Friday, October 13, 2023

Is the Draft Coming Back?


A disunited country will not tolerate it


The military’s move to the All Volunteer Force (AVF) in 1973 amounted to a minor revolution. The draft had remained in place after World War II to support the policy of containment, but the costly and prolonged Vietnam War rendered the draft controversial and ultimately untenable. Restricting the military to volunteers, coupled with the withdrawal of combat forces from Vietnam, would quickly reduce widespread anti-military sentiment.

Over time, the change would affect not only the military but also the general public. For the military, a culture of public support and respect augmented the military’s improved pay and benefits. This support became particularly pronounced at the time of the Gulf War and in the months after the 9/11 attacks.

Even though the public was grateful, it took little interest in military affairs. During the long wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, most Americans thought supporting the troops was enough. This did not mean much in practice—maybe a few solemn moments before ball games and the occasional “thank you” to someone in uniform at the airport. Otherwise, it was business as usual. Like George W. Bush said, “Go out and shop.”

When casualties spiked, the public was not fully invested. The troops had the support and sympathy of the public, but there was little personal connection. The nation was not at war so much as the small military caste. Thus, these wars inspired little music, art, or other forms of cultural production, such as those which reflected the trauma of Vietnam or the national unity of World War II.

There was a small anti-war movement during the 2000s, but it turned out to be narrowly partisan, and it disappeared after Obama’s election. The movement had almost nothing to say about our festering conflict in Afghanistan, which ultimately ended in failure.

A Small Professional Military Shielded American Empire from Domestic Scrutiny

While the public supported the military, they barely knew anything about it. So the policies and costs of American Empire were rarely a factor in electoral contests. For example, when four soldiers were killed in Niger in 2017, even high-level elected officials were surprised to learn that we had troops there.

The aloof relationship between the public and the military benefited the American Empire. Since our country’s imperial commitments did not create a lot of casualties or other inconveniences, the public mostly ignored them.

The AVF coincided with America’s brief reign as the “sole superpower.” Temporary, but real qualitative advantages in American technology—particularly airpower and the technology supporting intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance—allowed a swift conventional victory in the Gulf War, along with fast progress during the conventional phases of the Iraq and Afghanistan campaigns. The low quality of our adversaries enhanced the scale and spectacle of these victories.

There were also limitations revealed by the Iraq and Afghanistan campaigns. Rather than showcasing a revolution in military affairs, these low-tech occupations and counterinsurgencies revealed limitations in the ability of America to impose its will, not least because low numbers of “boots on the ground” contributed to a lack of security for the locals.

While unable to achieve their objectives, the generals and other national security professionals seemed mostly untroubled by the results. After the unsuccessful ends of these campaigns, there was almost none of the soul-searching that took place in the wake of Vietnam.

Instead, the brass and their cheerleaders in the Military-Industrial Complex announced they were shifting their focus to conflicts with peer competitors(read: Russia or China). Procurement and training were quickly shifted in this direction. Many thought American forces would excel in this type of campaign compared to the indeterminate slogging of counterinsurgency.

Ukraine as Test Lab for a War Against a Peer Competitor

The Russian invasion of Ukraine occurred in parallel with the U.S. military’s turn towards preparation for peer conflicts. Because NATO had been supporting Ukraine since 2014, a lot of chest-thumping ensued about superior NATO training, equipment, doctrine, and esprit de corps.

Ukraine’s military at first exceeded expectations, but it reached a high-water mark in the fall of 2022. Russia responded by mobilizing an additional 300,000 troops in response to its loss of Kherson and Kharkov. Since that time, Russia’s military proved stronger than expected, and its economy has demonstrated surprising resilience, particularly its defense industrial sector.

While a lot of embarrassing hyperbole circulates in the public sphere, more serious members of the military have been following the conflict closely, cataloging worrisome developments in tactics and technology. For example, Ukraine’s counter-offensive has not been able to accomplish very much, even after it received fairly sophisticated NATO Equipment like Leopard tanks and M777, along with months of indoctrination in the NATO way of war. Observers have also taken note that the size and scale of the battles, the numbers of casualties, and the destruction of equipment have far exceeded anything the U.S. military has faced since World War II.

