two men who later claimed in court that they killed Matthew in a state of “gay panic,” disturbed by his sexual advances.

Virtually overnight, gay activists made Shepard a national martyr. A play about his life and death, “The Laramie Project”, became one of the most-performed productions in America. Elton John even wrote a terrible song about him.

But it was all based on nothing.

Stephen Jimenez, himself a gay man, spent more than a decade reporting on the Shepard case, and in 2013 he published the definitive book on the case, “The Book of Matt: Hidden Truths About the Murder of Matthew Shepard”.

After some 13 years of digging, including interviews with more than 100 sources, including Shepard’s killers, Jimenez makes a radioactive suggestion: The grisly murder, 15 years ago this month, was no hate crime.

Shepard’s tragic and untimely demise may not have been fueled by his sexual orientation, but by drugs. For Shepard had likely agreed to trade methamphetamines for sex. And it killed him.

Aaron McKinney and Russell Henderson, now doing life for murder, were not homophobes, writes Jimenez. Shepard was lured from a bar, then driven to the outskirts of Laramie, Wyo., where he was robbed. McKinney savagely pistol-whipped Shepard with the barrel of a .357 Magnum. The men then hung him, barefoot, freezing and barely alive, on a fence, in a pose resembling a crucifixion. He died six days later.

But McKinney was no stranger. Strung out on meth for a week before the slaying, writes Jimenez, McKinney likely had been Shepard’s gay or bisexual lover.

[New York Post]

The full story came out nearly a decade ago. It even got coverage in mainstream and even progressive outlets, such as The Daily Beast and The Nation.

But then the Southern Poverty Law Center, always a relentless enforcer of narrative orthodoxy, trashed Jimenez on its “Hatewatch” blog. Media Matters did its part as well. America still has a federal hate crime law named after Shepard. “The Laramie Project” continues to be one of the most-staged plays in America, ensuring that Americans from Fullerton, CA to Chestertown, MDcontinue to learn the Myth of Matt.

Central Park Five

As the media struggle to frame America’s tough-on-crime era as a mistake rather than an achievement, they have settled on the Central Park Five as their preferred case to indict America’s “racist” criminal justice system. For one, it offers a chance to not only attack all of America, but also President Trump:

President Trump said on Tuesday that he would not apologize for his harsh comments in 1989 about the Central Park Five, the five black and Latino men who as teenagers were wrongly convicted of the brutal rape of a jogger in New York City.

In 1989, Mr. Trump placed full-page advertisements in four New York City newspapers, including The New York Times, calling for the state to adopt the death penalty for killers. He made clear that he was voicing this opinion because of the rape and assault of Trisha Meili, a woman who had been jogging in Central Park.

The five teenagers were wrongfully convicted and sentenced to prison for gang-raping and nearly killing Ms. Meili.

They said the police had coerced them into confessing to a crime they did not commit. Their convictions were vacated in 2002, and the city paid $41 million in 2014 to settle their civil rights lawsuit.

[New York Times]

On an April night in 1989, a mob of “youths”, went “wilding” through Central Park, robbing and assaulting anybody they came across in an orgy of mayhem. The climax of the crime spree was the horrifying assault on 28-year-old investment banker Trisha Meili, who was unwisely jogging through the park that evening. After the “youths” raped and sodomized her, Meili lost 75 percent of the blood in her body and spent 12 days in a coma before emerging with significant brain damage.

Five teenagers — Kevin Richardson, Antron McCray, Raymond Santana, Yusef Salaam and Korey Wise — were convicted of participating in the rape. In 2002, the convictions were vacated after convicted murderer Matias Reyes claimed to be the sole perpetrator. Reyes received a transfer to a nicer prison for his trouble. In 2014 Bill De Blasio awarded the five with a $40 million settlement.  In 2019, Netflix dramatized the saga of the Central Park Five with its miniseries “When They See Us”. The show’s release prompted the cancellation of the case’s prosecutor Elizabeth Lederer, who resigned from her post as a lecturer at Columbia Law, and former Manhattan sex crimes unit chief Linda Fairstein, who was dropped by the publisher of her mystery novels.

