Monday, October 10, 2022

Whose Pipeline Is It, Anyway?


Each country directs blame at the other. 
Each is in a propaganda war.


As with most news stories of critical importance lately, there are multiple conflicting reports as to whether or not the Nord Stream pipeline was intentionally sabotaged. Propagandists, conspirators and world governments have been hard at work to deflect and deny with spin that would shame hurricane Ian. 

To unravel what we don’t know, let’s start with what we do know. You know, real journalism. 

Nord Stream 2, a German–English expression translating to “North Stream 2” was completed in September of 2021 amidst fears at its inception and construction that the pipeline would be used as geopolitical leverage by Russia over Europe, Ukraine. and Western allies. The pipeline is approximately 767 miles long and approximately 48 inches in diameter. It runs from Northwestern Russia, through the Baltic Sea, to Northeastern Germany. Nord Stream 2 was designed to increase the annual capacity of Nord Stream to a natural gas capacity of 3.9 trillion cubic feet annually. 

On September 26, 2022, a loss of pressure, and a “strong upward flow” of methane—the single largest discharge ever recorded (according to NPR)—was preceded by multiple explosions as reported by Danish and Swedish officials.

I have yet to come across a credible article pointing to an accidental rupture of Nord Stream 2. So, if this was no accident, then who did it? 

The leading international strategists appear to be split between whether the United States or Russia is responsible. Both the United States and Russia are denying responsibility and throwing blame at the other. So with the he-said she-said gridlock, can we identify who had the strongest motive and the most to gain from the attack on the pipeline? 

Let’s look at Russia first. According to the Wall Street Journal, halfway through 2021 U.S. imports of crude oil from Russia hit its highest levels in a decade, but still don’t make up the largest part of our supplied oil; that predominantly comes from Canada 51.3 percent, Mexico 8.4 percent and Saudi Arabia 5.1 percent. Russia has 80,000,000,000 barrels in its oil reserves, and ranks 8th in the world—more than 60 times its annual consumption. Russia is the largest exporter of oil to global markets, increasing its revenue by 1.7 billion in 2021. 

Multiple reports indicate that Nord Stream 2 was not yet operational and Nord Stream was operating at reduced capacity (20 percent). In late February 2022, Russia received U.S. imposed sanctions due to the Ukraine conflict which included decertification of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline; of which Russia has been an outspoken proponent. Putin has openly criticized what he calls “the green agenda” as the culprit for Europe’s energy crisis; stating that if the European Union wants more gas they should lift the imposed sanctions and open the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. Opponents have long feared that Putin could cut off gas supply to Europe and use the pipeline as leverage. 

If the pipeline is gone, so is any leveraged advantage for Russia. Russia directly benefits from higher energy prices and economic unrest across Europe. Russia has been deemed the aggressor in the Ukraine conflict and has drawn global scorn, with any link to sabotage resulting in stiffer sanctions and condemnation. So what would be Russia’s motive? Money? Greed? Destabilization? What do they gain from the pipeline attack? Power? Control? Perhaps.

Let’s look at the United States. Russia has long been the preferred whipping boy of the United States. Although none of these Russia collusion theories proved to be factually correct, they did serve to make Americans hypersensitive to all things Russia. Included in this mix is the fact that Joe Biden, Nancy Pelosi, John Kerry and other high-ranking U.S. officials have children who have sat or currently do sit in executive level positions on various boards of directors for Ukraine energy entities. 

In January 2021, Biden shut down production of the Keystone pipeline and others, taking the United States off the path of energy independence. We currently import 8 percent of our crude from Russia, yet we have imposed numerous sanctions in 2022. Since January 2021, Biden has committed 16.9 billion dollars in foreign aid, with Ukraine also receiving financial assistance from 50 countries. 

