Wednesday, September 20, 2023

The Continuing Cultural Revolution

A review of Christopher F. Rufo’s America’s Cultural Revolution


Christopher F. Rufo’s America’s Cultural Revolution is a landmark study of America’s radicalization since the 1960s. It is a carefully constructed work full of insights, which confirmed for me the conclusions that I had reached while studying some of the same topics. Rufo shows convincingly that certain radical thinkers, most of whom were American born, affected deeply and perhaps irreversibly American institutions starting in the 1960s. This study clearly avoids an interpretive perspective that I have repeatedly mocked, exemplified by those who pretend that American culture and politics were generally sound up until quite recently, perhaps until the point when LGBT enthusiasts turned from gay marriage to gender transitioning.

Among the main architects of Rufo’s metamorphosed America were “the father of the revolution” Herbert Marcuse, Marcuse’s last wife, Erica Sherover-Marcuse, a radical feminist and censorship enthusiast, Marcuse’s black nationalist-Communist student Angela Davis, Portuguese revolutionary educator, Paul Freire, and black legal theorist and Harvard professor Derrick Bell. The influence of these figures, according to Rufo, can only be fully grasped by looking at those later luminaries whom they trained in their ideas. Equally critical from my perspective is the alacrity with which corporate capitalists ran to submit to the new order.

Rufo is certainly not assigning extravagant importance to those in his rogues’ gallery. He builds his case by citing the revolutionary statements of his subjects and by examining their powerful contacts in the American academy and among public administrators. Particularly striking is how readily government administration and elite institutions yielded to Rufo’s subjects and how easily they could train succeeding generations to take their place. When Patrisse Cullors, founder of BLM, praised Angela Davis as her teacher in the “Black struggle,” she did so in the Harvard Law Review. Cullors’s thinking was molded by Derrick Bell, another black nationalist and socialist radical, who graced the Harvard law faculty for decades. Bell, not incidentally, laid the foundations for DEI, an antimale and antiwhite policy that white male executives at Lockheed Martin helped pioneer.

“Educational philosopher” Paul Freire managed to guide the thinking of every major department of education in the country, starting with Harvard. Although none of Freire’s educational theories seems to have had any effect in improving the quality of American education, they did encourage a crusade against “whiteness” and capitalism. One of Freire’s “crucial relationships” was with the American radical educationist Jonathan Kozol, whose appearance at the small college where I taught generated, particularly in the education department, rapturous excitement.

Our college administration displayed equal enthusiasm when we were granted a visit by the “prison reformer,” Angela Davis. Since the college paid $10,000 for Angela’s homily, on which thunderous applause was then lavished, her presence on campus clearly meant something significant for the academic bureaucrats who invited her. My fellow-Marcuse student was, as she was introduced, a “prison reformer,” loosely understood, as Rufo explains. In August 1970 she collaborated in an attempted escape by her lover George Jackson, who was being tried in the Marin County Hall of Justice. At that time Angela furnished guns for those involved in the escape. Her “act of liberation,” as she described it, resulted in murder, threats on the presiding judge, and the taking of hostages. Davis was apprehended as an accomplice, but wealthy radicals came forth to pay her legal bills. A jury acquitted her, and she subsequently became an academic superstar, who began her victory lap by embarking on a world tour. As Rufo tells it: “She spoke to adoring crowds in Los Angeles, Chicago, Detroit, and New York and then traveled throughout the Soviet Union with stops in Russia, Central Asia, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Cuba, and Chile.”

Since Davis adored Communist regimes, which she regarded as antiracist, it is not surprising that her hosts rolled out the carpet for this admiring American radical. During her visits to Communist countries, she raged against those whom the Communists imprisoned and tortured. Presumably Communist victims were all racists and fascists. More surprising is the drooling adulation that Davis enjoyed on American campuses and among our progressive intellectuals.  Although Rufo is correct that the woke Left’s march through the institutions started with Marcuse and with such germinal tracts of his as Critique of Pure Tolerance and An Essay in Liberation, it is also the case that Marcuse’s radical activism started late in his life, sometime between the mid-1960s and his death in 1979. This German émigré, who began his career as a serious interpreter of Heidegger and Hegel, never enjoyed the decades of adulation or the cascading honoraria that devolved on his more criminal, less erudite student and on those other celebrities treated in Rufo’s work.

