Sunday, June 18, 2023

Tearing Apart the Governing Consensus

A victory for the administrative state in the war on 
Donald Trump won’t be a victory for the rule of law.


We hear a lot about the loss of “institutional legitimacy” these days. One of the great ironies attendant on that loss is a revolution in sentiment among many—but by no means all—people who think of themselves as conservative. Hitherto, such people would have been staunch supporters of those institutions that, traditionally, had represented the rule of law, the continuity of our culture, etc. Nowadays, they look with a jaundiced eye upon once-respected institutions like the Department of Justice, the FBI, the CIA, and the rest of the national security/surveillance apparat

How could it be otherwise? Recent revelations that scores if not hundreds of figures from that world had insinuated themselves into media, social and otherwise, to push a partisan agenda must give us pause. The stories are legion. Here’s one that just appeared in The Federalist by Margot Cleveland. 

The month before Joe Biden’s inauguration, FBI sources collaborated with the New York Times’ Russia-collusion hoaxer Adam Goldman to falsely portray the investigation into Hunter Biden as a big ole nothingburger. Americans just didn’t know it at the time. However, revisiting Goldman’s article now, in light of recent whistleblower revelations and statements by former Attorney General William Barr, reveals this reality—and more.

That’s bad, right? The FBI fed-faked news to our former “newspaper of record” about a partisan matter that might well have determined the outcome of a presidential election. And the response? A little feckless hand-wringing on the Right. Some clucking tongues. At the end of the day, though, expect crickets. 

In one of the very best pieces I have seen about the Horrors!-Trump-had-classified-documents-at-Mar-a-Lago indictment, also published at The Federalist, former Assistant U.S. Attorney Will Scharf minutes several disturbing features of that 37-count farce. Much of what he has to say is broadly exculpatory of Trump, but one of the most disturbing items concerns the 38th item in Special Counsel Jack Smith’s partisan cudgel: the indictment of Trump’s aide Walt Nauta. 

Why was Nauta indicted? Smith alleges he was guilty of “conspiracy to obstruct justice.” What he is being punished for, however, is refusing to betray his employer, Donald Trump. “Just turn state’s evidence on the bad orange man and we’ll let you go.” That, more or less, is what the Feds said.

They came down heavy on Nauta’s lawyer, Stanley Woodward, too. As Scharf explains, Woodward alleged in a court filing that 

during a meeting with prosecutors about his client’s case, the head of the Counterintelligence Section of DOJ’s National Security Division Jay Bratt ‘suggested Woodward’s judicial application [for a DC Superior Court judgeship] might be considered more favorably if he and his client cooperated against Trump.’

Got that? It might have been an out-take from “The Godfather.” But no, it is business as usual in the Department of Justice circa 2023. Of course, we do not yet know that the allegation is true. If it is, Scharf’s description of it as “truly wild misconduct” is an understatement. I think it is very likely true. 

As Scharf notes, “Woodward is a highly accomplished lawyer. He spent a decade at Akin Gump, a top law firm, clerked on the D.C. Circuit, and has very substantial experience in government investigations. This is not some fly-by-night TV lawyer. He is a legal heavyweight, and he is leveling an extremely serious allegation of misconduct against a senior official at DOJ.”

Let’s say his accusation turns out to be true. What then? If past performance is any guide, the erring prosecutor might or might not get a slap on the wrist and the whole thing will be buried. Maybe he will go on to a lucrative TV posting, à la Andrew McCabe or Peter Strzok. Maybe he’ll be shuffled to another department. Don’t expect any real consequences. 

Such cases, and they are legion, bring me back to that irony I mentioned at the outset of this column. The world seems increasingly divided between those who continue to have confidence in our institutions and those who, finding them bankrupt, have withdrawn their support.

This dividing line shows up in many different ways. One prominent fissure shows itself in the commentary on Jack Smith’s indictment. On one side, there are commentators—including such eminences as former Attorney General William Barr—who tell us that Trump’s holding on to those documents at Mar-a-Lago was heinous. On the other side are those (like me) who think it was no big deal. 

There has been a lot of talk about how he had “the nation’s most sensitive secrets” strewn about a closet or lining a bathroom. But nothing I’ve seen—certainly nothing in Smith’s indictment—rings any alarm bells to me. Joe Biden had hundreds of boxes of classified documents strewn about his garage and elsewhere in his house. He took those documents when he was a senator or vice president. Before, that is, he was president with the plenary power to declassify anything he wished and take home or on holiday anything he wished. 

