Wednesday, May 24, 2023

Make Bureaucracy Accountable Again

John Durham’s report is another example of why America desperately needs civil service reform.


John Durham’s report exposes the corruption and abuse of America’s bloated bureaucracy. Unelected officials in the Justice Department and FBI were able to investigate a presidential candidate and persecute several individuals with the flimsiest evidence imaginable. The Russia investigation nearly derailed Donald Trump’s presidency just to suit the whims of powerful civil servants. Worst of all, the bureaucrats responsible got away with the whole thing. 

Durham’s report argues that our country needs dramatic reforms to the FBI and Justice Department. That’s undoubtedly true, but they’re not the only government agencies in need of a top-to-bottom overhaul. The entire federal bureaucracy exhibits this corruption. These officials are accountable to no one and get away with undermining our elected leaders. 

The federal bureaucracy is one of America’s biggest problems. It’s inefficient, bloated, corrupt, and helps impose leftism on the country. It also costs taxpayers over a trillion dollars every year to maintain. Conservatives need to focus on starving the beast. It’s time to make the administrative state serve the people rather than itself.

One of the best places to start is the Office of Personnel Management. This agency staffs and manages the bureaucracy, meaning much of the system’s dysfunction comes from this office. The lazy and liberal government workers who infest the swamp can be blamed on OPM. They pose a serious problem for conservative governance. The Trump Administration’s endeavors faced strong resistance from career workers who found every opportunity to thwart the America First agenda. This included Justice Department lawyers refusing to prosecute cases, staffers in numerous agencies keeping political appointees in the dark about important business, and officials circumventing hiring freezes. It was tough to carry out policies when the personnel tasked with carrying them out refused to do so. 

Not only are these workers overwhelmingly liberal, but their performance also leaves much to be desired. Many of these workers do nothing but collect a government check. This problem was worsened by the lockdowns. Federal workers never went to the office and did minimal work while away—all under the pretext of COVID. As we approach the summer of 2023, many of these workers still haven’t returned to the office, leaving the government hampered by even greater inefficiency and incompetence. Regulations that make it nearly impossible to fire bad employees only facilitate poor performance

The incompetence of the federal bureaucracy is exemplified by the infamous OPM hack back in the 2010s. The agency’s lackluster security practices led to the largest security breach in American history. Countless volumes of sensitive data were compromised in the hack. It was entirely the result of a bureaucracy that doesn’t prioritize good workers.

On top of all this, the potential for graft is high. Just last week, a former OPM employee pleaded guilty to funneling millions of dollars in government contracts to businesses connected to her family. Over the course of 12 years, Sheron Spann pushed lucrative contracts to friendly firms without disclosing her links to them. She got away with it for a very long time with no one noticing. Imagine how many other similar cases there are.

OPM’s many faults have led to a congressional probe by the House Oversight Committee.

The Biden Administration has proposed its own bureaucratic reform that would require OPM to do greater vetting of government workers. But this reform has little to do with weeding out incompetent or corrupt civil servants. It’s all about purging the few conservatives from the bureaucracy. OPM’s proposed rules say the agency will assess a worker’s “suitability and fitness” and will empower OPM to fire anyone it finds “does not have the required level of character and conduct necessary to perform work for a Federal agency.” Liberal bureaucrats will decide who’s suitable and who’s not.

There are much better ideas to rein in the bureaucracy. Trump has proposed new rules that would make it easier to get rid of incompetent swamp creatures. This is a good start to casting out the bad workers, but there still needs to be ways to find good workers. One possibility is taking the power to hire away from liberal bureaucrats in OPM and putting it in the hands of the private sector. There already exist private alternatives, such as Monster, that can find competent and dedicated servants to the American people. OPM has failed for years in this task. It’s time to try something new.

America can only be made great again if the government serves the people again. The bureaucracy is one of the foremost obstacles to this goal. Republicans must prioritize the reform of our civil service. Our nation’s future depends on it.



X22, And we Know, and more- May 24

 



I can't get that ending out of my mind. There is material there for a sequel movie showing the rescue mission, and I and many others on other social media platforms know it! Plus, the showrunner himself said today that yeah, if Season 15 happened he would've brought her home. (don't know if I believe him on that because he's said that 2 times before, but it really does sound like he really did care about bringing Hetty home).