What struck me as a contemporary of the events Rufo describes is the worshipful treatment accorded to his subjects over many decades. Rufo is spot on about the long process by which the cultural radicalism that he explores became incorporated into our public consciousness. Such trends did not start yesterday, and even for someone, like me, who lived through these cultural and political changes, the extent of the revolution that Rufo depicts still seems astounding or dismaying.

A question to which I keep returning in my own studies, and one that Rufo shows is worth asking, is why the US was so susceptible to what his book reveals. Why did universities, shapers of popular culture and government administrators support radicalizing changes for many decades? Why did the affluent, including corporate executives, become intoxicated with cultural revolution, a trend that as Rufo documents hardly started with the death of George Floyd? We are now seeing a continuation of what the late Tom Wolfe in the early 1970s mocked as “radical chic.” White self-hate, and invectives against the “pig police” have now become fused with campaigns against gender distinctions, and the censoring of the unprogressive.

What, it might be reasonable to ask, made the earlier years of the Left’s takeover different from our own more advanced state of delusion? Several factors may have held back the full impact of these developments for a generation or more. Major political parties, particularly the Democrats, were still well to the right of where they are now in their stands on social questions. In the 1960s the Democratic Party moved quite cautiously on the abortion question lest it offend its blue collar Catholic and Southern Protestant base. Fifty years ago, there was also a solid, demonstrative opposition to the Left, which even included traditional Democratic constituencies. The Right still felt free to act out its irritation, for example, when the hardhats struck back at antiwar protesters in urban centers. This happened long before the Left came to control our surveillance state and military. In the 1960s, the Right was still in a position to assert itself quite forcefully.

Moreover, universities and the media in the early years of the Left’s march through our institutions were not as radicalized as they are now. They were mostly ‘liberal Democratic” by the standards of an earlier age, not by those of the Biden presidency. Equally significant, the major interest of the academic Left in the 1960s and 1970s, if memory serves, was not intersectional politics but excusing and sometimes glorifying Communist regimes, while attacking American Anti-Communists. The Vietnam War gave respectability to those trends but hardly initiated them. Although the civil rights movement developed a strident, violent radical wing in the 1960s, something that Rufo details for us, that wing did not enjoy anything approaching the social acceptability now claimed by BLM. After the death of George Floyd, 67% of Americans, according to a Pew Poll, supported this black nationalist movement which has never hidden its antiwhite and anti-American character and hardly eschews violence. In June 2023, support for BLM was still as high as 51%, despite continuing revelations about the corruptness of the movement’s leadership.

Pointing out that radical fashions and opinions have become more extreme and more socially acceptable since the 1960s does not at all clash with Rufo’s findings. He is filling in the background of an incremental revolution, the effects of which are now impacting our social, political, and cultural existence. It might be objected that Rufo is writing primarily a history of ideas and that other factors beside ideology created our woke world. I myself have published a book on the modern administrative state as the key player in the cultural and social transformation that we are experiencing, and Christopher Caldwell and Michael Rectenwald more recently have advanced related arguments. Others have stressed judicial activism as a critical factor in mandating social engineering of a kind that has transformed American society. These explanations, however, are not mutually exclusive; and Rufo’s work can be said to complement other interpretations.

Those who are observing with growing dismay what is transpiring in this country and throughout the West are seeking a more complete picture of how, in Rufo’s words, “the radical Left conquered everything.” The reasons are multifaceted, but Rufo’s book is a good place to start one’s investigation.



X22, And we Know, and more- Sept 20

 




Oldest wooden structure’ discovered on border of Zambia and Tanzania

 

Researchers have discovered remnants of what is thought to be the world’s oldest known wooden structure, an arrangement of logs on the bank of a river bordering Zambia and Tanzania that predates the rise of modern humans.

The simple structure, made by shaping two logs with sharp stone tools, may have formed part of a walkway or platform for human ancestors who lived along the Kalambo River nearly 500,000 years ago.

