Wednesday, July 19, 2023

Biden’s Failure Record With Broadband Goes Back to the ‘Stimulus’ of 2009


In July of 2009, Joe Biden, then the vice president of the United States, came to Wattsburg, Pa. to discuss the federal stimulus monies that would be used here and in other rural regions to expand broadband access to the internet.

Biden was there as part of a full-court press to ease the public’s concerns over the then-unprecedented $787 billion stimulus package that President Barack Obama had signed just weeks after taking office. I had covered his visit at Seneca High School, just outside of Erie, when he praised the promise of a $4 billion package of grants and loans available that he said would once and for all extend broadband internet access to rural and other underserved areas of the country.

Biden peppered the 100 or so attendees with anecdotal stories, calling farmers “the smartest people I know” while discussing the ability for places like Seneca High School to apply for grants.

“The bottom line is, you can’t function, a nation can’t compete in the 21st century without an immediate, high-quality access for everything from streaming video to information over line,” Biden said.

“Getting broadband to every American is a priority for this administration,” Biden concluded.

Biden had been instrumental in getting the 2009 recovery act through Congress, and once it was passed, he was then in charge of supervising the stimulus for the Obama administration.

However, the then-largest fiscal stimulus in history became politically toxic almost immediately. Opposition to it by Republicans, culturally conservative Democrats and independent voters brought about the birth of the Tea Party movement, and within just over a year from his visit, the Democrats lost a whopping 63 seats in the Obama-Biden administration’s first midterm elections.

A study from the Pew Research Center showed in 2014 that a plurality of people still adamantly believed the stimulus was a bad idea. Why? First, because voters believed too much money was spent, and second because voters believed there was little to show for it.

Like broadband.

Those voters weren’t wrong. The General Services Administration, an independent agency of the U.S. government, concluded in 2012 that stimulus money allocated for broadband never lived up to the promises Biden had made that day.

The GSA report said it found the projects that were allotted money for broadband access in rural America were “difficult to measure” because the Rural Utilities Service, part of the Department of Agriculture, did not establish performance metrics for measuring the progress in deploying infrastructure.

In short, the government candidly admitted it was unable to track the awardees’ progress in completing construction Biden promised would give broadband access to rural America.

A decade later, progress hasn’t been impressive. As of today, more than 42 million people in our country have no access to broadband, according to BroadbandNow, a data technology company.

So, what happened to that promise of broadband for everyone in 2009 — a selling point for Biden to get the stimulus package passed that he was integral in doing? Based on the government’s own records, the man put in charge of making sure all of those promises were met did not do his job well.

The interesting thing is not only was Biden never held accountable for the failure, but he has come up with a new taxpayer-funded infrastructure initiative called the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program. (It always is interesting how often this administration can place “equity” or “climate” in a program.) The BEAD Program was allotted a whopping $42.45 billion grant program that was created in Biden’s 2022 version of his stimulus program.

How has no one asked this administration what happened to the other billions that he promised would give rural Americans broadband 14 years ago? Or how they plan on fixing the mistakes they made back then? Instead, Biden just rolls out $42 billion and boasts he will make access to high-speed broadband universal by 2030.

When Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., tweeted that broadband was a vital success for the rural communities of his home state of Alabama last week, the press focused on Biden mocking him in a retweet that quipped, “See you at the groundbreaking.”

What the press should have spent time on was why there wasn’t broadband already in Alabama’s rural communities as pledged by Biden as vice president in 2009. Why wasn’t there an accounting of where that money went to outside of a buried government report?

When Biden rolled out his broadband equity program two weeks ago, he boasted that he had received letters and emails from across the country from people who were thrilled that after so many years of waiting, they were finally going to get high-speed internet.

He cited one message from a woman in Iowa describing the development as “the best thing that’s happened in rural America since the Rural Electrification Act,” referring to the push under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt to bring electricity to farms and ranches nationwide.

It was the same reference both he and Obama used repeatedly in 2009, and you have to wonder: Who will remember to hold this administration accountable in 2030? Certainly no one has remembered to do that this year.



Christian Patriot News, And we Know, and more- July 19

 



Hello. My favorite color is light blue.

Three Years Later, No Justice for BLM Insurrection in D.C.

D.C.’s lead prosecutor has turned a blind eye to a six-month campaign of terror in the nation’s capital in 2020 so he could keep his sights on the mostly nonviolent protesters of 1/6/21.


