Friday, October 21, 2022

Steve Bannon Sentenced to 4 Months Jail for Contempt for Defying J6 Subpoena, Sentence Deferred Pending Appeal


Earlier today Steve Bannon was sentenced to four months in jail for refusing to appear and be questioned by the congressional J6 committee.  However, Judge Carl Nichols has temporarily deferred the sentence pending an appeal by Bannon which will likely go into next year.

More than half the country holds contempt for congress, and the targeting of Bannon is transparently political. A defiant Steve Bannon spoke outside the courthouse after his sentence was delivered.  WATCH (prompted):


WASHINGTON DC – A federal judge has sentenced longtime Donald Trump adviser Steve Bannon to four months in jail for defying a subpoena from lawmakers investigating the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol by a pro-Trump mob. He will also be required to pay a $6,500 fine if his convictions stand.

U.S. District Court Judge Carl Nichols, a Trump appointee, said Bannon inappropriately defied the House’s select committee on a matter of significant national interest, and even after roadblocks to his testimony had been removed.

“Flaunting a Congressional subpoena betrays a lack of respect for the legislative branch which represents the will of the people of the United States,” Nichols said during a sentencing hearing at the federal courthouse a few blocks from the Capitol. “In my view, Mr. Bannon has not taken responsibility for his actions.”

Nichols cushioned the blow of the four-month jail term by opting to allow Bannon, 68, to remain free pending appeal, which is likely to push the issue well into next year and perhaps longer.

A jury convicted Bannon in July on two charges of contempt of Congress — one for refusing to testify to the Jan. 6 select committee, another for refusing to provide relevant documents to the panel.

The select committee subpoenaed Bannon in September 2021 as it sought testimony from close Trump aides involved in efforts to help him subvert the 2020 election. Prosecutors charged him in November 2021, three weeks after the House voted to hold him in contempt.

[…] Under federal law, the two misdemeanor counts Bannon was found guilty of each carried a minimum term of one month’s incarceration and a maximum of a year in prison. The Justice Department had asked Nichols to sentence Bannon to a six-month prison term. Prosecutors contended that the minimum sentence is mandatory, but Bannon’s lawyers argued that he could be sentenced to probation or to home confinement, rather than prison.

Nichols said several favors weighed in favor of a “substantial” sentence for Bannon — from the seriousness and significance of the Jan. 6 select committee probe to Bannon’s continued defiance of the select committee even after Trump purported in July to “waive” any assertion of executive privilege over his cooperation.

While many legal commentators have insisted that Bannon could not have had privileged conversations with Trump after Bannon left the White House staff in 2017, Nichols pointedly said Friday that such discussions might be covered by executive privilege.

However, the judge also seemed troubled that Bannon never produced any documents to the committee, even those that seemed certain not to be covered by any privilege Trump was asserting.

Nichols did acknowledge that Bannon appeared to rely on his lawyer’s advice, and he noted that the Jan. 6 select committee opted against a civil lawsuit to enforce its subpoena. (read more)



Is the Red Wave Back?

The question for Republicans is what will they do if—perhaps when—they reacquire congressional power. The question is doubly relevant with two more years of guaranteed Democratic White House control.


In the dog days of summer, as Joe Biden’s average approval rating plummeted to historic lows amid an intense flurry of national setbacks, policy blunders, and rhetorical “gaffes” (otherwise known as palpable senility), most in the punditry class began to predict an imminent “red wave” of Republican electoral dominance in November’s midterm elections.

The midterms that take place two years after a new presidency typically favor the opposition party, after all, and certain data—such as the four-decade-high inflation rate that was, and still is, raging like wildfire—pointed in the direction of a strong ballot-box backlash to one-party Democratic rule. At that time, we could also add in an “eyeball test” of sorts: Uncle Joe was (and still is), quite simply, way too old and way too bad at this.

