Monday, September 26, 2022

A New Counterculture?

If the Right captures some of the Left’s youthful energy and rebellious cachet, 
it would represent a tectonic cultural and political shift.


In July, the New York Times posted a job announcement seeking a reporter-cum-anthropologist to cover an important new beat: infiltrating the “online communities and influential personalities making up the right-wing media ecosystem” and “shedding light on their motivations” for the benefit of Timesreaders. Establishing this “critical listening post” would not be a role for the faint of heart. The daring candidate would have to be specifically “prepared to inhabit corners of the internet” where “far-right” ideas were discussed, all for the higher goal of determining “where and why these ideas take shape.”

You could be forgiven for questioning why the paper needed yet another reporter to shape the narrative about the political Right, given its constant focus on Donald Trump and the populist MAGA movement since 2016. But the timing of the announcement seemed to suggest that the Times had something else in mind. It arrived amid an explosion of media interest in understanding a strange new tribe, discovered suddenly not in the wilds of Kansas but right under their noses.

Back in April, an article by James Pogue in Vanity Fair revealed the emergence of a collection of “podcasters, bro-ish anonymous Twitter posters, online philosophers, artists, and amorphous scenesters”—sometimes called “‘dissidents,’ ‘neo-reactionaries,’ ‘post-leftists,’ or the ‘heterodox’ fringe . . . all often grouped for convenience under the heading of America’s New Right”—who represented the “seam of a much larger and stranger political ferment, burbling up mainly within America’s young and well-educated elite.” 

That last bit about the demographics of this so-called New Right may have been what got the Times’ attention. But Pogue had even more striking news: these dissidents, he wrote, had established “a position that has become quietly edgy and cool in new tech outposts like Miami and Austin, and in downtown Manhattan, where New Right–ish politics are in, and signifiers like a demure cross necklace have become markers of a transgressive chic.” This may have been the most alarming news of all for the paper of record: somehow, traditionalist right-wing conservatism had perhaps become cool.

Is it true—and if so, how is it possible? For at least a century, the Left has held a firm monopoly on “transgressive chic,” profitably waging a countercultural guerilla war against society’s hegemonic status quo. For the Right to capture some of the Left’s youthful energy and rebellious cachet would represent a tectonic cultural and political shift. We shouldn’t be shocked if it happens.

Few things are more natural for young people than to push back against the strictures and norms of their day, even if only to stand out a little from the crowd and assert their independence. A counterculture forms as a reaction against an official or dominant culture—and today, it is the woke neoliberal Left that occupies this position in America’s cultural, educational, technological, corporate, and bureaucratic power centers. In this culture, celebration of ritualized, old forms of transgression is not only permitted, but practically mandatory. Dissent against state-sponsored transgression, however, is now transgressive. All of what was once revolutionary is now a new orthodoxy, with conformity enforced by censorship, scientistic obscurantism, and eager witch-hunters (early-middleaged, zealously dour, tight-lipped frown, NPR tote bag, rainbow “Coexist” bumper sticker, pronouns in email signature—we all know the uniform).

Moreover, young people living under the permanent revolution of today’s cultural mainstream often tend to be miserable. Their disillusionment opens the door to subversive second thoughts on such verities as the bulldozing of sexual and gender norms, the replacement of romance by a Tinder hellscape, general atomized rootlessness, working life that resembles neo-feudal serfdom, and the enervating meaninglessness of consumerism and mass media. In this environment, the most countercultural act is to embrace traditional values and ways of life—like the vogue among some young people for the Latin Mass. We shouldn’t be too surprised if at least a subset of those youth seeking to rebel against the Man might, say, choose to tune in to Jordan Peterson, turn on to a latent thirst for objective truth and beauty, and drop out of the postmodern Left.

Meanwhile, much of American society’s genuine intellectual, artistic, and comedic energy—the kind of creative fire that draws bright young minds—has migrated to the Right. As the populist academic Michael Lind recently argued, “If you are an intelligent and thoughtful young American, you cannot be a progressive public intellectual today, any more than you can be a cavalry officer or a silent movie star,” since at this point “intellectual life on the American center-left is dead.” The spirit of adventure and debate that once drove the Left has, as he wrote, “been replaced by compulsory assent and ideas have been replaced by slogans that can be recited but not questioned,” while the mainstream marketplace of ideas is now filled with “the ritualized gobbledygook of foundation-funded single-issue nonprofits like a pond choked by weeds.”

Humor is similarly something that today’s hectoring class can’t quite produce. Real humor tends to play off the ironic gap between expectation and reality, or between the social pretense of propriety and the obvious. Satire, in particular, is a form of transgression that points out the falsities of illegitimate authority. Saul Alinsky may have correctly advised young left-radicals that “ridicule is man’s most potent weapon” against the establishment, but now the Left has itself become the establishment. Would-be comics who attempt, like the dull Soviet state satirical magazine Krokodil, to “correct with laughter” by mixing ideological regime propaganda with jokes simply end up being what the kids nowadays call “cringe.” The shackles of ideological dogma essentially block off the creative inspiration necessary for producing compelling art.