“Our office prosecutes all acts of violence, regardless of political motivation, the same.”

So said U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Matthew Graves—under oath, mind you, and with a straight face—during a hearing of the House Oversight Committee earlier this month. 

Representative Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) questioned Graves’ disparate treatment of Black Lives Matters rioters who terrorized Washington, D.C., in 2020 versus Trump supporters involved in the events of January 6, 2021.

Although the start of both incidents was a mere seven months apart, they are a world away in terms of accountability. 

In what Graves calls the “Capitol Siege” investigation, more than 1,000 Trump supporters have been criminally charged. Graves, a Biden appointee, has promised to double that caseload before he’s finished. His office announces new arrests every week.

That, however, is not the case for rioters who caused far more violence and inflicted far more damage in the nation’s capital in 2020. The rioting that began on May 29, 2020 at Lafayette Square prompted the lockdown of the White House; Donald Trump, his wife, and teenage son were ushered to an underground bunker for their safety as looters and arsonists repeatedly tried to scale the fence and break through police barricades erected outside the White House.

And what started that night in 2020 didn’t just last a few hours, as was the case with the Capitol protest. On June 1, rioters burned part of St. John’s Church, an historical landmark across from the White House, and set ablaze other areas of the public park.

Chaos continued throughout the summer with the president, his family, and White House staff under constant threat. Police arrested 11 people at Lafayette Square in July 2020 for various offenses including assault of a police officer. “The Tuesday night incidents that stretched over hours are the latest confrontations to transpire near the White House, where protesters have been gathering daily for more than a month to protest for racial justice after the killing of George Floyd in the custody of Minneapolis police,” the Washington Post reported on July 8, 2020.

After Trump accepted the GOP nomination for president on White House grounds in August 2020, rioters chased Republican lawmakers, including Senator Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and his wife, leaving the event. Some assaulted police in an attempt to get near members of Congress; Rep. Brian Mast (R-Fla.), who lost both legs and a finger in Afghanistan, was surrounded and shouted down by Black Lives Matter protesters as he tried to get home.

Elected officials weren’t the only targets of rage-filled activists occupying the heart of the nation’s capital that year. Trump supporters, including young families with children, were attacked by BLM and Antifa rioters during pro-Trump rallies in November and December 2020.

But the violent demonstrations at Lafayette Square represent the closest comparison to January 6: clashes between federal police and protesters on federal property. An Interior Department inspector general report detailed the turbulent situation at Lafayette Square that endangered police and the president for days 

[The] Treasury Annex building was vandalized; officers were assaulted with projectiles, such as bottles and bricks; and a brick struck a [U.S. Park Police] officer in the head, resulting in the officer’s hospitalization. USPP officers reported that some protesters threw projectiles, such as bricks, rocks, caustic liquids, frozen water bottles, glass bottles, lit flares, rental scooters, and fireworks, at law enforcement officials. Overall, 49 USPP officers were injured during the protests from May 29 to May 31, including one who underwent surgery for his injuries. The Secret Service—also reported injuries to their personnel during this time. On the evening of May 30, individuals at the protests threw projectiles at the officers and ultimately breached the first row of bike-rack fencing, thereby eliminating the buffer between the protesters and law enforcement officers.

Dozens of people were arrested, including a man who jumped over two barriers in an attempt to enter the White House. Yet only a handful of protesters faced federal charges—in sharp contrast to January 6 protesters who all face federal counts even for low-level offenses such as “parading” in the Capitol. Nearly all the charges initially filed by the D.C. U.S. Attorney’s office were dropped. (Graves did not take over the office until November 2021.)

Despite his claim his office is “prosecuting a number of individuals in connection with the incidents of the summer of 2020,” that simply does not appear to be the case, particularly since Graves further confirmed to Gosar that the office “declined a number of arrests presented to it under the leadership of the prior administration.”

But a change in political leadership does not absolve Graves from failing to bring federal charges against violent criminals who tried to destroy the nation’s capital in 2020. If Graves can indict nonviolent individuals for “seditious conspiracy” who did little more than make travel plans to attend political rallies on January 6, he could easily find more damning evidence against deep-pocketed organizers who encouraged thousands of rioters to occupy D.C. for months, threaten the president, traumatize residents and businesses, assault federal police, and intimidate Republican lawmakers and voters in the seat of American government—a legitimate “insurrection.”