Also in January of 2021, Biden affirmed opposition to Nord Stream 2 stating “Nord Stream 2 is a bad deal for Europe” and that his administration “will be reviewing new sanctions.” On May 19, 2021 Biden flip-flopped and waived sanctions on Nord Stream 2 amidst heavy criticism by both Republican and Democratic lawmakers. Why the switch? What’s the takeaway? The widely held belief is that the United States opposes the pipeline because Nord Stream 2 would increase Europe’s dependency on Russia’s lucrative gas exports and mitigate the effectiveness of U.S.-imposed sanctions. Don’t take my word for it; Joe Biden stated earlier in the year that, “if Russia invades . . . then there will be no longer a Nord Stream 2.” A reporter responded “But how will you do that, it’s in Germany’s control?” Biden replied, “I promise you, we will be able to do that.” 

I invite all critical thinkers to weigh in on this debate. Each country directs blame at the other. Each is in a propaganda war. Each has the means and ability to execute an attack on the pipeline. Yet, only one has stated intent to destroy the pipeline.




X22, And we Know, and more- Oct 10

 



Hung out with my mom today and had a great time! Here's tonight's news:


Ukraine and the Malevolent Legacy of the Obama-Biden Administration ~ VDH

The United States is shackled by a near decade of Russian reset 
and the aggression it invited on February 23, 2022.


During the current Ukrainian war, the media has created a mythology that the Left was tough on Vladimir Putin’s Russia. And thus, now it simply continues its hard-nosed efforts in Ukraine. 

But nothing could be further from the truth. Aside from Biden’s original panic of evacuating American diplomatic personnel from Kyiv, offering a ride out of Ukraine for the Zelenskyy government that would have effectively collapsed his nation’s resistance, and hesitation in selling Ukraine offensive weapons, there is also a prior legacy that had done a great deal of harm.

Indeed, many of America’s current difficulties in Ukraine originate from the Obama-Biden Administration’s former disastrous policies toward Russia birthed between 2009-2016. 

Remembering the Reset Disaster

Remember the initial premise of Russian “Reset”—the idea and the term were first used by Vice President Joe Biden (“It’s time to press the reset button”)—was based on the myth that the “cowboy” George W. Bush had been too tough on Putin after the 2008 Russo-Georgian War. To Biden and Obama, Bush had unduly sanctioned Vladimir Putin following his opportunistic absorption of South Ossetia in 2008 and attack on Georgia. And thus, the Russian dictator would easily then be wowed by Obama’s legendary charisma and charm from needless hostility to accommodation.

Accordingly, the reformist hope-and-change Obama Administration would rebuild a friendly relationship with Russia. Thereby they would win strategic help from Russia with Obama’s new ambitious agendas for Iran and Syria in remaking a more “equitable” Middle East. Translated that meant “balancing” the region. Thus, by weakening our former overdog allies in the Gulf and Israel while empowering our former underdog terrorist-sponsoring enemies in Tehran and Damascus, Obama sought to create strategic tension.

What followed was an utter disaster. Hillary Clinton in March 2009 at the comical “reset” ceremony in Geneva with Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov greenlighted outright Russian aggression. In response Moscow’s policy was soon to be against whatever the United States was for. In the Russian mind, the more an appeasing Obama looked the other way at Putin’s cyberattacks or later the dual invasions in 2014 of eastern Ukraine and Crimea, the more Washington compensated for its impotence by shrill sermons and empty lectures on Russian human-rights violations. 

For Putin, nothing was emptier than the loud moralistic harangues of the Obama-Biden Administration that was also carrying a mere twig. During those eight years, Russia, after a near half-century hiatus, was invited back into the Middle East as a “guarantor” that its client Syria’s WMD stockpile would be destroyed (it was not). Russia instead became a formable promoter of the Iranian, Hezbollah, the Assad regime, and Hamas axis, an obstacle to Israeli responses to cross-border terrorism, and a deterrent to any Western notion of preemptively destroying Tehran’s nuclear potential.

The Trump Hiatus

The irony is that while Trump was later smeared by the Obama-Biden Left as a “Russian asset” —in the words of former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper who himself had confessed to lying under oath to Congress—he managed to overturn the reset in comprehensive fashion. 

