Thursday, October 20, 2022

Justice Department’s War with the First Amendment


The Justice Department and courts apply free speech precedent selectively, depending on who and what cause benefits from the exercise of the right.


On a hot summer night in July of 2017, pigs crammed into pens in a Utah industrial farm awoke to the bobbing headlamps of blue-shirted activists cradling piglets as they tiptoed towards the exit. The group, “Animal Equality,” later posted video of the theft, or “rescue,” as they deemed it, in an effort to document and draw attention to the harsh conditions of the farm. More than five years later, on October 8, of this year, a jury acquitted the defendants after hearing arguments that the piglets had little or no commercial value due to their diseased state. 

Of course, the facility operators are not concerned about the loss of two piglets. They don’t want the public to know what’s really going inside the facility because the truth could hurt business. 

Around the country, state lawmakers, acting on complaints from the meat industry, enacted laws criminalizing the surreptitious or non-consensual taking of video and photographs of the conditions in these facilities. But these piglet thieves were not charged with violating such a law. Just one year before the acquittal, the United States 10th Circuit Court struck down a Kansas law which criminalized taking pictures and video of an animal facility without the consent of the owner. The invalidated law specifically excluded, “consent obtained through deception,” including using a false statement to gain entry onto the property. 

In August of 2021, the 10th circuit wrote that the law “punishes entry [into a facility] with the intent to tell the truth on a matter of public concern. Absent a compelling governmental interest . . . the challenged subsections of the Act cannot stand.” The court further noted that the lawmakers specifically designed the law to criminalize videos created with the intent to embarrass the facility owners. It added that the video-recording activities prohibited by the statute “fit comfortably in the speech-creation category recognized in these cases. An individual who photographs animals or takes notes about habitat conditions is creating speech in the same manner as an individual who records a police encounter.” The court added that even if the activists trespassed to create the video or used deception to gain access to the facility, the First Amendment nevertheless protects the recording of the videos.

So, under federal precedent, the First Amendment protects making videos of matters of public interest even if they’re recorded under false pretenses without the consent of the target. That would seem to apply to Project Veritas which repeatedly used false pretenses to record and surface information within the public interest including one of the very first public refutations of the Russian collusion hoax, exposing voter fraud, and evidence of Democrats trying to incite violence at Trump Rallies—the last of which resulted in a successful lawsuit against Project Veritas. Unfortunately for Project Veritas, according to the Justice Department, the rules are different when the videos embarrass their political allies, the Democrats.

Less than three months after the 10th circuit handed down the decision declaring surreptitiously recorded video as “speech” under the First Amendment, thugs from the FBI executed three search warrants against Project Veritas which, like the animal rights activists, had threatened to embarrass powerful people. The difference being only the identity of the powerful people in question. In its brief to the Southern District of New York, the government wrote, 

As an initial matter, there is considerable doubt whether the practices of Project Veritas or its employees generally could be entitled to the protection of a qualified journalist privilege. Project Veritas is not engaged in journalism within any traditional or accepted definition. Its ‘reporting’ consists almost entirely of publicizing non-consensual, surreptitious recordings made through unlawful, unethical, and or/dishonest means.

In a footnote, the Justice Department deceptively claimed, “The Government is unaware of any case in which this test has been applied to materials obtained by a search warrant.” Ah, so clever. The 10th circuit case striking down a law criminalizing non-consensual videos did not involve a search warrant. So the Justice Department conveniently did not disclose the recent precedent to the Court in its brief.

Perhaps the Justice Department told itself it need not disclose the recent 10th circuit precedent because the Project Veritas seizure took place in New York, outside of the 10th circuit. Well, no longer. In April of 2022, with little notice or fanfare, the Supreme Court denied certiorari leaving the 10th circuit decision undisturbed and, presumptively, the nationwide interpretation of the First Amendment concerning such matters. 