There has been a lot of talk about how the United States is more and more subject to a “two-tier” system of justice, which is to say a system of injustice. It pains me to acknowledge it, but it is true. Henry VIII had his Star Chamber, a similarly unjust form of meting out justice. Through it he got rid of the people who stood in his way or did not do what he wanted them to. 

The functionaries and factota of the administrative state are busy trying to do to Donald Trump what Henry did to his enemies. They might just be able to peck him to death, or to jail. It won’t be a victory for the rule of law. But it will surely increase the rancor and divisions that are tearing apart the governing consensus that once ruled in this country.



On the Fringe and Badlands Media- June 18

 



If your father is still in your life, tell him how much you love him today. You only get 1 real father in your life, don't waste life's opportunities to let him know how much he's appreciated. 💗

Do We Still ‘Hold These Truths’?


Today, our choice is between republic and oligarchy.


In about three weeks, we will once again be celebrating the Fourth of July, America’s Independence Day. But what are we really celebrating? For all too many Americans, the Fourth of July is just another summer holiday, albeit one with fireworks. Of course, most Americans dimly recollect that it was on this day, sometime in the distant past, that Americans declared their independence from Great Britain. But they seldom stop to reflect on the true revolution that the Fourth of July signifies: the Declaration of Independence and the creation of a nation based on a universal idea. As Alexander Hamilton put it in the Federalist, the United States had the opportunity to establish a government founded on “reflection and choice” rather than on “accident and force.”

The Declaration of Independence claimed to derive its authority from certain “self-evident” truths. Do we still believe in them? Do we still believe, as the Declaration maintains, that nature, including human nature, is accessible to human reason? That human reason can ascertain the “Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God” and certain self-evident truths, e.g. “that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.—That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed . . .”?

For the founders, the Constitution was designed to provide the framework for the kind of government envisioned by the Declaration: a republic or commonwealth intended to protect the natural rights of its citizens. The link between the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution was nicely captured by Abraham Lincoln in a fragment he most likely composed in the winter of 1861, shortly before his inauguration. Contemplating the nature of the Union and the Constitution in the face of the secession crisis, Lincoln argued the Constitution is principally a framework for sharing power within a republican government. He contended that this was the real thing to be preserved, because only republican government is capable of protecting the rights and liberties of the people. But Lincoln also saw the Declaration of Independence as the foundation of such a government, and the Constitution as the means of implementing it.

In this fragment, Lincoln observes that as important as the Constitution and Union may be, there is “something back of these, entwining itself more closely about the human heart. That something, is the principle of ‘Liberty to all’” as expressed in the Declaration. With or without the Declaration, Lincoln continues, the United States could have declared independence, but “withoutit, we could not, I think, have secured our free government, and consequent prosperity.”

Using as his text Proverbs 25:11, “A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in frames of silver,” Lincoln argues that the Declaration’s principle of liberty, a “word ‘fitly spoken,’ . . . has proved an ‘apple of gold’ to us. The Union and the Constitution, are the picture of silver, subsequently framed around it,” not to conceal or destroy the apple “but to adorn, and preserve it. The picture was made for the apple-not the apple for the picture. So let us act, that neither picture, [n]or apple, shall ever be blurred, or broken.”

As the late Walter Berns once wrote, laws in the United States derive 

from a constitution that is related to the Declaration of Independence as effect is related to cause, and the Declaration, the cause, is a political statement of a philosophical teaching concerning the nature of man, Providence, and nature itself. In it we learn that nature’s God endows all men with the rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, and that government is instituted to secure these rights. That the Constitution was understood by its framers to have as its purpose the establishment of such a government there can be little doubt.

So the founding generation, as well as Lincoln, saw the Constitution as the means for implementing a certain type of government, a republic based on the equality and consent of a self-governing people. In what respect are we equal under the Constitution? Only in our natural rights, which the Constitution is intended to protect. A corollary holds that all human beings are equal in the sense that no one person may govern another without the latter’s consent.

As noted above, the Declaration of Independence maintains that nature, including human nature, is accessible to human reason, which can ascertain our natural rights. To secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. 

But as James Madison noted in Federalist 51, because men are not angels, government requires certain “devices” to control potential abuses. “If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary. In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself.” Thus while the founders’ Constitution is based on mutual trust among fellow citizens, it embodies a deep distrust of those who hold power.