Not only has Graves not charged any suspects involved in the 2020 riots under his watch, but his office also helped negotiate a settlement between the Justice Department and Lafayette Square rioters, who sued the government for violating their civil rights during what Graves called “racial justice demonstrations in Lafayette Square.” The settlement with Black Lives Matter D.C. required Park Police and Secret Service to update their policies to protect those who “peacefully exercise their First Amendment rights.”

First Amendment rights these days are in the eye of the beholder—or in this case, the lead government prosecutor who decided to turn a blind eye to a six-month campaign of terror in the nation’s capital in 2020 so he could keep his sights on people who participated in a mostly nonviolent, comparatively brief protest on January 6.

Clearly, all “sieges” are not created equal.



Trump's Plan to Destroy the Deep State Causes Panic at the New York Times

Trump's Plan to Destroy the Deep State Causes Panic at the New York Times

streiff reporting for RedState 

What would a Trump 2.0 administration look like? According to a New York Times article based on extensive interviews with people who are perceived to be in Trump’s inner circle should he evade federal indictment (BREAKING: Donald Trump Confirms Receiving Target Letter From Jack Smith in January 6 Criminal Investigation), Trump’s second term would be a dystopic hellscape in which the federal government would actually follow White House policies.

Mr. Trump and his associates have a broader goal: to alter the balance of power by increasing the president’s authority over every part of the federal government that now operates, by either law or tradition, with any measure of independence from political interference by the White House, according to a review of his campaign policy proposals and interviews with people close to him.

Mr. Trump intends to bring independent agencies — like the Federal Communications Commission, which makes and enforces rules for television and internet companies, and the Federal Trade Commission, which enforces various antitrust and other consumer protection rules against businesses — under direct presidential control.

He wants to revive the practice of “impounding” funds, refusing to spend money Congress has appropriated for programs a president doesn’t like — a tactic that lawmakers banned under President Richard Nixon.

He intends to strip employment protections from tens of thousands of career civil servants, making it easier to replace them if they are deemed obstacles to his agenda. And he plans to scour the intelligence agencies, the State Department and the defense bureaucracies to remove officials he has vilified as “the sick political class that hates our country.”

If you want to hear the plan without the spin, visit the Trump 2024 website. Here Trump talks about how to shatter the power of the administrative state.

Here’s my plan to dismantle the deep state and reclaim our democracy from Washington corruption once and for all, and corruption it is.

First, I will immediately re-issue my 2020 Executive Order restoring the President’s authority to remove rogue bureaucrats. And I will wield that power very aggressively.

Second, we will clean out all of the corrupt actors in our National Security and Intelligence apparatus, and there are plenty of them. The departments and agencies that have been weaponized will be completely overhauled so that faceless bureaucrats will never again be able to target and persecute conservatives, Christians, or the left’s political enemies, which they’re doing now at a level that nobody can believe even possible.

Third, we will totally reform FISA courts which are so corrupt that the judges seemingly do not care when they are lied to in warrant applications. So many judges have seen so many applications that they know were wrong, or at least they must have known. They do nothing about it, they’re lied to.

Fourth, to expose the hoaxes and abuses of power that have been tearing our country apart, we will establish a Truth and Reconciliation Commission to declassify and publish all documents on Deep State spying, censorship, and corruption, and there are plenty of them.

Fifth, we will launch a major crackdown on government leakers who collude with the fake news to deliberately weave false narratives and to subvert our government and our democracy. When possible, we will press criminal charges.

Sixth, we will make every Inspector General’s Office independent and physically separated from the departments they oversee so they do not become the protectors of the Deep State.

Seventh, I will ask Congress to establish an independent auditing system to continually monitor our intelligence agencies to ensure they are not spying on our citizens or running disinformation campaigns against the American people, or that they are not spying on someone’s campaign like they spied on my campaign.

Eighth, we will continue the effort launched by the Trump administration to move parts of the sprawling federal bureaucracy to new locations outside the Washington Swamp. Just as I moved the Bureau of Land Management to Colorado, as many as 100,000 government positions can be moved out. And I mean immediately out of Washington to places filled with patriots who love America, and they really do love America.