But the truth is, the Central Park Five were almost certainly guilty, and in a just world all five would still be in prison (or better yet, executed). Reyes’s confession proves nothing, as it was known from the beginning that many people were involved in the attack. A 2003 NYPD report reaffirmed the group nature of the assault, and found no evidence of police or prosecutorial misconduct. Ann Coulter has been one of the few writers brave enough to tell the truth about the case:

The five accused rapists — Kevin Richardson, Antron McCray, Raymond Santana, Yusef Salaam and Kharey Wise — were duly convicted of the 1989 Central Park rape, as well as other assaults in the park that night; “exonerated” 13 years later; and, more than a decade after that, paid $40 million by the city of New York to settle a malicious prosecution case within months of Bill de Blasio becoming mayor, despite city lawyers’ confidence that they would win at trial.

To his credit, Mayor Michael Bloomberg refused to give the “exonerated” convicts a dime.

Today, they are civil rights heroes to Hollywood airheads and others completely unfamiliar with the facts of the case.

Here is just some of the evidence against them.

Santana was one of the first boys picked up in the park the night of the attacks, April 19, 1989. While being driven to the precinct house, he blurted out: “I had nothing to do with the rape.”

At this point, the jogger hadn’t been found. The police knew nothing about any rape. Richardson rode to the precinct with another boy, who announced to the police that he knew who did “the murder,” naming Antron McCray. Richardson concurred, saying, “Yeah. That’s who did it.”

Salaam confessed to the rape after the detective questioning him said that fingerprints had been found on the jogger’s clothing, and if the prints were his, he was “going down for the rape.” Salaam confessed immediately.

Taken to the scene of the crime by a detective and a prosecutor the following morning, Wise said, “Damn, damn, that’s a lot of blood. … I knew she was bleeding, but I didn’t know how bad she was. It was really dark. I couldn’t see how much blood there was at night.” (She’d lost three-quarters of her blood.)

[Ann Coulter]

The evidence listed by Ann Coulter just goes on and on, you’ll have to click the above link to read it all.

So, in summary, the Central Park Five saga isn’t a case of systemic racism run amok. Instead, it’s a case study of how “exonerated” criminals are often anything but.

Stonewall

In 2016, President Barack Obama designated the site of the Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village as a national monument. The statement announcing the designation described the inn as the site of the “Stonewall Uprising”:

On June 28, 1969, the Stonewall Inn, one of the most frequented LGBT bars in the city, was raided by the New York City Police Department to enforce a law that made it illegal to sell alcoholic drinks to “homosexuals.” Customers and their allies resisted the police by refusing to show identification or go into a bathroom so that a police officer could verify their sex, and a crowd gathered outside. As word spread, the gathering grew in size and a riot ultimately ensued. Within days, Stonewall seemed to galvanize LGBT communities across the country, with LGBT activists organizing demonstrations to show support for LGBT rights in several cities. These events, which are now often referred to as the Stonewall Uprising, are widely considered to be a watershed moment when the LGBT community across the nation demonstrated its power to join together and demand equality and respect.

[Obama WH Archives]

In his second inaugural address in 2013, Obama placed Stonewall on par with the Seneca Falls convention and MLK’s Selma march as an epochal moment in American civil rights history. And there, in all likelihood, it will remain, a part of the national mythology, taught to children in schools as part of their now-mandatory “LGBTQ+ history” curriculum.

Missing from the Obama summaries are a few important facts: That the Stonewall Inn was owned by the Mafia, that it was blackmailing its patrons, that it had become the hub of a multimillion-dollar extortion ring the police hoped to break up. The police officer who led the raid, even after being browbeaten into an apology, always said the target of the raid was the mob, not the gays.