One of the most important devices for controlling the abuses of government is the separation of powers. As Madison notes in Federalist 47, “The accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many, and whether hereditary, self appointed, or elective, may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny.”

Thus for the founders, a successful republic required not only virtuous citizens and broad civic trust but also mechanisms to prevent government abuse. This was simply prudent. While they hoped that enlightened public-minded men would govern, they also realized that it was necessary to have a government architecture that would minimize the damage in the event that less enlightened and public minded individuals rose to power.

So to reiterate: the political philosophy of the American republic is to be found in the Declaration of Independence. The architecture for implementing that political philosophy is the Constitution. Paraphrasing Lincoln, the “apple of gold” is the Declaration. The “picture of silver” is the Constitution. The latter exists to “adorn and preserve” the former.

Clearly this is not the situation that prevails today. Our presumed governors have cast aside the apple of gold and abuse the frame of silver at will. Unfortunately, what was created as a commonwealth has devolved into an oligarchy, rule by the few whose interests are at odds with those of the people at large. This ruling oligarchy includes not only unelected bureaucrats but also corporate leaders in tech, finance, and media, who establish rules from which they themselves are exempt. The result is the political crisis that we face today: a lawless executive, a Congress and Court complicit in this lawlessness, leading to an out of control federal government that makes a mockery of the idea of a self-governing people.

The change in our view of the relation between the Constitution and the Declaration is the result of the revolution in political thought effected by the Progressives in the latter part of the 19th and early part of the 20th centuries. Although many historians have treated the Progressives as merely a “good government” reform movement, the fact is that they essentially “re-founded” the American republic, transforming the basis of government from human nature and natural rights to “history” and “progress.” The Progressives asserted a new conception of man as a being who possesses no natural rights, but who does have potentially limitless material needs that must be provided by an administrative state ruled by “experts.”

Thus the Progressives effectively replaced liberty with “efficiency” and the concept of “rights” with prescriptive entitlements. While the Progressive movement is complicated and not always internally consistent, its fundamental “big idea” is that there is no such thing as the sort of unchanging truth claimed in the Declaration. Instead, all ideas arise from particular historical circumstances.

The era following the Civil War and Reconstruction essentially marked a return to the idea of limited government. But during this period, the “social question” began to arise: how was the American constitutional system to deal with the challenges of the post-war urban and industrial revolutions? While during the Civil War and Reconstruction, Lincoln and the Republicans adhered to the long tradition of Anglo-American constitutional principles that gave us both the Declaration and the Constitution, the Progressives—both intellectuals (e.g., Herbert Croly and John Dewey), imbued with the doctrine of progress arising from German political philosophy, and politicians, such as Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson—abandoned those principles for a set of so-called modern ideas.

Above all others, Woodrow Wilson, both as an intellectual (he was a professor and the president of Princeton University) and later a politician, embodied the essence of the new political science, arguing that the Constitution was not up to the task of dealing with the complexities of 20th century American life. The Constitution, said the Progressives, was outdated and incompetent to deal with contemporary economic and social ills. If the Constitution was to be applied at all, they contended, it ought to be applied as a “living” document, modified to meet the changes of modern life. 

While the founders created a republic based on natural law and natural right, the Progressives believed that there could be no abiding non-arbitrary standard of moral or political judgment, independent of human will. For the Progressives, government must evolve to meet the changing needs and must be guided by similarly evolving standards of right. Thus as the Progressive political scientist Charles Merriam put it in 1920, it is impossible “that any limit can be set to governmental activity.”

The touchstone of Wilson’s new political science was his 1912 campaign address, “What is Progress?” in which he attacked the Declaration of Independence and argued on behalf of replacing the political science of the founders with a new political science based on the evolutionary theory of Charles Darwin. Wilson also expressed frustration with, if not outright scorn for, the separation of powers. For Wilson, the checking-and-balancing function of the Constitution constituted a barrier that, for many decades, had prevented the national government from enacting the social and economic policies that Wilson and the Progressives had advocated.

Ignoring the other part of Madison’s argument for separating powers—energizing government through the clash of rival and opposite ambitions—the Progressives saw the Constitution’s separation of powers as an effort to enshrine legislative primacy. In the name of good government and efficiency, the Progressives sought to create a new constitutional order, with the president as its driving force.