Marks on the logs show they were cut, chopped and scraped with an array of stone tools found at the site. One log, a type of bushwillow, overlies the other and is held in place by a large inverted U-shaped notch in its underside.  


 

 

“When I first saw it, I thought this can’t be real. The wood and the stone suggest a high level of ingenuity, technological skill and planning,” said Prof Larry Barham, an archaeologist at the University of Liverpool who led the work.

“It could be part of a walkway or part of a foundation for a platform,” he said. “A platform could be used as a place to store things, to keep firewood or food dry, or it might have been a place to sit and make things. You could put a little shelter on top and sleep there.”

Scientists at the University of Aberystwyth dated the structure to at least 476,000 years old, from long before Homo sapiens are thought to have emerged about 300,000 years ago. The structure may be the work of Homo heidelbergensis, a predecessor of modern humans that lived in the region.

The scientists arrived at Kalambo Falls in 2019 hoping to press on with excavations made in 2006, only to find the river had shifted course and flooded the area.  


Barham’s plan B involved sliding down a 30ft cliff to a strip of beach on the Kalambo River upstream of a 770ft waterfall that plunges towards Lake Tanganyika. There he found the first of the wooden items recovered on the trip, a digging stick dated to about 390,000 years ago.  

Other wooden items included a wedge, a split branch with a notch that may have formed part of a trap, and a log cut at both ends. “It might be a work surface, like a Black and Decker workbench,” Barham said of the log.

The findings are remarkable because wood so rarely survives for long periods. The material at Kalambo Falls was preserved by waterlogged sediments that are starved of oxygen.

“It may not be the beginning of the built environment, but it is the earliest time we have of people taking trees, taking charge of this material, and shaping something that has no precedent, that has no natural form to emulate,” Barham said. “It’s a real cultural imposition on the landscape.” 


The site probably contains more ancient wooden objects, and Barham said the priority was to work with the Zambian government to get Kalambo Falls recognised as a Unesco world heritage site.

Dr Sonia Harmand, an expert in early stone age archaeology at Stony Brook University in New York called it a groundbreaking discovery.

“We know so few things about the use of organic materials during the early stages of our evolution that this makes it a very wanted discovery,” she said. “The team is formed of world experts and no doubt the discovery is solid.”

Dr Annemieke Milks, a Palaeolithic archaeologist at the University of Reading, said the interlocking, shaped logs were evidence of a “behavioural threshold”, showing that as early as 476,000 years ago, humans used large-scale materials to transform their lived environment.

“Although quite simple in nature, the shaped and interlocking logs indicate that these humans structured their environment,” she said. “While many other animals engage in such behaviours, the Kalambo Falls humans made use of multiple materials – at the very least stone and wood, and possibly fire – to do so.

“The rarity of wood preservation implies that such behaviours were more widespread than what we witness in the archaeological record,” she added. “Although the use of wood for tools and structures remains commonplace today, their findings provide a rare glimpse into the role that this simple material played in human evolution.”  


https://www.theguardian.com/science/2023/sep/20/oldest-wooden-structure-discovered-on-border-of-zambia-and-tanzania   



Under the Woke Regime, Fake Murders Are Punished and Real Murders Aren’t Worth Mentioning

America is a land of hierarchy. It’s why corporate media won’t talk about the teenager who ran over a retired police chief for fun.



Yeah, hit his ass,” a black teenager giddily said before his friend mowed down a cyclist in a recently circulated viral video.

“Ready?” the teenager driving what was reported to be a stolen car asked as he geared up to hit the cyclist, Andreas Probst, a 64-year-old retired police chief.

A retired police chief, out on a morning bike ride, is apparently murdered by a nonwhite teenager, and the corporate media are silent. There are no protesters outside the killer’s house. There are no social media campaigns for accountability. Fortune 500 companies will not honor the legacy of Andreas Probst, despite his contributions to society.

As anyone with a functioning brain could tell you after watching the video, the hit-and-run was intentional. Thankfully, local police agree. The 17-year-old driver of the car whose name remains unreleased is expected to have his charges “updated to include open murder,” according to The Las Vegas Review-Journal.