Project Veritas described a grave infringement of its ability to conduct exposé journalism writing, 

the government seized Mr. O’Keefe’s cell phones in a 6:00 AM raid on his home. The cell phones contain vast amounts of information protected by the First Amendment, including materials related to on-going news investigations, whistleblower information, and donor information that implicates freedom of speech and association guarantees. The cell phones also contain a vast amount of attorney-client privileged material, both related to the representation of Mr. O’Keefe and Project Veritas in connection with the government’s investigation, and attorney-client privileged materials arising out of many unrelated matters.

The FBI’s apparent justification—the search for Ashley Biden’s diary—is a laughably ridiculous pretext for the agency to disrupt the ongoing First Amendment activities of highly consequential journalistic organization. Not unlike the prosecution in the case of the “stolen” pigs, nobody in the Justice Department really cares about the diary. Obviously, the FBI acted to silence one of the Left’s most effective critics. For almost a year now, the FBI has waged a successful court battle to prevent the public from learning its legal justification for raiding Project Veritas.

The FBI’s campaign to intimidate its political opponents has shattered norms that traditionally protected journalists, political candidates, and attorneys from government retaliation. Federal law enforcement has seized attorney-client communication from Trump attorneys including Michael CohenJohn Eastman, and attorney-client communication from the Presidential Transition Team in the 2016-2017 timeframe. FBI critic Representative Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) recently emerged from an FBI smear campaign accusing him of sex trafficking. The “investigation” stemmed from a former FBI agent trying to extort $25 million from the Gaetz family. 

At the local government level, where future leaders are developed, Attorney General Merrick Garland has used the Justice Department to intimidate parental rights advocates who petition local school boards. And recent lawsuits uncovered shocking coordination between the government and social media to strangle dissenting political views. Similarly, politically disfavored January 6 defendants have had difficulty gaining access to competent legal representation in an environment in which the D.C. defense bar has become totally politicized. And one should not overlook the Justice Department’s disgraceful policy of withholding protection from conservative Supreme Court justices as leftists terrorize them in their own homes. Ever since the despicable assault on Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s good name during the confirmation battle, the Left has been pretty open about its goal of intimidating Supreme Court justices into submitting to the Left’s agenda.

All of this provides context to a common complaint Republican leaders have about “candidate quality” among Republican office seekers. Opposition parties in countries like Iran and Russia also have problems recruiting and retaining effective candidates. Talented leaders have come to understand that security forces might harass them if they pose any threat to the regime in elections. It’s difficult to have free and fair elections when the national police make life miserable for the lawyers, journalists, and candidates of an opposition party. 



X22, And we Know, and more- Oct 20

 



Temporally cold snap ends tomorrow. 😁 I didn't want to dig out my heavy coat today, so I stayed in. Here's tonight's news:


Awesome Actual Diversity Among GOP Candidates Owns the Libs

 

 

Awesome Actual Diversity Among GOP Candidates Owns the Libs

Article by Kurt Schlichter in Townhall 

 

Liberal "diversity" is stupid and evil, and we should utterly reject it. It's based on the origin of grandparents and other meaningless box-checks involving stuff like genitalia and genitalia preferences, and it has resulted in a grim uniformity in the kind of humorless pinko dorks who make up the Democrat candidate roster. What a bunch of stiffs, socialists, and schmucks. But the kind of diversity Republicans are demonstrating is something totally different. It has nothing to do with what continent their ancestors came from, what religion they adhere to, or even how they pee. It's conservative diversity – nominating a broad range of exceptional people with unique skill sets leveraged for maximum effect. And we're making it happen this election cycle.

For example, look at the Senate roster we might well have come January. Bad candidates? These guys are remarkable, especially compared to the unaccomplished Karens, woke weirdos, and posing weenies the Democrats are trying to shove down voters' throats.

Let's start with Dr. Oz. He's a TV star, sure, but that means he connects with people. He was poor and made himself rich – and from my conversations with him, that love of the American dream will bring an understanding to the Senate that we need in order to be the party that helps people get rich, or at least prosperous and secure. Plus, he's a cardiac surgeon – maybe having some more people who know a little about medicine might help us avoid "COVID II: Everybody Wear Your Groin Mask to Prevent Monkey Pox."