In contrast with this oppressive decadence of the mainstream Left, the dialectic of the countercultural Right crackles with irreverence and intellectual possibility. Across a growing ecosystem of YouTube videos, Twitter threads, Substack essays, online book clubs, and three-hour podcasts, exiles from the mainstream are looking to broaden their horizons, not only seeking alternative media but also excitedly discovering Christopher Lasch, debating John Locke, and discoursing on Livy. 

A hunger for forbidden knowledge and a yearning for genuine answers on political and cultural phenomena cloaked in official gaslighting has produced a legion of autodidacts, unrestrained by elite gatekeepers. And, finding themselves already outside the window of acceptability, and therefore no longer fettered by encrusted ideological orthodoxies or the need for self-censorship, many of these dissidents have no remaining reason to hesitate in pointing out when an establishment emperor has no clothes.

Who counts as a member of the countercultural Right? The universe extends beyond the traditionalist Catholics, Peter Thiel-aligned political operators, and dissident Internet personalities whom Pogue describes. It surely includes a broader array of political subgroups, including more established nationalist conservatives, European-influenced “post-liberal” intellectuals, and newly reactionary “gender critical” feminists now banished from the Left. But it shouldn’t be mistaken for merely a big political tent: its defining feature is not politics but shared alienation and dissent from the hegemony of the left-wing cultural mainstream. The millions of young people introduced to the validity of right-leaning ideas by such heterodox cultural commentators as Joe Rogan, or even awakened to the value of religious tradition by the likes of Jordan Peterson or Jonathan Pageau, form a cultural base that funnels people into a community of vocal dissidents.

The degree of factionalism and infighting that in some cases is already visible between various cliques of this countercultural Right—including theoretical disputes and petty differences, Twitter spats and personal grudges—is therefore also largely irrelevant. These subgroups may not always get along, but much like the old Left, their fissiparous squabbles represent the vigor of a newborn counterculture, even if they may prove some obstacle to cultural and political influence.

Critically, the countercultural Right is distinct from the riptide of Trumpian political populism, though voters and influencers may overlap. MAGA populism as an overt political movement has largely been limited to mobilizing those already beyond the fortress walls of the reigning elite class—and it has only consolidated and strengthened the elites’ defensive class consciousness. By contrast, a dissident counterculture is capable of resonating across classes, including within the elite class itself.

It’s for this reason that today’s conservatives shouldn’t underestimate the potential political advantage that an emergent counterculture could present in the long run. Conservatives can sometimes gain political power, but a monolithically united cultural opposition then tends to sabotage them. As the writer Tanner Greer has argued, culture wars are long, generational wars—and as polling tends to indicate, the younger generation currently appears to be overwhelmingly on board with left-wing cultural politics. But a shift in the values of some young Americans is far from impossible.

A transgressive countercultural appeal could prove the Right’s greatest asset. No official decrees from seats of government are likely to change the minds of a generation primed to rebel against authority. But a countercultural opposition could. The Left knows this well, of course, having leveraged the energy of the 1960s counterculture into a long march through the institutions and ultimately societal and managerial hegemony.

Commentary on the emergence of these new cultural dissidents often misses this point. A much-discussed recent opinion piece in the Times by Julia Yost, for example, accurately describes the growing young Catholic convert scene concentrated in Manhattan’s Lower East Side Dimes Square neighborhood as having adopted “an in-your-face style of traditionalism” more “in defiance of liberal pieties,” and because it is the “ultimate expression” of a “contrarian aesthetic,” than because its adherents have any particular devotion to the faith. Yost wonders, as other critics do, if these kids are simply role-playing. But it is their willingness to adopt traditional mores to gain approval among their peers that is significant, not the authenticity of their belief—which, as Yost concedes, may come later anyway.

Imitation is the process by which the terms of what is cool, attractive, and socially beneficial have always been established. These new Catholics—regardless of their sincerity—and other cultural dissidents may change those terms. To use a monetary metaphor: the elite depends on hoarding cultural capital, which is measured and accumulated through a common cultural currency; but if too many people switch to transacting with an alternative currency, the old one risks collapse, potentially prompting a sudden mass conversion to the new reserve currency. And though these cultural dissidents may have begun as a minority, and surely will remain so for some time, the exclusivity of minority status can itself act as an attractant. Scarcity can generate its own value.

If the elite Left is going to be stopped in its push to construct a woke total state, however, a budding counterculture won’t be enough. The Right and its anti-woke allies will have to identify, take, hold, and effectively operate real centers of power and influence. A young countercultural Right would be of help in this regard.