Then, from late July through Labor Day weekend in early September, the momentum seemed to shift a bit toward the incumbent party. Democrats largely outperformed expectations in special elections in Nebraska, Minnesota and New York, and the culturally conservative state of Kansas resoundingly rejected a pro-life attempt to amend the state’s constitution to democratize the abortion issue and let the state legislature decide Kansas abortion policy.

In general, for about four to six weeks, we began to see enough data trickle in to suggest that a “Dobbs backlash”—whereby the U.S. Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade would have the effect of energizing and mobilizing progressive voters—might really be in the offing. Some promising Republican Senate candidates in reliably Trumpy states, such as J. D. Vance in Ohio, seemed to be failing to gain polling traction. The punditocracy switched gears: The “red wave” might simply be a shapeless “purple drip.” (Some of us, it must be said, suggested that little had actually changed.)

Now, two-and-a-half weeks before Election Day, we are right back to where we started earlier this year, as spring moved into summer. The red wave appears to be coming back.

Republicans now consistently lead Democrats on the generic congressional ballot. As of this writing, the RealClearPolitics average has Republicans up 3.3 percentage points in the generic congressional ballot polling average; only one of the past 10 polls shows a Democratic lead. The data gets even more interesting when one peeks a bit under the hood into the polling cross-tabs; in the most recent New York Times/Siena College poll that had a R+4 top-line number on the generic ballot, independent women shifted a whopping 32 points toward Republicans (from D+14 to R+18) over the span of just one month. (Polling cross-tabs of that nature, due to the necessarily smaller sample size, should be taken with a grain of salt.) Meanwhile, Biden’s job approval rating has stabilized in the low 40s, placing him double-digits underwater; at least three major polls taken this month have his job approval in the high 30s.

Individual races across the country are bearing this out. In no less a bright-blue Democratic bastion than New York State, incumbent Democratic Governor Kathy Hochul is clinging to a narrowing single-digit lead over Republican challenger U.S. Representative Lee Zeldin. In neighboring Connecticut, incumbent Senator Richard Blumenthal appears to be nourishing a similarly shocking single-digit lead over Republican challenger Leora Levy. In Georgia, incumbent Republican Governor Brian Kemp is cruising to victory over inveterate election-denier Stacey Abrams; in Arizona, rising Republican superstar Kari Lake appears very well-positioned in her own gubernatorial race. In both the Peach State and the Grand Canyon State, then, ascendant Republican governor campaigns may well drag across the finish line Republican Senate candidates—Herschel Walker and Blake Masters, respectively—who have been neck-and-neck in the polls against their well-funded incumbent Democratic foes.

The map, moreover, is expanding—the Senate Leadership Fund, the super PAC affiliated with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), has been dropping millions of dollars to try to retake New Hampshire. At the same time, based on the candidate funding, national Democrats are scrambling to secure the Oregon gubernatorial mansion, while all but abandoning the Ohio playing field to Vance and the GOP. In neighboring Pennsylvania, the criminal-mollycoddling and stroke-addled John Fetterman is slipping, and the Keystone State Senate race against Dr. Mehmet Oz is now a dead-heat. Nevada, which broke for both Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden in the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections, is now looking like a likely Republican pickup.

In such an environment, when a huge plurality of 44 percent of voters (according to the Times/Siena poll) are voting on economy-related issues and when Republicans are trusted so much more than Democrats on those particular issues, it is reasonable to anticipate that the GOP will win the vast majority of the high-profile, toss-up races. Biden, earlier this week, tried to rekindle the “Dobbs backlash” magic by suggesting that a statutory Roe national codification as his leading agenda item come January if Democrats hold Congress, but even that abortion centrality now appears to be woefully misguided. According to a survey this week from WPA Intelligence, voters believe the mainstream Democratic position on abortion is “more extreme” than the mainstream Republican position by an almost 2-to-1 margin.

The question as always for Republicans is what will they possibly do if—perhaps when—they do reacquire congressional power. That question is doubly relevant with two more years of guaranteed Democratic White House control. And it is to that question that Republican leaders, with any luck, will soon turn.