Accordingly, Wilson and the Progressives reconceived the presidency itself. Wilson’s executive would overcome the original Constitution’s structural obstacle by rising above them. The means for doing so was party government, permitting the president to initiate a common policy agenda in order to breach the mere “parchment” barriers that divided the legislative and executive branches. As one Wilson scholar has observed:

The president would make the case for policy innovation directly to the people. Once armed with plebiscitary legitimacy, he might more easily prod an otherwise parochial Congress to address national needs. Madisonian fears about the mischiefs of faction would be overcome by separating politics and administration: Congress and the president would jointly settle upon the desired policy agenda, but its details, both in design and execution, would rely on non-partisan expert administrators’ special insight and technical skill, operating under the president’s general direction and control.

This reconceived presidency would also become the primary instrument of a new Constitution, one stripped of any foolish preoccupation with limited government.

In other words, executive power would grow in parallel with the growth of government in general. No longer would the president be seen as, at best, Congress’ co-equal or, at worst, the legislature’s frustrated servant. Instead, Wilson’s president would be a proactive government’s innovator-in-chief, one who understands the direction of historical forces but who unites this understanding with popular yearnings. For the Progressives, the president was to embody the will of the people.

The result of the Progressive’s revolution is an increasingly centralized and bureaucratized administrative state that expands relentlessly while increasing the dependence of the citizen-body on government. As Matthew Spalding has written, clients of the state are on the verge of becoming the majority faction that Madison feared as the greatest danger to free governments. Alexis de Tocqueville’s warnings about democratic despotism seem more and more prophetic, as an all-intrusive state reduces the people (in Tocqueville’s words) “to being nothing more than a herd of timid and industrious animals of which the government is the shepherd.”

In conclusion, I cannot express the current crisis of constitutionalism any better than my friend John Marini of the University of Nevada at Reno. “A constitution,” he writes, 

is meaningful only if its principles, which authorize government, are understood to be permanent and unchangeable, in contrast to the statute laws made by government that alter with circumstances and changing political requirements of each generation. If a written constitution is to have any meaning, it must have a rational or theoretical ground that distinguishes it from government. When the principles that establish the legitimacy of the constitution are understood to be changeable, are forgotten, or denied, the constitution can no longer impose limits on the power of government. In that case, government itself will determine the conditions of the social compact and become the arbiter of the rights of individuals. When that transformation occurred, as it did in the 20th century, the sovereignty of the people, established by the Constitution, was replaced by the sovereignty of government, understood in terms of the modern concept of the rational or administrative State. It was a theoretical doctrine, the philosophy of history, that effected this transformation and established the intellectual and moral foundations of progressive politics.

Today, our choice is between republic and oligarchy. To recapture the former, let us recur to the truths of the Declaration of Independence as expressed by President Calvin Coolidge in a speech commemorating its 150th anniversary:

About the Declaration there is a finality that is exceedingly restful. It is often asserted that the world has made a great deal of progress since 1776, that we have had new thoughts and new experiences which have given us a great advance over the people of that day, and that we may therefore very well discard their conclusions for something more modern. But that reasoning can not be applied to this great charter. If all men are created equal, that is final. If they are endowed with inalienable rights, that is final. If governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed, that is final. No advance, no progress can be made beyond these propositions. If anyone wishes to deny their truth or their soundness, the only direction in which he can proceed historically is not forward, but backward toward the time when there was no equality, no rights of the individual, no rule of the people. Those who wish to proceed in that direction can not lay claim to progress. They are reactionary. Their ideas are not more modern, but more ancient, than those of the Revolutionary fathers.

Otherwise, our crisis of constitutionalism and all its attendant woes will continue.



We Need Committed Dads To Quiet Our Cultural Chaos

The future of America depends in large part on men devoted to character and action who are unafraid to stand up for their wives and children. 



Dads across America are receiving something this Father’s Day that we have never sought but desperately deserve: vindication.  

The social engineers who have shaped the past 60 years of American social policy assumed a check from the government is an adequate replacement for a man in the home. Worse, a new generation of radical elites has spent the past decade trying to destroy the sex binary altogether.  

But the evidence is clear: Father absence is associated with higher rates of poverty, teen pregnancy, youth crime, and substance abuse. Conversely, children who grow up with both parents are more likely to attend college and less likely to live in poverty or go to prison.  