Many of the more politically oriented subgroups within the dissident Right, it’s worth noting, are busy familiarizing themselves with the works of realist philosophers of power, from Machiavelli and James Burnham to France’s Bertrand de Jouvenel. But this should not be especially surprising for a group already looking to the past for knowledge and inspiration. As Burnham wrote in his classic book The Machiavellians, an era of “revolutionary crisis makes men, or at least a certain number of men, discontent with what in normal times passes for political thought and science—namely, disguised apologies for the status quo or utopian dreams of the future.”

But it’s not their choice of reading material in itself that could make the new counterculture important politically. As the Trump Administration belatedly discovered, taking nominal control of government through elections today has little impact on the direction of Leviathan. Even if the party officially running things changes, the vast unelected administrative state remains staffed by people educated in the same elite institutions, living in the same elite conclaves, and shaped by the same material incentives to signal acculturation to the same mannerisms, values, networks, career paths, and ideological priorities—what the realist Italian political theorist Gaetano Mosca would have called the same “political formula.”

Personnel is policy. If this entrenched, decidedly-not-neutral governing class doesn’t accept a new policy order, it won’t happen. Declaring a new direction for government without installing new personnel willing and able to carry it out generates only elite revolt and sabotage. High-level political appointees inserted into departments and agencies in an attempt to direct change are quickly isolated and rejected by the immune system of the bureaucratic host-body, pushed out like the foreign objects they are.

Veterans of the Trump Administration appear belatedly to have grasped this reality, if reporting on a plan known as “Schedule F”—an attempt to replace a sizeable chunk of the “civil service” through executive order at the start of a new presidential administration—is accurate. But as Trump officials themselves have already seen, replacing all these personnel would be exceptionally difficult. In addition to the legal obstacles, nearly everyone with the skills and experience to do these jobs effectively is already an assimilated member of the same professional-managerial class. In fact, this status quoapplies not just to government but to nearly every influential large organization, including corporations, major media outfits, universities, and nonprofits. All rely on recruitment from the professional-managerial elite to operate, and so are effectively beholden to the cultural preferences of that milieu.

The only practical way forward for the populist Right, then, is to develop a counter-elite—operating in parallel under a different political formula and leveraging a different cultural currency—from which new leadership could staff positions of institutional power. These new elites could eventually come from anywhere, and from any social or economic class. But conversion from within the existing managerial class—in other words, the cultivation of “class traitors”—would produce the quickest results. The development of a counterculture attractive among the young and educated, up-and-coming elite is the best possible means to accomplish this. It is, after all, the path by which the hippies of the 1960s eventually acquired power. This is the true potential value of a right-wing counterculture.

Privileged young pretend-Catholics in downtown Manhattan might be unlikely themselves to become this counter-elite, but we can think of them as pioneers, reacting to and amplifying the same forces in the zeitgeist that may induce others to join the new counterculture. And, in doing so, they may open a gateway to subvert and perhaps, in time, seize a beachhead of cultural power from within society’s elite class.

This is what might have caused the New York Times and other prestige media to feel the hairs on the back of their neck twitch reflexively. A cultural break within what Pogue described as “America’s young and well-educated elite” would present a direct threat to the Left’s monolithic institutional power, one far greater than even the mass populist revolts that have thus far caused them such anxiety. Yet in the end, the Times, seemingly unable to resist the magnetic draw of Trump, chose to hire the populism-focused lead reporter of Buzzfeed’s infamous Russia-gate “exposé” on the Steele dossier to fill its new position. Perhaps they haven’t yet gras




X22, On the Fringe, and more- Septt 26

 



Here's tonight's news:


Moderate and MAGA Republicans

While woke Democratic candidates are flooded with hundreds of millions of dollars courtesy of coastal elites, Republicans lack the necessary funding to wage effective campaigns.


A recent New York Post editorial excoriated Chuck Schumer’s (D-N.Y.) political action committee for backing “MAGAite Don Bolduc” over “moderate GOP Senate candidate Chuck Morse” in the New Hampshire Republican primary. This was obviously a cynical attempt by the Democrats to help right-leaning Republicans win primaries so their Democratic rivals could beat them easily in November. The presence of such electoral opponents, moreover, would lend credence to Joe Biden’s attacks on “MAGA extremists.” Indeed, the unsettling presence of real Trumpites on the ballot, according to the Post, would give the Democrats an issue to run on absent any real accomplishments by the present administration.

Clearly, however, there is more than one reason the Post and other vehicles of moderate Republicanism are scolding the Democrats for promoting figures on the populist Right. Even if Republicans like Bolduc in New Hampshire, Blake Masters in Arizona, and Doug Mastriano, running for governor in Pennsylvania, win their respective races, they still won’t be on the same page with those who now disapprove of their candidacies. For the Republican center, a disqualifying charge raised against “MAGA candidates” is that they are “election deniers”—or were known to be such in the past. This, according to the Post, is why the very vulnerable New Hampshire Senator Maggie Hassan would lose to the moderate Morse by two points, according to a University of New Hampshire poll, but would edge out Bolduc by one point. 