Ninth, I will work to ban federal bureaucrats from taking jobs at the companies they deal with and that they regulate. So they deal with these companies and they regulate these companies and then they want to take jobs from these companies. Doesn’t work that way—such a public display cannot go on and it’s taking place all the time, like with Big Pharma.

Finally, I will push a constitutional amendment to impose term limits on members of Congress.

This is how I will shatter the deep state and restore government that is controlled by the people and for the people.

Thank you very much.

According to the New York Times team, this plan is being pushed by groups who happen to believe that the government is composed of three branches and that the bureaucracy has no power to pursue its own agenda.

The two driving forces of this effort to reshape the executive branch are Mr. Trump’s own campaign policy shop and a well-funded network of conservative groups, many of which are populated by former senior Trump administration officials who would most likely play key roles in any second term.

Mr. Vought and Mr. McEntee are involved in Project 2025, a $22 million presidential transition operation that is preparing policies, personnel lists and transition plans to recommend to any Republican who may win the 2024 election. The transition project, the scale of which is unprecedented in conservative politics, is led by the Heritage Foundation, a think tank that has shaped the personnel and policies of Republican administrations since the Reagan presidency.

That work at Heritage dovetails with plans on the Trump campaign website to expand presidential power that were drafted primarily by two of Mr. Trump’s advisers, Vincent Haley and Ross Worthington, with input from other advisers, including Stephen Miller, the architect of the former president’s hard-line immigration agenda.

Reading the story, the only controversy that I see is that if Trump, or whoever the 2024 nominee is, follows through on this plan, then the utter sh**show we experienced from 2016-2020 with broad swathes of the federal government actively sabotaging Trump’s agenda will begin to cease. I’m not sure I’m a huge fan of “sequestering funds,” but I’d rather we had that than Joe Biden spending money without authority. The idea that there is any federal appointee that the president can’t fire is simply unconstitutional. Trump should not have been put in the position of begging Bill Barr to rein in the rogue and dishonest investigation by Robert Mueller. He should have the authority to fire a special counsel. If Congress doesn’t like it, they can impeach him or go f*** themselves… whichever gives them the greatest satisfaction. Cabinet departments and independent agencies must operate under the guidance and, if necessary, the president’s direction. I don’t know how the idea got started that the Justice Department has some super-special independence, but it’s dumb.

The president shouldn’t have the right to dismiss civil service employees based on their politics because everyone’s on-duty politics are those of the president in a true, non-partisan civil service. He has an absolute right to select the personnel who will develop and execute his policies and fire them if they don’t perform or sabotage his initiatives.

Inevitably, someone will argue, “how will you like it when the Democrats are in charge.” Anyone who thinks the bureaucracy isn’t a fiefdom of the Democrat party needs to seriously reconsider their sanity.



Endless Trump Indictments And Jail Threats Means Republicans Can’t Quit The Weaponization Fight



The deep state’s incessant attempts to undermine the 2024 presidential election by throwing President Joe Biden’s number one political enemy in jail is getting old. It seems like every day, Biden bureaucrats and Democrats manufacture new justifications for why former President Donald Trump deserves to be behind bars.

“Deranged Jack Smith, the prosecutor with Joe Biden’s DOJ, sent a letter … stating that I am a TARGET of the January 6th Grand Jury investigation, and giving me a very short 4 days to report to the Grand Jury, which almost always means an Arrest and an Indictment,” Trump announced in a Truth on Tuesday.

The reasoning behind the partisan push to knock Trump out of the presidential run is often toothless, something even anti-Trump pundits and lawmakers admit. In this particular case, the Biden administration is attempting to try Trump for actions on January 6 he was already cleared of by the Senate,

“Smith will be hard-pressed to concoct a crime Trump committed related to Jan. 6, with the former president’s speech constitutionally protected and his legal theories, even if flawed, insufficient to create criminal liability,” Federalist Legal Correspondent Margot Cleveland wrote in April.

Clearly, the deep state is willing to try anything to keep Trump and his voters from regaining power because they pose a threat to the current unconstitutionally-inclined regime.

Democrats and corporate media are so committed to this goal that they didn’t even try to hide their desire to change election outcomes. Some propaganda press outlets are already attempting to blame Trump and his lawyers for fighting back against the influx of indictments.

“Trump Lawyers Seek Indefinite Postponement of Documents Trial,” one New York Times headline from last week reads.