Figured there is 1 thing I can do to try and raise awareness, which is start a petition and hope it gets the attention of other important figures.

Here's the link to it if you want to sign, and since I don't have Twitter, FB or IG, if any of you do, I recommend sharing the link on either of those platforms since the audiences on those platforms are bigger. And make sure to use these hashtags: #ncisla , #cbs and #paramountplus: https://www.change.org/p/ncis-la-the-search-for-hetty-sequel-movie-on-paramount?redirect=false

Hetty deserves to get to come home, and I have no idea how much longer Linda will be with us, and as long as there's a possibility of a movie out there, I'm not giving up on her happy ending.

The Corruption of Climate Science

Instead of fighting anti-civilization lunacy, corporations are taking their money off the table, along with their life-affirming affordable fuel.


“We need to criticize the people who got us here,” says Alex Epstein, founder of the Center for Industrial Progress and author of Fossil Future. “We can’t keep treating these designated experts as real experts. They are not real experts, they are destroyers. They are anti-energy, non-experts. And that needs to be made clear.”

Epstein is right, and his advice has never been more urgent—or as difficult to make people understand. It is no exaggeration that every major institution in America has now committed itself to the elimination of affordable and abundant energy. If it isn’t stopped, this commitment, motivated by misguided concern for the planet but also by a lust for power and money and enabled by moral cowardice and intellectual negligence, will destroy Western civilization.

For over 50 years, with increasing frequency, corrupted, careerist scientists have produced biased studies that, amplified by agenda-driven corporate and political special interests, constitute a “consensus” that is supposedly “beyond debate.” We are in a “climate crisis.” To cope with this climate emergency, all measures are justifiable.

This is overblown, one-sided, distorted, and manipulative propaganda. It is the language of authoritarians and corporatists bent on achieving even more centralized political power and economic wealth. It is a scam, perhaps the most audacious, all-encompassing fraud in human history. It is a scam that explicitly targets and crushes the middle class in developed nations and the entire aspiring populations in developing nations, at the same time as its messaging is designed to secure their fervent acquiescence.

What is actually beyond debate is not that we are in a climate crisis but that if we don’t stop destroying our conventional energy economy, we are going to be in a civilizational crisis.

Energy is the foundation of everythingprosperity, freedom, upward mobility, national wealth, individual economic independence, functional water and transportation infrastructure, commercial-scale agriculture, mining, and industryWithout energy, it all goes dark. And “renewables” are not even remotely capable of replacing oil, gas, coal, nuclear, and hydroelectric power. It’s impossible.

The only people who think renewables are capable of replacing conventional energy are either uninformed, innumerate, or corrupt. Period.

But to cope with the apocalyptic messaging of climate catastrophists, it isn’t enough to debunk the potential of renewables. It is also necessary to challenge the underlying climate “science.” The biased, corrupt, unceasing avalanche of expert “studies” serving up paid-for ideas to special interests that use them as bludgeons to beat into the desired shape every relevant public policy and popular narrative. So here goes.

A new study, released May 16, deserves far more criticism than it’s going to get. Authored by seven ridiculously credentialed experts and primarily affiliated with the leftist Union of Concerned Scientists, this study has the rather innocuous title: “Quantifying the contribution of major carbon producers to increases in vapor pressure deficit and burned area in western US and southwestern Canadian forests.” Bursting with charts and equations, and too many links to corroborating sources to count, the study has all the accouterments of intimidating credibility. But serious questions may be raised as to its logic as well as its objectivity.

Biased, Flawed Studies

For starters, this study doesn’t restrict itself to “Quantifying the contribution of major carbon producers to increases in vapor pressure deficit.” The authors can’t resist attacking these “major carbon producers.” In this revealing paragraph, the study’s true intent becomes apparent: it is fodder for litigation.

With the impacts of climate change growing increasingly severe, questions of who is responsible for climate change, how much responsibility each entity bears, and the obligations of those entities to mitigate future climate change and assist financially with climate adaptation are more present than ever in policy negotiations and in courtrooms around the world. These questions are deepened by the fact that the fossil fuel industry was aware of the climate-related risks of their products as early as the mid-1960s (Franta 2018) and, instead of shifting business practices, invested in campaigns and tactics to mislead the public and generate doubt about climate science.

That paragraph has nothing to do with the stated goal of the study. It just shows the political and legal context in which this study is designed to play a useful part. But what about the logic?