Trump vacated an asymmetrical and calcified anti-missile treaty with Russia. He upped sanctions on Russian oligarchs. He ordered lethal retaliation against Russian mercenaries in Syria. He flooded global markets with cheap U.S. oil and gas at Russia’s expense. He eventually sent deterrent offensive weapons to Ukraine—once canceled by the Obama Administration. Trump upped the Pentagon budget and controversially jawboned NATO members to increase their defense expenditures. That effort in part explains why the alliance had more confidence and resources in 2022 to oppose Russian aggression than it would have at anemic 2016 funding levels. 

In contrast, it was Hillary Clinton—and the American FBI—who hired Russian informants like Igor Danchenko and their conduit Christopher Steele to spread dirt during the 2016 election. The Russians likely feared the unpredictable “America First” Trump and were only too eager to see the Left lap up its concocted, seedy “Kompromat” on him. 

Recall that the projectionist Secretary of State Clinton had earlier further appeased Russia when her State Department approved the sale of the North American company Uranium One’s uranium holdings to the Russian-government-controlled company Rosatom—the same company that recently stole the Ukrainian-owned nuclear plant at Zaporizhzhia, Europe’s largest nuclear generator. It was also about this same time when Hillary Clinton greenlighted the deal that Bill Clinton received a preposterous quid pro quo$500,000 speaking fee in Moscow from a Russian bank, while millions of dollars from Moscow-affiliated companies suddenly flowed into the Clinton Foundation coffers. 

The New York Times headline succinctly summed up the Clinton-Russian trifecta of reset, appeasement, and aggrandizement as “Cash Flowed to Clinton Foundation Amid Russian Uranium Deal.” 

How strange then that we now totter on the brink of a full-throttled war with nuclear Russia over Putin’s latest aggressions in Ukraine. All the while we apparently forget that the Trump Administration never colluded with Russia, was tough in action rather than verbiage with Putin, and thus remained the only one of the last four administrations during which Vladimir Putin did not invade a former Russian republic.

The Obama Russian Quid Pro Quo

Obama himself inadvertently outlined some of the parameters of the disastrous reset relationship in his infamous March 2012 hot-mic concessionsto Russian President Dmitry Medvedev at a summit in Seoul, South Korea:

Obama: ‘This is my last election . . . After my election I have more flexibility.’

Medvedev: ‘I understand. I will transmit this information to Vladimir.’  

Obama: ‘On all these issues, but particularly missile defense, this, this can be solved but it’s important for him to give me space.’ 

Medvedev: “Yeah, I understand. I understand your message about space. Space for you . . .”

 Obama: ‘This is my last election . . . After my election I have more flexibility.’ 

Medvedev: ‘I understand. I will transmit this information to Vladimir.’

The implications of that exchange were never fully appreciated, although then presidential candidate Mitt Romney claimed at the time that the diminution of U.S. national security for Obama’s own 2012 political reelection interests should have disqualified his reelection effort. Mortgaging U.S. security interests to help a reelection campaign was certainly far more an impeachable offense than the Trump phone call.  

So often it is also forgotten that the terms of the hot mic “deal” were eventually “solved” as Obama promised. The Russians did give “space” to candidate Barack Obama. And eight months later he was reelected—in part because of the perceived international quiet that the Obama appeasement policies had supposedly achieved.

Indeed, the Obama-Putin understanding may have postponed Russian invasions of Ukraine and Crimea until Obama was safely—and welcomely—reelected. As also promised, Obama did finalize his cancellations of missile defense by nixing the U.S., Polish, and Czech strategic initiatives. Note that lost network of anti-ballistic missile defense today might have been of value in offering Europe deterrence against Putin’s current nuclear bomb threats. 

Russian appeasement and the Iran Deal

Yet even as late as 2015, as Putin was escalating his open-ended cyber-attacks on U.S. domestic targets, Vice President Joe Biden was still wedded to appeasing him:

Once we pressed that reset button in 2009, between then and 2012, we achieved a great deal in cooperation with Russia to advance our mutual interests and I would argue the interests of Europe—the New START Treatythat reduced our strategic nuclear arsenal by one-third; a vital supply route for coalition troops in and out of Afghanistan; at the United Nations Security Council, resolutions that pressured North Korea and Iran and made possible serious nuclear discussions in Tehran, which continue as I speak.