X22, And we Know, and more- Oct 21 (Day 1 of #GreatAmericanChristmas 🌲)

 



🌲 Happy 1st day of #GreatAmericanChristmas! I hope you all enjoy everything this amazing network has to offer. :) 18 new movies, plus some aquired titles, and all of their 2021 movies! Hope you find something you love. 🌲



Here's tonight's news:

 

Fire, Air, and the New Right

The battle against bad ideas can only be won with better ideas.


Most morally serious people on the Right are preoccupied with the same question: How do we defeat the monster of woke ideology? Each month, the Left seems to get crazier, yet its stranglehold on American society only gets stronger.

The obvious way to fight any danger is to embrace its opposite. To put out a fire, you douse it with water. But in the case of major conflagrations—as any forest ranger will tell you—the more effective, if counterintuitive, solution may be to start another fire

The “art of fire,” like any kind of technical knowledge, is amoral. Firefighters are often the best arsonists, just as physicians sometimes make the best poisoners. But for the same reason, it is professional idea-mongers—intellectuals and academics—who may be the most effective at defeating harmful theories. This is an essential lesson to keep in mind in our battle against left-wing dogmatic insanity.

Fighting fire with fire is tricky and dangerous. Most of the time, water really is the best option. If we carry this metaphor over into the realm of ideas, we can understand the entirely reasonable reaction of many decent people to the devastation inflicted by deranged theorists: Marxism, moral relativism, National Socialism, radical Islamism, “antiracism” . . . the list goes on. In each case, some abstract philosophical or theoretical doctrine—which might have looked good on paper—gets taken up by fanatics who cause terrible misery trying to implement their pie-in-the-sky paradigm. 

This often leads to a deep wariness of all theoretical ideas, a position one finds among many New Right figures on Twitter and elsewhere. Better to steer clear of philosophical constructs altogether, they say, and stick with the tried and true. Experience, tradition, and the common sense of the ordinary man in the street are the most reliable guides for decent politics. Often, that is entirely sensible.

But sometimes, applying this method is mistaken. Rejecting philosophy entirely can be an unhelpful overreaction when bad ideas are burning up the forest. 

I’m abusing this fire metaphor because it points to an important argument made by James Madison, which is directly relevant here. 

In a famous passage in Federalist 10, Madison warns against such overreaction. Yes, there is a danger of people abusing their freedom to undermine the common good—a problem he called “faction.” But Madison notes that in a free society, it is only natural that people will embrace various opinions, interests, and policies, not all of which are completely upright. So the question is, “How do we deal with this?” Madison answers:

There are again two methods of removing the causes of faction: the one, by destroying the liberty which is essential to its existence; the other, by giving to every citizen the same opinions, the same passions, and the same interests.

It could never be more truly said than of the first remedy, that it was worse than the disease. Liberty is to faction what air is to fire . . . . But it could not be less folly to abolish liberty, which is essential to political life, because it nourishes faction, than it would be to wish the annihilation of air, which is essential to animal life, because it imparts to fire its destructive agency.

Since it makes no sense to combat the fire of faction by extinguishing the air of liberty, Madison says the “causes of faction cannot be removed.” Therefore, “relief is only to be sought in the means of controlling its effects.”

I would suggest the same lesson be applied to the problem of pernicious intellectual dogmas in our contemporary politics. Getting rid of the causewould mean rejecting our capacity for rational thought. So just because leftists misuse the power of reason, people on the Right are not thereby justified in abandoning critical thinking. The battle against bad ideas can only be won by offering better ideas

Madison himself seems to suggest this in Federalist 37, where he discusses the line between federal authority and the powers of the states. This simple-sounding distinction, he explains, turns out to be quite difficult. (In fact, he struggled with this question his whole life.) The father of the Constitution then goes off into an interesting tangent about “the faculties of the mind,” which “have never yet been distinguished and defined, with satisfactory precision.” “Sense, perception, judgment, desire, volition, memory, imagination, are found to be separated by such delicate shades and minute gradations that their boundaries have eluded the most subtle investigations, and remain a pregnant source of ingenious disquisition and controversy.”