His opponent? The commie wife of a mutated ogre who not only was a parasite to his parents but has a parasitical lump on his neck. Perhaps Fetterman can provide the perspective of the mentally defective in the Senate, but frankly, the world's most tiresome deliberative body has that demo covered already.

In Arizona, we have Blake Masters, a brilliant entrepreneur with an understanding of business and tech. I met him recently, and this guy knows the score on technology policy and modern business. He's smart, and we can use the smart perspective as opposed to the dumb one. We ought to be grateful Blake will take the cut in pay and prestige to join the Senate.

His opponent? Mark Kelly was an astronaut. Unless the Senate is being shot into space – which I'm all for, BTW – that's not super-useful. Admittedly, the short shuttle pilot does check the diversity boxes for Hobbits and Biden submissives.

How about Herschel Walker? We're told he's dumb by the same people who have utterly screwed up our country over the last couple of decades, but there's no need to defer to their intimate personal familiarity with being stupid. Listen to Herschel. The guy is all heart and love for others, even obnoxious folks who trot out horrific racial tropes. He's a genuinely good guy. A guy who overcame a tough past, including mental illness. We want a guy with that character and that experience in the Senate. He doesn't need the heartache or hassle. He wants to help. That's why he's running. We need guys like that.

His opponent? The Right Reverend Evicto, who would live by Jesus's word if Jesus had said, "Boot thy tenant from thy crappy apartment if ye tenant falls short $30 in rent."

In Nevada, we have Adam Laxalt, a personal friend who I watched get up before everyone and work past when everyone else crashed during the election fight. He has a young family, and he served as a Naval officer. His roots in Nevada are deep – he knows everyone and everything that is going on. And he's smart – this is a guy who knows how to dig in and cross-examine and get to the truth when the Senate once again starts performing oversight on the Biden Regime instead of tongue baths.

His opponent is a non-entity whose name I can never remember.

JD Vance was a Marine, a tech guy – gee, tech would seem to be a topic we need to address good n' hard – and he famously grew up poor. I think the Senate could benefit from a few guys who grew up with plastic spoons in their pieholes instead of silver ones.

His opponent? Tim Ryan, whose inspiring life story is one of a guy who has spent his entire life either as a legislative staffer or a legislator. A lifelong politician is the opposite of diversity. It's adversity – for us.

Speaking of silver spoons, we are likely to see Nebraska Governor Pete Ricketts replace the useless Ben Sasse when he finally goes away in the next couple of months. I had a lot of doubts about Ricketts until I heard him on the "Ruthless" podcast, thinking him both a family, wealthy, rich guy and a moderate. He's probably softer than me – everyone is – but what was important about him is his business experience and his focus on using business management principles to make government work better. That is invaluable.

And others bring great stuff to the table. Eric Schmitt in Missouri is an attorney general who has waged a legal battle against Big Tech and the Biden administration, but who also has a special needs son. His opponent is some rich lib lady dilettante. Tiffany Smiley in Washington nursed her wounded warrior husband back to health while General Bolduc in New Hampshire killed jihadis. Their opponents? Both are up against generic Chardonnay wine women who vote for whatever bit of pinko nonsense Schumer tells them to. 

Joe O'Dea in Colorado was a contractor and built stuff. Sadly, for reasons that baffle me, he chose to pick a fight with Trump. His opponent is a sissy city boy when half of Congress is already sissy city boys, so if he somehow overcomes his wang-stomp, he will be useful.

And Mike Lee, who is super smart, has an opponent – that vendor-shafting dork McMuffin – who was so obnoxious in their debate that an audience of mellow Utah people booed him. 