All of us, we all invested in a type of Russia we hoped—and still hope—will emerge one day: a Russia integrated into the world economy; more prosperous, more invested in the international order.

 Had Biden not contributed to that fantasy of green-lighting Putin, he might not now be name calling the nuclear, wounded autocrat as a “killer” whom the president boasts should be removed—as he warns us that we are nearer to nuclear Armageddon than at any time in our history.

What explains the Obama-Biden serial denial of reality that their own appeasing of Russia was the height of folly? One reason is surely the crackpot notion that Russia had been seen as vital to the so-called Iran deal and related Middle East messes. Then as now, the Left believed that through Russian auspices it could massage Tehran into a nuclear deal and reset the entire Middle East in the bargain. 

The result is an Orwellian scenario in which Biden still begs Russia’s aid to ensure an Iran deal, while believing his invaluable broker is an abject murderer who should be yanked out of office.

Indeed, the Obama-Biden disastrous fixation with courting Iran has had lots of unfortunate ripples for years. And some of them continue in our current conundrum in Ukraine. 

In May 2014, remember, the Iranians with much braggadocio showed off a mockup of their reverse-engineered new RQ-170 drone. That once implausible feat was facilitated by the Iranians’ December 2011 downing of a U.S. Sentinel drone. At the time, a number of administration critics had blasted the Obama Administration for not immediately bombing all downed American drones to smithereens on Iranian soil to prevent Iranian reverse-engineering. 

And now? One of the greatest worries during the Ukrainian offensive has been the sudden emergence of Russian-purchased cheap Iranian suicide drones. Few imagined that the low-cost imports would exhibit such a deadly sophistication in stealth, range, and targeting—and well beyond either Iran’s indigenous research and development, or Russia’s own available drone fleet. The origins of these Iranian drones can also be traced directly back to the Obama-Biden appeasement of Iran. 

Don’t Underestimate Joe’s Ability to F–k Things Up.”

We are in a conundrum in Ukraine, all at once pursuing several mutually exclusive agendas: 

  1. cutting back our own energy production while beseeching illiberal third parties to up theirs to supply what we could but will not produce, 
  2. worrying about protecting Europe from Russia while demanding it become more aggressive toward Putin, 
  3. ensuring the EU has enough energy to survive the winter but doing so without relying on Russian gas or oil, 
  4. green-lighting Ukraine to expel every last Russian—including raids into Russia proper and hits on Russian citizens—as we warn Putin that his nuclear threats to Ukraine will earn him a strong but still unspecified U.S. counter-response—even as the Biden Administration insidiously assumes complete responsibility for arming, sustaining, and protecting Ukraine from nuclear Russia and as Zelenskyy urges America to consider preemptive first nuclear strikes against Russia. 
  5. ostracizing Russia from the international community while we beg it to be a good international citizen in helping us to reboot the Iran deal as it buys lethal American-fed Iranian drones.

The United States has few options in Ukraine not just because of the Biden Administration’s fiascos in Afghanistan that destroyed our deterrence or because of the Biden family syndicate’s years of corrupt money leveraging of Russian, Ukrainian, and Chinese interests that make Joe Biden vulnerable to pressures from all the major interests in the Ukraine mess.

It is also not just because the woke politicization of the U.S. military has cast global doubt on American military readiness. And it is not even because Biden deliberately has cut back on U.S. gas and oil production at a time of surging global demand and reduced capacity, thus enriching Putin and strangling Western economies. 

Instead, we are shackled by a near decade of Russian reset and the aggression it invited on February 23, 2022. Obama and Biden long sought to placate Putin to help with their puerile Mideast agendas. They invited him into Syria. They made him the key player in their pursuit of the Iran deal. And they ignored his 2014 invasions of Eastern Ukraine and Crimea. 

How ironic that we now find ourselves sending arms to protect Ukraine from reverse-engineered Iranian drones, beseeching in vain regimes to send us oil that we refuse to produce for ourselves, and having given up an Eastern European missile defense system to counter Putin’s nuclear threats—even as we coax both our enemies Tehran and Moscow into cementing a nuclear deal that will be as disastrous to our friends as it is to ourselves.