Of course, I have no idea why Bolduc couldn’t easily surmount a one-point deficit running against a collapsing Democratic incumbent. He is certainly within striking distance, seven weeks from the election, as the Democratic administration in D.C. careens from one disaster to another. 

Equally open to question is why we should give the boot to a Republican candidate for having questioned the official results of the 2020 presidential election. There are certainly multiple grounds for reexamining that event, which contributors to this website have laid out in exhausting detail. 

I also haven’t noticed the usual “moderate” suspects lacing into Democrats who have stridently challenged Republican electoral victories. The invention of the Steele dossier and the propagation of the Trump-Russia collusion hoax were attempts pushed by leading Democrats, with the assistance of the corporate press and the Secret Service, to undo an election they had lost. In comparison to their utterly unscrupulous Democratic counterparts, Republican “election deniers” have been relatively reserved. If Democrats have equated all Republican election critics with those who broke into the Capitol on January 6, that is hardly the fault of Republican candidates who are now running for office.

Election denying, however, may not be the strong suit for Republican office-seekers right now; and the best approach may well be the one Mastriano has taken in my state, which is hammering on the bad economy, open borders, and surging crime rate and promising to protect our enormous energy industry. Like other populist Republicans, Mastriano, a longtime vocal “election-denier” seems to have turned the page and now stresses with regard to the 2020 election the need to make sure past irregularities do not occur again. Mastriano is prudently pivoting away from his known views on the 2020 election, given the negative reaction this could engender among our state’s electorate. But those who hope to check the Biden Administration should not scorn candidates who were “election deniers.” Such figures have shown a fighting spirit that is desirable in resisting the Left. 

This brings me to my main point. Do we really want the Republican opposition to the Democrats, especially while Biden is swinging away at MAGA “semi-fascists,” to beg for a return to “bipartisanship”? I would think the occasion calls for exactly the opposite. There is value, for example, in having someone like J. D. Vance take the place of “moderate” Republican senator Rob Portman in Ohio. Vance would replace Amy Klobuchar’s favorite Republican with someone who is likely to become the bane of Klobuchar and other Senate Democrats. Portman, by the way, has fought for years for a bill that would federalize gay marriage, an action that has made this Ohio “moderate,” beloved to other “moderates,” quite popular among the LGBT crowd. (What about the constitutional right residing in the states to decide such a matter as gay marriage?) 

If there is any reason that races are closer this fall than they should be, it is that Republican candidates are being gravely underfunded by their PACs, as Kimberley Strassel points out in a recent column. While vacuous or radically woke Democratic candidates are being flooded with hundreds of millions of dollars courtesy of coastal elites, Republicans are lacking the necessary funding to wage effective campaigns. Strassel points to the underfunded Blake Masters in Arizona, who should be able to overtake struggling Mark Kelly for the Senate, but who has barely enough funds to stay in his race. This, and not the supposed lack of “moderation” among Republican candidates, is the main obstacle to a victory over the Democrats in November. 




The Border Crisis Is Just The Tip Of The Iceberg. In Mexico, A Cartel Crisis Looms

Amid record numbers of illegal border-crossers, a larger crisis looms in Mexico with dire implications for the United States.



Last week, U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced that apprehensions of illegal immigrants surpassed 2.1 million for the fiscal year in August, with more than 203,000 apprehensions last month alone, marking six straight months of southwest border arrests exceeding 200,000.

Nothing like this has ever happened before. The 2.1 million figure represents an all-time high, surpassing the previous record of 1.7 million, set in fiscal year 2021. That is to say, every year President Joe Biden has been in office has been a record-breaking year of illegal immigration. Biden’s policies are directly responsible for the ongoing border crisis, which will continue unabated until those policies change. Whatever the number ends up being for 2022, the number for 2023 will almost certainly be higher. 

But the shocking volume of arrests at the border, and the dramatic footage of illegal immigrants crossing the Rio Grande or lining up by the hundreds along stretches of the border wall (or scaling it), can blind us to another, less obvious crisis unfolding on the Mexican side of the border that we need to understand if we hope to craft policies that will put an end to mass illegal immigration.

That crisis, put simply, is the gradual takeover of the Mexican state by cartels. I hesitate to call them “drug cartels,” because what these criminal organizations do goes far beyond the manufacture and trafficking of narcotics. In addition to drugs, Mexican cartels are now involved in industrial agriculture, port operations, migrant smuggling, human trafficking, and even the control and distribution of water in drought-stricken parts of the country.