Maybe this unnamed teenager will face justice and be locked away for the rest of his natural life, but what are the odds of an anti-social homicidal maniac actually being held accountable for his actions these days? I’m not optimistic, and that’s only part of the issue at hand.

On May 25, 2020, video surfaced of a white Minneapolis police officer, Derek Chauvin, with his knee on the back of a large black man, George Floyd, after the latter reportedly attempted to use a counterfeit bill in a convenience store. Floyd’s increasingly erratic behavior after being approached by the police led to Chauvin using a standard practice restraint to keep him from causing harm to himself and others. While restrained, Floyd would expire. It would later be revealed that he had a “fatal level” of fentanyl in his system during these events, but this didn’t matter. Nor did his aggressive and erratic behavior prior to being restrained on the ground.

The footage with which nearly everyone is familiar was void of context necessary to develop a proper understanding of the incident. It only shows a white man in uniform using his authority to push a yelling black man into the street. All the world saw was a black man repeatedly calling for his “mama” while saying he couldn’t breathe before he died. Chaos subsequently erupted in the streets, likely compounded by pent-up Covid-era frustrations, and the narrative makers ran with it.

Institutional media, corporate America, academia, and the political class enthusiastically insisted Floyd’s death was caused by white supremacy and systemic racism while race rioters and anarchists wreaked havoc on the general populace for several consecutive months. Dozens were killed, more than a billion dollars in property damage occurred, and virtually every major institution from Silicon Valley to Sesame Street pledged fealty to Black Lives Matter.

Because one man died in a highly publicized and drastically mischaracterized event, the country’s civic pantheon was cast aside: Eternal truth and natural law gave way to racial grievance and intersectional hierarchy. The “1619 Project” became our foundational myth, anti-racism our national religion.

Floyd’s death fundamentally changed the nature of our republic. Probst’s death will soon be forgotten.

The Civil Rights Regime

The deafening silence from institutional media and the overwhelming majority of the American government following the killing of Probst is a consequence of the civil rights regime. It’s the creation and dehumanizing of outgroups and the overlooking of in-group members’ maliciousness. It is an integral part of American government and culture.

Fulfilling the promises of the Declaration of Independence and ensuring equality for all American citizens before the law was a noble and righteous goal. This may have been where these intentions began, but it is certainly not where the exercise has ended.

The legal system has been generationally warped through decades of affirmative action and disparate impact laws creating new social hierarchies. Every identitarian denomination seeks representation within this coalition, hoping to partake in the spoils and gain social capital. Odds are they will be able to. The only ones not allowed within the gate are those who benefited from the old hierarchies or those whose worldviews challenge the premise of the new ones.

This is why any time trans activists, race grifters, anarchists, or any other leftist ideological group stages an “insurrection,” by left-wing standards, the media whitewash it. The chaos engulfing the nation during the summer of 2020 reinforced a hierarchy the civil rights regime has a vested interest in maintaining, so it was allowed to continue. Jan. 6, however, challenged the new hierarchy so its participants must never again be allowed to see the light of day.

Where Americans initially saw an opportunity to correct historical wrongs, cynical activists saw a spoils system and new cultural ethos to exploit edging out anyone else who couldn’t sufficiently claim the legal or cultural status of “victim.” 

Recall this past May when Daniel Penny (white) restrained Jordan Neely (black), a dangerous schizophrenic and violent, repeat criminal, on the New York City subway system after the latter repeatedly menaced passengers. Neely would later be pronounced dead at a New York hospital after the incident.

Whereas Neely allegedly shouted about how he would “hurt anyone on this train,” and Penny likely prevented him from doing just that (as any able-bodied man ought to do in a healthy society), this didn’t stop leftists in legacy media and the government from lavishing praise upon the former while condemning the latter as an evil racist murderer. After all, Neely sometimes dressed up as Michael Jackson, and Penny is a white guy who said, “Hey, stop that.”

[READThe Lesson of Jordan Neely: Your Courage and Sacrifice Will Be Punished]

Following this, America dusted off the 2020 playbook, corporations bent the knee, politicians raised their fists, protesters flooded the streets — you get the picture.