That doesn’t mean fatherhood today is the same as it was in previous generations. Dads today spend more time with their children than fathers did in the 1960s. For many men, bathing their children and reading to them at night are as much a part of being a good father as teaching their kids to change a tire, fish, or throw a perfect spiral. 

Those who have used law and culture to dismiss biology and undermine the role of fathers are wrong. Dads do matter.  

Sadly, one important role that fewer and fewer fathers play is that of husband. About 40 percent of all children today are born to unmarried parents. While the 70 percent nonmarital birth rate among black women receives a disproportionate amount of attention, close to 30 percent of white children and over half of Hispanic children are born out of wedlock. Asian Americans are the only ethnic group in the country whose nonmarital birth rate falls below the 1965 “Moynihan threshold” of 25 percent

At that time, 1 in 4 black children born to unwed mothers was seen as a national emergency. Today, Democrats reject attempts to tie family structure to social outcomes, going as far as removing all references to fatherhood from their 2020 party platform. In fact, the only mention of marriage in that document is regarding forced marriages in foreign countries.  

Their rejection of the natural family obscures an obvious reality: The most privileged people in America today are the children who grow up with their married biological parents in a stable and loving home. This self-evident truth should function as the bedrock of all conservative social policy.  

Marriage is the greatest structural enabler of father involvement. But it also accounts for the duties and obligations husbands and wives have toward one another. It’s no coincidence that the vow to stay committed “in sickness and in health” is absent from child support orders or co-parenting agreements. This is why the most important thing conservatives should be doing to promote healthy families is using every ounce of political and cultural capital to reconnect marriage and childrearing. 

The need to put “marriage before carriage” is one reason every American should become familiar with the “Success Sequence” that shows 97 percent of Millennials born between 1980 and 1984 who finished school, secured employment, and married before having children were not poor by their mid-30s. That message is tangible, achievable, and measurable. It is also something that can be introduced to children long before they make the decision to start a family. 

This country needs fathers of every background who value strength, courage, faith, and love. We need men who are unafraid to stand up for their wives and children and who see protecting and providing for their families as their most important vocation. The future of America depends in large part on men devoted to character and action.  

Fathers should be the first and last lines of defense against the Lupron leftists in politics, media, and medicine claiming a loving parent would put his son on puberty blockers or consent to a double mastectomy for his teenage daughter.  

We spent decades sending the message through policy and culture that fathers don’t really matter. Nothing could be further from the truth. It’s more important than ever for men to build families rooted in faith that provide a model for the next generation of boys to emulate. 

Men need purpose they are willing to both live and die for. The responsibilities that come with a family give them both.  



WATCH: Greg Gutfeld Puts Joe Biden on a Spit and Roasts Him for Over Three Minutes

WATCH: Greg Gutfeld Puts Joe Biden on a Spit and Roasts Him for Over Three Minutes

Bonchie reporting for RedState 

As RedState reported, Joe Biden hasn’t had a good mid-June when it comes to demonstrating his mental acuity. The president’s handlers have taken a live-and-let-live approach, and multiple speeches have led to a mountain of evidence that Biden’s downfall is accelerating, and we haven’t even gotten to the questionable hug he gave Eva Longoria yet.

Greg Gutfeld, perhaps one of the few reasons to still tune into Fox News from time to time, hit the highlights in a hilarious monologue that stretched on for over three minutes.

If you’re looking for a little comedic relief after a grueling week of news, this delivers some hits.



Here’s a bit of what Gutfeld had to say.

GUTFELD: The president with no brain thinks we’re building an ocean train. It’s true, old Joe came up with an ingenious transportation plan this week. My god, I hope it’s not plans to build a railroad from the Pacific all the way across the Indian Ocean.

(Plays clip of Biden saying that)

Get in trouble. Once again the president says out loud that other people are in charge. So a train across the Indian Ocean. What’s next? An elevator to Narnia? An escalator to Candyland? A beanstalk to Tyrace’s house?

Meantime, you better not ask him about his family’s wheeling and dealing with supermodels when they run out of Greg (laughter).

(…)

Later in the evening, Biden held a screening of Eva Longoria’s new movie Flaming Hot. I was really disappointed by the misleading title. Turns out it’s not about Natalie from Facts of Life. She’s still alive, I’m just saying the character doesn’t exist.

Anyway, the audience on the White House lawn featured many Hispanics, and to Joe’s dismay, they weren’t there to mow the grass. I know, I know. He’s a racist. On the bright side, no man flashed his breasts.