These twin crises are connected. Although the border crisis is a direct result of Biden’s policies, the cartels are exploiting those policies for profit. One estimate from Homeland Security Investigations puts the figure at $13 billion annually, up from just $500 million in 2018. That is to say, illegal immigration has been industrialized by these cartels and their smuggling networks. It is not too much to say they have turned the southwest border into a vast black market, not just for deadly drugs such as fentanyl, but also for illegal immigration.   

new report from the Texas Public Policy Foundation (where, full disclosure, I once worked and am today a senior fellow) sheds some much-needed light on how the cartels have accomplished this. Their involvement in migrant smuggling — a vast enterprise that involves transportation, surveillance, logistics, accounting, and stash houses on both sides of the border — is a natural extension of their increasing involvement in nearly every facet of Mexico’s economic and political life.

The report, whose author has remained anonymous for safety reasons, chronicles the recent history of deep collusion between the Mexican state and the country’s most powerful drug cartels: “The unfortunate reality is that criminal cartels have burrowed their way into the government — and vice versa. Well-meaning public servants, of whom Mexico has many, are powerless against a nexus of senior officeholders, societal elites, and criminal cartels.”

The rot in the Mexican state, the report makes clear, goes to the very top. In 2018, just before President Enrique Peña Nieto left office, Ivan Reyes Arzate, a high-ranking member in the Mexican Federal Police, was found guilty in U.S. federal court on charges of obstructing a Drug Enforcement Administration investigation of international drug trafficking and money laundering. The case “represented the first time a high-level foreign law enforcement officer was held criminally accountable in a U.S. courtroom for interfering with a transnational organized crime investigation,” according to the TPPF report.

But if Peña Nieto’s time in office was marked by a curtailment of U.S.-Mexico law enforcement cooperation, Mexico’s current president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, has sought to shut down such cooperation almost entirely. Thanks to a new law pushed by López Obrador’s administration aimed at curbing the operations of foreign agents (clearly aimed at the DEA), decades of U.S.-Mexico bilateral cooperation has been effectively ended. In addition to this new law, López Obrador in April shut down an elite anti-narcotic unit that had worked with the DEA for 25 years.

Since taking office, López Obrador has pursued a posture of passivity toward the cartels, especially the Sinaloa Cartel, the country’s most powerful. In so doing, Mexico’s president has transformed his naïve campaign slogan, abrazos no balazos (“hugs not bullets”), into a policy framework that can only be understood as a rebuke of the United States in favor of the cartels. 

What is also different now than in the past, the TPPF report explains, is that the cartels “increasingly supplant the legitimate sovereignty of the Mexican state with their own — often in cooperation with major elements of that state. The qualitative difference since 2018 has been the near-open role of the current Mexican president in allowing, and perhaps even participating in, that cooperation.” Indeed, by some estimates cartels now control up to 40 percent of Mexican territory.

If that sounds outlandish, it is not because the facts don’t support such a conclusion but because corporate media in the U.S. are for the most part unwilling or unable to cover the issue in depth or accurately convey its implications for America.

The implications are this: As the Mexican state succumbs to the cartels, Mexico’s problems will become America’s problems. That doesn’t just mean a worsening border crisis but a breakdown of law and order all up and down the border, on both sides of the Rio Grande, and a worsening drug crisis in American cities far from the border. It means the corruption of Mexican officialdom will gradually spread to American officialdom, just as the operations of Mexican cartels have spread to every corner of the United States.

What to do about all this? The first step is for the United States to stop treating Mexico like a partner or a peer with whom we can work together to address common challenges. Our entire posture has to shift. We have to begin treating Mexico less like an ally and more like a hostile neighbor. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, to his credit, this week took the extraordinary step of issuing an executive order designating Mexican drug cartels as terrorist organizations. While that might not do much on its own, it at least sends a signal to Washington that it is time for the federal government to do the same.

There is of course an historical precedent for this, and indeed the relatively peaceful interregnum of the past 80 years is a departure from the historical norm of U.S.-Mexico relations. We are now returning to the norm, whether policymakers in Washington realize it or not.




Kari Lake Drops the Hammer on Liz Cheney After Pathetic Attack


Bonchie reproting for RedState 

Despite proclamations from the media that Liz Cheney’s platform would be larger than ever after she got blasted in Wyoming’s Republican primary, that hasn’t really materialized. Instead, Cheney has been completely marginalized to ranting at obscure conferences and posting fan fiction on the January 6th Twitter account.

Who could have possibly seen that coming? But I digress, Cheney was speaking to The Texas Tribune for reasons unknown on Saturday and decided to completely beclown herself. She went after Kari Lake, again ranting about “election deniers.” She then went on to attack Gov. Glenn Youngkin as well, proclaiming that he crossed a line in campaigning with Lake.