The NYT can complain all it wants about Trump’s attempts to move his trial so as not to disturb his third presidential run. But what the article completely failed to mention is that it was the Biden administration, not Trump, that purposefully loosed its brazenly partisan scheme in the middle of the 2024 election cycle in the first place. Democrats deliberately disrupted the presidential election in 2016, they did it again in 2020, and they are doing it again in 2024.

Harvard-Harris poll conducted in June signals Americans aren’t buying the administration’s lame excuses to cover for their rigging. A majority, 56 percent, of Americans believe the Trump indictments are “interference by the Department of Justice in the 2024 elections” instead of a “fair application of the law.”

Ever since they took back the House of Representatives in the 2022 midterm election, Republicans have honored their promise to expose the corruption that plagues Biden, the Department of Justice, the FBI, the FTC, and many other agencies.

After yet another summer of lies and invented scandal, it’s tempting for the majority of Americans and Republicans who believe this is a witch hunt to quiet their criticisms or give up the fight. However, balking now, as some have already done, at the crux of corruption investigations in the House, an abortion fight in the Senate, and in the middle of the public persecution of the Republican presidential frontrunner is not an option. 

A rampant regime left unpunished for prosecuting citizens based on the administration’s desire to “criminalize politics” and “criminalize differences” will remain a rampant regime.

Since the beginning, preventing Trump from taking the White  House was always the left’s top priority. And since the corrupt actors, agencies, or agents responsible for orchestrating this crusade against Americans’ presidential pick faced no consequences or jail time for their crimes, that goal has not changed.

The corruption of the deep state became more apparent in recent years because the Biden administration publicly adopted its agenda. As a result, a majority of Americans deem the Biden regime’s definition of “justice” a sham and want the FBI castigated for trading true accountability for partisanship.

Nothing excites the left more than the prospect of putting their political enemies in prison. Unless they are forced to stop, the regime responsible for raiding pro-life pastors, smearing parents as domestic terrorists, and demanding Big Tech censor you for dissenting, will keep attacking Trump and the people who think like him.



DeSantis Blames Trump for J6 Insurrection, Pledges to Stop Prosecuting Corrupt Democrats and Return to Political Civility






(New York Post – Rupert Murdoch) – […] DeSantis spoke hours after Trump disclosed, he is a target of special counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into the events surrounding the ransacking of the Capitol.

Smith has been spearheading the DOJ’s two investigations involving Trump: one into the Capitol riot and the former president’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election result, and the other into sensitive national security material kept at the former president’s Mar-a-Lago resort.





On Politics, Evil, and Stupidity

 



On Politics, Evil, and Stupidity


On Politics, Evil, and Stupidity


Article by David Solway in PJMedia

In a lengthy interview with Tucker Carlson, the controversial but rather impressive Andrew Tate suggested that the standard political distinction between Left and Right, liberal-progressivist and conservative, is not in itself the polarity that explains the culture wars we are undergoing or the social divide that is tearing apart our countries. The distinction, he argues, is between people who think and people who don’t, or as he put it, between “the thinkers and the repeaters.” It’s between those who endeavor to acknowledge reality — for example, that there are two and only two biological sexes or that Socialism, as defined by Thomas DiLorenzo in “The Problem with Socialism,” is “the biggest generator of poverty the world has ever known” — and those who merely repeat the ideological sedatives of the day or the tectonic lies that have become the trademark of the so-called legacy media. Tate should know. He is one of the prime victims of rampant and unscrupulous media disinformation.

But the schism goes even deeper than Tate’s antitheses. Quite bluntly, however problematic or elusive the definition of the concept may be, it has to do with the question of what we call “evil,” which has always resisted a definitive answer. In the moral structure of Judeo-Christian civilization, evil is theologically and philosophically understood as a rupture in the creation of the inhabited universe, the existence of groundless or unprovoked pain and suffering, or the handiwork of the Devil, as the early Christian Gnostics believed. Especially in the human world, evil is construed as the perennial tendency to lie or suppress observable truth, to cause harm for personal advantage, to inflict gratuitous suffering, and to bring misery and destruction upon whole societies in the interests of unworkable theory, unprovable assumptions, vaunting ambition, or what Samuel Taylor Coleridge, psychoanalyzing Shakespeare’s Iago, called “motiveless malignity.”