By Bridling Section 230, SCOTUS Can Finally Do What Congress Won’t: Rein In Big Tech

A ruling that returns to Section 230’s intent would respect the public’s interest while immunizing platforms to moderate nasty content. 



The Supreme Court announced this week that it will finally attempt to do what Congress has not: bring clarity to Section 230, the law that protects internet platforms from liability for content published by others. While Section 230 operates across the internet, it is also, for Big Tech, a valuable financial subsidy.

Over nearly 30 years since its passage, lower courts have stretched what the plain text suggests is a limited, fairly porous liability into a bulletproof one, which immunizes platforms for far more than just the messages they deliver. Product liability claims for child sex crimes committed using Instagram fall under Section 230 immunity, as do all manner of the platforms’ own moderation — that is, what they do to the content posted by users.

The question before the court — and, indeed, the one currently bedeviling policymakers — is how far Section 230 immunity ultimately goes. The vehicle for deciding this comes in the form of Gonzalez v. Google, a case filed by the family of a 23-year-old American woman killed in an ISIS attack on a Paris cafe in 2015. The family of Nohemi Gonzalez argues that, under the Antiterrorism Act, Google (which owns YouTube) aided ISIS through YouTube videos — more specifically, through its recommendation algorithms, which placed ISIS videos into the feeds of users.

The divided panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit ultimately ruled that Section 230 protects the ability of platform algorithms to recommend someone else’s content — though the majority agreed with the dissent’s observation of “a rising chorus of judicial voices cautioning against an overbroad reading of the scope of Section 230 immunity,” and noted that “the Internet has grown into a sophisticated and powerful global engine the drafters of §230 could not have foreseen.”

Moreover, in her concurrence, Judge Marsha Berzon concluded that the algorithmic amplification, which now powers the business model of the social media platforms “well outside the scope of traditional publication,” constituted the platforms “engaging in its own communications with users.” 

“Nothing in the history of Section 230 supports a reading of the statute so expansive as to reach these website-generated messages and functions,” she wrote. Despite this, Berzon noted, the court was bound to years of overly broad precedent that it could not undo.

It is the Supreme Court, however, that can untangle the years of lower courts misreading the statute, and this will be the question sitting before the justices in the coming months. How they rule has the power to curtail the way in which the biggest corporations in the world curate both the modern public square and a significant portion of the digital economy.

SCOTUS Can Update 230 for the Modern Internet

The court agreeing to take this case is a recognition of two things. First, there is the possibility of something amiss with the statutory interpretation of Section 230 as it currently stands. As I and many others have argued, Congress intended Big Tech’s liability shield to be limited and delineated. Lower courts have rendered it expansive and bulletproof, setting bad precedent that continues to bind lower courts even when they raise their own doubts. That bad precedent must be undone. 

The legislative history is clear that Section 230 had two ultimate aims: to make the internet safe for kids and to give the platforms the necessary incentive to moderate smut while allowing “a true diversity of political discourse” to flourish. Former Rep. Chris Cox, one of the authors of Section 230, is now paid by the tech companies to argue that he meant the provision to be the seminal charter of online internet immunity, but even he cannot hide from his own words nearly 30 years ago. 

Speaking in favor of his amendment, the Online Family Empowerment Act (later known as Section 230), Cox argued, “We want to encourage [internet services] … to everything possible for us, the customer, to help us control, at the portals of our computer, at the front door of our house, what comes in and what our children see.” 

Moreover, a close textual analysis of Section 230 does not support an expansive aim, as Michigan State law professor Adam Candeub has persuasively argued:

Notice what section 230’s text does not do: give platforms protection for content moderation. … That would include ‘disinformation,’ ‘hate speech,’ ‘misgendering,’ religious hatred,’ or for that matter the traffic prioritization that platforms perform to give people content they want.