This matters because the AVF military has always been fairly small. Even during the height of the Cold War in the 1980s, the Army’s active-duty troops numbered only around 750,000, whereas the conscript army of World War II numbered over 8 million. The 1990s “peace dividend” reduced the Army further to a little below 500,000, and it has hovered around this number ever since. The other branches were similarly reduced at this time. Surprisingly, no branch of the armed forces significantly expanded its active component to address the demands of the Iraq and Afghanistan campaigns.

Such low numbers might work against overmatched third world armies, but they proved inadequate to achieve victory against illiterate guerillas. Harder still would be something like the war of attrition now taking place in Ukraine.

Not only are large numbers of troops needed to cover territory in such a war, but larger numbers are needed to deal with casualties an order of magnitude greater than anything the U.S. military has faced since World War II. A recent article in Parameters observed that “Army theater medical planners may anticipate a sustained rate of roughly 3,600 casualties per day, ranging from those killed in action to those wounded in action or suffering disease or other non-battle injuries. . . . For context, the United States sustained about 50,000 casualties in two decades of fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan. In large-scale combat operations, the United States could experience that same number of casualties in two weeks.”

The authors reached a conclusion about the limits of the AVF, particularly in light of recent recruiting challenges: “The technological revolution . . . suggests this force has reached obsolescence. Large-scale combat operations troop requirements may well require a reconceptualization of the 1970s and 1980s volunteer force and a move toward partial conscription.”  

Military leaders have recently expressed similar sentiments. 

A Disunited Country Will Not Tolerate a Draft

The prosperous, homogeneous, and high-trust America of the 1960s—one where most of the families had two parents, and the dads were World War II veterans—nearly tore itself apart over the Vietnam-era draft. That cultural conflict cast a long shadow and discouraged military adventurism for many years. It is impossible to believe that the disunited, fragmented, and multicultural America of today would support a draft to pursue a high-casualty war of attrition for some abstract goal like “the balance of power in Europe” or “open shipping lanes in the South China Sea.”

Right now, Americans are mostly indifferent to their empire because it does not demand anything of them. Some even have a positive view, thinking it keeps us safe. But if American Empire now means you, your son, or (God forbid!) your daughter is being drafted to protect some place no one has ever heard of, the American people will immediately turn hostile.

Public support for defending countries like Ukraine and Taiwan is a mile wide and an inch deep. So long as we have nuclear weapons and two oceans protecting us, no one will treat a conflict over some foreign land as existential (other than the Kagan family). While the AVF had a lot of freedom for many years due to public apathy about foreign policy, that same indifference is the reason most Americans will not stomach a draft to support a costly conflict with a peer competitor. Americans do not care about remaining the “sole superpower” nearly as much as the ruling class does.

There is a growing, worldwide anti-American alliance opposing the American Empire. China and Russia lead the movement, but it includes many other countries among the so-called BRICS. For a long time the AVF was an effective and politically viable means of imposing the American will on these countries, but our small professional military is no longer fit for the task.

It is too small, it has expended too much of its reserve equipment and ammunition in Ukraine, and quality has gone down. It also now faces a loss of public support along with a recruiting crisis, which shows few signs of abating. In parallel with these challenges, the defense industrial sector has proven unable to keep pace with the requirements of a modern war of attrition.

Thus, the American Empire is now in the middle of an existential crisis due to the limitations of the AVF. Though small, for a time this force had a qualitative advantage over the rest of the world, and it received consistent domestic political support because its burdens were absent for those outside of the military. This approach is no longer viable because of changes in warfare and changes to America itself.

If a draft is required to maintain the American Empire, we should consider other modes of coexistence with the rest of the world that do not depend on oversized American military power, because a draft is impossible in today’s America.



X22, And we Know, and more- Oct 13

 



Hamas and Amoral Clarity ~ VDH

Support for Hamas killers by the college DEI crowd reveals the real moral and intellectual rot in higher ed


One unexpected blowback from the medieval Hamas’s barbaric murdering of hundreds of Israeli civilians is the revelation of current global amorality.