On the one hand, this means we must moderate our “hopes from the efforts of human sagacity.” And yet, such intellectual modesty does not make the difficult questions go away—which seems to me to be the urgent point to remember today. 

We need to refute, not ignore, the pernicious doctrines of the Left. That means defending this truth: that we inhabit an intelligible universe governed by an objective moral order; and that the dogmas of the Left are wrong, above all, because they reject the laws of nature and nature’s God.

To recover our republican freedom from the woke maniacs, we should recall that the whole American experiment in liberty is premised on the founders’ belief in “sufficient virtue among men for self-government” including our capacity for “reflection and choice.”


We Need To Stop Calling Ourselves Conservatives


The conservative project has failed, and conservatives need to forge a new political identity that reflects our revolutionary moment.



Given the state of America in 2022, conservatives should stop calling themselves conservatives.

Why? Because the conservative project has largely failed, and it is time for a new approach. Conservatives have long defined their politics in terms of what they wish to conserve or preserve — individual rights, family values, religious freedom, and so on. Conservatives, we are told, want to preserve the rich traditions and civilizational achievements of the past, pass them on to the next generation, and defend them from the left. In America, conservatives and classical liberals alike rightly believe an ascendent left wants to dismantle our constitutional system and transform America into a woke dystopia. The task of conservatives, going back many decades now, has been to stop them.

In an earlier era, this made sense. There was much to conserve. But any honest appraisal of our situation today renders such a definition absurd. After all, what have conservatives succeeded in conserving? In just my lifetime, they have lost much: marriage as it has been understood for thousands of years, the First Amendment, any semblance of control over our borders, a fundamental distinction between men and women, and, especially of late, the basic rule of law.

Calling oneself a conservative in today’s political climate would be like saying one is a conservative because one wants to preserve the medieval European traditions of arranged marriage and trial by combat. Whatever the merits of those practices, you cannot preserve or defend something that is dead. Perhaps you can retain a memory of it or knowledge of it. But that is not what conservatism was purportedly about. It was about maintaining traditions and preserving Western civilization as a living and vibrant thing.

Well, too late. Western civilization is dying. The traditions and practices that conservatives champion are, at best, being preserved only in an ever-shrinking private sphere. At worst, they are being trampled to dust. They certainly do not form the basis of our common culture or civic life, as they did for most of our nation’s history.

To talk now of “family values” is to assume that there are enough Americans able and willing to marry and raise children together for something like “family values” to matter in the public discourse, much less in the halls of power. To talk of defending “religious freedom” is to misapprehend that the real risk today is widespread irreligion, which will leave so few religious Americans in the coming generations that the government and large corporations will inevitably — and easily — persecute them.

Conservatives are still invoking these things as if they are magic incantations that can roll back time, just as they did during the crucial decades of the past half-century when a cultural and technological revolution was re-making America before their eyes, and they did nothing to stop it.

In a recent essay for Compact, Jon Askonas argues convincingly that the conservative project failed because “it didn’t take into account the revolutionary principle of technology, and its intrinsic connection to the telos of sheer profit.” Conservatives, he says, were too obsessed with “left-wing revolutionary politics” and missed the real threat, which was technological change so swift and powerful it fundamentally reordered society, swept tradition aside, and unleashed a moral relativism that rendered the conservative project obsolete.

Instead of questioning these technologies, asking whether they would contribute to human flourishing, conservatives acquiesced to their inevitability and focused instead on narrower issues. The result has been the transformation of society within the span of a single human lifetime, and with it the wholesale destruction of our traditions and the looming implosion of Western civilization. 

While it might be necessary, as Askonas argues, to enact a serious program of technological development to build a future that supports human flourishing, it is also the case that to do so on a scale sufficient to save our country will require political power — and the willingness to use it.