Penny’s whiteness was placed at the very center of what we were assured was a violent attack motivated by racial animus. He was a white man killing a black man because that’s what white men do, so the narrative goes, and is currently facing second-degree manslaughter charges for the crime of saying, “Hey, stop that.”

The only person credited with agency in the situation is Penny because his skin color denotes him as a victimizer. Sort of like how an “SUV” plowed through marchers in Waukesha, Wisconsin, two years ago because the driver — Darrell E. Brooks Jr., a black racist — is a victim per the powers that be.

This logic was further on display this past spring after Democrats and other leftist jackals in the media ran cover for the increasingly violent LGBT agenda following a trans radical’s targeting of Christians at a private day school. Instead of taking the opportunity to stand in solidarity with the people who were actually targeted, they opted to blame conservative lawmakers, media companies, and Christians for standing in the way of social engineering genital mutilation progress.

[READHere Are Leftists’ Disgusting Reactions to the Nashville Christian School Shooting]

The “trans community,” White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said shortly after the murders, is “under attack.” The shooter’s victims did not receive the same empathetic support.

The six Christians who were apparently targeted for their faith, the people mowed down by Brooks, the high likelihood of Daniel Penny facing jail time for protecting other people, and Andreas Probst being murdered for sport do not matter to the civil rights regime. Their innocence does not matter, only their sacrifice does, because it reiterates to the rest of us that there is a tangible cultural hierarchy, fully backed by the U.S. government, against which we are powerless.

Specific groups are insulated and emboldened to the detriment of others.

As one of the left’s leading midwits luminaries, Ibram X. Kendi, says, “The only remedy to past discrimination is present discrimination. The only remedy to present discrimination is future discrimination.”

And so the cycle continues with what writer Auron MacIntyre calls an “aristocracy of favored groups” — one not of merit, but of victimhood.



The Russell Brand Scandal Is a Media Witch Hunt and It's Easy to Prove


Russell Brand has become a really hot story, and looking at the media landscape, everyone has a different reason as to why they're interested. 

The former actor turned political/cultural commentator has grown quite a mighty audience, and it's not something the left approves of in the least. Brand's brand of commentary calls out mainstream media narratives as the lies they are, and he's talking to all the people he shouldn't be. This results in a form of narrative destruction, and for the left, controlling the narrative is everything. 

No one hates losing control of the narrative more than the corporate media, and once you become a threat to them, they will go out of their way to ruin your reputation and/or destroy you financially and professionally. Brand must have rubbed too many people the wrong way, and as such, they went searching into his past to see if he rubbed any other people the wrong way...if you're picking up what I'm putting down. 

If you want a good rundown of the charges coming against Brand, I recommend this coverage by Brad Slager, who delves into the allegations with further detail. 

(READ: The Need for Caution on Russel Brand Accusations and Why the Press Is Not Being Cautious - Pt. 1)

But my focus is the media's intentions. 

An article from The Times spoke about the ongoing investigation into Russell Brand, and a few things caught my eye that should shine some light on the fact that this is a witch hunt to silence a man they've come to dislike and feel threatened by. 

Starting with this one. Emphasis mine: 

Over the past few years, reporters have interviewed hundreds of sources who knew or worked with Brand: ex-girlfriends and their friends and family, comedians and other celebrities, people who worked with him on radio and TV, and senior staff at the BBC, Channel 4 and other media organisations.

So the investigation into Brand began years ago, and the quest to gather any damning information about him was so thorough that they were effectively interviewing anyone who ever stood five feet away from Brand. 

It gets even worse when you see the extent they were willing to go through to get this information: 

Along with these interviews reporters have seen private emails and text messages, submitted freedom of information requests, viewed medical and therapists’ notes, scrutinised Brand’s books and interviews, and watched and listened to hundreds of hours of his shows on the BBC, Channel 4 and YouTube to corroborate allegations.

At some point, this stopped being an investigation and became a mission that utilized every resource news organizations had to get the dirt they needed on Brand. 

But it doesn't stop there. We can see what the mission was from the very beginning with this line: 

All said they felt ready to speak only after being approached by reporters. Several said they felt compelled to do so given Brand’s newfound prominence as an online wellness influencer, with millions of followers on YouTube and other sites.