More than 20 Harvard university identity politics groups pledged their support to the Hamas murderers—to the utter silence for days of Harvard President Claudine Gay.

Americans knew higher education practiced racist admission policies. It has long promoted racially segregated dorms and graduations. And de facto it has destroyed the First Amendment.

But the overt support for Hamas killers by the diversity, equity, and inclusion crowd on a lot of campuses exposes to Americans the real moral and intellectual rot in higher education.

Democratic Socialist members of the new woke Democrat Party openly expressed ecstatic support for Hamas’s bloodwork.

Their biggest fears were not dead fellow Americans or hostages, or some 1,000 butchered Jewish civilians. Instead they were fearful that righteous Israeli retaliation might destroy the Hamas death machine.

Palestinians for years fooled naïfs in Europe and the Obama and Biden administrations into sending billions of dollars into Gaza.

These monies were channeled to tunnel into Israel, to obtain a huge rocket arsenal, and to craft plans to wipe out Jews.

The Biden administration has blood on its hands.

As soon as Biden took power, he resumed massive subsidies to radical Palestinians, canceled by the prior Trump administration.

He ignored warnings from his own state Department that such fungible moneys would soon fuel Hamas terrorism.

His administration dropped sanctions against Iran, ensuring that Tehran would enjoy a multi-billion-dollar windfall to be distributed to Israel’s existential enemies—another fact well known to the Biden administration.

If the Biden administration had announced overtly that it was rabidly anti-Israel, it would be hard to imagine anything it could have done differently from its present nihilist behavior.

Biden and company quickly restarted the defunct Iran appeasement deal—a leftover from the anti-Israeli Obama administration. No surprise, they appointed radical pro-Iranian activist Robert Malley to head the negotiations.

Malley allegedly has leaked American classified documents to Iranian officials and is under investigation by the FBI. He did his best to place pro-Iranian, anti-American activists into the high echelons of the U.S. government.

Biden was intent on forcing South Korea to release to Iran $6 billion in sanctioned frozen money.

That expectation of cash ensured Iran would be reimbursed for its present terrorist arming spree.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken shamefully tweeted that Israel should settle for an immediate ceasefire. No wonder he soon withdrew his unhinged posting.

That idiocy would be the moral equivalent of an American ally in December1941 urging the U.S. to seek negotiations with imperial Japan after its surprise bombing of Pearl Harbor—to avoid a “cycle of violence.”

The Biden team has drained strategic arms stockpiles in Israel, designed to help the Jewish state in extremis.

It recklessly abandoned a multibillion-dollar arms trove in Kabul, some of which reportedly made its way from Taliban killers to the Hamas murderers.

Once the mass murdering started, the amoral clarity of our “allies” was stunning.

NATO partner Turkey openly sided with the killers. It —along with Blinken—called for a cease fire—at the moment the Hamas death squads had finished, and Israel was ready to hold Hamas to account.

Qatar, where the U.S. Central Command is based, proved little more than a Hamas front.

It offers sanctuary to the architects of Hamas killing. And Qatar ensures a safe financial pipeline to Hamas from Iran and the radical Arab world.

Some of the most vehement current supporters of the Hamas death squads were immigrants to America from the Middle East.

Oddly, they apparently had fled just such illiberal Middle East regimes to reach a tolerant, democratic, and secure United States.

Yet they now endorse the Hamas butchering of Jewish civilians. Its savagery is aimed at executing, raping, and beheading Jews, and then mutilating their bodies.

Hamas apparently hopes to shock the Israeli government into voluntarily committing suicide—in line with the ancient Hamas agenda to destroy the Jewish state.

In a strange way, this reign of death has become a touchstone, an acid test of sorts that has revealed the utter amorality of enemies abroad and quite dangerous people at home.

It is past time that Americans deal with the medieval world that was revealed this week rather than keep dreaming in the fantasy world of our government.

Americans need to stop illegal immigration and restore their southern border, while ceasing all immigration from unhinged, hostile nations.