So what kind of politics should conservatives today, as inheritors of a failed movement, adopt? For starters, they should stop thinking of themselves as conservatives (much less as Republicans) and start thinking of themselves as radicals, restorationists, and counterrevolutionaries. Indeed, that is what they are, whether they embrace those labels or not.

They might, looking to American history for inspiration, conjure up the image of the Pilgrims — those iron-willed and audacious Christians who refused to accept the terms set by the mainstream of their time and set out to build something entirely new, to hew it out of the wilderness of the New World, even at great personal cost.

Or they might claim the mantle of revolutionaries, invoking the Founding Fathers’ view (or, at least, Thomas Jefferson’s) that periodic revolution to preserve liberty and civil society has always been and always will be necessary.

Whatever the term or image, the imperative that conservatives must break from the past and forge a new political identity cannot be overstated. It is time now for something new, for a new way of thinking and speaking about what conservative politics should be. The fusionism of past decades, in which conservatives made common cause with market-obsessed libertarians and foreign policy neocons, is finished. So too is Conservatism Inc. and the establishment GOP it enabled, whose first priority was always tax cuts for big business at the expense of everything else. The election of Donald Trump in 2016 heralded a populist wave and the end of Republican politics as we knew it, and now we are in uncharted waters.

To be sure, there has been plenty of talk on the right lately about what should be done differently now. Some, such as Sohrab Ahmari, Gladden Pappin, and Adrian Vermeule (along with a larger cohort of conservative Catholic thinkers), advocate a conservatism that is comfortable with big government and in fact sees it as necessary not only for the common good but to tame what Ahmari recently called the “private tyranny” of woke corporations empowered by unrestrained market forces. Conservative Catholics, he argues, should today claim ownership of a pro-worker, even pro-union political agenda that once belonged to the left, and which produced generations of Democrat-voting Catholic workers.

Indeed, a willingness to embrace government power has been a topic of fruitful debate on the “New Right” in recent years, as it should be. However uncomfortable traditional “small-government” conservatives might be with Ahmari’s argument, it is more or less true.

Put bluntly, if conservatives want to save the country they are going to have to rebuild and in a sense re-found it, and that means getting used to the idea of wielding power, not despising it. Why? Because accommodation or compromise with the left is impossible. One need only consider the speed with which the discourse shifted on gay marriage, from assuring conservatives ahead of the 2015 Obergefell decision that gay Americans were only asking for toleration, to the never-ending persecution of Jack Phillips.

The left will only stop when conservatives stop them, which means conservatives will have to discard outdated and irrelevant notions about “small government.” The government will have to become, in the hands of conservatives, an instrument of renewal in American life — and in some cases, a blunt instrument indeed.

To stop Big Tech, for example, will require using antitrust powers to break up the largest Silicon Valley firms. To stop universities from spreading poisonous ideologies will require state legislatures to starve them of public funds. To stop the disintegration of the family might require reversing the travesty of no-fault divorce, combined with generous subsidies for families with small children. Conservatives need not shy away from making these arguments because they betray some cherished libertarian fantasy about free markets and small government. It is time to clear our minds of cant.

In other contexts, wielding government power will mean a dramatic expansion of the criminal code. It will not be enough, for example, to reach an accommodation with the abortion regime, to agree on “reasonable limits” on when unborn human life can be snuffed out with impunity. As Abraham Lincoln once said of slavery, we must become all one thing or all the other. The Dobbs decision was in a sense the end of the beginning of the pro-life cause. Now comes the real fight, in state houses across the country, to outlaw completely the barbaric practice of killing the unborn.

Conservatives had better be ready for it, and Republican politicians, if they want to stay in office, had better have an answer ready when they are asked what reasonable limits to abortion restrictions they would support. The answer is: none, for the same reason they would not support reasonable limits to restrictions on premeditated murder.