Look at that GOP lineup. Not one is there for any reason other than what he or she has done and who he or she is. You have hard skills from folks like Oz and Ricketts. You have bureaucracy fighters like Schmitt. Master and Vance know tech and know how to rein it in. Smiley and Bolduc both love the (real) military but also know the price of war and will provide a check on Bill Kristolian chickenhawk adventurism. Herschel Walker will bring heart to the caucus. And Mike Lee is a constitutional scholar.

I don't want a Senate made up entirely of tech guys, crusading lawyers, military guys, or ex-athletes on a mission to help others. But I want some of all of them, together, on our team. And what's the alternative? A bunch of prissy snobs telling you their pronouns and shrimping the toes of every pinko with a blue check. They are all the same.

We're diverse.

 

https://townhall.com/columnists/kurtschlichter/2022/10/19/awesome-actual-diversity-among-gop-candidates-owns-the-libs-n2614704 

 



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Who Denies Election Results? ~ VDH

There is nothing “unprecedented” about challenging election results. And for Democrats, there’s nothing unprecedented in trying to manipulate them.


A Democrat myth has arisen that Donald Trump’s denial of the accuracy of the 2020 vote was “unprecedented.”

Unfortunately, the history of U.S. elections is often a story of both legitimate and illegitimate election denialism. 

The 1800, 1824, 1876, and 1960 elections were all understandably questioned. In some of these cases, a partisan House of Representatives decided the winner.  

Presidential candidate Al Gore in 2000 did not accept the popular vote results in Florida. He spent five weeks futilely contesting the state’s tally—until recounts and the Supreme Court certified it. 

The ensuing charge that George W. Bush was “selected not elected” was the Democrats’ denialist mantra for years.

In 2004, Senator Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) and 31 Democratic House members voted not to certify the Ohio election results in their unhinged efforts to overturn the election. Those denialists included the current sanctimonious chairman of the January 6 select committee, U.S. Representative Benny Thompson (D-Miss). 

After 2016, crackpot Democratic orthodoxy for years insisted that Donald Trump had “colluded” with Russia to “steal” certain victory from Hillary Clinton. 

Clinton herself claimed that Trump was not a “legitimate” president. No wonder she loudly joined #TheResistance to obstruct his presidency. 

The serial denialist Clinton later urged Joe Biden not to concede the 2020 election if he lost.  

Also after 2016, left-wing third-party candidate and denialist Jill Stein vainly sued in courts to disqualify voting machine results in preselected states. 

A denialist host of Hollywood C-list actors in 2016 cut television commercials begging members of the Electoral College to violate their oaths and instead flip the election to Hillary Clinton. 

Clinton herself had hired foreign national Christopher Steele to concoct a dossier of untruths to smear her 2016 campaign opponent, Donald Trump. 

The FBI took up Clinton’s failed efforts. It likewise paid in vain her ancillaries like Christopher Steele to “verify” the dossier’s lies. 

The bureau further misled a FISA court about the dossier’s authenticity. An FBI lawyer even altered a document, as part of a government effort to disrupt a presidential transition and presidency. 

The Clinton-FBI Russian-collusion hoax was a small part of the progressive effort to warp the 2016 election result. 

The Washington Post giddily bragged about various groups formed to impeach Trump in his first days in office, on the pretext he was illegitimately elected.

Rosa Brooks, an Obama Administration Pentagon lawyer, less than two weeks after Trump’s inauguration wrote a long denialist essay in Foreign Policyoutlining a strategy to remove the supposedly illegitimate president. She discussed the options of impeachment, the 25th Amendment—and even a military coup

When rioting exploded in the streets of Washington D.C. after the election results became clear, Madonna infamously shouted to a mass crowd that she dreamed of blowing up the White House, presumably with the Trump family in it. 

Was that not the most violent form of election denialism?

The election denialist Stacey Abrams became a media heartthrob and left-wing cult hero. Abrams monetized her ridiculous denialism (“voter suppression”) by stumping the country from 2018 to 2021 claiming, without evidence, that the 2018 the Georgia gubernatorial election was rigged. In truth, she lost by over 50,000 votes.