So now we have to ask if this compelling feeling they felt was urged on by these reporters who were clearly trying to find what they could to ruin Brand.

Is Brand guilty? 

I don't know. 

What we do know about Brand is that he was a movie star who was addicted to sex, drugs, and rock n' roll. It's a bad combination and one prone to serious issues and dangerous situations. The probability that every single sexual interaction he had while in a drug-fueled state was pure as the driven snow he snorted is minimal. 

The question isn't necessarily about whether or not Brand was the choir boy of sex addicts, but whether or not he actually raped people. That should be the primary concern of every person on Earth, but let's be clear: That's not the media's concern. 

The media's concern is likely three things. 

Firstly, the silencing of Brand, which will be one more popular voice challenging their narrative gone. 

Second, they get to reinforce the false narrative that Republicans don't care about women and that the right is a cesspool of pro-patriarchial attitudes that, if given the chance, would push women into a second or even third-class citizen status. This is a great narrative to have running when it comes to time to vote in the 2024 election. 

Thirdly, the ruination of Brand can translate to a bad reputation developing for the platforms he calls home. In this case, that platform is Rumble. Rumble is a free speech platform that plays host to a myriad of voices, and many of them are well-known figures on the right. Giving Rumble that reputation may turn people off to it and cause them to never visit and possibly those who choose it as a platform to walk away. This could also help in the preservation of narratives as fewer people will be venturing to Rumble to hear news and opinions inconvenient to the corporate media. 

I hope Brand is innocent, not just because I want the media to lose but because it's my sincere hope that no one suffered such an egregious and traumatic event as a rape. If he is guilty, then he should suffer for it, but let's not get it twisted. The media isn't on some noble quest to bring a wrongdoer to justice. This is a witch hunt and a politically expedient one at that. 



We Are the Danger


Big Tech and the progressive elites have labeled us as “dangerous.” Companies like Google and others have participated in concentrated efforts to target RedState and other right-leaning news sites by applying this label, also referring to us as “derogatory” for the stories we report.

They are right.

We are dangerous, but not in the way they would have people believe.

Let me set the table. Many of my colleagues, along with myself, have been covering news related to the nationwide effort to promote a progressive LGBTQ agenda through the public school system. Most recently, we have focused on California’s government empowering itself to use its position to force school districts to conceal information about students from their parents. When a child shows signs that they are dealing with gender dysphoria, teachers and other members of school staff are now compelled by law to prevent parents from finding out.

Ward Clark reported that a federal judge issued an injunction against Escondido Union School District (EUSD) over a requirement that teachers deceive parents about their children’s gender identity.

The background statement of this decision begins:

If a school student suffers a life-threatening concussion while playing soccer during a class on physical fitness, and the child expresses his feelings that he does not want his parents to find out, would it be lawful for the school to require its instructor to hide the event from the parents? Of course not. What if the child at school suffers a sexual assault, or expresses suicidal thoughts, or expresses aggressive and threatening thoughts or behavior? Would it be acceptable not to inform the parents? No. These would be serious medical conditions to which parents have a legal and federal constitutional right to be informed of and to direct decisions on medical treatment. A parent’s right to make decisions concerning the care, custody, control, and medical care of their children is one of the oldest of the fundamental liberty interests that Americans enjoy. However, if a school student expresses words or actions during class that may be the first visible sign that the child is dealing with gender incongruity or possibly gender dysphoria, conditions that may (or may not) progress into significant, adverse, life-long social-emotional health consequences, would it be lawful for the school to require teachers to hide the event from the parents?

In this case, it's clear that consistency and predicates in other cases are being considered in the overall picture of parental rights. As the statement notes, the EUSD's transgender pronoun policy would somehow place gender confusion in a different category than a sports injury or other mental issues.

As Susie Moore wrote earlier, Clark’s article was deemed “dangerous and derogatory” by the censorship brigade at Google. This is part of an overall effort to demonetize our content and that of other right-leaning news sites.

The question is: What is so “dangerous” about reporting on a judge’s ruling?