The military must return to its deterrent role and fire its woke commissariat.

Our leaders must accept that in the last three years of the Biden administration, serial American appeasement abroad, disunity at home, and social chaos have encouraged an entire host of enemies —China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, Middle East illiberal regimes, and former friends like Turkey and Qatar.

And our enemies dream of doing to us what we just saw in Israel.



Nice Speech, Mr. President. Now Let’s Stop Appeasing Terrorists

Biden has said all the right things.
 But he hasn’t done many of them.
 Not yet.



After the slaughter of more than a thousand Jews in Israel, among them beheaded infants and impaired elderly women burned alive, President Joe Biden delivered a righteous speech defending Israel and condemning the antisemitism of Hamas as “pure, unadulterated evil.”

We should expect this kind of sentiment from any leader of a nation of civilized people after the single worst act of butchery against Jews since the Holocaust. And, earnestly, the moral clarity was nice to hear after listening to the degeneracy of Hamas allies and the fellow travelers that infest the American left these days.  

Democrats who’ve spent years defending the likes of Rashida Tlaib or Ben Rhodes or BLM or CAIR or whomever else are now feigning surprise that Soviet-style “anti-Zionists” are in their midst. And these aren’t members of some fringe groups dressing up like a bunch of Nazis in front of Disney World. They’re celebrated and educated and deeply embedded in left-wing intellectual circles, in major universities, in bureaucracies, in Congress, in establishment publications, and in cable news channels.

Some on the center-left have spoken out. Most leaders have not. I’m not suggesting censoring anyone. But if you’re too much of a coward to denounce these people at this point, when will you?

So, anyway, Biden’s speech was nice. But what are Democrats going to do? It is likely that the United States is providing Israel with intelligence assistance. One hopes we’ll provide diplomatic cover rather than engage in the Obama-era machinations that treated the Jewish State as if it were barely an ally. All that is also appreciated.

When, however, will the administration rescind the $6 billion waiver it gave the Iranian mullahs, who have spent decades murdering and kidnapping American citizens, in addition to fueling war against our allies in the Middle East? There is no plausible way that Hamas could launch an attack of this scope without the logistical and monetary assistance of Iran. The Biden administration has allowed somewhere around $40 billion in waivers to flow to Iran over the past few years, not only six. Some of that was likely to keep world supplies up and prices domestically down (of course, we could drill here instead.) Sanctions exist to pressure regimes to engage in normal behavior. Will that change, or will Biden continue to employ pernicious Obama-style placation of the terror regime?

What is Biden going to do about Qatar — where Hamas leaders are welcome to celebrate the murder of Jews and Americans while sipping spring water in upscale hotel rooms in Doha? The Department of Justice has designated Hamas as a terror organization. Qatar is ostensibly an ally. There is no reason we should not be able to extradite the architects of violence against American citizens.

What is Joe Biden doing about the hundreds of millions of U.S. tax dollars that continue to flow to Palestinian governments every year in direct aid and through the United Nations? Will we fund groups that divert fungible assets to launch terror attacks and pay stipends to the families of those who murder Jewish civilians? Should we be funding regimes that work to instill and propel (generational) hate and violence?

Only months ago, Fatah was in talks to form a unity government with Hamas, the organization that executed 260 young people at a music festival. (Though, to be fair, Hamas could probably win a majority support from the Congressional Progressive Caucus or the Harvard student body, as well.) For over a decade, there haven’t been elections in the “West Bank” because Hamas, or similarly fanatical parties, would prevail. The only group that can make Fatah look moderate is Hamas. Does that sound like the type of place deserving of U.S. aid? Or moral support? Or a state?  

The president has said all the right things. It’s appreciated. But his administration hasn’t done many of them. Not yet.



Leftists Excuse Hamas for the Same Reasons They Support Black Lives Matter, Defund the Police, And the Rest



It apparently confounds some people that there exists a not small number of Americans who either outright support Hamas terrorists or, at least, have a difficult time finding anything bad to say about them, even after reports that its members went on a bloody rampage beheading babies.