Cheney appears to still be living in a fantasyland where she’s influential and has a say in what “our party” does or doesn’t do. I have news for her, though. She is not a Republican any longer. You don’t get to join arms with Nancy Pelosi, Jamie Raskin, and Adam Schiff and still claim to have the best interests of the GOP in mind. Cheney is a Democrat who wants to run a scam presidential campaign in 2024. That’s the only reason she hasn’t made it official yet.

Attacking Youngkin fully exposes that. He’s a mainstream Republican in just about every phase. It is part of his job to support his fellow Republicans in gubernatorial races. It’s to his credit that he’s mature enough to brush aside whatever disagreements may exist to help Lake in her pursuit of victory. Cheney, on the other hand, is a pathetic, petty person who would rather see Americans suffer (as they are doing now under Democrat rule) than let go of her vendetta.

For her part, Kari Lake saw Cheney’s comments and dropped the hammer in response.

Here’s the thing. Let’s give Cheney the benefit of the doubt that she’s truly principled in her fight against “election denial.” Do I believe that? No, but let’s pretend.

If that’s true, why in the world would she work to get Democrats elected when they denied the elections of Donald Trump and George W. Bush? Heck, two of Cheney’s colleagues on the January 6th committee actually objected to certification, something I’m now assured is traitorous. And you know who has never said a word about it? That would be Liz Cheney.

She’s a hypocrite, pushing an obsession instead of putting the country first. That she believes she has any ability to affect the mid-terms is downright delusional. Cheney is going to learn, one way or another, that media plaudits don’t add up to much.




Biden Continues His Bald-Faced Lies About AR-15 Muzzle Velocity


Mike Miller reporting for RedState 

It’s not that Biden lies that most matters; it’s why he lies and his complete lack of conscience while lying– every lie to embellish (lie more about) his past, or to exploit divisive issues, always with an eye on the ballot box. It’s what Democrats do, but the most inept president in the history of the country lies better than most.

Among Biden’s many “windmills” at which he tilts is the left’s favorite “weapon of war,” the dreaded “assault rifle,” known to the rational rest of us as America’s most popular rifle, the AR-15. Estimates of the number of AR-15s in circulation vary, with most coming in between 20 and 30 million.

Hence, the “Come and take it” mentality, but that’s a story for another time.

Anyway, gun-grabbing Joe on Friday once again repeated his ridiculous lie about the muzzle velocity of an AR-15, in simplistic language that further proves his ignorance of firearms and the rounds they fire.

As reported by Daily Wire, even though the lie has been repeatedly debunked, Biden said in a speech to the National Education Association — while railing against so-called “weapons of war” — another Democrat concoction meant to scare the uninformed among us:

The speed of the bullet is five times that that comes out of the muzzle of most weapons.

Utterly false.

As correctly noted by Daily Wire, several rifles-and even some handguns-fire rounds at a higher velocity than the 2,700-3,100 feet per second of an AR-15. But, hey — when have facts mattered to a Democrat and his or her narrative? Particularly, if your name is Joe Biden.

Noted George Washington University Law School Professor, author, and frequent Fox News contributor, Jonathan Turley — who’s far from a conservative — called Biden out in a more scholarly manner:

We have previously discussed dubious constitutional and historical claims by President Joe Biden on gun bans. However, on Friday, he returned to a curious claim that he has made repeatedly: that “the bullet out of an AR-15 travels five times as rapidly as a bullet shot out of any other gun.”

Conservative and gun rights publications have repeatedly shot down that claim but it does not seem to have any impact. As with Biden’s false claim that certain weapons were banned from private ownership at the ratification of the Second Amendment, the President continues to make the same false claim on velocity speed.

To Turley’s point, Biden bizarrely said in May:

The Second Amendment, from the day it was passed, limited the type of people who could own a gun and what type of weapon you could own. You couldn’t buy a cannon.

Complete nonsense. Historians have repeatedly pointed out that there is no truth to Biden’s claim.

To be fair, while AR-15s do fire rounds at high velocities, those muzzle speeds are nowhere near Biden’s claim, according to ballistics experts. When they exit the barrel, AR-15 rounds are traveling at about twice the speed of rounds fired from a typical handgun.

And let’s not forget Vice President Kamala Harris, who took time out from the excellent job she continues to do as Biden’s border czar [ROFL emoji] to also say stupid crap about AR-15s:

Do you know what an assault weapon is? It was designed for a specific purpose, to kill a lot of human beings quickly. An assault weapon is a weapon of war, with no place, no place in a civil society.

You wanna say it, this time? Never mind. As Turley observed:

Those false statements can be dismissed as just another gaffe or ‘Corn Pop’ story, but they refer to the factual foundation for gun control under the Second Amendment. Since President Biden is suggesting that such facts are material to a ban, there is a need for accuracy in such details.

Again, Professor Turley, when has Joe Biden ever allowed facts to supersede one of his false narratives?