Here is where this study falls apart. It’s always fascinating to wade through intellectual efforts that are the product of extraordinary diligence and rarified expertise, only to discover the absence of fundamental variables and realize that by leaving them out, the entire argument disintegrates.

To explain what the authors got wrong, it is first necessary to summarize what they did. In plain English, the authors claim that hotter summers in recent years have caused more severe forest fires in the western United States, and fossil fuel emissions are causing the hotter summers.

That’s it.

To make their case, the authors have relied on a scientific term that imparts gravitas to the discussion, “vapor pressure deficit.” This is a big phrase that simply means “dry air.” The point they’re making is that it isn’t merely heat itself, but the fact that moisture is absent from the air, which causes trees to dry out faster and therefore become easier to ignite and burn. So far, so good. But there are at least two gaping holes in this reasoning. Both should be obvious.

First, the heat waves afflicting western forests in recent years are not unique. Even in modern history, the hottest temperature ever recorded in California was in 2013, when it hit 134 degrees in Death Valley. As for whipsawing extremes, during the 1930s, a decade when hot temperatures rivaled if not exceeded those we experience today, the coldest temperature ever measured in California, negative 45 degrees, was recorded in Nevada County. But the last few centuries are a mere heartbeat in the meteorological history of California.

Last year the San Jose Mercury breathlessly reported that the droughtover now, by the waywas the “worst in 1,200 years.” This raises the obvious question, what about that even bigger drought that occurred 1,200 years ago? This same newspaper in 2014 reported that “past dry periods lasted more than 200 years.” And so what about these multi-century droughts? Do we have temperature data for them? Was it hot? What was the vapor pressure deficit during these prehistoric, 200-year droughts? Such questions are not asked, much less answered.

One can go on. Prehistoric Sequoias, the predecessors of redwood trees, first appeared in the fossil record 200 million years ago, when dinosaurs still walked the earth. In their current form, redwoods have thrived in California forover 20 million years. For most of that period, the average global temperatures were considerably higher than they are today.

But what if it isn’t just heat, but dry heat, that is unprecedented today? What if the “vapor pressure deficit” is worse today than it has been at any time in 20 million years? That is a huge assumption, probably impossible to verify. Even if it’s true, it doesn’t make up for the study’s other flaw, which is the density of forests in California today, which is truly unprecedented. The study’s authors acknowledge they don’t take this variable into account, writing:

Our results highlight the roles of major carbon producers in driving forest fire extent by enhancing fuel aridity, but do not explicitly account for effects from non-climatic factors such as the prohibition of Indigenous burning, legacies of fire suppression, or changing human ignitions.

The authors go on to contend this omission has “not modified the climate-BA [burned area] relationship at the scale of this study.”

They’re wrong.

In California, wildlife biologists and forest ecologists who spend their lives studying and managing these timberlands unanimously agree that tree density has increased, thanks to “non-climatic factors such as the prohibition of Indigenous burning, and legacies of fire suppression.” The increase is not subtle. Without small, naturally occurring fires that clear underbrush and smaller trees, forests become overgrown. Controlled burns and responsible logging are absolutely necessary to maintain forest health. According to a study conducted in 2020 by UC Davis and USDA, California’s mid-elevation Ponderosa pine and mixed conifer forests used to average 60 trees per acre, and now they average 170 trees per acre according to conservative estimates.

This is not an isolated finding. Observations of excessive tree density are corroborated by numerous studies, testimony, and journalistic investigations. Unlike the subjectively defined algorithms plugged into a climate model, excessive tree density is an objective fact, verified repeatedly by people on the ground. To imply by omission that more than tripling the density of trees across millions of acres of forest would not leave them stressed and starved for soil nutrients, sunlight, and water from rain and atmospheric moisture is scientific malpractice.

Without taking these additional factors into account, it is deceptive to indict fossil fuel emissions for causing wildfires. Perhaps some indirect connection can be established of debatable relevance, but for this study to assign specific percentages and acreages suggests a premeditated purpose: creating material for expert testimony for litigation against oil companies.