It shouldn’t. The same people succeed every time in siding with everything that sucks, whether it’s BLM, the pronoun brigade, or the ACAB crowd — all in the name of “diversity, equity and inclusion.” Like BLM activists, the Palestinian government, such that it can be called that, believes it’s entitled to something. In this case, land. And rather than share in that land in a civilized, productive, and democratic way, they choose violence.

You thought the news that terrorists had infiltrated quiet villages while Israelis were engaged in holy rituals before murdering infants would shake every American to their core? You haven’t met a “social justice” activist.

They don’t care about that. They care about who has what they want or who they think should have what they don’t.

All of their goals are the same as Hamas: Get what they want, and until they do, everyone is supposed to suffer, including by violence. Especially by violence.

Anyone living in a major American city knows the drill. After the fiery but mostly peaceful George Floyd protests of summer 2020 simmered down, it wasn’t but two months before all the downtown storefronts were boarded up and shuttered again in anticipation of the election. And it wasn’t in case of a Biden victory.

What happened after the left’s most precious Supreme Court ruling was overturned last year? A sitting justice was targeted for assassination.

That anyone is really disgusted, shocked, or appalled by the views from the same people over what happened in Israel last weekend only speaks to who hasn’t been paying attention. It’s not a novel form of hideous. It’s been here for quite some time now.



What Happens if There Is Another Terrorist Attack in America?


This past week has felt a lot like the early 2000s, shortly after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Since Saturday, my colleagues and I have been writing almost nonstop about the war in Israel, which is the latest development in the Israel/Palestinian conflict. I’m having conversations about terrorism and the Middle East that I haven’t had in years.

Over the past decade, there have been fewer than 10 radical Islamic terrorist attacks in the United States. Most of these were lone wolf attacks carried out by people who were radicalized after already residing in the country.

But the hostilities in Israel have brought concerns about a resurgence in terrorist activity on American soil. These worries were exacerbated by the words of a former Hamas leader, who exhorted Muslims to express their anger on Friday, October 13th. The New York Police Department (NYPD) has begun mobilizing for potential violence, in the wake of former Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal's missive.

The NYPD has ordered all cops to report in uniform starting Friday in anticipation of potential unrest stemming from the former leader of Hamas’ call on Muslims to stage global demonstrations in support of Palestinians, The Post has learned.

“All uniformed members of the service in every rank, will perform duty in the uniform of the day and be prepared for deployment,” read a Wednesday night memo sent to all NYPD members.

Cops will not be granted excusals or shift changes and the order will remain in effect “until further notice,” according to the memo.

The former Hamas leader made his statements on Tuesday, and there are fears that some will heed them and engage in violence.

Former Hamas chief Khaled Mashaal gave a speech on Tuesday encouraging Muslims and Palestinian supporters to display their anger and begin pro-Palestinian demonstrations on Friday while begging for donations for Hamas to continue its war with Israel.

As reported by Reuters, Mashaal primarily aimed his speech at those living in the Arab and Islamic world, encouraging them to "head to the squares and streets of the Arab and Islamic world on Friday."

"Tribes of Jordan, sons of Jordan, brothers and sisters of Jordan... This is a moment of truth and the borders are close to you, you all know your responsibility," Mashaal said.

He also addressed all who teach and learn "jihad," or the Muslim holy war.

"To all scholars who teach jihad... to all who teach and learn, this is a moment for the application (of theories)," he added.

Hopefully, there will be no terrorist attacks forthcoming. But if this were to happen, it could potentially have far-reaching consequences for the nation and the world – especially if there are many casualties.

For starters, such an occurrence would send shockwaves through America’s political landscape. If it happens while President Joe Biden is at the helm, it could be perceived as a failure of his administration and make people more hesitant to support him. Indeed, Biden has already been criticized for what people perceive to be a weak and tepid response to the outbreak of violence in Israel.

Moreover, if former President Donald Trump becomes the nominee, he would play to the fact that he decimated ISIS while he was in office. When people are afraid, they might look to someone who has a proven track record of handling radical Islamic terrorism.