Admittedly, it is often hard to distinguish between perduring evil and “repeater” stupidity, between people who act with malice aforethought to deceive or injure others and those who clearly evince a deficiency of intelligence, doing harm unintentionally, going with the turbid flow, and embracing realistically implausible or absurd ideas and practices. Stupid is as stupid does.

“When stupid people are at work,” writes Carlo Cipolla in The Basic Laws of Human Stupidity, “the society as a whole is impoverished.” The damage is more than likely to be irreparable. “A stupid person is the most dangerous type of person,” he concludes, though an evil person will give a stupid person a run for his money. We might better say that stupid people are the readily accessible prey of evil people. An infallible sign of a stupid person is the susceptibility to programming and propaganda — what Mike Adams calls an “obedience idiot.”

Indeed, average IQ appears to have steadily decreased over the last decade and especially since the COVID mandates came into force — assuming, of course, that IQ is a proximate indicator of general intelligence. But there can be little doubt that stupidity has gone “viral,” that it has become the major pandemic of our times. A U.S. Congressman who believes the island of Guam might tip over due to military freight and reinforced personnel may not be as exceptional as we might assume. The cult of Woke, for example, is an ocean full of capsizing islands.

As Einstein is reputed to have said, “there is a major difference between intelligence and stupidity; intelligence has its limits.” The problem is that stupid people, Tate’s “repeaters,” who are legion, will commit acts or endorse positions whose consequences we may call “evil,” creating situations that lead to needless distress and outright torment or anguish, which, in the words of Macbeth, will often “return to plague th’inventor.”

Socially, economically and politically, the majority of those who are either stupid or evil, or both, are obviously to be found mainly among the Left, although the conservative Right is by no means exempt. But the issue is one of preponderance, which leans decisively to the Left. Nonetheless, if a solution to the problem of stupidity or evil were even remotely conceivable, it would not be political. Stupidity is at least theoretically treatable in isolated cases via genuine education and informed conversation and debate. People have been known to change their minds or revise their core assumptions. But evil, as it were, a world of slaughter and agony, is baked into the natural Creation as the Gnostics believed — “this munching universe,” in the phrase of novelist Lawrence Durrell in “Monsieur, or The Prince of Darkness.” And again, it is hardwired into the human soul with its tendency to sadism or plain viciousness, what the Talmudic sages called the yetzer hara, or evil inclination, and Saint Augustine in “City of God” called the mysterium iniquitatis.

Between evil and stupidity falls the shadow of our dereliction. This does not mean that we should eschew political considerations. The political battle is ongoing and necessary. The Left must be fought tooth and nail, whether as a grand political ideology with its secular scriptures, as the carcinogen of feminist dogma, as the LGBTQ+ aberration with its endless alphabetical string denoting ever new chapters and branches, as the palpable madness of radical environmentalism and climate engineering, or massively braindead movements such as Wokeism. The Left represents on a global scale the paramount instance of the unholy alliance between evil and stupidity.

The conflict in which intelligent people are engaged, however, does mean that they are bound to a kind of Sisyphean Labor. What the struggle requires is a combination of courage and reflection, the determination to persist in unequal combat against personal inclinations and frailties as well as the unredeemed world in which, to paraphrase Existentialist philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre, we are condemned to live, even if we strive, as best we can, to hold to the Ten Commandments and the Four Virtues.

The West is now caught in the vise between undisguised evil and vaulting stupidity, a wasting disease to be fought not only in the political arena but in the very corpuscles of an increasingly decadent civilization. I cannot say if the end times are already upon us. But without luck, grace, intelligence, and dedication, our future is a foregone conclusion.

On Politics, Evil, and Stupidity – PJ Media








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NSC Spokesman Claims Without Evidence the Military Can't Recruit or Retain Women Without Free Abortion

NSC Spokesman John Kirby Claims Without Evidence the Military Can't Recruit or Retain Women Without Free Abortion

streiff reporting for RedState 

National Security Council spokesman John Kirby launched into a lengthy diatribe Tuesday directly equating the ability of military servicewomen and female family members to combat readiness, attracting recruits, and retaining talent.

What brought on his monologue was Alabama Senator Tommy Tuberville holding up promotions and reassignments of some three-and-four-star generals because Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has elected to defy federal law and pay for abortions to servicemembers and dependents in states that value a baby’s life.