Is this dangerous to members of the LGBTQ community? Of course not. But the real danger is that our continued exposure of these issues poses a threat to an authoritarian progressive agenda that seeks to usurp parental rights and use the power of the state to force their views on the rest of us.

This is not only about a single ruling. Rather, this is part of an overarching push to curtail speech, especially when it challenges the prevailing narrative to which progressive demand we adhere. If Clark had put a left-wing spin on the aforementioned report and criticized the injunction, there is no doubt Google would not only have not labeled us as “dangerous and derogatory,” it would likely have boosted the article in the search rankings.

When companies like Google apply such labels, they are essentially siding with the people who think affirming parental rights is a threat – not to children, but to their agenda. This is a cautionary tale, like so many other stories of this type.

The bottom line is that RedState is a threat to the progressive order. Sites like ours pose a very real danger to what these people seek to accomplish. They want nothing less than to use the power of the state and America’s prominent institutions to force their way of thinking on the rest of us, regardless of how we might feel about it.

The silver lining to all of this is that this scenario shows we are making a difference. Folks who dare to speak up and challenge the assault on our natural rights are moving the needle – and the progressives in charge of Big Tech are terrified. This means we need to double down. It means we need more people to get off the sidelines and start speaking out in our own communities and on all of our platforms. This is not an easy battle – but the reaction of the enemy shows that it is one we can win if we remain steadfast.



Voters Say Transgender Issues Should Sit Near the Bottom of 2024 Campaign Concerns


Transgender issues are a highly divisive topic but both parties seem to agree that when it comes to doing anything about them, politicians should make it less of a priority than most other things. 

According to a new poll by "The 19th*" and Survey Monkey, various hot-topic issues were asked about such as abortion, transgenderism, and gender-affirming care. While the findings say that an overwhelming majority approve of the gender-bending trend, it tends to lose staying power the closer the issue drifts to Washington or children: 

  • Both abortion and gender-affirming care for adults have widespread support. A majority of Americans (63%) think abortion should be legal in all (30%) or most (33%) cases, and more than half (57%) favor the rights of transgender adults to access gender-affirming care, though significantly fewer (39%) support gender-affirming care for minors. Most think that politicians are not informed enough about abortion (70%) and gender-affirming care for minors (72%) to create fair policies. 
  • Americans would prefer that politicians either protect transgender people or not focus on transgender issues at all. Only 17% say politicians should focus on restricting gender-affirming care, while 44% say politicians should not focus on transgender issues, and 33% say they should focus on protecting trans people. Republicans in particular don’t want their politicians focusing on transgender issues; 58% say so, compared with 49% of Independents and 32% of Democrats.

To be clear, these numbers should be taken with a grain of salt. The 19th* appears to be a left-leaning organization focusing on women's rights and gender politics. It's biased toward women and its inclusion of writers and staff that come from leftist rags like Mother Jones. According to the site, it takes its name from the 19th Amendment but adds an asterisk to its name to indicate that "suffrage remains a work in progress for many in this country, particularly people living in states where voter suppression exists and tens of thousands of transgender Americans who face barriers to voting."

Their clear bias toward the hard left makes some of these findings all the more peculiar, namely that the people they interviewed didn't want politicians doing anything about transgender issues for the most part. Moreover, it's interesting how they couched it. 

"Most think that politicians are not informed enough about abortion (70%) and gender-affirming care for minors (72%) to create fair policies," it read. 

Odd. Given the partnership abortion organizations have with the Democrat Party and the way they advertise for one another through endless activism, you'd think there would be a tidal wave of single-issue voters crashing against the voting booths to pull the lever for Democrats. 

But they want everyone to stay away from the issue, and at a time when Roe v. Wade's death is still fresh on the minds of many and right in the midst of many states banning "gender-affirming care" for minors?

Something's off here, and I suspect it's the 19th*'s rationalization for these numbers.

If I were to guess, I'd say the reason the people think politicians should stay away from these issues, particularly transgenderism, is because they hardly top the list of concerns for the people. Even abortion registers at only five percent, according to their own survey, and transgenderism didn't make the list at all. 

In fact, sitting at the top of the list is "Inflation and the cost of living" at a whopping 36 percent, with "Jobs, unemployment, and wages" trailing in second at 10 percent. 