The Real Reason for Catastrophic Wildfires

California’s forests are tinderboxes because environmentalists made it nearly impossible to get permits to do controlled burns and because environmentalists decimated the timber industry. In the face of relentless regulatory and litigious harassment, California’s timber industry has shrunk from harvesting 6 billion board feet per year as recently as the 1990s to less than 2 billion board feet in recent years. Meanwhile, California’s fire suppression industrial complex has grown to gargantuan proportions, pouring billions of dollars into putting fires out before they can spread.

The result is predictable and doesn’t require a climate scientist to explain it. We have mismanaged our forests for decades, mostly thanks to the misguided influence of environmentalist pressure groups on the state legislature. California’s forests are now overcrowded with trees that are stressed, dried out, and ready to burst into flames, with or without a “vapor pressure deficit.”

The solution, according to climate catastrophists, is to empty the dangerous, flammable “urban/wildland interface” of human habitation, mandate electric vehicles, and sue oil companies. This will accomplish nothing for the forests, even if every apocalyptic climate scenario were to come true. A rational solution would be to bring back the timber industry, deregulate controlled burns and mechanical thinning, revive responsible grazing of cattle, goats, and sheep to remove excessive foliage, and watch the forests again thrive.

If mismanagement is what’s really causing forest superfires, media misinformation is what’s preventing policy reform. A Sacramento Bee headline, for example, says, “Fossil fuel companies to blame for share of California wildfires . . . ” From The Hill: “Scientists blame fossil fuel production for more than a third of Western wildfires.” From “Pulitzer Prize-winning”Inside Climate News: “Fossil Fuel Companies and Cement Manufacturers Could Be to Blame for a More Than a Third of West’s Wildfires.” None of these media reports mention tree density.

The monolithic alignment of the scientific and journalistic community in support of an authoritarian, utterly impractical “climate” agenda reveals a misunderstanding if not outright betrayal of scientific and journalistic core values. Both disciplines are founded on the bedrock of skepticism and debate. Without nurturing those values, the integrity of these disciplines is undermined. When it comes to issues of climate and energy policy in America, science and journalism are compromised.

Fossil Fuel Industry Failures

Let’s suppose that back in the mid-1960s, oil companies were presented with a theory that fossil fuel emissions would cause the climate to warm. Wouldn’t their first rational response be to question this theory? Why would questioning a theory constitute “misleading the public”? Even if some of the executives in these companies believed these theories, it would be absurd to suggest all of them did. In any boardroom discussion, and this is amusingly ironic, the economic interests of an oil corporation would compel their directors to be intellectually honest and not simply accept the theory that their product was going to warm the planet. Good luck proving that oil companies intentionally misled the public.

But so what? Were America’s oil and gas companies simply supposed to believe all these nascent theories and shut down? What exactly should they have done, back in the mid-1960s, to cope with this allegedly looming climate emergency? Were solar panels and wind turbines ready for rapid deployment back then? Of course not, especially since solar panels from China, and wind turbines from Germany, are still not capable of providing more than a small fraction of the energy we need.

The real crime, if you want to call it that, isn’t that oil and gas companies questioned climate change theories back in the 1960s or ’70s. It’s that they’re accepting them now.

Oil and gas companies today are not willing to challenge the climate crisis orthodoxy, or the myth of cost-effective renewables at scale. They aren’t willing to devote their substantial financial resources to debunking this agenda-driven madness that is on the verge of taking down our entire civilization. The fact that America’s oil and gas companies have adopted a strategy of appeasement is a crime against humanity. The fact that these companies are failing to make long-term investments to develop new oil and gas fields, and instead are reaping windfall profits as they sell existing production at politically inflated prices, that, too, is a crime against civilization.

Ultimately, the Union of Concerned Scientists and the major oil companies are complicit in the destruction of America’s energy economy. Because rather than declaring total war on these paid-for, flawed scientific studies and the special interests that fund them, oil companies will engage in theatrical litigation, knowing that the cost of settlements won’t even come close to the short-term profits to be had by slowly asset stripping their companies while selling diminishing quantities of fuel at punitive rates.

Epstein is right that we must criticize the “experts” that want to destroy human civilization with climate alarmism. But we must also recognize and criticize the institutions targeted for destruction. Instead of fighting this lunacy, they are taking their money off the table, along with their life-affirming affordable fuel, and heading for the hills.



From Heroes to Villains: The Consequences of Demonizing Self-Defense


Up until this point, the idea that one is justified in using violent force to defend themselves and their loved ones seemed to be a common-sense concept. But over the past few years, it appears that forces in government and society are trying to challenge that notion.