On the transgender question, conservatives will have to repudiate utterly the cowardly position of people like David French, in whose malformed worldview Drag Queen Story Hour at a taxpayer-funded library is a “blessing of liberty.” Conservatives need to get comfortable saying in reply to people like French that Drag Queen Story Hour should be outlawed; that parents who take their kids to drag shows should be arrested and charged with child abuse; that doctors who perform so-called “gender-affirming” interventions should be thrown in prison and have their medical licenses revoked; and that teachers who expose their students to sexually explicit material should not just be fired but be criminally prosecuted.

If all that sounds radical, fine. It need not, at this late hour, dissuade conservatives in the least. Radicalism is precisely the approach needed now because the necessary task is nothing less than radical and revolutionary.

To those who worry that power corrupts, and that once the right seizes power it too will be corrupted, they certainly have a point. If conservatives manage to save the country and rebuild our institutions, will they ever relinquish power and go the way of Cincinnatus? It is a fair question, and we should attend to it with care after we have won the war. 

For now, there are only two paths open to conservatives. Either they awake from decades of slumber to reclaim and re-found what has been lost, or they will watch our civilization die. There is no third road. 






Will the Left Allow Voters to Take Back Power?


The Left’s power of intimidation begins with a great big bluff against the far more powerful American citizenry.


Ayn Rand’s 1957 novel, Atlas Shrugged, contains a message of hope for all who look to the invincible juggernaut of state power. She writes, “The great oak tree had stood on a hill over the Hudson . . . for hundreds of years . . . it was a thing that nothing could change or threaten . . . One night, lightning struck the oak tree . . . The trunk was only an empty shell; its heart had rotted away long ago; there was nothing inside-just a thin gray dust that was being dispersed by the whim of the faintest wind.”

She set the novel in a dystopian United States with characteristics we can recognize today as we look around. An expert class reorganizing the American economy to fit social justice objectives blames unknowable causes for the steady economic decline that attends their utopian programs. Only by seizing more power over the economy can these experts restore prosperity, they claim. But the cycle repeats as things increasingly fall apart. 

In Rand’s conception, beneath the apparent power of the statist movement lies a hollow, rotten core. One crack of the hard exterior causes the whole thing to come tumbling down. More than 30 years before the fall of the Soviet Union, during the arguable apex of Soviet power under Stalin, Rand saw the inherent weakness of a system that survives by crushing freedom. 

Social justice, climate change, criminal justice “reform,” gender-affirming “care,” critical race theory, ESG—all of these utopian ideals have made things worse. The great spasm of protests and violence in 2020 following the death of George Floyd aggravated race relations by normalizing “trainings” in workplaces and schools during which openly bigoted propaganda shamed Americans for the color of their skin. The trillions spent on climate change have not changed or reversed the trajectory of the climate. Woke corporate executives engage in soft embezzlement as they redirect scarce company resources to profit-destroying social justice objectives. And pushing “gender-affirming” sex surgeries results in more teen suicides not fewer, as the proponents promised. Homelessness, inflation, race relations, crime. It matters not which of the Left’s social programs you pick. They all burn money to make the problems they promise to solve worse. Looking into her crystal ball, Rand got things almost exactly right.

But the spell is breaking. Inflation, above all else, hurts the very people the Left promised to champion. Some Americans are now skipping meals to accommodate the stolen purchasing power that funds the Left’s vision. While House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) prospers with suspiciously prescient stock buys, she “rejects” that voters are more concerned about inflation than her January 6 television show. If they cannot find bread, let them eat ice cream.

Being a public servant is no bar to living in luxury. Pelosi isn’t the only one. FBI Director Christopher Wray pays coach fare to take the FBI’s luxury jet on vacation and weekend trips to family in Atlanta. Nothing is too good for the man overseeing the FBI’s complete conversion to an agent of political oppression. 

Political oppression, which the Left has merely piloted thus far, will need to ramp up dramatically if the Left is to maintain power. Promises of freedom, prosperity, and equality soon gave way to oppression as restive citizens asked for new leadership in Russia, Cuba, Venezuela, etc. When you hear the Left promise the “end of democracy” if Americans vote them out of power, you had better listen. 