Moreover, their questions about gender-affirming care for minors can be interpreted differently from person to person. It does not point specifically to a certain ideological position or action taken, just whether or not people think politicians are informed enough to make decisions about it. It's a messy question that likely got a messy answer. 

Either way, it would appear people played it safe and made it clear that politicians should probably not touch it. 

The question is, if Democrats are paying attention to this, will they do as they're told and back off the issue? 

If they do, then the transgender community has to ask itself if the Democrats truly care about them like they say they do, or if they're just more concerned about their jobs and are willing to use transgenderism as a prop when it's politically expedient. 

Democrats have already done this once before. The moment it becomes more beneficial to be pro-woman, the Democrat Party will drop the transgender community to better promote the "Party of Women" narrative. The Democrats suddenly remembering what a woman was upon the death of Roe v. Wade is a good example of this. 

The transgender community should probably brace itself for disappointment this election season, but they shouldn't worry. They'll be paid attention to once they become politically viable as an issue again. 



Jack Smith’s Gag Order Designed to Destroy Trump’s First Amendment Right to Criticize Biden on Campaign Trail



Special Counsel Jack Smith filed a motion on Friday that, if granted, would effectively bar President Donald Trump from criticizing him, President Joe Biden, and other deep state bureaucrats for their hyperpartisan prosecution of his First Amendment right to claim that the 2020 presidential election was stolen.

“Through his statements, the defendant threatens to undermine the integrity of these proceedings and prejudice the jury pool, in contravention of the ‘undeviating rule’ that in our justice system a jury’s verdict is to ‘be induced only by evidence and argument in open court, and not by any outside influence,’” Smith wrote in the motion to D.C. District Judge Tanya Chutkan.

Under Smith’s proposal, chatter about the high-profile case would be legal for everyone, including President Joe Biden, but not Trump himself. The jury pool, judges, and others involved would hear campaign commentary from corporate media and Biden about the case. They would not, however, be privy to any takes from Trump, whose primary campaign strategy thus far is to repeatedly call attention to the weaponization of the federal government.

Smith paints his radical demands for Trump’s muzzling as “modest, permissible restrictions” that might be applied in any routine federal criminal case. This, however, is no routine case. It’s a partisan indictment led by bureaucrats handpicked by Trump’s Democrat replacement and 2024 rival that has quickly become one of the most egregious examples of sweeping state abuse this nation has ever seen.

Even corporate media like the Washington Post acknowledge Smith’s latest attempt to criminalize political speech and make criticism into defamation amounts to election interference in an already “legally flawed” and “unwise” indictment.

If Chutkan grants Smith’s request for a sweeping gag order, she will be endorsing the silencing of not just the former leader of the free world but also the Biden administration’s top political rival — a current presidential candidate.

Chutkan has yet to rule on Smith’s motion but her previous pronouncement regarding Trump’s case inspires no confidence that the Republican’s First Amendment rights will be considered or protected.

“Mr. Trump, like every American, has a First Amendment right to free speech. But that right is not absolute,” Chutkan said during proceedings in August. “In a criminal case such as this one, the defendant’s free speech is subject to the rules.”

Chutkan’s declaration that “I cannot and I will not factor into my decisions how it will factor into a political campaign” also seems to suggest means she doesn’t care about the political implications of handicapping the speech of a man who is in the middle of an election cycle.

“What the defendant is currently doing — the fact that he’s running a political campaign has to yield to the orderly administration of justice. If that means he can’t say exactly what he wants to say about witnesses in this case, that’s how it has to be,” the Obama appointee concluded.

Smith’s motion and Chutkan’s comments only confirm Americans’ fears that the Department of Justice is corrupt, weaponizes itself against its citizens for political purposes, and wants to capitalize on the left’s 2020 censorship campaign.

large majority of Americans believe the U.S. has a two-tiered system of justice. Another 56 percent recognize the Trump indictments as “interference by the Department of Justice in the 2024 election” instead of a “fair application of the law.”

The incumbent administration grasping at the First Amendment rights of the leading presidential candidate to shut him up is a perfect example of the abuse of power and political hit jobs Americans worry about.