Lately, we have seen members of the chattering class villainize those placed in a position in which they were forced to use deadly force to prevent someone from victimizing them. It raises an important question: What are those demonizing these folks trying to accomplish?

In an interview with The Daily Signal, Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) expressed concern over the rush to vilify former Marine Daniel Penny, who has been charged with second-degree manslaughter in the death of Jordan Neely in the New York subway. Hawley highlighted the need for all the facts to be known before passing judgment, emphasizing the confusing signals being sent to young men by the media and the left.

He argued that the immediate condemnation of Penny’s actions without a complete understanding of the incident could discourage men from stepping up to be heroes. Hawley raised the question of whether society still values the willingness of men to put themselves on the line for others, referencing the condemnation faced by Penny despite his attempt to protect fellow passengers, noting:

This is a good example of the extremely confusing signals that the culture and the media and the Left send to young men, which is that you don’t hear much outrage on the Left … about the fact that New York subways and streets are extremely unsafe, and that if you are an everyday citizen walking or traveling, you may well be subject to violence. That’s just wiped away. We’re supposed to just live with that.

The lawmaker continued:

But then, you’ve got a guy who actually puts himself in danger to try to help other people. You’ve got a subway passenger now saying, ‘He saved my life. He put himself in danger.’ That is automatically condemned before we even know all the facts. It’s like, ‘Oh, that must be wrong’ or ‘That must be crazy.’

Hawley then pointed out that men placed in a situation where they have to defend others might think:

Well, now, hold on. I thought that a man was supposed to be willing to put himself on the line. Isn’t that what we celebrate in the Greatest Generation, for example, a whole generation of young men who went out there and sacrificed for their country? But you’re telling me now, ‘If I do that, I’m going to be vilified, sued, charged, what have you.’

In another instance, a shootout occurred in southeast Shelby County, Tennessee when a man confronted a group of suspected car thieves outside his home. The incident was captured on surveillance video, which showed the thieves shooting at the man first.

In response, the man returned fire multiple times. However, when law enforcement arrived, the man was arrested for reckless endangerment. The man’s wife criticized the investigators for focusing on charging her husband instead of apprehending the suspects.

The home and a neighboring house were left with bullet holes, and two vehicles were also damaged. The unnamed individual could be facing up to six years in prison if convicted.

There is also the case of Jose Alba, a bodega worker in New York City, who stabbed a man to death when the individual and his girlfriend physically assaulted him. He was subsequently charged with murder by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.

Alba was given bail of $250,000 and sent to Riker’s Island, although the bail was later reduced due to public outcry. Meanwhile, the girlfriend of the attacker, who had incited the assault and stabbed Alba three times did not face charges as the DA’s office considered her actions “self-defense.” The decision sparked outrage, with critics questioning the double standard and the failure to hold the woman accountable. Bragg’s office later freed Alba due to the backlash.

We also can’t forget the case of Kyle Rittenhouse, who gunned down three men during a violent protest in Kenosha, Wisconsin. One of the assailants attacked Rittenhouse and attempted to grab his rifle. The other two assaulted him with a skateboard and one pointed a pistol at him. Still, Democrats and members of the activist media painted him as a racist white supremacist who murdered these fine, upstanding individuals despite it being a clear case of self-defense.

In each of these cases, there was an effort to portray defenders as aggressors and undermine their right to protect themselves and their loved ones. These individuals were punished by the government and the media for trying to protect their lives. Such instances contribute to a culture that questions and devalues the actions of those who defend themselves.

The vilification of people who use force to protect themselves appears to be a sinister effort to undermine the concept of self-defense and serves as a strategic tool to promote increased reliance on the government for protection, rather than on individual capabilities. By painting self-defenders as villains and undermining their rights, a narrative is crafted that instills fear and doubt in people’s ability to protect themselves and their loved ones. Even worse, it seems these agitators are trying to delegitimize the concept of self-defense.

This is why it is so vital to challenge the narrative that labels people who defend themselves as villains. The opinion molders are trying desperately to persuade people to view the government as the only entity that is allowed to use violence for protection. This is a dangerous mode of thinking that would lead to disastrous outcomes if it is not effectively debunked.



Tina Turner: Music legend dies at 83

 

Singer Tina Turner, whose soul classics and pop hits like The Best and What's Love Got to Do With It made her a superstar, has died at the age of 83.