Democrats have already started talking about “safeguards” and “guardrails,” to counter a loss in the midterms. What might these entail? CensorshipArresting Biden’s 2024 political opponent? Using the FBI to harass elected officials? Sending the FBI to intimidate local activists petitioning their school boards? Unlike what happened after Trump won in 2016, the plans aren’t secret. These methods are already in use or being floated in our supposedly free press, which works tirelessly to prop up their authoritarian movement.

And unlike the wave midterms in 1994 and 2010, the Democrats see this one coming. In an example that typifies the reaction of most elites to the coming smackdown, however, “The View’s” Joy Behar reacted with dread that American voters weren’t buying the narrative that a potential loss for Democrats threatens democracy itself. 

Will the Left allow disobedient voters to wrest the elected government from their control? Will unfolding election results suddenly go dark for hours or days while Democrats implausibly reverse Republican leads with undated mail-in ballots? Will partisan judges tamper with voting rules to keep elections in play long enough to discover new votes? Read this list of confirmed incidents of voter fraud that have already been documented this year.

Even if the Democrats lose both houses of Congress and the lion’s share of local government contests, they will retain much of the real power within the corporations, universities, and federal agencies. But they are losing or have lost significant portions of the population, including many of the new immigrants Biden hoped would guarantee permanent Democratic majorities. On inflationcrime, immigration, education, and a host of other issues, the Democrats have lost the faith of the persuadable independents. 

Left-wing power, at its source, really boils down to a single tool: The power to shame and ostracize its opposition. But that is increasingly fading: whistleblowers in the FBI, pro-free speech Elon Musk purchasing Twitter, failed cancellation efforts against J.K. Rowling and Joe Rogan, and lawsuits exposing government coordination with social media to censor. Even comedians are beginning, cautiously, to poke fun at the absurdity of the Left’s cultural dictates. You can see spiderweb cracks spread across the monolith of left-wing power. 

All of the institutional power the Left possesses will mean nothing if they don’t have the ability to intimidate. And the power of intimidation begins with a great big bluff against the far more powerful American citizenry. The Left’s power rests on the shoulders of a great American Atlas—millions of ordinary Americans who silently seethed through the past six years of left-wing power grabs. And that Atlas need only shrug at the next round of faux crisis hysteria, and the Left’s power will collapse overnight. 



NYC's New Accommodations for Illegal Aliens Have American Homeless Crying Foul

 

Center for illegal aliens on Randall's Island
 

NYC's New Accommodations for Illegal Aliens Have American Homeless Crying Foul


Article by Nick Arama in RedState

NYC’s Mayor Eric Adams declared an emergency after just getting several thousand illegal aliens sent to his city. Meanwhile, 203,597 illegal aliens have crossed our southern border in just August 2022 alone, and the media isn’t focused on that. Adams has now set up a tent city on Randall’s Island to deal with the influx. The first group of 500 single men was expected on Wednesday this week.

What do they have to look forward to in the tent accommodations?

The city unveiled Mayor Eric Adams’ controversial tent city on Tuesday — detailing how migrants staying there will be given three meals a day, fluff-and-fold laundry service and an array of entertainment including TV and video games.

“This is a place people can come, rest, relax and kick their feet up after the journey they have been on,” Emergency Management Commissioner Zach Iscol told reporters at the facility on Randall’s Island.

There are also two popcorn machines, Xbox game consoles, ping-pong and foosball tables, board games, as well as 12 phones that can be used to make international calls. In addition to the three meals a day, snacks will be provided while coffee, tea, and water will be available around the clock. And of course, the meals are “culturally appropriate” and will rotate regularly.


 

Whew, glad to know none of the illegal aliens will be offended by not “culturally appropriate” food, and it will rotate so they wouldn’t get bored. Are these officials in NYC joking? If you didn’t mind sleeping with a lot of other people, why would you ever leave? Oh, and they’re going to issue ID cards to the illegal aliens and make sure that ordinary homeless Americans can’t get in. So IDs aren’t Jim Crow 2.0 now, when you use them to keep Americans out.