Time magazine’s Molly Ball in a triumphalist essay bragged that in 2020 a combination of Big Tech money from Silicon Valley—fueled by Mark Zuckerberg’s $419 million infusion—absorbed the balloting collection and counting of several key voting precincts weighed to help Joe Biden.

Ball bragged of careful pre-election censoring of the contemporary news by Big Tech. Most notably, that effort spread the lie that the Hunter Biden laptop scandal was “Russian disinformation.” 

Left-wing interest groups modulated the often-violent Black Lives Matter and Antifa street protests of 2020 in efforts to aid the Biden campaign. 

Ball summed up that left-wing election engineering effort as “a conspiracy unfolding behind the scenes” and called it “the secret history of the 2020 election.”

So, who exactly were those “secret” warpers of the 2020 election? 

As Ball put it: “A well-funded cabal of powerful people, ranging across industries and ideologies, working together behind the scenes to influence perceptions, change rules and laws, steer media coverage and control the flow of information.” 

It is entirely legitimate to question the probity and legality of those systematic left-wing efforts in key states to overturn long-standing voting laws passed by state legislatures. 

Then followed an even larger effort to render Election Day a mere construct for the first time in American history. Over 100 million ballots were not cast on Election Day, the vast majority of them (and by design) Biden votes. Somehow customary ballot disqualification rates of mail-in ballots in some states plunged—even as their numbers exploded.

The scariest form of election interference was the 2020 “cabal.” The FBI, Silicon Valley, street protestors, and the media all conspired to work for the “right result.” 

Apparently, that “conspiracy” was the denialists’ response to the 2016 victory of Donald Trump that they never accepted.




Biden Shamelessly Depletes Our Strategic Petroleum Reserve To Buy Midterm Votes For Democrats


Approval of President Biden tends to lag gasoline prices, so expect the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to continue to be used politically.



Gasoline prices will soar after the Democrats’ midterm shellacking. Why? Power. For many politicians, as well as parties, the point of power is power.

Biden campaigned against American oil and gas, saying he would “end fossil fuels” with no more pipelines and “no more drilling on federal lands, no more drilling, including offshore, no ability for the industry to continue to drill.”

Within a week of taking office, Biden banned the Keystone XL pipeline and suspended oil and gas leasing on federal lands — the latter move was subsequently overturned in late August by a federal judge in response to a lawsuit by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. The regulatory assault has been unrelenting as well.

Meanwhile, Biden’s allies in woke finance are working to dry up the capital needed to find more oil and gas and then produce and refine it. As a result, America is producing about 1 million barrels a day less oil than it did under former President Donald Trump (before the onset of Covid-19).

Strategic Reserve Low

Coincidentally, that 1-million-barrel shortfall is about the same amount of oil Biden has been withdrawing from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR).

Congress created the SPR in 1975 after the oil shocks of the 1970s led to gas lines and stagflation. Situated underground in giant caverns associated with salt domes in Louisiana and Texas, the SPR was rapidly filled to about 600 million barrels by 1990. It reached its maximum capacity of 714 million barrels during the Great Recession when the price of oil plunged from $190 a barrel to $58.

But since Biden’s election — and especially since the White House announced an accelerated draw down of the SPR on Nov. 23, 2021 — the oil in the SPR has plummeted to levels not seen since 1984, shortly after the storage caverns became operational.

Presidential Approval Tied to Gas Prices

The figure below illustrates two important variables during President Joe Biden’s time in office. The first is the RealClearPolitics average of presidential job approval polling, with approval tracked in black and disapproval in red. The second is the average price for a gallon of regular gasoline. The figure shows how public approval of the job Biden is doing tends to lag the price of gasoline — a common and necessary product most voters buy on a regular basis, and one for which there is extreme and constant visibility, unlike, say, the cost of eggs or a pair of shoes.

Sources: Real Clear Politics, Energy Information Administration, American Automobile Association.