Turley also suggested that an AR-15 ban would likely face scrutiny in the courts:

Courts likely would press the Biden administration on why it is seeking to ban this model when other higher-caliber weapons are sold. AR-15s can handle a variety of calibers. However, they are no more powerful than other semi-automatic rifles of the same caliber and actually have a lower caliber than some commonly sold weapons which use .30-06, .308 and .300 ammunition; many of these guns fire at the same — or near the same rate — as the AR-15. None of these weapons are classified as actual military “assault weapons,” and most civilians cannot own an automatic weapon.

Joe Biden and the Democrat Party, along with their left-wing lapdog media, were unavailable for comment.

The bottom line:

While Biden and Democrats, and the so-called “mainstream” media continue their ridiculous attacks against “assault weapons” and other “weapons of war,” blood continues to run in the streets of Chicago’s Southside, New York City, New Orleans, and many other Democrat-run cities across America.

And where’s Joe? Tilting at politically expedient windmills, of course.




Edward Snowden granted Russian citizenship

 

Former US intelligence contractor Edward Snowden, who leaked extensive US intelligence surveillance operations, has been granted Russian citizenship.

The decree was signed by Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday.

Mr Snowden, 39, has been living in exile in Russia since exposing the National Security Agency (NSA) programme affecting millions of Americans in 2013.

Mr Snowden, who faces espionage charges in the US, has made no public comments.

Mr Snowden said afterwards that he felt vindicated by the ruling.   

Top US intelligence officials had publicly insisted the NSA had never knowingly collected data from private phone records, until Mr Snowden exposed evidence to the contrary.

Following the revelation, officials said the NSA's surveillance program had played a crucial role in fighting domestic terrorism, including the convictions of Basaaly Saeed Moalin, Ahmed Nasir Taalil Mohamud, Mohamed Mohamud, and Issa Doreh, of San Diego, for providing aid to al-Shabab militants in Somalia.  


https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-63036991   




Those with Trumpets are Not Going to be Silent in the Fight Against Tyranny and Nihilistic Collectivism


It took an extra 12-hrs before the powers that be permitted the full video of Neil Oliver’s remarks from this week to be presented for replay (yesterday only a 4-minute segment was available).  However, that said, Mr Oliver speaks for many people when he outlines the nature of the political turmoil between the ‘elites’ and those they consider the ‘proles.’  WATCH:


[Transcript] – Those who speak out are shouted down until they are proved right. Again and again, and again we are made to watch, or to endure the crude, bullying tactics of the school playground. Reasoned debate and argument have long since gone over the hill into history. Now it’s just one long slanging match, in which the loudest, angriest and most effectively insulting voices seek to win by volume alone, so often echoed by mainstream media who hold reasoned voices in contempt … apparently preferring to ridicule and diminish rather than provide courteous space for those who merely have questions in need of answers.

Again and again, those shouted down are, however, revealed as having been right all along.

Those who spoke out against lockdowns were shouted down until they were proved right about irreparable harm done, the harms that confront us now in every aspect of our lives.

Those who doubted the efficacy and safety of so-called vaccines were shouted down – until they were proved right, and it became irrefutable and undeniable that those medical procedures did not work as advertised and had resulted in death and permanent injury for uncounted numbers.

Those who spoke out about the existence of rape gangs in British cities were shouted down until they were proved right and some … just some … of the victims finally had their voices heard and our establishment was shamed for having knowingly stood by for decades while uncounted thousands of the most vulnerable souls were treated like meat by men acting with impunity. All of it was excused and covered up on the grounds that to do otherwise would have brought accusations of racism.

Shouting down has become a universal and even when it is proven wrong, never is there any backing down by the loudest, any real admission of error. Instead, those voices just move on to their next target. But by now, the truth is that too much harm has been done and any temptation to shy away from confrontation is long behind us. Now more than ever is the time firmly to say, “enough” – we will not be silenced, however loudly we are condemned. This is precisely the moment when those questioning the dogma must find renewed strength for the fight.

Those who questioned the wisdom of sacrificing fossil fuels and nuclear energy on the altar of the so-called Green agenda, are yet more of those who have been proved right after all.

Now millions face a winter of cold and hunger – and futures blighted by the deliberate and whole sale diminishing of opportunities – on account of generations of political policies bordering on the suicidal. In the birthplace of the industrial revolution that illuminated the entire world, the lights are going out because economically illiterate politicians wanted to live out adolescent fantasies of saving the world.

I say it’s not the world in need of saving – but us, from them and the compound consequences of their vanity and greed.

Those who questioned and continue to question the so-called settled science of climate crisis are no longer just shouted down but demonized as latter-day heretics apparently fit for little less than burning at the stake.

Those who simply have questions about the war in Ukraine – about committing billions of pounds to war while Britons face the darkest winter of their lifetimes are shouted down as Putin-loving enemies of democracy. The shouting down is the response to every contrary voice, and the shouting down on this matter must stop as well.