I wonder if Joe knows Eva for a long time.

(Plays video of Biden “joking” he’s known Eva Longoria since “she was 17 and I was 40”)

Ehh, I didn’t know Eva Longoria was 70. And then later, he went in for a hug that he held a little too long. Yeahhh (audience reacts to video). It’s probably payback for Dr. Jill slapping tongues with Doug Emhoff. But Eva had to remove his liver-spotted hands from her taut torso, and it’s not his fault, he thought she was an ice cream cone.

It continues from there, but my brain can only handle so much transcription at any given time.

Regardless, what else can you do but laugh? We have a president who isn’t in charge of his own administration and is obviously suffering through some stage of dementia. Better to tell a few jokes than focus on the reality that the nation is being driven over the cliff by a guy who couldn’t get hired as a manager at the fast food joint.

Unfortunately, humor only goes so far because Biden is “running” the most powerful country in the world with very predictable results. 2024 can’t get here soon enough, though Republicans seem intent on doing everything they can to keep their streak of blown elections going. So in the end, who’s really the butt of the joke?



Red States Fight Back Against Credit Card Tracking of Gun Purchases


The anti-gunner lobby’s efforts remain in full swing, as it employs every strategy available to limit gun ownership in America. Luckily, those on the gun rights side of the conversation are fighting back tooth and nail. The Second Amendment might remain under threat, but it appears those protecting it are up to the task of frustrating the efforts of those who think only the government should have the right to keep and bear arms.

Earlier in 2023, major credit card companies like Visa, Mastercard, and others, announced that they would be adding a tracking code specifically to identify purchases of firearms and gun-related paraphernalia. The idea is supposedly to root out suspicious purchase of guns that could be used to commit violent crimes. But those who know better understand that this move is more about allowing the state to have a better way to keep an eye on American gun owners.

Fortunately, at least some Republican-led states such as Texas, Montana, North Dakota, Idaho, West Virginia, Mississippi, and Florida have passed laws banning the use of specialized tracking codes for firearm retailers, while Democratic senators have expressed support for the implementation of such codes to aid law enforcement in identifying potential mass shooters.

Texas became the most recent state to pass such legislation after Gov. Greg Abbott signed House Bill 2837, which prohibits the tracking of purchases made at firearm retailers:

The move makes Texas the biggest state to implement restrictions on the use of MCCs. It also represents a victory for gun-rights advocates and gun industry members who have been pushing back against the idea of trying to track, and potentially flag, certain kinds of gun purchases.

In May, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed into law a bill that also prohibits the tracking of gun sales. The legislation will levy fines on credit card companies found to have used the tracking code. They will be dinged up to $10,000 per offense.

When the aforementioned credit card companies announced that they would be adopting the new standard, the move was widely lauded by those in the anti-gunner lobby, who claimed this step would make it easier for law enforcement to stop mass shootings and other forms of gun violence. They still contend that this will somehow save lives despite no evidence backing up their claims.

However, critics like myself pointed out that financial institutions are already required to report suspicious transaction activity. Adding a new code would not make this any different. Instead, this will create a de facto gun registry that these companies could – and would – eagerly provide for the government in its efforts to target lawful gun owners.

Don’t think it could happen? Think again.

In March, it was revealed that Bank of America assisted the FBI in tracking transactions made by folks who were located near the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. They cross-referenced these transactions to identify people who were at the location and had also purchased a firearm in the past:

An FBI whistleblower told congressional investigators that the D.C. field office pushed local offices to open criminal investigations into Americans based solely on financial transactions Bank of America tracked and voluntarily provided to the bureau, according to testimony reviewed by The Federalist.

“Bank of America, with no directive from the FBI, datamined its customer base,” whistleblower and recently retired FBI supervisory intelligence analyst George Hill told investigators for the House Judiciary Committee, according to Hill’s testimony.

The fact that Bank of America was willing to collude with the FBI to target Americans without even telling their customers what they were doing is a prime indicator of how little these companies care about our Second Amendment rights and, also, our privacy. In my opinion, these organizations won’t hesitate to sell you out to the feds, which is why more states need to prevent them from creating a gun registry for the government. We can’t count on blue states to follow suit, but there are plenty of flyover states whose residents might have a problem with companies collaborating with the government to violate our right to keep and bear arms.