Turner had suffered a number of health issues in recent years including cancer, a stroke and kidney failure.

She rose to fame alongside husband Ike in the 1960s with songs including Proud Mary and River Deep, Mountain High.

She divorced the abusive Ike in 1978, and went on to find even greater success as a solo artist in the 1980s.  


Dubbed the Queen of Rock 'n' Roll, Tina Turner was famed for her raunchy and energetic stage performances and husky, powerful vocals.

She won eight Grammy Awards and was inducted into the Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame in 2021 as a solo artist, having first been inducted alongside Ike in 1991.

Upon her solo induction, the Hall of Fame noted how she had "expanded the once-limited idea of how a Black woman could conquer a stage and be both a powerhouse and a multidimensional being".

Younger stars who have felt her influence include Beyonce, Janet Jackson, Janelle Monae and Rihanna.  


Born in Tennessee into a sharecropping family, she first found prominence as one of the backing singers for her husband's band The Kings of Rhythm.

She soon went to to front the band, and the couple tasted commercial success with Fool in Love and It's Gonna Work Out Fine, which made the US charts in the early 60s.

Their other hits included 1973's Nutbush City Limits, about the small town where Tina was born. But Ike's physical and emotional abuse was taking its toll.

It was he who changed her name from her birth name, Anna Mae Bullock, to Tina Turner - a decision he took without her knowledge, one example of his controlling behaviour.  


She recalled the trauma she suffered throughout their relationship in her 2018 memoir, My Love Story, in which she compared sex with the late musician to "a kind of rape".

"He used my nose as a punching bag so many times that I could taste blood running down my throat when I sang," she wrote.

After escaping her abuser, she went on to rebuild her career and become one of the biggest pop and rock stars of the 80s and 90s, with hits including Let's Stay Together, Steamy Windows, Private Dancer, James Bond theme GoldenEye, I Don't Wanna Fight and It Takes Two, a duet with Rod Stewart.

She also starred in 1985 film Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome - which featured another of her smashes, We Don't Need Another Hero - and The Who's 1975 rock opera Tommy as the Acid Queen. 


She found happiness with her second husband, German music executive Erwin Bac. They began dating in the mid-80s, and got married in 2013.

The pair lived in Switzerland, with Turner taking Swiss citizenship. He donated one of his kidneys to her in 2017 after it was discovered she was suffering from kidney failure.

She also suffered tragedy with the loss of her eldest son Craig to suicide in 2018. His father was Turner's former bandmate, Raymond Hill.

Another son, Ronnie, whose father was Ike Turner, died in 2022. She also had two adopted sons, Ike Jr and Michael, Ike's children from a previous relationship.

Tina's life story spawned a 1993 biopic titled What's Love Got To Do With It, which earned Angela Bassett an Oscar nomination for playing the star; and a hit stage musical - aptly titled Tina: The Musical. She was also the subject of HBO documentary Tina in 2021.

In an interview with Marie Claire South Africa in 2018, Turner said: "People think my life has been tough, but I think it's been a wonderful journey. The older you get, the more you realise it's not what happened, it's how you deal with it."  



https://www.bbc.com/news/65669653

A blueprint so effective, Trump tries copying it

Some of Trump’s campaign promises sound a bit familiar…

According to Donald Trump, Governor Ron DeSantis’ Florida Blueprint has turned the great state of Florida into a hellscape.

Just last month, the 2024 frontrunner (who is totally not at all scared of Ron DeSantis running against him) blasted the state he calls home by citing several far-left lunatics including MSNBC’s resident psychopath Joy Reid.

Yes sir. The DeSantis Florida Blueprint was such an abysmal failure that Meatball Ron DeSanctimonious DeSactus exposed himself as the loser, RINO, globalist, Paul Ryan puppet that he is.

And yet, it certainly looks as if Donald Trump (the guy who is “ahead by a lot” and is not at all worried about that Establishment RINO Ron DeSantis) has decided to steal from DeSantis’ Florida Blueprint and repackage it as part of his 2024 campaign promises.

Axios previewed some of what Trump promises to do if he gets the GOP nomination and manages to win the general election. And having read through the piece, I couldn’t help but notice that quite a few of the campaign’s promises sound a hell of a lot like the very things Ron DeSantis has done in Florida … that apparently, according to Trump, turned the Sunshine State into such a disastrous mess and Governor DeSantis into a loser and failure.