It is truly astonishing to learn how many morality tales from the textbooks of woke indoctrination turn out to be based on blatant falsehoods. Of course, it has long been a staple of political philosophy that every society depends on certain foundational and animating myths. In Plato’s “Republic”, Socrates suggests that even the most perfect imaginary polity requires some kind of “noble lie” to function successfully. What is most nefarious about the myths undergirding the Globalist American Empire is perhaps not so much that they are falsehoods, but they are deeply destructive and malicious falsehoods. The American people must understand not only the falsehood of the myths foisted upon them, but also the maliciousness behind such myths, in order to begin to escape from the spiritual and mental prison created for them by their corrupt and illegitimate ruling class.




Russia's Gazprom says gas flows to Europe will stay shut after G7 agreed price cap to choke Putin's war machine

 

Russia's Gazprom has said natural gas supplies to Europe via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline will remain shut off.

It comes after G7 finance ministers agreed to impose a price cap on Russian oil exports in an effort to limit funding for President Vladimir Putin's war in Ukraine.  

Gazprom said it was not reinstating supplies to Europe because the main gas turbine at Portovaya compressor station near St Petersburg could not operate safely until a leak was repaired. It did not say when supplies would be restarted.  

Moscow has blamed sanctions imposed by the West after Russia invaded Ukraine for hampering routine operations and maintenance for Nord Stream 1. However, Brussels has said that is a pretext and Russia is using gas as an economic weapon to retaliate.

Germany's network regulator said the country was better prepared for a stop of Russian gas supplies, but urged citizens and companies to cut consumption.

"In view of the Russian decision not to allow any gas to flow via Nord Stream 1 for the time being, the LNG terminals,

the relevant storage levels & significant savings requirements are becoming more important," Klaus Mueller, president of the Bundesnetzagentur, tweeted. "It's good that Germany is now better prepared, but now it's down to each and everyone."  

The G7 decision was made at a virtual meeting of the group, made up of seven of the world's richest countries - the UK, US, Canada, Italy, France, Germany and Japan - on Friday afternoon.

Confirming the news, Chancellor Nadhim Zahawi said: "We will curtail Putin's capacity to fund his war from oil exports by banning services, such as insurance and the provision of finance, to vessels carrying Russian oil above an agreed price cap."

The price cap has not yet been decided.  

Despite selling less oil since the invasion of Ukraine in February, Russia made £600m more from oil sales in June than it did in the previous month because of rocketing prices pushed up by the war.

As well as limiting Russia's revenues, it is hoped the price cap can also bring down rising energy prices around the world.

Speaking after the announcement, Mr Zahawi said the move will "protect our citizens from oil price shocks next year".

He added: "That is a significant step forward.

"It will mean that Putin can't profiteer from excessively high oil prices and of course, protect all of us from oil price shocks next year and beyond." 

Putin's strategy will not work'

The G7 decision comes after Mr Zahawi met with Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen in Washington on Wednesday for talks on how to tackle the spiralling cost of living crisis.

Sky News understands that the meeting was important in getting the two countries in lockstep over the price cap.

Mr Zahawi said G7 ministers would be discussing strategies to implement the cap in December, then putting it in place in February.

Energy bills will soar for millions of UK households before then, after Ofgem hiked up its October price cap by 80% - plunging many into financial hardship.  

https://news.sky.com/story/g7-finance-ministers-agree-price-cap-on-russian-oil-to-choke-putins-war-machine-12687804   


The Nord Stream 1 gas leak Gazprom says is in one of the engines at at Portovaya compressor station. Pic: Gazprom  




McConnell Sounds Like He Wants To Abandon A Ship Rick Scott Wants To Captain

Rick Scott is working to push Senate Republicans into the majority, 
while Mitch McConnell seems more interested in vindicating himself.



Republican senators are set to face two options this January. The first: a GOP Senate minority led by longtime leader Sen. Mitch McConnell. The second: a Republican majority, led by Florida Sen. Rick Scott.

Theirs is a fight that’s been publicly brewing since (at least) McConnell’s December declaration that there would be no 2022 GOP agenda. After another month of missteps, however, their battle might have real-world consequences.