Democrats in Congress would not be immune from this fallout. There is a decent chance that Americans will place Republicans in charge of the government, as Democrats are perceived as weak on these issues.

Next, there can be no doubt that the elites in government will use a potential terrorist attack as a prime opportunity to grow their power. It is precisely what happened after 9/11. Congress passed the Patriot Act, which expanded the federal government’s ability to spy on American citizens under the guise of trying to root out terrorism. This has resulted in a multitude of violations of privacy and civil liberties.

If there is another attack, we should get ready for Patriot Act 2.0, 3.0, and possibly 4.0. Politicians and members of the press will lull the public into believing that the government should amass more power for our own good. Unfortunately, much of the public will go along with this proposition, which will undoubtedly make us less free.

There is also the possibility that such an attack could help America overcome its deepening political divisions. Right now, Americans are very much separated by political ideology. Collective trauma could bring about a paradigm shift in which Americans view external forces as the enemy instead of Team Red and Team Blue. Something similar happened after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

On the other hand, we no longer live in the year 2001. In 2023, a terrorist attack could very well cause even more division. The two parties will point fingers at the other, blaming political opposition for the loss of life. Rather than uniting against a common enemy, Americans might turn on each other. It’s not a pleasant outcome, but it cannot be discounted.

The situation in Israel is already having global ramifications. But as far as the violence goes, it has remained in the region. However, it might not take much for the conflict to have a ripple effect across the globe. Let’s hope that doesn’t happen – the nation is already enough of a powder keg as it is.




Your Black Lives Matter Donation May Have Helped Hamas

In addition to its direct support of Palestinians, BLM works closely with numerous domestic, left-wing, pro-Palestinian organizations.



On Oct. 9, Black Lives Matter (BLM) Grassroots, a collection of BLM chapters responsible for much of the BLM movement’s heavy lifting, released a statement in support of the Palestinian people that likens Palestinian terrorism to BLM’s own activism. Some individual chapters went further in their show of support for Hamas. BLM Chicago shared a celebratory graphic of a paraglider in obvious reference to the slaughtering of at least 260 civilians by Hamas militants at an Israeli music festival. Such statements are nothing new for BLM, a “movement committed to ending settler colonialism in all forms” that advocates for “Palestinian liberation.”

Many Americans are aware that both the Obama and Biden administrations sent hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars to Hamas and its benefactors. A comparatively smaller number are aware that public companies donate to Palestinian organizations and their allies such as Black Lives Matter. Both are wealth transfers that drain resources from our economy to enable Palestinian barbarism like that unleashed on Israelis this past Saturday.

Recall that corporations gave more than $99 billion to the BLM movement and related causes after the death of George Floyd, as shown by the Claremont Institute’s BLM Funding Database. McKinsey and Company claims the number is far higher, about $340 billion. This wealth transfer included at least $122 million in funding for BLM itself.

Some of that money undoubtedly went to Hamas. Radical black activists have long identified with the “Palestinian cause,” BLM has a history of supporting Palestinian organizations, and delegations of BLM activists have visited the Palestinian territories on more than one occasion.

In addition to its direct support of Palestinian groups, BLM works closely with numerous domestic, left-wing, pro-Palestinian organizations such as Students for Justice in Palestine and members of the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement. Activists belonging to these organizations celebrated Hamas’ most recent atrocities across the West, including in America’s streets and on America’s college campuses.

BLM At School, the PreK-12 educational arm of the BLM movement, devotes an entire block of its curriculum to “Black + Palestinian Solidarity.” Among its troves of Palestinian propaganda are articles such as “How the sun of Palestine reached a Black Panther in jail,” published by The Electronic Intifada, and “Our Liberation is Connected with the Palestinian People,” published in The Progressive Magazine. The curriculum, which equates “Israeli settler colonialism” to “anti-Black violence,” calls for “unified action against anti-Blackness, white supremacy, and Zionism.” BLM At School is an official partner of the National Education Association and is present in thousands of schools nationwide.