Not surprisingly, an administration whose chief declared war on American-made energy well before inauguration presided over a steady increase in the price of gasoline.  

By November, with the average price of a gallon of regular gasoline having increased steadily over the past 11 months from $2.20 to $3.40, or 55 percent, the Biden team was panicking as the presidential job approval deficit hit a negative 12.1 percentage points. The irony, of course, is that the price of energy was merely reacting to Biden’s own policies.

The challenge for green politicians is that while polling frequently shows Americans approve of expanding green energy (wind, solar, and batteries) by 80 percent to 20 percent, when a modest cost is assigned to these policies — even $20 a month in higher prices for electricity or gasoline — support quickly collapses to 30 percent to 70 percent against green energy, especially among lower-income groups that have traditionally been a core Democratic constituency. It seems everyone’s for windmills, rainbows, and unicorns — until the bill comes due.

Thus, on Nov. 23, 2021, as Biden’s approval ratings had precipitously declined for six months, the White House announced a greatly accelerated drawdown of the SPR. Almost immediately, there was relief at the pump and the Biden job approval rating saw a jolt upward — for a month.

Unfortunately for Biden, his administration’s ongoing hostility to American-made oil, combined with the federal government’s competing against the oil and gas industry by selling oil out of storage, could not keep prices low forever.

Using the Strategic Petroleum Reserve Politically

So, where do we go from here? If Biden has been drawing down the SPR for crass partisan purposes, transmogrifying the Strategic Petroleum Reserve into the Strategic Political Reserve, what might he do after Nov. 8 when the Democrats may lose both the House and the Senate as well as some governorships and state legislative chambers?

To see how Biden might use the awesome, market-shaping power of the SPR, we must look at how it’s been abused so far: not as a store of energy to mitigate the effects of another Arab oil embargo, nor in the event of a major war, but to purchase political popularity. This view is further fortified by revelations out of Saudi Arabia that Biden begged the Saudis to delay the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries’ production cut until after the November elections.

The Biden team — overweighted with elite, woke Ivy Leaguers — would view a loss to the MAGA masses in November as a rebuke deserving of a crushing response.

One option is refilling the SPR. My colleague John Hostettler, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives for a dozen years through 2007, believes that in the wake of a midterm loss, a simple cessation of the SPR draws wouldn’t be enough; it wouldn’t inflict enough pain.

Should the SPR draws stop, or, as Hostettler believes, shift back to refilling the reserves, what would happen? Oil prices would immediately spike, with gasoline prices following quickly. Democrats would start attacking “greedy Big Oil” and would introduce so-called windfall profits taxes, propose a ban on the export of American oil and gas, and call for hearings on oil industry collusion.

Republicans, of course, would defend the domestic oil industry. In response, Democrats and their allies in big media would pillory Republicans, calling them friends of Big Oil and enemies of working Americans.

Lastly, as gasoline prices pushed through $6, $7, or even $8 a gallon, Biden’s team would be at first quietly, then openly, touting the “transition” to green energy. “Don’t want to pay $8 a gallon for gas? Buy an electric car (with a made-in-China battery)!” they’d say.

In an arcade gaming context, Democrats’ actions to punish Americans for their November insolence might well turn into a Leeroy Jenkins moment, where their drive to inflict maximum pain at the pump results in the Democrats being wiped out in 2024.

But a new Republican majority in Congress wouldn’t be powerless. They can make aggressive use of the Congressional Review Act (CRA) to overturn many Biden administration rules, including the climate disclosure rule, that increase the costs of producing energy. Biden could veto CRA joint resolutions, but doing so would highlight his bad policies. Republicans could also redistribute funds from regulatory compliance to accelerating permitting to speed getting oil and gas out of the ground and to the consumer. Congress can also vote to remove judicial review to curb frivolous environmental or green energy lawsuits. While Biden could veto all of these initiatives, Congress, with the power of the purse, has a powerful negotiating tool.