Despite D.C.’s always useless conventional wisdom about the GOP Senate leader’s endless savvy, McConnell has given up on the duties of his job, turning on both his voters and his party. Scott, by contrast, is clearly aiming for the job — and is working hard to show he deserves it. Who gets it might depend on which party wins this November.

Scott has placed his chips on a Republican majority and a plan of action should the GOP gain one. Toward this service, in February — 10 weeks after McConnell had promised no legislative agenda for the 2022 agenda — Scott released his 12-point plan.

The release of an actual plan to run on infuriated McConnell, who came down on his leadership colleague with the kind of rage he often spares his political opponents and reserves for the apostates in his midst.

Disaffected conservatives and Republicans alike closely watched how Scott would respond to his senior’s public rebuke. Scott surprised the capital city by responding with a series of ads on Fox News, taking his plan directly to the party’s base despite McConnell’s complaints. While few in D.C. agreed with every aspect of Scott’s plan, it was an actual platform — and one he was willing to fight Senate leadership over.

For years, conservatives had run against Mitch McConnell, only to fall in line under the money his Senate Leadership Fund could either provide or cut off. For years, however, he’d remained staunchly in place, with no serious contenders to unseat him.

Misstep after misstep, chiefly beginning with his December announcement of no agenda, however, has significantly undermined McConnell’s invincibility.

In mid-August this year, faced with a historically unpopular president, a slate of radical and stroke-stricken Democrat candidates (and a host of difficult-but-competitive races), McConnell chose to trash his home team.

Over the following days, he backed his trash talk with potentially sabotaging moves, slashing ad-buys in Blake Masters’ Arizona Senate race. Masters, like Ohio Republican nominee J.D. Vance, is a protegee of mercurial billionaire Peter Thiel. And like Vance, Masters was supported by Thiel over McConnell’s preferred candidate in the primary.

McConnell blamed Masters’ alleged poor performance for the cuts, but while Masters has failed to fundraise, the race remains competitive by all measures outside the Democrats’ wish-casting.

The reality is McConnell is angry the base didn’t choose his guys. Not content with taking his ball home, however, this week his team leaked to The Washington Post that he’d demanded Thiel be the one who funds the candidates he’d supported in the primaries.

Does a man who wants to be the leader of his party publicly lament the defects of his team and even predict their loss? Does a man who wants to head a GOP majority cut his spending in close races while blaming the voters for selecting their own candidates? Does a man who wants to lead conservatives try to publicly humiliate a conservative mega-donor using leaks to the left-wing Washington Post?

None of this was lost on Scott, chairman of the Republican National Senatorial Committee, who, in a Thursday Washington Examiner op-ed, accused Republican leaders of “an amazing act of cowardice,” treason against “the conservative cause,” and having “contempt for the voters.”

“If you want to talk about the need to raise more money to promote our candidates versus the Democrats’ terrible candidates,” Scott wrote, “I agree. If you want to trash-talk our candidates to help the Democrats, pipe down. That’s not what leaders do. And Republicans need to be leaders that build up the team and do everything they can to get the entire team over the finish line.”

It was Scott’s most open declaration of war yet but is still one that leaves the independently wealthy multi-millionaire safe with the majority of his colleagues. If Republicans do indeed fail to take the Senate in November, McConnell can claim he was right — but Scott can claim he fought to the end with the army he had.

And if Republicans take the Senate (and they very well might), Scott will be the only man who fought the whole time. In either scenario, McConnell’s grip on power will be severely weakened — and Rick Scott’s positioned himself to take his job as leader, either right away or when the next moment arrives.



Liz Cheney Throws a Tantrum at Ted Cruz, but He Decimates Her With the Perfect Response


Nick Arama reporting for RedState 

Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) got her rear handed to her in her primary in Wyoming, losing by almost 40 points to Harriet Hageman who had been endorsed by President Donald Trump.

What was hilarious was that after being handed such a decisive fanny kicking, Cheney then said that she was considering possibly running for president in 2024, not seeming to understand that she wouldn’t have any constituency to be able to win in such an effort.