But the court’s decision to take this case is also a recognition of the instrumental role that the major technology platforms now play in the day-to-day lives of citizens. We have a public square and a large portion of the economy mediated by technology. Yet the rules that govern it are entirely privatized, subjected to court distortion, profit motive, individual commoditization, and corporate whim. The values of free speech and a vigorous exchange of ideas and viewpoints are an afterthought.

Justice Clarence Thomas has argued that the role of major internet platforms is so critical in modern society that it now reaches the level of common carrier regulation. With regard to Section 230, he has suggested that the court should consider “whether the text of this increasingly important statute aligns with the current state of immunity enjoyed by the Internet platforms.”

Despite the hair-raising rhetoric from the tech press and Big Tech’s network of paid policy groups about any changes to Section 230 heralding “the end of the internet,” it is not unreasonable that Congress or the courts would revisit a statute that now applies to platforms and, indeed, a comprehensive internet that didn’t even exist when the original law was passed. 

Clarification is especially warranted as the platforms have made it a pattern to try to have their cake and eat it, too — that is, argue the contradiction that all their content moderation is not their speech and thus Section 230 protected, while at the same time arguing that their content moderation is also their speech, and thus protected by the First Amendment. This is facially ridiculous and something neither the courts nor Congress should let stand.

Yet the Supreme Court, of course, could very well get it wrong. A sweeping ruling that rejects any sort of nuance and instead determines that every moderation decision by the tech companies is protected by Section 230, or that every moderation decision is protected by the First Amendment, would be a huge setback for state attempts to step in and reform the tech companies. State laws, like the one out of Texas recently upheld by the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, would be irreparably harmed.

Rather, a limited, case-by-case ruling that takes into account the original intent of Section 230, along with the technology that has developed since its passage, would respect both the public’s interest in preserving the right to have a plurality of voices while immunizing the platforms to moderate for the actual nasty content categorized in the statute itself.

In the absence of any recent congressional action on the matter, the Supreme Court has taken for itself the opportunity to clarify the rules surrounding engagement in the modern public square and the digital economy. For those interested in an outcome that both incentivizes the platforms to moderate the true harm that can flourish on the internet while allowing a diversity of speech — that is, the original intent of Section 230 — a decision that returns the statute to its original confines would be welcome. 




Politico Obtains Military Records of GOP Candidate Jennifer Ruth-Green, Releases Story of Her Sexual Assault


Bonchie reporting for RedState 

In what may be the most egregious example of gutter politics of the 2022 cycle, Politico obtained and wrote a story on the stolen military records of GOP House Candidate Jennifer-Ruth Green, who is facing off against Democrat incumbent Frank Mrvan in Indiana.

But while the hacks at Politico were obviously looking for dirt, what they instead found was an instance of Green being sexually assaulted by an Iraqi soldier while she was serving a tour in the Middle-Eastern nation. Yet, instead of hitting pause, recognizing the sensitive nature of such personal information and the harm releasing it could cause, Politico published it anyway.

Green’s opponent must be incredibly desperate to pull a stunt like this. It’s bad enough to steal her military records (there is no legal way they could have been obtained given Green did not consent to their release), but to then treat an instance of sexual assault as if it’s just campaign fodder is disgusting.

According to Green, she actually asked Politico not to print the story, but the reporter refused to heed her pleas. Ask yourself what possible justification could exist to print a woman’s experience with sexual assault, garnered via allegedly stolen documents, without her consent. Was Politico thinking that would somehow make Green look bad? Or were they just desperate to salvage a dud of a story after it became clear the records didn’t show anything but Green being an honorable member of the Air Force?

Whatever the reason, it’s inexcusable, and it’s a damning indictment of the mainstream press, which will apparently do anything to try to prop up Democrats during an election.

Green responded to the situation with a video and by putting out a statement. Here’s what she had to say.

“I’m a survivor of sexual trauma in the military. I am being forced to share this information outside of my own timeline and for the first time publicly because my Congressman, Frank Mrvan, and his cronies illegally obtained my military records describing my sexual assault. His team fished the details of my assault to different news outlets, asking them to share misinformation to portray me as a failed military officer who lacks integrity. This is false.