Those who have questions about mass immigration – who fear the inevitable erosion and dilution of British culture by beliefs and behaviours of utterly different sorts arriving in their midst at an excessive rate, are still being shouted down now, even as the ancient religious hatreds of the sub-continent emerge, large as life, on English streets. If questions can’t be asked, how can answers be found?

Name-calling is at the heart of it too – the seat of the fire that burns to a crisp any with the temerity to challenge this orthodoxy or that. Those who questioned lock downs were called granny-killers; those who questioned vaccines were called covidiots; those who continue to challenge the Green agenda are climate-change-deniers – how effective, in the art of shutting down, is the dreaded suffix of denier, with all its echoes of 20th century horror?

Those who accused the rape gangs were derided as racists – another slur that is all but unsurvivable for anyone who wants to keep a job, far less a place in polite society. Those who have seen at first hand the worst consequences of too much immigration happening too fast … who have watched self-imposed segregation take shape in one town and city after another, the undeniable establishment of ghettoes, are similarly defamed – shouted down as having nothing more to offer than hate based on skin colour – when what they are actually pointing out is the crystalising and entrenching of the kind of division and imported religious hatred that ends always and only in the ugliness playing out in now in Leicester and Birmingham.

The damage done by the delusion, the myth of multi-culturalism – the band-aid hurriedly applied when concepts like assimilation and integration were seen to have failed – has hardly been limited to these islands.

Not so very long ago, Sweden was regarded as a beacon of caring, sharing, liberal leftism. Not anymore. Since 2018 there have been almost 500 bombings in the towns and cities of a country most people likely still believe, mistakenly, to be a model of safety and stability, the home of Ikea and St Greta of Thunberg. It’s not just bombs – 47 people have been shot dead so far this year. National Police commissioner Anders Thornberg is on record describing, “an entirely different kind of brutality” in ghetto-ised suburbs dominated by immigrants.

Since 2000, Sweden’s immigrant population – those born elsewhere but now resident – has doubled to 20 percent. Sweden took in more migrants per capita than any other country during the wave of immigration in 2015. Most of the incomers have been young men. At the recent general election, Sweden’s most outspoken anti-immigration party – the Sweden Democrats – emerged as the second biggest in parliament.

Those who have voted for the SDs are shouted down – even as news media carry reports of a new trend in so-called “humiliation robberies” during which victims are not just robbed but also degraded while their attackers film the abuse.

Despite the hitherto unknown levels of violence and crime, still it is hard for Swedes to speak out about the reality of their situation. Those who point to the existence of ghettoes – of no go area’s into which fire and ambulance crews will not venture without police escorts – are shouted down as “safety deniers”. Can you imagine … “safety deniers” … whatever next?

When will the shouting down stop? Time and time again those calling out real problems, real danger, are the targets of tactics shaped always and only to silence dissent, to deride and alienate any who seek to give voice to uncomfortable truth, even just to ask a question.

On the other side of the Atlantic, in the US there is no functioning southern border to speak o-. The number of those heading north is now of the seven-figure variety. That is unsustainable, in every way. Those speaking out are shouted down as racists and xenophobes, as you would surely expect. Florida governor Ron De Santis is among those that have taken to moving migrants on – putting them aboard planes and buses and transporting them to self-proclaimed “sanctuary states” whose politics and politicians declare them as fully supportive of new arrivals.

No sooner had 50 of those immigrants touched down in wealthy, liberal enclave Martha’s Vineyard, however, than the allegedly tolerant and welcoming residents had moved heaven and earth to ensure those pilgrims were back on buses and headed out of sight and out of mind before leaving so much as a footprint on the all-white beach.

It was ever thus – those with enough money and the right friends get to preach about how others must live … while being forever insulated against the consequences. Too many people, made guinea pigs for social engineering by holders of influence, have been handed too much to bear.

Those authority figures, who never had any intention of taking part in their own experiment but saw to it instead that the inhabitants of distant corners they neither knew nor cared about would have to sink or swim in an ill-judged and excessive wave of newcomers, will continue to do as they please whilst insisting those beneath them in the food chain should simply shut up.

But now is most definitely not the time for dissenting voices to lose their collective nerve. Now more than ever those with questioning, defiant, contrary voices must find the determination to go on. We face economic challenges of a sort most of us have never before had to contemplate. Furthermore, we have been divided among ourselves as never before.

Old certainties have been torn away with nothing desirable to replace them, but we must remember what has been taken and so resolve to take it all back.

This is no time for silence. After two years like no others – when we’ve been told to be frightened of each other on account of a disease, of our way of life on account of its impact on the world, of the future itself – it might be tempting to submit.

Here’s the thing: the shouting and the name calling are the least of it. After Covid, after Lockdown, after war, after crisis after crisis after crisis. If we don’t make all of our voices heard and right now, ask yourself, what might they try next?  (link)