If she’s not attacking Trump as part of the Jan. 6 Committee since she’ll be out in January, the Democrats no longer will have a use for her. They no longer have to pump her up as having any kind of credibility.

Cheney suddenly seems to realize that she dug herself a hole that she can’t get out of, that she’s history in January.

Of course, being Cheney, she’s doing exactly the wrong thing to try to get out of the hole. Or perhaps the right thing, if what she cares about is getting a position on MSNBC. She’s now expanding her grift to make herself relevant (to Democrats) by attacking other Republicans including people like Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO), Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a possible presidential candidate in 2024.

She attacked Hawley and Cruz for objecting to the electoral counts from Pennsylvania and Arizona, claiming they were “unfit to serve.” But that’s completely within the Constitution to do so, contrary to what she claimed. Indeed, Democrats including Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) who serves on the Jan. 6 Committee objected to the electoral count for Trump in January 2017. But Cheney doesn’t seem to have a problem with that.

Many Democrats made similar objections in prior elections. Democrats including Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton all cast doubt on the election of Trump. But that hasn’t stopped her from throwing in with them, she just attacks Republicans.

But when she tries to take on Ted Cruz, she’s outmatched and just looks like she’s desperate for attention.

That’s sort of hilarious and pretty sad coming from someone who threw out any principle that she claimed to have by throwing in with the Democrats. Imagine Cheney calling anyone else unprincipled. It’s a straight-up projection by someone trying to kiss the feet of Democrats for relevance. She’s becoming the bitter equivalent of Hillary Clinton, now that she’s adding stewing about her loss as well.

But Cruz, who has a great sense of humor and a good record of doing in those who try to take him on, finished her off with a simple response.

That’s the perfect response because that’s what she’s facing right now — complete irrelevance in January.




Rick Scott Slams Loser Mentality of Republicans, Takes Shot at Mitch McConnell


Bonchie reporting for RedState 

Sen. Rick Scott, who heads the NRSC, has taken a lot of heat this cycle for the perceived diminishment of Republican chances to take the Senate. How valid those criticisms are is arguable, and I’m of the mind that relying on the same polls that missed numerous races from 2014-2020 is a bit foolhardy.

Still, the “bad candidates” claim has become prevalent and toxic among Republicans, with many seeming to want to be “right” more than doing what it takes to win with who is on the ballot. Scott has finally hit back with a not-so-subtle shot at Mitch McConnell, who recently trotted out the “band candidate line,” and a rallying cry to everyone else.

I’m not a big Scott fan, but he’s speaking a truth that needs to be spoken in this tenuous environment. I am sick and tired of seeing GOP operatives, including McConnell, who actually put his name to his comments, running to leftwing newspapers to talk about how bad Republican candidates are this cycle. That is irrelevant at this point. The candidates are the candidates, and the primaries are over. To continue to try to relitigate that is idiotic and only helps Democrats as we head towards November.

Scott’s line about the Washington “chattering class” hating Republican voters is also on the money. I understand that McConnell can’t stand the people who have put him in power all these years, but he could at least not actively kneecap them in the process. That goes for all the anonymous statements being given to the Post and Times as well.

Besides, a lot of the “bad candidate” talk is simply the establishment not liking who was chosen. J.D. Vance is not a bad candidate. Herschel Walker is currently running ahead of Raphael Warnock in Georgia. Adam Laxalt has a good shot in Nevada. Perhaps Blake Masters is a bit of a mismatch for Arizona, but he’s the guy, and he needs to be supported. Further, some “good candidates” like Ron Johnson are currently trailing according to the polls. Should he not be supported?

The time to whine and moan ended back in the summer. Republicans must united to defeat Democrats in this mid-term. The stakes are too high to continue to give Joe Biden the power of the purse and the ability to shove through radical judges. That doesn’t mean Republicans will agree on everything, but they agree on the big issues, and those must take precedence. Enough of the silly infighting.