Report: 'Heavily Armed' IRS Agents Seize 'Dozens of Boxes' of Sales Records From Montana Gun Store

Report: 'Heavily Armed' IRS Agents Seize 'Dozens of Boxes' of Sales Records From Montana Gun Store

Mike Miller reporting for RedState 

A Montana gun shop owner says he was targeted by “heavily armed agents” before the store opened on Wednesday. The federal agents seized “dozens of boxes” of ATF Form 4473s, which contain required background-check information on gun purchasers. How to put this, tactfully… WTF is going on?

Tom Van Hoose, the owner of Highwood Creek Outfitters in Great Falls, told KRTV he’s been under surveillance for two years by “state and federal agencies including the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Occupational Safety & Health Administration, the Department of Homeland Security, the State of Montana and now the Internal Revenue Service,” according to the news outlet.

Van Hoose surmised the reason behind the close surveillance of his store:

I can only assume that it’s because of the style of weapons that we have and the press that’s so against them. The current administration seems to be hell-bent on getting those guns out of the hands of average Americans.

Boom (pun intended.)

Gun-grabber Joe Biden and his gun-grabber administration have been on a hell-bent mission to restrict the rights of law-abiding gun owners from the outset of the worst presidency for the American people in U.S. History.

Gun grabbers and their lapdog state media conjure up ridiculous meaningless terms like “gun violence,” “assault rifles,” “weapons of war,” “commonsense gun legislation,” and other such bilge for the ultimate purpose of confiscating firearms from Americans whose right are protected by the Second Amendment.

So the salient question is this:

Under what law do heavily armed IRS agents have the right to confiscate dozens of boxes of background-check information of law-abiding Americans; information which not only contains a gun purchaser’s name, address, birth date, state and city of birth, gender, social security number, but also the serial numbers of all guns purchased?

Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen told Breitbart News on Saturday morning:

I spoke with the shop owner who told me that 20 heavily armed IRS agents from multiple states in our region served a warrant before his business opened. They took dozens of boxes full of 4473s — more than a decade’s worth. This is extremely concerning because it seemingly exceeds the search warrant which limited the scope of the search to financial records.

These aren’t financial records, they’re records of lawful firearm purchases. What the hell does the IRS need with 4473s? We know the ATF in Washington, D.C., is trying to scoop up as many of these purchase records as possible, and that’s what it looks like they’re trying to do here.

Again, under what law? Knudsen then stated the obvious:

There’s a clear and disturbing pattern developing of the Biden administration sending federal agents to harass American gun owners, shops, and manufacturers.

Biden wants to repeal PLCAA so they can shut down gun companies and coerce states to implement ‘red flag’ laws so firearms can be seized without due process. Now, they’re sending federal agents door-to-door in my state to intimidate people.

The PLCAA (Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act) “prohibits civil liability actions from being brought or continued against manufacturers, distributors, dealers, or importers of firearms, or ammunition for damages, injunctive or other relief resulting from the misuse of their products by others.”

In other words, the Biden administration wants the equivalent of an ability to bring civil liability actions against an automobile manufacturer or dealership, if a driver of one of their models of vehicles kills another driver.

Insane? Of course, it is — in both the hypothetical car analogy and in the case of firearms manufacturers and retailers, as well.

Finally, Knudsen correctly added:

There’s no question about it, this is the most anti-gun administration in the nation’s history.

Again, BOOM.

Look, I’m not a constitutional scholar, but, one more time, what gives the IRS — or any federal agency — the right to arbitrarily seize the non-financial information of law-abiding firearms purchasers?

Joe Biden was unavailable for comment.

The Bottom Line

Gun grabbers define the analogy — “There is only one way to eat an elephant: a bite at a time” —as well as any other leftist group in America.

Not dissimilar to the left’s insidious attempt to indoctrinate this country’s young children with disgusting, if not immoral, beliefs, those who would ultimately ban all firearms from America’s citizenry if they could get away with it, continue their hell-bent efforts to take one bite at a time out of the Second Amendment.

Needless to say, not only must the gun grabbers be stopped; federal agencies that do the gun grabbers’ bidding must be stopped in their tracks, as well — sooner than later.




Everything We Know About The Biden Bribery Scheme From The FBI Document

Here’s what we know about the damning document FBI leadership tried to hide from congressional Republicans.