READ the whole Tuberville vs. DOD Saga:

While progressives and the Biden White House are trying to portray this as Tuberville stopping military promotions, that is a lie. The Senate can confirm the promotions of as many Biden generals as they think the nation can stand; all they have to do is…wait for it…vote. Tuberville is objecting to motions to confirm these officers by “unanimous consent.” This means Chuck Schumer’s Senate would have to do its job and schedule hearings and votes. But that’s a lot like work, so they are swamping Tuberville with ridiculous personal attacks.

Q    Thank you, Karine.  The administration has been critical of Senator Tuberville with his holds on military promotions because of social policy and saying that he is harming military readiness.  On the flipside of that impasse — and this is something that Republican lawmakers have raised — why is the new DOD policy on abortion critical to military readiness?

MR. KIRBY:  I’m really glad you asked that question.

Q    (Inaudible.)  (Laughs.)

MR. KIRBY:  No, I mean, I really am.

One in five members of the U.S. military are women.  Twenty percent.  We’re an all-volunteer force.  Nobody is forcing you to sign up and go.  People volunteer to go.  You raise your right hand and you say, “I’m going to — I’m going to do this for a few years or even for my life, and it might cost me my life to do it.”

And when you sign up and you make that contract, you have every right to expect that the organization — in this case, the military — is going to take care of you, and they’re going to take care of your families, and they’re going to make sure that you can serve with dignity and respect no matter who you are or who you love or how you worship or don’t.

And — and our policies — whether they’re diversity, inclusion, and equity; or whether they’re about transgender individuals who qualify physically and mentally to serve to be able to do it with dignity; or whether it’s about female servicemembers — one in five — or female family members being able to count on the kinds of healthcare and reproductive care specifically that they need to serve — that is a foundational, sacred obligation of military leaders across the river.

I’ve seen it myself.  And it matters, because it says we’re invested in you because you are being willing to invest in us.  You’re investing your life, your family’s livelihood with us.  We owe you ba- — that back in return.

I had a chance a couple of weeks ago to meet with some military spouses here at the White House.  Some were active-duty members.  Some were spouses.  All were women.  And to a one, they told me that abortion laws in this country that are now being passed are absolutely having an effect on their willingness to continue serving in uniform or to encourage — or discourage, in this case — their spouses from continuing service.

So, if you don’t think there’s going to be a retention and a morale issue, think again.  Because it’s already having that effect.

I have a — a son in the Navy — I think you all know that — and son-in-law, too.  They’re both stationed down in Norfolk on destroyers.  You know, they’re proud to keep serving their country in the Navy.   But, you know, the Navy told them where to go.  They go — you go where you’re told.  That’s the way orders work.  You go where you’re assigned; you don’t get to choose.

And so, what happens if you get assigned to a state like Alabama, which has a pretty restrictive abortion law in place, and you’re concerned about your reproductive care?  What do you do?  Do you say “no” and get out?  Well, some people may decide to do that.  And what does that mean?  That means we lose talent — important talent.

And we’re, again, an all-volunteer force.  Recruiting is tough enough as it is with a very strong economy out there.  We want to keep the people that we get, and we want to — we want to make sure that they can continue to serve.

So, it has — it can have an extremely, extremely significant impact on our recruiting and retention.  Not to mention, it’s just the right darn thing to do for people that raise their hand and agree to serve in the — in the military.

Charitably, what Kirby is tossing around is horsesh**.

There is no empirical evidence that women are either refusing to enlist or to marry men in the military because they just know they are going to need an abortion one day.

The only reason I can think of for DOD to support a policy at odds with medical science is that they want to inure women to the thought of killing children. Quite honestly, I think there are enough psychopaths in the world without enlisting women who wouldn’t join if they couldn’t have an abortion on demand.

If someone is stationed in Alabama, I’m picking on Alabama only because Kirby did, and you or your spouse just have to have an abortion in a situation that doesn’t meet the requirements of “life-threatening” under Alabama law; nothing stops you from hopping in your car and driving someplace where killing your kid is legally protected. Just ask for leave. It really isn’t hard.

Tuberville is doing the right thing. He’s trying to make Austin comply with federal law. If Austin disagrees with that, he needs to make his case to Congress that the military can’t function without abortion. If Schumer and Senate Democrats disagree, the solution is really simple. Vote on the nominations.