Team Trump is vowing to eliminate Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion programs from schools and universities – something the Florida legislature passed this session and Governor DeSantis signed into law.

Team Trump also plans to go after the medical mutilation of minors – something Florida and many other Republican-led states have already passed laws to do.

Team Trump is also vowing to get rid of Soros-backed “Marxist prosecutors.” It’s unclear just what kind of authority a president has to remove local district attorneys who are elected to office. But since Governor DeSantis has gotten rid of Soros-backed prosecutors, Trump wants to do it too.

Axios points out that Trump’s blueprint is missing specifics, like how he plans to set about accomplishing the things DeSantis accomplished. So we can only guess based on past performance.

And if past performance is any indication, Trump’s grand master plan probably boils down to bypassing Congress and signing a bunch of Executive Orders that are easily revoked the minute a Democrat replaces him.

This was the Trump strategy during his term in office, and so far, I have seen nothing from the Trump campaign that leads me to suspect he would do anything differently if he did win in 2024.

One big difference between the Florida Blueprint and Trump’s campaign promises is that one of them is grounded in reality, having already been passed by a legislature and signed into law, and one of them is a series of campaign promises made by the same guy who once promised to build a wall and make Mexico pay for it.

What are the odds that a second Trump administration would have the skill and talent needed to implement his ambitious campaign promises? Given Trump’s penchant for tossing anyone and everyone under the bus, why would anybody with an ounce of talent or skill sign up for that kind of ritual abuse?

The only people gravitating toward Donald Trump are the wackjobs, backbenchers, and sycophantic hangers-on who pose no threat to him and are unlikely to outshine him.

As I said in my column “No Country for Old Men:”

Since Trump tends to attract grifters like a ship attracts barnacles, a second Trump administration would likely end up being staffed by dead-enders and hangers-on whose loyalty isn’t to the country but to Trump.

Donald Trump isn’t a coalition builder. It’s impossible to build a coalition of competent winners when you’re busy blowing up bridges while promoting candidates based solely on their devotion to you.

And I just don’t see Donald Trump changing course.

The Florida Blueprint is successful in practice because DeSantis built a coalition in the legislature and filled his administration with smart, talented people who share his agenda. Since Trump is unlikely to do either, his blueprint isn’t worth the paper it’s printed on.

As Dave Reaboi put it in response to the Axios piece:

Let’s put aside the fact that getting any of this done—which requires a cadre of professionals dedicated to this mission—is far beyond Trump’s abilities; he’s on the campaign trail being far LESS visionary and based than DeSantis when it comes to the use of state power. Someone can write these things for him, and you can clap, but he can’t relate to any of it.

You can tell that this platform is completely unserious by the fact that, during his first term, he wasn’t able to accomplish a far less aggressive agenda. It’s all just fantasy for the rubes.

Most of these policy ideas are great—and they’re selling it to people who don’t have any conception of what it takes to implement a policy agenda—but you might as well ask your plumber to get it done. None of it is real.

Some of you are going to vote for him. That’s fine; you’ve got your reasons. But don’t be silly enough to think that any of this can happen—or that Trump is disciplined and committed to any of them.

It isn’t at all uncommon for a politician running for president to make promises his ass can’t cash.

Joe Biden promised to “restore the soul of the nation,” unite the country, end a virus, cure cancer, always take responsibility for his actions, and restore America’s place in the world.

What a shock; Joe Biden hasn’t done any of that.

What’s more, Biden flooded the country with over 6 million illegal aliens who were able to easily enter because the wall Trump promised in 2016 wasn’t there to stop them, and all the Trump-era executive orders to stem the flow of illegals were quickly revoked by Grandpa Joe.

The Florida Blueprint will have a lasting impact on the state because of the groundwork DeSantis and the Republicans have done.

Meanwhile, Trump’s MAGA blueprint from his time in office, most of which consisted of executive orders, dissipated like smoke the instant Biden replaced him.

Promises are cheap and easy, which is why presidential candidates make so many of them.

Lasting accomplishments, like the ones DeSantis had in Florida, require a hell of a lot more than late-night anger posting on Truth Social while your campaign staff makes pie-in-the-sky promises you wouldn’t begin to know how to implement.