Iowa Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley and House Oversight Committee Chairman Rep. James Comer of Kentucky dropped a bombshell subpoena last month demanding the FBI hand over a document alleging a bribery scheme between President Joe Biden and a “foreign national.”

On May 3, the pair of GOP lawmakers requested congressional access to an unclassified FD-1023 form, a document used by the bureau to catalog information from a confidential human source. The FBI record suggests President Biden took a foreign bribe during his time in the Obama administration.

After more than a month-long back-and-forth between agency leadership and Capitol Hill wherein House Republicans even prepared contempt proceedings for FBI Director Christopher Wray, members of Congress were finally able to review the document Thursday. Here’s everything we know about the record in question.

Confidential Human Source IS ‘Highly Credible’

The confidential human source (CHS) behind the FD-1023 is reportedly a “highly credible” informant with an agency tenure stretching back more than a decade. According to Fox News, the whistleblower informant has collaborated “in multiple investigative matters” with the FBI since the Obama administration, with consistent reviews for credibility.

“The confidential human source who provided information about then Vice President Biden being involved in a criminal bribery scheme is a trusted, highly credible informant who has been used by the FBI for over 10 years and has been paid over six figures,” Chairman Comer told reporters last week.

Contrary to MSNBC’s claim that “All roads lead to [Rudy] Giuliani” in the sourcing for the document, individuals familiar with the investigation told The Federalist the FD-1023 document came independent of information provided by the former New York City mayor.

Allegations Date Back to 2017

In addition to researching the cache of incriminating intelligence on the Biden family Giuliani sent to the FBI, agents searched the FBI’s databases and discovered a related FD-1023 from 2017. That prompted agents to re-interview the CHS and uncover details about the Burisma bribery scandal, resulting in the FD-1023 dated June 30, 2020.

Bidens Took $10M From Burisma Executive allegedly

Grassley spoke in a Monday floor speech about the “foreign national” who allegedly bribed the Biden family, and who has since been identified by people familiar with the matter as Mykola Zlochevsky, the founder of Burisma. The Ukrainian energy firm showered Hunter Biden in excess compensation on its corporate board while his father served as the “public face” of White House policy towards Ukraine.

The CHS summarized earlier meetings with Zlochevsky in the FD-1023, claiming the Bidens “coerced” the foreign businessman to pay the multimillion-dollar bribes. Zlochevsky had been trying to shut down government investigations into his Ukrainian energy firm. The energy tycoon allegedly paid $5 million to then-Vice President Joe Biden, referred to as the “Big Guy” by Zlochevsky in the FD-1023, and $5 million to Hunter.

According to a report from Grassley and Wisconsin Republican Sen. Ron Johnson in September 2020, Zlochevsky had separately paid a $7 million bribe to the Ukrainian prosecutor general’s office to shut down another probe.

In 2018, Biden bragged about his lead role in the termination of Ukraine’s top prosecutor who was investigating Burisma.

Grassley: There Are Tapes

While the DOJ appeared to try to drown out coverage of the Biden bribery scheme with the unprecedented indictment of former President Donald Trump, Grassley reinjected the White House scandal into the news by disclosing the existence of audio recordings on Monday.

“According to the 1023, the foreign national possesses 15 audio recordings of phone calls between him and Hunter Biden,” Grassley said. Another two recordings are reportedly calls between Zlochevsky and then-Vice President Biden, for 17 recordings in “total.”

Grassley said Zlochevsky kept the tapes “as a sort of insurance policy,” and noted that the form also suggested “then-Vice President Joe Biden may have been involved in Burisma employing Hunter Biden.”

House Republicans who reviewed the document also say Hunter Biden pressed Burisma to purchase an American oil company. In 2016, the Ukrainian firm ultimately took over a Canadian firm’s shares to buy into a joint venture with the American company Cub Energy.

AG Barr Referred Investigation To Delaware

Shortly after FBI Director Wray allowed members of the House Oversight Committee access to the FD-1023, Democrat Ranking Member Jamie Raskin sought to dismiss Republican allegations of corruption with a statement. An investigation into Biden bribery, Raskin said, had previously been shut down under Attorney General Bill Barr during the Trump administration.

“In August 2020, Attorney General Barr and his hand-picked U.S. Attorney signed off on closing the assessment,” Raskin said.

In an exclusive interview with The Federalist, however, the former attorney general debunked Raskin’s assertion.

“On the contrary,” Barr said, “it was sent to Delaware for further investigation.”