The events currently unfolding in Israel reveal what is truly meant by BLM and the left when they call for “decolonization.” In a since-deleted post on X that was retweeted by The Washington Post’s global opinions editor, Karen Attiah, Soho House and Teen Vogue journalist Najma Sharif wrote of the Palestinian raping, torturing, and murdering of Israeli women and children: “What did y’all think decolonization meant? vibes? papers? essays? losers.”

Sharif echoes the sentiments of BLM co-founder Patrisse Cullors, who in 2015 asserted that “Palestine is our generation’s South Africa … if we don’t step up boldly and courageously to end the imperialist project called Israel, we’re doomed.”

To BLM, pro-Palestine activists, and the rest of the radical left, decolonization means the annihilation of the people and state of Israel. Transposed to the American context, decolonization means the annihilation of the United States and the predominantly white settlers who founded it. Some Americans, such as the sitting vice president, consciously support proponents of decolonization. Others only support them involuntarily or unconsciously, partly out of ignorance but largely because the administrative state and corporate America are not accountable to the American people.

Many have written at length about the unaccountability of the “uniparty,” the “deep state,” and “Our Democracy™.” Few have addressed the transformation of corporate philanthropy into a left-wing patronage network. Suffice it to say, today’s corporate philanthropy is driven largely by ideological forces such as the ESG cartel, corporate donations are typically made out of public sight, and shareholders have little recourse to challenge corporate directors on their donations. Corporations freely spend public wealth to support a vast NGO archipelago of far-left causes, including BLM. Money is fungible, and donations to BLM are in effect donations to violent Palestinian groups.

Thanks to corporate America and the left, Americans unwittingly have blood on their hands. Reforms are needed to rein in corporate philanthropy and subject corporations to public scrutiny. For now, the public should shame and punish the unrepentant corporations that redistributed their wealth to BLM and its allies. The companies in the BLM Funding Database are a good place to start.



WATCH: Things Get Spicy in France as Police Battle Pro-Hamas Protesters


Bonchie reporting for RedState 

Pro-Hamas protests have broken out across the globe following the massacre of over 1,200 people in Israel. Terrorists breached the security fences and flew over them in hang gliders on Saturday, committing mass atrocities in Israeli towns and at a music festival with an estimated 100 people still being held hostage. 

That prompted mass protests around the globe in support of Hamas, with violence expected to escalate further during a "day of rage" on Friday. Things are already getting spicy in France, though, with police clashing with protesters. 

Here's how things started, and then we'll get to how it ended.

TRANSLATION: Free Palestine is sprayed on the statue of the Republic during the pro-Palestine demonstration in Paris.

A crowd of at least several hundred protesters surrounded the Statue of the Republic, with some scaling it and defacing it. "Free Palestine" can be seen spray-painted on the priceless piece of art while it appears a piece of red fabric was placed over one of the heads on the statue. 

Keep in mind that all of this is occurring in the wake of the massacre of at least 1,200 people, including the brutal murder of babies. Yet, people across Europe and in the United States apparently think that's a great time to show support for Hamas' operation and demand the Palestinians be given concessions. That just doesn't wash. You don't get to perpetrate the largest murder spree against Jews since the Holocaust and then play the victim. 

And while some will claim these protesters aren't pro-Hamas but are just pro-Palestinian, I don't think that distinction can be made in this situation. It'd be like people protesting in favor of Nazi Germany right after a concentration camp was discovered. These protests are occurring because of Hamas' attack. Further, many of these protesters are directly praising the terrorists, not even leaving their allegiances ambiguous. 

Regardless, while France may have its flaws, they don't play around when it comes to illegal protests. 

It's not clear whether the last clip is of the same protest at the Statue of the Republic or another one somewhere else, but the result was the same. Police used tear gas before officers in riot gear were brought in to clear the area. Protesters can be seen running away, screaming phrases like "free Palestine."

Is this a preview of the "day of rage?" That will likely depend on how tough local authorities get in shutting down the protests that break the law. In this case, vandalism and trespassing were happening and French police moved quickly. Other countries, including the United States, are likely to not be as aggressive. We'll have to see if that allows things to escalate into violence.