5th Circuit Just Delivered a Decision That Has Elizabeth Warren Throwing a Hissy Fit


Nick Arama reporting for RedState 

The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals just delivered a big blow to the brainchild of Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) through the 2010 Dodd-Frank law that allowed the bureau to be funded through the Federal Reserve, and bypass the congressional appropriations process. Republicans have fought it for years, saying that the way it was set up makes them not accountable, without review.

The Fifth Circuit just ruled that the funding mechanism of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) was unconstitutional.

“Congress’s decision to abdicate its appropriations power under the Constitution, i.e., to cede its power of the purse to the Bureau, violates the Constitution’s structural separation of powers,” a three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in a case brought by a payday lending group against the CFPB’s 2017 payday lending rule.

In other words, they were improperly delegating something that was their responsibility — their power to exercise.

“Even among self-funded agencies, the Bureau is unique,” Judge Cory Wilson wrote Wednesday. “The Bureau’s perpetual self-directed, double-insulated funding structure goes a significant step further than that enjoyed by the other agencies on offer.”

We know that giving power to unaccountable bureaucracies — something that Democrats love to do, especially when they are in control of the bureaucracies — ends up being a bad idea, so this is a great decision.

It is probably going to be appealed further, so this is likely not the end of it.

But it sounded like the Republicans were already welcoming the decision and gearing up to take back their oversight. Here’s Rep. Tom Emmer (R-MN).

Meanwhile, Warren is throwing a hissy fit, which you know is a good thing.



Biden Shows What a Small Man He Is When Doocy Asks About Top Issue for Americans


Nick Arama reporting for RedState 

Joe Biden has a long history of not being able to take being challenged. He may be the first person ever running for president who seemed to have a habit of insulting voters when they asked him questions that he didn’t like, including calling voters “lying dog-faced pony soldier” and “look, fat,” as well as telling another voter he was lying and “full of sh*t” before saying that he should “take him outside.”

Biden showed that temper again when he was challenged earlier about whether his continued release from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve was “political” to help Democrats in the election.

He also had another moment when he was asked a question by Fox’s Peter Doocy as to which was the top domestic priority for the Administration — inflation or abortion?

Now, we saw how badly House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) handled that question when asked by MSNBC’s Andrea Mitchell. Pelosi said she didn’t agree with the polls that said that inflation and crime were the most important issues, not abortion.

She denies what Americans are saying is most important and she wonders why the Democrats are in trouble in this election.

Biden went in the same direction, but instead of just answering the question, he also added an insult against Peter Doocy as well.

“They’re all important, unlike you, there’s no one thing,” Biden shot back at Doocy. “It crosses the border…We oughta be able to walk and chew gum at the same time.” Then he raised his fist and beat it out of there.

Now I’m not sure whether there he’s saying “unlike you” meaning Doocy isn’t important, or “unlike you, there’s no one thing” meaning he can do more than Doocy by concentrating on more than one issue/question. Either way, it was an effort to put him down. That’s Biden, just a nasty, small man. He got in trouble before when he was caught on a hot mic calling Doocy a “son of a bitch.” He later called him up but didn’t say he was sorry for what he had done. He also called him a “one horse pony” on another occasion, in yet a third insult.

In addition to insulting Doocy, he also refused to truly answer the question. Saying “they’re all important” means that you’re not treating one as more important than the other. “All are important” means no, inflation isn’t your “top priority.” Once again, that shows voters exactly what you care about — and it isn’t the economy. He doesn’t want to offend anyone on the left by saying abortion isn’t the most important thing and he doesn’t want to talk about inflation because he’s done such a horrible job on it. Indeed, had he cared about the economy or inflation as his top issue, he wouldn’t have driven us into the state that we are in now with the worst inflation in 40 years — he was too busy spending on his agenda items making everything worse.

But it’s funny he said they “oughta be able to walk and chew gum at the same time.” He’s shown that he can’t do that while he’s failed at virtually every issue that he’s faced.