I believe after sharing my assault against the advice of some in my command, my career was intentionally derailed. The paperwork Congressman Mrvan illegally obtained contains information that reflects me in a negative light. I have since appealed the incident with the military, and the entire issue is settled. Clearly, I have progressed as a military member, promoting to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel, and successfully completing a command tour.

I have written to the U.S. Attorney, the Air Force Inspector General, and the Department of Defense asking them to launch criminal probes into the release of my confidential personnel file.

I am saddened to have to share publicly one of the most private events of my life, and I’m even more saddened that Congressman Mrvan, who I applauded for authoring the Military Sexual Trauma bill, would engage in or tolerate this despicable behavior from his campaign and his allies. It’s unacceptable for every vet, it’s unacceptable for every woman, and it’s unacceptable for anyone who has ever been a victim of sexual assault.

However, God, my family, my Pastor and his wife, and the mental health providers at the Adam Benjamin VA have been instrumental in helping me thrive after this great difficulty.

As a servant and as a leader, I take my words and my responsibilities seriously. I will continue to serve people with integrity, and I am undeterred by Congressman Mrvan’s attacks. As I have always, I will move forward and succeed despite obstacles such as this thrown in my path.”

One of the things that has Green so incensed is that Politico boiled the story down to a dry account that absconds from the horrifying details. For example, Green wasn’t just randomly grabbed. She was grabbed by an Iraqi man with a gun, trapped in an enclosed area she couldn’t escape, who then exposed himself and tried to force her into sexual acts. Instead of her story being fully told, Politico chose to use a general account as political fodder to help a Democrat out, though it will certainly backfire.

I can only imagine the emotions that Green must be feeling after being forced to relieve her sexual assault because some leftwing rag, sourced by a scumbag Democrat, has no standards. If the shoe were on the other foot, there’s a zero percent chance Politico publishes the story. But because Green is a Republican, there are no boundaries.




Katie Hobbs' Interview Confirms Why Kari Lake Is Going to Win in Arizona


Nick Arama reporting for RedState 

If you aren’t willing to debate, you shouldn’t be a candidate in any political race.

We saw Joe Biden hide out in his basement. John Fetterman the Democratic candidate running for Senate in Pennsylvania put off debate as long as he could, scheduling it for October 25, likely hoping that many will have voted before he completely bombs it.

Katie Hobbs the Democratic candidate for governor in Arizona has also been avoiding debating the Republican Kari Lake. Part of that is that she’s afraid of Lake, who is a very polished speaker and who is campaigning for the issues that people in Arizona care about including the economy and securing the border. Hobbs likely knows she would be at sea, as she just showed by her horrible performance in a town hall on Friday.

But she showed just what a horrible candidate she is with the answer she gave when she did an interview with “Face the Nation” on Sunday.

Major Garrett asked, “Are you saying this morning that there is no circumstance that you can envision, or would even try to negotiate, in which you and Kari Lake would appear at a debate together before the election?”

Hobbs completely ducks the question saying her schedule is “pretty much set.” Yes, because she’s avoided debating, she had a lot of time before this to agree. She refused to. She’s not doing it because she knows she would lose. Talk about cowardly.

If that wasn’t cowardly enough, Hobbs also pulled the cowardly move we’re seeing from a lot of Democrats right now — refusing to say if they would have Joe Biden come campaign for them and ducking if she stood with Joe Biden’s policy moves on inflation which have hurt so many Americans.

“I’m focused on the race here in Arizona and the needs of Arizonans,” Hobbs smirked. “It’s a race between myself and Kari Lake. And the ideas we are bringing to the table.” Yes, which is why if she were “focused on the race” and confident in her ideas, she would want to have a debate so the people of Arizona can see what she had to say. But when she gives such a farcical answer, she’s spitting in the eye of the voters. And it shows she’s scared of Kari Lake. Plus, she sounds a lot like a 12-year-old girl (no offense to 12-year-old girls), not a gubernatorial candidate.

If a candidate isn’t willing to debate and ducks the simplest of questions like this, no voter should give them any credence or their vote. This is one of the reasons Hobbs is falling behind Lake because the voters are “focused” on who will put themselves out there for the people.