So, how do homeless Americans feel about all this? They’re outraged.

“They’ve got Xboxes? Get the f–k outta here!” fumed Baran Hines, 36.

The Brooklyn native said he’s been living since late August in the HELP Meyer shelter on Randall’s Island in a high-rise that’s just 350 yards away and visible from the new tent city.

“The building I’m in is so f–king awful,” Hines said.

“The smell is awful on every floor. The bathrooms are terrible with piss everywhere and s–t everywhere. There are flies in the bathroom.

“The tents look five times better,” he added.

Hines said he sleeps on “a raggedy bed with a hard mattress” and won’t eat the food that’s served “because that s–t will kill you.”

“Once a month, if I recognize the food, I’ll eat it,” he said. “But you taste some meals and you don’t know what it is.”

The elevators and the laundry machines frequently don’t work.

 

There are always going to be reasons people feel that someone is something better than them, Mayor Eric Adams said, putting down the complaints by the homeless men. Yes, particularly when the illegal aliens are getting it better. The city is paying $5,300 per man per month to house them in that crummy shelter. Heck, for that amount of money they could be living in the poshest apartment with all the services. That’s the consequence of a Democratic-run city.

But even in the homeless shelter system, illegal aliens are allegedly getting preferential treatment to Americans, according to the men at Manhattan’s Bellevue shelter. Shelter residents said fights have erupted because of the overcrowding and tensions between the two groups, with one resident saying, “It’s gonna blow up any day now.” Adams’ response to questions about that? “We’re not doing that, and we should not have to pit against the migrants and non-migrants.” He’s sort of right; he’s not doing that– he’s out and out giving preferential treatment to illegal aliens.

 

https://redstate.com/nick-arama/2022/10/20/nycs-new-accommodations-for-illegal-aliens-have-american-homeless-crying-foul-n646378







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AOC Appears to Have a Nervous Breakdown When Confronted by Protesters at Town Hall


Bonchie reporting for RedState 

I’ll admit to having enjoyed the last several months of not writing about Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Obviously, there are far more important things going on than what a radical in a deep-blue district says and does.

Unfortunately, I’ve got to break the glass and hit the red button regarding this latest incident. Because when one of the Democrat Party’s most high-profile figures appears to have a nervous breakdown at a town hall, it’s got to be discussed.

AOC was confronted by protesters while addressing a crowd on Wednesday evening, and things got very weird.

I’m not even sure what those people are protesting, and given this is Queens we are talking about, it’s just as likely they are mad at AOC for not being radical enough. Still, I feel confident in going out on a limb and suggesting that comically dancing to people singing about your need to be thrown out of office probably isn’t the best response. The entire point of a town hall is to show you are taking the concerns of your constituents seriously. Mocking them does the opposite.

Then there was this performance where AOC appears to devolve into an imitation of Rosie Perez.

Before that, AOC actually ran out of the room in the face of the protesters and hecklers. The room erupts in cheers after she leaves. The camera then shows her standing in a doorway with what appears to be her personal security before she emerges again.

It sure seems like AOC is a person who isn’t used to getting pushback. After all, she’s perhaps the most over-hyped and pampered politician in Washington, at least compared to what she contributes. Far from the working-class persona that she attempts to cling to, she’s settled in nicely among the elite.

Somewhat ironically, the only reason AOC was at that town hall to get heckled and jeered was that she skipped a debate with her general election opponent, Tina Forte.

I’m not going to pretend that Forte has any real shot at defeating the Democrat. The dynamics of the district make that nearly impossible. I will say that it’s interesting to see how underwhelming AOC is when she’s not in her “element” of magazine covers and friendly interviewers. She’s an actress and a very bad one at that. Her lust for power also means that she doesn’t have the guts to cast the purity votes someone like Bernie Sanders does to keep his supporters happy. She wants to be in leadership, and it shows.